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- STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-
-
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: Stories of the Scottish Border
-Author: Mr and Mrs William Platt
-Release Date: July 17, 2013 [EBook #38845]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 38845 ***
Produced by Al Haines.
@@ -7878,378 +7855,4 @@ Science through the Ages
_Other volumes in active preparation_
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-***
-
-
-
-
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 38845 ***
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- STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-
-
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: Stories of the Scottish Border
-Author: Mr and Mrs William Platt
-Release Date: July 17, 2013 [EBook #38845]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _The Rookhope Ride_]
-
-
-
-
- STORIES OF THE
- SCOTTISH BORDER
-
-
- BY
-
- Mr and Mrs WILLIAM PLATT
-
-
-
- WITH SIXTEEN FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- M. MEREDITH WILLIAMS
-
-
-
- GEORGE G. HARRAP & CO. LTD.
- LONDON BOMBAY SYDNEY
-
-
-
-
- _First published December 1910_
- _by_ GEORGE G. HARRAP & COMPANY
- _39-41 Parker Street, Kingsway, London, W.C.2
- Reprinted: December 1916; March 1919;
- April 1929_
-
-
-
- _Printed in Great Britain by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh_
-
-
-
-
- *Contents*
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
- I. THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS
- II. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER
- III. WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US
-
-
-CHAP.
-
- I. Bamburgh and its Coast
- II. Athelstan at Vinheath
- III. Monks and Minstrels
- IV. Sir Patrick Spens
- V. Auld Maitland
- VI. The Mystery of the Eildons
- VII. Black Agnes of Dunbar
- VIII. The Young Tamlane
- IX. The Gay Goss-Hawk
- X. The Corbies
- XI. Otterbourne and Chevy Chase
- XII. The Douglas Clan
- XIII. Alnwick Castle and the Percies
- XIV. Hexham and Queen Margaret
- XV. Fair Helen of Kirkconnell
- XVI. Johnie of Breadislee
- XVII. Katharine Janfarie
- XVIII. By Lauder Bridge
- XIX. The Battle of Flodden Field
- XX. After Flodden
- XXI. Graeme and Bewick
- XXII. The Song of the Outlaw Murray
- XXIII. Johnie Armstrong
- XXIV. The Lament of the Border Widow
- XXV. The Raid of the Kers
- XXVI. Merrie Carlisle
- XXVII. Kinmont Willie
- XXVIII. Dick o' the Cow
- XXIX. The Lochmaben Harper
- XXX. The Rookhope Ride
- XXXI. Barthram's Dirge
- XXXII. Queen Mary and the Borders
- XXXIII. The Raid of the Reidswire
- XXXIV. Jock o' the Side
- XXXV. Hobbie Noble
- XXXVI. The Laird o' Logie
- XXXVII. Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead
-XXXVIII. Muckle-Mou'd Meg
- XXXIX. The Dowie Dens of Yarrow
- XL. Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland
- XLI. Gilderoy
- XLII. Archie Armstrong's Oath
- XLIII. Christie's Will
- XLIV. Northumberland at the Time of the Civil War
- XLV. Montrose and Lesly
- XLVI. The Death of Montrose
- XLVII. The Borderers and the Jacobites
- XLVIII. The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall
- XLIX. In Wild Northumberland To-Day
-
-
-
-
- *Illustrations*
-
-The Rookhope Ride. . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-Egil at Vinheath
-
-The Siege of Maitland Castle
-
-Black Agnes
-
-The Twa Corbies
-
-The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham
-
-Johnie of Breadislee.
-
-Flodden Field
-
-"Tell Us All--Oh, Tell Us True!"
-
-The Border Widow
-
-The Escape of Kinmont Willie
-
-Queen Mary crossing the Solway
-
-"A Boon, a Boon, my Noble Liege!"
-
-"She Kissed his Cheek, She Kaim'd his Hair"
-
-The Storming of Newcastle
-
-"'Tis I, 'Tis thy Winifred!"
-
-
-
-
-_In liquid murmurs Yarrow sings_
- _Her reminiscent tune_
-_Of bygone Autumn, bygone Springs,_
- _And many a leafy June._
-
-_No more the morning beacons gleam_
- _Upon the silent hills;_
-_The far back years are years of dream--_
- _Now peace the valley fills._
-
-_No more the reivers down the vale_
- _On raid and foray ride;_
-_No more is heard the widow's wail_
- _O'er those who fighting died._
-
-_When morning damns with all its joys_
- _Then from the meadows rise_
-_A hundred throbbing hearts to voice_
- _Their anthems to the skies._
-
-_When noontide sleeps where brackens wave,_
- _Ere shadows yet grow long,_
-_No sound awakes the echoes save_
- _The Yarrow's pensive song._
-
-_And when the eve, with calm delight,_
- _Betokens night is nigh,_
-_Beneath the first star's tender light_
- _Is heard the owlet's cry._
-
-_While Yarrow's liquid cadence swells_
- _By meadow, moor, and hill,_
-_At morn or noon or eve there dwells_
- _A mournful memory still._
-
-W. CUTHBERTSON.
-
-
-
-
- *Stories of The Scottish Border*
-
-
- *Introduction*
-
- *I.--THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS*
-
-
-The district called the Border is one of the most interesting in Great
-Britain. It consists of that part of England that is nearest Scotland,
-and that part of Scotland that is nearest England, mainly the counties
-of Northumberland, Cumberland, Berwickshire, Roxburghshire, and
-Dumfriesshire.
-
-The country is very picturesque and highly romantic. It abounds in great
-rolling, breezy hills, with swift streamlets or "burns" running down
-their sides to swell the rushing rivers. No part of our island has more
-beautiful valleys than those of the Border.
-
-This bold, rough district, well adapted to defence, and situated also
-just where the island of Great Britain is almost at its narrowest,
-became, after many a struggle, the boundary between England and
-Scotland. The character of the country was suited to the rearing of
-hardy Moorland sheep and cattle; its inhabitants therefore were a tough,
-open-air race of men, strong, strapping fellows, fearless riders, always
-ready for an adventure, especially if it meant a fight.
-
-In those days of Border strife there was hardly such a thing as
-international justice, that is to say, the people of one nation were not
-very particular as to what they did to people of another nation;
-therefore these bold, hardy Border men, Englishmen and Scot alike, were
-fond of creeping across the boundary to steal the cattle of their
-neighbours. Men devoted to such raids were called "Freebooters" or
-"Mosstroopers," the name "Moss" being given in the North Country to
-boggy tracts that lie about the hill-sides.
-
-So it happened that the Border was in a perpetual state of petty
-warfare, conducted, it is true, with a certain amount of good-will and a
-rough approach to chivalry, and with the concurrence of the powerful
-Border nobles of both nations, who often played an important part
-therein. At times these raids developed into important warlike
-expeditions, when a fierce noble, or even a king, had some reckless game
-to play. Hence, among the ballads which give us so vivid an account of
-Border strife, we find descriptions not only of the minor doings of
-picturesque sheep-stealers, but also of pitched battles such as Chevy
-Chase and Homildon Hill.
-
-The union of England and Scotland in 1603 naturally put an end to all
-the former excuses for raiding, and therefore terminated the true
-Freebooter period. After this, despite one or two belated attempts,
-such as Elliot's big raid in 1611, sheep-stealing ceased to be looked
-upon as an honourable calling, and became mere thieving. The men who
-would have raided one another's farms in 1602 became friendly neighbours
-after the Border Commission of 1605. There had been little malice in
-their former freebooting. Both sides were of one race; and they had the
-pleasure of finding that their lands went up greatly in value in
-consequence of the Border peace.
-
-To-day, the Border presents scenes of peaceful cattle-farming. But
-Romance is still in the air, hangs about the fine, breezy moorlands and
-beautiful dales, and is seen clearly in the faces of the healthy
-Border-folk. A holiday at any Border farm would prove a most enjoyable
-one. There are wonderful Roman remains, for here it was that the Romans
-built their wall; there are castles of the Border barons; the views are
-wide and grand; the river-valleys are unmatched for beauty, and
-delightful wild flowers are plentiful, chief among which are fox-gloves,
-the giant wild Canterbury Bells, the handsome North Country wild
-geranium, several interesting kinds of wild orchids, and a variety of
-others too numerous to mention. Last, but not least, it is often
-possible in the evenings to see the farmers' sons engaged in friendly
-wrestling in the meadows, when we can realise that these great manly
-fellows are of the same vigorous race that kept the Borders lively a few
-centuries ago.
-
-
-
- II.--A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER
-
-
-Before dealing in detail with the stirring stories of Border history and
-legend, to retell which is the purpose of this book, we will first
-inquire--What is it that settles exactly the position of the border-line
-between two countries? To find the answer we must think what happens
-when a country is invaded.
-
-If the invaders are stronger than the people whom they attack, they go
-on thrusting back their foes till these reach some strong position
-where, by the aid of mountain, river, or marsh, they are able, at any
-rate for a time, to hold their own. Thus, a border-line is always
-determined by some natural feature of the country which gives the
-defenders an advantage.
-
-The attackers will not always operate from the same locality, and the
-defenders will not always fall back in the same direction; the two
-sides, also, will vary in power from time to time. For these reasons a
-border-line, especially in the old fighting days, was often altered.
-
-When the Romans invaded Britain they gradually conquered the southern
-part of it, but they could not subdue the wilder north; one of their
-boundary lines was drawn from the Solway to the Tyne; then they fought
-their way further north and their next definite boundary was a line
-running from the Forth to the Clyde. Along each of these boundaries they
-built a great wall, and to this day parts of these Roman walls remain.
-But it is worth noting that neither of these wall border-lines stands
-upon the present border, one being all in England and the other all in
-Scotland.
-
-When the Romans left Britain, called back to defend their own native
-land from invasion, there followed a brief period for which we have no
-definite record of events in this island. This is the period of King
-Arthur, and none can say how much is true in the Arthurian legends.
-
-But history begins to become clear again about the time that the Angles
-came in their ships across the North Sea, bent on conquest. They landed
-on all the natural harbours of the east coast, driving the Britons back
-and taking the land for themselves. The fact that they landed on the
-East and drove the Britons westward, leads us to think that sooner or
-later a boundary would have been formed dividing the island into the
-east side (for the Angles) and the west side (for the Britons).
-
-Now that is exactly what did happen. The border-lines were nowhere like
-the present ones. The northern kingdom of the Angles reached to the
-Forth, where these people founded Edinburgh (Edwin's burgh). On the
-west the Britons had sway in Cornwall (Corn-Walles), Wales, Cumbria
-(which stretched from the Mersey to the Solway), and Strathclyde (from
-the Solway to the Clyde). North of the Forth was the country of the
-Picts; while the Scots were a race recently come from Ireland, and they
-only owned what we now call Argyleshire, and the islands lying near to
-it. Not one inch of the present Border was at that day in the
-border-line!
-
-Of the various races that lay round about where the Border now is, the
-Northumbrians seemed at first to be the strongest. The capital of their
-kingdom was Bamburgh, a place still famous for its castle, though to-day
-it is not important enough to have a railway station! But it still
-looks very picturesque on the wild coast, with the Farne Islands, the
-first seat of Northumbrian Christianity, in the near distance.
-
-Ambition had much to do with the downfall of Northumbria. The famous
-King Eadbert would not rest content till he had scaled Dumbarton, the
-capital of Strathclyde. This was to his career what the march to Moscow
-was to Napoleon's, for, though Eadbert got safely to Dumbarton (756) his
-army was cut to pieces in getting back again. The Northumbrians seem to
-have lost some of their northern lands, for they moved their capital
-further south, to the old Roman city of Corbridge which stood on the
-Tyne just where the delightful country town of that name stands to-day.
-
-In 844 a king of the Scots, named Kenneth MacAlpin, became (we don't
-quite know how) king of the Picts also, joining two strong races under
-one ruler, and thus was powerful enough to give great trouble to the
-weakened kingdom of Northumbria. He several times led his army through
-Lothian, the district belonging to the Angles between the Forth and the
-Tweed, but was never quite able to conquer it. It is important to
-remember that up to that date Lothian had never belonged to Scotland.
-The appearance of the Danes added to the confusion of those restless
-days. For some few years it was doubtful whether Scot, Dane, or Angle
-would get the best of it in Northumbria. But at last the genius of
-Athelstan of Wessex revived the power of the Angles over the whole of
-that large part of the island which they had settled, right up to the
-Forth itself. Edinburgh was still English in 957, and the border-line
-was still very far from the present one. But there was no longer a king
-of Northumbria; only an earl, who was subject to the will of the
-West-Saxon kings.
-
-This fact of the dominance of the West Saxons, whose capital was far to
-the south at Winchester, must have added to the weakness of the
-Northumbrian border. By the year 963 the Scots had conquered Edinburgh,
-and it was now never again to return to English rule. Before very long
-the whole of Lothian had passed under Scottish control; but it was not
-yet held to be part of Scotland. Nor must it be thought that this
-conquest of Lothian fixed the border-line in its present position, for
-the king of the Scots was at that time ruler over Cumberland, which had
-never yet been English and was all that was left of the old British
-kingdom of Cumbria.
-
-Frontier wars with varying successes between Scot, Angle, and Dane mark
-the stormy history of this time. The power of Cnut held back the Scotch
-attempts upon Nothumberland; but during a lull in the wars the grand-son
-of the Scottish king married the sister of Earl Siward, and received as
-her dowry twelve towns in the valley of the Tyne, an astonishingly
-imprudent arrangement.
-
-At the time of the battle of Hastings, the earldom of Northumberland was
-so far distant from Winchester as to be somewhat out of the control of
-the King of England; the power of the Scottish kings threatened it; they
-held twelve towns in Tynedale, and Cumberland was a part of Scotland.
-The Northumbrians refused to accept William the Conqueror as their king;
-and had they been able to make good their refusal, they must sooner or
-later have been conquered by the Scots, and the border-line between
-England and Scotland would then most probably have been formed by the
-Tees, the mountain boundary of Westmoreland, and Morecambe Bay.
-
-But William was not a king to be played with. He reduced Northumberland
-to subjection and carried his army into Scotland as far as the river
-Tay, where he forced the King of Scotland to admit that he, William, was
-his overlord.
-
-Notwithstanding this humiliation, when King William returned to
-Winchester, the Scots several times went back to their favourite
-amusement of raiding unhappy Northumberland.
-
-One of these invasions took place in the reign of William Rufus (1093),
-who went north in person. He doubtless recognised the fact that owing
-to the Scots possessing Cumberland they were in the strong position of
-being able to attack Northumberland on two sides. He took Cumberland by
-force of arms, and thus for the first time it became a part of England
-(the word "Cumberland" means the land of the Cumbrians or Welsh, a Saxon
-form of the Welsh word Cymry).
-
-Rufus rebuilt the strong fortress of Carlisle to defend his new border
-at its weakest corner. For the most part this border is excellently
-protected by the natural rampart of the wild Cheviot Hills, and is in
-every way as good a border as could be devised. It runs in a fairly
-straight line from south-west to north-east, across a narrow part of the
-island.
-
-But although this border-line proved to be a permanent one, it must not
-be thought that it remained undisputed. The times were rough, and hardy
-fighting folk lived on the Border. They had many grounds for quarrel,
-and took advantage of them all. For one thing, the exact boundary of
-North Cumberland was never quite defined till 1552; up to which year
-there was a tract of land between the rivers Esk and Sark, which was
-claimed by both countries, and therefore called the "Debateable Land."
-Then the Scots maintained that they were overlords of Northumberland,
-while the English kings cherished the notion that they were overlords of
-the whole island of Britain, and the wild spirits on both sides were
-always ready to fight.
-
-Out of this fighting spirit sprung the stirring history of the Border,
-which forms the theme of the deathless Ballads, the stories of which it
-is now our purpose to retell.
-
-
-
- III.--WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US
-
-
-Many a name holds a meaning wrapt up within itself like a nut in its
-shell. For instance, "Edinburgh" is a Saxon name--Edwin's burgh--and
-the word tells us that this noble city, though now the capital of
-Scotland, was originally founded by and belonged to a Saxon king of
-Northumbria. The Highlanders, in their own Gaelic language, called it
-Dunedin. This has the same signification as Edinburgh, but, like most
-Gaelic names, it is arranged in the reverse order to that in which an
-English name is generally put together. "Dun" means burgh, "Edin" is
-Edwin. This is the same Dun that we have in "Dundee," which means the
-burgh on the Tay, and might be translated as "Tayburgh." "Dumbarton"
-means the burgh of the Britons, and teaches us another notable lesson,
-namely, how far north in the old times the British influence extended.
-For "British" in this case means "Welsh." Nowadays we associate the
-Welsh with Wales only. Formerly there must have been a numerous colony
-of Welsh in Scotland, as the name "Dumbarton" testifies, as also many
-Scottish family names. The great name of Wallace itself, for instance,
-suggests such an origin, for "Wallace" is merely a corrupt form of the
-word "Welsh," and proves that the great national hero was of Welsh
-extraction. Then "Cumberland"--Cymry land--means the land of the Welsh,
-or Cymry, as they call themselves. The county of Cumberland did not
-really belong to the English till the time of William Rufus. The first
-syllable of "Carlisle" denotes a Celtic fortified town, and must be
-compared with the first syllable of "Carnarvon."
-
-The presence of the Roman wall is shown in many names in Northumberland,
-such as "Wallsend," "Walltown," "Wallridge," "Heddon-on-the-Wall,"
-"Wallhouses," and "Thirlwall."
-
-For a very interesting instance of what a name tells us we may leave the
-Border for a moment and consider why the northernmost part of Scotland
-is called "Sutherland." It must have been so named by people living in
-the Orkney and Shetland isles, of a different race from the Scotch--that
-is, Norse settlers in those islands.
-
-With regard to surnames, how many stop to think that "Oliphant" is
-merely a form of "elephant," and was originally an allusion to a big,
-burly ancestor? "Grant," which is the same as "grand," must also have
-been once applied to one who was a giant in size. The Frazers somehow
-got their name from the French word for a strawberry, fraise. The
-odd-looking "Scrymgeour" means simply a scrimmager or skirmisher.
-"Turnbull" recalls one who turned the bull at a bull-baiting. The
-well-known "Gladstains" or "Gladstone" has nothing to do with "glad,"
-but is from "glede," an old word for the kite, and commemorates some
-stone where these birds frequented. "Buccleuch" is from the killing of
-a buck in a cleugh or ravine.
-
-The Christian names of the Borderers are full of life and local colour,
-and differ much from those of Southern England. "Barthram" is the
-northern form of "Bertram," "Nigel" of "Neil," "Jellon" of "Julian,"
-"Ringan" of "Ninian." It was the general custom to abbreviate Christian
-names or use them in the diminutive form, as is constantly the practice
-in these Border ballads. "Hobbie" stands for "Halbert," a fine old name
-which must not be confused with "Albert." "Dandie" or "Dandrie" is
-"Andrew," "Eckie" is "Hector," "Lammie" is "Lambert," "Lennie" is
-"Leonard." "Adam" becomes, in the familiar form, "Aicky," "Christian"
-becomes "Christy," "Gilbert" becomes "Gibby."
-
-Another peculiarity of the ballads is the regular recurrence of such
-phrases as "the Laird's Jock," "the Laird's Wat," "Ringan's Wat," etc.
-These expressions mean, "John the son of the Laird," "Walter the son of
-the Laird," "Walter the son of Ringan or Ninian."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter I*
-
- *Bamburgh and its Coast*
-
-
-The little town of Bamburgh has two striking features--the great castle
-upon its stern rock, and the wild coast-line at its feet where dash the
-storms of the North Sea.
-
-To-day it is not important enough to have a railway station of its own;
-yet once it was the capital of the great Saxon kingdom of Northumbria.
-Its original name was Bebbanburgh, so called after Queen Bebba; of its
-Saxon fortress hardly a trace remains, the present building being partly
-the old Norman castle, with repairs and additions of a later date. The
-ancient pile has a strength, dignity, and grandeur which accords well
-with its truly noble situation.
-
-The North Saxons in choosing such a spot for their capital showed a very
-evident desire to keep in touch with the sea. Over the sea they had
-come; and over the sea would come both friends and enemies. Many a
-meeting of both friend and foe has taken place at Bamburgh!
-
-Perhaps the fiercest of the enemies was Ragnar of the hairy-breeches, a
-famous viking who plundered, ravaged, and burnt without mercy. These
-vikings, powerful men and fearless sea-rovers, were a standing terror to
-Northumbria. Men with frames and muscles strong as iron; at home both
-on the sea and on the battle-field; fair-haired, blue-eyed men, guarded
-by helmet, breast-plate, and shield, armed with heavy weapons, because
-at that date the art of the smith was not equal to making them sharp,
-light, and strong at once. So these mighty warriors hewed their way
-through the field of battle with great strokes, and when their foes fled
-in terror, the vikings took back to their ships all the treasure they
-could find, and away they went across the sea again. But with all their
-fierceness they loved poetry (wild war-poetry, most of it) and they
-loved their strong, brave women.
-
-Ragnar was a thorough viking. He loved fighting, and his handsome wife,
-and the battle songs he made. But the Saxons had no cause to love him,
-and when his ship ran aground near Jarrow, they bound him and cast him
-into a pit of snakes, and watched him slowly die. The viking had no fear
-of death. He sang as he lay there, of his life and his deeds--of the
-great banquets he had given to the wolves and the vultures and the
-fierce battles he had won, spreading the terrors of his name from the
-Orkneys to the Mediterranean; of his beautiful wife and strong sons, and
-of how they would avenge him; and of how Woden, the lord of all
-warriors, was calling him to his Hall.
-
-Many a battle has been fought on that wild coast since Ragnar died; much
-history has been made thereabouts, and many legends have attached
-themselves to Bamburgh. Like most famous places, it had its own special
-dragon, the "Laidly Worm" or loathsome serpent of the ancient ballad.
-
- "For seven miles east, and seven miles west,
- And seven miles north and south,
- No blade of grass or corn would grow,
- So venomous was her mouth!"
-
-
-And yet, when the gallant knight gave her "kisses three," she changed at
-once into a beautiful lady!
-
-But despite its castle, its battles, and its legends, Bamburgh slowly
-declined in importance. As the capital of Northumbria it had been one
-of the chief towns in England. But the gallant Northumbria of the
-Saxons was more open to enemies than any other part of the country;
-Cumbrians were on the west and Scots on the north, and this was of all
-Saxon kingdoms the most exposed to the ravages of the Danes. From the
-capital of a kingdom it became the capital of a county (Bamburghshire),
-returning two members to Parliament in the reign of Edward I.; but it
-grew of less and still less importance, till at last it was known only
-to the student of history. It shared this fate with Lindisfarne, called
-Holy Island, once the Canterbury of the North, on whose rocky shores
-still stand the ruins of the fine Norman cathedral which took the place
-of the old Saxon one. Lindisfarne and Bamburgh--neighbours, divided
-only by a narrow belt of sea--two names that conjure up vivid pictures
-of romantic history. Yet suddenly, early in the nineteenth century, the
-great deed of a splendid heroine lent new glory to the wild, sea-girt
-town.
-
-Grace Darling was born at Bamburgh in 1817, in a cottage on the south
-side of the village street, which can still be seen to-day. Her father
-became keeper of the lighthouse on the Langstone, a rocky islet five
-miles from the coast, guarding ships from the dangerous Farne Islands, a
-group of iron-bound rocks where seabirds dwell. In the early morning of
-September 7, 1838, during the raging of a most terrible storm, she heard
-the crash of a ship dashed upon the rocks, and anguished cries; as soon
-as dawn enabled them to see, the girl and her father made out the dark
-outline of the wreck, and the miserable forms of the mariners crouching
-on rocks from which the rising tide would sweep them inevitably to
-death. With superb heroism Grace and her father pushed their small boat
-into the furious waters, and after strenuous and dauntless efforts,
-always at the peril of their own lives, they saved the whole ship's
-company, nine souls in all. So fierce was the storm that it was three
-days before a boat dared take them from the Langstone to the mainland.
-
-The roar of approbation which greeted her from the whole country found
-her as modest as she was brave. But for all her courage, this noble girl
-was not strong. She died four years later, and lies buried at Bamburgh,
-within sound of the sea. And the Langstone is known to-day as "Grace
-Darling's Island," and the tomb of the brave girl rouses sweeter
-memories than the frowning fortress of Bamburgh.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter II*
-
- *Athelstan at Vinheath*
-
-
-Famous among the old Norse sea-rovers was Egil, son of Skallagrim. In
-the course of his many voyages, he visited all the lands between the
-White Sea and the Bay of Biscay, and when at last he settled down in his
-Iceland home, where he lived on till well past the age of eighty, he
-loved to gather his children and grandchildren around him by the
-fireside during the long Icelandic winter, and to tell the story of his
-adventures. He was a true Norseman, fond of the sea and the fight, fond
-of his wife and children, fond of song, at which he was highly skilled.
-His songs and his stories of adventure were listened to with eagerness,
-and they were repeated after him, and were at last written down,
-probably between one hundred and fifty and two hundred years after his
-death. Books were scarce in those days, and stories were treasured and
-faithfully re-told. So this story of Egil was probably written out very
-much in the simple, vigorous style in which the old warrior would have
-told it to his grandchildren, as they listened to him with wide-open,
-wondering eyes. And as the old man had taken part in an early battle
-between Saxon-English and Scots, upon the Border, we have here a fine
-picture of how fights were fought in the reign of King Athelstan.
-
-Egil was speaking to Icelandic children who knew little about England,
-so he began by telling how in the days when Harold Fairhair was king of
-Norway, Alfred the Great was the first supreme king over all England.
-When Alfred died he was succeeded by his son Edward, who was followed by
-Athelstan the Victorious. In Egil's day Athelstan was young and had but
-just been made king, and many chieftains, who had kept quiet before, now
-thought that the time had come when they could do as they pleased again.
-But Athelstan meant to show them that he too could rule England strongly
-and wisely.
-
-These were the days of brute force, and the king had first to get an
-army together. Besides his own English folk, many roving Norsemen came
-to take his pay, and among the number were Egil and his elder brother
-Thorolf, with their men. They saw the king himself, who received them
-well. Athelstan was a good Christian, known as the Faithful, and he
-desired that Thorolf and Egil should submit to be marked with the Cross,
-that they might take their place by his Christian soldiers without
-quarrel. This they agreed to, and the king gave them command over three
-hundred men. Now Olaf the Red was king in Scotland. His father was a
-Scot, but his mother was a Dane of the family of Ragnar
-with-the-hairy-breeches, that savage old viking. Northumberland, which
-in those days extended to the Humber, and included York as its chief
-city, was half-full of Danes, and King Olaf wished to claim it for his
-own, and add it to Scotland.
-
-Athelstan had set Earl Alfgeir and Earl Gudrek to rule Northumberland
-and defend it from the Scots. But Olaf of Scotland came south with his
-mighty host; there was a fierce battle; Earl Gudrek was slain and Earl
-Alfgeir fled. When Athelstan heard of the triumph of Olaf, he began at
-once to march northward with all the men he could get together; but he
-was yet young, and some of the treacherous earls, hearing that Olaf had
-so far been victor, deserted King Athelstan. Chief among these traitors
-were Earl Hring and Earl Adils, who should have been in the very front
-of the English army, but who basely went over to the Scots. Thus Olaf's
-host became exceeding great, greater by far than the English army.
-
-Then Athelstan called together his captains and his counsellors; Egil
-was there, and heard all the grave talk as to what should be done. At
-last a plan was made that all thought good, and this is what followed.
-
-First, messengers were sent to King Olaf, saying that King Athelstan
-would meet him in fair fight at Vinheath by Vinwood, in Northumberland,
-where he would mark out the field of battle with rods of hazel. He who
-won the battle should be king over all England. The armies should meet
-a week hence, and whichever was first on the ground should wait a week
-for the other. King Olaf should bide quiet, and not harry the land till
-the battle was ended. North of the heath was a town; there King Olaf
-stayed, for there he could best get provisions for his army. But some
-of his men he sent to the heath, to view it.
-
-The hazel-poles were already set up on the large level plain. A river
-was on one side, and a wood was on the other. And where river and wood
-were nearest to one another, there King Athelstan's tents were pitched.
-
-Many tents there were, but the front line of tents stood high, so that
-the Scots could not see how many were behind. Every third tent was
-empty, but many men were sleeping on the grass in the open, so that the
-Scots might think that the English had a large army there. Every day
-more English troops came in, and when the time was come that was fixed
-for the battle, English envoys went to the King of the Scots asking if
-there need be the great fight and bloodshed that threatened; if Olaf
-would go peaceably home, Athelstan would give him a shilling of silver
-for every plough that ploughed in England. The Scots took counsel
-together and said they must have more than this. Then the messengers
-begged a three days' truce to consider this. On the third day they came
-again, saying that King Athelstan would give what he offered before and
-also to the Scottish army a silver shilling for every freeman soldier, a
-silver mark for every lesser officer, a gold mark for every captain, and
-five gold marks for every earl. But the Scots asked not only for this,
-but also for Northumberland to be yielded to them. Then the English
-messengers answered that Scottish messengers must ride back with them,
-to take the answer from Athelstan himself.
-
-Now the truth is this: that the Scottish king had taken Athelstan by
-such surprise that he needed time to get his men together; all these
-messages were but a trick to gain time till the king should come up
-himself with all the men he could gather. When, therefore, the
-messengers rode up to King Athelstan, he had but just arrived on the
-scene of battle. And when he heard the message he said: "Tell King Olaf
-this, that I will give him leave to return to Scotland safely if only he
-give back all he has unjustly taken from this land, and if he own
-himself my under-king, holding Scotland for me and at my behest."
-
-This proud answer made the Scottish messengers at once see what had been
-going on. So they hastened back to their king to tell him how they had
-been received and what the meaning of it was.
-
-When the Scots found that the English had thus outwitted them, they took
-counsel together in some anger. Earl Adils, he who had deserted the
-English, said that he and his brother, Earl Hring, would that very night
-make a surprise attack; if it succeeded, well and good; if not, then
-they could easily withdraw, and the main battle could begin in the
-morning. This the King of Scots held to be good advice.
-
-So the two traitor earls and their men moved southward under cover of
-the darkness. But Thorolf the Norseman was used to the ways of war, and
-his sentries were alert and blew a great war-blast on their horns. And
-thus the fight began.
-
-Thorolf was armed with a massy halberd that stood taller than a man;
-broad was its blade and thick its socket, and it ended in a four-edged
-spike. He had a strong sword by his side and a big, heavy shield on his
-left arm; he had a helmet but no shirt of mail. His brother Egil was
-armed in much the same way. The Norsemen's standard was borne by Thorfid
-the strong.
-
-Next to the Norsemen, in the first rank also, was the division led by
-Earl Alfgeir, he who had once before fled from the Scots. King
-Athelstan gave him this chance to redeem himself. Now when the first
-onslaught of the Scots took place, Earl Adils came against Earl Alfgeir,
-while Earl Hring came against the Norsemen.
-
-And now the battle began. The two traitor earls urged on their men, who
-charged with spirit. The fight was fierce, and soon Alfgeir gave
-ground; this made the foe press on the fiercer, and before long Alfgeir
-was in full flight. He avoided the town where Athelstan was, and fled
-night and day to the coast, where he took ship out of the country he had
-served so ill.
-
-Adils did not dare to pursue him far, for fear of being himself cut off
-from his friends. So he returned to help his brother Hring against the
-Norsemen. Thorolf, like a true general, saw the danger of this, and at
-once told Egil to turn aside with half their force to prevent Adils from
-joining his brother. The Norsemen fought a grand fight, but were badly
-outnumbered, and the battle seemed to be going against them. Then
-Thorolf became furious. Disdainful of life, he cast his shield behind
-his back, grasped his great halberd with both hands, and sprang forward,
-hacking down all who opposed him. Straight for Hring's standard he went,
-nothing could stop him. He slew the standard-bearer, cut through the
-standard-pole, and with a mighty stroke thrust his halberd right through
-the body of Hring, the traitor earl, and lifted him up in the air that
-all might see that he was slain. Then Adils and the rest of the men
-fled to the wood, and thus ended the first part of the fight. More was
-to come on the morrow.
-
-At dawn next day King Athelstan came forward with his main army. He had
-heard of the great deeds of the brothers Thorolf and Egil; most
-courteously he thanked them, and said that he would always reckon them
-as his friends. Then with his captains he made his plans for the
-battle. Egil he put in command of the front ranks of his men, and
-Thorolf he set aside to face those of the Scots who might charge the
-English in loose array.
-
-[Illustration: Egil at Vinheath]
-
-"For this is the way of the Scots," he said; "they dash to and fro, rush
-forward and hither and thither, and are dangerous except to a commander
-who is both wary and bold."
-
-Egil said, "I would rather that Thorolf and I were near together"; but
-Thorolf answered, "As the king commands, so will we do."
-
-The battle began, and soon waged furiously. Thorolf and his men pressed
-forward along the woodside, hoping to take the enemy on the flank. Now,
-unknown to him, Adils and his followers were hiding among the trees, and
-of a sudden Adils sprang out and smote him down. Thorfid, too, the brave
-standard-bearer, was pressed back, but rallied the men, who fought
-desperately.
-
-The Scots had raised a great shout at the fall of Thorolf, and this was
-heard by Egil, who, when he saw the standard forced back, feared that
-his brother was dead, for Thorolf had never drawn back from any foe. So
-with a fierce cry Egil hacked his way through to that part of the field,
-and when he learnt the truth from his men, he never rested till he had
-slain Adils with his own hand.
-
-The followers of Adils then fled, and Egil and the Norsemen hewed their
-way through the flank of the Scottish force towards the place where King
-Olaf's standard was. Noting this, King Athelstan, that wary general,
-caused his own standard to be set forward and all his army to attack at
-once. Fierce and furious was the fight, and great was the slaughter.
-King Olaf was slain, with great numbers of his men, and the rest fled in
-confusion. The English victory was complete.
-
-As soon as Athelstan saw that victory was his, he left the pursuit to
-his captains and hastened to the town to make his arrangements. Egil
-pursued far and fiercely, and when at last he came back to the
-battlefield his first thought was for his dead brother. Worn out though
-he was, he would take no rest until he had buried the warrior with full
-honours, with his arms and his raiment; and before the sad farewell was
-said Egil clasped a gold bracelet on both of Thorolf's wrists to show
-his deep love. Then they buried the hero deep and put a high cairn of
-stones over him.
-
-Then one last tribute Egil paid to his brother, the greatest of them
-all. Among these old Norse warriors there existed a great love of song;
-the great fighters strove also to be great song-makers, and Egil was
-famous above most for this power. The Norsemen's poems had not rhymes
-like ours; they had short vigorous lines, and in each pair of lines
-three of the important words had to begin with the same letter. Wild
-strong chants they were. This is the song that Egil sang at the burial
-of his brother, Thorolf Skallagrimsson:--
-
- "The halberd of the hero
- Hewed down the foe before him;
- Then in the brunt of battle
- Was spilt brave Thorolf's blood.
- The grass is green on Vinheath
- Where sleeps my great-souled brother;
- But death, in doubled sorrow,
- Our doleful hearts must bear."
-
-
-When Egil got to the town he found the king and his army making merry
-over their victory at a huge feast. The courteous king saw Egil and bade
-him come and sit near to him. The king watched the burly Norseman, who
-was tall, with broad shoulders, a powerful head and mighty strength; but
-now his head was bent forward, and he kept his sword across his knees,
-and now and again half drew it and then clashed it back into its
-scabbard like a man who fights with heavy thoughts. He ate little and
-drank less. Then King Athelstan, watchful and courteous, took a gold
-ring from his arm, and placing it on his sword-point, handed it thus to
-where Egil sat. At this mark of honour the Norseman's face grew
-brighter. Then the king sent round his own horn for Egil to drink; so
-he drank to the king and sang a verse of wild poetry in his praise, made
-on the spur of the moment; and with this the king was much pleased.
-
-Then the king sent also for two chests full of silver, and said to
-Egil:--
-
-"These chests carry to thy father; it is fitting that King Athelstan
-make him some gift for the loss of his son. And do thou stay with me
-long, and I will give thee honour and dignity."
-
-Thus the great king in kindness and courtesy did what he could to soothe
-the grief of the warrior; and Egil stayed the winter with Athelstan, but
-when the summer came he wished to go back to his own people. But he had
-much respect for King Athelstan, and ere he bade him farewell he made a
-long poem to his glory.
-
-_From the Song of Egil Skallagrimsson, to the Glory of King Athelstan._
-
- "See how the kingly warrior,
- Land-warder, battle-wakener,
- Smites even to the earth
- The earls who rise against him!
- Glad is now Northumberland,
- This the king she needed,
- Wise and bold of race and blood,
- Dauntless in the battle-field!"
-
-
-Many were the verses of this stirring song; and after each came the
-refrain:--
-
- "Scottish hills where reindeer roam
- Own the rule of Athelstan!"
-
-
-The king gave Egil two heavy gold rings and a handsome cloak that he
-himself had worn; then the Norseman sailed away, for always near to his
-heart was the welfare of his dead brother's wife and child. Yea, for
-the rest of his long life he loved this child even as he loved his own.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter III*
-
- *Monks and Minstrels*
-
-
-The wild Borderland was the scene of the labours of many ol the first
-great Christian leaders. Where the arts of war were so much practised,
-it was needful that the arts of peace should flourish also. Great was
-the influence, even in the wildest times, of these able, serious,
-devoted leaders of early religious thought, men like Ninian and
-Kentigern.
-
-Christianity first came into Britain in Roman times, and some of the
-Britons were converted. After the Romans quitted the country, King
-Arthur was the leader of the Christian Britons, and he is said to have
-fought with the pagan Britons, the pagan Picts, the pagan Saxons, who
-had begun their invasions, and the disorderly soldiers of various races,
-probably pagans whom the Romans left behind along the wall.
-
-In due time the fight developed into a struggle between Christian
-Britons and pagan Saxons, and then the Saxons themselves began to accept
-the new religion. Oswald, a Northumbrian prince, had in a time of peril
-hidden in the island of Iona, to where the great Irishman Columba had
-come from Ireland as a missionary. When Oswald returned to power he
-summoned to his kingdom Aidan, a high-minded Christian teacher, whom he
-made first bishop of Lindisfarne (Holy Island). Aidan being a Celt, had
-to do his work through interpreters, but he did it well, and laid the
-foundations of Christianity and learning in Northumbria. Cuthbert was
-another famous missionary. Rising from shepherd-boy to bishop, he
-impressed both king and peasant by the dignified simplicity and
-sincerity of his life. His place of meditation was a sea-girt rock by
-Lindisfarne, lonely and picturesque, and still called after his name. A
-curious fossil, with the mark of a cross, is plentiful there, and goes
-by the name of St Cuthbert's beads. Other famous teachers were Wilfrid
-of York, who founded the churches of Hexham and Ripon; Boisil, who
-founded Melrose, and Biscop, who founded Jarrow.
-
-But perhaps the most celebrated of all was Bede, the "Venerable Bede,"
-who lived at Jarrow and wrote forty-five learned books on all subjects,
-including music, astronomy, and medicine. All the scholars in England
-flocked to hear his teachings, and he was justly called "the father of
-English learning." He it was who first introduced into England the art
-of making glass.
-
-His last work was to translate the Gospel of St John into Northumbrian
-English. This was in the year 735. Being too ill to hold a pen, he
-dictated to his favourite pupil. "Write quickly," he said, for he felt
-that he was dying. "It is finished," answered the lad, and the old
-man's heart was satisfied. In a faint, brave voice he chanted the
-_Gloria_, and so died singing.
-
-In those days there was, of course, no such thing as printing. Every
-manuscript was written and rewritten, carefully, by hand, and treasured
-as a sacred possession in the seats of learning. So proud were they of
-their manuscripts that they beautified them with illustrations in
-colour. Many of these manuscripts have, of course, been destroyed; for
-instance, the Danes in 875 burnt the priceless library of Bishop Acca at
-Hexham, destroying in one day the treasured collection of a lifetime;
-but many remain to show the love of learning which existed even then.
-Bishop Edfrid, who lived in the little rocky island of Lindisfarne, made
-a copy of the Gospels, which is looked upon with wonder even to-day.
-Strings of beautiful birds and quaint animals are drawn upon his pages;
-evangelists with mantles of purple and tunics of blue, pink, or green.
-With the writing clear and beautiful, the decorations showing the
-greatest care and devotion, this manuscript of one thousand two hundred
-years ago has been the delight of thousands, and comes down to us to
-witness to the loving care of the scholars of old in the days before
-printing was known.
-
-Great as was their love of beautiful manuscripts, they had an equally
-noble passion for grand buildings. A superb monument of simple dignity
-and religious grandeur is the Norman Cathedral at Durham, commenced by
-Bishop Carilef in 1093, and finished by Bishop Flambard in 1128.
-Occupying a wonderful position at the top of a wooded hill, around which
-flows the beautiful river Wear, Durham Cathedral is in itself one of the
-noblest buildings in the world. While the Church in those troublous
-times kept thus a storehouse of learning for serious scholars, other
-methods kept the people informed of the more stirring events of their
-day.
-
-In the old days, when no newspapers existed to tell people the news,
-when books were scarce and history was not taught to every lad as a part
-of his training, the ballad-writer and the wandering minstrel played a
-very important part. Ballads, sometimes really fine pieces of poetry,
-sometimes a mere halting troop of lame lines, were made upon every
-occasion of local or general interest. They were sung to simple and
-often beautiful tunes or chants. The best of the minstrels were welcome
-to the halls of the nobles, and even to the king himself; the poorest of
-them sang on the village green. The ballads were learnt and repeated by
-the folk of the country-side; some were in later times printed on loose
-sheets, but at first they were handed on from mouth to mouth.
-Alterations and errors often crept in; mistakes due to a sameness of
-sound. For instance, in the old ballad of _Mary Ambree_, a soldier is
-referred to as "Sir John Major," probably meaning Sergeant-major. In
-one of the versions of the battle of Chevy Chase, Henry Percy was said
-to have been killed there, whereas he really lived on to be slain at
-Shrewsbury. But, despite such occasional blunders, the ballads on the
-whole throw a vivid light on the manners and customs of the old days, as
-well as being usually stirring and sometimes strikingly noble and
-pathetic pieces of poetry. They deal as a rule rather with the side
-currents than with the main stream of history; but they express
-themselves with such homely force and directness that they bring home to
-us with wonderful clearness the character of the vigorous manly men with
-whose doings they are chiefly concerned.
-
-During the last one hundred and fifty years many able men have laboured
-to collect old ballads, writing them down from the mouths of the
-country-folk and printing them in books with notes of explanation. One
-of the earliest thus to collect ballads seriously was Bishop Percy; the
-best known is Sir Walter Scott, of whose interest in the subject
-Lockhart, his biographer, writes very pleasantly.
-
-Prefaced to many of the stirring tales in this present book are lines
-from the old Border ballads from which they are taken. It is to be
-hoped that readers will be tempted sooner or later to read the rest of
-these fine ballads for themselves.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter IV*
-
- *Sir Patrick Spens*
-
-
- "The king sits in Dunfermline town
- Drinking the blood-red wine;
- 'O where shall I get a well-skilled skipper
- To sail this new ship of mine?'"
-
-
-Almost every collection of Scottish songs contains this picturesque old
-ballad, which refers to a very remote time in Scottish history, probably
-the end of the thirteenth century. King Alexander III. of Scotland died
-in 1285; he had the bitter grief of seeing all his children die before
-him. His daughter Margaret had been married to Eric, King of Norway,
-and she left a daughter also called Margaret, and known as the "Maid of
-Norway." This maid was now heiress to the Scottish throne, and it is
-natural to suppose that the lonely king should wish her to return to
-Scotland, and should send a richly appointed ship to fetch her back.
-And although there is no strictly historical record of such an
-expedition, the truth of the ballad is made more probable by the fact
-that it opens in the fine old town of Dunfermline.
-
-Dunfermline was a favourite residence of Alexander, who was killed in
-its neighbourhood by a fall from his horse, and was buried in the abbey
-there, the ruins of which beautiful structure still remain.
-
-In this ballad the king is feasting at Dunfermline town, and calls for a
-skilful mariner to sail his new ship. An old knight at the king's right
-hand answers that the best sailor who ever sailed the sea is Sir Patrick
-Spens. So the king writes a letter, sealing it with his own hand, and
-sends it to Sir Patrick, commanding him to sail away to Norway over the
-white sea-foam and bring home the maid.
-
-Now every good sailor dreaded the rough Northern seas in winter, so
-though the brave Sir Patrick laughed aloud when he began to read, he
-wept blinding tears before he had ended. "Who has done this deed?" he
-cried; "who has told the king of me and urged him to send us out at this
-time of the year to sail on the stormy sea? Yet, wind, wet, hail, or
-sleet, we must set out, for 'tis we who must fetch home the maid."
-
-So they set sail on a Monday morning, and reached Norway on a Wednesday.
-History tells us that Eric of Norway was very unwilling to part with his
-daughter. This probably accounts for the fact that the old ballad tells
-us that the Scotsmen had only been there a fortnight when the lords of
-Norway began to say that Sir Patrick and his men were spending the gold
-of their king and queen. "Ye lie," cried Sir Patrick, "loudly I hear ye
-lie, for I brought with me over the sea enough red gold and white money
-to supply the wants of my men. Make ready, make ready, my merry men; we
-will sail at daybreak." "Alack," quoth the men, "a deadly storm is
-brewing. Yesterday evening the new moon was seen carrying the old moon
-in her arms; we shall certainly come to harm if we go to sea."
-
-Barely had they sailed three leagues when the sky darkened, the wind
-blew loudly, and the sea grew boisterous. Soon they were in the midst
-of a terrible storm. The anger of the sea was far more dreadful than
-the anger of the lords of Norway. The anchors broke away, the topmasts
-snapped, and the waves came over the broken ship, tearing her sides
-asunder. "O where shall I get a good sailor to take the helm while I
-climb the tall topmast to see if I can espy land?" "That I fear ye
-never will," cried a sailor as he took the helm, and scarcely had Sir
-Patrick gone a step when a plank started in the ship's side and the
-water came pouring in.
-
-"Fetch a web of silken cloth, and fetch a web of twine," cried Sir
-Patrick, "and cast them down to our ship's side!" For it was the custom
-in those days, when a leak could not be reached from inside the vessel,
-to cast down some closely woven stuff in the hope that the suction of
-the water would drag it across the leak and stop thus the fatal inrush
-of water. Alas! all their efforts failed. Then the ballad-writer says
-somewhat grimly of the dandies among the Scottish lords that whereas at
-first they grumbled to see the water spoil their fine cork-heeled shoes,
-when the storm had done its fatal work the sea was "above their hats"!
-
- "And many was the feather bed
- That fluttered on the foam;
- And many was the gude lord's son
- That never mair came home!
-
- The ladyes wrang their fingers white;
- The maidens tore their hair,
- A' for the sake of their true loves;
- For them they'll see nae mair.
-
- O lang, lang may the ladyes sit,
- Wi' their fans into their hand,
- Before they see Sir Patrick Spens
- Come sailing to the strand!
-
- And lang, lang may the maidens sit,
- With their goud kaims[#] in their hair,
- A' waiting for their ain dear loves!
- For them they'll see nae mair.
-
-[#] Golden combs.
-
- O forty miles off Aberdeen,
- 'Tis fifty fathoms deep,
- And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
- Wi' the Scots lords at his feet."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter V*
-
- *Auld Maitland*
-
-
- "'Wha holds this house?' young Edward cried,
- 'Or wha gives it o'er to me?'
- ''Tis I will keep my good old house,
- While my house will keep me!'"
-
-
-The story of Auld Maitland is said to be taken from a very old ballad,
-and known chiefly to the people who lived in the neighbourhood of
-Ettrick Forest. The old folks there would while away the long winter
-evenings by singing of the deeds of their ancestors, and the ballad of
-_Auld Maitland_, as thus chanted, was written down by the mother of
-James Hogg, the "Ettrick Shepherd."
-
-The castle of Thirlestane stood on the river Leader, and still, in its
-restored form, deserves its name of "the darksome house." It may have
-often withstood the English during the Baliol wars, and hatred of the
-English and of Edward I. is expressed with extreme virulence throughout
-the poem. Here is the story:--
-
-There lived in the south country a king named Edward, who wore the crown
-unworthily for fifty years. This king had a nephew, strong in blood and
-bone, who bore the same hateful name. One day the young man came before
-the king, and kneeling low, he said, "A boon, a boon I crave of thee, my
-good uncle. Oft have I wished to take part in our long wars in fair
-Scotland. Grant me fifteen hundred chosen strong men to ride there with
-me."
-
-"Certainly thou shalt have them, and more, and I myself, though old and
-grey, will see thy host arrayed for battle."
-
-King Edward sent hither and thither, and assembled fifteen hundred men
-on Tyne side, and three times as many at North Berwick, all bound for
-battle. They marched up the banks of Tweed, burning the Merse and
-Teviotdale, and up and down the Lammermoor Hills, until they came to the
-darksome house called, by some, "Leader-Town."
-
-"Who holds this house?" cried young Edward, "or who gives it over to
-me?" He was answered, as proudly, by a grey-haired knight: "I hold my
-house of Scotland's king, who pays me in meat and fee, and I will hold
-it as long as it will stand together."
-
-Thereupon the English brought up their sows[#] to the wall with many a
-heavy sound, but the soldiers on the wall cast down blazing pitch and
-tar barrels, to consume the formidable machine. They also threw down
-stones and beams and darts from their springalds,[#] and slew many of
-the English.
-
-[#] A military engine framed of wood, covered with hides and mounted on
-wheels, so that, being rolled forward to the foot of the wall, it served
-as a shed to defend the miners underneath it and their battering-rams
-from the stones and arrows of the soldiers above.
-
-[#] Large crossbows worked by machinery.
-
-Fifteen days they besieged the castle of Auld Maitland, but left him at
-the end of that time unhurt within his stone stronghold.
-
-[Illustration: _The Siege of Maitland Castle_]
-
-They loaded fifteen ships with as much spoil as they could carry away
-from the district around, and claimed that now they had conquered
-Scotland with buckler, bow, and brand. So they sailed away to France to
-meet the old King Edward, who was burning every castle, tower, and town
-that he met with. They came at last to the town of Billop-Grace, where
-Auld Maitland's three sons were at school.
-
-Edward had quartered the arms of Scotland with his own. "See'st thou
-what I see?" said the eldest son to the youngest; "if that be true that
-yonder standard says, then are we all three fatherless, and Scotland
-conquered up and down. Never will we bow to the conquerer. Let us go,
-my two brothers, and try our chance in an adventure?" Thereupon they
-saddled two black horses and a grey, and rode before day-dawn to King
-Edward's army. Arrived there, they hovered round, and Maitland begged
-to be allowed to carry the king's standard, the Golden Dragon.
-
-"Where wast thou born and bred, and in what country?" demanded the
-knight who bore the banner. "I was born in the north of England,"
-answered Maitland; "my father was a knight and my mother a lady, and I
-myself am a squire of high renown, and may well carry the banner of a
-king." "Never had the son of an Englishmen such an eye or brow,"
-answered the knight; "thou art more like Auld Maitland than any man I
-have ever seen; yet God grant that such a gloomy brow I never see again;
-he slew and wounded many of our men."
-
-At the mention of his father's name Maitland's anger burst out, and
-lifting up a gilded dagger that hung low by his knee, he struck fiercely
-at the standard-bearer, and, catching hold of the corner of the
-standard, rode swiftly away with it, crying to his brothers, "Is it not
-time to flee?" "Ay, by my sooth," they both shouted, "we will bear you
-company." So they rode off at hot speed, the pursuers following. The
-youngest Maitland, turning round in the path, drew his brand and killed
-fifteen of the foremost, and the rest fell back. Then he dug his spurs
-into the sides of his faithful grey, until both the sides ran blood.
-"Thou must carry me away, or my life lies in pledge," he cried.
-
-About daybreak the brothers arrived at their uncle's castle, who, seeing
-the three Scottish lads with pursuers riding hard at their heels,
-ordered the portcullis to be drawn up and the drawbridge let down, for
-that they should lodge with him that night in spite of all England.
-
-When the three came inside the gate, they leapt down from their horses,
-and taking three long spears in their hands, they fought till it was
-full daylight, killing and wounding many of the Englishmen round the
-drawbridge. Some of the dead were carted away in waggons, and stones
-were heaped upon the rest as they lay in the gutter.
-
-King Edward proclaimed at his pavilion door that three lads of France,
-disguised, and with false words, had come and stolen away the standard,
-and had slain his men in their lawful attempt to regain it.
-
-"It ill befits a crowned king to lie," said the youngest Maitland, "and
-he shall be reproved for it before I taste meat or drink."
-
-Straightway he went before King Edward, and, kneeling low, begged leave
-to speak a word with him. "Man, thou shalt have leave to speak, even
-though thou shouldst speak all day," answered the king.
-
-"Ye said," spoke the youngest Maitland, "that three young lads of France
-had stolen away the standard with a false tale, and slain many men. But
-we are not lads of France, and never have pretended to be; we are three
-lads of fair Scotland, and the sons of Auld Maitland, nor are there men
-in all your host dare fight us three to three."
-
-"Now, by my sooth," said the young Edward, who stood by, "Ye shall be
-well fitted, for Percy shall fight with the eldest, and Egbert Lunn with
-thee, and William of Lancaster with the other, and the surviving brother
-shall fight with me. Remember, Percy, how oft the Scot has cowered
-before thee; I will give thee a rig of land for every drop of Maitland
-blood."
-
-So they set to, and the eldest Maitland clanked Percy over the head and
-wounded him so deeply that the best blood of his body ran down his hair.
-"I have slain one," shouted Maitland to his brothers; "slay ye the other
-two, and that will be good company, and if the two shall slay ye both,
-ye shall get no help from me."[#]
-
-[#] According to the laws of chivalry, having slain his own man, he
-could, if he pleased, come to the assistance of the others.
-
-But Egbert Lunn was like a baited bear and had seen many battles, and
-when Maitland saw that his youngest brother was having the worst of it,
-he could not restrain himself longer, and shouting, "I am no king; my
-word shall not stand," he struck Egbert over the head and slew him.
-"Now I have slain two; slay ye one for good company," he cried; "neither
-shall ye get any help from me even if the one shall slay ye both." So
-the two brothers slew the third, and hung him over the drawbridge for
-all the host to see.
-
-Then they rode and ran, but still got not away, but hovered round,
-boasting: "We be three lads of fair Scotland that fain would see some
-fighting."
-
-When young Edward heard this, he cried wrathfully, "I'll take yon lad
-and bind him, and bring him bound to thee."
-
-"Now God forbid that ever thou shouldst try that," said the king; "we
-have lost three worthy leaders; wouldst thou be the fourth? Never again
-would I be happy if thou wert to hang on yonder drawbridge."
-
-But Edward struck fiercely at Maitland, cleaving his stout helmet and
-biting right near his brain. When Maitland saw his own blood flowing he
-threw away his weapon, and springing angrily at young Edward's throat,
-he swung him thrice about and flung him on the ground, holding him there
-though he was of great strength.
-
-"Now let him up," cried King Edward, "let him come to me, and for thy
-deed thou shalt have three earldoms."
-
-"Nay," replied Maitland, "never shall it be said in France or in
-Scotland that Edward once lay under me and got up again," and with that
-he pierced him through the heart and hung him over the drawbridge with
-the other three.
-
-"Now take from me my bed of feathers," said the king, "make me a bed of
-straw. Would that I had not lived to see the day that makes my heart so
-sad."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter VI*
-
- *The Mystery of the Eildons*
-
-
- "Before their eyes the Wizard lay
- As if he had not been dead a day.
- His hoary beard in silver roll'd,
- He seemed some seventy winters old.
- High and majestic was his look,
- At which the fellest friends had shook,
- And all unruffled was his face;
- They trusted his soul had gotten grace."
- SCOTT: _Lay of the Last Minstrel._
-
-
-Just above Melrose, the ruined abbey of which is one of the beauties of
-Scotland, there rises a striking mass of three hills known as "the
-triple Eildons." They rise very high above the surrounding land, and
-are steep enough to need a very hard scramble to mount to the very
-summit; but once at the top the view is wonderful indeed. On a fine day
-the Tweed can be seen winding in and out most picturesquely, till it
-loses itself in the low distant haze of the North Sea, thirty miles
-away. But even grander is the view of the entire line of the Cheviots,
-like a huge wall, fifty miles long, seen to immense advantage from
-Eildon, which towers over the rich valleys of Tweed and Teviot that lie
-between. One of the legends of the triple Eildons is that King Arthur
-lies sleeping beneath them, some day to awaken. Tradition says that he
-fought a great battle near here, by Gala Water, in the Vale of Woe.
-
-However that may be, it is certain that at the foot of Eildon lie many
-famous dead. In Melrose Abbey lies the heart of Robert Bruce, and also
-the body of the strong King Alexander II., he who first subdued and made
-obedient the wild tribes of Argyle. Here, too, is buried the brave
-Douglas who died so gallantly on the field of Otterbourne; and also of
-another brave Douglas who got his death wound at Poictiers.
-
-Sir Walter Scott, who did more than any other man to spread all over the
-world the knowledge of Scotland, Scottish history, Scottish romance, and
-Scottish character, lies buried on the southern side of Eildon, in the
-rival abbey of Dryburgh. But Melrose can claim a man who in his day was
-an object of the deepest wonder and terror--Michael Scott, the famous
-wizard of the thirteenth century, he who brought the learning of
-Aristotle to expound to Western Europe, he whom Dante described as
-learned in every deep spell of the magic arts. Perhaps he was only a
-scientist, born before his time; yet even to-day old folk in the country
-remember that it was he who is said to have cleft the head of Eildon
-Hill into three!
-
-One of the many strange tales told of Michael Scott is this:--
-
-They say that the lord of Morpeth, in Northumberland, promised the great
-wizard a rich reward if he would only make the sea roll up the valley of
-the pretty river Wansbeck till it reached Morpeth, so that vessels could
-sail up to the town. The distance is seven miles, and the wizard,
-declaring the matter a most simple one, prepared his magic spell. He
-then said that if a certain man would run from the sea to the town, and
-on no account look back, whatever he heard, the desire of the lord would
-be satisfied. The man no sooner started to run than he heard the waters
-following him. Faster and faster he went, and faster and faster came
-the ocean, dashing and roaring, never overtaking him, but always so near
-his heels as to fill him with ever greater and greater terror.
-
-Before he had finished the third mile he was in such a state of alarm
-that he could not resist the impulse to see what was happening. He
-turned round, and the spell was broken; the waters had followed him thus
-far, but would come no further. Even the best of wizards will fail when
-his instructions are not obeyed.
-
-So says the story. People are free to believe it or not, as they
-please. It is certain that the sea runs nearly three miles up the
-Wansbeck valley, and there stops; but many people think that that is
-explained by the natural rise of the land!
-
-The story of how Michael Scott came to divide the Eildon Hill into three
-runs as follows:--
-
-The wizard had one very active little demon, who was always bothering
-his master to give him something to do. First Michael commanded him to
-put a barrier across the Tweed at Kelso, thinking to keep him quiet for
-at least a week; it was done in a single night, and again the demon
-demanded work. Then Michael set him to divide Eildon into three; this
-also was done in a night, and again the demon came clamouring for
-employment. So in despair the wizard ordered him to make ropes out of
-sea-sand! This, of course, is impossible, as the sand will not hold
-together. But if you go down to the shore on the south-east coast of
-Scotland on a dark and stormy night, you can still hear what sounds like
-the demon moaning and groaning over his impossible task; and there is
-certainly a barrier across the Tweed at Kelso, and the Eildon Hill is
-certainly divided into three! So you may believe as much as you please
-of this story.
-
-Another tale that is told of the magic powers of this famous man relates
-that he was once chosen to go as ambassador from the King of Scotland to
-the King of France on urgent business. Instead of going, as is usual in
-such cases, with a number of followers, he conjured up a demon shaped
-like a huge black horse, and rode away over the sea. When half-way
-across the North Sea the horse said to his rider:--
-
-"What do the old women of Scotland say at bed-time?" Had the magician
-fallen into the trap and named a prayer, the demon would have
-disappeared and the wizard would have been drowned! But Michael Scott
-merely commanded his steed to go on quickly and not to talk. Very soon
-he came to Paris, tied his horse to the gate of the French king's
-palace, and boldly entered and stated his business. The French king
-sneered at an ambassador who was not followed by a train of knights, and
-began at once to refuse all he asked. "Wait a moment, your Majesty,"
-said Michael, "till you have seen my horse stamp three times."
-
-At the first stamp the ground so shook that every steeple in Paris
-rocked, making all the bells ring loudly; at the second stamp the king
-heard behind him a loud crash that made him leap three feet in the air;
-looking round, he saw that three of the towers of his palace had fallen;
-the horse raised his foot to stamp a third time, but the king was so
-terrified that he shouted hastily that he would grant all that Michael
-asked if only he would keep his horse from stamping!
-
-Whether this tale is true or not, Michael Scott was certainly one of the
-ambassadors sent to bring back the Maid of Norway to Scotland on the
-death of King Alexander III. He wrote many learned books, and possessed
-many others; and they say that when he was buried at Melrose many of
-these same magic books were buried with him.
-
-To this romantic district of the Eildons belonged True Thomas, Thomas
-the Rhymer, or Thomas of Ercildoune, as he was variously called, who was
-held in awe by Border-folks as a prophet. The ruins of his tower are
-still shown by the pretty river Leader, just about two miles above the
-spot where it joins the Tweed. The Rhymer seems to have died a few
-years before 1300; but despite the passing of six centuries he is still
-remembered. The story of how he gained his prophetic powers is quite
-worth hearing, whether we believe it or not.
-
-The tale goes that Thomas was on Huntlie bank, near the Eildon Hills,
-when he saw a wonderful lady approaching him. She was dressed in
-grass-green silk, with a mantle of fine velvet, and the noble horse on
-which she rode had silver bells in its mane. Thomas was so surprised at
-this remarkable sight that when the lady came near he dropped on his
-knee and pulled off his cap, and cried out, reverently, that she must be
-the Queen of Heaven. But she answered that she was Queen of fair
-Elfland, and dared him, with a witching glance, to kiss her lips. The
-bold and gallant Thomas did not need a second invitation, and promptly
-kissed the fairy, when she seized upon him and fled away with him
-swifter than the wind.
-
-Soon all living land was left behind, and they came to a wild place
-where three roads met. One was a narrow path, beset with thorns and
-briers; and this the fairy said was the road of righteousness, which
-very few people ever troubled to find. Another was a broad and
-attractive road, which was the way of sinners; whilst the third, a
-pretty winding road, led to Elfland, and thither they went together.
-
-Soon there was neither sun nor moon to lighten the way, and Thomas and
-his companion waded through rivers above the knee. The sea moaned and
-roared in the dread darkness, and Thomas somehow found that they waded
-oft through streams of red blood--blood that had been shed on earth.
-Then they came to a beautiful garden, and the Elfland queen gave Thomas
-an apple to eat, saying:--
-
-"Take this for thy wages, true Thomas; it will give thee the tongue that
-can never lie." Poor Thomas turned pale at the thought of such a gift.
-"Let my tongue be my own!" he pleaded; "how shall I buy or sell in any
-market, flatter a prince, or compliment a lady, if you give me such a
-tongue!"
-
-But the Elfland queen would take no denial, and Thomas had to do her
-behest, wherefore for the rest of his life Thomas carried with him this
-gift of truthfulness.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter VII*
-
- *Black Agnes of Dunbar*
-
-
-The fortress of Dunbar was always a very important one to the Scots. It
-commanded the coast road from England across the Border to Edinburgh,
-not only one of the best routes in itself, but one which had the
-additional advantage to the English that by following it they could keep
-in touch with their ships. So it is not surprising that many stirring
-events in history took place at this historic town.
-
-King Edward I. of England won a very important victory at Dunbar during
-his first invasion of Scotland, and to the place which had witnessed the
-triumph of the father, his son, Edward II., fled for safety after his
-defeat at Bannockburn, taking ship thence back to England. In the time
-of Mary Queen of Scots the fortress was held by Earl Bothwell; from here
-he consented to the surrender of poor Mary, and here he rested in safety
-before his final flight to Scandinavia. Oliver Cromwell fought and won
-at Dunbar his desperate battle with the Scottish Presbyterians, the fate
-of which for some time hung in the balance. Cromwell considered the
-place so valuable that he had new harbour works made there, and a
-portion of his work, forming part of the east pier of the present much
-larger harbour, is still to be seen.
-
-The last time that Dunbar resounded to the march of an army bent on
-immediate fight was in 1745, when the boastful English general, Sir John
-Cope, landed here to engage the Highland followers of Prince Charles
-Edward (called the "Young Pretender"). Prince Charlie was at Edinburgh,
-and Dunbar Castle commanded the road into England. Cope asserted that
-the Highlanders would run away at the mere sight of his army. He
-marched westward, but was surprised in the early morning by his enemies
-when near Prestonpans. In less than ten minutes it was the unprepared
-English who were flying in disorder, utterly routed.
-
-The foregoing is but a brief outline of the stormy history of those grey
-and ruined battlements overlooking the bleak North Sea at the
-southernmost point of entrance to the noble Firth of Forth. The mention
-of these stirring incidents, however, will serve to show what a very
-important place Dunbar was, and that it was necessary to Scottish safety
-that a strong hand should have charge of its fortress. We are now to
-see how at one of the most critical hours a woman was to hold command,
-and to hold it worthily.
-
-Early in the reign of King Edward III. of England Scottish affairs were
-in some confusion. King Robert Bruce had lately died, leaving a son,
-King David II., then only five years old. That great leader and friend
-of Bruce, Randolph, Earl of Moray, was appointed Guardian of Scotland,
-but he too soon died. Edward III., anxious to interfere in Scottish
-affairs, agreed to help Edward Balliol to make himself king of the
-Scots. So an English army was again in Scotland, and one of the places
-they were keenest to take was the fortress of Dunbar.
-
-[Illustration: _Black Agnes_]
-
-The castle was a very strong one. It was built on a chain of great
-rocks that stretched out to sea, and could only be reached from land by
-one road, which was, of course, strictly guarded. The lord of the
-castle was the Earl of March (the word March in those days meant a
-border-land), but he was away with the Scottish army, and his wife was
-in charge of the castle. She was the daughter of that brave Earl of
-Moray, Guardian of Scotland, who has just been mentioned. The English
-army was led by an experienced general, the Earl of Salisbury, and he
-probably thought that he would not have much trouble in overcoming
-"Black Agnes," as the dark-haired countess was called.
-
-He soon discovered that she was of heroic mould, however, for though he
-himself led the storming-parties, she on her side, urging on her men in
-person, hurled back his every attack. The Lady Agnes was quite
-fearless, and treated the siege as if it were a pastime to be enjoyed.
-When the English, with machines made for the purpose, hurled heavy
-stones against the walls, Black Agnes would call one of her maidens with
-a napkin to wipe off the dust that they made! The biggest of all the
-English war-machines was called a sow, and when it was brought to the
-walls the countess cried out in rough jest that it was surrounded by
-little pigs. At the same moment a mass of rock, which she had caused to
-be loosened, was hurled by her men on to the English, crushing their sow
-and many soldiers with it.
-
-At last there seemed a chance for the English. Near midnight a Scot
-came into their camp, saying that he was ready to betray the castle for
-a reward. The Earl of Salisbury and some chosen knights rode carefully
-forward, and found the gate open and the portcullis raised, as the man
-had promised. But for all that, they doubted if Black Agnes could so
-far relax her vigilance; wherefore instead of the earl entering first,
-he sent forward a retainer. His caution was soon justified, for no
-sooner had this man passed the gate than the portcullis fell. It was a
-trick to capture the earl, but the Scots were disappointed this time.
-
-The gallant English lord was loud in admiration of the brave Scottish
-lady who was thus defying him. Once when examining the defences with a
-lieutenant, an arrow struck his companion dead. "The countess's
-love-arrows pierce to the heart," said Salisbury, on his return to the
-camp. Despite the courtly manner in which the well-bred baron referred
-to the lady, however, he did not relax his efforts to overcome her.
-
-Salisbury's land forces had now surrounded the castle on the land side,
-while his ships at sea completed the blockade. The garrison was
-threatened with starvation. Greater and greater became the privations
-of the heroic defenders. The countess, no less brave than ever, hoped
-on, though ground for hope grew less and less. She could not bring
-herself to think of defeat, and her brave, bright face still gave
-courage and inspiration to all.
-
-Meantime the story of the struggle and difficulties of the defenders was
-raising up helpers, and Sir Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie got ready a
-light vessel filled with provisions and manned by forty brave Scots, who
-only waited for a dark night to make the attempt to steal past the
-English fleet. They lay hidden by the Bass Rock, a lofty islet at the
-mouth of the Firth of Forth, some seven or eight miles from Dunbar,
-until one starless night they stole very cautiously down the wild
-coast-line of Haddingtonshire, sometimes all but bumping into an English
-vessel in the dark. Fortune favours the brave, and despite dangers and
-difficulties they got safely at last to the castle, whose distant light
-had been their guide. Be sure Black Agnes welcomed them! This proved to
-be the turning-point of the long siege. With fresh hope, the garrison
-made a sudden sally on the English, driving back their advance guard,
-and after five months of fierce but fruitless attempts, Salisbury was
-compelled to withdraw his forces and admit defeat. Nevertheless, the
-English were gallant enough to sing their praises of this Scottish
-heroine; their minstrels made songs in her honour, in one of which
-Salisbury is made to say:--
-
- "Came I early, came I late,
- I found Black Agnes at the gate."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter VIII*
-
- *The Young Tamlane*
-
-
- "He's ta'en her by the milk-white hand,
- Among the leaves so green."
-
-
-This tale belongs to the romantic side of the Border minstrelsy, and
-illustrates some of the common superstitions of olden times concerning
-elves and fairies. The scene is laid in the Selkirk or Ettrick Forest,
-a mountainous tract covered with the remains of the old Caledonian
-Forest. About a mile above Selkirk is a plain called Carterhaugh, and
-here may still be seen those fairy rings of which it was believed that
-anyone sleeping upon one will wake in a fairy city. And here was, and
-perhaps still is, an ancient well. The ballad opens by telling how all
-young maids were forbidden to come or go by way of Carterhaugh, "for
-young Tamlane (or Thomalin) is there," and every one going by
-Carterhaugh is obliged to leave him something in pledge. But the Lady
-Janet, the fairest of the Selkirk lasses, was obstinate, and declared
-that she would come or go to Carterhaugh, as she pleased, "and ask no
-leave of him," since the land there belonged to her by hereditary right.
-She kilted her green mantle above her knee, and braided her yellow hair
-above her brow, and off she went to Carterhaugh. When she got to the
-well, she found the steed of the elfin knight Tamlane standing there,
-but he himself was away.
-
- "She hadna pu'd a red, red rose,
- A rose but barely three;
- Till up and starts a wee, wee man
- At Lady Janet's knee.
-
- Says--'Why pu' ye the rose, Janet?
- What gars (makes) ye break the tree?
- Or why come ye to Carterhaugh,
- Withouten leave of me?'
-
- Says--'Carterhaugh it is mine ain;
- My daddy gave it me:
- I'll come and gang to Carterhaugh,
- And ask nae leave o' thee.'"
-
-
-But Tamlane took her by the hand and worked upon her his spells, which
-no maiden might resist, however proud she might be.
-
-When she came back to her father's hall, she looked pale and wan; and it
-seemed that she had some sore sickness. She ceased to take any pleasure
-in combing her yellow hair, and everything she ate seemed like to be her
-death. When her ladies played at ball, she, once the strongest player,
-was now the faintest. One day her father spoke out, and said he, "Full
-well I know that you must have some lover." She said:--
-
- "'If my love were an earthly knight,
- As he's an elfin grey,
- I wouldna give my own true love
- For no lord that ye hae.'"
-
-
-Then she prinked herself, and preened herself, all by the light of the
-moon alone, and went away to Carterhaugh, to speak with Tamlane. When
-she got to the well, she found the steed standing, but Tamlane was away.
-She had barely pulled a double rose, when up started the elf.
-
-"Why pull ye the rose, Janet?" says he; "why pull ye the rose within
-this garden green?" "The truth ye'll tell me, Tamlane; were ye ever in
-holy chapel, or received into the Christian Church?" "The truth I'll
-tell thee, Janet; a knight was my father, and a lady was my mother, like
-your own parents. Randolph, Earl Moray, was my sire; Dunbar, Earl
-March, is thine. We loved when we were children, which yet you may
-remember. When I was a boy just turned nine, my uncle sent for me to
-hunt, and hawk, and ride with him, and keep him company. There came a
-wind out of the north, a deep sleep came over me, and I fell from my
-horse. The queen of the fairies took me off to yon green hill, and now
-I'm a fairy, lithe and limber. In Fairyland we know neither sickness
-nor pain. We quit our body, or repair unto them, when we please. We can
-inhabit, earth, or air, as we will. Our shapes and size we can convert
-to either large or small. We sleep in rose-buds, revel in the stream,
-wanton lightly on the wind, or glide on a sunbeam. I would never tire,
-Janet, to dwell in Elfland, were it not that every seven years a tithe
-is paid to hell, and I am so fair of flesh, I fear 'twill be myself. If
-you dare to win your true love, you have no time to lose. To-night is
-Hallowe'en, and the fairy folk ride. If you would win your true love,
-bide at Miles Cross." Miles Cross is about half a mile from
-Carterhaugh, and Janet asked how she should know Tamlane among so many
-unearthly knights. "The first company that passes by, let them go. The
-next company that passes by, let them go. The third company that passes
-by, I'll be one of those. First let pass the black steed, Janet, then
-let pass the brown; but grip the milk-white steed, and pull down the
-rider--
-
- "For I ride on the milk-white steed,
- And aye nearest the town;
- Because I was a christened knight,
- They gave me that renown."
-
-
-Tamlane went on to explain that his fairy comrades would make every
-effort to disgust her with her captive. They would turn him in her very
-arms into an adder; they would change him into a burning faggot, into a
-red-hot iron goad, but she must hold him fast. In order to remove the
-enchantment, she must dip him in a churn of milk, and then in a barrel
-of water. She must still persevere, for they would shape him in her
-arms into a badger, eel, dove, swan, and, last of all, into a naked man,
-but
-
- "Cast your green mantle over me,
- I'll be myself again."
-
-
-So fair Janet in her green mantle went that gloomy night to Miles Cross.
-The heavens were black, the place was inexpressibly dreary, a north wind
-raged; but there she stood, eagerly wishing to embrace her lover.
-Between the hours of twelve and one she heard strange eldrich sounds and
-the ringing of elfin bridles, which gladdened her heart. The oaten
-pipes of the faires grew shrill, the hemlock blew clear. The fairies
-cannot bear solemn sounds or sober thoughts; they sing like skylarks,
-inspired by love and joy. Fair Janet stood upon the dreary heath, and
-the sounds waxed louder as the fairy train came riding on. Will o' the
-Wisp shone out as a twinkling light before them, and soon she saw the
-fairy bands passing. She let the black steed go by, and then the brown.
-But she gripped fast the milk-white steed, and pulled down the rider.
-Then up rose an eldrich cry, "He's won among us all!" As Janet grasped
-him in her arms the fairies changed him into a newt, an adder, and many
-other fantastic and terrifying shapes. She held him fast in every
-shape. They turned him at last into a naked man in her arms, but she
-wrapped him in her green mantle. At last her stedfast courage was
-rewarded, she redeemed the fairies' captive, and by so doing won his
-true love! Then up spoke the Queen of Fairies, "She that has borrowed
-young Tamlane has got a stately groom! She's taken the bonniest knight
-in all my company! But had I known, Tamlane," said the fairy queen, "had
-I known that a lady would borrow thee, I would have taken out thy two
-grey eyes, and put in wooden eyes. I would have taken out thy heart of
-flesh, Tamlane, and put in a heart of stone. I would have paid my tithe
-seven times to hell ere I would have let her win you away."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter IX*
-
- *The Gay Goss-Hawk*
-
-
-In the opening lines of this old ballad Lord William is talking to the
-goss-hawk, who tells his master that he is looking pale and thin, and
-seeks to know che cause.
-
- "O waly, waly, my gay goss-hawk,
- Gin your feathering be sheen!"
- "And waly, waly, my master dear,
- Gin ye look pale and lean!
-
- O have ye tint[#] at tournament
- Your sword, or yet your spear?
- Or mourn ye for the Southern lass,
- Whom ye may not win near?"
-
-[#] lost
-
- "I have not tint at tournament
- My sword, nor yet my spear;
- But sair[#] I mourn for my true love,
- Wi' mony a bitter tear.
-
-[#] sore
-
- But weel's me on ye, my gay goss-hawk,
- Ye can baith speak and flee;
- Ye sall carry a letter to my love,
- Bring an answer back to me."
-
- "But how sall I your true love find,
- Or how suld I her know?
- I bear a tongue ne'er wi' her spake,
- An eye that ne'er her saw."
-
- "O weel sall ye my true love ken,
- Sae sune[#] as ye her see;
- For, of a' the flowers of fair England,
- The fairest flower is she.
-
-[#] soon.
-
- The red that's on my true love's cheek
- Is like blood-drops on the snaw;
- The white that is on her breast bare,
- Like the down o' the white sea-maw.
-
- And even at my love's bour-door
- There grows a flowering birk;[#]
- And ye maun sit and sing thereon
- As she gangs to the kirk.
-
-[#] birch.
-
- And four-and-twenty fair ladyes
- Will to the Mass repair;
- But weel may ye my ladye ken,
- The fairest ladye there."
-
- Lord William has written a love-letter,
- Put it under his pinion grey;
- An' he is awa' to Southern land
- As fast as wings can gae.
-
- And even at the ladye's bour[#]
- There grew a flowering birk;
- And he sat down and sung thereon
- As she gaed to the kirk.
-
-[#] bower.
-
- And weel he kent that ladye fair
- Amang her maidens free,
- For the flower that springs in May morning
- Was not sae sweet as she.
-
- He lighted at the ladye's yate[#]
- And sat him on a pin,[#]
- And sang fu' sweet the notes o' love,
- Till a' was cosh[#] within.
-
-[#] gate.
-[#] pine.
-[#] quiet.
-
- And first he sang a low low note,
- And syne[#] he sang a clear;
- And aye the o'erword[#] o' the sang
- Was--"Your love can no win here."
-
-[#] then.
-[#] refrain.
-
- "Feast on, feast on, my maidens a',
- The wine flows you amang,
- While I gang to my shot-window
- And hear yon bonnie bird's sang.
-
- Sing on, sing on, my bonny bird,
- The sang ye sung yestreen,
- For weel I ken, by your sweet singing
- Ye are frae my true love sen."[#]
-
-[#] sent.
-
- O first he sang a merry song,
- And syne he sang a grave;
- And syne he picked his feathers grey,
- To her the letter gave.
-
- "Have there a letter from Lord William;
- He says he's sent ye three;
- He canna wait your love langer,
- But for your sake he'll die."
-
- "Gae bid him bake his bridal bread,
- And brew his bridal ale;
- And I shall meet him in Mary's Kirk,
- Lang, lang ere it be stale."
-
- The lady's gane to her chamber,
- And a moanfu' woman was she;
- As gin[#] she had taken a sudden brash[#]
- And were about to die.
-
-[#] if
-[#] illness.
-
- "A boon, a boon, my father dear,
- A boon I beg of thee!"
- "Ask not that haughty Scottish lord,
- For him ye ne'er shall see.
-
- But for your honest asking else,
- Weel granted it shall be."
- "Then, gin I die in Southern land,
- In Scotland gar[#] bury me.
-
-[#] cause
-
- And the first kirk that ye come to,
- Ye's gar the mass be sung;
- And the next kirk that ye come to
- Ye's gar the bells be rung.
-
- And when ye come to St Mary's Kirk,
- Ye's tarry there till night."
- And so her father pledged his word,
- And so his promise plight.
-
- She has ta'en her to her bigly bower
- As fast as she could fare;
- And she has drank a sleepy draught,
- That she had mixed wi' care.
-
- And pale, pale grew her rosy cheek,
- That was sae bright of blee,[#]
- And she seemed to be as surely dead
- As any one could be.
-
-[#] bloom.
-
- Then spake her cruel step-minnie,[#]
- "Tak ye the burning lead,
- And drap a drap on her bosome,
- To try if she be dead."
-
-[#] mother.
-
- They took a drap o' boiling lead,
- They drapped it on her breast;
- "Alas! alas!" her father cried,
- "She's dead without the priest."
-
- She neither chattered with her teeth,
- Nor shivered with her chin;
- "Alas! alas!" her father cried,
- "There is nae breath within."
-
- Then up arose her seven brethren,
- And hewed to her a bier;
- They hewed it frae the solid aik,[#]
- Laid it o'er wi' silver clear.
-
-[#] oak.
-
- Then up and gat her seven sisters,
- And sewed to her a kell,[#]
- And every steek[#] that they put in
- Sewed to a siller bell.
-
-[#] shroud.
-[#] stitch.
-
- The first Scots kirk that they cam to,
- They garred the bells be rung;
- The next Scots kirk that they cam to,
- They garred fhe mass be sung.
-
- But when they cam to St Mary's Kirk,
- There stude spearmen all on a row;
- And up and started Lord William,
- The chieftaine amang them a'.
-
- "Set down, set down the bier," he said,
- "Let me look her upon;"
- But as soon as Lord William touched her hand,
- Her colour began to come.
-
- She brightened like the lily flower,
- Till her pale colour was gone;
- With rosy cheek, and ruby lip,
- She smiled her love upon.
-
- "A morsel of your bread, my lord,
- And one glass of your wine;
- For I have fasted these three lang days,
- All for your sake and mine.
-
- Gae hame, gae hame, my seven bauld brothers,
- Gae hame and blaw your horn!
- I trow[#] ye wad hae gi'en me the skaith,[#]
- But I've gi'en you the scorn.
-
-[#] reckon.
-[#] harm.
-
- Commend me to my grey father,
- That wished my soul gude rest;
- But wae be to my cruel step-dame,
- Garred burn me on the breast."
-
- "Ah! woe to you, you light woman!
- And ill death may ye die!
- For we left father and sisters at hame,
- Breaking their hearts for thee."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter X*
-
- *The Corbies*
-
-
-Two ancient songs have come down to us in which the principal speakers
-are supposed to be Corbies, carrion-crows or ravens, birds which feed on
-the flesh of the dead. In both songs the birds discuss a dead knight
-upon whose rich body they wish to feed. But deep interest lies in the
-fact that the two song-writers present entirely different views of the
-case. One appeals to our feelings with a beautiful and touching picture
-of devotion, the knight's companions proving true to him in death. The
-other is far more grim, and causes us to shudder at the utter loneliness
-of the dead man, deserted by all those who in life were beholden to his
-friendship. Both are powerful and striking examples of ancient vigour
-and directness.
-
- THE TWA CORBIES
-
- As I was walking all alane,
- I heard twa corbies making a mane;[#]
- The tane unto the t'other say,
- "Where sall we gang and dine to-day?"--
-
-[#] moan.
-
- "In behint yon auld fail dyke,
- I wot there lies a new-slain knight;
- And naebody kens that he lies there,
- But his hawk, his hound, and lady fair.
-
- His hound is to the hunting gane,
- His hawk, to fetch the wild-fowl hame,
- His lady's ta'en another mate,
- Sa we may mak our dinner sweet.
-
- Ye'll sit on his white hause-bane,[#]
- And I'll pick out his bonny blue een:
- Wi' ae lock o' his gowden hair,
- We'll theek[#] our nest when it grows bare.[#]
-
-[#] neck.
-[#] thatch.
-[#] Variant reading--"We'll theek our nest--it's a' blawn hare."
-
- Mony a one for him makes mane,
- But nane sall ken where he is gane;
- O'er his white banes, when they are bare,
- The wind sall blaw for evermair."
-
-[Illustration: The Twa Corbies]
-
-
-
- THE THREE RAVENS
-
- There were three ravens sat on a tre,
- They were as black as they might be:
-
- The one of them said to his mate,
- "Where shall we our breakfast take?"--
-
- "Downe in yonder greene field,
- There lies a knight slain under his shield;
-
- "His hounds they lie downe at his feete,
- So well they their master keepe;
-
- "His hawkes they flie so eagerlie,
- There's no fowle dare come him nie.
-
- "Down there comes a fallow doe,
- As great with yong as she might goe.
-
- "She lift up his bloudy hed,
- And kist his wounds that were so red.
-
- "She got him up upon her backe,
- And carried him to earthen lake.
-
- "She buried him before the prime,
- She was dead her selfe ere even song time.
-
- "God send every gentleman,
- Such hawkes, such houndes, and such a leman."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XI*
-
- *Otterbourne and Chevy Chase*
-
-
- "It fell about the Lammas-tide,
- When moor-men win their hay,
- The doughty Douglas bound him to ride
- Into England, to drive a prey."
-
-
-The ballads of _Otterbourne_ and _Chevy Chase_ record the Scottish and
-English versions of a most stubborn Border battle. Whichever of the two
-contains the greater amount of truth, it is clear that the day was a
-bloody one, and that, moreover, it was fought on both sides with a
-chivalrous admiration for the powers of the other which is
-characteristic of those strife-loving days. Sir Philip Sidney wrote of
-it: "I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas, that I found not
-my heart moved more than with a trumpet."
-
-The ballad of _Chevy Chase_ is of later date than its rival, and it
-contains certainly one misstatement of historical fact, since Hotspur
-outlived the fight at Chevy Chase (1388) and was slain some fifteen
-years later at the battle of Shrewsbury (1403).
-
-The Scottish version of the battle of Otterbourne tells us that it was
-about the Lammas-tide or haymaking time of the year 1388 when the brave
-Earl of Douglas, with his brother, the Earl of Murray, made a foray into
-England, with a gay band of Gordons, Graemes, and Lindsays. He burned
-Tynedale and half of Bamborough and Otterdale, and marching up to
-Newcastle, rode round about the castle, crying, "Who is lord of this
-castle, and who is its lady?"
-
-Then up spake proud Lord Percy, known as _Hotspur_, and said, "I am the
-lord of this castle, and my wife is the gay lady of it."
-
-"That pleases me well," answered Douglas, "yet, ere I cross the Border
-hills, one of us shall die."
-
-Then Percy took his long spear, shod with metal, and rode right
-furiously at the Douglas; but his lady, looking from the castle wall,
-grew pale as she saw her proud lord go down before the Scottish spear.
-
-"Had we two been alone, with never an eye to see, I would have slain
-thee, but thy lance I will carry with me," said Douglas, and, to
-complete the disgrace, this lance bore attached to it the Percy pennon.
-
-"Go then to Otterbourne," said Percy, "and wait there for me, and if I
-come not before the end of three days, call me a false knight."
-
-"Otterbourne is a pleasant and a bonny place," answered Douglas; "but
-though the deer run wild among the hills and dales, and the birds fly
-wild from tree to tree, yet is there neither bread nor kale nor aught
-else to feed me and my men. Yet will I wait thee at Otterbourne to give
-thee welcome, and if thou come not in three days' time, false lord, will
-I call thee!"
-
-"By the might of Our Lady, I will come," cried the proud Percy. "And
-I," answered Douglas, "plight thee my troth that I will meet thee
-there."
-
-So Douglas and his men encamped at Otterbourne, and sent out their
-horses to pasture.
-
-But before the peep of dawn, up spake a little page: "Waken ye, waken
-ye, my good lord; the Percy is upon us!" "Ye lie, ye lie," shouted
-Douglas; "yesterday, Percy had not men enough to fight us. But if thou
-lie not, the finest bower in Otterbourne shall be thy reward, and if
-what thou sayest prove false, thou shalt be hanged on the highest tree
-in Otterbourne. Yet I have dreamed a dreary dream; I dreamed that a
-dead man won a battle and that I was that dead man."
-
-So Douglas belted on his good broadsword, and ran to the field, but
-forgot his helmet, and Percy and the Douglas fought with their swords
-together till the blood ran down like rain, and the Douglas fell,
-wounded on the brow.
-
-Then he called to him his little foot-page and told him to run quickly
-and bring to him his sister's son, Sir Hugh Montgomery.
-
-"My good nephew," said Douglas, "the death of one matters not; last
-night I dreamed a dreary dream, but yet I know the day is thine. My
-wound is deep; take thou the vanguard; bury me in the bracken high that
-grows on yonder lea, and let no man living know that a Scot lies there.
-And know that I am glad to die in battle, like my good forefathers, and
-not on a bed of sickness."
-
-Montgomery lifted up his noble lord, while his eyes wept salt tears, and
-hid him in the bracken bush that his followers might not see, and before
-daylight the Scots slew many a gallant Englishman. The good Gordons
-steeped hose and shoes in the blood of the English; the Lindsays flew
-about like fire till the battle was ended, and Percy and Montgomery
-fought till the blood ran down between them.
-
-"Now, yield thee, yield thee, Percy," cried Sir Hugh, "or I vow I will
-lay thee low!"
-
-"Since it must be so," quoth Earl Percy, "to whom shall I yield?"
-
-"Thou shalt not yield to me or to any lord, but to the bracken bush that
-grows on yonder lea!"
-
-"I will not yield to briar or bracken bush, but I would yield to Lord
-Douglas or to Sir Hugh Montgomery, if he were here."
-
-Then Montgomery made himself known, and as soon as Percy knew that it
-was Montgomery, he struck the point of his sword into the ground, and
-Montgomery, who was a courteous knight, took him up by the hand.
-
-This deed was done at Otterbourne at daybreak, where Earl Douglas was
-buried by the bracken bush, and Percy led captive into Scotland, and it
-is said that Hotspur, for his ransom, built for Montgomery the castle of
-Penoon, in Ayrshire.
-
-But the English version of these stirring events can also claim to be
-heard; the ballad upon it is called _Chevy Chase_, which means the Chase
-on the Cheviots; and so popular was this ballad that its name was given
-to a boys' game, which is so called even to this day. It tells how the
-Percy, from his castle in Northumberland, vowed that within three days
-he would hunt on the mountains of Cheviot in spite of the doughty
-Douglas and his men, and that he would kill and carry away the fattest
-deer in Cheviot.
-
-"By my faith," said Douglas, when he heard of the boast, "but I will
-hinder his hunting."
-
-Percy left Bamborough Castle with a mighty company, no less than fifteen
-hundred bold archers chosen out of three shires.
-
-The foray began on a Monday morning in the high Cheviot Hills, and many
-a child yet unborn was to rue the day.
-
-The drivers went through the woods and raised the deer, and the bowmen
-shot them with their broad arrows. Then the wild deer rushed through
-the woods, only to be met and killed by the greyhounds, and before
-noontide a hundred fat deer lay dead. The bugles sounded, "A mort!" and
-on all sides Percy and his men assembled to see the cutting up of the
-venison.
-
-Said Percy: "The Douglas promised to meet me here this day, yet right
-well did I know that he would fail." But a Northumberland squire saw
-the doughty Douglas coming with a mighty company, with spear and
-batter-axe and sword. Never were men hardier of heart and hand seen in
-Christendom--two thousand spearmen born along the banks of the Tweed and
-Teviotdale. Then said Lord Percy: "Now leave off the cutting of the
-deer, and take good heed to your bows, for never had ye more need of
-them since ye were born."
-
-Earl Douglas rode before his men, his armour glittering like a burning
-coal, and never was such a bold baron. "Tell me whose men ye are," said
-he, "and who gave ye leave to hunt in Cheviot without word asked of me?"
-
-Then answered Lord Percy, "We will not tell thee whose men we are, and
-we will hunt here in spite of thee. We have killed the fattest harts in
-Cheviot and will carry them away."
-
-"By my troth," said Douglas, "one of us shall die this day. Yet it were
-great pity to kill all these guiltless men. Thou, Percy, art a lord of
-land, and I am called an earl in my country; let our men stand by, and
-we will fight together."
-
-"Now a curse on his crown, who says nay to that," cried Lord Percy. "By
-my troth, Douglas, thou shalt never see the day either in England,
-Scotland, or France, when I fear to meet one, man to man."
-
-Then spoke Richard Witherington, a squire of Northumberland. "Never
-shall this be told in England, to the shame of good King Harry the
-Fourth. I wot ye be two great lords, and I but a poor squire, yet would
-I never stand and look on while my captain fought. While I can wield a
-weapon, I will not fail, both heart and hand."
-
-So the English with good heart bent their bows, and slew seven score
-spearmen with the first arrows they shot.
-
-Earl Douglas stayed on the field, but that he was a good captain was
-truly seen, for he wrought great woe and mischief. He parted his host
-in three like a proud chieftain, and they came in on every side with
-their mighty spears, wounding the English archers and slaying many a
-brave man.
-
-Then the English pulled out their brands, and it was a heavy sight to
-see the bright swords light on the helmets, striking through the rich
-mail, and the cloth of many folds under it, and laying many low.
-
-At last the Douglas and the Percy met and fought with swords of Milan
-steel till the blood spurted like rain and hail from their helmets.
-
-"Hold thee, Percy," said Douglas, "and I will bring thee to James, our
-Scottish king, where thou shalt have an earl's wages and free ransom,
-for thou art the manfullest man that ever yet I conquered fighting in
-the field."
-
-"Nay, then," said Lord Percy. "I told thee before that never would I
-yield to any man of woman born."
-
-With that there came an arrow hastily from a mighty man, and struck Earl
-Douglas through the breast bone, and never more did he speak a word but
-only this: "Fight, my merry men, while ye may--my life's days are done."
-
-Then Percy leaned on his hand, and when he saw the Douglas die, he said,
-"Woe is me. I would have parted with my land for three years to have
-saved thy life, for a better man of heart and hand was not in all the
-north country."
-
-But Sir Hugh Montgomery, a Scottish knight, when he saw the Douglas done
-to death, grasped a spear and rode through a hundred archers, never
-slackening his pace till he came to Lord Percy, whom he set upon,
-sending his mighty spear clean through his body, so that a man might see
-a long cloth-yard and more at the other side. There were no two better
-captains in Christendom than were that day slain.
-
-When one of the Northumberland archers saw this, he drew an arrow to his
-bow and set upon Montgomery, until the swan feathers of his arrows were
-wet with his heart's blood.
-
-Not one man gave way, but still they stood hewing at each other, while
-they were able.
-
-This battle began in Cheviot, an hour before noon, nor was it half done
-at evensong, but they fought on by moonlight though many had scarce the
-strength to stand. Of fifteen hundred English archers only fifty-three
-remained, and of two thousand Scottish spearmen only fifty-five
-remained, all the rest being slain in Cheviot.
-
-With Lord Percy were slain, Sir John of Agerstone, Sir Roger the gentle
-Hartly, Sir William the bold Heron, Sir George the worthy Lovel, a
-renowned knight, and Sir Ralph the rich Rugby. Woe was it that
-Witherington was slain, for when both his legs were hewn in two he
-kneeled and fought on his knees.
-
-With the brave Douglas were slain Sir Hugh Montgomery, and worthy Sir
-Davy Liddle, that was his sister's son; Sir Charles, a Murray who
-refused to flee, and Sir Hugh Maxwell. On the morrow they made biers of
-birch and grey hazel, and many widows bore weeping from the field the
-bodies of their dead husbands. Well may Teviotdale and Northumberland
-wail and moan for two such great captains.
-
-Word came to James the Scottish king at Edinburgh, that the brave
-Douglas, Lieutenant of the Marches, lay slain in Cheviot, and he wept
-and wrung his hands, and said, "Alas! Woe is me; there will never be
-such another captain in Scotland."
-
-Word came also to London, to Harry the Fourth, that Lord Percy,
-Lieutenant of the Marches, lay slain in Cheviot. "God have mercy on his
-soul," said King Harry; "I have a hundred captains in England as good as
-he, yet I wager my life that his death shall be well avenged"; and this
-vow he kept, at the Battle of Homildon Hill, where he beat down six and
-thirty Scottish knights on one day.
-
-But so real to the Borderers was their grief over their dead that the
-ballad ends with a quaint but heartfelt appeal to the Prince of Peace:--
-
- "Jesus Christ our ills abate,
- And to His bliss us bring!
- Thus was the hunting of the Cheviot;
- God send us all good ending!"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XII*
-
- *The Douglas Clan*
-
-
-The Douglas clan was at one time the strongest of all the great Scotch
-families on the Border; they were wild and proud and recklessly brave,
-and no account of the Borders would be complete without the broad
-details of their tragic history.
-
-The first to raise the fame of the family to the highest place in honour
-was the brave Sir James Douglas, the friend of Bruce, and, after Bruce
-himself, the greatest hero among the Scots of that stormy period. He
-was a powerful, black-haired man with a dark complexion, and was called
-by the English "The Black Douglas." So great was the terror of his name
-that English mothers on the Border, when their children were naughty,
-would tell them that the Black Douglas would get them, or if they were
-fretful they would comfort them with the assurance--
-
- "Hush ye, hush ye, little pet ye,
- Hush ye, hush ye, do not fret ye,
- The Black Douglas shall not get ye."
-
-
-Sir Walter Scott relates how, when the garrison of Roxburgh Castle were
-making merry at Shrovetide, the castle was surprised by the Douglas, who
-mounted to the ramparts where a woman was crooning the refrain to her
-babe. "You are not so sure of that," he said, laying his hand upon her
-shoulder. It is pleasant to read that on this occasion the Black
-Douglas did not turn out so black as he was painted, and beyond her
-fright the woman came to no harm at the hands of Sir James and his
-followers.
-
-At one time the English had seized the Douglas castle in Lanarkshire,
-and Sir James and his men disguised themselves and came to church on
-Palm Sunday, when the English soldiers were worshipping there. Suddenly
-in the midst of the service Douglas dropped his cloak and drew his sword
-and shouted: "A Douglas! a Douglas!"
-
-The English soldiers were taken by surprise, and were killed before they
-could recover themselves. This deed brought Douglas great fame, but
-after all it was hardly a fair fight.
-
-In 1327, when Edward III. was only fifteen years old, Douglas led a raid
-into Northumberland and Durham which did the English much damage.
-Edward came after them with an English army, and the Scots, being
-outnumbered, were compelled to dodge up and down in order to avoid a
-pitched battle. But in one bold night attack, Douglas and five hundred
-of the Scots penetrated to the king's tent, and almost succeeded in
-taking him prisoner. Failing in this, they returned unharmed to their
-own country, and shortly afterwards, at the Treaty of Northampton in
-1328, King Edward III. agreed to acknowledge Robert Bruce as King of
-Scotland, and the long war between Scotland and England ended.
-
-A year later Bruce died, but after a romantic custom of that day he
-bequeathed his heart to his gallant friend, Sir James Douglas. Douglas
-had this heart enclosed in a silver casket and carried it hung about his
-neck. The war with England being over, this restless knight sought
-adventures in Spain, fighting against the Saracen followers of Mahomet.
-In one fierce battle, he and his men were surrounded by their enemies.
-Douglas, probably realising that this was his last fight, took the
-casket and flung it into the midst of his foes, crying: "Go first in
-fight, as thou wert used to do; Douglas will follow thee or die!" He
-then rushed desperately after it, fighting his way on till at last his
-dead body fell on this dearly prized relic, which he guarded to the end.
-The casket lies buried in the Abbey of Melrose, but Douglas's body was
-laid in his own church.
-
-Of the bold Earl Douglas who fought and died at Otterbourne the tale is
-told in our last chapter. We may pass on to another famous Douglas,
-this time a heroine, who lived in the reign of James I. of Scotland
-(quite a different king from James I. of England). When James was only
-twelve years old, he was taken prisoner by Henry IV. of England, and
-kept captive till he was thirty. But he was given an education fit for
-a king, and in England he met the lady he devotedly loved, Lady Joan
-Beaufort, daughter of the Earl of Somerset. He addressed a beautiful
-poem to her and married her, and these two always most dearly loved one
-another. When at last his long captivity came to an end, he got back to
-Scotland to find the kingdom in disorder, and the nobles defying the law
-and acting as they pleased. James, a strong and able king, set his
-strength against their strength, and gradually got his whole kingdom
-into order and ruled with wisdom and justice.
-
-But in these days it was impossible to be firm without sternness, and
-James made enemies. When he was staying at Perth one Christmas-time,
-these enemies, led by a bold villain called Sir Robert Graham, secretly
-encircled the house where he was staying. The unarmed king only heard
-of their presence when they were advancing, fully armed, to his room.
-He tore up a plank in the floor, seeking thus to find a hiding-place.
-The enemies were almost at the door, and it was necessary to delay their
-entrance, for one minute might save his life. All the bars of the door
-had been removed beforehand, but a brave heroine, Kate Douglas, thrust
-her arm through the staples. The villains were angered to find the door
-barred against them, and hurled their weight upon it.
-
-The Douglas heroine stood there, her pale face set hard, without a cry,
-as the crash broke the bone of her brave strong arm, and the would-be
-murderers staggered in. But alas! the sacrifice of Kate Douglas availed
-nothing except to place her name upon the immortal roll of the heroes of
-the ages, for after a brief search the murderers found the king and slew
-him.
-
-The queen, who had loved James with the utmost devotion, found her love
-give added fierceness to her hate against his murderers. They were all
-tracked down, and she caused them to die with terrible tortures, the
-cruellest of which she reserved for Graham. Thus did great King James's
-"milk-white dove" revenge the slaying of the husband she loved dearer
-than life itself.
-
-Till this time it had seemed as if the Douglases were devoted to the
-good of Scotland. But in those wild, reckless times qualities that were
-strong for good could also be strong for evil.
-
-When James I. of Scotland was murdered, his young son was only six years
-old. This meant that for many years there would be no strong king able
-to cope with the lawless spirit of the nobles, strongest among whom were
-the proud, bold Douglases.
-
-The lawlessness of the times is well shown by an act of foul treachery
-committed by Sir William Crichton, Governor of Edinburgh, and an enemy
-of the Douglas family. He invited one of the earls to dinner at the
-castle, and while there had him seized and beheaded. It is said that a
-bull's head was placed on the dish in front of Douglas, this being a
-sign that he was to be killed. The people called this "Douglas's black
-dinner," and sang of the wicked deed in sorrowful verse:--
-
- "Edinburgh Castle, town and tower
- God grant thou sink for sin!
- And even for that black dinner
- Earl Douglas got therein."
-
-
-But the new King James found, before he was twenty years old, that the
-Douglases themselves could act with equal cruelty and lawlessness.
-
-The king was fond of a brave young soldier named Maclellan, who, having
-some quarrel with Earl Douglas, was thrown by him into a dungeon in his
-castle. So the king wrote a letter to Douglas, saying he must set
-Maclellan free, and sent this letter by Maclellan's uncle, Sir Patrick
-Gray. When Douglas saw Gray riding up to his castle, he at once guessed
-the errand. So he came out as though he were delighted to see him, and
-insisted on his sitting down and having dinner with him, before the
-king's letter was opened and discussed. But the treacherous earl had
-given secret orders that Maclellan should be beheaded while they were
-dining, so that after dinner was over, and the letter was read, he could
-say that this had been done before he had seen the king's message.
-
-Gray dared not show his anger, for fear he too should be killed. He
-mounted his swift horse and rode away, but the moment he was outside the
-castle walls he shook his mailed fist at Douglas and cried out--
-
-"Treacherous earl, disgrace to knighthood, some day you shall pay for
-this black, base deed!"
-
-Douglas mounted his men, and they pursued Gray almost to the gates of
-Edinburgh; but he rode for his life, and faster than they.
-
-When Douglas and the king next met there was a stormy scene. The earl
-was so proud and wilful that he would not bend to any of the king's
-wishes or heed the king's anger in the least. So King James, mad with
-rage, stabbed the reckless earl with his dagger, and Sir Patrick Gray,
-seeing this, struck him a death-blow with his axe.
-
-The king was in Stirling Castle, a powerful fortress at the top of a
-steep hill, when the new earl, the younger brother of the murdered man,
-rode up with six hundred followers, and burnt and plundered the town
-before the king's very eyes, and added to the insult by publicly
-declaring that King James II. was a law-breaker.
-
-For three years the quarrel went on between the king and the Douglases,
-but it was then evident that there could be no peace between them. So
-at last the king's army attacked the collected forces of the strong
-Douglas family at a place on the Borders then called Arkinholm, where
-the picturesque little town of Langholm now stands. Here the beautiful
-river Esk receives the water of two smaller streams, and so it was a
-good place to make a stand for a fight. The battle was long and
-desperate; three brothers of the bold black Douglases were there, and
-they withstood the king's men till the rivers ran red; but their cause
-was hopeless. One was slain in battle; one was taken and executed; one
-escaped into England; and the power of the Black Douglases was gone.
-
-Thus it was that the strongest and most famous family of the Borders was
-broken up, because its proud leaders dared to dictate to the king
-himself.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XIII*
-
- *Alnwick Castle and the Percies*
-
-
-The castle of Alnwick stands on a hill on the south bank of the river
-Alne; being protected on one side by the river and on another by a deep
-gorge, it stands in a strong natural position. There are traces of
-earthworks that seem to show that the spot was fortified in the old
-British days, but the earliest fact which we know certainly is that
-there was a Saxon fortress here, held by a Gilbert Tyson, when William
-the Conqueror claimed England. Tyson hastened south to fight on
-Harold's side, and was killed at the battle of Hastings.
-
-The fortress seems to have got into the hands of a Norman knight, Ivo de
-Vesci, who married the grand-daughter of Gilbert Tyson. King Malcolm of
-Scotland was killed in front of it, in 1093, with three thousand of his
-men. De Vesci's son-in-law was probably the knight who rebuilt the
-castle in the Norman style, some portions of which still remain.
-
-In 1174, William the Lion, King of Scotland, who had claimed
-Northumberland as his own, attacked the castles of Wark and of Alnwick.
-Wark was defended by a gallant knight named Roger de Stuteville.
-William's brave men tried in vain to force their way through the
-portcullis, but were beaten back. Then William ordered up his
-_perire_, a machine made for hurling stones. "This," said the king,
-"will soon smash down the gate for us!" With great expectations the
-machine was set in motion, but it acted so badly that it threw the
-stones on to William's own men, and nearly killed one of his best
-knights! William raved in his fury, and swore he would rather have been
-captured in fair fight than be made to look so foolish in the eyes of
-his enemies. He gave word to burn the castle, but the wind was in the
-wrong quarter and blew back the flames. So he had to give up the siege.
-Stuteville, like a gallant enemy, told his men not to shout taunts and
-jeers at the departing Scots. But instead they blew trumpets and horns,
-and sang songs, and called out a very loud and hearty "Good-bye."
-
-Shortly afterwards, William came before Alnwick, and it was then De
-Vesci's turn. It was Saturday morning on a hot July day, and the
-Scottish king's knights flatteringly told him that the English were
-bound to give way to him, and Northumberland would be his. The king was
-dining in front of the castle, with no helmet on, when suddenly a part
-of the English army made a surprise attack. The bold king leapt on to
-his grey charger, and unhorsed the first knight he met. So quick and
-brave were the Scots that they had almost defeated the English when an
-English foot-soldier stabbed the king's horse with his lance, and it
-fell, bringing William down to the ground and pinning him there. This
-turned the course of battle; the Scots were beaten back, and William
-taken prisoner.
-
-In was in 1309 that the great Percy family first obtained possession of
-Alnwick and its domain. Henry Percy purchased it from Anthony Bek,
-Bishop of Durham, who had somehow obtained power over it, and the brave
-De Vesci family disappear. About this date Northumberland was in a
-miserable condition; it was the reign of the feeble Edward II., and
-Bruce had invaded the four northernmost counties of England, and was
-exacting tribute from them. The English were safe only within their
-fortresses.
-
-However, the brave Sir Thomas Gray, who held Norham Castle, did much to
-uphold the falling honour of England, and Henry Percy almost rebuilt the
-castle of Alnwick, which in his son's time successfully withstood a
-siege. But at last peace was restored by the Treaty of Northampton in
-1328, by the terms of which the English king renounced all claim to
-Scotland.
-
-The Percy family were of Norman origin, deriving their name from a
-Norman village. William de Percy crossed to England just after the
-battle of Hastings, and received grants of land in Yorkshire. Agnes de
-Percy married Jocelin, Count of Louvain, and their son Henry took his
-mother's surname. From that year onward, the the Christian name of
-Henry was always given to the eldest son; there were fourteen Henry
-Percies!
-
-Even in these wild times the Percies were distinguished by the boldness
-of their spirits. One of the Counts of Louvain, grandfather of the
-first Henry Percy, shocked the men of his day by hanging some of his
-enemies with the church bell-ropes. It was not the hanging that was
-objected to--hanging was common enough; but the use of church-ropes for
-the purpose was thought very wicked!
-
-After they had rebuilt Alnwick Castle and settled down there, the
-Percies soon established their power in the North. At the coronation of
-Richard II., in 1377, a Henry Percy was Marshal of England, and he was
-then made Earl of Northumberland. His son, "Hotspur," was the most
-famous of all the Percies. In their time, the battles of Otterbourne
-and Homildon Hill were fought. But they rebelled against Henry IV. and
-Hotspur was killed at the battle of Shrewsbury (1403), while his father
-was slain a few years later at Bramham Moor, his head set up on London
-Bridge, and quarters of his body on the gates of Berwick, Newcastle,
-Lincoln, and London, to discourage others from following in his
-footsteps!
-
-Henry, son of "Hotspur," was the second earl. He repaired and added to
-the castle and was present at the battle of Agincourt. It was not the
-habit of the Percies to die in their beds, and this one was killed in
-the Wars of the Roses, at the first battle of St Albans, in 1455.
-
-The fact of their having taken the losing Lancastrian side in these wars
-kept the family under a cloud for a number of years. One of them
-deserted Richard III. on Bosworth field in 1485; one of them was
-beheaded at York in 1572, for taking part in the "Rising of the North";
-one of them was found shot in his bed in 1585, and another died in the
-Tower in 1632. So that the family could hardly be said to be quieting
-down.
-
-They sided with Parliament during the Civil War, but later on they
-favoured the Restoration. At last there came a time when there were no
-male heirs left in this great line, but only a daughter, Elizabeth. She
-married the Duke of Somerset, and had thirteen children, the eldest
-surviving of whom was created Earl of Northumberland in 1748. But he
-died the year after, leaving only a daughter, who had married a very
-able baronet, to whom was given the title of Duke of Northumberland in
-1766. He very wisely took the surname of Percy, and again restored the
-castle of Alnwick, putting the family estates and affairs in good order.
-So that the Percies of Alnwick Castle are Dukes of Northumberland to
-this day.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XIV*
-
- *Hexham and Queen Margaret*
-
-
-The town of Hexham stands on the south bank of the Tyne, rising
-gradually up the hill and presenting a most picturesque appearance.
-About two miles above Hexham the North and the South Tyne meet, and the
-combined river is broad and noble, and the hills around Hexham give
-strength and beauty to the scene. The commanding appearance and central
-position of the priory church adds its note of dignity, and the total
-effect of the town is very pleasing to the eye.
-
-There is no doubt that from very early times there was a town in this
-fine natural position. The burial-grounds of primitive races have been
-discovered here, with stone and bronze implements. The Romans had a
-town here of some importance, although it was four miles south of their
-great wall. A Roman tombstone was discovered here, nine feet by three
-and a half feet, showing a Roman officer on horseback, overthrowing in
-fierce fight a savage and scowling foe. This fine relic is set up in
-the church, and is not the only thing to see there. The original church
-upon this spot was built in 674, in the reign of King Egfrid of
-Northumbria. Wilfrid, the very able and influential Bishop of York, was
-the man who presided at the building of it, and there were bishops at
-Hexham for a couple of centuries. In 875 the Danes ruthlessly burnt the
-town; and nearly one thousand years later, in 1832, there was found
-buried in the ground a bronze vessel containing about nine thousand
-Saxon coins of the eighth and ninth century, evidently buried to protect
-this treasure from the invaders. Those who buried them were probably
-slain before they had time to dig them up again. There was a legend of
-another treasure hidden between Hexham and Corbridge, and King John came
-to Hexham in 1201 to search for it. He returned in 1208 and in 1212,
-but found nothing. Time passed, and this tale of hidden treasure ceased
-even to be local gossip, but in 1735 by accident it was found.
-
-The present handsome priory church must have been built about the time
-of King John's visits to Hexham. It is a noble building, well worth a
-visit. In 1725, when some work was being done in the church, a
-wonderful discovery was made. It was found that there was an old Saxon
-crypt, a narrow vault with several passages, underneath the church!
-This was so carefully hidden that it was evidently intended as a place
-of refuge in danger. It was built of Roman stones, several of which
-have Roman inscriptions.
-
-The Scots several times attacked Hexham. Once Sir William Wallace came
-there with his army, but he would not let his Scots damage the church,
-so that Hexham, on the whole, had a less stormy life than many of the
-Border towns, although in 1537, when Henry VIII. caused the monastery to
-be suppressed, the prior and five of the leading monks were hanged
-before the gates as a gentle reminder that they were to live there no
-longer.
-
-But by far the most stirring event in Hexham's history was the battle
-which raged there in 1464. The Wars of the Roses do not form a pleasing
-episode in English history. They were pitiless, and treachery was
-mingled with bloodshed; desertions and executions were the accompaniment
-of every battle. Edward IV. was coldly cruel and unscrupulous, one of
-the blackest figures of a black time. But romance centres round Queen
-Margaret, the dauntless and resourceful wife of the feeble King Henry
-VI., with whom Edward disputed the throne. She it was who, making up for
-her husband's weakness, urged ever bravely and hopefully the cause of
-her son. Thus she pressed on to the very end, till that son, worthy of
-his heroic mother, proudly answered the taunts of his base enemies, even
-though in their power, preferring speedy death to any lessening of his
-tragic dignity, and dying before the eyes of the successful and exultant
-Edward.
-
-In this fierce drama, Hexham was but an episode. The Lancastrians had
-scattered after their heavy defeat at Towton. Margaret in person had
-begged a little help of the King of Scotland, a little more of the King
-of France. The Borderland was favourable to her, and she gathered her
-forces together there, King Henry VI. staying in Alnwick Castle.
-
-Lord Montague, brother to the powerful but crafty Earl of Warwick, was
-warden of the East Marches for Edward, and he hastily collected the
-Yorkist forces. He was swift, able, and unscrupulous. He attacked a
-small body of Lancastrians on Hedgeley Moor, only ten miles from
-Alnwick, and defeated them, killing their leader, Sir Ralph Percy, son
-of Hotspur. As this gallant man died he consoled himself by saying, "I
-have saved the bird in my bosom," by which poetical phrase he meant that
-he had saved his honour by being true to his queen. In May the greater
-battle of Hexham was fought. King Henry was there in person, with the
-dauntless Queen Margaret and her son, and their brave general, the Duke
-of Somerset. They marched out of Hexham to attack Lord Montague; the
-battle began by the village of Linnels, on the south side of the Devil's
-Water, a stream that runs into the Tyne. The fight was desperate, for
-both sides knew that no quarter would be given. It is said by some that
-the Scots, having no interest in the war, deserted Margaret; anyway, bit
-by bit the Lancastrians were forced back, to the very streets of Hexham
-itself, two miles away. In these narrow streets, in the quarter that is
-still called Battle Hill, the last desperate fighters on the side of the
-Red Rose made their final and unavailing stand.
-
-At last the remnant fled, and no doubt many a Hexham maid and dame, at
-the risk of her own life or limb, hid that day some devoted follower of
-Margaret.
-
-The gallant Duke of Somerset was taken prisoner, and there and then was
-brought to the block in the market-place and beheaded. The cruel
-Montague had not the true soldier's respect for a brave enemy, whose
-blood thus mingled with that of his men. Other nobles were taken as
-prisoners to Newcastle, but Edward also was devoid of mercy, and all
-perished.
-
-[Illustration: _The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham_]
-
-Till the last moment the queen hoped on. She was not daunted by scenes
-of strife and bloodshed. When defeat was an accomplished fact, she and
-her young son fled to the Dipton Woods, where they fell into the hands
-of rough men, some say a party of Yorkist stragglers. Whilst these men
-were eagerly dividing and quarrelling over the queen's jewels, she and
-the prince slipped away. Deeper into the dangerous woods they had to go,
-for worse than robbers were hunting for them around Hexham. Suddenly an
-outlaw stood in their path with drawn sword. Even after that day of
-stir and terror Margaret's courage did not fail her. She boldly
-declared to the man that she was the Queen of England, and with her was
-her only son. Now, if he chose to betray them he could do so; but if he
-had that natural nobility that hailed gladly great chances to do great
-deeds, now was his time to prove himself a man, and to save the
-ill-fated prince and his queen.
-
-The robber bowed before her as though she were on her throne, and as if
-the trees were her army around her. He swore to die a hundred deaths
-rather than betray his rightful sovereign and her prince. He honourably
-kept his word; and through his safe guidance and steady devotion, both
-queen and prince were able to join King Henry in Scotland, to which
-place he had safely escaped.
-
-Thus the bandit of Hexham proved himself to be a truer man than either
-Lord Montague, or Warwick, the King-maker, or King Edward IV. of
-England.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XV*
-
- *Fair Helen of Kirkconnell*
-
-
-Very simple, very touching, is the story of fair Helen of Kirkconnell.
-This beautiful maiden had two lovers, one rich, one poor. Her friends
-favoured the rich one, she loved the poor one. She and her chosen lover
-used to meet secretly in the romantic churchyard of Kirkconnell, by the
-side of the river Kirtle. Learning this, the rejected lover crept up
-one evening, with his carbine, to shoot his luckier rival; Helen saw him
-at the moment of firing, and threw herself forward to receive the shot
-in her bosom, and so save her lover's life at the cost of her own.
-
-The ballad describing the grief of her lover is one of the most
-beautiful and touching pieces of poetry in existence, and must be given
-here entire.
-
-
- *FAIR HELEN*
-
- I wish I were where Helen lies;
- Night and day on me she cries;
- O that I were where Helen lies,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- Curst be the heart that thought the thought,
- And curst the hand that shot the shot,
- When in my arms burd Helen dropt,
- And died to succour me.
-
- O think ye not my heart was sair,
- When my love dropt and spak nae mair!
- There did she swoon wi' meikle care,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee.
-
- As I went down the water-side,
- None but my foe to be my guide,
- None but my foe to be my guide,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- I lighted down my sword to draw,
- I hacked him in pieces sma',
- I hacked him in pieces sma',
- For her sake that died for me.
-
- O Helen fair beyond compare,
- I'll make a garland of thy hair,
- Shall bind my heart for evermair,
- Until the day I die.
-
- O that I were where Helen lies,
- Night and day on me she cries;
- Out of my bed she bids me rise,
- Says, "Haste and come to me!"
-
- O Helen fair! O Helen chaste!
- If I were with thee, I were blest,
- Where thou lies low, and takes thy rest,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee.
-
- O that my grave were growing green,
- A winding sheet drawn ower my een,
- And I in Helen's arms were lying,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- I wish I were where Helen lies!
- Night and day on me she cries,
- And I am weary of the skies,
- For her sake that died for me.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XVI*
-
- *Johnie of Breadislee*
-
-
-Johnie of Breadislee, outlaw and deer-stealer, was one of the "broken
-men," as they were called, the Ishmaels of the Border. Johnie rose up
-one May morning, and called for water to wash his hands. He ordered to
-be unleashed his good grey dogs, that were bound with iron chains. When
-his mother heard that he had called for the dogs, she wrung her hands.
-"O Johnie!" she cried, "for my blessing, do not go to the greenwood
-to-day. Ye have enough of good wheat bread, enough blood-red wine,
-therefore, Johnie, I pray, stir not from home for any venison." But
-despite his mother's tears, Johnie busked up his good bent bow, and his
-arrows, and went off to Durrisdeer to hunt down the dun deer. As he
-came by Merriemass he espied a deer lying beneath a bush of furze.
-Johnie let fly an arrow, and the deer leapt as the pitiless shaft found
-its mark, and between the water and the brae his good hounds "laid her
-pride." So Johnie cut up the venison, giving the liver and lungs to his
-faithful hounds, as if they had been earl's sons. With such zest did
-they eat and drink that Johnie and the dogs fell asleep, as if they had
-been dead. Then as they lay, there came by a silly old man, and, as
-soon as he saw the poachers, he ran away to Hislinton, where the Seven
-Foresters were. "What news?" they asked. "What news bring ye, ye
-grey-headed carle?" "I bring no news," said the grey-headed carle,
-"save what my eyes did see. As I came down by Merrimass among the
-stunted trees, the bonniest child I ever saw lay asleep among his dogs.
-The shirt upon his back was of fine Holland, his doubtlet, over that,
-was of Lincoln twine, his buttons were of the good gold, the mouths of
-his good grey hounds were dyed with blood."
-
-Now Johnie, like many another free-hearted outlaw, was a well-liked man.
-So the chief forester said, "If this be Johnie of Breadislee we will
-draw no nearer." But this was not the spirit of his men. Quoth the
-sixth Forester, "If it indeed be he, rather let us slay him."
-Cautiously they went through the thicket, and when they saw their man,
-asleep and helpless, they shot a flight of arrows. Johnie sprang up,
-sore wounded on the knee. The seventh forester cried out, "The next
-flight will kill him," but little chance did the outlaw give them for
-such an easy victory. He set his back against an oak and propped his
-wounded leg upon a stone; with bow or with sword he was a better man by
-far than any of his foes.
-
-In the short, sharp fight that followed, he killed six of the foresters,
-some with arrow, and some with steel; and when the seventh turned to
-flee, Johnie seized him from behind and threw him on to the ground with
-a force that broke three of his ribs. Then he laid him on his steed,
-and bade him carry the tidings home.
-
-[Illustration: _Johnie of Breadislee_]
-
-But Johnie himself was hurt to death. "Is there no bonnie singing
-bird," he cried, "that can fly to my mother's bower and tell her to
-fetch Johnie away?" A starling flew to his mother's window sill, and
-sang and whistled, and the burden of its tune was ever the same. "Johnie
-tarries long." So the men made a litter from rods of the hazel bush and
-of the thorn and fetched Johnie away. Then his old mother's tears
-flowed fast, and she said, "Ye would not be warned, my son Johnie, to
-bide away from the hunting. Oft have I brought to Breadislee the less
-or greater gear, but never what grieved my heart so sorely. But woe
-betide that silly old grey-headed carle! An ill death shall he die!
-The highest tree in Merriemass shall be his reward."
-
- "Now Johnie's gude bent bow is brake,
- And his gude grey dogs are slain,
- And his body lies dead in Durrisdeer,
- And his hunting it is done."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XVII*
-
- *Katharine Janfarie*
-
-
-This ballad is evidently the original of Sir Walter Scott's "Lochinvar,"
-though Sir Walter reversed the names of the two leading male characters.
-In "Katharine Janfarie" Lochinvar plays the part of the craven
-bridegroom.
-
- There was a may,[#] and a weel-far'd may,
- Lived high up in yon glen;
- Her name was Katharine Janfarie,
- She was courted by mony men.
-
-[#] maiden.
-
- Up there came Lord Lauderdale,
- Up frae the Lowland Border,
- And he has come to court this may,
- A' mounted in good order.
-
- He told na her father, he told na her mother,
- And he told na ane o' her kin,
- But he whispered the bonnie lassie hersell,
- And has her favour won.
-
- But out there cam Lord Lochinvar,
- Out frae the English Border,
- All for to court this bonny may,
- Weel mounted, and in order.
-
- He told her father, he told her mother,
- And a' the lave[#] o' her kin;
- But he told na the bonny may hersell,
- Till on her wedding e'en.
-
-[#] rest.
-
- She sent to the Lord o' Lauderdale,
- Gin[#] he wad come and see,
- And he has sent back word again,
- Weel answered he suld[#] be.
-
-[#] if.
-[#] should.
-
- And he has sent a messenger
- Right quickly through the land,
- And raised mony an armed man
- To be at his command.
-
- The bride looked out at a high window,
- Beneath baith dale and down,
- And she was aware of her first true love,
- With riders mony a one.
-
- She scoffed him, and scorned him,
- Upon her wedding-day;
- And said, "It was the Fairy Court,
- To see him in array!
-
- "O come ye here to fight, young lord,
- Or come ye here to play?
- Or come ye here to drink good wine,
- Upon the wedding-day?"
-
- "I come na here to fight," he said,
- "I come na here to play,
- I'll but lead a dance wi' the bonny bride,
- And mount, and go my way."
-
- It is a glass of the blood-red wine
- Was filled up them between,
- And aye she drank to Lauderdale,
- Wha[#] her true love had been.
-
-[#] who.
-
- He's taen[#] her by the milk-white hand,
- And by the grass-green sleeve;
- He's mounted her hie behind himsell,
- At her kinsmen speired[#] na leave.
-
-[#] taken.
-[#] asked.
-
- "Now take your bride, Lord Lochinvar!
- Now take her if ye may!
- But if you take your bride again,
- We'll call it but foul play."
-
- There were four-and-twenty bonnie boys,
- A' clad in the Johnstone grey;
- They said they would take the bride again,
- By the strong hand, if they may.
-
- Some o' them were right willing men,
- But they were na willing a';
- And four-and-twenty Leader lads
- Bid them mount and ride awa'.
-
- Then whingers flew frae gentles' sides,
- And swords flew frae the shea's,[#]
- And red and rosy was the blood
- Ran down the lily braes.
-
-[#] sheathes.
-
- The blood ran down by Caddon bank,
- And down by Caddon brae,
- And, sighing, said the bonnie bride--
- "O wae's me for foul play."
-
- My blessing on your heart, sweet thing!
- Wae to your wilfu' will!
- There's mony a gallant gentleman
- Whae's bluid ye have garred[#] to spill.
-
-[#] caused.
-
- Now a' the lords of fair England,
- And that dwell by the English Border,
- Come never here to seek a wife,
- For fear of sic[#] disorder.
-
-[#] such.
-
- They'll track ye up, and settle ye bye,
- Till on your wedding-day;
- Then gie ye frogs instead of fish,
- And play ye foul foul play.
-
-
-
- *LOCHINVAR*
-
-In Sir Walter Scott's poem, Lochinvar is the hero, and the story has a
-happier ending. The song was supposed to have been sung to James IV. by
-Lady Heron at Holyrood shortly before the fatal battle of Flodden.
-
- O young Lochinvar has come out of the west,
- Through all the wide border his steel was the best;
- And save his good broadsword, he weapons had none,
- He rode all unarmed, and he rode all alone,
- So faithful in love, and so dauntless in war,
- There never was knight like the young Lochinvar.
-
- He staid not for brake, and he stopped not for stone,
- He swam the Eske river where ford there was none,
- But ere he alighted at Netherby gate,
- The bride had consented, the gallant came late;
- For a laggard in love, and a dastard in war,
- Was to wed the fair Ellen of brave Lochinvar.
-
- So boldly he entered the Netherby Hall,
- Among bride's men, and kinsmen, and brothers, and all,
- Then spoke the bride's father, his hand on his sword
- (For the poor craven bridegroom said never a word),
- "O come ye in peace here, or come ye in war,
- Or to dance at our bridal, young Lord Lochinvar?"
-
- "I long wooed your daughter, my suit you denied;
- Love swells like the Solway, but ebbs like its tide,
- And now am I come, with this lost love of mine,
- To lead but one measure, drink one cup of wine,
- There are maidens in Scotland, more lovely by far,
- That would gladly be bride to the young Lochinvar."
-
- The bride kissed the goblet; the knight took it up,
- He quaffed off the wine, and he threw down the cup.
- She looked down to blush, and she looked up to sigh,
- With a smile on her lips, and a tear in her eye.
- He took her soft hand, ere her mother could bar,
- "Now tread we a measure!" said young Lochinvar.
-
- So stately her form, and so lovely her face,
- That never a hall such a galliard did grace;
- While her brother did fret, and her father did fume,
- And the bridgroom stood dangling his bonnet and plume,
- And the bride-maidens whispered, "'Twere better by far,
- To have matched our fair cousin with young Lochinvar."
-
- One touch to her hand, and one word in her ear,
- When they reached the hall-door, and the charger stood near;
- So light to the croupe the fair lady he swung,
- So light to the saddle before her he sprung!
- "She is won! we have gone over bank, bush, and scaur;
- They'll have fleet steeds that follow," quoth young Lochinvar.
-
- There was mounting 'mong Graemes of the Netherby clan;
- Fosters, Fenwicks, and Musgraves, they rode and they ran,
- There was racing and chasing, on Cannobie Lee,
- But the lost bride of Netherby ne'er did they see.
- So daring in love, and so dauntless in war,
- Have ye e'er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar?
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XVIII*
-
- *By Lauder Bridge*
-
-
-The Ancient Royal Burgh of Lauder, a quaint little border town with
-hardly more than one street, is on the banks of the river Leader, on the
-high road between Edinburgh and Kelso. It stands very picturesquely,
-among the bold hills and fine woods of Berwickshire, and the valley is
-called Lauderdale, extending to where the Leader joins the Tweed, just
-below Melrose. Peacefully beautiful is the spot; and yet it was once
-the scene of a harsh, grim tragedy.
-
-It was in the reign of King James III. of Scotland, who offended his
-subjects in two particulars.
-
-First, to get wealth for himself, he mixed brass and lead with his
-silver money, and put it into circulation as pure silver; next, he chose
-favourites from the common people, and set these above the proud
-noblemen of Scotland.
-
-This latter would not have been so bad a fault if the king had always
-chosen wisely; but, as often in such cases, he was led by flatterers
-rather than by worthy men.
-
-In 1482 the king declared war against England, and, as in these warlike
-days the nobles were the leaders of the army, this brought the
-discontented lords together.
-
-When the Scottish army reached Lauder in their southward march, the
-proud nobles met in Lauder church; all were angry with the king, yet
-each was afraid to make the first move. So Lord Gray told them a
-mocking fable.
-
-"Do you remember," said he, "how all the mice got together and agreed
-that it would be a splendid thing if a bell were hung round the cat's
-neck, so that wherever she went she could be heard; the only difficulty
-was to find a mouse to bell the cat!"
-
-These warlike nobles did not like to be spoken of as if they were mice,
-and it roused them to deeper rage.
-
-Then out spoke Archibald Douglas, Earl of Angus, the head of the younger
-branch of the Douglas family. "Trust me, I'll bell the cat!"
-
-There was a knock at the door; Cochrane, the architect, whom the nobles
-said had been a mason, but was now the king's chief favourite, entered,
-dressed in black velvet, with a heavy chain of gold round his neck, a
-horn of gold tipped with precious stones, and all his attire of the
-costliest. Angus caught the chain in his hands and said, "A rope would
-suit that neck better!"
-
-Then the nobles laid violent hands on all the king's low-born favourites
-and hanged them by the bridge of Lauder, in front of the king's very
-eyes! Cochrane was proud and brave to the last. He said that as the
-king had made him an earl he should be hanged with a rope made of silk;
-little did the nobles care for his protests, the halter of a horse was
-in their opinion good enough for him.
-
-From this time onward the headstrong Earl of Angus was known by the
-nick-name of "Bell-the-Cat." It may be taken for granted that neither
-he nor the nobles who supported him would have dared to act so
-arrogantly and violently unless they felt quite sure that the king had
-not the power to punish them. He returned sullenly to Edinburgh, more
-the captive of the nobles than their master.
-
-A parliament appointed the Duke of Albany lieutenant-general of the
-kingdom, but he in turn soon lost favour, for he was suspected of too
-great a friendship for Edward IV., King of England, and fled for safety
-to France, giving James another chance to govern his kingdom for
-himself.
-
-This weak and unhappy monarch, however, was not destined to have much
-peace. Before very long, another quarrel with his nobles led to their
-taking up arms with a view of deposing him and placing his son on the
-throne. The king and his nobles met in battle near Stirling, but, at
-the very beginning of the fight, James was thrown from his horse and
-stabbed by a soldier, whose name remained unknown. Thus died this weak
-but amiable and unfortunate king.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XIX*
-
- *The Battle of Flodden Field*
-
-
-One of the most tragic episodes in the History of the Borders was the
-battle of Flodden Field, when the flower of the Scottish nobility fell
-around their sovereign, James IV., while fighting against the English
-under Surrey.
-
-The causes of the war were many. Henry of England refused to give up
-the jewels which had been promised as the dowry of his sister Margaret
-on her marriage with James IV.
-
-The Lord High Admiral of England, Sir Edmund Howard, had attacked and
-taken two Scottish ships, and slain their captain, Sir Andrew Barton.
-James, who was fond of Barton, demanded redress, but Henry insolently
-replied that kings should not quarrel about pirates.
-
-But the immediate cause was the friendship between France and Scotland.
-Henry was preparing for war with France, and James stood by his ally,
-declaring that if Henry warred with France, he would lead an army into
-England. The Queen of France sent James a turquoise ring, asking him to
-carry out his threat to serve her interests.
-
-James had been warned that his action would have terrible consequences.
-A man appeared to him at Linlithgow, clad in a long blue gown, with bare
-head, and carrying a pikestaff, and having told the king that his dead
-mother had sent him to warn him not to go to war against England, he
-disappeared as suddenly as he had come.
-
-Also at the dead of night a voice had been heard proclaiming aloud at
-the market Cross in Edinburgh the names of those who, within forty days,
-would be no more. It was thought at the time that these happenings were
-instigated by Queen Margaret, but the king still persisted in his
-policy, and led his army across the Border, in spite of the warnings of
-his counsellors and his queen.
-
-A fine description of his army is given by Sir Walter Scott, when Lord
-Marmion watches the scene from Blackford Hill.
-
- "Thousand pavilions, white as snow,
- Spread all the Borough-moor below,
- Upland, and dale, and down:--
- A thousand, did I say? I ween,
- Thousands and thousands, there were seen,
- That chequer'd all the heath between
- The streamlet and the town;
- In crossing ranks extending far,
- Forming a camp irregular;
- Oft giving way, where still there stood
- Some relics of the old oak wood,
- That darkly huge did intervene,
- And tamed the glaring white with green,
- In these extended lines there lay,
- A martial kingdom's vast array.
-
- For from Hebudes, dark with rain,
- To eastern Lodon's fertile plain,
- And from the southern Redswire edge,
- To farthest Rosse's rocky ledge,
- From west to east, from south to north,
- Scotland sent all her warriors forth,
- Marmion might hear the mingled hum,
- Of myriads up the mountain come;
- The horses' tramp, and tingling clank,
- Where chiefs reviewed their vassal rank,
- And charger's shrilling neigh;
- And see the shifting lines advance
- Whilst frequent flash'd, from shield and lance,
- The sun's reflected ray.
- * * * * *
- They saw, slow rolling on the plain,
- Full many a baggage-cart and wain,
- And dire artillery's clumsy car.
- By sluggish oxen tugg'd to war;
- * * * * *
- Nor mark'd they less, where in the air
- A thousand streamers flaunted fair,
- Various in shape, device, and hue,
- Green, sanguine, purple, red, and blue,
- Broad, narrow, swallow-tailed, and square,
- Scroll, pennon, pensil, bandrol,[#] there
- O'er the pavilions flew.
- Highest and midmost, was descried
- The royal banner floating wide;
- The staff, a pine-tree, strong and straight,
- Pitch'd deeply in a massive stone,
- Which still in memory is shown,
- Yet bent beneath the standard's weight.
- Whene'er the western breeze unroll'd,
- With toil, the huge and cumbrous fold,
- And gave to view the dazzling field,
- Where, in proud Scotland's royal shield,
- The ruddy lion ramp'd in gold."
-
-[#] Each feudal ensign intimated the rank of those who displayed them.
-
-
-Marmion wondered that with such a glorious army at his back anyone
-should try to dissuade James from battle, yet Sir David Lindesay of the
-Mount answered him,
-
- "'twere good
- That Kings would think withal,
- When peace and wealth their land has bless'd,
- 'Tis better to sit still at rest,
- Than rise, perchance to fall."
-
-
-Men-at-arms were there, sheathed in plate armour, with battle-axe and
-spear, and mounted on Flemish steeds. Young knights and squires
-practised their chargers on the plain. Hardy burghers marched on foot,
-armed with long pikes and two-handed swords and bright bucklers.
-
-The yeoman, too, was on foot, dressed in steel-jack quilted well with
-iron, and bearing at his back, provisions for forty days. He seemed sad
-of cheer, and loth to leave his humble cottage, wondering who would till
-the land during his absence.
-
-There, too, was the Borderer:--
-
- "bred to war,
- He knew the battle's din afar,
- And joy'd to hear it swell.
- His peaceful day was slothful ease,
- Nor harp nor pipe his ear could please
- Like the loud slogan yell."
-
-for
-
- "War's the Borderer's game,
- Their gain, their glory, their delight,
- To sleep the day, maraud the night,
- O'er mountain, moss, and moor."
-
-[Illustration: _Flodden Field_]
-
-There, too, were the Celts, with savage eyes looking out wildly through
-red and sable hair, with sinewy frames and legs bare above the knees,
-their chiefs known by the eagle's plumage. They wore the skin of the
-red deer, a graceful bonnet, and a plaid hung from the shoulders, and
-carried as weapons a broadsword, a dagger, and quivers, bows, and
-shafts.
-
-The Isles-men, too, were there, carrying the ancient Danish battle-axe.
-While the army was mustering together, James feasted the chiefs in
-Holyrood Palace, for at dawn they were to march southward.
-
- "Well loved that splendid monarch aye
- The banquet and the song,
- By day the tourney, and by night
- The merry dance, traced fast and light,
- The maskers quaint, the pageant bright,
- The revel loud and long.
- This feast outshone his banquets past;
- It was his blithest and his last."
-
- And hazel was his eagle eye,
- And auburn of the darkest dye,
- His short curl'd beard and hair.
- Light was his footstep in the dance,
- And firm his stirrup in the lists;
- And oh! he had that merry glance,
- That seldom lady's heart resists."
-
-
-Yet no fair lady was as dear to James as his own Queen Margaret, who sat
-alone in the tower of Linlithgow weeping for the war against her native
-country, and for the danger of her lord.
-
-On the morrow, James marched south, crossed the Tweed, and encamped on
-the banks of the Till, near Twisel Bridge. The Scottish army moved down
-the side of the Tweed to Flodden Hill taking Norham Castle, and the
-Border towns of Etal, Wark, and Ford. Much time was wasted in these
-petty enterprises, time which should have been spent in marching to
-Newcastle before the English were prepared to offer resistance. When
-the castle of Ford was stormed, Lady Heron, wife of Sir William Heron,
-then a prisoner in Scotland, was taken, and this beautiful and artful
-woman induced James to idle away his time until all chance was lost of
-defeating the enemy.
-
-The army suffered severely from want of provisions, and many of the
-Highlanders and Isles-men returned home, many who had come only for
-booty, deserted, and the numbers were reduced to about thirty thousand.
-
-Meanwhile, the Earl of Surrey had raised twenty-six thousand men, and
-received other enforcements as he came north from Durham. He therefore
-challenged James to fight, and charged him with violating the treaty of
-peace between the two kingdoms.
-
-The Scottish nobles were unwilling to fight, and said it was impossible
-to remain in a country so plundered; also, if fight the king must, he
-would fight to much greater advantage in his own country, to whose
-welfare the loss of this battle would be fatal; while he had
-sufficiently indicated his honour by crossing the Border.
-
-James would not listen to the counsel of his nobles, though even the
-aged Earl of Angus expostulated with him. To this old warrior he
-angrily said, "Angus, if you are afraid, you may go home," at which
-insult the aged Earl burst into tears.
-
-The English army crossed the Till by Twisel Bridge and pressed on while
-the Scottish army stood idly by, the Scottish nobles in vain entreating
-the king to attack the English while they were crossing.
-
-When the English army had drawn up in order of battle on the left bank
-of the river, the Scots, setting fire to their temporary huts, came down
-the ridge of Flodden. The clouds of smoke from the burning huts were
-driven into the face of the English, so that the Scots had got to within
-a quarter of a mile of them before they perceived them.
-
- "No martial shout, nor minstrel tone,
- Announced their march; their tread alone,
- At times one warning trumpet blown,
- At times a stifled hum,
- Told England, from his mountain-throne,
- King James did rushing come:
- Scarce could they hear or see their foes
- Until at weapon-point they close."
-
-
-With clanging blows and arrows that fell like rain, with yelling and
-clamour and sword-sway and lance-thrust, the battle continued until the
-evening, and when even fell, the Scots still fought in an unbroken ring
-round their king. But when darkness came, and Surrey withdrew his men,
-the flower of Scotland's chivalry had fallen, and the king lay dead on
-the field.
-
- "Afar, the royal standard flies,
- And round it toils and bleeds and dies.
- Our Caledonian pride!"
- * * * * *
- But yet, though thick the shafts as now,
- Though charging knights like whirlwinds go,
- Though billmen ply the ghastly bow,
- Unbroken was the ring.
- The stubborn spearmen still made good
- Their dark impenetrable wood,
- Each stepping where his comrade stood
- The instant that he fell.
- No thought was there of dastard flight:
- Link'd in the serried phalanx tight,
- Groom fought like noble, squire like knight,
- As fearlessly and well;
- Till utter darkness closed her wing
- O'er their thin host and wounded King.
- Then skilful Surrey's sage commands
- Led back from strife his shattered bands;
- And from the charge they drew,
- As mountain-waves, from wasted lands,
- Sweep back to ocean blue.
- Then did their loss his foemen know;
- Their King, their lords, their mightiest low,
- They melted from the field as snow,
- When streams are swoln and south winds blow
- Dissolves in silent dew.
- * * * * *
- Still from the sire the son shall hear
- Of the stern fight and carnage drear
- Of Flodden's fatal field,
- Where shiver'd was fair Scotland's spear,
- And broken was her shield!
- * * * * *
- And well in death his trusty brand,
- Firm clench'd within his manly hand
- Beseem'd the Monarch slain."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XX*
-
- *After Flodden*
-
-
-So deeply did the tragic result of Flodden touch the hearts of the
-Scottish people that no Scot could for many a long day hear it mentioned
-without a heart-thrill.
-
-Many are the songs written about it, the most famous perhaps, being the
-"Flowers of the Forest," written two centuries later, though partly
-founded upon an older and almost forgotten song.
-
-
- *THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST*
-
- I've heard them lilting, at our ewe-milking,
- Lasses a' lilting, before dawn o' day;
- But now they are moaning on ilka green loaning[#]
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
-[#] a broad grassy lane used as milking-ground.
-
- At bughts, in the morning, nae blythe lads are scorning;[#]
- The lasses are lonely, and dowie, and wae;
- Wae daffing,[#] nae gabbing,[#] but sighing and sabbing;
- Ilk ane lifts her leglin,[#] and hies her away.
-
-[#] rallying.
-[#] joking.
-[#] chatting.
-[#] milking-pail.
-
- In hair'st, at the shearing, nae youths now are jeering,
- The bandsters[#] are runkled,[#] and lyart[#] or gray;
- At fair, or at preaching, nae wooing, nae fleeching;[#]
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
-[#] sheaf-binders.
-[#] wrinkled.
-[#] inclining to grey.
-[#] coaxing.
-
- At e'en, in the gloaming, nae younkers are roaming
- 'Bout stacks with the lasses at bogle to play;
- But ilk maid sits dreary, lamenting her deary--
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
- Dool and wae for the order, sent our lads to the Border!
- The English, for ance, by guile wan the day:
- The Flowers of the Forest, that fought aye the foremost,
- The prime of our land, are cauld in the clay.
-
- We'll hear nae mair lilting at the ewe-milking;
- Women and bairns are heartless and wae:
- Sighing and moaning on ilka green loaning--
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
- JEAN ELLIOT (1727-1805).
-
-
-The following poem also gives eloquent and touching expression to the
-deep gloom which descended upon the Border after the fatal battle, and
-tells of the despair felt in almost every Ettrick home:--
-
-
- *SELKIRK AFTER FLODDEN*
-
- (A WIDOW'S DIRGE, OCTOBER 1513)
-
- It's but a month the morn
- Sin' a' was peace and plenty;
- Oor hairst was halflins shorn,
- Eident men and lasses denty.
- But noo it's a' distress--
- Never mair a merry meetin ';
- For half the bairns are faitherless,
- And a' the women greetin'.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Miles and miles round Selkirk toun,
- Where forest flow'rs are fairest,
- Ilka lassie's stricken doun,
- Wi' the fate that fa's the sairest.
- A' the lads they used to meet
- By Ettrick braes or Yarrow
- Lyin' thrammelt head and feet
- In Brankstone's deadly barrow!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Frae every cleuch and clan
- The best o' the braid Border
- Rose like a single man
- To meet the royal order.
- Oor Burgh toun itsel'
- Sent its seventy doun the glen;
- Ask Fletcher[#] how they fell,
- Bravely fechtin', ane to ten!
- O Flodden Field!
-
-[#] This was the man who brought an English flag back to Selkirk from
-Flodden. Four brothers of that name are said to have perished in the
-battle.
-
- Round about their gallant king,
- For country and for croun,
- Stude the dauntless Border ring,
- Till the last was hackit doun.
- I blame na what has been--
- They maun fa' that canna flee--
- But oh, to see what I hae seen,
- To see what now I see!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- The souters a' fu' croose,
- O'er their leather and their lingle,
- Wi' their shoon in ilka hoose,
- Sat contentit round the ingle.
- Noo there's naething left but dool,--
- Never mair their work will cheer them;
- In Flodden's bluidy pool
- They'll neither wait nor wear them!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Whar the weavers used to meet,
- In ilka bieldy corner,
- Noo there's nane in a' the street,
- Savin' here and there a mourner,
- Walkin' lonely as a wraith,
- Or if she meet anither,
- Just a word below their braith
- O' some slauchtered son or brither!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- There stands the gudeman's loom
- That used tae gang sae cheerie,
- Untentit noo, and toom,
- Makin' a' the hoose sae eerie,
- Till the sicht I canna dree;
- For the shuttles lyin' dumb
- Speak the loudlier to me
- O' him that wunna come.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Sae at nicht I cover't o'er,
- Just to haud it frae my een,
- But I haena yet the pow'r
- To forget what it has been;
- And I listen through the hoose
- For the chappin o' the lay,
- Till the scrapin' o' a moose
- Tak's my very braith away.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Then I turn to sister Jean,
- And my airms aboot her twine,
- And I kiss her sleepless een,
- For her heart's as sair as mine,--
- A heart ance fu' o' fun,
- And hands that ne'er were idle,
- Wi' a' her cleedin' spun
- Against her Jamie's bridal.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Noo we've naether hands nor hairt--
- In oor grief the wark's forgotten,
- Though it's wantit every airt,
- And the craps are lyin' rotten.
- War's awsome blast's gane bye,
- And left a land forlorn;
- In daith's dool hairst they lie,
- The shearers and the shorn.
- O Flodden Field.
-
- Wi' winter creepin' near us,
- When the nichts are drear and lang,
- Nane to help us, nane to hear us,
- On the weary gate we gang!
- Lord o' the quick an' deed,
- Sin' oor ain we canna see,
- In mercy mak gude speed,
- And bring us whar they be,
- Far, far, frae Flodden Field!
- "J. B. Selkirk" (JAMES B. BROWN).
- _By permission of W. Cuthbertson, Esq._
-
-
-Another lyric, relating to the fatal battle of Flodden, refers to the
-gallantry of the Souters, or shoemakers of Selkirk, who, to the number
-of eighty, and headed by their town-clerk, joined the army as it entered
-England. They distinguished themselves greatly, and few returned. The
-"yellow and green" are the liveries of the house of Home, taxed by some
-with being the cause of the defeat.
-
-
- *THE SOUTERS OF SELKIRK*
-
- Up wi' the Souters of Selkirk,
- And doun wi' the Earl of Home;
- And up wi' a' the braw lads
- That sew the single-soled shoon.
-
- Fye upon yellow and yellow,
- And fye upon yellow and green,
- But up wi' the true blue and scarlet,
- And up wi' the single-soled sheen.
-
- Up wi' the Souters of Selkirk,
- For they are baith trusty and leal;
- And up wi' the men o' the Forest,
- And doun wi' the Merse to the deil.
-
-
-In Aytoun's "Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers," the following well-known
-poem tells how the news of the disaster at Flodden Field was received in
-Edinburgh:--
-
-
- *EDINBURGH AFTER FLODDEN*
-
- I
-
- News of battle! news of battle!
- Hark! 'tis ringing down the street:
- And the archways and the pavement
- Bear the clang of hurrying feet.
- News of battle! Who hath brought it?
- News of triumph! Who should bring
- Tidings from our noble army,
- Greetings from our gallant King?
- All last night we watched the beacons
- Blazing on the hills afar,
- Each one bearing, as it kindled,
- Message of the opened war.
- All night long the northern streamers
- Shot across the trembling sky:
- Fearful lights that never beckon
- Save when kings or heroes die.
-
-
- II
-
- News of battle! Who hath brought it?
- All are thronging to the gate;
- "Warder--warder! open quickly!
- Man--is this a time to wait?"
- And the heavy gates are opened;
- Then a murmur long and loud,
- And a cry of fear and wonder
- Bursts from out the bending crowd.
- For they see in battered harness
- Only one hard-stricken man;
- And his weary steed is wounded,
- And his cheek is pale and wan.
- Spearless hangs a bloody banner
- In his weak and drooping hand--
- God! can that be Randolph Murray,
- Captain of the city band?
-
-
- III
-
- Round him crush the people, crying,
- "Tell us all--oh, tell us true!
- Where are they who went to battle,
- Randolph Murray, sworn to you?
- Where are they, our brothers--children?
- Have they met the English foe?
- Why art thou alone, unfollowed?
- Is it weal, or is it woe?"
- Like a corpse the grisly warrior
- Looks from out his helm of steel;
- But no word he speaks in answer--
- Only with his armd heel
- Chides his weary steed, and onward
- Up the city streets they ride;
- Fathers, sisters, mothers, children,
- Shrieking, praying by his side.
- "By the God that made thee, Randolph!
- Tell us what mischance hath come."
- Then he lifts his riven banner,
- And the asker's voice is dumb.
-
-[Illustration: "_Tell us all--oh, tell us true!_"]
-
-
- IV
-
- The elders of the city
- Have met within their hall--
- The men whom good King James had charged
- To watch the tower and wall.
- "Your hands are weak with age," he said,
- "Your hearts are stout and true;
- So bide ye in the maiden town,
- While others fight for you.
- My trumpet from the Border-side
- Shall send a blast so clear,
- That all who wait within the gate
- That stirring sound may hear.
- Or, if it be the will of Heaven
- That back I never come,
- And if, instead of Scottish shout,
- Ye hear the English drum,
- Then let the warning bells ring out,
- Then gird you to the fray,
- Then man the walls like burghers stout,
- And fight while fight you may.
- 'Twere better that in fiery flame
- The roofs should thunder down,
- Than that the foot of foreign foe
- Should trample in the town!"
-
-
- V
-
- Then in came Randolph Murray,
- His step was slow and weak,
- And, as he doffed his dinted helm,
- The tears ran down his cheek:
- They fell upon his corslet
- And on his mailed hand,
- As he gazed around him wistfully,
- Leaning sorely on his brand.
- And none who then beheld him
- But straight were smote with fear,
- For a bolder and a sterner man
- Had never couched a spear.
- They knew so sad a messenger
- Some ghastly news must bring;
- And all of them were fathers,
- And their sons were with the King.
-
-
- VI
-
- And up then rose the Provost--
- A brave old man was he,
- Of ancient name, and knightly fame,
- And chivalrous degree.
- He ruled our city like a Lord
- Who brooked no equal here,
- And ever for the townsmen's rights
- Stood up 'gainst prince and peer.
- And he had seen the Scottish host
- March from the Borough muir,
- With music-storm and clamorous shout,
- And all the din that thunders out
- When youth's of victory sure.
- But yet a dearer thought had he;--
- For, with a father's pride,
- He saw his last remaining son
- Go forth by Randolph's side,
- With casque on head and spur on heel,
- All keen to do and dare;
- And proudly did that gallant boy
- Dunedin's banner bear.
- Oh! woeful now was the old man's look,
- And he spake right heavily--
- "Now, Randolph, tell thy tidings,
- However sharp they be!
- Woe is written on thy visage,
- Death is looking from thy face;
- Speak! though it be of overthrow--
- It cannot be disgrace!"
-
-
- VII
-
- Right bitter was the agony
- That wrung that soldier proud;
- Thrice did he strive to answer,
- And thrice he groaned aloud.
- Then he gave the riven banner
- To the old man's shaking hand,
- Saying--"That is all I bring ye
- From the bravest of the land!
- Ay! ye may look upon it--
- It was guarded well and long,
- By your brothers and your children,
- By the valiant and the strong.
- One by one they fell around it,
- As the archers laid them low,
- Grimly dying, still unconquered,
- With their faces to the foe.
- Ay! ye may well look upon it--
- There is more than honour there,
- Else, be sure, I had not brought it
- From the field of dark despair.
- Never yet was royal banner
- Steeped in such a costly dye;
- It hath lain upon a bosom
- Where no other shroud shall lie.
- Sirs! I charge you, keep it holy;
- Keep it as a sacred thing,
- For the stain ye see upon it
- Was the life-blood of your King!"
-
-
- VIII
-
- Woe and woe and lamentation!
- What a piteous cry was there!
- Widows, maidens, mothers, children,
- Shrieking, sobbing in despair!
- Through the streets the death-word rushes,
- Spreading terror, sweeping on.
- "Jesu Christ! our King has fallen--
- O Great God, King James is gone!
- Holy mother Mary, shield us,
- Thou who erst did lose thy Son!
- O the blackest day for Scotland
- That she ever knew before!
- O our King--the good, the noble,
- Shall we see him never more?
- Woe to us, and woe to Scotland!
- O our sons, our sons and men!
- Surely some have 'scaped the Southron,
- Surely some will come again!"
-
-
-Randolph Murray describes how the monarch lies dead on the field with
-his nobles round him.
-
- "All so thick they lay together,
- When the stars lit up the sky,
- That I knew not who were stricken,
- Or who yet remained to die."
-
-
-A hollow knell is rung and the miserere is sung, and all is terror and
-disorder until the Provost rouses them.
-
- "If our King be taken from us,
- We are left to guard his son.
- * * * * *
- Up! and haste ye through the city,
- Stir the burghers stout and true!
- Gather all our scattered people,
- Fling the banner out once more--
- Randolph Murray! do thou bear it,
- As it erst was borne before:
- Never Scottish heart will leave it,
- When they see their monarch's gore!"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXI*
-
- *Graeme and Bewick*
-
-
-Good Lord Graeme and Sir Robert Bewick were friends. They met one day
-in Carlisle, and went arm in arm to the wine, and, as was too oft the
-custom of these days, they stayed and drank till they were both merry.
-Good Lord Graeme took up the cup. "Sir Robert, and here's to thee!" he
-said, "and here's to our two sons at home, for they like us best in our
-own country."
-
-"O were your son a lad like mine," answered Bewick, boastfully, "and
-learnt some books that he could read, they might be two brothers in
-arms, and lord it over the Borderside.
-
- 'But your son's a lad, and he's but bad,
- And billie[#] to my son he cannot be.'
-
-[#] Comrade, or brother-in-arms.
-
-You sent him to school, and he would not learn; you bought him books,
-and he would not read!"
-
-Lord Graeme called angrily for the reckoning. "My blessing shall he
-never earn," said he, "till I see how his arm can defend his head." He
-threw down a crown, and went to the stable, took his horse, and rode
-home. "Welcome, my old father," said his son, Christie Graeme, "but
-where were ye so long from home?" "I have been at Carlisle town, and a
-shamed man I am by thee," answered his father with a black look; "I have
-been at Carlisle town, where Sir Robert Bewick met me. He says you are
-but a bad, wild youth, and can never be billie to his boy. I sent you
-to the school, and you would not learn. I bought you books, and you
-would not read; therefore you shall never have my blessing till I see
-you save your head in fight with young Bewick." "Now God forbid, my old
-father, that ever such a thing should be! Billie Bewick was my master,
-and I his scholar, in spite of the pains he wasted in teaching me." "O
-hold thy tongue, thou foolish lad! If thou dost not soon end this
-quarrel, there's my glove, I'll fight with thee myself."
-
-Then Christie Graeme stooped low. "Father, put on your glove again, the
-wind has blown it from your hand."
-
- "What's that, thou sayst, thou limmer loon?
- How darest thou stand to speak to me?
- If thou do not end this quarrel soon,
- There's my right hand, thou'lt fight with me!"
-
-
-Then went Christie to his chamber, to consider what should happen.
-Should he fight with his own father, or with his brother-in-arms,
-Bewick?
-
- "If I should kill my billie dear,
- God's blessing I shall never win;
- But if I strike at my auld father,
- I think 'twould be a mortal sin.
- But if I kill my billie dear
- It is God's will, so let it be;
- But I make a vow, ere I go from home,
- That I shall be the next man's die."
-
-He put a good old jack or quilted doublet on his back, and on his head
-he put a cap of steel, and well did he become them with his sword and
-buckler by his side!
-
-Now young Bewick had taken his father's sword under his arm, and walked
-about his father's close. He looked between himself and the sun, to see
-some approaching object, and was aware of a man in bright armour, riding
-that way most hastily.
-
- "O who is yon, that comes this way,
- So hastily that hither came?
- I think it be my brother dear,
- I think it be young Christie Graeme.
- Your welcome here, my billie dear,
- And thrice you're welcome unto me."
-
-
-Christie explained that he was come to fight, that his father had been
-to Carlisle, and had met with the elder Bewick. He retailed what had
-passed, "and so I'll never earn my father's blessing, till he sees how
-my arm can guard my head in fight against thee."
-
- "O God forbid, my billie dear,
- That ever such a thing should be!
- We'll take three men on either side,
- And see if we can our fathers agree."
-
-
-Christie shook his head. He knew that it was useless. "O hold thy
-tongue, billie Bewick. If thou'rt a man, as I'm sure thou art, come
-over the dyke and fight with me."
-
-"But I have no harness, billie, as I see you have."
-
-"As little harness as is on your back shall be on mine."
-
-With that Christie threw off his coat of mail and cap of steel, stuck
-his spear into the ground, and tied his horse up to a tree. Bewick
-threw off his cloak, and cast aside his psalter book. He laid his hand
-upon the dyke, and vaulted over. The two fought for two long hours.
-The sweat dropped fast from them both, but not a drop of blood could be
-seen to satisfy the requirements of honour. At last Graeme hit Bewick
-under the left breast, and he fell to the ground wounded mortally.
-
- "Rise up, rise up, now, billie dear,
- Arise and speak three words to me!
- Whether thou's gotten thy deadly wound,
- Or if God and good leeching[#] may succour thee?"
-
-[#] Doctoring.
-
-Bewick groaned. "Get to horse, billie Graeme, and get thee hence
-speedily. Get thee out of this country--that none may know who has done
-this." "O have I slain thee, billie Bewick? But I made a vow, ere I
-came from home, that I would be the next man to die!" Thereupon he
-pitched his sword hilt downwards into a mole-hill, took a run of some
-three and twenty feet, and on his own sword's point he fell to the
-ground dead.
-
-Then up came Sir Robert Bewick. "Rise up, my son," he said, "for I
-think you have got the victory."
-
-"O hold your tongue, my father dear. Let me be spared your prideful
-talking. You might have drunken your wine in peace, and let me and my
-billie be! Go dig a grave, both wide and deep, and a grave to hold us
-both; but lay Christie Graeme on the sunny side, for full sure I know
-that the victory was to him."
-
-"Alas," cried old Bewick, "I've lost the liveliest lad that ever was
-born unto my name." "Alas," quoth good Lord Graeme, "my loss is the
-greater.
-
- 'I've lost my hopes, I've lost my joy,
- I've lost the key, but and the lock;
- I durst have ridden the world around,
- Had Christie Graeme been at my back!'"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXII*
-
- *The Song of the Outlaw Murray*
-
-
- "Word is gone to our noble king,
- In Edinburgh where that he lay,
- That there was an Outlaw in Ettrick Forest
- Counted him nought, nor all his Court so gay."
-
-
-The King mentioned in the ballad is supposed to have been either James
-IV. or James V. This places the date somewhere in the early part of the
-sixteenth century.
-
-The Outlaw Murray and his lady kept royal state in Ettrick Forest. Here
-he lived with five hundred men, all gaily clad in livery of Lincoln
-green. His castle, built of lime and stone, stood fair and pleasantly
-in the midst of the Forest, surrounded by pine trees under which
-wandered many a hart and hind, many a doe and roe and other wild
-creatures. In the forefront of the castle stood two unicorns, with the
-picture of a knight and lady with green holly above their brows.
-
-The King in Edinburgh heard of all this royal state and that the Outlaw
-in Ettrick Forest cared nought for the King of Scotland and his court.
-
-"I make a vow," said the King, "that either I shall be King of Ettrick
-Forest, or the Outlaw shall be King of Scotland."
-
-Then up spoke Lord Hamilton to the noble King, "my sovereign prince,
-take counsel of your nobles and of me. I counsel ye to send to the fine
-Outlaw and see if he will come and be your man and hold the Forest in
-fee from you. If he refuse, we will conquer both him and his lands,
-throw his castle down, and make a widow of his gay lady."
-
-Then the King called to him James Boyd, son of the Earl of Arran, and
-when Boyd came and knelt before him, "Welcome, James Boyd," said the
-noble King; "you must go for me to Ettrick Forest where bides yonder
-Outlaw, ask him of whom he holds his lands, and who is his master, and
-desire him to come and be my man, and hold the Forest free from me. I
-will give him safe warrant to and from Edinburgh, and if he refuse we
-will conquer him and his lands, and throw down his castle, and make a
-widow of his gay lady; and hang his merry men pair by pair wherever we
-see them."
-
-James Boyd took leave of the King and went blithely on his way, until he
-came to the fair Ettrick Forest, the first view of which he got coming
-down Birkendale Brae. He saw the doe and roe, the hart and hind and wild
-beasts in plenty, and heard blows ringing boldly, and arrows whizzing
-near by him.
-
-He saw, too, the fair castle, the like of which he had never seen
-before, with the two gay unicorns on the forefront, and the picture of
-the knight and lady with the green holly above their brow.
-
-Then he spied the five hundred men, all clad in livery of Lincoln green,
-and shooting with their bows on Newark Lee. In the midst of them was a
-knight armed from head to foot, mounted on a milk-white steed, with
-bended bow, all fine to look upon; whom Boyd knew at once to be the
-Outlaw himself.
-
-"God save thee, brave Outlaw Murray, thy lady, and all thy chivalry!"
-
-"Marry, thou art welcome, gentleman; thou seemst to be a King's
-messenger."
-
-"The King of Scotland sent me here, good Outlaw, to know of whom you
-hold your lands, and who is your master."
-
-"These lands are _mine_. I know no King in Christendom. I won this
-Forest from the English when neither the King nor his knights were there
-to see."
-
-"The King desires that you come to Edinburgh, and hold the Forest then
-of him. If you refuse, he will conquer your lands and you, and he has
-vowed to throw down your castle, make a widow of your gay lady, and hang
-your knights pair by pair wherever he finds them."
-
-"Ay, by my troth! I should indeed be far behind. Before the King should
-get my fair native land, many of his nobles would be cold, and their
-ladies right weary."
-
-Then spoke the lady of the Outlaw, fair of face. "That an Outlaw should
-come before the King without my consent makes me fear much that there is
-treason. Bid him be good to his lords at home, for my lord shall ne'er
-see Edinburgh."
-
-James Boyd took leave of the bold Outlaw and went back to Edinburgh, and
-when he came to the King, knelt lowly on his knee.
-
-"Welcome, James Boyd," said the noble King, "of whom is Ettrick Forest
-held?"
-
-"Ettrick Forest is the fairest forest that ever man saw. There are doe
-and roe and hart and hind and wild beasts in plenty; there's a fine
-castle of lime and stone standing there pleasantly, and in the forefront
-of the castle two unicorns all fine to see, with a picture of a knight
-and a lady, and the green holly above their brows. There the Outlaw
-keeps a royal company--five hundred merry men, all gaily clad in Lincoln
-green, and the Outlaw and his lady in purple. Surely they live right
-royally. He says that the forest is his own, that he won it from the
-English, and that as he won it, so will he keep it against all the Kings
-in Christendom."
-
-"Go warn me Perthshire and Angus," cried the King, "go warn Fife up and
-down and the three Lothians, and harness my own horse, for I will myself
-to Ettrick Forest."
-
-When the Outlaw heard that the King was coming to his country to conquer
-him and his lands:
-
-"I make a vow," said he. "I make a vow, and that truly, that the King's
-coming shall be a dear one."
-
-Then he called messengers and sent them in haste hither and thither.
-
-"One of you go to Halliday, Laird of Corehead, my sister's son. Tell
-him to come quickly to my aid, for that the King comes to Ettrick
-Forest, and we shall all be landless."
-
-"What news? What news, man, from thy master?" said Halliday.
-
-"No news thou carest to hear; I come seeking your aid; the King is his
-mortal enemy."
-
-"By my troth, I am sorry for that; if Murray lose fair Ettrick Forest,
-the King will take Moffatdale from me. I'll meet him with five hundred
-men, and more if need be, and before he gets to Ettrick Forest, we will
-all die on Newark Lee."
-
-Another messenger went from the Outlaw to Andrew Murray of Cockpool, his
-dear cousin, to desire him to come and help him with all the power he
-could get together.
-
-"It is hard," said Andrew Murray, "very hard to go against a crowned
-King and put my lands in jeopardy; but if I come not by day I shall be
-there at night."
-
-A messenger went also to Sir James Murray of Traquair.
-
-"What news? What news, man, from your master to me?" said James Murray.
-
-"What need I tell? Well ye know that the King is his mortal enemy and
-that he is coming to Ettrick Forest to make ye all landless men."
-
-"By my troth," said James Murray, "with yonder Outlaw will I live and
-die; the King has long ago given away my lands, so matters can be no
-worse for me."
-
-So the King came on with five thousand men through Caddon Ford. They
-saw the dark forest before them and thought it awesome to look upon, and
-Lord Hamilton begged that the King should take counsel of his nobles and
-should desire the Outlaw to meet him at Permanscore with four of his
-company and that the King should go there also accompanied by five
-Earls. "If he refuse to do that, we'll conquer both him and his lands;
-there shall never a Murray after him hold lands free in Ettrick Forest."
-
-The Laird of Buckscleuth, a man stalwart and stern, thought it beneath
-the state and dignity of a King to go and meet an Outlaw. "The man that
-lives in yonder forest, lives by robbery and felony! wherefore, ride on,
-my liege; we will follow thee with fire and sword; or if your courtier
-lords fall back, our Borderers will make the onset."
-
-But the King spoke forth, casting a wily glance around. "Thou mayest
-hold _thy_ tongue, Sir Walter Scott, nor speak more of robbery and
-felony, for if every honest man had his own cattle thy clan would be a
-poor one."
-
-The King then called to him a gentleman, a royal banner-bearer, James
-Hoppringle of Torsonse by name, who came and knelt before him.
-"Welcome, James Pringle of Torsonse, ye must take a message for me; go
-to yonder Outlaw Murray, where he bideth so boldly; bid him meet me at
-Permanscore with four of his company, I myself will come to him with
-five Earls. If he refuse, bid him look for no favour from me. There
-shall never a Murray after him have free land in Ettrick Forest."
-
-So James Pringle came before the Outlaw. "Welcome James Pringle of
-Torsonse! What message bringst thou from the King to me?"
-
-"He bids ye meet him at Permanscore, with four of your company, and he
-will go there himself with no more than five Earls. If you refuse, he
-will cast down your bonny castle, make a widow of your gay lady, and
-loose on you the bloodhound Borderers to harry you with fire and sword.
-Never shall a Murray after you hold free land in Ettrick Forest."
-
-"It goes hard with me," said the Outlaw; "judge if it go not very hard.
-I mind not the losing of myself, but when I think of my offspring after
-me, my merry men's lives, my widow's tears, that is the pang that
-pinches me. Yonder castle will be right dreary when I am laid in bloody
-earth. Auld Halliday, young Halliday, ye two shall go with me, with
-Andrew and James Murray."
-
-When they came before the King they fell on their knees. "Mercy, mercy,
-noble King, for His sake who died on the Cross."
-
-"Such mercy shall ye have; ye shall be hanged on the gallows."
-
-"May God forbid, and may your mercy be better than that, else, when ye
-come to the port of Edinburgh, ye shall be thinly guarded. These lands
-of fair Ettrick Forest I won from the Southrons, and as I won them so
-will I keep them, against all the Kings in Christendom."
-
-The nobles round the King thought it a pity that he should die.
-
-"Grant me mercy, sovereign prince, and extend me favour. If thou wilt
-make me Sheriff of Ettrick Forest, and my offspring after me, I will
-give thee the keys of my castle, and the blessing of my gay lady."
-
-"If thou wilt give me thy castle keys and the blessing of thy gay lady,
-I'll make thee Sheriff of Ettrick Forest as long as the trees grow
-upward, and never shalt thou forfeit it, if thou be not a traitor to the
-King."
-
-"But Prince, what shall become of my men? When I go back they will call
-me traitor. I had rather lose both life and land than be rebuked by my
-merry-men."
-
-"I will pardon them all if they amend their lives. Name thy lands where
-they lie, and I will render them back to thee."
-
-"Philiphaugh and Lewinhope are mine by right, Newark, Foulshiells and
-Tinnies I won by my bow and arrow. I have farms at Newark Lee and
-Hangingshaw which are mine by birth, and I have many farms in the Forest
-whose names I do not know." Thereupon he gave the King the key of his
-castle, with the blessing of his fair lady, and the King made him
-Sheriff of Ettrick Forest for as long as the trees should grow upward,
-never to be forfeited while he and his descendants remained faithful to
-the King. Much of this land belongs to Murray's heirs, even to this
-day.
-
- "Wha ever heard in, in ony times,
- Sicken an outlaw in his degr,
- Sic favour got befor a King,
- As did the Outlaw Murray of the Foreste free?"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXIII*
-
- *Johnie Armstrong*
-
-
- "When Johnie came before the King,
- With all his men so brave to see,
- The King he moved his bonnet to him;
- He knew he was a King as well as he."
-
-
-In 1529 James V. visited the Border country to execute justice on the
-wild freebooters. Of these the chief was Johnie Armstrong of Gilnockie,
-who levied blackmail for many miles round his residence at the Hollows,
-and spread the terror of his name as far as Newcastle. Acting on the
-evil counsel of false friends, Johnie presented himself before the King
-in all the pomp of Border chivalry.
-
-According to the old ballad the King wrote with his own hand a loving
-letter to Johnie Armstrong, Laird of Gilnockie, bidding him come and
-speak with him speedily. Whereupon the Elliots and Armstrongs convened a
-meeting, to which they came in gallant company, and decided to ride out
-to meet the King and bring him to Gilnockie.
-
-"Make ready rabbits and capon and venison in plenty," said Johnie, "and
-we'll welcome home our royal King to dine at Gilnockie."
-
-So they ran out their horses on Langholm Down, and broke their spears,
-and the ladies, looking from their high windows, cried "God send our men
-safe home again."
-
-When Johnie came before the King with all his brave fellows, the King
-took off his bonnet to him as to an equal.
-
-"My name is Johnie Armstrong," said the freebooter, "your subject, my
-liege; let me find grace for my loyal men and me."
-
-But the King cried, "Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight!
-Never have I granted a traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a bonnie
-gift--four-and-twenty milk-white steeds, newly foaled--I'll give thee
-four-and-twenty milk-white steeds that prance and neigh at a spear, and
-as much English gold as four of their broad backs are able to bear."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a bonnie
-gift--four-and-twenty mills that are working all the year round for
-me--four-and-twenty mills that shall go for thee all the year round, and
-as much good red wheat as all their happers are able to bear."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a great
-gift--four-and-twenty sisters' sons shall fight for thee though all
-should flee."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a brave gift. All
-between here and Newcastle town shall pay thee yearly rent."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Ye lie, calling me traitor; ye lie now, King, although ye be King and
-Prince. Well dare I say it, that all my life I have loved naught but
-honesty, a fleet horse, a fair woman, and two bonny dogs to kill a deer;
-yet had I lived for another hundred years, England should have still
-found me meal and malt and plenty of beef and mutton. Never would a
-Scot's wife have been able to say that I robbed her of aught. But
-surely it is great folly to seek for hot water beneath cold ice. I have
-asked grace of a graceless King, but there is none for me and my men.
-But had I known before I came how unkind thou wouldst prove to me, I
-would have kept the Borderside in spite of thee and thy nobles. How
-glad would be England's King if he but knew that I was taken, for once I
-slew his sister's son and broke a tree over his breastbone."
-
-Now Johnie had a girdle round his waist embroidered and spangled with
-burning gold, very beautiful to look upon, and from his hat hung down
-nine tassels, each worth three hundred pounds. "What wants that knave
-that a King should have, but the sword of honour and the crown?" cried
-the King.
-
-"Where did ye get those tassels, Johnie, that shine so bravely above
-your brow?"
-
-"I got them fighting in the field where thou darest not be," replied
-Johnie. "And had I now my horse and good harness, and were I riding as
-I am used to do, this meeting between us should have been told these
-hundred years. God be with thee, my brother Christy, long shalt thou
-live Laird of Mangertown on the Border-side ere thou see thy brother
-ride by again. God be with _thee_, my son Christy, where thou sitst on
-thy nurse's knee; thou'lt ne'er be a better man than thy father, though
-thou live a hundred years. Farewell, bonnie Hall of Gilnockie, standing
-strong on Eskside; if I had lived but seven more years, I would have
-gilded thee round about."
-
-Then Johnie Armstrong was slain by the King's orders at Carlinrigg with
-all his gallant company, and Scotland's heart was sad to see the death
-of so many brave men, who had saved their country from the Englishmen.
-None were so brave as they, and while Johnie lived on the Border-side no
-Englishman durst come near his stronghold.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXIV*
-
- *The Lament of the Border Widow*
-
-
-How King James V. of Scotland, in 1529, set forth to strike terror into
-the Border freebooters, has been already told in the account of Johnie
-Armstrong. A less celebrated moss-trooper, Cockburne of Henderland, was
-hanged by the pitiless King over the gate of his own tower. The wife of
-Cockburne loved him most dearly, and when she found the King would show
-no mercy, fled away to the rocks behind the castle whilst the cruel
-sentence was carried out. She sat by a roaring torrent of the
-Henderland burn, the noise of which in her ears drowned the savage
-shouts of the King's soldiers. The beautiful song which describes the
-grief of this loving woman is one of the gems of ancient poetry, and is
-here printed entire.
-
-
- *THE LAMENT OF THE BORDER WIDOW*
-
- My love he built me a bonny bower,
- And clad it a' wi' lilye flower,
- A brawer bower ye ne'er did see,
- Than my true love he built for me.
-
- There came a man by middle day,
- He spied his sport, and went away;
- And brought the King that very night,
- Who brake my bower, and slew my knight.
-
- He slew my knight to me sae dear;
- He slew my knight, and took his gear;
- My servants all for life did flee,
- And left me in extremitie.
-
- I sew'd his sheet, making my moan;
- I watch'd the corpse, myself alone;
- I watch'd his body, night and day;
- No living creature came that way.
-
- I took his body on my back,
- And whiles I gaed, and whiles I sat;
- I digg'd a grave, and laid him in,
- And happ'd him with the sod sae green.
-
- But think na ye my heart was sair,
- When I laid the moul' on his yellow hair;
- O think na ye my heart was wae,
- When I turn'd about, away to gae?
-
- Nae living man I'll love again,
- Since that my lovely knight was slain,
- Wi' ae lock of his yellow hair,
- I'll chain my heart for evermair.
-
-[Illustration: "_I sew'd his sheet, making my moan; I watch'd the
-corpse, myself alone._"]
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXV*
-
- *The Raid of the Kers*
-
-
-The spirited ballad that describes this raid is quite modern, since it
-was written by Hogg, "the Ettrick Shepherd," in 1830. But the rash raid
-it describes took place in 1549. The Kers were an important Border
-family, the leaders of whom afterwards became Earls of Roxburgh. Sir
-Andrew Ker was warden of the Border at the time of the raid, but he
-proved that it took place without his consent. The Kers were all
-left-handed men, and puzzled their enemies by their left-handed
-swordsmanship. Even to-day in some parts of the borders a left-handed
-man is called "Ker-handed."
-
-On a fine September evening Tam Ker rode out, with fifty in his company.
-They were armed for a fight and their swords were keen; they rode by the
-Maiden Crags and down the Osway burn, going carefully till the daylight
-closed, for they were soon in Northumberland. Their bold plan was to get
-down the valley of the Coquet even as far as Rothbury where Withrington,
-the English warden, kept a magnificent herd of cattle. They had one
-castle to pass, that of Biddleston, which had been held by the Selby
-family since the reign of Henry III., and still belongs to them to this
-day. Biddleston Castle guarded the Allanton or Alwinton ford, where the
-Alwin stream enters the Coquet. So they sent the reckless Mark Ker
-first, to scout along by the ford, and told him to set up marks on the
-cairns to show his progress. Having nothing else to mark with, he tore
-the shirt off his back, and left strips of it on the cairns. At the
-ford a sentry challenged him, and he answered that he had a message for
-Withrington. The sentry demanded his sealed warrant, and the Scot drew
-his sword. They fought bravely and long before the Englishman was
-killed, and the Scot marvelled that a common soldier should so withstand
-him, for he was the best swordsman of his race. On he galloped, on and
-on, till he met a comely maiden, and addressing her he tried to imitate
-the Northumberland speech, saying that he had lost his way. She told
-him at once that she knew he was a Scot, but so also was she. She had
-been taken captive, but word had came by an English spy that the Kers
-were out upon a raid, and while the English had set a hundred soldiers
-to guard their cattle she had slipped away to warn the Scots and to
-return with them. Being a gallant after the manner of that day, he
-sprang from his horse, kissed her, and invited her to mount his saddle
-even if he had to run beside till he could capture another steed. But
-an English soldier came up and warned him roughly off the road. Mark
-Ker had been brought up to answer rough words with rougher blows; out
-leapt his sword, and he cut the rude words short by slashing the man's
-head off. Then he disguised the maid in the dead man's clothes, and they
-retraced their steps that he might warn his companions. They very soon
-came upon them, and all together hid in the lowest dell of the Larbottle
-burn while they made their plans. Tam Ker, with twenty of the men, was
-to draw off the English, while Mark with thirty others slipped round and
-drove off the cattle unperceived. This was done, and till after
-midnight, Tam, aided by the darkness and by the difficulties of the wild
-locality, held the English at bay.
-
-Then he heard the bugle signal, and knew that Mark was well on the road
-with the beasts, and that he must follow quickly. But Withrington also
-guessed what the signal meant, and pursued with all the speed he knew.
-Mark had not long crossed the ford at Biddleston before the English were
-on him. First Mark and Withrington fought in single combat, hand to
-hand, all their men watching eagerly; it was still very dark, but the
-clash of sword against sword lit the air with sparks. Withrington was
-badly wounded, but Mark was killed. With desperate shouts the Scots fell
-upon the English; then up came Tam and his men from behind to help the
-Scots, but the Captain of Biddleston had also been awakened, and
-galloped down with his men to aid the English. Tam smote his head off
-with his sword, but the horse galloped on with his headless body right
-into the ranks of the Scots. They thought it must be a demon and began
-to scatter in full flight to the Border. Tam was slain, trying to
-follow them, and his men, seeing that they had work enough to gallop for
-their lives, slew the cattle they could no longer hope to steal. On and
-on the hard-pressed remnant spurred their weary horses. It was daylight
-now, and the English along the road shot arrows at them as they galloped
-past. Out of fifty-one hardy, healthy Kers who had started forth in the
-raid, only seventeen, weary and wounded, saw their homes again.
-
-And back in the south country, the comely Scottish maiden lay dead
-across the breast of the gallant Mark, their hearts' blood mingling in a
-common stream. Small wonder that a Scot should make a ballad of the
-story and that Borderers should sing it even to this day.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXVI*
-
- *Merrie Carlisle*
-
-
-The city of Carlisle stands in the midst of a beautiful and fertile
-district with pleasant but not too steep hills around. In the old days
-an easy water-supply was a first essential, and at Carlisle three rivers
-meet, the Caldew and the Petterill running here into the broad stream of
-the Eden. These three rivers almost enclose the ground upon which the
-city is built, so that it is most probable that there was an ancient
-British settlement upon so advantageous a site, before the Roman
-invasion. Our earliest record, however, goes back no further than Roman
-days, and it is certain there was then a Roman city here called
-_Luguvallium_ (the trench of the legion). Even to-day, when new
-gas-pipes are being laid in the ground, it is by no means rare to dig up
-Roman relics. The long Roman name became gradually corrupted into
-"Luel," or "Liel," and the Britons added their word "Caer," which means
-a city, hence "Caer-luel"--an earlier form of the modern Carlisle. The
-Roman city stood, as might be expected, by the great Roman wall,
-guarding the spot where the wall crossed the river Eden. And visitors
-may see to-day that the centre of Carlisle consists of a market-place
-with two main streets leading therefrom, the usual plan in cities of
-Roman origin.
-
-Carlisle was destined to have a stormy history. Draw a line from the
-Solway eastward, straight through Carlisle, and it will be seen that
-here the mainland of Britain is about at its narrowest, hardly so much
-as seventy miles wide, as the crow flies. Note, too, that the wild
-hills of the Pennines and the Cheviots fill in most of this narrow
-district, and that the mainland of Scotland strikes sharply off to the
-west. It is plain from these facts that Carlisle commands the main road
-between Scotland and England, and they provide the reason why at the
-present day seven different railways, most of them important ones, run
-their trains into Carlisle station. The very same reason was responsible
-for the fact that in the good old times no English town was more often
-burnt down by enemies than "Merrie Carlisle."
-
-Even in Roman days, during the reign of Nero, Carlisle was burnt down at
-least once by the wild Picts, who were brave enough to venture against
-the well-armed troops of Rome. After the Romans left Britain this town
-was one of the strongholds of King Arthur; to be sure, nothing very
-definite is known about this romantic king, but the old ballads tell us
-that he was victorious over Gauls, Dacians, Spaniards, and Romans. This
-sounds very unlikely to those who do not realise that when Rome called
-home her best men for her own defence she may have left behind many
-rough soldiers, of various nations, to guard the wall. Although we know
-nothing about King Arthur save what is vague and legendary, we do know
-that the Roman legions were recruited from all the provinces of the
-empire. Cumberland had many connexions with King Arthur; within twenty
-miles of Carlisle, near Penrith, is a big round hill called "King
-Arthur's Table"; while nearer still, on the Penrith and Carlisle road,
-is shown the spot where stood Tearne-Wadling Lake and Castle, where King
-Arthur was bewitched and taken prisoner by the "foul, discourteous
-knight," only to be released provided one of his men would consent to
-marry the hideous lady with hair like serpents! When at last Sir
-Gawaine married this hag for his King's sake, she, of course, changed at
-once into a beautiful young woman! This does not sound very convincing,
-it is true, but in the old days many tales just as unlikely were told of
-famous men. At any rate the ballad begins with the lilting line:--
-
- "King Arthur lives in merrie Carleile,"
-
-and all that concerns us at the moment is that perhaps he really did
-live there, and did do some very real fighting along the debateable line
-of the wall.
-
-We next learn of Carlisle that King Egfrid of Northumbria rebuilt the
-city about the year 675, wherefore we can only suppose that it had
-suffered its somewhat usual fate, perhaps at the hands of that savage
-Saxon warrior called The Burner. But in any case, Carlisle never
-belonged to the Northumbrians for any considerable space of time, but
-was the capital of the Celtic or Welsh kingdom of Cumbria, from which
-the present name of Cumberland is derived.
-
-In 875 the Danes had a turn at pillaging and harrying Carlisle, which
-was again in sorry plight. Both Cumbria and Northumbria were faring
-very badly in the struggle between the various kingdoms which then
-divided up Britain, and for a while it looked as if the energetic kings
-of the Scots would annex both these northern dominions. But the coming
-of the strong-handed Normans altered all this; and by far the most
-noteworthy event in the history of Carlisle was the fact that during
-1092 and 1093 William Rufus seized Cumberland, and for the first time
-added it definitely to England.
-
-Recognising at once the strength and value of Carlisle, Rufus caused a
-strong Norman castle to be built where the old Roman fort used to stand.
-To-day, despite the many rough adventures which have befallen this
-northern city, there yet remain portions of William Rufus's castle, side
-by side with fragments of the old Roman walls. Many of the modern
-buildings put up in King George's day are crumbling, but the old Norman
-and Roman remains are firm as a rock!
-
-The castle was strengthened by King Henry I., but this did not prevent
-its seizure in 1135 by King David of Scotland, who added to it in turn.
-The Scots held the keep till 1157, when it was retaken by Henry II., but
-a few years later, in 1173, William the Lion, King of Scotland, besieged
-it, and for the next fifty years it changed hands several times,
-according to the fortunes of war. It is significant that a main street
-in the northern part of Carlisle is called "Scotch Street," while
-another in the southern part is called "English Street!"
-
-Edward I. held a parliament here after defeating Wallace at Falkirk; and
-it was from Carlisle that this English King conducted his later
-operations against Scotland. It is a pathetic picture, that of this
-stern warrior in his old age, on his last march, trying to carry out his
-pet scheme of uniting the entire island under one rule. He was so ill
-that he had to be carried in a litter as far as Carlisle. Finding
-himself again so near the border, he felt the old fire glow within him,
-and sprang upon his horse--but at Burgh-on-Sands, on the shore of the
-Solway, whence he could view the goal of his ambition, the brave King
-died.
-
-During the next thirty years Carlisle was frequently attacked by the
-Scots, but they were usually defeated. In 1337, however, they partly,
-and in 1345 almost entirely burnt it down. Again in 1380 they burnt
-part of what had been rebuilt! Had there been fire insurance in these
-wild days, the premiums in Carlisle would have been heavy!
-
-After the Wars of the Roses, the city seemed to settle down somewhat,
-and was chiefly known on the Border as the place where Scottish
-freebooters were hanged if caught. In one of the Border villages there
-is a famous churchyard where of old only the graves of women and
-children were to be seen. The explanation was given to a passing
-traveller by an old woman, who said that the men were all buried "in
-merrie Carlisle," meaning, that is, that they had all been hanged there!
-
-In 1537 there was a rising in England known as the "Pilgrimage of
-Grace," in opposition to the savage policy of Henry's minister, Thomas
-Cromwell, and no less than eighty thousand insurgents are said to have
-attacked Carlisle; but after much fighting the rebels were defeated and
-seventy-four of their leaders were executed on the city walls.
-
-When Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned in Carlisle in 1568 it was
-vainly besieged by a force that sought to rescue her; but less than
-thirty years afterwards, in 1596, by a bold stroke of daring, Lord Scott
-of Buccleuch succeeded in surprising the castle and in liberating the
-well-known freebooter, "Kinmont Willie."
-
-When King James united England and Scotland, the troubles of Carlisle
-might have been thought to be over. But in the civil war between King
-and Parliament it was again a storm centre, and was held alternately by
-each of the parties.
-
-The last warlike operations against this much-besieged city were
-undertaken in 1745, when it was first taken by Prince Charlie, who made
-a triumphal entry without any serious fighting, and afterwards retaken
-almost as easily by the cruel Duke of Cumberland, whose entry into the
-place was followed, as usual, by a series of executions.
-
-Among those who suffered was Sir A. Primrose, a gallant ancestor of the
-present Lord Rosebery. The victims were executed, with the cruelties of
-the old law against treason, on the celebrated Gallows Hill, at Harraby,
-and were buried in nameless graves in the Kirkyard of St Cuthbert's.
-Passing down the Botchergate (the London Road), past the site of the old
-Roman cemetery, the wayfarer may see Gallows Hill rise where a deep cut
-has been made to avoid a steep rise in the road. It was just outside the
-boundary of old Carlisle, and executions were witnessed from the walls,
-by men and women alike. Climb the hill--it is worth while. The little
-river Petteril sparkles at our feet; the view, fresh and green,
-stretches away nobly to the Pennines and the Border Hills. Keep a warm
-thought in your heart for all the gallant fellows who met death bravely
-in this place.
-
-No history of Carlisle could omit to mention the Cathedral. English
-cathedrals are shaped like a cross lying on the ground; the long stem of
-the cross is the _nave_ of the cathedral; the two arms are the
-_transepts_; and the upper end that continues the main stem is the
-_choir_. Where choir, nave and transepts meet, the _tower_ rises. But
-unlike every other English cathedral, that of Carlisle has height and
-width, but is too short in length, two-thirds of the nave having been
-hurled down by the Scots!
-
-Every cathedral has its history written in its stones, for those who
-know how to read it. That of Carlisle shows a stormy history, stormier
-than any other. It is not a peaceful building carried out very much in
-one style and undisturbed. It is a building full of signs of
-disturbance, the builders of which were interrupted in their plans by
-war and frequently had their building seriously damaged by their
-enemies. It is a mixture of styles, a mass of re-buildings and
-afterthoughts, but for that very reason it is a fitting symbol of the
-much-harassed city. With all its signs of storm and stress it has much
-beauty, and possesses the finest window in all England, one of the
-finest in the world. Just outside the Cathedral is a noble stretch of
-the old West Wall of the city, which gives a vivid idea of its strength
-in the old days.
-
-The bishops of Carlisle live at Rose Castle, five miles south of the
-Cathedral. This has been their residence for over six hundred years.
-No doubt they thought it advisable not to live in the "merrie city"!
-
-In this castle King Edward I. stayed. It was once partly burnt by
-Bruce, and again partly by the Puritans, but this is a comparatively
-clean record for such a district! In 1745 Captain Macdonald and his
-Scots came down to besiege it, but hearing that the bishop's baby
-daughter was about to be christened, the gallant captain would not let
-warfare spoil so peaceful a ceremony, and not only withdrew his men, but
-also left a white cockade behind him as a sign that the place was not to
-be molested. In all this he showed that true courtesy that always marks
-the real Highland gentleman.
-
-Standing to-day in this bustling, breezy, pleasant little city, it is
-not easy to realise the wild scenes it has witnessed. The charming
-rivers that hem it in show no traces of the bloodshed of the past. Yet
-here have contended painted Pict and war-trained Roman; here the most
-skilful leaders of the Celts, Saxons, and Danes have led their brave and
-sturdy men to battle; here Norman knight has fought with hardy Scot, and
-fierce Border factions have wrangled and sought speedy justice; Puritan
-has fought Cavalier, and Jacobite has faced Hanoverian; kings, generals,
-and warriors of many centuries have found a fitting meeting-place before
-or behind the walls of Carlisle.
-
-An open, airy, quaint city. There is not very much that is old in it,
-for the old was not allowed to stand long enough! But on the top of its
-principal hill the tall truncated Cathedral presents a picturesque
-figure, and if we stand there or by the castle the eye commands fine,
-ancient walls and very delightful distances. It is a place of lingering
-memories, and if these are chiefly of strife and bloodshed we do not
-forget that to the Border folk the city was "Merrie Carlisle."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXVII*
-
- *Kinmont Willie*
-
-
- "O have ye not heard of the false Sakelde,
- O have ye not heard of the keen Lord Scroope,
- How they have taken bold Kinmont Willie
- On Haribee to hang him oop?"
-
-
-The story of this famous freebooter, William Armstrong of Kinmonth,
-belongs to the time of Queen Elizabeth, when Lord Scroope was Warden of
-the Western Marches, and Mr Sakelde of Corby Castle was his Deputy.
-
-Kinmont Willie was a descendant of the famous Johnie Armstrong of
-Gilnockie, and his capture was a violation of the existing truce between
-Scroope and Buccleuch, the Keeper of Liddesdale. Elizabeth was
-indignant at Buccleuch's action in rescuing Willie, and as the Scots at
-that time were very anxious not to offend her, Buccleuch was sent to
-England and came before the Queen, who asked him how he dared to
-undertake such an adventure. "What is it," answered he, "that a man
-dare not do?"
-
-"With ten thousand such men," said Elizabeth, turning to a
-lord-in-waiting, "our brother of Scotland might shake the firmest throne
-of Europe."
-
-The ballad tells of the capture of Kinmont Willie, and how the false
-Sakelde and his men treacherously seized him.
-
-They bound his legs beneath his horse, and tied his hands behind his
-back, and with five men on each side to guard him, brought him over
-Liddel ford and through Carlisle sands to Carlisle castle.
-
-When he arrived there, Willie addressed his captor in these words:
-
-"My hands are tied, but my tongue is free. Who will avow this deed or
-answer for it to bold Buccleuch?"
-
-"Hold thy tongue, thou rank robber! Never a Scot shall set thee free.
-Ye shall take farewell of me before ye cross my castle gate," said
-Scroope.
-
-"Fear ye not that, my lord," answers Willie, "for by the faith of my
-body, never did I yet lodge in a hostelry but that I paid my reckoning
-before I went."
-
-Word was sent to Branksome Hall to the Keeper of Liddesdale that Lord
-Scroope had captured Kinmont Willie, whereupon the Keeper smote the
-table with his hand till the red wine sprang on high, "A curse on my
-head," he cried, "if I be not avenged of Lord Scroope. Is my helmet a
-widow's cap, or my lance a twig from a willow-tree, or my fist a lady's
-lily hand, that an English lord should appraise me so lightly? Have
-they taken Kinmont Willie in spite of the truce, and forgotten that the
-bold Buccleuch is Keeper on the Scottish side? Have they taken Kinmont
-Willie so fearlessly, and forgotten that the bold Buccleuch can back a
-steed and wield a weapon? Were there but war between the lands, then
-would I slight Carlisle Castle though it were built of marble; I would
-set it on fire and drench it with English blood. But since there is
-peace and not war, I'll set the Kinmont free yet never harm English lad
-or lass!"
-
-So Buccleuch called forty bold Marchmen, all of his own name and kin
-except one, Sir Gilbert Elliot, Laird of Stobs. They came spur on heel
-and armour on shoulder, with gloves of green and feathers of blue. Five
-and five came first with hunting-horns and bugles; five and five more
-came with Buccleuch like Warden's men arrayed for battle; five and five
-came like a gang of masons, carrying long high ladders; and five and
-five came like broken men, and so they reached Woodhouselee.
-
-When they had crossed to the English side, the first man they met was
-the false Sakelde.
-
-"Where are ye going, ye keen hunters?" quoth Sakelde.
-
-"We go to hunt an English stag that has trespassed on Scottish ground."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye martial men?"
-
-"We go to catch a rank robber that has broken faith with the bold
-Buccleuch."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye mason lads, with all these long high ladders?"
-
-"We go to harry a corbie's nest not far from here."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye broken men?" said false Sakelde.
-
-But Dickie of Dryhope, leader of the broken men, had never a word of
-learning, and answered nothing.
-
-"Why trespass ye on the English side? Stand! ye raw-footed outlaws!"
-
-Never a word yet said Dickie, but for answer ran his lance clean through
-the body of the false Sakelde.
-
-On then they went to Carlisle town, crossing the Eden at Staneshaw-bank,
-nor lost they either horse or man, though the water was high in flood.
-
-When they reached Staneshaw-bank the wind was rising, and the Laird
-ordered them to leave there their horses for fear they should stamp and
-neigh. The wind blew loudly enough then, but when they came beneath the
-castle wall there was wind and rain and flying sleet. On they crept on
-their knees and held their breath till they placed the ladders against
-the wall. Buccleuch himself mounted first, took the watchman by the
-throat and flung him down upon the leads. "Thou hadst gone on the other
-side," said he, "had there not been peace between our lands."
-
-[Illustration: _The Escape of Kinmont Willie_]
-
-"Sound out the trumpets!" quoth he; "let's wake up Lord Scroope!" Then
-loud blew the Warden's trumpet to the tune of "O wha dare meddle wi'
-me?"
-
-To work they went speedily, and cut a hole through the lead, gaining
-thus the castle hall.
-
-Those inside thought the castle had been taken by King James and all his
-men, yet it was only twenty Scots and ten that had put a thousand in
-such a stir. They hammered and banged at the bars until they came to
-the inner prison, where lay Kinmont Willie.
-
-"Do ye sleep or wake, Kinmont Willie, on the morn when ye shall die?"
-
-"O I sleep lightly and wake often; it's long since sleep was frightened
-from me. Give my service to my wife and bairns and all good fellows
-that enquire after me."
-
-Red Rowan, the strongest man in Teviotdale, lifted him up. "Stay now,
-Red Rowan, till I take farewell of Lord Scroope. Farewell, farewell, my
-good Lord Scroope," he cried. "I will pay ye for my lodging when first
-we meet on the Border."
-
-With shout and cry Red Rowan bore him on his shoulders down the long
-ladder, the irons clanking at every stride.
-
-"Many a time," said Kinmont Willie, "have I ridden a horse both wild and
-unruly, but never have my legs bestrode a rougher beast than Red Rowan.
-Many a time have I pricked a horse over the furrows, but never since I
-backed a steed have I worn such cumbrous spurs."
-
-Scarcely had they won the Staneshaw-bank when all the bells in Carlisle
-were ringing and Lord Scroope was after them with a thousand men on
-horse and on foot. But--
-
- "Buccleuch has turn'd to Eden water
- Even where it flowed frae bank to brim,
- And he has plunged in wi' a' his band,
- And safely swam them through the stream.
-
- He turn'd him on the other side,
- And at Lord Scroope his glove flung he--
- 'If ye like na my visit to merry England,
- In fair Scotland come visit me!'
-
- All sore astonished stood Lord Scroope,
- He stood as still as rock of stane;
- He scarcely dared to trew[#] his eyes,
- When through the water they had gane.
-
-[#] Trust
-
- 'He is either himsell a devil frae hell,
- Or else his mother a witch maun be;
- I wadna have ridden that wan water,
- For a' the gowd[#] in Christentie.'"
-
-[#] Gold
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXVIII*
-
- *Dick o' the Cow*
-
-
- "Fair Johnie Armstrong to Willie did say
- 'Billie, a-riding we will gae.'"
-
-
-The ballad of this name, a popular one in Liddesdale, relates, like that
-of Kinmont Willie, to the time when Lord Scroope was Warden of the West
-Marches and Governor of Carlisle. Dick o' the Cow seems to have been his
-fool or jester. Dickie, some years after the events described in the
-ballad, fell a victim to the vengeance of the Armstrongs.
-
-
-There had been no raids from Liddesdale for a considerable time, and no
-riding, and the horses had all grown so fat that they dare scarcely stir
-out of the stall. Then fair Johnie Armstrong said to his brother Willie,
-"Brother, we will go a-riding. We have long been at feud with England,
-and perhaps we shall find some spoil."
-
-So they rode to Hulton Hall and round about it, but the laird, a wise
-man, had left neither goods nor cattle outside to steal, except six
-sheep in a meadow. Said Johnie, "I'd rather die in England than take
-those six sheep to Liddesdale."
-
-"But who was that man we last met as we came over the hill?"
-
-"Oh, he is an innocent fool, and men call him Dick o' the Cow."
-
-"That fool has three good cows of his own, as good as there are in
-Cumberland. Betide me life or death, they shall go to Liddesdale with
-me!"
-
-So they came to the house of the poor fool, broke down his thick wall,
-loosed his three cows, and took also three coverlets from his wife's
-bed.
-
-In the morning at daylight when the loss was discovered, there were loud
-lamentations. "Hold thy tongue, wife," said Dickie, "and stop thy
-crying. I'll bring thee back three cows for each one that thou hast
-lost."
-
-So Dickie went to Lord Scroope. "Hold thy tongue, fool," said Scroope.
-"I have no time for jesting."
-
-"A shame on your jesting, my lord!" said Dickie, "jesting agrees not
-with me. Liddesdale was in my house last night and has taken my three
-cows. I can no longer dwell in Cumberland as your poor faithful fool,
-unless you give me leave to steal in Liddesdale."
-
-"I give thee leave, fool!" said Scroope; "but thou speakest against me
-and my honour unless thou give me thy hand and pledge that thou wilt
-steal from none but those who stole from thee."
-
-"There is my right hand and pledge! May my head hang on Haribee, and
-may I never again cross Carlisle sands if I steal from any man who stole
-not from me.",
-
-Dickie joyfully took leave of his lord and master, and went and bought a
-bridle and a pair of new spurs which he packed up in the thigh of his
-breeches, then he came on as fast as he could to Pudding-burn house,
-where were thirty-three Armstrongs.
-
-"O what has come to me now?" said Dickie, "what great trouble is this?
-For here is but one innocent fool against thirty-three Armstrongs?" Yet
-he went courteously up to the Hall board.
-
-"Well may ye be, my good Laird's Jock, but the devil bless all your
-company. I'm come to complain of your man, Johnie Armstrong, and of his
-brother Willie, that they came to my house last night and took away my
-three cows."
-
-Quoth fair Johnie Armstrong, "We'll hang him."
-
-"Nay," said Willie, "we'll slay him."
-
-But up spoke another young Armstrong, "We'll give him a thrashing and
-let him go."
-
-Then up spoke the good Laird's Jock, the best fellow in all the company,
-"Sit down a while, Dickie, and we'll give thee a bit of thine own cow's
-thigh."
-
-Dickie's heart was so sore that he could not eat a bit, but he went and
-lay down in an old peat-house where he thought to sleep the night, and
-all the prayers the poor fool prayed were, "I wish I had amends for my
-three good cows."
-
-Now it was the custom of Pudding-burn house and of the house of
-Mangerton, whose laird was chief of the Armstrong clan, that any who
-came not to the table at the first summons got no more meat till the
-next meal, so some of the lads, hungry and weary, had thrown the key of
-the stable above the door-head. Dickie took good notice of that to turn
-it to his own account, went into the stable where stood thirty-three
-horses and tied thirty of them with St Mary's knot, tight to their
-stalls.
-
-Of the remaining three, Dickie took two, which belonged to Johnie and
-Willie Armstrong, and the one belonging to the Laird's Jock he left
-loose in the stable. Leaping on one, he took the other along with him,
-and rode off as fast as he could.
-
-When day came, there were great shouts and cries.
-
-"Who has done this," quoth the good Laird's Jock; "see that ye tell me
-the truth."
-
-"It is Dickie that has been in the stable last night, and has taken the
-horses."
-
-"Ye never would listen to me," said the good Laird's Jock, "though I
-told ye true tales. Ye would never stay out of England but would steal
-everything, till ye were crooked and blind."
-
-"Lend me thy bay," said fair Johnie; "he is the only horse loose in the
-stable, and I'll either fetch back Dick o' the Cow, or he shall die."
-
-"Lend thee my bay!" said Jock; "he is worth gold and good money. Dick
-o' the Cow has taken two horses; I would not ye make them three."
-
-Johnie, however, took the Laird's steel jacket on his back, and a
-two-handed sword by his side, and a steel cap on his head, and galloped
-after Dickie, who was barely three miles from the town when Johnie
-overtook him on Cannobie Lee, on the borders of Liddesdale.
-
-"Abide, abide, thou traitor thief!" cried Armstrong; "the day is come
-that thou shalt die!"
-
-Dickie looked over his left shoulder and said, "Johnie, hast thou no
-more in thy company? There is a preacher in our chapel who teaches all
-the livelong day, and when day is gone and night has come, there are
-only three words I remember--the first and second are Faith and
-Conscience--the third is 'Ne'er let a traitor free.' What faith and
-conscience was thine, Johnie, when thou tookest away my three cows? And
-when thou hadst taken them away, thou wast not satisfied. Thou sentest
-thy brother Willie, and took away three coverlets off my wife's bed!"
-
-Then Johnie let his spear fall low by his side, and thought he would
-have killed Dickie, but the powers above were stronger than he, and he
-only succeeded in running through the fool's jerkin. Dickie out with
-his sword and ran after him, and when he could not get at him with the
-blade, he felled him with the butt-end over the eye, felled Johnie
-Armstrong, the finest man in the south country. "Gramercy," said
-Dickie, "I had but two horses, thou hast made them three!"--and he took
-Johnie's steel jacket off his back and his two-handed sword, and his
-steel cap. "Farewell, Johnie," said he, "I'll tell my master I met
-thee."
-
-When Johnie wakened out of his swoon, he was a sad man. "Art thou gone,
-Dickie?" he said. "Then the shame and woe are left with me. Art thou
-gone? Then, Dickie, the devil go in thy company, for if I live to be a
-hundred, I'll never again fight with a fool."
-
-Dickie came home to the good Lord Scroope as fast as he could. "Now,
-Dickie, I'll neither eat nor drink till thou art hanged on high."
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord," said Dickie, "this was not the promise
-ye made me, for I would never have gone to Liddesdale to steal if I had
-not got leave from thee." "But why did ye steal the Laird's Jock's
-horse? Ye might have lived long in Cumberland before the Laird's Jock
-had stolen from thee."
-
-"Indeed, I knew ye lied, my lord. I won the horse from fair Johnie
-Armstrong hand to hand on Cannobie Lee. There is the jacket that was on
-his back, and the two-handed sword that hung by his side, and the steel
-cap that was on his head. I brought all these tokens to show thee."
-
-"If that be true that thou tellest me (and I think thou durst not lie)
-I'll give thee fifteen pounds for the horse, all told out in the lap of
-thy cloak; I'll give thee one of my best milk cows to maintain thy wife
-and three children, and they will be as good as any two of thine would
-be."
-
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord!" said Dickie. "Do ye think aye to make
-a fool of me? I'll either have twenty pounds for the horse or else I'll
-take him to Mortan fair."
-
-So Scroope gave him twenty pounds for the horse, all in gold and good
-money, and one of his best milk cows to maintain his wife and three
-children.
-
-Then Dickie rode as fast as he could through Carlisle town, and the
-first man he met was my lord's brother, Ralph Scroope, Bailiff of
-Glozenburrie.
-
-"Well be ye met, Ralph Scroope!" said Dickie.
-
-"Welcome, my brother's fool!" said Ralph. "Where did ye get Johnie
-Armstrong's horse?"
-
-"Where did I get him? I stole him," said Dickie.
-
-"Wilt thou sell me the bonny horse?"
-
-"Ay, if thou count out the money in the lap of my cloak, for never a
-penny will I trust thee."
-
-"I'll give thee ten pounds for the horse and count it into the lap of
-thy cloak, and one of my best milk cows to maintain thy wife and three
-children."
-
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord! Do ye think aye to make a fool of me?
-I'll either have twenty pounds for the horse, or I'll take him to Mortan
-fair."
-
-So Ralph gave him twenty pounds for the horse, all in gold and good
-money, and one of his milk cows to maintain his wife and three children.
-
-Then Dickie leaped and laughed, and cried, "May the neck of the third
-horse be broken if either of the two were better than he!"
-
-So he came home to his wife and ye may judge how the poor fool had
-succeeded. For her three stolen coverlets he gave her two score English
-pounds, and two cows as good as her own three. "And here," said he, "is
-a white-footed nag that I reckon will carry us both. But if I stay
-longer in Cumberland the Armstrongs will hang me." So Dickie took leave
-of his lord and went to live at Burgh under Stanmuir.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXIX*
-
- *The Lochmaben Harper*
-
-
-The castle of Lochmaben is said to have been the residence of Robert
-Bruce while Lord of Allandale. Hence, as a royal fortress, the keeping
-of it was always granted to some powerful lord. There is extant a grant
-giving to one of these, Robert Lauder, the office of Captain and Keeper
-of Lochmaben Castle for seven years, and among his perquisites were
-"lands stolen from the King"!
-
-The inhabitants of four small villages near the castle have each still
-to this day a right to a small piece of ground. These people are
-descendants of Robert Bruce's retainers, to whom he assigned these
-portions of land in reward for faithful service, and there are still to
-be found some families (_e.g._ the Richardsons of Lochmaben) who hold
-their lands direct from the times of Bruce without a break.
-
- "O heard ye na o' the silly blind Harper,
- How long he lived in Lochmaben town?
- And how he wad gang to fair England,
- To steal the Lord Warden's Wanton Brown?
-
- But first he gaed to his gude wyfe,
- Wi' a' the haste that he could thole[#]
- 'This wark,' quo' he, 'will ne'er gae well
- Without a mare that has a foal.'
-
-[#] Suffer.
-
-
-Quoth his wife, "Thou hast a good grey mare that can jump both high and
-low; so set thee on her back and leave the foal at home with me." Away
-went the Harper to England as fast as he might, and when he came to
-Carlisle gate, who should be there but the Warden himself?
-
- "'Come into my hall, thou silly blind Harper,
- And of thy harping let me hear!'
- 'O, by my sooth,' quo' the silly blind Harper,
- 'I wad rather hae stabling for my mare."
-
- The Warden looked o'er his left shoulder,
- And said unto his stable groom--
- 'Gae take the silly blind Harper's mare,
- And tie her beside my Wanton Brown.'"
-
-
-So the Harper harped and sang, the lordlings danced, and so sweet was
-the music that the groom forgot all about the stable door. Still the
-Harper harped on till all the nobles were fast asleep, when he quickly
-took off his shoes, crept softly down the stair, and hied with light
-tread to the stable door, which he opened and entered. He found there
-three-and-thirty steeds. He took a colt's halter which he had hidden in
-his hose, slipped it over Wanton Brown, tied it to the grey mare's tail,
-and turned them both loose at the castle gate.
-
-Away they went over moor and moss and dale, and the mare never let
-Wanton rest a moment, but kept him galloping home to her foal. So swift
-of foot was she, and knew her way so well, that she reached Lochmaben a
-good three hours before daybreak.
-
-When she came to the Harper's door, she neighed and snorted. "Rise up,"
-shouted the Harper's wife, "thou lazy lass, and let in thy master and
-his mare." The lass rose up, put on her clothes and looked through the
-lock-hole. "By my sooth," cried she, "our mare has got a fine brown
-foal!"
-
-"Hold thy tongue, thou foolish wench, the light is dazzling thine eyes.
-I'll wager all I have against a groat that it's bigger than ever our
-foal will be."
-
-Still in merry Carlisle the Harper harped to high and low, and nought
-could they do but listen to him until day-dawn. But when it was
-daylight they discovered that Wanton Brown was gone and also the poor
-blind Harper's mare.
-
-"Alas! alas!" cried the cunning old Harper, "alas that I came here; in
-Scotland I have lost a brown colt foal and in England they have stolen
-my good grey mare."
-
-"Cease thy lamenting, thou silly blind Harper, and go on harping; we'll
-pay thee well for the loss of thy colt foal and thou shalt have a far
-better mare." So the harper harped and sang, and so sweet were his
-harpings that he was paid for the foal he never had lost and three times
-over for the gray mare.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXX*
-
- *The Rookhope Ride*
-
-
-This Durham border song is supposed to be spoken by a Weardale man, who
-begins by denouncing the inhabitants of the Tyne valley, "and all their
-companies there about" as false thieves,
-
- "minded to do mischief
- And at their stealing stands not out."
-
-
-It must be confessed that the Tynedale men had an unenviable reputation.
-They were such lawless desperadoes, so addicted to rapine, that during
-more than two centuries the merchants of Newcastle regularly refused to
-take an apprentice born in that district. The date is December 1572.
-The rebel Earl of Northumberland, who had taken up arms for Mary Queen
-of Scots, and for the old religion, had been betrayed by the Scots and
-beheaded at York. Owing to this rebellion there was great confusion in
-the northern counties, hence the time was well chosen by the "limmer
-thieves" of Tynedale to make a predatory raid on their neighbours. They
-gathered together the stoutest men of arms and the best in gear, a
-hundred or more in number, and in the forenoon, about eleven o'clock,
-they came into a "bye-fell" and stopped for a meal--the last which some
-of them would eat. When they had eaten, they chose their captains,
-Harry Corbyl, Simon Fell, and Martin Ridley. Then they rode on over the
-moss, "with many a brank and whew," saying to one another that they were
-men enough,
-
- "For Weardale-men have a journey ta'en,
- They are so far out o'er yon fell,
- That some of them's with the two earls,
- And others fast in Bernard castell.
-
- There we shall get gear enough,
- For there is nane but women at hame;
- The sorrowful fend that they can make.
- Is loudly cries as they were slain."
-
-
-They came in at Rookhope Head, which is the top of a rocky valley, about
-five miles long, at the end of which Rookhope Burn empties itself into
-the river Wear. This valley is as wild and open to-day as it was then.
-In some four hours they gathered together about six hundred sheep and
-they were engaged in "shifting" the horses, when the hue and cry was
-raised by one Rowley, whose horse they tried to take. He was the first
-man to see them. The cry spread rapidly down Rookhope burn and through
-Weardale, and word came to the bailiff's house at the East-gate. He was
-out, but his wife had his horse saddled and sent it to him, together
-with his sword, spear, and jacket quilted with iron plates, the sort of
-harness worn by the moss-troopers and other light horsemen of the time.
-The bailiff had already heard the bad news, and was sorely troubled
-thereby. His own brother had been attacked three days before by
-marauders, and lay sick with nineteen wounds. Yet the bailiff shrank
-not at all, but hied fast after the sheep-stealers, with as many of the
-neighbours as he could gather to bear him company.
-
-The pursuers overtook the thieves in Nuketon Cleugh, and gave them all
-the fighting they wanted. Not one of them ever thought to see his wife
-again. They bore three banners against the Weardale men, "as if the
-world had been all their own." The fray lasted only an hour, but many a
-tall man lay weaponless and sore wounded before that hour was done, and
-four of the Northumbrian prickers were slain, including Harry Corbyl
-whom they had chosen to be their captain. Eleven of them were taken
-prisoners. Only one of the Weardale men fell but--
-
- "These Weardale-men, they have good hearts,
- They are as stiff as any tree;
- For, if they'd everyone been slain,
- Never a foot back man would flee.
-
- And such a storm amongst them fell,
- As I think you never heard the like;
- For he that bears his head on high,
- He oft-tymes falls into the dyke.
-
- And now I do entreat you all,
- As many as are present here,
- To pray for the singer of this song,
- For he sings to make blythe your cheer."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXI*
-
- *Barthram's Dirge*
-
-
-The story of how this ballad came to be preserved to us is a very
-interesting one. A Mr Surtees, who was very interested in the old
-ballads, used to give work to a poor old Scotswoman to weed in his
-garden. Finding that she had learnt ballads in her young days, he
-encouraged her to talk about them, and this was amongst those which she
-recited to him. She told him that it referred to a young man named
-Bertram or Barthrum, who made love to a young lady against the wish of
-her brothers. The cruel brothers slew him, but the lady had him buried
-at the very spot where he was wont to come to visit her in the days of
-their love. Sir Walter Scott thinks that perhaps Barthram was an
-Englishman and the lady was Scottish, and that the anger of the lady's
-brothers against him was partly on that account.
-
-It must be remembered that in those stormy days, when Border rivalry was
-keen, and all the Border chiefs, on both sides, were men of war-like
-mould, intermarriage between the two races was punishable by Border law.
-Each side felt equally that such mixed marriages would sooner or later
-produce a race that was neither loyal English nor loyal Scotch. A
-spirit of aloofness and rivalry was deliberately encouraged, right up to
-the time of the union of the two countries under one king.
-
-
- *BARTHRAM'S DIRGE*
-
- They shot him dead at the Nine-Stone Rig,
- Beside the Headless Cross,
- And they left him lying in his blood,
- Upon the moor and moss.
-
- * * * * *
-
- They made a bier of the broken bough,
- The sauch and the aspin gray,
- And they bore him to the Lady Chapel,
- And waked him there all day.
-
- A lady came to that lonely bower,
- And threw her robes aside,
- She tore her long yellow hair,
- And knelt at Barthram's side.
-
- She bathed him in the Lady-Well,
- His wounds so deep and sair,
- And she plaited a garland for his breast,
- And a garland for his hair.
-
- They rowed him in a lily-sheet,
- And bare him to his earth,
- And the Gray Friars sung the dead man's mass,
- As they pass'd the Chapel Garth.
-
- They buried him at the mirk midnight,
- When the dew fell cold and still,
- When the aspin gray forgot to play,
- And the mist clung to the hill.
-
- They dug his grave but a bare foot deep,
- By the edge of the Ninestone Burn,
- And they covered him o'er with the heather-flower,
- The moss and the Lady fern.
-
- A Gray Friar staid upon the grave,
- And sang till the morning tide,
- And a friar shall sing for Barthram's soul,
- While the Headless Cross shall bide.[#]
-
-[#] Mr Surtees observes, on this passage, that in the return made by the
-commissioners, on the dissolution of Newminster Abbey, there is an item
-of a Chauntery, for one priest to sing daily _ad crucem lapideam_.
-Probably many of these crosses had the like expiatory solemnities for
-persons slain there. They certainly did bury, in former days, near the
-Ninestone Burn, for Sir Walter Scott found there, lying among the
-heather, a small monumental cross, with initials, which he reverently
-placed upright.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXII*
-
- *Queen Mary and the Borders*
-
-
-The brief reign of Mary, Queen of Scots, was so crowded with incident
-that she was left with little time to visit the disturbed borderland of
-her kingdom. None-the-less her few visits to this district were fraught
-with important consequences. In 1565, when she married her cousin Lord
-Darnley, the head of the Douglas faction and a Roman Catholic, the
-Protestant nobles took up arms. In her very honeymoon she headed her
-soldiers, pursued the rebels to Dumfries, entered the town with a pistol
-in each hand, and laughed heartily at the fun of making her enemies
-"skip like rabbits" over the Border. She was only twenty-two years
-old--a fearless, dashing, attractive woman, with a clever head, a strong
-will, and a wild and lawless disposition.
-
-In the next year she again visited the Border, but on a very different
-errand. Mary had developed an extreme fancy for that bold Border Lord,
-the Earl of Bothwell, whose Castle of Hermitage commanded the
-picturesque and important valley of the Liddel. The Queen had given him
-authority to control the fierce Borderers; and when the earl was riding
-out he met the most lawless of them, Jock Elliot, of whom the couplet--
-
- "My name is little Jock Elliot
- And who dare meddle wi' me?"
-
-Bothwell fired straight at Elliot with his pistol, wounding him in the
-leg. Elliot aimed a mighty blow at Bothwell with his two-handed sword,
-giving the earl so sore a wound that he was glad enough to gallop home
-while there was yet time to save his life.
-
-Mary was holding solemn court at Jedburgh when she heard of her
-favourite's danger. She straightway took horse and rode to Hermitage, a
-hard cross-country ride of twenty miles, through a district infested
-with reckless men. When she galloped back to Jedburgh, she was in high
-fever and nearly died. Later on, in the misery of her long
-imprisonment, she often said, "Would I had died at Jedburgh!" Years
-later, a broken piece of a silver spur was found at Queensmire, on this
-difficult and dangerous road, just where Queen Mary's horse was said to
-have come to grief.
-
-Yet another time Queen Mary came to the Border, this time to cross
-it--after her imprisonment at Lochleven, her escape, and the disastrous
-rout of her followers at Langside. Daring and resourceful as ever, she
-fled across the Solway in an open boat; Scotland had failed her, she
-sought the protection of England. She landed at Cockermouth, and was
-led to Carlisle by Sir R. Lowther, and kept there, in reality a
-prisoner, while Elizabeth was musing of the dangers of the position. The
-Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland took up Mary's cause and
-attempted to rescue her, but the Warden of Carlisle, Lord Scroope,
-defended the town successfully against the two earls, and they were soon
-in flight, eastward for their very lives. After this attempt at rescue
-Mary was, for greater safety, sent down to Bolton Castle in Yorkshire.
-
-[Illustration: Queen Mary crossing the Solway]
-
-Leonard Dacre, a member of the powerful Cumberland family of the Dacres,
-seems to have played a treacherous part, first promising the earls his
-help, and then betraying them to Elizabeth. He seized Nawarth Castle,
-which properly belonged to his young niece, and collected together three
-thousand men to the old Border war-cry, "A Red Bull, a Red Bull!"
-(probably the nickname of some fierce red-haired Celtic champion). The
-defeated earls came to Nawarth for shelter, and Dacre refused to harbour
-them. But by this time Elizabeth was convinced of Dacre's treason, and
-ordered Lord Hudson, the Governor of Berwick, to arrest him.
-
-Hudson appears to have marched by rather a round-about way, for Dacre
-met him at Geltbridge, on the west of Nawarth. A bridge is always a
-good point of vantage for meeting an enemy, especially when the river
-runs, as the Gelt does, through a deep and wooded gorge. The enemy has
-only a narrow way by which to approach, and no doubt Dacre posted his
-archers behind the trees and among the great rocks. The fight was a
-desperate one, but Hudson's men prevailed and pursued their foes far up
-the hill of Gelt, scuffling fiercely among the forest trees and dyeing a
-deeper hue the red sandstone cliffs and quarries.
-
-All the rebels who could escape fled across the Border to Scotland,
-where the Borderers, who were till then their enemies, received them
-with that open and fair hospitality which was one of their many great
-qualities. Elizabeth demanded that the leading noblemen should be given
-up to her; but although the Scottish Regent, Murray, made a pretence of
-trying to secure the Earl of Westmoreland, the Scots had too much sense
-of honour to allow him to proceed.
-
-The Earl of Northumberland, was however betrayed to the Scottish Regent
-by Hector Armstrong of Harelaw; but this the gallant Borderers held to
-be shameful, and Armstrong was a ruined man from that day forth.
-
-Two years later, this Earl was actually sold to Elizabeth and beheaded
-at York. Thus ended this small rebellion, called in history the Rising
-of the North, but which is known locally in Cumberland as Dacre's Raid.
-
-There is a little stream which rushes down a deep and beautiful glade to
-join the river Gelt above Geltbridge; this stream is known as
-"Hellbeck," and villagers tell us that the reason for this name is that
-it was stained with blood for two whole days after some battle that took
-place there. This battle is probably the one spoken of here.
-
-A wicket gate by Geltbridge leads us to the path through Gelt woods.
-The noble gorge is deeply cleft through the grand red sandstone rocks.
-Below roars and dashes the impetuous river; the path winds, sometimes
-high, sometimes low, through wonderful weeds, carpeted with beautiful
-mosses, gemmed with delightful flowers. On one of the rocks is an
-inscription carved by a Roman soldier, over fifteen hundred years ago.
-Follow the river, up, up, till the little Hellbeck is seen trickling
-down from the east; cross the little bridge and follow the streamlet on
-its opposite bank, along a path so little trod as to be scarcely
-visible; wander among ferns along one of the loneliest glens in the
-whole of Britain, passing the great railway bridge (_under_ if the
-stream be low or _over_ if it be high) till you join the main road
-again. There is no spot more beautiful or more peaceful. Yet this is
-the Hellbeck where men fought and hacked, and slashed and slew, among
-these woods, up and down these steep hillsides. These old trees, when
-young, have felt warm blood at their roots; and all because of a young,
-wild wilful queen, who fascinated men's hearts then, and the memory of
-whom fascinates them still.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXIII*
-
- *The Raid of the Reidswire*
-
-
- "To deal with proud men is but pain,
- For either must ye fight or flee,
- Or else no answer make again,
- But play the beast, and let them be."
-
-
-Reidswire, the name of a place about ten miles from Jedburgh, means the
-Red Swire. Swire is an old northern term for the descent of a hill, and
-the epithet red may refer to the colour of the heath.
-
-The affair about which we are to tell took place on the 7th of July
-1575, at a meeting held, on a day of truce, by the Wardens of the
-Marches, for redressing wrongs and adjusting difficulties which could
-not be prevented from arising upon the Border. The Scottish Warden was
-Sir John Carmichael, and among his following were the Armstrongs and
-Elliots, Douglas of Cavers (a descendant of the Douglas who fell at
-Otterbourne), Cranstoun, whose ferocious motto was "Ye shall want ere I
-want," Gladstain, "good at need," and the ancient head of the
-Rutherfoords, called in tradition the Cock of Hunthill, "with his nine
-sons him about." The English Warden was the haughty Sir John Forster,
-and he had full fifteen hundred men with him, chiefly Northumbrians,
-Tynedale, and Reedsdale men, who looked with scorn upon the much smaller
-array of their hereditary foes.
-
-The meeting, however, began meekly enough, with merriment and jests.
-Such Border meetings of truce, though they might wind up in blood, as
-was to happen now, always began as occasions of marketing and revelry.
-Both parties came fully armed to such a tryst, yet intermixed in mutual
-sports and familiar intercourse,
-
- "Some gaed to drink, and some stood still,
- And some to cards and dice them sped."
-
-
-The Scots planted their pavilions or tents and feared no ill, even when
-they saw five hundred Fenwicks (a powerful Northumbrian clan) "marching
-in a flock." The clerk began to call the rolls, and to deal with one
-complaint after another for the loss of cows or ewes or other property.
-In the course of the proceedings an accusation was raised against an
-English freebooter named Farnstein, at the instance of a Scotch
-complainant. A "true bill" was found against the man, which means that
-he ought to be handed over to justice. But the English Warden alleged
-that he had fled, and could not be found. Carmichael, considering this
-as a pretext to avoid making compensation for the felony, bade the
-Northumbrians speak out plainly, and "cloke no cause for ill nor good."
-Upon this Sir John Forster, a proud and insolent man, "began to reckon
-kin and blood," by which picturesque phrase the ballad probably means
-that he swiftly added up his forces. Then he drew himself up, backed by
-his Dalesmen, all fingering their bows, and with insulting expressions
-against Carmichael's kin he bade him "match with his equals." The men
-of Tynedale, who only wanted a pretext for a quarrel, drew their bows
-and let off a flight of arrows among the Scots. The more moderate men on
-both sides at first tried to quell the tumult, but in vain. The fight
-was bound to come.
-
- "Then there was naught but bow and spear,
- And every man pulled out a brand."
-
-
-The English showed their usual dexterity with the bow. The Scots, for
-some reason, never took to this weapon; they had fire-arms, pistolets,
-and the like. The terrible cloth-yard arrows "from tackles flew," and
-the old proverb bade fair to justify itself, that every English archer
-carried twenty-four Scots under his belt--an allusion to his bundle of
-shafts. Success seemed certain for the English side; some of the
-foremost men among the Scots fell, and even Carmichael was thrown to the
-ground and was within an ace of being made a prisoner. The air
-resounded with the rallying cries of the English, the names of their
-captains, "A Shaftoe! A Shaftoe!" "A Fenwick! A Fenwick!" The Scots
-had little harness among them, only a few had the jack which served them
-as a defence for the body. Nevertheless, they laid about them sturdily,
-with "dints full dour," and there was many a cracked crown. Then
-suddenly a shout was heard. "Jedburgh's here!" A body of Jedburgh
-burgesses appear to have arrived just in the nick of time to add to the
-outnumbered force of Scots. They probably wore armour and what were
-called "white hats," that is steel caps. Meanwhile, the English, too
-confident of easy victory, instead of slaying more Scots and turning the
-repulse into a rout, thought only to plunder the unhappy merchants, who,
-trusting to the truce which had been proclaimed, had attached themselves
-to the meeting. Had it not been for the English greed, the Scots would
-have been defeated. As it was, the Tynedale men, throwing themselves on
-the merchants' packs, fell into disorder, their adversaries recovered
-from their surprise, and the timely arrival of the Jedburgh men turned
-the tables. A short, sharp bout ended in the triumph of the Scots and
-the Northumbrians fled, "Down ower the brae, like clogged bees." The
-Scots took many prisoners, amongst whom were the English Warden, and his
-son-in-law, Sir Francis Russell; but the most gallant soldier taken that
-day was that courteous knight, Sir Cuthbert Collingwood, to whose family
-Admiral Collingwood belonged. Several of those "Fenwicks fierce," who
-had turned up five hundred strong at the commencement of the fray, had
-the mortification of being carried off in triumph by their enemies. All
-these prisoners were sent to the Earl of Morton, Regent of Scotland, who
-detained them at Dalkeith for some days, until the bitter feeling
-natural after such an affair had died down, at any rate in part, and by
-this prudent precaution the Regent is thought to have probably averted a
-war between the two kingdoms. He ultimately permitted them to return to
-their own country, parting from them with great expressions of regard.
-The interest taken in the matter by Queen Elizabeth, and the
-representations of her Ambassador at Edinburgh, no doubt had something
-to do with this happy issue.
-
-It will probably occur to the careful reader of this book as somewhat
-strange to find the ruling powers of England and Scotland both so set
-upon peace; but it must be remembered that at this period in the reign
-of Queen Elizabeth the heir-apparent to the English throne was the young
-James VI., King of Scotland, who would naturally not wish for any
-quarrel with the country which he hoped later on to rule. Elizabeth, on
-the other hand, had Mary Queen of Scots as her prisoner, and did not
-wish in any further way to strain the already delicate relations between
-the two countries.
-
-The Carmichael mentioned in this ballad, known in full as Sir John
-Carmichael of Edrom, Scottish Warden of the Middle Marches, was
-afterwards murdered by one of the wild Armstrongs, who is said to have
-composed, the night before his execution, the following manly and
-pathetic "Good-night." The third and fourth lines show clearly the
-disrepute into which this once honoured clan was falling; the seventh
-and eighth lines could only have been written by one who, despite his
-faults, had the true gallant instincts deep in his blood.
-
-
- ARMSTRONG'S GOOD-NIGHT
-
- "This night is my departing night,
- For here nae langer must I stay;
- There's neither friend nor foe o' mine,
- But wishes me away.
-
- What I have done thro' lack of wit,
- I never, never can recall;
- I hope ye're a' my friends as yet;
- Good-night and joy be with you all!"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXIV*
-
- *Jock o' the Side*
-
-
- "He is well kend, John of the Syde,
- A greater thief did never ryde."
-
-
-The subject of this ballad bears some resemblance to Kinmont Willie, and
-such adventures were not uncommon in those turbulent times. The events
-we are to relate originated in a raid ridden by the famous Liddesdale
-spearmen (the hardiest of the Scotch moss-troopers) upon English ground.
-
-"They had better hae staid at home," for the outcome was that one of
-their best men, Michael of Winfield, was killed, and Jock o' the Side,
-nephew to the Laird of Mangerton, was taken prisoner, and promptly
-lodged in Newcastle Jail. When the news reached Jock's mother she
-kilted her coats up to her knee, and ran down the water with the tears
-falling in torrents from her eyes. She ran to Mangerton House, on the
-banks of the Liddel, and told her brother, the good old lord, the bad
-news. "Michael is killed, and they have taken my son John." "Never
-fear, sister," quoth Mangerton, "I have eighty-three yokes of oxen, my
-barns, my byres, my folds are all filled, I'll part with them all ere
-Johnie shall die." Then he thought out his plan. "Three men I'll send
-to set him free, all harnessed in the best steel; the English loons
-shall feel the weight of their broad swords. The Laird's Jock shall be
-one, the Laird's Wat two, and Hobbie Noble, thou must be the third. Thy
-coat is blue, and since England banished thee thou hast been true to
-me." Now this Hobbie was an Englishman, born in Bewcastledale, the
-wildest district in Cumberland. Like numerous other English outlaws, he
-had made his own country too hot to hold him; his misdeeds had banished
-him to Liddesdale, and he was now in high favour with the Laird of
-Mangerton. The Laird gave the dauntless three orders to reverse the
-shoes of their horses, so that anyone crossing their trail might think
-they were proceeding in a contrary direction. He also warned them not
-to seem gentlemen, but to look like corn-carriers; not to show their
-good armour, nor appear like men of war, but to be arrayed as country
-lads, with halter and cart-collar on each mare. So Hobbie mounted his
-grey, Jack his lively bay, and Wat his white horse, and they rode for
-Tyne water. When they reached the Tyne they lighted down at a ford, and
-by the moonlight they cut a tree, with fifteen nogs on each side, to
-serve them as a scaling ladder, to climb Newcastle wall with. However,
-when they came to Newcastle town and alighted at the wall, their tree
-proved three ells too short, and there was nothing for it but to force
-the gates. At the gate a proud porter attempted to withstand them. The
-Armstrongs wrung his neck, took his life and his keys at once, and cast
-his body behind the wall. Soon they reached the jail, and called to the
-prisoner,
-
- "Sleeps thou, wakes thou, Jock o' the Side,
- Or art thou weary of thy thrall?"
-
-
-Jock answered dolefully, "Often I wake, nay, sleep seldom comes to
-me--but who's this knows my name so well?" Then out and spoke the
-Laird's Jock, his cousin and namesake, "Now fear ye not, my billie!"
-quoth he; "for here are the Laird's Jock, the Laird's Wat, and Hobbie
-Noble the Englishman come to set you free." Jock o' the Side did not
-think it possible that they could effect his release. "Now hold thy
-tongue, my good cousin," said he. "This cannot be--
-
- 'For if all Liddesdale were here the night,
- The morn's the day that I must die.'
-
-They have laid full fifteen stone of Spanish iron on me, I am fast bound
-with locks and keys in this dark and dreary dungeon." But the Laird's
-Jock replied. "Fear not that; faint heart never won fair lady. Work
-thou within, we'll work without, and I'll be sworn we'll set thee free."
-They loosed the first strong door without a key, the next chained door
-they split to flinders. The Laird's Jock got the prisoner on his back,
-irons and all, and brought him down the stairs with no small speed and
-joy. Hobbie Noble offered to bear some of his weight, but the Laird's
-Jock said that he was lighter than a flea. When they had all gone out
-at the gates, the prisoner was set on horseback, and they all joked
-wantonly. "O Jock," they cried, "you ride like a winsome lady, with
-your feet all on one side." The night was wet, but they did not mind.
-They hied them on full merrily until they came to the ford at
-Cholerford, above Hexham. There the water was running mountains high.
-They asked an old man, "Honest man, tell us in haste, will the water
-ride?" "I've lived here thirty years and three," replied he, "and I
-never saw the Tyne so big, nor running so like a sea." The Laird's Wat
-counselled them to halt. "We need not try it, the day is come we all
-must die!" "Poor faint-hearted thief!" cried the Laird's Jock.
-"There'll no man die but him that's fated; I'll guide you safely
-through; lift the prisoner behind me." With that they took to the water
-and managed to swim through. "Here we are all safe," said the Laird's
-Jock triumphantly. "Poor faint Wat, what think ye now?" They now saw
-twenty men pursuing them, sent from Newcastle, all English lads, stout
-and true. But when their leader saw the water he shook his head. "It
-won't ride, my lads," said he. Then he cried to the party of Scots:
-"Take the prisoner, but leave me my fetters." But the Laird's Jock was
-not a Scot for nothing. "I wat weel no," he shouted back, "I'll keep
-them, they'll make horse-shoes for my mare--for I am sure she's bought
-them right dear from thee." Then they went on their way to Liddesdale,
-as fast as they could, and did not rest until they had brought the
-rescued prisoner to his own fireside, and made him free of his irons.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXV*
-
- *Hobbie Noble*
-
-
- "Keep ye weel frae the traitor Mains!
- For gold and gear he'll sell ye a'."
-
-
-In the ballad of "Jock o' the Side," we have seen Hobbie Noble act a
-distinguished part in the deliverance from captivity of Jock, cousin of
-the Laird of Mangerton, chief of the Armstrong clan. Now in the
-following ballad we shall learn how ungrateful the Armstrongs were for
-his faithful services. The Armstrongs were one of those outlawed or
-broken clans, whose hand was against every man, and living as they did
-in what was called the Debateable Land, on the frontier between
-Liddesdale and England, these stark cattle-lifters and arrant thieves
-levied tribute from English and Scotch alike. Halbert or Hobbie Noble
-was an Englishman, a Cumbrian born and bred, but his misdeeds were so
-great, they banished him never to return, and he established himself
-among the Armstrongs. From their territory he continued his
-depredations upon the English, in resentment of which they at length
-offered a bribe to the Armstrongs to decoy him into England under
-pretence of inviting him to join them in a foray.
-
- "At Kershope foot the tryst was set,
- Kershope of the lily lee,"
-
-and the name of the chief traitor and leader of the gang was Sim o' the
-Mains. Hobbie harnessed himself "both with the iron and with the
-steel," buckled spur on his heel and belted brand to his side, leaped
-upon his "fringed grey," and rode down the banks of the Liddel. As soon
-as he saw the others, "Well be ye met, my comrades five," he cried.
-"Now, what is your will with me?" They all answered, with one consent,
-"Thou'rt welcome here, brave Noble; wilt thou ride with us into England,
-and we will be thy safe warrant? If we get a horse worth a hundred
-pounds thou shalt soon be upon its back." But Hobbie said that he dared
-not ride into England by day, as he had a feud with the Land-Sergeant
-(an officer under the Warden, to whom was entrusted the arrest of
-delinquents).
-
- "But will ye stay till the day gae down,
- Until the night come o'er the ground,
- And I'll be a guide worth any two
- That may in Liddesdale be found?
- Though the night be black as pitch and tar,
- I'll guide ye o'er yon hill so high;
- And bring ye all in safety back,
- If ye'll be true and follow me."
-
-
-They let him guide them over moss and moor, over hill and hope, and over
-many a down, until they came to the Foulbogshiel. But meanwhile word
-was gone to the Land-Sergeant, in Askerton, about seventeen miles from
-Carlisle. "The deer that you have hunted so long, is in Bewcastle Waste
-this day." The Sergeant understood at once. Quoth he, "Hobbie Noble is
-that deer! He carries the style full high. He has often driven our
-bloodhounds back. Now go, warn the bows of Hartlie Burn, see they
-sharpen their arrows on the wall! Warn Willeva and Speir Edom, take
-word to them that they meet me on the Rodric-haugh at break of day. We
-will on to Conscouthart-green, for there, I think, we'll get our
-quarry." In the meantime Hobbie had alighted and was sleeping in the
-Foulbogshiel. He dreamed that his horse was shot beneath him, and he
-himself was hard put to it to get away. The cocks crowed, the day
-dawned, and if Hobbie had not wakened he would have been taken or slain
-in his sleep.
-
- "Awake, awake, my comrades five!
- I trow here makes a full ill day;
- Yet the worst cloak o' this company
- I hope shall cross the Waste this day,"
-
-Thus cried he to his companions, thinking the gates were clear. But
-alas! it was not so. They were beset by the Land-Sergeant's men, cruel
-and keen, and while the Englishmen came before, the traitor Sim o' the
-Mains came behind. Had Noble been as masterful a champion as Wallace
-himself, he could not have won under such untoward circumstances. He
-had but a laddie's sword, but he did more than a laddie's deeds, for
-that sword would have cleared Conscouthart-green had it not broken over
-one of the English heads. So his treacherous companions delivered
-Hobbie up to the officers of justice; they bound him with his own
-bowstring, but what made his heart feel sorest of all, was that it was
-his own five who bound him. They took him on to Carlisle. They asked
-him mockingly if he knew the way. He thought much, but said little,
-though he knew it as well as they did. As they took him up the Carlisle
-streets, the old wives cast their windows wide, every woman whispering
-to another, "That's the man loosed Jock o' the Side." The poor fellow
-cried out, "Fie on ye, women! why call ye me man? It's no like a man
-that I'm used, but like a beaten hound that's been fighting in the
-gutter." They had him up through Carlisle town, and set him by a
-chimney fire, where they gave him a wheaten loaf to eat, and a can of
-beer. "Confess my lord's horse, Hobbie," they said, "and to-morrow in
-Carlisle thou shalt not die." "How can I confess them," says the poor
-man, "when I never saw them." And he swore a great oath, by the day
-that he was born, that he had never had anything of my lord's. He had
-but short shrift and they hung him the next morning.
-
-According to the ballad, his last words were of manly pride:--
-
- "Yet wad I rather be ca'd Hobbie Noble,
- In Carlisle, where he suffers for his fault,
- Than I'd be ca'd the traitor Mains,
- That eats and drinks o' meal and malt."
-
-
-Thus died the doughty Noble. It is proper to add, however, that the
-Armstrong's chief, Lord Mangerton, with whom Hobbie had been a
-favourite, took a severe revenge on the traitors who betrayed him. The
-contriver of the scheme, Sim o' the Mains, fled into England to escape
-the resentment of his chief, and was there caught by the English, and
-himself executed at Carlisle, two months after Hobbie's death in the
-same place! Such is, at least, the tradition of Liddesdale.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXVI*
-
- *The Laird o' Logie*
-
-
-In 1592, the Earl of Bothwell, Francis Stuart, failed in an attempt
-against King James VI., whom he tried to surprise in the palace of
-Falkland. Amongst his adherents, whom he sought about the King's person,
-was the hero of this ballad, the Laird of Logie, who was taken prisoner
-and laid in Edinburgh chapel in the keeping of Sir John Carmichael, the
-hero of the ballad called the "Raid of Reidswire." Carmichael was at
-this time captain of the King's Guard, and had the keeping of State
-criminals.
-
- I will sing, if ye will hearken,
- If ye will hearken unto me;
- The King has ta'en a poor prisoner,
- The wanton laird o' young Logie.
-
- Young Logie's laid in Edinburgh chapel,
- Carmichael's the keeper o' the key;
- And may Margaret's lamenting sair,
- A' for the love of young Logie.
-
- "Lament, lament na, may Margaret,
- And of your weeping let me be;
- For ye maun to the King himsell,
- To seek the life of young Logie."
-
- May Margaret has kilted her green cleiding,[#]
- And she has curl'd back her yellow hair--
- "If I canna get young Logie's life,
- Farewell to Scotland for evermair."
-
-[#] Clothing.
-
- When she came before the King,
- She kneelit lowly on her knee--
- "O what's the matter, may Margaret?
- And what needs a' this courtesie?"
-
- "A boon, a boon, my noble liege,
- A boon, a boon, I beg o' thee!
- And the first boon that I come to crave,
- Is to grant me the life of young Logie."
-
-[Illustration: "_A boon, a boon, my noble liege, A boon, a boon, I beg
-o' thee!_"]
-
- "O na, O na, may Margaret,
- Forsooth, and so it mauna be;
- For a' the gowd o' fair Scotland
- Shall not save the life of young Logie."
-
- But she has stown[#] the King's redding kaim,[#]
- Likewise the Queen her wedding knife,
- And sent the tokens to Carmichael,
- To cause young Logie get his life.
-
-[#] Stolen.
-[#] Dressing comb.
-
- She sent him a purse of the red gowd,
- Another o' the white monie;
- She sent him a pistol for each hand,
- And bade him shoot when he gat free.
-
- When he came to the Tolbooth stair,
- There he let his volley flee;
- It made the King in his chamber start,
- E'en in the bed where he might be.
-
- "Gae out, gae out, my merrymen a',
- And bid Carmichael come speak to me;
- For I'll lay my life the pledge o' that,
- That yon's the shot o' young Logie."
-
- When Carmichael came before the King,
- He fell low down upon his knee;
- The very first word that the King spake,
- Was--"Where's the laird of young Logie?"
-
- Carmichael turn'd him round about
- (I wot the tear blinded his ee),
- "There came a token frae your grace,
- Has ta'en away the laird frae me."
-
- "Hast thou play'd me that, Carmichael?
- And hast thou play'd me that?" quoth he;
- "The morn the justice-court's to stand,
- And Logie's place ye maun supplie."
-
- Carmichael's awa to Margaret's bower,
- Even as fast as he may dree--
- "O if young Logie be within,
- Tell him to come and speak with me!"
-
- May Margaret turn'd her round about
- (I wot a loud laugh laughed she),
- "The egg is chipp'd, the bird is flown,
- Ye'll see nae mair of young Logie."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXVII*
-
- *Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead*
-
-
- "'Tis I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead,
- And a harried man I think I be!
- There's nothing left at the fair Dodhead
- But a woeful wife and bairnies three!"
-
-
-About Martinmas time, when Border steeds get corn and hay, the Captain
-of Bewcastle rode over to Tividale to forage. And first he met a guide
-high up in Hardhaughswire, and next he met a guide low down in Borthwick
-water.
-
-"What tidings, what tidings, my trusty guide?" "No tidings have I--yet
-if ye go to the fair Dodhead, I'll let ye see many a cow's calf." Right
-hastily they came to the fair Dodhead, loosed the cows and ransacked the
-house.
-
-Jamie Telfer's[#] heart was sore when he saw this, and the tears ran
-down his cheeks, and he pleaded with the Captain to give him back his
-gear, or else he would have revenge upon him. But the Captain only
-laughed and said, "Man, there's nothing in thy house but an old sword
-without a sheath that could scarcely kill a mouse."
-
-[#] The Telfers, though they had become Scotch at the time of this
-ballad, were originally a Norman family, descended from the knight
-"Taille-fer" (cut-iron), who came over with William the Conqueror.
-
-The sun was not up though the moon had gone down, and there was a
-sprinkling of new-fallen snow upon the ground when Jamie Telfer ran ten
-miles a-foot between the Dodhead and Stob's Hall. When he came to the
-tower gate he shouted aloud, and old Gibby Elliot came out and asked the
-meaning of such disturbance.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I, for
-nothing is left at fair Dodhead but a sad wife and three bairnies."
-
-"Go and seek help at Branksome Hall, for ye shall get none from me--seek
-help where ye paid blackmail, for, man, never did ye pay _me_ any."
-
-James turned him about, his eyes blinded with tears. "Never shall I pay
-blackmail again to Elliot. My hounds may all run masterless, my hawks
-may fly as they will from tree to tree, and my lord may seize the lands
-of his vassal, for never shall I see again the fair Dodhead."
-
-He turned him to Tiviotside and made as fast as he could for Coultart
-cleugh, and there he shouted aloud until out came old Jock Grieve, and
-asked who it was that made such a noise.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I, for
-nothing is left at fair Dodhead but a weeping wife and three bairnies,
-and six poor calves stand in the stall crying aloud for their mothers."
-
-"Alack!" quoth Jock Grieve, "alack, my heart is sore for thee! for I
-married the eldest of three sisters, and you married the youngest."
-
-So he took out his bonny black horse, right well fed with corn and hay,
-and set Jamie Telfer on his back, to take his troubles to Catslockhill.
-When he came to Catslockhill he shouted aloud until out came William's
-Wat to ask what was the matter.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I.
-The Captain of Bewcastle has driven away my gear; for God's sake rise
-and help me."
-
-"Alas and alack," quoth William's Wat, "my heart is sore for thee.
-Never did I yet come to the fair Dodhead and found thy basket bare."
-
-He set his two sons on coal-black steeds, and he himself mounted a
-freckled grey, and with Jamie they rode to Branksome Hall, where they
-shouted so loud and high that old Buccleuch came out to ask what was the
-matter.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I;
-there is nought left at fair Dodhead but a weeping wife and three
-bairnies."
-
-"Alack," quoth the good old lord, "my heart is sorry for thee; go call
-Willie, my son, to come speedily. Go call up hastily the men that live
-by the waterside. They who will not ride for Telfer's cattle, let them
-never again look me in the face. Call up Wat o'Harden and his sons,
-call up Borthwick Water, Gaudilands and Allanhaugh, call Gilmanscleugh
-and Commonside; ride by the gate at Priesthaughswire and call the
-Currors of the Lee, and call brave Willie of Gorrinberry as ye come down
-the Hermitage slack."
-
-So the Scotts rode and ran bravely and steadily, shouting "Ride for
-Branksome," and when Willie looked ahead he saw the cattle being driven
-fast up the Frostylee brook, and to the plain.
-
-"Who drives yon cattle?" cried Willie Scott, "to make us a laughing
-stock?" "'Tis I, the Captain of Bewcastle; I will not hide my name from
-thee."
-
-"Let Telfer's cattle go back, or by the faith of my body," said Willie,
-"I'll ware my dame's calf-skin on thee."
-
-"I will not let the cattle go back neither for thy love nor fear; I will
-drive Jamie Telfer's cattle in spite of all your company of Scotts."
-
-"Set on them, lads!" cried Willie; "set on them cruelly; there will be
-many an empty saddle before they come to Ritterford."
-
-So they set to with heart and hand, and blows fell like hail until many
-were slain and many a horse ran masterless. But Willie was struck by a
-sword through the headpiece and fell to the ground, and auld Wat of
-Harden wept for rage when he saw that his son was slain. He took off
-his steel cap and waved it thrice, and the snow on the Dinlay mountain
-was never whiter than the locks of his hair.
-
-"Revenge! revenge!" he cried; "lay on them, lads. Willie's death shall
-be revenged or we will never see Teviotside again."
-
-The lances flew into splinters, and many another brave rider fell, and
-before the Kershope ford was reached, the Scots had got the victory.
-John of Brigham was slain, and John of Barlow, and thirty more of the
-Captain's men lay bleeding on the ground. The Captain himself was run
-through the right thigh and the bone broken, and never would woman love
-him again, if he should live a hundred years.
-
-"Take back the kye!" said he; "they are dear kye to some of us; never
-will a fair lady smile on me if I should live to be a hundred."
-
-Word came to the Captain's bride in her bower, that her lord had been
-taken prisoner. "I would rather have had a winding-sheet," said she,
-"and helped to put it over his head than that he should have been
-disgraced by the Border Scot when he led his men over Liddel."
-
-There was a wild gallant there named Watty Wudspurs (Madspurs) who
-cried, "Let us on to his house in Stanegirthside, if any man will ride
-with us!"
-
-So they came to Stanegirthside, pulled down the trees, burst open the
-door, and drove out all the Captain's kye before them.
-
-An old woman of the Captain's kin cried, "Who dare loose the Captain's
-kye, or answer to him and his men?"
-
-"It is I, Watty Wudspurs, that loose the kye; I will not hide my name
-from thee; and I will loose them in spite of him and his men."
-
-When they came to the fair Dodhead they were a welcome sight, for
-instead of his own ten milk kye Jamie Telfer had now got thirty-three.
-He paid the rescue shot in gold and silver, and at Willie Scott's
-burial, there were many weeping eyes.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXVIII*
-
- *Muckle-mou'd Meg*
-
-
-The Scott family was very powerful on the Border in the days of Queen
-Elizabeth, the bravest and strongest of them being the bold Lord of
-Buccleuch. His name is often mentioned in Border history, and so is
-that of another Scott, "auld Wat Scott of Harden." He was a fit man for
-these wild times, being both brave and canny. He married a beautiful
-Border lass, "the Flower of Yarrow," and it is surprising how many able
-men have descended from this marriage. Not only did Sir Walter Scott
-and Robert Louis Stevenson claim descent from this fine old freebooter;
-his daughter Maggie married Gilbert Elliot of Stobs, nicknamed "Gibbie
-wi' the Golden Garters," and from them were descended George Augustus
-Elliot (Lord Heathfield), famous for his splendid defence of Gibraltar,
-worthy of the best Border traditions, and also the Elliots of Minto, who
-have twice been Viceroys of India, once late in the eighteenth and once
-early in the twentieth century.
-
-But on one occasion one of the sons of Scott of Harden came perilously
-near to finding out how far his neck was capable of carrying the weight
-of his body. It was late in Queen Elizabeth's reign, and King James VI.
-of Scotland was extra anxious to live at peace with England, for he
-expected now very soon to be King over both countries. So he told his
-Warden, the bold Buccleuch, to restrain the wild Scotch freebooters; and
-you may imagine that the order was little to their liking. Young Willie
-Scott, Scott of Harden's son, quickly determined that cattle he must
-steal anyhow; he was his father's son, and did not his father once say,
-as he gazed longingly at a fine English haystack, "if only ye'd got four
-legs, haystack, ye would not be standing there!" So as Willie Scott was
-forbidden to steal English cattle, he decided to steal Scotch.
-
-Sir Gideon Murray, of Elibank Castle, was an old enemy of the Scott
-family, having once been told off to punish them for some audacious act
-of theirs. And Sir Gideon had some cattle that would make any
-Borderer's mouth water and his arm itch to drive them home. So Willie
-and a few boon companions started off one night for Elibank. But a
-warning voice had reached Sir Gideon, and Willie received a warm
-reception, and was taken prisoner. He lay in the castle dungeon all
-night, reflecting on the folly of being caught, and fully expecting to
-be hanged very early next morning, perhaps without even his breakfast to
-comfort him!
-
-But early on the fatal morning, Lady Murray startled her husband by
-asking him if he really meant to hang Willie Scott. He looked at her as
-if she were mad; of course, what else was there to do? Then she
-unfolded her scheme. She had a very plain-looking daughter known as
-"Muckle mou'd Meg," or Margaret with the extremely large mouth. Young
-Scott was handsome and of good family, and poor Meg would never again
-have such a chance of getting a good husband. Why not release Willie
-Scott, if only he would marry Mucklemou'd Meg?
-
-They were men of action in those days, and the priest was instantly sent
-for. Then, all being ready, the prisoner was brought forth. He was
-shown on the one hand the priest and the girl, and on the other hand the
-tree and the noose, and was asked to take his choice. His first proud
-feeling was that he would be mocked at if he married such a girl on such
-terms, and he walked bravely towards the rope. But the nearer he got to
-it the uglier it looked. He had to confess to himself that it was not
-at all a comfortable looking rope; he had a nasty feeling round his neck
-from merely looking at it, and thought it would probably feel worse when
-it got round his throat. Then he looked at the girl; she certainly was
-not as beautiful as his mother, the lovely Flower of Yarrow; and a
-Borderer loved a beautiful wife. But if he hanged he would have no wife
-at all! Then he suggested that he should have three days to think it
-over, but Murray said no, neither priest nor noose was prepared to wait,
-he must decide at once. Then he looked again at Meg and saw a kind
-glance in her eye; she felt sorry for the handsome young fellow. Then
-he knew she had a good heart, and that decided the matter; he went up
-and kissed her with a good grace, and the priest married them straight
-away.
-
-Afterwards he became Sir William Scott, and an important man on the
-Border. And, best of all, Meg proved to be a real good wife to him, and
-he never regretted the day when he elected to suffer the knot to be tied
-by the priest instead of by the hangman.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXIX*
-
- *The Dowie Dens of Yarrow*
-
-
-This is one of the most famous and widely known of all the Border
-ballads, and has proved a source of inspiration to several poets,
-including Wordsworth, who wrote three poems upon the subject. The bard
-does not relate the full particulars, but gives only the barest outlines
-of facts, which were well known in his day, and still live in tradition.
-The story tells of a duel between two brothers-in-law. The very spot
-where it took place is still pointed out, a low muir on the Yarrow
-banks. The slain knight was apparently Walter Scott, one of the
-ancestors of Lord Napier. His murderer was his brother-in-law, John
-Scott. "Dowie" means melancholy, and "den" is a word used to describe a
-narrow, rocky valley, usually wildly beautiful.
-
- Late at e'en drinking the wine,
- And e'er they paid the lawing,
- They set a combat them between,
- To fight it in the dawing.[#]
-
-[#] Dawn.
-
- "O stay at home my noble lord,
- O stay at home my marrow.
- My cruel brother will you betray,
- On the dowie houms[#] of Yarrow."
-
-[#] Hillocks.
-
- "O fare ye well, my lady gay!
- O fare ye well, my Sarah!
- For I must go, though I ne'er return
- From the dowie banks of Yarrow."
-
- She kissed his cheek, she combed his hair,
- As oft she had done before, O,
- She belted him with his noble brand,
- "And he's away to Yarrow."
-
- As he gaed up the Tennies bank
- I wot he gaed with sorrow,
- Till down in a den he spied nine armed men,
- On the dowie houms of Yarrow.
-
- "O come ye here to part your land,
- The bonnie forest thorough?
- Or come ye here to wield your brand,
- On the dowie houms of Yarrow?"
-
- "I come not here to part my land,
- And neither to beg nor borrow,
- I come to wield my noble brand
- On the bonnie banks of Yarrow.
-
- "If I see all, ye're nine to ane;
- And that's an unequal marrow;
- Yet will I fight, while lasts my brand,
- On the bonnie banks of Yarrow."
-
- Four has he hurt, and five has slain,
- On the bloody braes of Yarrow,
- Till that stubborn knight came him behind,
- And ran his body thorough.
-
- "Gae hame, gae hame, good brother John,
- And tell your sister Sarah,
- To come and lift her leafu'[#] lord;
- He's sleepin' sound on Yarrow."
-
-[#] Lawful.
-
- "Yestreen I dreamed a dolefu' dream,
- I fear there will be sorrow!
- I dreamed I pu'd the heather green,
- Wi' my true love on Yarrow.
-
- "O gentle wind, that bloweth south,
- From where my love repaireth,
- Convey a kiss from his dear mouth,
- And tell me how he fareth!
-
- "But in the glen strive armed men;
- They've wrought me dole and sorrow;
- They've slain--the comeliest knight they've slain,
- He bleeding lies on Yarrow."
-
- As she sped down yon high, high hill,
- She gaed wi' dole and sorrow,
- And in the den spied ten slain men,
- On the dowie banks of Yarrow.
-
- She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair,
- She searched his wounds all thorough,
- She kiss'd them till her lips grew red,
- On the dowie houms of Yarrow.
-
- "Now haud[#] your tongue, my daughter dear,
- For a' this breeds but sorrow;
- I'll wed ye to a better lord,
- Than him ye lost on Yarrow."
-
-[#] Hold.
-
- "O haud your tongue, my father dear!
- Ye mind me but of sorrow;
- A fairer rose did never bloom
- Than now lies cropp'd on Yarrow."
-
-[Illustration: "_She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair, She searched
-his wounds all thorough._"]
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XL*
-
- *Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland*
-
-
- "When for the lists they sought the plain
- The stately lady's silken rein
- Did noble Howard hold;
- Unarmed by her side he walk'd
- And much, in courteous phrase they talk'd
- Of feats of arms of old.
- Costly his garb; his Flemish ruff
- Fell o'er his doublet, shaped of buff,
- With satin slashed and lined;
- Tawny his boot and gold his spur,
- His cloak was all of Poland fur,
- His hose with silver twined.
- His Bilboa blade, by Marchmen felt,
- Hung in a broad and studded belt;
- Hence, in rude phrase, the Borderers still
- Call'd noble Howard, Belted Will."
- SCOTT, _Lay of the Last Minstrel_.
-
-
-One of the many picturesque figures of Border history was "Belted Will,"
-or to call him by his proper name and title, Lord William Howard, a
-younger son of the powerful Duke of Norfolk.
-
-His mother had died when he was an infant, and his father, the foremost
-Roman Catholic nobleman in England, took up the cause of Mary Queen of
-Scots, whom he wished to marry. For this treason against Queen
-Elizabeth he was beheaded in 1572, when young Lord William was only nine
-years old. At the age of fourteen the young lord's guardians arranged
-for him a marriage with Elizabeth Dacre, a member of a powerful Border
-family, and heiress to the Baronry of Gilsland. As the bride was even
-younger than her boy-husband, let us hope that they both went to school
-again immediately after the marriage!
-
-When he grew to manhood, Lord William warmly supported the Roman
-Catholic cause and was imprisoned by Elizabeth; but when James became
-King, he was released and restored to his estates on the Border.
-Throughout the remainder of his career he was the most notable man of
-his district. He knew how to make himself respected by his wild
-neighbours. His fame and power were great. He founded the fortunes of
-his family so surely that he it is who is usually thought of as the
-ancestor of the Earls of Carlisle, though his great-grandson was the
-first to hold the title.
-
-Lord William had great energy and many interests, and was remarkable as
-being an "all-round" man. He was equally a leader of men and a lover of
-books; no detail in the management of his estates was too small for him
-to study; he was a good husband to his wife, and a splendid father to
-his fifteen children. He selected the most beautiful of his several
-castles, that of Naworth, and repaired and almost rebuilt it; he took
-there the fine old oak ceiling from the ancient castle of Kirkoswald,
-which was ornamented with portraits of all the kings of England.
-Visitors to Naworth can see to-day the "hall of Belted Will," by kind
-permission of the present Earl of Carlisle.
-
-He was something of a poet and very much of an antiquarian. His estates
-were full of interesting things, and none knew them better than he.
-There were miles of the Roman wall, still in excellent condition; there
-were many Roman altars and inscriptions, which he copied and translated;
-quite near him, at Coome Crags, was a Roman quarry, which can still be
-seen to-day, with marks of Roman tools on its stones. It stands in a
-beautiful wood by the side of the lovely river Irthing. And only a
-little further on, standing on a fine cliff overlooking the river, is
-the old Roman station of Amboglanna, a fort that covered five and a half
-acres, with walls that were once five feet thick, the main foundations
-of which are still standing, clear enough for anyone to trace them out.
-It is quieter there to-day than it was in Roman times, or in the
-stirring days of Belted Will!
-
-It is good to think that this broad-shouldered, gallant, powerful
-nobleman, who could ride, shoot, fight and keep this wild district in
-order, was at the same time such a clever student and book-worm. They
-tell a story that he was once sitting in his library intent on a book
-when his men brought in a robber whom they had caught red-handed, and
-asked Lord William to try him. Belted Will, angry at being interrupted,
-cried out:--"Don't disturb me; hang him!" Half an hour later he rose
-and came down to try the man, but finding that he was already hanged he
-went on with his book. It is only fair to add that robbers in those
-days expected no mercy when caught.
-
-One of the many clever things that Lord William did was to have figures
-carved in oak to represent soldiers; these he placed on the top of his
-high towers, and deceived the Scots into thinking that he had a large
-and very watchful garrison! These figures can still be seen at Naworth.
-Near Naworth Castle is Lanercost Priory, where King Edward I. stayed on
-his way to Scotland. There is a secret passage from Naworth tower which
-is supposed to run under the river to Lanercost. No one is allowed to
-go through it, as it is considered dangerous; the people of the district
-say that the last man to do so was Oliver Cromwell.
-
-Visitors to Naworth to-day should certainly go on to Gilsland itself,
-the picturesque straggling little town, which was the head of the
-Baronry which Elizabeth Dacre brought to her boy-husband. The Irthing
-at Gilsland runs through a wonderfully beautiful gorge, rocky and
-wooded, wild and romantic. Stand on the venturesome stepping stones
-near the old church, with the river rushing at your very feet, and see
-if this is an exaggeration of the beauties of the scene. Right in the
-midst of the glen you can see the "Popping-stone" where Sir Walter Scott
-walked with the lady of his choice and asked her to marry him. Readers
-of "Guy Mannering" can see in Over Denton church near Gilsland the grave
-of Meg Merrilees, who died here at the age of ninety-eight. The town is
-also interesting for the fact that the county border is at Gilsland, and
-there is an inn so built that it stands in both counties, and contains a
-bed in which you can sleep with your head in Northumberland and your
-feet in Cumberland!
-
-There is a story of Belted Will that tells eloquently of the strength of
-his character. When he was released from prison by King James he found
-his estates so ruined by careless management that he knew that great
-care was needed to put things right again; so until he got his affairs
-into order, all the pocket-money that he would allow himself was twenty
-shillings per month!
-
-Bold William, Belted Will, gallant Lord Howard, as you will, died at
-Naworth in 1640 aged seventy-seven, one year after the death of his
-devoted wife. His descendants were, like himself, students and men of
-action; the present Earl of Carlisle is directly sprung from him, and is
-very proud of the fact.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLI*
-
- *Gilderoy*
-
-
-Gilderoy was a celebrated and most daring highwayman, who roamed far,
-and was well-known all over Scotland and indeed in London. His death
-inspired a very striking ballad, but this is hardly a Border Lowland
-ballad, but refers chiefly to another Border district, namely, that
-between the Lowlands and Highlands. Just as the Scottish Lowlanders
-thought the English their legitimate quarry, so the Highlanders in turn
-looked upon the Lowlanders as created to supply them with all they
-lacked. There is a story on record of a Highland chief who, finding his
-men had carelessly robbed another Highlander, returned the spoil with a
-handsome apology, and issued stringent orders that in future nothing was
-to be taken except in the Lowlands, "where all men make their prey."
-
-Among the robber clans of the Highlands, the MacGregors stand easily in
-the first rank. In a long series of Scottish Acts of Parliament, they
-are habitually referred to as "the wicked clan Gregor, so long
-continuing in blood, slaughter, theft, and robbery." One of their most
-famous exploits was the battle of Glenfruin, when they defeated their
-enemies, the Colquhouns, and slew two hundred of them. The Colquhouns
-appeared before the King at Stirling with the bloody shirts stripped off
-their dead, and the law was put in motion against the MacGregors more
-vigorously than ever. This was in 1603. The execution of Gilderoy, as
-described in our poem, took place in 1638. His real name was Patrick
-MacGregor, and the fact that he belonged to this Ishmaelite clan, whose
-hand was directed against every man, and whose very name had been
-solemnly abolished, may well serve as an excuse for his career of crime.
-Gilderoy, in Gaelic, means the red-haired gillie or lad, and besides the
-name there are many other points of similarity between him and Rob Roy,
-who was the head of the Clan MacGregor in the following century. Both
-Gilderoy and Rob Roy were professional blackmailers, that is, they could
-be relied on never to plunder anyone who was prudent enough to buy them
-off by paying a fixed contribution. This is what is meant in the
-following lines of the ballad--
-
- "All these did honestly possess
- He never did annoy,
- Who never failed to pay their cess
- To my love, Gilderoy."
-
-
-The "cess" is the blackmail, or insurance against robbery. The
-widespread reputation of Gilderoy is attested by the many legends of him
-which are printed in the old chap-books and "Lives of the Highwaymen."
-According to these authorities, Gilderoy once robbed Oliver Cromwell
-near Glasgow; but an even more romantic episode of his career was a
-roaming trip upon the continent, in the course of which he is said to
-have picked Cardinal Richelieu's pocket while he was celebrating mass in
-the King's presence, at the church of St Denis in Paris. He made his
-way even to Madrid, where he succeeded in carrying off the Duke of
-Medina-Cell's plate. Altogether a most notorious and dashing cateran.
-The ballad is supposed to be spoken by a young woman who had all her
-life been attached to him.
-
- "Gilderoy was a bonnie boy,
- Had roses to his shoon;[#]
- His stockings were of silken soy,
- With garters hanging down.
- It was, I ween, a comely sight
- To see so trim a boy;
- He was my jo, and heart's delight,
- My handsome Gilderoy.
- * * * * *
- My Gilderoy and I were born
- Both in one town together;
- We scant were seven years before
- We 'gan to love each other.
- Our daddies and our mammies they
- Were filled with meikle joy,
- To think upon the bridal day
- Of me and Gilderoy."
-
-[#] Shoes.
-
-
-But there intervened the spirit of adventure which had ever been the
-birthright of all of his surname,
-
- "Oh, that he still had been content
- With me to lead his life!
- But ah! his manful heart was bent
- To stir in deeds of strife;
- And he in many a venturous deed
- His courage bold would try;
- And now this gars[#] my heart to bleed
- For my dear Gilderoy."
-
-[#] Makes.
-
-
-No doubt those who knew Gilderoy personally would have agreed, as was
-actually said of Rob Roy, that he was a benevolent and humane man "in
-his way."
-
- "My Gilderoy, both far and near,
- Was feared in every town;
- And boldly bore away the gear
- Of many a Lowland loun,
- For man to man durst meet him none,
- He was so brave a boy;
- At length with numbers he was ta'en,
- My winsome Gilderoy."
-
-
-He was not so fortunate as Rob Roy, who ultimately died peacefully in
-his bed. Gilderoy had lost the game, and he had to pay the stakes.
-
- "Of Gilderoy so feared they were,
- They bound him fast and strong;
- To Edinbro' they led him there,
- And on a gallows hung.
- They hung him high above the rest,
- He was so trim a boy;
- There died the youth whom I loved best,
- My handsome Gilderoy."
-
-
-Thus perished one of the characteristic products of an age whose
-standards were so different from ours that we can hardly judge him
-fairly. He was banned before his birth, a scion of a race so
-indomitably and innately ferocious that the law attempted to extirpate
-them, root and branch. The very name of Gregor could be given by no
-clergyman at baptism, under penalty of deprivation and banishment.
-Cunning and politic neighbours were not slow to take advantage of the
-stubborn disposition of the MacGregors, and gradually stripped them of
-their once extensive lands in Argyle and Perthshire. Gilderoy might well
-consider that he was "an honester man than stood on any of their
-shanks," and we may be excused for feeling a very lively sympathy with
-him, and for echoing in our inmost hearts the exquisitely feminine point
-of view expressed by the lady composer of the ballad.
-
- "If Gilderoy had done amiss,
- He might have banished been;
- Ah! what sore cruelty is this
- To hang such handsome men!
- To hang the flower of Scottish land,
- So sweet and fair a boy!
- No lady had so white a hand
- As thee, my Gilderoy!
-
- When he had yielded up his breath
- I bare his corpse away;
- With tears, that trickled for his death,
- I washt his comely clay;
- And sicker[#] in a grave sae deep
- I laid the dear lo'ed boy;
- And now for ever maun I weep,
- My winsome Gilderoy."
-
-[#] Safely.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLII*
-
- *Archie Armstrong's Oath*
-
-
- "And oft since then, to England's King,
- The story he has told;
- And aye, when he 'gan rock and sing,
- Charlie his sides would hold."
-
-
-Archie Armstrong lived in Eskdale, where he did his best to keep up the
-grand reputation of his family as being among the very boldest
-sheep-stealers of the Border. His house was at Stubholm, where the
-Wauchope stream runs into the river Esk, near where the picturesque town
-of Langholm now stands. Living in the reign of Charles I., after the
-union of crowns, the profession of freebooter was far less honourable
-than of old. He could not now plead that he was a Border soldier,
-fighting against his nation's enemy. The wild Border blood in him might
-cry out for the old adventurous career, but he could no longer hope for
-the aid of powerful Border families. When cornered, his sole protector
-would be his own wits, and woe betide him if they failed!
-
-Archie's house was about eight miles from the Border, and he could not
-help strolling towards the fascinating line and tasting the sweetness of
-temptation. When the chance came that seemed to him sufficiently safe,
-he would go home in company though he had walked out alone; the
-"company" being a good fat English sheep. One night a shepherd had
-marked him lingering about, and had watched him, and raised an alarm.
-Away went stout Archie at a Marathon pace; half way home he passed
-Gilnockie tower, where his ancestor bold Johnie Armstrong lived so
-gaily. "Alas!" thought Archie, dolefully, "he too was hanged in the
-end!"
-
-He got home well in front of his pursuers, but his wife gave him small
-encouragement. With typical Scottish dourness she remarked to him, "Ye
-will be ta'en this night and hanged i' the morning."
-
-But Archie put a braw face on it, and declared that he would never hang
-for one silly sheep. Quicker than any butcher he skinned and roughly
-trimmed the dead animal, throwing the rejected parts into the swift
-stream. Then rejoicing in the fact that his child was away with its
-aunt, he put the carcase carefully in the cradle and began rocking it
-and singing a lullaby to it, as if he were the most loving father in all
-the British Isles.
-
-The pursuers now rushed in, and began to accuse Archie triumphantly; but
-he rebuked them for making so much noise, telling them that his child
-was at death's door! As for stealing their sheep, he took a solemn oath
-that if he had done such a thing he would ask to be doomed to "eat the
-flesh this very cradle holds!"
-
-Such an oath on the Borders was a very serious matter; they little knew
-that the only flesh in the cradle was sheep's flesh, which Archie asked
-nothing better than to devour!
-
-Impressed but not convinced, his enemies carefully searched the whole of
-Archie's house and garden; it was only with very great unwillingness
-that they at last decided that they must miss the supreme pleasure of
-hanging him! They went away saying that they must have been deluded by
-the devil or by witches; and the shepherd resolved to hang a branch of
-rowan-tree (mountain-ash) by his fold, for that was well-known to have
-the power to keep witches away.
-
-As soon as they were all on their road to England again, Archie skipped
-about like a dancing fiddler. "Wife," he said, "I never knew before
-that I would make such a good nurse."
-
-After this Archie wandered down to London, and his wild jests becoming
-famous, he was made Court Jester by King Charles I. And many a time he
-acted the story to the King, rocking a pretended cradle, and singing a
-persuasive lullaby, to the King's intense amusement.
-
-Nevertheless, Archie lost his place by his boldness. These were the days
-of Archbishop Laud (1637), who was hated by the Scots. One day, as the
-archbishop was about to say grace before dinner, Archie asked the King's
-permission to say grace instead. The King consented, and the jester's
-double-meaning words were as follows:--
-
-"All _praise_ to God, and little _laud_ to the devil!"
-
-The archbishop, in many senses a little man, had Archie dismissed in
-disgrace. But, such were the chances of these uncertain times, the
-archbishop was executed in the end, while the sheepstealer escaped that
-fate!
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLIII*
-
- *Christie's Will*
-
-
-The resourceful Archie, whose tale we have just told, was not the only
-one of the reckless Armstrongs to keep up the old freebooting habits in
-the reign of Charles I. There lived at Gilnockie tower (the old
-residence of the famous Johnie Armstrong) in the parish of Cannobie, a
-notorious Willie Armstrong, known as Christie's Will. Like Archie, he
-more than once owed his life to his ready wit. He was shut up in
-Jedburgh jail when the Earl of Traquair, Lord High Treasurer, paid the
-prison an official visit. When he asked Will the cause of his being
-there, the freebooter answered:--
-
-"For stealing two halters, my lord."
-
-Traquair was surprised, but Will afterwards owned that there was a fine
-colt at the end of each halter.
-
-Traquair was amused and pleased by the boldness of the man, and had him
-set free.
-
-Some little time afterwards Traquair was involved in a law-suit which
-was set down to be decided by Lord Durie, who seems to have let it be
-known before-hand what his opinion was upon the case. Nothing would
-save Traquair's interests except that Durie must be got out of the way
-before the case began. But how was it to be done?
-
-Christie's Will was appealed to, and merely said "Leave it to me."
-
-It was the judge's habit to take horseback exercise on the sands of
-Leith without any attendant. One morning, whilst so riding, a
-well-dressed and gentlemanly stranger, on a good horse, happened to
-overtake him; a courteous greeting led to a friendly conversation, in
-which the stranger proved himself so affable and entertaining that the
-judge rode on by his side without suspicion. Suddenly, when they had
-come to a lonely spot, Lord Durie found himself seized by this muscular
-gentleman, smothered up in a big cloak, whisked off his horse and on to
-the stranger's, who galloped off, mischief knows where! It was
-Christie's Will, carrying out his promise.
-
-The judge's horse galloped home, riderless. Search was made, but the
-judge could not be found. It could only be supposed that he had been
-thrown off into the sea. His successor was appointed, and Lord
-Traquair's case was heard and won!
-
-Lord Durie had languished for several months in a dreary underground
-vault. I wonder if he thought of the many poor wretches he had
-sentenced to a similar fate? Suddenly at midnight he was roughly
-awakened, muffled up as before, and carried away again by his captor on
-horseback. Next morning, by the light of the newly-risen sun, he found
-himself on the very spot by the sands of Leith from which he had been
-kidnapped! We will hope that every one, including his successor, was
-glad when he thus came to life again.
-
-When the Civil War began, the Earl of Traquair was faithful to King
-Charles I. Having some papers of importance that he wished to have
-given into the King's own hands, he entrusted these to the bold
-freebooter. Christie's Will did his errand, and received an equally
-important answer. But spies at Court had given Cromwell word of the
-matter, and the command was sent up to Carlisle that Will Armstrong must
-be intercepted there. Not knowing his danger, Will halted in the town
-to refresh his horse, then pushed forward to the bridge which crossed
-the Eden on the Northern boundary of the city. Cromwell's soldiers were
-waiting for him; the bridge was high and narrow, the broad Eden waters
-were swirling in high flood.
-
-Christie's Will, without one second's hesitation, spurred his horse over
-the parapet. He sank ... he came up ... he sank ... he came up ... he
-sank ... he came up, this time at the very bank. He cut his heavy,
-dripping cloak from his shoulders; relieved of the weight, his horse
-struggled to the land. Away went Will, away went the troopers after
-him. It was a hard race to the river Esk, and this also Will had to
-swim. But now he was in Scotland, and his friends were at hand; gaily
-Will turned to his pursuers, who dared not cross the water; "Good
-friends," cried he, "come over and drink with me!" But they showed him
-their backs, and their horses's tails, and he saw no more of them.
-
-Such were the exploits of Christie's Will; he was the last of the
-free-booters, but he certainly knew how to live up to their boldest
-traditions.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLIV*
-
- *Northumberland at the time of the Civil War*
-
-
-During the stormy days of King Charles I., the Borders, and especially
-Northumberland, saw many stirring scenes. It must be remembered that
-shortly before the Long Parliament was elected, King Charles almost came
-to war with the Scottish Presbyterians, because they would not obey the
-harsh rule of Archbishop Laud. The Scots raised an army under the lead
-of shrewd general Alexander Leslie, the "old, little, crooked soldier,"
-of great experience, trained by the great Gustavus of Sweden. In 1639
-Charles sent ships up to the Forth, in reply to which Leslie marched his
-army to threaten the border. The old quarrel between the two countries
-began to blaze up again. King Charles led an army to the border and was
-received with splendid applause at Newcastle. Many joined his army, and
-shouted with joy at the thought of meeting the Scots in battle. But
-they were an untrained disorderly crew, who fired their guns off at
-random and kept no military order whatever. Gallant Leslie marched his
-men down to Duns Law, in South Berwickshire, and was ready to fight.
-But King Charles would not trust his army that length; he made terms
-with his opponents, promising them the reforms they set their hearts
-upon, and the two armies melted away like school-boys at the end of the
-term.
-
-Things were soon as bad as before. Lord Conway was sent by the King to
-put Newcastle into a strong defensive state. His greatest difficulty
-was to get money for the purpose, for the King's quarrel with his
-various Parliaments had deprived him of supplies. The badly paid troops
-mutinied, and the ring-leader was shot. Very soon the Scottish army came
-across the Tweed, the Highlanders armed with bows and arrows.
-
-They pitched their camp on Heddon Law, and soon proved to the country
-folk that they had not come for plunder, but would pay for all they
-wanted to eat. This re-assured the country people, who had no real
-quarrel with the Scots, and even became most friendly to them.
-
-With Lord Conway it was otherwise; he was the King's officer, and was
-bound to offer resistance. His opinion was that if once the Scots
-crossed the Tyne, and attacked Newcastle from the south or Gateshead
-side, they were sure of victory. Accordingly, leaving a strong garrison
-to protect the town, he marched out with two thousand or more foot and
-fully one thousand horse to command the important ford across the Tyne
-at Newburn, a place five or six miles due west of Newcastle. It is
-interesting to remember that here also the Romans had had
-fortifications, along the line of the wall, and the very spot where the
-Scots and English fought may well have been the scene of contests
-between the Roman Legions and the wild Picts.
-
-The English arrived first, on the south bank of the river, and threw up
-earth-works hastily. Very soon they saw the Scots march into Newburn
-village, on the north bank, where they employed themselves by hauling
-their cannon up to the church tower. Remarkable cannon they were, made
-out of bar-iron hooped together with cord and wet, raw hides! But they
-were not required to carry any distance, the foe was only on the other
-side of the Tyne. All the morning the enemies looked at one another
-across the river, each hesitating to fire the first shot of the war. At
-last an English officer shot a Scotch officer, and the fight began. The
-Scots were on the higher ground, and their cannon, rough as they were,
-sent heavy shot on to the English. Then when the river tide went down,
-the Scots rushed across the ford, and the battle was soon won, the royal
-standard being taken. English runaways rushed through the woods and
-into Newcastle, crying, "Fly for your lives, naked devils have destroyed
-us!" Whether they referred to kilted Highlanders is uncertain. Anyway,
-Leslie and his Scots entered Newcastle in triumph, but were afterwards
-bought off with a payment of 60,000 and recrossed the Tweed into
-Scotland.
-
-This was in 1641, a year in which King Charles was quarrelling bitterly
-with his Long Parliament, though the actual civil war in England did not
-begin till 1642. Early in 1642 it was decided that so important a town
-as Newcastle ought to be put in a stronger state of defence.
-
-William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle, was made governor of the town, but
-he was much hindered in his plans by lack of money. King Charles,
-however, promoted him from Earl to Marquis of Newcastle, and the lack of
-funds he made up as best he was able. However, the Governor of Holy
-Island, off the Northumberland shore, found himself left for sixteen
-months without any pay! He wrote to the King's treasury a protest in
-verse, beginning:--
-
- "_The great commander o' the Cormorants,_
- _The geese and ganders of these hallowed lands,_
- _Where Lindisfarne and Holy Island stands,_
- _These worthless lines sends to your worthy hands._"
-
-
-The allusion in the first two lines is to the fact that Holy Island and
-the Farne Islands were then, and are still to-day, so thinly peopled
-that sea-birds gather there in large numbers, adding greatly to the wild
-beauties of these islets and rocks.
-
-In January 1644 a serious struggle began. Leslie and his soldiers
-crossed the Tweed at Berwick bridge and again entered Northumberland.
-General Bayly marched his men from Kelso across the frozen river and
-joined Leslie at Alnwick. Warkworth Castle, though it contained cannon
-and provisions, surrendered at once. The Scottish general gravely told
-Bemerton, the governor, that if he had learnt to fight as well as he had
-learnt to dance his castle could never have been taken! The country
-districts of Northumberland had no quarrel with the Scots, and it was
-soon evident that the real fight would be at Newcastle, bravely held by
-the Marquis and by the Mayor, Sir John Marley.
-
-The Scottish "murthering pieces," as the cannon were called, were
-brought down by sea, and the obstinate conflict began. Despite the
-terrible weather of a very rough February, frequent skirmishes took
-place, while the Scots closed nearer and nearer round the gallantly
-defended town. Leslie soon found that the defences had been put into
-good order; the ditch round the town was dug deep, and close to the
-walls; the walls themselves were strongly underpinned. The battlements
-were strengthened by stone and lime, but the top stones were loosened so
-as to slip if the enemy attempted to mount them. Every cannon was
-placed carefully, to the best advantage.
-
-[Illustration: _The Storming of Newcastle_]
-
-But the Marquis of Newcastle was called southward by the needs of his
-King. With him were his thousand brave "White coats," so called because
-they wore white coats which they promised to dye in the blood of the
-enemy. But they met the terrible Ironsides at Marston Moor, and in a
-conflict of furious bravery on both sides, all of the gallant thousand
-except thirty were slain on the field of battle.
-
-This was in July of 1644, but it did not affect the siege of Newcastle,
-which still dragged obstinately on, under the skilful guidance of the
-dauntless Mayor. By October, Sir John Marley was so buoyed up by his
-success that he sent a letter to General Leslie to ask if he was still
-alive! This the Scots took to be an insult, and a grand assault was
-begun. The Scots were furious, and the defence was desperate. The roar
-of the cannon and the rattle of the musketry were succeeded, as the
-assault got nearer and nearer to its aim, by the clashing of swords and
-the clanging of pikes. At last, the regiments of Loudoun and Buccleugh
-succeeded in forcing their way into the town. In vain the defenders
-made their last gallant charge; their cause was now hopeless, and soon
-the market-place was filled with fugitives, who flung down their arms
-and cried aloud for quarter at the hands of the triumphant Scots.
-
-In these days the defender was often made to feel the anger of the
-victors, who in the flush and cruelty of victory avenged their dead,
-only too terribly, upon the losing side. Not so at Newcastle.
-Prominent in its day, it stands out because of the mercy of the Scottish
-conquerors as much as for the heroism of its defence. In this, the last
-great struggle on English ground between Scots and English, it is
-pleasing indeed to recall facts that redound to the high honour of both
-parties.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLV*
-
- *Montrose and Lesly*
-
-
-James Graham, the great Marquis of Montrose who at first sided with the
-Scottish Covenanters against Charles I., was so out of sympathy with the
-extreme turn which affairs took later against that unhappy monarch that
-he went over to the King's side. Gathering the Highland Clans under his
-standard, he marched Southward and defeated the Covenanters in a series
-of brilliantly fought battles. He occupied Edinburgh, and laid great
-plans to complete the conquest of Scotland by subduing the Borderland.
-
-If the Borders had remained in their old fighting state no doubt many a
-Border chief would have joined Montrose's army and aided his bold plans.
-But, unfortunately for King Charles, the Borders had been tamed and
-disarmed since the union of England and Scotland under James I. Only a
-few adventurous spirits like Christie's Will remained as examples of the
-old wild days.
-
-The remnant of the army of the Covenanters was commanded by the stern
-General David Lesly (not the Alexander Leslie who figures in the
-preceding chapter), and was somewhere in the Border district. Gay
-Gallant Montrose did not bother as to exactly where this army was; he
-despised it too heartily. He himself was at Selkirk, while his army was
-encamped on the neighbouring plain of Philiphaugh.
-
-Montrose was busy writing a cheering message to King Charles to the
-effect that he had now no enemy left in Scotland who could offer an
-effective resistance to his arms. Little did he think that General
-Lesly was gradually creeping nearer, nearer, and was now actually within
-four miles of his army. With the advantage of a thick Scotch mist,
-Lesly's men actually burst upon Montrose's infantry without a single
-scout having seen them to give warning of their approach! In such
-confusion, Montrose's men had no chance whatever.
-
-The Marquis galloped up, only to find his soldiers hopelessly defeated
-and great numbers slain. There was nothing left but for those to escape
-who could. The Marquis succeeded in cutting his way through, and
-gathered his troops to fight again later on; but his efforts were doomed
-to failure.
-
-A popular ditty of these days, sung to a stirring tune, was called
-"Lesly's March." Sir Walter Scott seems to regard this as wholly
-serious, and ranks it as a Covenanter song. It appears to me, however,
-that many of the lines have a very sarcastic flavour; no doubt the
-Covenanters did really think that
-
- "There's none in the right but we,
- Of the old Scottish nation";
-
-but they would probably have phrased it a little less baldly. To me it
-appears as if this song were the work of an onlooker and not a partisan;
-one ready to see the faults of both sides, and very much inclined to
-hold back his final opinion till he saw which was going to win. But let
-the March speak for itself.
-
-
- *LESLY'S MARCH*
-
- March! march:
- Why the de'il do ye na march?
- Stand to your arms, my lads,
- Fight in good order;
- Front about, ye musketeers all,
- Till ye come to the English Border;
- Stand till 't, and fight like men,
- True gospel to maintain.
- The parliament's blythe to see us a' coming!
- When to the kirk we come,
- We'll purge it ilka room,
- Frae popish relics, and a' sic innovation,
- That a' the world may see,
- There's nane in the right but we,
- Of the auld Scottish nation.
-
-
-A truly partisan ballad of the day describes the battle of Philiphaugh
-and exults in the defeat of Montrose, "our cruel enemy," it calls him.
-As a ballad it has no great poetic merit; the very sober Covenanters
-probably regarded ballad-making as a frivolity. But it describes rather
-graphically how an "aged father," from the country-side, led Lesly's
-army very cautiously and wisely to the very tents of the foe. These
-details are no doubt accurate; though the ballad-writer (whoever he was)
-displays his ignorance of other matters by making the old soldier say
-that he was at the battle of Solway Moss (which took place one hundred
-years before) and at that of Dunbar, which was not fought till five
-years later!
-
-The following are the opening verses of the ballad, giving an idea of
-its plain, straightforward style:--
-
- On Philiphaugh a fray began,
- At Hairhead-wood it ended;
- The Scots out o'er the Graemes they ran,
- Sae merrily they bended;
-
- Sir David frae the Border came,
- Wi' heart an' hand came he;
- Wi' him three thousand bonny Scots,
- To bear him company.
-
- Wi' him three thousand valiant men,
- A noble sight to see!
- A cloud o' mist them weel conceal'd,
- As close as e'er might be.
-
- When they came to the Shaw burn,
- Said he, "Sae weel we frame.
- I think it is convenient
- That we should sing a psalm."
-
-
-It is not necessary to quote more of it, but it may be remarked that in
-place of the last line as given here, the _unregenerate_ substituted,
-
- "That we should take a dram."
-
-In point of actual fact, _both_ versions are probably true!
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLVI*
-
- *The Death of Montrose*
-
-
-During the imprisonment of King Charles I., at a time when active war on
-his behalf might do the unhappy monarch more harm than good, the gallant
-Montrose had retired to France. His bright military fame, his courteous
-manners, and manly bearing made him friends everywhere, and when he
-visited Germany the Emperor conferred on him the rank of Marshal.
-Hearing of the execution of Charles I., Montrose at once placed himself
-at the disposal of Charles II., now a fugitive in Holland. This prince
-named him Captain General of Scotland, and the daring hero set out for
-the Orkney Islands with about five hundred paid soldiers, mostly
-adventurous Germans and Dutchmen. Only a reckless spirit like Montrose
-would have undertaken so wild a commission.
-
-Scotland was heartily sick of war, and learnt with consternation of the
-arrival of this firebrand. Lesly was sent forward with four thousand
-men to attack Montrose's five hundred! Colonel Strachan led the
-advanced guard, which fell unexpectedly upon the invading army, and,
-after a brief, fierce struggle, totally defeated it.
-
-Montrose, disguised as a peasant, entrusted his life to one he believed
-to be his friend, M'Leod, Laird of Assaint. But this unworthy man
-betrayed him to his bitterest enemy, General Lesly. Thus, at last, this
-brilliant commander was in the hands of the bitter Covenanters, into
-whose hearts his brilliant victories had once spread such terror. Their
-treatment of him is a black stain upon their memory. For days he was
-led about in the peasant's disguise, which he had put on; he was carted
-through the streets of Edinburgh, accompanied by such insults that the
-populace cried shame upon his captors.
-
-When tried before the Scottish Parliament for treason, he made a most
-eloquent defence, one of the most notable of his assertions being that
-he had never stained his victories by slaughtering his foes in cold
-blood after the battle. In this he was far above his enemies, who had
-disgraced their victory of Philiphaugh by many an execution, and who
-were now bent upon taking the life of Montrose himself. The sentence
-against him was probably decided before his defence had been heard; it
-ran thus:--
-
-"That James Graham should next day be carried to Edinburgh cross and
-there hanged on a gibbet 30 feet high for the space of three hours; then
-to be taken down, his head to be struck off on a scaffold and affixed to
-the prison; his arms and legs to be stuck up on the four chief towns of
-the Kingdom, his body to be buried in the place set aside for common
-criminals."
-
-To this sentence the great Marquis haughtily replied that he would
-rather have his head so placed than his picture in the King's
-bedchamber, and that he wished he had limbs enough to be dispersed into
-all the cities of Christendom, to prove his dying attachment to his
-king. And in the one evening of life that still remained to him, this
-accomplished and fearless nobleman employed his time in turning these
-loyal sentiments into verse.
-
-Despite the fact that he triumphed undaunted over all the mean
-inventions of their malice, his enemies persisted to the end.
-
-The executioner tied mockingly round his neck the book that had been
-published describing his victories; Montrose thanked him, saying that he
-wore it with more pride than he had ever worn the garter of honour. He
-uttered a short prayer; then asking them what more indignities they had
-prepared for him, he patiently and with unbroken spirit yielded his life
-to the hangman, at the too early age of thirty-eight.
-
-Whatever opinions we may have as to the rights and wrongs of the
-quarrel, this brutal killing of a gallant soldier and accomplished
-gentleman can only rank as a hideous blot upon all concerned in it.
-Every insult hurled at Montrose has returned in the verdict of time with
-redoubled force against the malice of those who stooped to such
-vindictiveness. The execution of a soldier who has violated no rule of
-war is at any time a thing that revolts the human conscience, and a
-sentence hoarse with the vile taunts of its utterers has so far lost all
-semblance of justice that it is needless to argue upon it.
-
-In the verdict of history, the great Marquis of Montrose, whether right
-or wrong in his political views, lived and died like a man of honour.
-
-The ballad of the "Gallant Grahams," written about this time, reflects
-very sincerely and touchingly the devotion and affection surrounding the
-great Marquis, accompanied by the very Scottish feeling that in addition
-to his own personal power and genius, he was also the head of the great
-Border family of Grahams.
-
-
- *THE GALLANT GRAHAMS*
-
- Now, fare thee well, sweet Ennerdale![#]
- Baith kith and countrie I bid adieu;
- For I maun away, and I may not stay,
- To some uncouth land which I never knew.
-
-[#] A corruption of Endrickdale. The principal and most ancient
-possessions of the Montrose family lie along the water of Endrick, in
-Dumbartonshire.
-
- To wear the blue I think it best,
- Of all the colours that I see;
- And I'll wear it for the gallant Grahams,
- That are banished from their countrie.
-
- I have no gold, I have no land,
- I have no pearl nor precious stane;
- But I wald sell my silken snood,
- To see the gallant Grahams come hame.
-
- In Wallace days, when they began,
- Sir John the Graham[#] did bear the gree
- Through all the lands of Scotland wide:
- He was lord of the south countrie.
-
-[#] The faithful friend and adherent of the immortal Wallace slain at
-the battle of Falkirk.
-
- And so was seen full many a time;
- For the summer flowers did never spring,
- But every Graham, in armour bright,
- Would then appear before the king.
-
- They were all drest in armour sheen,
- Upon the pleasant banks of Tay;
- Before a king they might be seen,
- These gallant Grahams in their array.
-
- At the Goukhead our camp we set,
- Our leaguer down there for to lay;
- And, in the bonny summer light,
- We rode our white horse and our gray.
-
- Our false commander sold our king,
- Unto his deadly enemie,
- Who was the traitor, Cromwell, then;
- So I care not what they do with me.
-
- They have betray'd our noble prince,
- And banished him from his royal crown;'
- But the gallant Grahams have ta'en in hand
- For to command those traitors down.
-
- In Glen-Prosen[#] we rendezvous'd,
- March'd to Glenshie by night and day.
- And took the town of Aberdeen,
- And met the Campbells in their array.
-
-[#] Glen-Prosen is in Angusshire, usually called Forfarshire. The
-Glenshee road, over the Grampians, is the highest road in Great Britain.
-
- Five thousand men, in armour strong,
- Did meet the gallant Grahams that day
- At Inverlochie, where war began,
- And scarce two thousand men were they.
-
- Gallant Montrose, that chieftan bold,
- Courageous in the best degree,
- Did for the king fight well that day;--
- The Lord preserve his majestie!
-
- Then woe to Strachan, and Ilacket baith!
- And, Lesly, ill death may thou die!
- For ye have betray'd the gallant Grahams,
- Who aye were true to majestie.
-
- And the Laird of Assaint has seized Montrose,
- And had him into Edinburgh town;
- And frae his body taken the head,
- And quarter'd him upon a trone,
-
- And Huntly's[#] gone the self-same way,
- And our noble king is also gone;
- He suffer'd death for our nation,
- Our mourning tears can ne'er be done.
-
-[#] The Marquis of Huntly, one of the few Scottish nobles who never
-wavered in his devotion to King Charles I., was beheaded by the sentence
-of the Parliament of Scotland.
-
- But our brave young king is now come home,
- King Charles the Second in degree;
- The Lord send peace into his time,
- And God preserve his majestie!
-
-
-The ballad-writer's reference to the "coming home" of Charles II.
-probably means his signing of the Covenant and placing himself entirely
-at the mercy of the violent bigots who had killed his most faithful
-servant, Montrose. To this was Charles reduced by the desperate nature
-of his fortunes. But this course of action entirely severed the
-Scottish Covenanters from the English Puritans, and admirers of the
-gallant Montrose can take a grim pleasure in the fact that his
-arch-enemy, General Lesly, was most disastrously defeated by Cromwell at
-the battle of Dunbar.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLVII*
-
- *The Borderers and the Jacobites*
-
-
-During the Jacobite Rising, many of the Border chiefs took up arms in
-the Stuart cause. Two of these, Lord Derwentwater and Viscount Kenmure,
-were beheaded on Tower Hill for their part in the unsuccessful rising of
-1715, and another, Lord Nithsdale, was only saved from the same fate by
-the courage of his wife.
-
-This brave woman travelled in the depth of winter from Scotland, but
-when she reached York the snow was so deep that the stage coach could go
-no further. She continued her journey alone, though the snow was above
-the horse's knees, and by good luck she reached London and the Tower in
-safety, where, by bribing the guards, she managed to see her husband.
-
-She then resolved to petition the King for his life, and she herself
-tells in a letter to her sister how she waited in the ante-room to see
-the King (George I.), and how she threw herself at his feet to present
-the petition. The King tried to get away from her, but she seized hold
-of his coat, and was dragged on her knees along the floor. This scene
-produced no result, and as other efforts to procure Nithsdale's release
-also failed, the Countess determined to save him by a stratagem. She
-again bribed the guards to let her in, telling them she had joyful news
-for her husband about the petition. She dressed him in woman's clothes,
-which she had smuggled in for the occasion, and painted his face, and
-brought him out, speaking to him as to the woman friend who had
-accompanied her, but who had already left the prison, calling him "Mrs
-Betty," and asking him for the love of God to go as quickly as he could
-to her lodging and fetch her maid, as she wished to go and present her
-final petition for the release.
-
-All went well, and Nithsdale escaped to France; but the King was highly
-incensed and declared that the Countess cost him more trouble than any
-woman in Europe.
-
-Her adventures were not yet over, however. In spite of the fact that
-the King had wished for her arrest, she travelled to Scotland to fetch
-her son, and the valuable papers which she had taken the precaution to
-bury underground on her departure for London.
-
-She was successful in this second journey, and, after concealing herself
-and her son, until no further search was made for them, this noble and
-enterprising woman escaped to France and joined her husband. They
-afterwards went to Rome, where they lived happily for many years.
-
-In an old ballad called "Lord Nithsdale's Dream," he is described as
-dreaming in the Tower the night before his execution, after having said
-farewell to his beloved wife.
-
- "Farewell to thee, Winifred, pride of thy kind,
- Sole ray in my darkness, sole joy in my pain."
-
-He listens for the last sound of her footfall, and catches the last
-glimpse of her robe at the door, and then all joy and gladness depart
-out of his life, and he prays alone in his dungeon, thinking of the
-dreadful dawn that awaits him.
-
-He falls asleep and dreams that he is a frolicsome boy again, playing
-amongst the bracken on the braes of the Nith, bathing in its waters and
-treading joyfully the green heather. Or again he is riding to the hunt
-on his gallant grey steed, with a plume in his bonnet and a star on his
-breast, chasing the red deer and the wild mountain roe.
-
-The vision changes, and he dreams that he is telling his love to
-Winifred, and swearing to be faithful to her, watching the red blushes
-rise on her cheeks at his words of love, and hearing her sweet voice
-replying.
-
-Again he is riding at the head of his gallant band.
-
- "For the pibroch was heard on the hills far away,
- And the clans were all gathered from mountain and glen.
- For the darling of Scotland, their exile adored,
- They raised the loud slogan--they rushed to the strife;
- Unfurl'd was the banner, unsheathed was the sword,
- For the cause of their heart, that was dearer than life."
-
-
-And now the darksome morn has come, the priest is standing by his side,
-saying the prayers for the dead. He hears the muffled drum and the bells
-tolling his death knell; the block is prepared, the headsman comes; and
-the victim is led bare-headed from his cell.
-
-Waking, he turns on his straw pallet, and sees, by the pale, misty light
-of a taper, the form of his wife.
-
- "'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!" softly she said,
- "Arouse thee and follow, be bold, never fear,
- There was danger ahead, but my errand has sped,
- I promised to save thee, and lo! I am here!"
-
-[Illustration: "_'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!_"]
-
-Then she puts woman's garb upon him, and together they pass the
-unsuspecting guards and weary sentinels.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the peasantry on the Nithsdale estates heard of their Lord's escape
-their joy was unbounded.
-
-One of the songs published and sung everywhere at the time, begins:--
-
- "What news to me, carlin'?
- What news to me?"
- "What news!" quo' the carlin',
- The best that God can gie."
-
-
-The speaker asks if the true king has come to his own, and the carlin'
-answers.
-
- "Our ain Lord Nithsdale
- Will soon be 'mang us here.
-
-
-Then the speaker says:--
-
- "Brush me my coat, carlin',
- Brush me my shoon;
- I'll awa and meet Lord Nithsdale,
- When he comes to our town."
-
-
-"Alack-a-day," says the carlin'. "He has escaped to France, with scarce
-a penny."
-
-"Then," says the first speaker, "we'll sell our corn and everything we
-have and send the money to our lord, and we'll make the pipers blow and
-lads and maidens dance, and we'll all be glad and joyful and play 'The
-Stuarts back again,' and make the Whigs go mad."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lord Derwentwater's fate was not so happy as that of Lord Nithsdale,
-though Lady Derwentwater made a desperate effort to save him.
-
-It was she indeed who had urged him to throw in his lot with the
-Stuarts, saying that it was not good that he should hide his head when
-other gentlemen were mustering for the cause.
-
-The peasantry still think that Lady Derwentwater sits on her ruined
-tower lamenting the evil counsel she gave her husband, and they hasten
-by in fear when they see her lamp-light flickering.
-
-Derwentwater is described in the old ballads, as "a bonny lord," with
-hair of gold, and kind love dwelling in his hawk-like eyes.
-
-He passionately loved his beautiful home in Tynedale, the foundations of
-which may still be seen. The wooded glen below the castle, with the
-little burn running through it, spanned by a grey bridge is romantically
-beautiful.
-
-His "Farewell" to all this beauty is pathetic.
-
- "Farewell to pleasant Ditson Hall,
- My father's ancient seat;
- A stranger now must call thee his,
- Which gars[#] my heart to greet.[#]
- Farewell each kindly well-known face,
- My heart has held so dear:
- My tenants now must leave their lands,
- Or hold their lives in fear.
-
-[#] makes.
-[#] weep.
-
- No more along the banks of Tyne,
- I'll rove in autumn grey;
- No more I'll hear, at early dawn,
- The lav'rocks[#] wake the day:
- Then fare thee well, brave Witherington,
- And Forster ever true.
- Dear Shaftsbury and Errington,
- Receive my last adieu.
-
-[#] larks.
-
- And fare thee well, George Collingwood,
- Since fate has put us down,
- If thou and I have lost our lives,
- Our King has lost his crown.
- Farewell, farewell, my lady dear,
- Ill, ill thou counsell'dst me:
- I never more may see thy babe
- That smiles upon thy knee.
-
- And fare thee well, my bonny grey steed,
- That carried me aye so free;
- I wish I had been asleep in my bed,
- The last time I mounted thee.
- The warning bell now bids me cease;
- My troubles nearly o'er;
- Yon sun that rises from the sea,
- Shall rise on me no more.
-
- Albeit that here in London town
- It is my fate to die,
- O carry me to Northumberland,
- In my father's grave to lie:
- There chant my solemn requiem
- In Hexham's holy towers,
- And let six maids of fair Tynedale
- Scatter my grave with flowers.
-
- And when the head that wears the crown,
- Shall be laid low like mine,
- Some honest hearts may then lament
- For Radcliff's fallen line.
- Farewell to pleasant Ditson Hall,
- My father's ancient seat;
- A stranger now must call thee his,
- Which gars my heart to greet."
-
-
-Before his death, Earl Derwentwater signed a paper acknowledging "King
-James the Third" as his sovereign, and saying that he hoped his death
-would contribute to the service of his King.
-
-He is said to have looked closely at the block, and to have asked the
-executioner to chip off a rough place that might hurt his neck. Then,
-pulling off his coat and waistcoat, he tried if the block would fit his
-head, and told the executioner that when he had repeated "Lord Jesus
-receive my soul" for the third time, he was to do his office, which the
-executioner accordingly did at one blow.
-
-History tells that Derwentwater was brave and open-hearted and generous,
-and that his fate drew tears from the spectators, and was a great
-misfortune to his country. He was kind to the people on his estates, to
-the poor, the widow and the orphan.
-
-His request to be buried with his ancestors was refused, and he was
-interred at St Giles, Holborn, but his corpse was afterwards removed and
-carried secretly to Northumberland, where it was deposited in Dilston
-Chapel. The aurora borealis, which appeared remarkably vivid on the
-night of his execution, was long called in that part of the country
-"Lord Derwentwater's Lights."
-
-Immediately after Derwentwater's execution, Lord Kenmure also suffered
-death. After his execution, a letter was found in his pocket addressed
-to the Pretender, by the title of King James, saying that he died in his
-faithful service, and asking him to provide for his wife and children.
-
-The following ballad describes his rising in the Stuart cause--
-
- "O Kenmure's on and awa', Willie,
- O Kenmure's on and awa';
- And Kenmure's lord's the bravest lord
- That ever Galloway saw.
- Success to Kenmure's band, Willie!
- Success to Kenmure's band!
- There's no a heart that fears a Whig,
- That rides by Kenmure's hand.
-
- His lady's cheek was red, Willie,
- His lady's cheek was red,
- When she saw his steely jupes[#] put on,
- Which smell'd o' deadly feud.
- Here's Kenmure's health in wine, Willie,
- Here's Kenmure's health in wine;
- There ne'er was a coward o' Kenmure's blude,
- Nor yet o' Gordon's line.
-
-[#] armour.
-
- There's a rose in Kenmure's cap, Willie,
- There's a rose in Kenmure's cap,
- He'll steep it red in ruddie heart's blade,
- Afore the battle drap.
- Here's him that's far awa', Willie,
- Here's him that's far awa',
- And here's the flower that I lo'e best,
- The rose that's like the snaw.
-
- O Kenmure's lads are men, Willie,
- O Kenmure's lads are men,
- Their hearts and swords are metal true,
- And that their foes shall ken.
- They'll live, or die wi' fame, Willie,
- They'll live, or die wi' fame,
- And soon wi' sound o' victorie
- May Kenmure's lord come hame."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLVIII*
-
- *The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall*
-
-
-If you stand upon Rose Hill, which rises from the banks of the river
-Irthing just where Northumberland meets Cumberland, you have lying
-around you one of the finest wild prospects in the United Kingdom. Hills
-to the north, stretching away into Scotland; hills to the east, broken
-into picturesque valleys, especially the great gap through which rushes
-the young Tyne; hills to the south, dominated by the powerful head of
-Cross Fell, a great sprawling mountain, not a peaked one, the highest
-stretch of which is nearly three thousand feet above sea level.
-
-But while drinking in the glories of the distances, the eye will note
-with curiosity a strange-looking but picturesque hill only a couple of
-miles to the South-east, with a long rocky ridge at its top deeply cut
-into or "nicked" in nine different places, this giving it a very wild
-appearance. It is one of these hills which tempts the keen observer to
-go on and explore it. If we cut direct to it, over the fields, it is
-rough going, but the view is good all the way. And there are four
-special objects of interest, all close together; the rushing Tipalt
-river, Thirlwall Castle, the Roman wall, and the Nine Nicks.
-
-Thirlwall Castle rises tall, square, and stern, with a dark fir-wood
-behind it at the foot of the hill, where a bend in the river makes a
-natural moat. Approaching it from Rose Hill, it looks as if the
-building were still nearly complete, but the south side has almost
-entirely fallen away and all the floors and the roof are out. Edward I.
-slept in this Castle when it was newly built, in 1306; but now it is
-grass-grown and moss-grown, and its three bare walls rise gaunt and grim
-to the sky. It is entirely built out of stones with Roman chisel marks,
-taken from the great Roman wall, which unfortunately was once regarded
-as a handy stone-quarry for anyone to take from.
-
-The name "Thirlwall" means "Drill-wall," and marks the spot as that at
-which the wild Northern tribes first "drilled" or broke through the
-wall. The name was, of course, given to the place long before this
-castle was built.
-
-To mount from Thirlwall Castle to the top of the Nine Nicks is an easy
-enough task for any vigorous person. It is just a fine healthy scramble.
-When at the top, it becomes evident that some sort of fortification once
-existed there. In point of fact this was the important Roman station
-called "Magna" which stood at about the middle of the Roman Wall. The
-wall ran from sea to sea, that is to say, from the mouth of the Tyne to
-the Solway. Thus it was nearly eighty miles long, and a very elaborate
-structure indeed.
-
-It consisted of three distinct portions:--
-
-1. The main stone wall, with a ditch to the north of it.
-
-2. An earth-work to the south of this, consisting of either two or
-three ramparts about seventy feet apart, with a ditch between.
-
-8. Stations, Castles and Watch-towers. Sometimes these were to the
-north of the wall, sometimes in the middle, sometimes south, according
-to the nature of the country.
-
-The height of the main wall was from sixteen to twenty feet, including
-battlements. It was six to nine feet thick. Fancy a powerful military
-wall of about eighteen feet high stretching nearly eighty miles right
-across England! It hardly seems possible that the Romans could
-undertake such a work. The square strong stones were carefully selected
-and often brought from quarries at a distance. These stones flanked the
-outsides of the wall, and in between was strong concrete which was
-poured in while in liquid.
-
-The second wall was of earth and stones, and, of course, lower than the
-first. Then there was a castle every mile, some of which can still be
-clearly traced, and a "station," about every four miles, of which
-several interesting ruins remain. There was a road eighteen feet wide
-between the two walls.
-
-Those who have the energy to toil on for a full dozen miles of rough
-walking, along the wall, eastward from Thirlwall, will be rewarded by
-some of the most romantic scenes in Britain. They will see the wall at
-its best. They will pass Whinshields, the highest point in the wall,
-1230 feet above sea level. The wild Northumbrian lakes will lie at
-their feet; if the day is fine, the Solway will be seen glistening,
-thirty miles to the west; and on the east the eye follows the Tyne
-almost to the sea. The Pennine Ridge bars the view twenty miles to the
-south, while on the North the High Cheviot is clear and strong, thirty
-miles away.
-
-Passing Whinshields, it is not far to Borcovicus (often called
-Housteads) where lie the remains of a large Roman Station, wonderful
-remains, showing the whole outline with startling clearness. This
-station covered five acres, and here was quartered a cohort of the
-Tungrian infantry, consisting of a thousand brave soldiers, servants of
-Imperial Rome.
-
-But, after all, nothing is so impressive as the remains of the wall
-itself. Stand at the top either of Whinshields or of the Nine Nicks,
-and try to imagine what it looked like in Roman days. Eastward along
-the Tyne valley and westward along the Irthing valley ran this wonderful
-work, this powerful girdle of stone. The very spot was chosen with
-great judgment, for these valleys gave the Romans a district protected
-by the bleak hills, where they could live and where they could keep
-cattle and grow grain. But the hilly nature of the ground must have
-added to the difficulty of the builders. The wall had to run up steep
-hill sides and cling to the edge of cliffs, and precipices; it had to be
-carried by bridges over roaring torrents, and when it reached low-lying
-ground it had to avoid the treacherous swamps and morasses. And yet,
-despite every obstacle, the great wall ran on its direct way, as strong
-and persistent as the great people who built it.
-
-It withstood the shock of war, it was not flung down by soldiers
-marching against it. But to the people who wanted to build castles or
-houses or farms, or even to mend roads, the wall offered a mass of
-material ready to hand, and it suffered not from man's energy so much as
-from his laziness. Century after century it was robbed of its stones;
-to-day a series of long grass-grown mounds, a few feet high, running
-across the meadows, are nearly all that remain of one of the most
-wonderful pieces of building that was ever erected in Great Britain.
-Even today, in its decay, it is one of the most romantic features of a
-highly romantic district.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLIX*
-
- *In Wild Northumberland To-day*
-
-
-These tales of the Borders would hardly be complete without a few
-concluding words about the great romantic charm which still invests the
-Borderline. Let us, for example, make a brief survey of some of the
-haunting spots in wild Northumberland. We will pass over such towns as
-Warkworth, Alnwick, Alnmouth; beautiful as they are, they have moved
-with the times and are too modern to be more than mentioned here. But
-in a place like Holy Island we feel the call of the old days, and the
-charm that was theirs. This Island was the scene of the first efforts
-of Christianity to curb the wild and warlike Northumbrians; St Aidan,
-and St Cuthbert, both men of remarkable genius and great influence,
-taught there lessons of peace and justice without which every warlike
-state would descend into mere savagery. The island is about two miles
-square, and at low tide it is easy to walk across the sands to or from
-the mainland of Northumberland. The distance is two and a half miles,
-and it is necessary to take off shoes and stockings, for the water on
-the sands will often be six inches deep. A row of posts marks the way,
-and some of them have ladders, reaching up to a barrel on the top, so
-that any caught by the tide can find a safe harbour wherein they will
-suffer nothing more serious than a long wait! The island is inhabited
-by fishing folk, living simple healthy lives. There are fine rocks and
-splendid sands; beautiful flowers and lovely shells. The seabirds are
-wonderful. The ruins of the old Cathedral and castle are very
-interesting, it is a delightful old-world place, out of the rush and
-hurry of modern life.
-
-Retracing our steps to the mainland, and proceeding westward for a dozen
-or so miles as the crow flies, we reach the River Till, and the field of
-Flodden. Here we are near to the big wild wall of the Cheviot hills,
-and to keep on the English side of the border we need to turn due south.
-It is then about thirty miles of rough walking through these grandly
-rugged hills before we come to the field of Otterburn.
-
-But we realise in that walk how it was that the district produced and
-still produces a hardy race of hunters and sheep-farmers, and why it is
-that the towns and farms nestle in the valleys, so that the Borderers,
-when they meant to say, "Rouse the neighbourhood," used the phrase,
-"Raise the _water_" (meaning, of course, the houses along the
-waterside). Further south, still going among splendid shaggy hills, we
-reach the North Tyne River, and soon afterwards some highly interesting
-Roman remains, including the arches of a fine bridge over the river at
-the Roman Station of Cilurnum, near Chollerford. This is on the Roman
-Wall, which has already been described under the heading of Thirlwall.
-A few miles to the west would bring us to the picturesque but
-little-known Northumberland Lakes, where the wild swans nest. If we
-continue south and south-west we can follow the beautiful valleys of the
-Allan or the South Tyne. This is a district of hills, roads, and
-castles; the domain of the fated Lord Derwentwater was near here. For
-beauty the whole of this neighbourhood would be hard to beat; yet it is
-too little known.
-
-If we still go south, the scenery grows wilder and wilder as we approach
-the huge mountain of Cross Fell. We may cross into south-east Cumberland
-and visit the quaint old town of Alston, one of the highest towns in
-England. Here were once the royal silver mines, when English coins were
-made from Alston silver. Lead is chiefly mined there now, and the mines
-are worth a visit. Near Cross Fell also is a rough road called the
-"Maiden Way," and an old legend says it was made by women, who carried
-the stones in their aprons! The western slope of the Fell is famous for
-a specially violent wind called the "Helm wind," which rages there at
-certain seasons. It is just as if it were rushing fiercely down the
-hill, with a roaring noise and strength enough to overturn a horse and
-cart, and to beat the grass and grain till it is black! But though it
-does a deal of damage it is very exhilarating, making people feel merry
-in spite of themselves. And on Cross Fell slopes can be seen the
-beautiful River Tees, which can be followed to its grand waterfalls of
-the the Cauldron and the High Force. In the first the water dashes on
-to huge rocks, and is thrown back on itself, roaring, foaming, and
-fighting; in the second, it tumbles sheer down a dark and noble cliff.
-And everywhere on the heights there are splendid views.
-
-In making any such excursions as the ones here outlined, into the
-out-of-the-way parts of Northumberland and the Borders, we find an added
-pleasure in the character of the people. The Borderers are still a
-grand race; big men, vigorous, honest, courteous, hospitable, free from
-all that is mean and small. In some districts you can hear "thou" and
-"thee" still used, and meet old men who have never seen a railway. One
-dear old farmer, a real picture of a simple honest man, hearing I had
-come from London, asked me if the London men had got their hay-crop in
-yet! One typical Northumbrian, of great natural intelligence, bearing a
-name famous on the Borders, is station-master at a local station that
-stands in a wood, and between trains, studies bird and wild-flower till
-he has made himself a most interesting naturalist. A stranger who has
-lost his way will find these courteous folk ready to walk a mile or two
-with him, out of their own way, just to set him right; and he who is
-tired and hungry will be invited to step in and eat, and perhaps find
-himself introduced to all the family and treated like an honoured guest;
-then, not a penny of payment taken, they will set him on his way with a
-bunch of the best flowers from the garden! For hearts on the Border are
-very human and warm. So that in due time he who knows the Borderers
-will delight to hear the unmistakeable Northumbrian or the pronounced
-Border accent. And he will say to himself: Splendid is the Border
-scenery, and stirring are the Border ballads, but best of all are the
-Border men.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- TOLD THROUGH THE AGES
-
-Legends of Greece and Rome
-Favourite Greek Myths
-Stories of Robin Hood and his Merry Outlaws
-Stories of King Arthur and his Knights
-Stories from Herodotus
-Stories from Wagner
-Britain Long Ago
-Stories from Scottish History
-Stories from Greek Tragedy
-Stories from Dickens
-Stories from the Earthly Paradise
-Stories from the neid
-The Book of Rustem
-Stories from Chaucer
-Stories from the Old Testament
-Stories from the Odyssey
-Stories from the Iliad
-Told by the Northmen
-Stories from Don Quixote
-The Story of Roland
-Stories from Thucydides
-The Story of Hereward
-Stories from the Faerie Queene
-Cuchulain: The Hound of Ulster
-Stories from Xenophon
-Old Greek Nature Stories
-Stories from Shakespeare
-Stories from Dante
-Famous Voyages of the Great Discoverers
-The Story of Napoleon
-Stories of Pendennis and the Charterhouse
-Sir Guy of Warwick
-Heroes of the Middle Ages
-The Story of the Crusades
-The Story of Nelson
-Stories from George Eliot
-Froissart's Chronicles
-Shakespeare's Stories of the English Kings
-Heroes of Modern Europe
-The Story of King Robert the Bruce
-Stories of the Scottish Border
-The Story of the French Revolution
-The Story of Lord Kitchener
-Stories of the Saints
-The Story of St Elizabeth of Hungary
-In Feudal Times
-The High Deeds of Finn
-Early English Travel and Discovery
-Legends of Ancient Egypt
-The Story of the Renaissance
-Boyhood Stories of Famous Men
-Stories from French History
-Stories from English History
-Famous English Books and their Stories
-Women of the Classics
-In the Days of the Guilds
-Science through the Ages
-
-_Other volumes in active preparation_
-
-
-
-
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<meta content="EpubMaker 0.3.20a7 by Marcello Perathoner &lt;webmaster@gutenberg.org&gt;" name="generator" />
</head>
<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 38845 ***</div>
<div class="document" id="stories-of-the-scottish-border">
<h1 class="center document-title level-1 pfirst title"><span class="x-large">STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER</span></h1>
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-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>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 </span><a class="reference internal" href="#project-gutenberg-license">Project Gutenberg License</a><span>
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-<p class="noindent pnext"></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<div class="align-None container" id="pg-machine-header">
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>Title: Stories of the Scottish Border
-<br />
-<br />Author: Mr and Mrs William Platt
-<br />
-<br />Release Date: July 17, 2013 [EBook #38845]
-<br />
-<br />Language: English
-<br />
-<br />Character set encoding: UTF-8</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
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-<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-start-line"><span>*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK </span><span>STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER</span><span> ***</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
</div>
<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-produced-by"><span>Produced by Al Haines.</span></p>
@@ -10665,346 +10635,6 @@ Border ballads, but best of all are the Border men.</span></p>
<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
<div class="backmatter">
</div>
-<p class="pfirst" id="pg-end-line"><span>*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK </span><span>STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER</span><span> ***</span></p>
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 38845 ***</div>
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-.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-
-
-.. meta::
- :PG.Id: 38845
- :PG.Title: Stories of the Scottish Border
- :PG.Released: 2013-07-17
- :PG.Rights: Public Domain
- :PG.Producer: Al Haines
- :DC.Creator: Mr and Mrs William Platt
- :MARCREL.ill: \M. Meredith Williams
- :DC.Title: Stories of the Scottish Border
- :DC.Language: en
- :DC.Created: 1910
- :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg
-
-==============================
-STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-==============================
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. pgheader::
-
-.. container:: frontispiece
-
- .. vspace:: 2
-
- .. _`The Rookhope Ride.`:
-
- .. figure:: images/img-front.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *The Rookhope Ride*
-
- *The Rookhope Ride*
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line
-
- .. class:: x-large
-
- STORIES OF THE
- SCOTTISH BORDER
-
- .. vspace:: 2
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- BY
-
- .. class:: LARGE
-
- Mr and Mrs WILLIAM PLATT
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. class:: center large
-
- WITH SIXTEEN FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- M. MEREDITH WILLIAMS
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- GEORGE G. HARRAP & CO. LTD.
- LONDON BOMBAY SYDNEY
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: verso center white-space-pre-line
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *First published December 1910*
- *by* GEORGE G. HARRAP & COMPANY
- *39-41 Parker Street, Kingsway, London, W.C.2
- Reprinted: December 1916; March 1919;
- April 1929*
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *Printed in Great Britain by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh*
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Contents
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line
-
-`INTRODUCTION`_
-
-.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line
-
-I. `THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS`_
-II. `A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER`_
-III. `WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US`_
-
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-CHAP.
-
-.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line
-
-I. `Bamburgh and its Coast`_
-II. `Athelstan at Vinheath`_
-III. `Monks and Minstrels`_
-IV. `Sir Patrick Spens`_
-V. `Auld Maitland`_
-VI. `The Mystery of the Eildons`_
-VII. `Black Agnes of Dunbar`_
-VIII. `The Young Tamlane`_
-IX. `The Gay Goss-Hawk`_
-X. `The Corbies`_
-XI. `Otterbourne and Chevy Chase`_
-XII. `The Douglas Clan`_
-XIII. `Alnwick Castle and the Percies`_
-XIV. `Hexham and Queen Margaret`_
-XV. `Fair Helen of Kirkconnell`_
-XVI. `Johnie of Breadislee`_
-XVII. `Katharine Janfarie`_
-XVIII. `By Lauder Bridge`_
-XIX. `The Battle of Flodden Field`_
-XX. `After Flodden`_
-XXI. `Graeme and Bewick`_
-XXII. `The Song of the Outlaw Murray`_
-XXIII. `Johnie Armstrong`_
-XXIV. `The Lament of the Border Widow`_
-XXV. `The Raid of the Kers`_
-XXVI. `Merrie Carlisle`_
-XXVII. `Kinmont Willie`_
-XXVIII. `Dick o' the Cow`_
-XXIX. `The Lochmaben Harper`_
-XXX. `The Rookhope Ride`_
-XXXI. `Barthram's Dirge`_
-XXXII. `Queen Mary and the Borders`_
-XXXIII. `The Raid of the Reidswire`_
-XXXIV. `Jock o' the Side`_
-XXXV. `Hobbie Noble`_
-XXXVI. `The Laird o' Logie`_
-XXXVII. `Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead`_
-XXXVIII. `Muckle-Mou'd Meg`_
-XXXIX. `The Dowie Dens of Yarrow`_
-XL. `Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland`_
-XLI. `Gilderoy`_
-XLII. `Archie Armstrong's Oath`_
-XLIII. `Christie's Will`_
-XLIV. `Northumberland at the Time of the Civil War`_
-XLV. `Montrose and Lesly`_
-XLVI. `The Death of Montrose`_
-XLVII. `The Borderers and the Jacobites`_
-XLVIII. `The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall`_
-XLIX. `In Wild Northumberland To-Day`_
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Illustrations
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Rookhope Ride.`_ . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`Egil at Vinheath`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Siege of Maitland Castle`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`Black Agnes`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Twa Corbies`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`Johnie of Breadislee.`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`Flodden Field`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`"Tell Us All—Oh, Tell Us True!"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Border Widow`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Escape of Kinmont Willie`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`Queen Mary crossing the Solway`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`"A Boon, a Boon, my Noble Liege!"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`"She Kissed his Cheek, She Kaim'd his Hair"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`The Storming of Newcastle`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent
-
-`"'Tis I, 'Tis thy Winifred!"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: italics
-
- | In liquid murmurs Yarrow sings
- | Her reminiscent tune
- | Of bygone Autumn, bygone Springs,
- | And many a leafy June.
-
- | No more the morning beacons gleam
- | Upon the silent hills;
- | The far back years are years of dream—
- | Now peace the valley fills.
-
- | No more the reivers down the vale
- | On raid and foray ride;
- | No more is heard the widow's wail
- | O'er those who fighting died.
-
- | When morning damns with all its joys
- | Then from the meadows rise
- | A hundred throbbing hearts to voice
- | Their anthems to the skies.
-
- | When noontide sleeps where brackens wave,
- | Ere shadows yet grow long,
- | No sound awakes the echoes save
- | The Yarrow's pensive song.
-
- | And when the eve, with calm delight,
- | Betokens night is nigh,
- | Beneath the first star's tender light
- | Is heard the owlet's cry.
-
- | While Yarrow's liquid cadence swells
- | By meadow, moor, and hill,
- | At morn or noon or eve there dwells
- | A mournful memory still.
-
-.. class:: no-italics
-
- | W. CUTHBERTSON.
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`INTRODUCTION`:
-.. _`THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS`:
-
-.. class:: center x-large bold
-
- Stories of
- The Scottish Border
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Introduction
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- I.—THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The district called the Border is one of the
-most interesting in Great Britain. It consists
-of that part of England that is nearest Scotland,
-and that part of Scotland that is nearest England,
-mainly the counties of Northumberland, Cumberland,
-Berwickshire, Roxburghshire, and Dumfriesshire.
-
-The country is very picturesque and highly romantic.
-It abounds in great rolling, breezy hills, with swift
-streamlets or "burns" running down their sides to
-swell the rushing rivers. No part of our island has more
-beautiful valleys than those of the Border.
-
-This bold, rough district, well adapted to defence, and
-situated also just where the island of Great Britain is
-almost at its narrowest, became, after many a struggle,
-the boundary between England and Scotland. The
-character of the country was suited to the rearing of
-hardy Moorland sheep and cattle; its inhabitants therefore
-were a tough, open-air race of men, strong, strapping
-fellows, fearless riders, always ready for an adventure,
-especially if it meant a fight.
-
-In those days of Border strife there was hardly such a
-thing as international justice, that is to say, the people of
-one nation were not very particular as to what they did
-to people of another nation; therefore these bold, hardy
-Border men, Englishmen and Scot alike, were fond of
-creeping across the boundary to steal the cattle of their
-neighbours. Men devoted to such raids were called
-"Freebooters" or "Mosstroopers," the name "Moss"
-being given in the North Country to boggy tracts that
-lie about the hill-sides.
-
-So it happened that the Border was in a perpetual
-state of petty warfare, conducted, it is true, with a
-certain amount of good-will and a rough approach to
-chivalry, and with the concurrence of the powerful
-Border nobles of both nations, who often played an
-important part therein. At times these raids developed
-into important warlike expeditions, when a fierce noble,
-or even a king, had some reckless game to play. Hence,
-among the ballads which give us so vivid an account
-of Border strife, we find descriptions not only of the
-minor doings of picturesque sheep-stealers, but also
-of pitched battles such as Chevy Chase and Homildon Hill.
-
-The union of England and Scotland in 1603 naturally
-put an end to all the former excuses for raiding, and
-therefore terminated the true Freebooter period. After
-this, despite one or two belated attempts, such as Elliot's
-big raid in 1611, sheep-stealing ceased to be looked upon
-as an honourable calling, and became mere thieving.
-The men who would have raided one another's farms
-in 1602 became friendly neighbours after the Border
-Commission of 1605. There had been little malice in
-their former freebooting. Both sides were of one race;
-and they had the pleasure of finding that their lands
-went up greatly in value in consequence of the Border peace.
-
-To-day, the Border presents scenes of peaceful
-cattle-farming. But Romance is still in the air, hangs about
-the fine, breezy moorlands and beautiful dales, and is
-seen clearly in the faces of the healthy Border-folk. A
-holiday at any Border farm would prove a most
-enjoyable one. There are wonderful Roman remains, for
-here it was that the Romans built their wall; there are
-castles of the Border barons; the views are wide and
-grand; the river-valleys are unmatched for beauty,
-and delightful wild flowers are plentiful, chief among
-which are fox-gloves, the giant wild Canterbury Bells,
-the handsome North Country wild geranium, several
-interesting kinds of wild orchids, and a variety of others
-too numerous to mention. Last, but not least, it is
-often possible in the evenings to see the farmers' sons
-engaged in friendly wrestling in the meadows, when
-we can realise that these great manly fellows are of the
-same vigorous race that kept the Borders lively a few
-centuries ago.
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. _`A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER`:
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- II.—A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Before dealing in detail with the stirring stories of
-Border history and legend, to retell which is the purpose
-of this book, we will first inquire—What is it that
-settles exactly the position of the border-line between
-two countries? To find the answer we must think
-what happens when a country is invaded.
-
-If the invaders are stronger than the people whom they
-attack, they go on thrusting back their foes till these
-reach some strong position where, by the aid of mountain,
-river, or marsh, they are able, at any rate for a time,
-to hold their own. Thus, a border-line is always
-determined by some natural feature of the country which
-gives the defenders an advantage.
-
-The attackers will not always operate from the same
-locality, and the defenders will not always fall back in
-the same direction; the two sides, also, will vary in
-power from time to time. For these reasons a border-line,
-especially in the old fighting days, was often altered.
-
-When the Romans invaded Britain they gradually
-conquered the southern part of it, but they could not
-subdue the wilder north; one of their boundary lines
-was drawn from the Solway to the Tyne; then they
-fought their way further north and their next definite
-boundary was a line running from the Forth to the Clyde.
-Along each of these boundaries they built a great wall,
-and to this day parts of these Roman walls remain.
-But it is worth noting that neither of these wall
-border-lines stands upon the present border, one being
-all in England and the other all in Scotland.
-
-When the Romans left Britain, called back to defend
-their own native land from invasion, there followed a
-brief period for which we have no definite record of
-events in this island. This is the period of King Arthur,
-and none can say how much is true in the Arthurian
-legends.
-
-But history begins to become clear again about the
-time that the Angles came in their ships across the
-North Sea, bent on conquest. They landed on all the
-natural harbours of the east coast, driving the Britons
-back and taking the land for themselves. The fact that
-they landed on the East and drove the Britons westward,
-leads us to think that sooner or later a boundary
-would have been formed dividing the island into the east
-side (for the Angles) and the west side (for the Britons).
-
-Now that is exactly what did happen. The border-lines
-were nowhere like the present ones. The northern
-kingdom of the Angles reached to the Forth, where these
-people founded Edinburgh (Edwin's burgh). On the
-west the Britons had sway in Cornwall (Corn-Walles),
-Wales, Cumbria (which stretched from the Mersey to
-the Solway), and Strathclyde (from the Solway to the
-Clyde). North of the Forth was the country of the Picts;
-while the Scots were a race recently come from Ireland,
-and they only owned what we now call Argyleshire, and
-the islands lying near to it. Not one inch of the present
-Border was at that day in the border-line!
-
-Of the various races that lay round about where the
-Border now is, the Northumbrians seemed at first to be
-the strongest. The capital of their kingdom was
-Bamburgh, a place still famous for its castle, though
-to-day it is not important enough to have a railway
-station! But it still looks very picturesque on the wild
-coast, with the Farne Islands, the first seat of
-Northumbrian Christianity, in the near distance.
-
-Ambition had much to do with the downfall of
-Northumbria. The famous King Eadbert would not rest
-content till he had scaled Dumbarton, the capital of
-Strathclyde. This was to his career what the march
-to Moscow was to Napoleon's, for, though Eadbert got
-safely to Dumbarton (756) his army was cut to pieces
-in getting back again. The Northumbrians seem to
-have lost some of their northern lands, for they moved
-their capital further south, to the old Roman city of
-Corbridge which stood on the Tyne just where the
-delightful country town of that name stands to-day.
-
-In 844 a king of the Scots, named Kenneth MacAlpin,
-became (we don't quite know how) king of the Picts also,
-joining two strong races under one ruler, and thus was
-powerful enough to give great trouble to the weakened
-kingdom of Northumbria. He several times led his army
-through Lothian, the district belonging to the Angles
-between the Forth and the Tweed, but was never quite
-able to conquer it. It is important to remember that
-up to that date Lothian had never belonged to Scotland.
-The appearance of the Danes added to the confusion
-of those restless days. For some few years it was
-doubtful whether Scot, Dane, or Angle would get the best of it
-in Northumbria. But at last the genius of Athelstan of
-Wessex revived the power of the Angles over the whole
-of that large part of the island which they had settled,
-right up to the Forth itself. Edinburgh was still English
-in 957, and the border-line was still very far from the
-present one. But there was no longer a king of
-Northumbria; only an earl, who was subject to the will
-of the West-Saxon kings.
-
-This fact of the dominance of the West Saxons, whose
-capital was far to the south at Winchester, must have
-added to the weakness of the Northumbrian border.
-By the year 963 the Scots had conquered Edinburgh,
-and it was now never again to return to English rule.
-Before very long the whole of Lothian had passed under
-Scottish control; but it was not yet held to be part of
-Scotland. Nor must it be thought that this conquest
-of Lothian fixed the border-line in its present position,
-for the king of the Scots was at that time ruler over
-Cumberland, which had never yet been English and was
-all that was left of the old British kingdom of Cumbria.
-
-Frontier wars with varying successes between Scot,
-Angle, and Dane mark the stormy history of this time.
-The power of Cnut held back the Scotch attempts upon
-Nothumberland; but during a lull in the wars the grand-son
-of the Scottish king married the sister of Earl Siward,
-and received as her dowry twelve towns in the valley
-of the Tyne, an astonishingly imprudent arrangement.
-
-At the time of the battle of Hastings, the earldom of
-Northumberland was so far distant from Winchester
-as to be somewhat out of the control of the King of
-England; the power of the Scottish kings threatened it;
-they held twelve towns in Tynedale, and Cumberland
-was a part of Scotland. The Northumbrians refused to
-accept William the Conqueror as their king; and had
-they been able to make good their refusal, they must
-sooner or later have been conquered by the Scots, and
-the border-line between England and Scotland would
-then most probably have been formed by the Tees, the
-mountain boundary of Westmoreland, and Morecambe Bay.
-
-But William was not a king to be played with. He
-reduced Northumberland to subjection and carried his
-army into Scotland as far as the river Tay, where he
-forced the King of Scotland to admit that he, William,
-was his overlord.
-
-Notwithstanding this humiliation, when King William
-returned to Winchester, the Scots several times went
-back to their favourite amusement of raiding unhappy
-Northumberland.
-
-One of these invasions took place in the reign of
-William Rufus (1093), who went north in person. He
-doubtless recognised the fact that owing to the Scots
-possessing Cumberland they were in the strong position
-of being able to attack Northumberland on two sides.
-He took Cumberland by force of arms, and thus for the
-first time it became a part of England (the word
-"Cumberland" means the land of the Cumbrians or
-Welsh, a Saxon form of the Welsh word Cymry).
-
-Rufus rebuilt the strong fortress of Carlisle to defend
-his new border at its weakest corner. For the most part
-this border is excellently protected by the natural
-rampart of the wild Cheviot Hills, and is in every way as
-good a border as could be devised. It runs in a fairly
-straight line from south-west to north-east, across a
-narrow part of the island.
-
-But although this border-line proved to be a
-permanent one, it must not be thought that it remained
-undisputed. The times were rough, and hardy fighting
-folk lived on the Border. They had many grounds for
-quarrel, and took advantage of them all. For one thing,
-the exact boundary of North Cumberland was never
-quite defined till 1552; up to which year there was a
-tract of land between the rivers Esk and Sark, which was
-claimed by both countries, and therefore called the
-"Debateable Land." Then the Scots maintained that
-they were overlords of Northumberland, while the
-English kings cherished the notion that they were
-overlords of the whole island of Britain, and the wild spirits
-on both sides were always ready to fight.
-
-Out of this fighting spirit sprung the stirring history
-of the Border, which forms the theme of the deathless
-Ballads, the stories of which it is now our purpose to
-retell.
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. _`WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US`:
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- III.—WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Many a name holds a meaning wrapt up within itself
-like a nut in its shell. For instance, "Edinburgh"
-is a Saxon name—Edwin's burgh—and the word tells
-us that this noble city, though now the capital of
-Scotland, was originally founded by and belonged to
-a Saxon king of Northumbria. The Highlanders, in
-their own Gaelic language, called it Dunedin. This has
-the same signification as Edinburgh, but, like most
-Gaelic names, it is arranged in the reverse order to that
-in which an English name is generally put together.
-"Dun" means burgh, "Edin" is Edwin. This is the
-same Dun that we have in "Dundee," which means
-the burgh on the Tay, and might be translated as
-"Tayburgh." "Dumbarton" means the burgh of the
-Britons, and teaches us another notable lesson, namely,
-how far north in the old times the British influence
-extended. For "British" in this case means
-"Welsh." Nowadays we associate the Welsh with Wales only.
-Formerly there must have been a numerous colony of
-Welsh in Scotland, as the name "Dumbarton" testifies,
-as also many Scottish family names. The great name
-of Wallace itself, for instance, suggests such an origin,
-for "Wallace" is merely a corrupt form of the word
-"Welsh," and proves that the great national hero was
-of Welsh extraction. Then "Cumberland"—Cymry
-land—means the land of the Welsh, or Cymry, as they
-call themselves. The county of Cumberland did not
-really belong to the English till the time of William
-Rufus. The first syllable of "Carlisle" denotes a Celtic
-fortified town, and must be compared with the first
-syllable of "Carnarvon."
-
-The presence of the Roman wall is shown in many
-names in Northumberland, such as "Wallsend,"
-"Walltown," "Wallridge," "Heddon-on-the-Wall,"
-"Wallhouses," and "Thirlwall."
-
-For a very interesting instance of what a name tells
-us we may leave the Border for a moment and consider
-why the northernmost part of Scotland is called
-"Sutherland." It must have been so named by people
-living in the Orkney and Shetland isles, of a different
-race from the Scotch—that is, Norse settlers in those
-islands.
-
-With regard to surnames, how many stop to think
-that "Oliphant" is merely a form of "elephant," and
-was originally an allusion to a big, burly ancestor?
-"Grant," which is the same as "grand," must also have
-been once applied to one who was a giant in size. The
-Frazers somehow got their name from the French word
-for a strawberry, fraise. The odd-looking
-"Scrymgeour" means simply a scrimmager or skirmisher.
-"Turnbull" recalls one who turned the bull at a
-bull-baiting. The well-known "Gladstains" or "Gladstone"
-has nothing to do with "glad," but is from "glede,"
-an old word for the kite, and commemorates some stone
-where these birds frequented. "Buccleuch" is from
-the killing of a buck in a cleugh or ravine.
-
-The Christian names of the Borderers are full of
-life and local colour, and differ much from those of
-Southern England. "Barthram" is the northern form
-of "Bertram," "Nigel" of "Neil," "Jellon" of
-"Julian," "Ringan" of "Ninian." It was the general
-custom to abbreviate Christian names or use them in
-the diminutive form, as is constantly the practice in
-these Border ballads. "Hobbie" stands for "Halbert,"
-a fine old name which must not be confused with
-"Albert." "Dandie" or "Dandrie" is "Andrew,"
-"Eckie" is "Hector," "Lammie" is "Lambert,"
-"Lennie" is "Leonard." "Adam" becomes, in the
-familiar form, "Aicky," "Christian" becomes "Christy,"
-"Gilbert" becomes "Gibby."
-
-Another peculiarity of the ballads is the regular
-recurrence of such phrases as "the Laird's Jock,"
-"the Laird's Wat," "Ringan's Wat," etc. These
-expressions mean, "John the son of the Laird,"
-"Walter the son of the Laird," "Walter the son of
-Ringan or Ninian."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Bamburgh and its Coast`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter I
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Bamburgh and its Coast
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The little town of Bamburgh has two striking
-features—the great castle upon its stern rock,
-and the wild coast-line at its feet where dash
-the storms of the North Sea.
-
-To-day it is not important enough to have a railway
-station of its own; yet once it was the capital of the
-great Saxon kingdom of Northumbria. Its original
-name was Bebbanburgh, so called after Queen Bebba;
-of its Saxon fortress hardly a trace remains, the present
-building being partly the old Norman castle, with repairs
-and additions of a later date. The ancient pile has a
-strength, dignity, and grandeur which accords well with
-its truly noble situation.
-
-The North Saxons in choosing such a spot for their
-capital showed a very evident desire to keep in touch
-with the sea. Over the sea they had come; and over
-the sea would come both friends and enemies. Many a
-meeting of both friend and foe has taken place at
-Bamburgh!
-
-Perhaps the fiercest of the enemies was Ragnar of the
-hairy-breeches, a famous viking who plundered, ravaged,
-and burnt without mercy. These vikings, powerful
-men and fearless sea-rovers, were a standing terror to
-Northumbria. Men with frames and muscles strong as
-iron; at home both on the sea and on the battle-field;
-fair-haired, blue-eyed men, guarded by helmet, breast-plate,
-and shield, armed with heavy weapons, because
-at that date the art of the smith was not equal to making
-them sharp, light, and strong at once. So these mighty
-warriors hewed their way through the field of battle
-with great strokes, and when their foes fled in terror, the
-vikings took back to their ships all the treasure they
-could find, and away they went across the sea again.
-But with all their fierceness they loved poetry (wild
-war-poetry, most of it) and they loved their strong,
-brave women.
-
-Ragnar was a thorough viking. He loved fighting,
-and his handsome wife, and the battle songs he made.
-But the Saxons had no cause to love him, and when his
-ship ran aground near Jarrow, they bound him and cast
-him into a pit of snakes, and watched him slowly die.
-The viking had no fear of death. He sang as he lay
-there, of his life and his deeds—of the great banquets he
-had given to the wolves and the vultures and the fierce
-battles he had won, spreading the terrors of his name
-from the Orkneys to the Mediterranean; of his beautiful
-wife and strong sons, and of how they would avenge
-him; and of how Woden, the lord of all warriors, was
-calling him to his Hall.
-
-Many a battle has been fought on that wild coast since
-Ragnar died; much history has been made thereabouts,
-and many legends have attached themselves to
-Bamburgh. Like most famous places, it had its own special
-dragon, the "Laidly Worm" or loathsome serpent of the
-ancient ballad.
-
- | "For seven miles east, and seven miles west,
- | And seven miles north and south,
- | No blade of grass or corn would grow,
- | So venomous was her mouth!"
- |
-
-And yet, when the gallant knight gave her "kisses
-three," she changed at once into a beautiful lady!
-
-But despite its castle, its battles, and its legends,
-Bamburgh slowly declined in importance. As the
-capital of Northumbria it had been one of the chief towns
-in England. But the gallant Northumbria of the Saxons
-was more open to enemies than any other part of the
-country; Cumbrians were on the west and Scots on the
-north, and this was of all Saxon kingdoms the most
-exposed to the ravages of the Danes. From the capital
-of a kingdom it became the capital of a county
-(Bamburghshire), returning two members to Parliament in the
-reign of Edward I.; but it grew of less and still less
-importance, till at last it was known only to the student
-of history. It shared this fate with Lindisfarne, called
-Holy Island, once the Canterbury of the North, on
-whose rocky shores still stand the ruins of the fine
-Norman cathedral which took the place of the old
-Saxon one. Lindisfarne and Bamburgh—neighbours,
-divided only by a narrow belt of sea—two names that
-conjure up vivid pictures of romantic history. Yet
-suddenly, early in the nineteenth century, the great
-deed of a splendid heroine lent new glory to the wild,
-sea-girt town.
-
-Grace Darling was born at Bamburgh in 1817, in a
-cottage on the south side of the village street, which can
-still be seen to-day. Her father became keeper of the
-lighthouse on the Langstone, a rocky islet five miles
-from the coast, guarding ships from the dangerous
-Farne Islands, a group of iron-bound rocks where
-seabirds dwell. In the early morning of September 7, 1838,
-during the raging of a most terrible storm, she heard
-the crash of a ship dashed upon the rocks, and anguished
-cries; as soon as dawn enabled them to see, the girl and
-her father made out the dark outline of the wreck, and
-the miserable forms of the mariners crouching on rocks
-from which the rising tide would sweep them inevitably
-to death. With superb heroism Grace and her father
-pushed their small boat into the furious waters, and after
-strenuous and dauntless efforts, always at the peril of
-their own lives, they saved the whole ship's company,
-nine souls in all. So fierce was the storm that it was
-three days before a boat dared take them from the
-Langstone to the mainland.
-
-The roar of approbation which greeted her from the
-whole country found her as modest as she was brave.
-But for all her courage, this noble girl was not strong.
-She died four years later, and lies buried at Bamburgh,
-within sound of the sea. And the Langstone is known
-to-day as "Grace Darling's Island," and the tomb of the
-brave girl rouses sweeter memories than the frowning
-fortress of Bamburgh.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Athelstan at Vinheath`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter II
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Athelstan at Vinheath
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Famous among the old Norse sea-rovers was
-Egil, son of Skallagrim. In the course of his
-many voyages, he visited all the lands between
-the White Sea and the Bay of Biscay, and when at last
-he settled down in his Iceland home, where he lived on
-till well past the age of eighty, he loved to gather his
-children and grandchildren around him by the fireside
-during the long Icelandic winter, and to tell the story
-of his adventures. He was a true Norseman, fond of the
-sea and the fight, fond of his wife and children, fond of
-song, at which he was highly skilled. His songs and his
-stories of adventure were listened to with eagerness, and
-they were repeated after him, and were at last written
-down, probably between one hundred and fifty and two
-hundred years after his death. Books were scarce in
-those days, and stories were treasured and faithfully
-re-told. So this story of Egil was probably written out
-very much in the simple, vigorous style in which the old
-warrior would have told it to his grandchildren, as they
-listened to him with wide-open, wondering eyes. And
-as the old man had taken part in an early battle between
-Saxon-English and Scots, upon the Border, we have here
-a fine picture of how fights were fought in the reign of
-King Athelstan.
-
-Egil was speaking to Icelandic children who knew
-little about England, so he began by telling how in the
-days when Harold Fairhair was king of Norway, Alfred
-the Great was the first supreme king over all England.
-When Alfred died he was succeeded by his son Edward,
-who was followed by Athelstan the Victorious. In
-Egil's day Athelstan was young and had but just been
-made king, and many chieftains, who had kept quiet
-before, now thought that the time had come when they
-could do as they pleased again. But Athelstan meant
-to show them that he too could rule England strongly
-and wisely.
-
-These were the days of brute force, and the king had
-first to get an army together. Besides his own English
-folk, many roving Norsemen came to take his pay, and
-among the number were Egil and his elder brother
-Thorolf, with their men. They saw the king himself,
-who received them well. Athelstan was a good Christian,
-known as the Faithful, and he desired that Thorolf and
-Egil should submit to be marked with the Cross, that they
-might take their place by his Christian soldiers without
-quarrel. This they agreed to, and the king gave them
-command over three hundred men. Now Olaf the Red
-was king in Scotland. His father was a Scot, but his
-mother was a Dane of the family of Ragnar
-with-the-hairy-breeches, that savage old viking.
-Northumberland, which in those days extended to the Humber, and
-included York as its chief city, was half-full of Danes,
-and King Olaf wished to claim it for his own, and add
-it to Scotland.
-
-Athelstan had set Earl Alfgeir and Earl Gudrek to rule
-Northumberland and defend it from the Scots. But
-Olaf of Scotland came south with his mighty host;
-there was a fierce battle; Earl Gudrek was slain and Earl
-Alfgeir fled. When Athelstan heard of the triumph of
-Olaf, he began at once to march northward with all
-the men he could get together; but he was yet young,
-and some of the treacherous earls, hearing that Olaf
-had so far been victor, deserted King Athelstan. Chief
-among these traitors were Earl Hring and Earl Adils, who
-should have been in the very front of the English army,
-but who basely went over to the Scots. Thus Olaf's
-host became exceeding great, greater by far than the
-English army.
-
-Then Athelstan called together his captains and his
-counsellors; Egil was there, and heard all the grave
-talk as to what should be done. At last a plan
-was made that all thought good, and this is what
-followed.
-
-First, messengers were sent to King Olaf, saying that
-King Athelstan would meet him in fair fight at Vinheath
-by Vinwood, in Northumberland, where he would mark
-out the field of battle with rods of hazel. He who won
-the battle should be king over all England. The armies
-should meet a week hence, and whichever was first
-on the ground should wait a week for the other. King
-Olaf should bide quiet, and not harry the land till the
-battle was ended. North of the heath was a town;
-there King Olaf stayed, for there he could best get
-provisions for his army. But some of his men he sent
-to the heath, to view it.
-
-The hazel-poles were already set up on the large level
-plain. A river was on one side, and a wood was on the
-other. And where river and wood were nearest to one
-another, there King Athelstan's tents were pitched.
-
-Many tents there were, but the front line of tents
-stood high, so that the Scots could not see how many
-were behind. Every third tent was empty, but many
-men were sleeping on the grass in the open, so that the
-Scots might think that the English had a large army
-there. Every day more English troops came in, and
-when the time was come that was fixed for the battle,
-English envoys went to the King of the Scots asking if
-there need be the great fight and bloodshed that
-threatened; if Olaf would go peaceably home, Athelstan
-would give him a shilling of silver for every plough that
-ploughed in England. The Scots took counsel together
-and said they must have more than this. Then the
-messengers begged a three days' truce to consider this.
-On the third day they came again, saying that King
-Athelstan would give what he offered before and also to
-the Scottish army a silver shilling for every freeman
-soldier, a silver mark for every lesser officer, a gold
-mark for every captain, and five gold marks for every
-earl. But the Scots asked not only for this, but also
-for Northumberland to be yielded to them. Then the
-English messengers answered that Scottish messengers
-must ride back with them, to take the answer from
-Athelstan himself.
-
-Now the truth is this: that the Scottish king had
-taken Athelstan by such surprise that he needed time
-to get his men together; all these messages were but a
-trick to gain time till the king should come up himself
-with all the men he could gather. When, therefore, the
-messengers rode up to King Athelstan, he had but just
-arrived on the scene of battle. And when he heard the
-message he said: "Tell King Olaf this, that I will give
-him leave to return to Scotland safely if only he give
-back all he has unjustly taken from this land, and if he
-own himself my under-king, holding Scotland for me and
-at my behest."
-
-This proud answer made the Scottish messengers at
-once see what had been going on. So they hastened
-back to their king to tell him how they had been received
-and what the meaning of it was.
-
-When the Scots found that the English had thus
-outwitted them, they took counsel together in some anger.
-Earl Adils, he who had deserted the English, said that he
-and his brother, Earl Hring, would that very night make
-a surprise attack; if it succeeded, well and good; if
-not, then they could easily withdraw, and the main
-battle could begin in the morning. This the King of
-Scots held to be good advice.
-
-So the two traitor earls and their men moved
-southward under cover of the darkness. But Thorolf the
-Norseman was used to the ways of war, and his sentries
-were alert and blew a great war-blast on their horns.
-And thus the fight began.
-
-Thorolf was armed with a massy halberd that stood
-taller than a man; broad was its blade and thick its
-socket, and it ended in a four-edged spike. He had a
-strong sword by his side and a big, heavy shield on his
-left arm; he had a helmet but no shirt of mail. His
-brother Egil was armed in much the same way.
-The Norsemen's standard was borne by Thorfid the
-strong.
-
-Next to the Norsemen, in the first rank also, was the
-division led by Earl Alfgeir, he who had once before fled
-from the Scots. King Athelstan gave him this chance
-to redeem himself. Now when the first onslaught of the
-Scots took place, Earl Adils came against Earl Alfgeir,
-while Earl Hring came against the Norsemen.
-
-And now the battle began. The two traitor earls
-urged on their men, who charged with spirit. The fight
-was fierce, and soon Alfgeir gave ground; this made
-the foe press on the fiercer, and before long Alfgeir was
-in full flight. He avoided the town where Athelstan
-was, and fled night and day to the coast, where he took
-ship out of the country he had served so ill.
-
-Adils did not dare to pursue him far, for fear of being
-himself cut off from his friends. So he returned to help
-his brother Hring against the Norsemen. Thorolf, like
-a true general, saw the danger of this, and at once told
-Egil to turn aside with half their force to prevent Adils
-from joining his brother. The Norsemen fought a grand
-fight, but were badly outnumbered, and the battle
-seemed to be going against them. Then Thorolf became
-furious. Disdainful of life, he cast his shield behind his
-back, grasped his great halberd with both hands, and
-sprang forward, hacking down all who opposed him.
-Straight for Hring's standard he went, nothing could stop
-him. He slew the standard-bearer, cut through the
-standard-pole, and with a mighty stroke thrust his
-halberd right through the body of Hring, the traitor
-earl, and lifted him up in the air that all might see that
-he was slain. Then Adils and the rest of the men fled
-to the wood, and thus ended the first part of the fight.
-More was to come on the morrow.
-
-At dawn next day King Athelstan came forward
-with his main army. He had heard of the great deeds of
-the brothers Thorolf and Egil; most courteously he
-thanked them, and said that he would always reckon
-them as his friends. Then with his captains he made
-his plans for the battle. Egil he put in command of the
-front ranks of his men, and Thorolf he set aside to face
-those of the Scots who might charge the English in loose
-array.
-
-.. _`Egil at Vinheath`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-028.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Egil at Vinheath
-
- Egil at Vinheath
-
-"For this is the way of the Scots," he said; "they
-dash to and fro, rush forward and hither and thither,
-and are dangerous except to a commander who is both
-wary and bold."
-
-Egil said, "I would rather that Thorolf and I were
-near together"; but Thorolf answered, "As the king
-commands, so will we do."
-
-The battle began, and soon waged furiously. Thorolf
-and his men pressed forward along the woodside, hoping
-to take the enemy on the flank. Now, unknown to him,
-Adils and his followers were hiding among the trees,
-and of a sudden Adils sprang out and smote him down.
-Thorfid, too, the brave standard-bearer, was pressed
-back, but rallied the men, who fought desperately.
-
-The Scots had raised a great shout at the fall of
-Thorolf, and this was heard by Egil, who, when he saw
-the standard forced back, feared that his brother was
-dead, for Thorolf had never drawn back from any foe.
-So with a fierce cry Egil hacked his way through to that
-part of the field, and when he learnt the truth from
-his men, he never rested till he had slain Adils with
-his own hand.
-
-The followers of Adils then fled, and Egil and the
-Norsemen hewed their way through the flank of the Scottish
-force towards the place where King Olaf's standard
-was. Noting this, King Athelstan, that wary general,
-caused his own standard to be set forward and all his
-army to attack at once. Fierce and furious was the
-fight, and great was the slaughter. King Olaf was slain,
-with great numbers of his men, and the rest fled in
-confusion. The English victory was complete.
-
-As soon as Athelstan saw that victory was his, he left
-the pursuit to his captains and hastened to the town to
-make his arrangements. Egil pursued far and fiercely,
-and when at last he came back to the battlefield
-his first thought was for his dead brother. Worn out
-though he was, he would take no rest until he had buried
-the warrior with full honours, with his arms and his
-raiment; and before the sad farewell was said Egil
-clasped a gold bracelet on both of Thorolf's wrists to
-show his deep love. Then they buried the hero deep
-and put a high cairn of stones over him.
-
-Then one last tribute Egil paid to his brother, the
-greatest of them all. Among these old Norse warriors
-there existed a great love of song; the great fighters
-strove also to be great song-makers, and Egil was famous
-above most for this power. The Norsemen's poems had
-not rhymes like ours; they had short vigorous lines, and
-in each pair of lines three of the important words had to
-begin with the same letter. Wild strong chants they were.
-This is the song that Egil sang at the burial of his
-brother, Thorolf Skallagrimsson:—
-
- | "The halberd of the hero
- | Hewed down the foe before him;
- | Then in the brunt of battle
- | Was spilt brave Thorolf's blood.
- | The grass is green on Vinheath
- | Where sleeps my great-souled brother;
- | But death, in doubled sorrow,
- | Our doleful hearts must bear."
- |
-
-When Egil got to the town he found the king and his
-army making merry over their victory at a huge feast.
-The courteous king saw Egil and bade him come and sit
-near to him. The king watched the burly Norseman,
-who was tall, with broad shoulders, a powerful head and
-mighty strength; but now his head was bent forward,
-and he kept his sword across his knees, and now and
-again half drew it and then clashed it back into its
-scabbard like a man who fights with heavy thoughts.
-He ate little and drank less. Then King Athelstan,
-watchful and courteous, took a gold ring from his arm,
-and placing it on his sword-point, handed it thus to
-where Egil sat. At this mark of honour the Norseman's
-face grew brighter. Then the king sent round his own
-horn for Egil to drink; so he drank to the king and sang
-a verse of wild poetry in his praise, made on the spur
-of the moment; and with this the king was much pleased.
-
-Then the king sent also for two chests full of silver,
-and said to Egil:—
-
-"These chests carry to thy father; it is fitting that
-King Athelstan make him some gift for the loss of his
-son. And do thou stay with me long, and I will give
-thee honour and dignity."
-
-Thus the great king in kindness and courtesy did what
-he could to soothe the grief of the warrior; and Egil
-stayed the winter with Athelstan, but when the summer
-came he wished to go back to his own people. But he
-had much respect for King Athelstan, and ere he bade
-him farewell he made a long poem to his glory.
-
-
-*From the Song of Egil Skallagrimsson, to the Glory of
-King Athelstan.*
-
- | "See how the kingly warrior,
- | Land-warder, battle-wakener,
- | Smites even to the earth
- | The earls who rise against him!
- | Glad is now Northumberland,
- | This the king she needed,
- | Wise and bold of race and blood,
- | Dauntless in the battle-field!"
- |
-
-Many were the verses of this stirring song; and after
-each came the refrain:—
-
- | "Scottish hills where reindeer roam
- | Own the rule of Athelstan!"
- |
-
-The king gave Egil two heavy gold rings and a
-handsome cloak that he himself had worn; then the Norseman
-sailed away, for always near to his heart was the
-welfare of his dead brother's wife and child. Yea, for the
-rest of his long life he loved this child even as he loved
-his own.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Monks and Minstrels`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter III
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Monks and Minstrels
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The wild Borderland was the scene of the labours
-of many ol the first great Christian leaders.
-Where the arts of war were so much practised,
-it was needful that the arts of peace should flourish also.
-Great was the influence, even in the wildest times, of
-these able, serious, devoted leaders of early religious
-thought, men like Ninian and Kentigern.
-
-Christianity first came into Britain in Roman times,
-and some of the Britons were converted. After the
-Romans quitted the country, King Arthur was the
-leader of the Christian Britons, and he is said to have
-fought with the pagan Britons, the pagan Picts, the
-pagan Saxons, who had begun their invasions, and the
-disorderly soldiers of various races, probably pagans
-whom the Romans left behind along the wall.
-
-In due time the fight developed into a struggle between
-Christian Britons and pagan Saxons, and then the Saxons
-themselves began to accept the new religion. Oswald,
-a Northumbrian prince, had in a time of peril hidden in
-the island of Iona, to where the great Irishman Columba
-had come from Ireland as a missionary. When Oswald
-returned to power he summoned to his kingdom Aidan,
-a high-minded Christian teacher, whom he made first
-bishop of Lindisfarne (Holy Island). Aidan being a
-Celt, had to do his work through interpreters, but he
-did it well, and laid the foundations of Christianity
-and learning in Northumbria. Cuthbert was another
-famous missionary. Rising from shepherd-boy to bishop,
-he impressed both king and peasant by the dignified
-simplicity and sincerity of his life. His place of
-meditation was a sea-girt rock by Lindisfarne, lonely and
-picturesque, and still called after his name. A curious
-fossil, with the mark of a cross, is plentiful there, and
-goes by the name of St Cuthbert's beads. Other famous
-teachers were Wilfrid of York, who founded the churches
-of Hexham and Ripon; Boisil, who founded Melrose,
-and Biscop, who founded Jarrow.
-
-But perhaps the most celebrated of all was Bede,
-the "Venerable Bede," who lived at Jarrow and wrote
-forty-five learned books on all subjects, including music,
-astronomy, and medicine. All the scholars in England
-flocked to hear his teachings, and he was justly called
-"the father of English learning." He it was who first
-introduced into England the art of making glass.
-
-His last work was to translate the Gospel of St John
-into Northumbrian English. This was in the year 735.
-Being too ill to hold a pen, he dictated to his favourite
-pupil. "Write quickly," he said, for he felt that he was
-dying. "It is finished," answered the lad, and the old
-man's heart was satisfied. In a faint, brave voice he
-chanted the *Gloria*, and so died singing.
-
-In those days there was, of course, no such thing as
-printing. Every manuscript was written and rewritten,
-carefully, by hand, and treasured as a sacred possession
-in the seats of learning. So proud were they of their
-manuscripts that they beautified them with illustrations
-in colour. Many of these manuscripts have, of course,
-been destroyed; for instance, the Danes in 875 burnt
-the priceless library of Bishop Acca at Hexham, destroying
-in one day the treasured collection of a lifetime;
-but many remain to show the love of learning which
-existed even then. Bishop Edfrid, who lived in the little
-rocky island of Lindisfarne, made a copy of the Gospels,
-which is looked upon with wonder even to-day. Strings
-of beautiful birds and quaint animals are drawn upon
-his pages; evangelists with mantles of purple and tunics
-of blue, pink, or green. With the writing clear and
-beautiful, the decorations showing the greatest care and
-devotion, this manuscript of one thousand two hundred
-years ago has been the delight of thousands, and comes
-down to us to witness to the loving care of the scholars
-of old in the days before printing was known.
-
-Great as was their love of beautiful manuscripts, they
-had an equally noble passion for grand buildings. A
-superb monument of simple dignity and religious
-grandeur is the Norman Cathedral at Durham, commenced
-by Bishop Carilef in 1093, and finished by Bishop
-Flambard in 1128. Occupying a wonderful position at
-the top of a wooded hill, around which flows the
-beautiful river Wear, Durham Cathedral is in itself one
-of the noblest buildings in the world. While the Church
-in those troublous times kept thus a storehouse of
-learning for serious scholars, other methods kept the
-people informed of the more stirring events of their day.
-
-In the old days, when no newspapers existed to tell
-people the news, when books were scarce and history
-was not taught to every lad as a part of his training, the
-ballad-writer and the wandering minstrel played a very
-important part. Ballads, sometimes really fine pieces of
-poetry, sometimes a mere halting troop of lame lines,
-were made upon every occasion of local or general
-interest. They were sung to simple and often beautiful
-tunes or chants. The best of the minstrels were welcome
-to the halls of the nobles, and even to the king himself;
-the poorest of them sang on the village green. The
-ballads were learnt and repeated by the folk of the
-country-side; some were in later times printed on loose
-sheets, but at first they were handed on from mouth to
-mouth. Alterations and errors often crept in; mistakes
-due to a sameness of sound. For instance, in the old
-ballad of *Mary Ambree*, a soldier is referred to as "Sir
-John Major," probably meaning Sergeant-major. In
-one of the versions of the battle of Chevy Chase, Henry
-Percy was said to have been killed there, whereas he
-really lived on to be slain at Shrewsbury. But, despite
-such occasional blunders, the ballads on the whole throw
-a vivid light on the manners and customs of the old days,
-as well as being usually stirring and sometimes strikingly
-noble and pathetic pieces of poetry. They deal as a rule
-rather with the side currents than with the main stream
-of history; but they express themselves with such
-homely force and directness that they bring home to us
-with wonderful clearness the character of the vigorous
-manly men with whose doings they are chiefly concerned.
-
-During the last one hundred and fifty years many able
-men have laboured to collect old ballads, writing them
-down from the mouths of the country-folk and printing
-them in books with notes of explanation. One of the
-earliest thus to collect ballads seriously was Bishop
-Percy; the best known is Sir Walter Scott, of whose
-interest in the subject Lockhart, his biographer, writes
-very pleasantly.
-
-Prefaced to many of the stirring tales in this present
-book are lines from the old Border ballads from which
-they are taken. It is to be hoped that readers will be
-tempted sooner or later to read the rest of these fine
-ballads for themselves.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Sir Patrick Spens`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter IV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Sir Patrick Spens
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "The king sits in Dunfermline town
- | Drinking the blood-red wine;
- | 'O where shall I get a well-skilled skipper
- | To sail this new ship of mine?'"
- |
-
-Almost every collection of Scottish songs
-contains this picturesque old ballad, which refers
-to a very remote time in Scottish history,
-probably the end of the thirteenth century. King
-Alexander III. of Scotland died in 1285; he had the
-bitter grief of seeing all his children die before him. His
-daughter Margaret had been married to Eric, King of
-Norway, and she left a daughter also called Margaret,
-and known as the "Maid of Norway." This maid was
-now heiress to the Scottish throne, and it is natural
-to suppose that the lonely king should wish her to
-return to Scotland, and should send a richly appointed
-ship to fetch her back. And although there is no
-strictly historical record of such an expedition, the truth
-of the ballad is made more probable by the fact that it
-opens in the fine old town of Dunfermline.
-
-Dunfermline was a favourite residence of Alexander,
-who was killed in its neighbourhood by a fall from his
-horse, and was buried in the abbey there, the ruins of
-which beautiful structure still remain.
-
-In this ballad the king is feasting at Dunfermline
-town, and calls for a skilful mariner to sail his new ship.
-An old knight at the king's right hand answers that the
-best sailor who ever sailed the sea is Sir Patrick Spens.
-So the king writes a letter, sealing it with his own hand,
-and sends it to Sir Patrick, commanding him to sail
-away to Norway over the white sea-foam and bring
-home the maid.
-
-Now every good sailor dreaded the rough Northern
-seas in winter, so though the brave Sir Patrick laughed
-aloud when he began to read, he wept blinding tears
-before he had ended. "Who has done this deed?"
-he cried; "who has told the king of me and urged him
-to send us out at this time of the year to sail on the
-stormy sea? Yet, wind, wet, hail, or sleet, we must
-set out, for 'tis we who must fetch home the maid."
-
-So they set sail on a Monday morning, and reached
-Norway on a Wednesday. History tells us that Eric
-of Norway was very unwilling to part with his daughter.
-This probably accounts for the fact that the old ballad
-tells us that the Scotsmen had only been there a
-fortnight when the lords of Norway began to say that Sir
-Patrick and his men were spending the gold of their
-king and queen. "Ye lie," cried Sir Patrick, "loudly
-I hear ye lie, for I brought with me over the sea enough
-red gold and white money to supply the wants of my
-men. Make ready, make ready, my merry men; we
-will sail at daybreak." "Alack," quoth the men, "a
-deadly storm is brewing. Yesterday evening the new
-moon was seen carrying the old moon in her arms; we
-shall certainly come to harm if we go to sea."
-
-Barely had they sailed three leagues when the sky
-darkened, the wind blew loudly, and the sea grew
-boisterous. Soon they were in the midst of a terrible
-storm. The anger of the sea was far more dreadful
-than the anger of the lords of Norway. The anchors
-broke away, the topmasts snapped, and the waves came
-over the broken ship, tearing her sides asunder. "O
-where shall I get a good sailor to take the helm while
-I climb the tall topmast to see if I can espy land?" "That
-I fear ye never will," cried a sailor as he took
-the helm, and scarcely had Sir Patrick gone a step when
-a plank started in the ship's side and the water came
-pouring in.
-
-"Fetch a web of silken cloth, and fetch a web of
-twine," cried Sir Patrick, "and cast them down to our
-ship's side!" For it was the custom in those days, when
-a leak could not be reached from inside the vessel,
-to cast down some closely woven stuff in the hope that
-the suction of the water would drag it across the leak
-and stop thus the fatal inrush of water. Alas! all their
-efforts failed. Then the ballad-writer says somewhat
-grimly of the dandies among the Scottish lords that
-whereas at first they grumbled to see the water spoil their
-fine cork-heeled shoes, when the storm had done its
-fatal work the sea was "above their hats"!
-
- | "And many was the feather bed
- | That fluttered on the foam;
- | And many was the gude lord's son
- | That never mair came home!
-
- | The ladyes wrang their fingers white;
- | The maidens tore their hair,
- | A' for the sake of their true loves;
- | For them they'll see nae mair.
-
- | O lang, lang may the ladyes sit,
- | Wi' their fans into their hand,
- | Before they see Sir Patrick Spens
- | Come sailing to the strand!
-
- | And lang, lang may the maidens sit,
- | With their goud kaims[#] in their hair,
- | A' waiting for their ain dear loves!
- | For them they'll see nae mair.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Golden combs.
-
-..
-
- | O forty miles off Aberdeen,
- | 'Tis fifty fathoms deep,
- | And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
- | Wi' the Scots lords at his feet."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Auld Maitland`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter V
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Auld Maitland
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "'Wha holds this house?' young Edward cried,
- | 'Or wha gives it o'er to me?'
- | ''Tis I will keep my good old house,
- | While my house will keep me!'"
- |
-
-The story of Auld Maitland is said to be taken
-from a very old ballad, and known chiefly to
-the people who lived in the neighbourhood of
-Ettrick Forest. The old folks there would while away
-the long winter evenings by singing of the deeds of their
-ancestors, and the ballad of *Auld Maitland*, as thus
-chanted, was written down by the mother of James Hogg,
-the "Ettrick Shepherd."
-
-The castle of Thirlestane stood on the river Leader,
-and still, in its restored form, deserves its name of "the
-darksome house." It may have often withstood the
-English during the Baliol wars, and hatred of the
-English and of Edward I. is expressed with extreme
-virulence throughout the poem. Here is the story:—
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-There lived in the south country a king named
-Edward, who wore the crown unworthily for fifty years.
-This king had a nephew, strong in blood and bone,
-who bore the same hateful name. One day the young
-man came before the king, and kneeling low, he said,
-"A boon, a boon I crave of thee, my good uncle. Oft
-have I wished to take part in our long wars in fair
-Scotland. Grant me fifteen hundred chosen strong men
-to ride there with me."
-
-"Certainly thou shalt have them, and more, and I
-myself, though old and grey, will see thy host arrayed
-for battle."
-
-King Edward sent hither and thither, and assembled
-fifteen hundred men on Tyne side, and three times as many
-at North Berwick, all bound for battle. They marched
-up the banks of Tweed, burning the Merse and Teviotdale,
-and up and down the Lammermoor Hills, until they came
-to the darksome house called, by some, "Leader-Town."
-
-"Who holds this house?" cried young Edward,
-"or who gives it over to me?" He was answered, as
-proudly, by a grey-haired knight: "I hold my house
-of Scotland's king, who pays me in meat and fee, and
-I will hold it as long as it will stand together."
-
-Thereupon the English brought up their sows[#] to
-the wall with many a heavy sound, but the soldiers on
-the wall cast down blazing pitch and tar barrels, to
-consume the formidable machine. They also threw
-down stones and beams and darts from their springalds,[#]
-and slew many of the English.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] A military engine framed of wood, covered with hides and mounted
-on wheels, so that, being rolled forward to the foot of the wall, it
-served as a shed to defend the miners underneath it and their
-battering-rams from the stones and arrows of the soldiers above.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Large crossbows worked by machinery.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Fifteen days they besieged the castle of Auld Maitland,
-but left him at the end of that time unhurt within his
-stone stronghold.
-
-.. _`The Siege of Maitland Castle`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-042.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *The Siege of Maitland Castle*
-
- *The Siege of Maitland Castle*
-
-They loaded fifteen ships with as much spoil as they
-could carry away from the district around, and claimed
-that now they had conquered Scotland with buckler, bow,
-and brand. So they sailed away to France to meet the old
-King Edward, who was burning every castle, tower, and
-town that he met with. They came at last to the town
-of Billop-Grace, where Auld Maitland's three sons were
-at school.
-
-Edward had quartered the arms of Scotland with
-his own. "See'st thou what I see?" said the eldest
-son to the youngest; "if that be true that yonder
-standard says, then are we all three fatherless, and
-Scotland conquered up and down. Never will we bow
-to the conquerer. Let us go, my two brothers, and
-try our chance in an adventure?" Thereupon they
-saddled two black horses and a grey, and rode before
-day-dawn to King Edward's army. Arrived there,
-they hovered round, and Maitland begged to be allowed
-to carry the king's standard, the Golden Dragon.
-
-"Where wast thou born and bred, and in what
-country?" demanded the knight who bore the banner.
-"I was born in the north of England," answered
-Maitland; "my father was a knight and my mother a lady,
-and I myself am a squire of high renown, and may well
-carry the banner of a king." "Never had the son of an
-Englishmen such an eye or brow," answered the knight;
-"thou art more like Auld Maitland than any man I
-have ever seen; yet God grant that such a gloomy
-brow I never see again; he slew and wounded many
-of our men."
-
-At the mention of his father's name Maitland's anger
-burst out, and lifting up a gilded dagger that hung low
-by his knee, he struck fiercely at the standard-bearer,
-and, catching hold of the corner of the standard, rode
-swiftly away with it, crying to his brothers, "Is it not
-time to flee?" "Ay, by my sooth," they both shouted,
-"we will bear you company." So they rode off at hot
-speed, the pursuers following. The youngest Maitland,
-turning round in the path, drew his brand and killed
-fifteen of the foremost, and the rest fell back. Then he
-dug his spurs into the sides of his faithful grey, until
-both the sides ran blood. "Thou must carry me away,
-or my life lies in pledge," he cried.
-
-About daybreak the brothers arrived at their uncle's
-castle, who, seeing the three Scottish lads with pursuers
-riding hard at their heels, ordered the portcullis to be
-drawn up and the drawbridge let down, for that they
-should lodge with him that night in spite of all England.
-
-When the three came inside the gate, they leapt down
-from their horses, and taking three long spears in their
-hands, they fought till it was full daylight, killing and
-wounding many of the Englishmen round the drawbridge.
-Some of the dead were carted away in waggons,
-and stones were heaped upon the rest as they lay in
-the gutter.
-
-King Edward proclaimed at his pavilion door that
-three lads of France, disguised, and with false words,
-had come and stolen away the standard, and had slain
-his men in their lawful attempt to regain it.
-
-"It ill befits a crowned king to lie," said the youngest
-Maitland, "and he shall be reproved for it before I
-taste meat or drink."
-
-Straightway he went before King Edward, and,
-kneeling low, begged leave to speak a word with him.
-"Man, thou shalt have leave to speak, even though
-thou shouldst speak all day," answered the king.
-
-"Ye said," spoke the youngest Maitland, "that three
-young lads of France had stolen away the standard with
-a false tale, and slain many men. But we are not lads of
-France, and never have pretended to be; we are three
-lads of fair Scotland, and the sons of Auld Maitland, nor
-are there men in all your host dare fight us three to three."
-
-"Now, by my sooth," said the young Edward, who
-stood by, "Ye shall be well fitted, for Percy shall fight
-with the eldest, and Egbert Lunn with thee, and William
-of Lancaster with the other, and the surviving brother
-shall fight with me. Remember, Percy, how oft the
-Scot has cowered before thee; I will give thee a rig of
-land for every drop of Maitland blood."
-
-So they set to, and the eldest Maitland clanked
-Percy over the head and wounded him so deeply that
-the best blood of his body ran down his hair. "I have
-slain one," shouted Maitland to his brothers; "slay
-ye the other two, and that will be good company, and
-if the two shall slay ye both, ye shall get no help from
-me."[#]
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] According to the laws of chivalry,
-having slain his own man, he
-could, if he pleased, come to the assistance of the others.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-But Egbert Lunn was like a baited bear and had
-seen many battles, and when Maitland saw that his
-youngest brother was having the worst of it, he could
-not restrain himself longer, and shouting, "I am no
-king; my word shall not stand," he struck Egbert
-over the head and slew him. "Now I have slain two;
-slay ye one for good company," he cried; "neither
-shall ye get any help from me even if the one shall
-slay ye both." So the two brothers slew the third,
-and hung him over the drawbridge for all the host
-to see.
-
-Then they rode and ran, but still got not away,
-but hovered round, boasting: "We be three lads of
-fair Scotland that fain would see some fighting."
-
-When young Edward heard this, he cried wrathfully,
-"I'll take yon lad and bind him, and bring him bound
-to thee."
-
-"Now God forbid that ever thou shouldst try that,"
-said the king; "we have lost three worthy leaders;
-wouldst thou be the fourth? Never again would I be
-happy if thou wert to hang on yonder drawbridge."
-
-But Edward struck fiercely at Maitland, cleaving his
-stout helmet and biting right near his brain. When
-Maitland saw his own blood flowing he threw away his
-weapon, and springing angrily at young Edward's
-throat, he swung him thrice about and flung him on
-the ground, holding him there though he was of great
-strength.
-
-"Now let him up," cried King Edward, "let him
-come to me, and for thy deed thou shalt have three
-earldoms."
-
-"Nay," replied Maitland, "never shall it be said
-in France or in Scotland that Edward once lay under
-me and got up again," and with that he pierced him
-through the heart and hung him over the drawbridge
-with the other three.
-
-"Now take from me my bed of feathers," said the
-king, "make me a bed of straw. Would that I had
-not lived to see the day that makes my heart so sad."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Mystery of the Eildons`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter VI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Mystery of the Eildons
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "Before their eyes the Wizard lay
- | As if he had not been dead a day.
- | His hoary beard in silver roll'd,
- | He seemed some seventy winters old.
- | High and majestic was his look,
- | At which the fellest friends had shook,
- | And all unruffled was his face;
- | They trusted his soul had gotten grace."
- | SCOTT: *Lay of the Last Minstrel.*
- |
-
-Just above Melrose, the ruined abbey of which
-is one of the beauties of Scotland, there rises a
-striking mass of three hills known as "the triple
-Eildons." They rise very high above the surrounding
-land, and are steep enough to need a very hard scramble
-to mount to the very summit; but once at the top the
-view is wonderful indeed. On a fine day the Tweed
-can be seen winding in and out most picturesquely,
-till it loses itself in the low distant haze of the North Sea,
-thirty miles away. But even grander is the view of the
-entire line of the Cheviots, like a huge wall, fifty miles
-long, seen to immense advantage from Eildon, which
-towers over the rich valleys of Tweed and Teviot that
-lie between. One of the legends of the triple Eildons
-is that King Arthur lies sleeping beneath them, some
-day to awaken. Tradition says that he fought a great
-battle near here, by Gala Water, in the Vale of Woe.
-
-However that may be, it is certain that at the foot of
-Eildon lie many famous dead. In Melrose Abbey lies
-the heart of Robert Bruce, and also the body of the
-strong King Alexander II., he who first subdued and
-made obedient the wild tribes of Argyle. Here, too,
-is buried the brave Douglas who died so gallantly on the
-field of Otterbourne; and also of another brave Douglas
-who got his death wound at Poictiers.
-
-Sir Walter Scott, who did more than any other man
-to spread all over the world the knowledge of Scotland,
-Scottish history, Scottish romance, and Scottish character,
-lies buried on the southern side of Eildon, in the rival
-abbey of Dryburgh. But Melrose can claim a man who
-in his day was an object of the deepest wonder and
-terror—Michael Scott, the famous wizard of the
-thirteenth century, he who brought the learning of
-Aristotle to expound to Western Europe, he whom
-Dante described as learned in every deep spell of the
-magic arts. Perhaps he was only a scientist, born before
-his time; yet even to-day old folk in the country
-remember that it was he who is said to have cleft the
-head of Eildon Hill into three!
-
-One of the many strange tales told of Michael Scott is
-this:—
-
-They say that the lord of Morpeth, in Northumberland,
-promised the great wizard a rich reward if he
-would only make the sea roll up the valley of the
-pretty river Wansbeck till it reached Morpeth, so that
-vessels could sail up to the town. The distance is
-seven miles, and the wizard, declaring the matter a
-most simple one, prepared his magic spell. He then
-said that if a certain man would run from the sea to the
-town, and on no account look back, whatever he heard,
-the desire of the lord would be satisfied. The man no
-sooner started to run than he heard the waters following
-him. Faster and faster he went, and faster and faster
-came the ocean, dashing and roaring, never overtaking
-him, but always so near his heels as to fill him with
-ever greater and greater terror.
-
-Before he had finished the third mile he was in such
-a state of alarm that he could not resist the impulse
-to see what was happening. He turned round, and
-the spell was broken; the waters had followed him
-thus far, but would come no further. Even the best of
-wizards will fail when his instructions are not obeyed.
-
-So says the story. People are free to believe it or
-not, as they please. It is certain that the sea runs
-nearly three miles up the Wansbeck valley, and there
-stops; but many people think that that is explained
-by the natural rise of the land!
-
-The story of how Michael Scott came to divide the
-Eildon Hill into three runs as follows:—
-
-The wizard had one very active little demon, who was
-always bothering his master to give him something to
-do. First Michael commanded him to put a barrier
-across the Tweed at Kelso, thinking to keep him quiet
-for at least a week; it was done in a single night, and
-again the demon demanded work. Then Michael set
-him to divide Eildon into three; this also was done in a
-night, and again the demon came clamouring for
-employment. So in despair the wizard ordered him to
-make ropes out of sea-sand! This, of course, is
-impossible, as the sand will not hold together. But if you
-go down to the shore on the south-east coast of Scotland
-on a dark and stormy night, you can still hear what
-sounds like the demon moaning and groaning over his
-impossible task; and there is certainly a barrier across
-the Tweed at Kelso, and the Eildon Hill is certainly
-divided into three! So you may believe as much as
-you please of this story.
-
-Another tale that is told of the magic powers of this
-famous man relates that he was once chosen to go as
-ambassador from the King of Scotland to the King
-of France on urgent business. Instead of going, as is
-usual in such cases, with a number of followers, he
-conjured up a demon shaped like a huge black horse,
-and rode away over the sea. When half-way across
-the North Sea the horse said to his rider:—
-
-"What do the old women of Scotland say at
-bed-time?" Had the magician fallen into the trap and
-named a prayer, the demon would have disappeared
-and the wizard would have been drowned! But Michael
-Scott merely commanded his steed to go on quickly
-and not to talk. Very soon he came to Paris, tied his
-horse to the gate of the French king's palace, and boldly
-entered and stated his business. The French king
-sneered at an ambassador who was not followed by a
-train of knights, and began at once to refuse all he
-asked. "Wait a moment, your Majesty," said Michael,
-"till you have seen my horse stamp three times."
-
-At the first stamp the ground so shook that every
-steeple in Paris rocked, making all the bells ring loudly;
-at the second stamp the king heard behind him a loud
-crash that made him leap three feet in the air; looking
-round, he saw that three of the towers of his palace had
-fallen; the horse raised his foot to stamp a third time,
-but the king was so terrified that he shouted hastily
-that he would grant all that Michael asked if only he
-would keep his horse from stamping!
-
-Whether this tale is true or not, Michael Scott was
-certainly one of the ambassadors sent to bring back
-the Maid of Norway to Scotland on the death of King
-Alexander III. He wrote many learned books, and
-possessed many others; and they say that when he
-was buried at Melrose many of these same magic books
-were buried with him.
-
-To this romantic district of the Eildons belonged True
-Thomas, Thomas the Rhymer, or Thomas of Ercildoune,
-as he was variously called, who was held in awe by
-Border-folks as a prophet. The ruins of his tower are
-still shown by the pretty river Leader, just about two
-miles above the spot where it joins the Tweed. The
-Rhymer seems to have died a few years before 1300;
-but despite the passing of six centuries he is still
-remembered. The story of how he gained his prophetic
-powers is quite worth hearing, whether we believe it
-or not.
-
-The tale goes that Thomas was on Huntlie bank, near
-the Eildon Hills, when he saw a wonderful lady approaching
-him. She was dressed in grass-green silk, with a
-mantle of fine velvet, and the noble horse on which
-she rode had silver bells in its mane. Thomas was so
-surprised at this remarkable sight that when the lady
-came near he dropped on his knee and pulled off his cap,
-and cried out, reverently, that she must be the Queen
-of Heaven. But she answered that she was Queen of
-fair Elfland, and dared him, with a witching glance,
-to kiss her lips. The bold and gallant Thomas did not
-need a second invitation, and promptly kissed the fairy,
-when she seized upon him and fled away with him swifter
-than the wind.
-
-Soon all living land was left behind, and they came to
-a wild place where three roads met. One was a narrow
-path, beset with thorns and briers; and this the fairy
-said was the road of righteousness, which very few
-people ever troubled to find. Another was a broad and
-attractive road, which was the way of sinners; whilst
-the third, a pretty winding road, led to Elfland, and
-thither they went together.
-
-Soon there was neither sun nor moon to lighten the
-way, and Thomas and his companion waded through
-rivers above the knee. The sea moaned and roared
-in the dread darkness, and Thomas somehow found that
-they waded oft through streams of red blood—blood that
-had been shed on earth. Then they came to a beautiful
-garden, and the Elfland queen gave Thomas an apple
-to eat, saying:—
-
-"Take this for thy wages, true Thomas; it will
-give thee the tongue that can never lie." Poor Thomas
-turned pale at the thought of such a gift. "Let my
-tongue be my own!" he pleaded; "how shall I buy
-or sell in any market, flatter a prince, or compliment
-a lady, if you give me such a tongue!"
-
-But the Elfland queen would take no denial, and
-Thomas had to do her behest, wherefore for the rest of
-his life Thomas carried with him this gift of truthfulness.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Black Agnes of Dunbar`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter VII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Black Agnes of Dunbar
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The fortress of Dunbar was always a very
-important one to the Scots. It commanded the
-coast road from England across the Border to
-Edinburgh, not only one of the best routes in itself,
-but one which had the additional advantage to the
-English that by following it they could keep in touch
-with their ships. So it is not surprising that many
-stirring events in history took place at this historic
-town.
-
-King Edward I. of England won a very important
-victory at Dunbar during his first invasion of Scotland,
-and to the place which had witnessed the triumph of the
-father, his son, Edward II., fled for safety after his
-defeat at Bannockburn, taking ship thence back to
-England. In the time of Mary Queen of Scots the
-fortress was held by Earl Bothwell; from here he
-consented to the surrender of poor Mary, and here he
-rested in safety before his final flight to Scandinavia.
-Oliver Cromwell fought and won at Dunbar his desperate
-battle with the Scottish Presbyterians, the fate of which
-for some time hung in the balance. Cromwell
-considered the place so valuable that he had new harbour
-works made there, and a portion of his work, forming
-part of the east pier of the present much larger harbour,
-is still to be seen.
-
-The last time that Dunbar resounded to the march
-of an army bent on immediate fight was in 1745, when
-the boastful English general, Sir John Cope, landed
-here to engage the Highland followers of Prince Charles
-Edward (called the "Young Pretender"). Prince
-Charlie was at Edinburgh, and Dunbar Castle
-commanded the road into England. Cope asserted that the
-Highlanders would run away at the mere sight of his
-army. He marched westward, but was surprised in the
-early morning by his enemies when near Prestonpans.
-In less than ten minutes it was the unprepared English
-who were flying in disorder, utterly routed.
-
-The foregoing is but a brief outline of the stormy
-history of those grey and ruined battlements
-overlooking the bleak North Sea at the southernmost point
-of entrance to the noble Firth of Forth. The mention
-of these stirring incidents, however, will serve to show
-what a very important place Dunbar was, and that it
-was necessary to Scottish safety that a strong hand
-should have charge of its fortress. We are now to see
-how at one of the most critical hours a woman was to
-hold command, and to hold it worthily.
-
-Early in the reign of King Edward III. of England
-Scottish affairs were in some confusion. King Robert
-Bruce had lately died, leaving a son, King David II.,
-then only five years old. That great leader and friend
-of Bruce, Randolph, Earl of Moray, was appointed
-Guardian of Scotland, but he too soon died. Edward
-III., anxious to interfere in Scottish affairs, agreed
-to help Edward Balliol to make himself king of the
-Scots. So an English army was again in Scotland, and
-one of the places they were keenest to take was the
-fortress of Dunbar.
-
-.. _`Black Agnes`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-054.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *Black Agnes*
-
- *Black Agnes*
-
-The castle was a very strong one. It was built on a
-chain of great rocks that stretched out to sea, and could
-only be reached from land by one road, which was, of
-course, strictly guarded. The lord of the castle was the
-Earl of March (the word March in those days meant a
-border-land), but he was away with the Scottish army,
-and his wife was in charge of the castle. She was the
-daughter of that brave Earl of Moray, Guardian of
-Scotland, who has just been mentioned. The English
-army was led by an experienced general, the Earl of
-Salisbury, and he probably thought that he would not
-have much trouble in overcoming "Black Agnes,"
-as the dark-haired countess was called.
-
-He soon discovered that she was of heroic mould,
-however, for though he himself led the storming-parties,
-she on her side, urging on her men in person, hurled back
-his every attack. The Lady Agnes was quite fearless,
-and treated the siege as if it were a pastime to be enjoyed.
-When the English, with machines made for the purpose,
-hurled heavy stones against the walls, Black Agnes
-would call one of her maidens with a napkin to wipe off
-the dust that they made! The biggest of all the English
-war-machines was called a sow, and when it was brought
-to the walls the countess cried out in rough jest that it
-was surrounded by little pigs. At the same moment
-a mass of rock, which she had caused to be loosened,
-was hurled by her men on to the English, crushing their
-sow and many soldiers with it.
-
-At last there seemed a chance for the English. Near
-midnight a Scot came into their camp, saying that he
-was ready to betray the castle for a reward. The Earl
-of Salisbury and some chosen knights rode carefully
-forward, and found the gate open and the portcullis
-raised, as the man had promised. But for all that, they
-doubted if Black Agnes could so far relax her vigilance;
-wherefore instead of the earl entering first, he sent
-forward a retainer. His caution was soon justified,
-for no sooner had this man passed the gate than the
-portcullis fell. It was a trick to capture the earl,
-but the Scots were disappointed this time.
-
-The gallant English lord was loud in admiration of
-the brave Scottish lady who was thus defying him.
-Once when examining the defences with a lieutenant,
-an arrow struck his companion dead. "The countess's
-love-arrows pierce to the heart," said Salisbury, on his
-return to the camp. Despite the courtly manner in
-which the well-bred baron referred to the lady, however,
-he did not relax his efforts to overcome her.
-
-Salisbury's land forces had now surrounded the
-castle on the land side, while his ships at sea completed
-the blockade. The garrison was threatened with
-starvation. Greater and greater became the privations
-of the heroic defenders. The countess, no less brave
-than ever, hoped on, though ground for hope grew less
-and less. She could not bring herself to think of defeat,
-and her brave, bright face still gave courage and
-inspiration to all.
-
-Meantime the story of the struggle and difficulties of
-the defenders was raising up helpers, and Sir Alexander
-Ramsay of Dalhousie got ready a light vessel filled with
-provisions and manned by forty brave Scots, who only
-waited for a dark night to make the attempt to steal
-past the English fleet. They lay hidden by the Bass
-Rock, a lofty islet at the mouth of the Firth of Forth,
-some seven or eight miles from Dunbar, until one
-starless night they stole very cautiously down the wild
-coast-line of Haddingtonshire, sometimes all but bumping
-into an English vessel in the dark. Fortune favours the
-brave, and despite dangers and difficulties they got
-safely at last to the castle, whose distant light had been
-their guide. Be sure Black Agnes welcomed them!
-This proved to be the turning-point of the long siege.
-With fresh hope, the garrison made a sudden sally on the
-English, driving back their advance guard, and after
-five months of fierce but fruitless attempts, Salisbury
-was compelled to withdraw his forces and admit defeat.
-Nevertheless, the English were gallant enough to sing
-their praises of this Scottish heroine; their minstrels
-made songs in her honour, in one of which Salisbury
-is made to say:—
-
- | "Came I early, came I late,
- | I found Black Agnes at the gate."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Young Tamlane`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter VIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Young Tamlane
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "He's ta'en her by the milk-white hand,
- | Among the leaves so green."
- |
-
-This tale belongs to the romantic side of the
-Border minstrelsy, and illustrates some of the
-common superstitions of olden times concerning
-elves and fairies. The scene is laid in the Selkirk
-or Ettrick Forest, a mountainous tract covered with
-the remains of the old Caledonian Forest. About a
-mile above Selkirk is a plain called Carterhaugh, and
-here may still be seen those fairy rings of which it was
-believed that anyone sleeping upon one will wake in a
-fairy city. And here was, and perhaps still is, an ancient
-well. The ballad opens by telling how all young maids
-were forbidden to come or go by way of Carterhaugh,
-"for young Tamlane (or Thomalin) is there," and
-every one going by Carterhaugh is obliged to leave him
-something in pledge. But the Lady Janet, the fairest
-of the Selkirk lasses, was obstinate, and declared that
-she would come or go to Carterhaugh, as she pleased,
-"and ask no leave of him," since the land there belonged
-to her by hereditary right. She kilted her green mantle
-above her knee, and braided her yellow hair above her
-brow, and off she went to Carterhaugh. When she got
-to the well, she found the steed of the elfin knight
-Tamlane standing there, but he himself was away.
-
- | "She hadna pu'd a red, red rose,
- | A rose but barely three;
- | Till up and starts a wee, wee man
- | At Lady Janet's knee.
-
- | Says—'Why pu' ye the rose, Janet?
- | What gars (makes) ye break the tree?
- | Or why come ye to Carterhaugh,
- | Withouten leave of me?'
-
- | Says—'Carterhaugh it is mine ain;
- | My daddy gave it me:
- | I'll come and gang to Carterhaugh,
- | And ask nae leave o' thee.'"
- |
-
-But Tamlane took her by the hand and worked upon
-her his spells, which no maiden might resist, however
-proud she might be.
-
-When she came back to her father's hall, she looked
-pale and wan; and it seemed that she had some sore
-sickness. She ceased to take any pleasure in combing
-her yellow hair, and everything she ate seemed like to
-be her death. When her ladies played at ball, she, once
-the strongest player, was now the faintest. One day
-her father spoke out, and said he, "Full well I know that
-you must have some lover." She said:—
-
- | "'If my love were an earthly knight,
- | As he's an elfin grey,
- | I wouldna give my own true love
- | For no lord that ye hae.'"
- |
-
-Then she prinked herself, and preened herself, all by the
-light of the moon alone, and went away to Carterhaugh,
-to speak with Tamlane. When she got to the well, she
-found the steed standing, but Tamlane was away. She
-had barely pulled a double rose, when up started the elf.
-
-"Why pull ye the rose, Janet?" says he; "why
-pull ye the rose within this garden green?" "The truth
-ye'll tell me, Tamlane; were ye ever in holy chapel, or
-received into the Christian Church?" "The truth I'll
-tell thee, Janet; a knight was my father, and a lady
-was my mother, like your own parents. Randolph,
-Earl Moray, was my sire; Dunbar, Earl March, is thine.
-We loved when we were children, which yet you may
-remember. When I was a boy just turned nine, my
-uncle sent for me to hunt, and hawk, and ride with him,
-and keep him company. There came a wind out of the
-north, a deep sleep came over me, and I fell from my
-horse. The queen of the fairies took me off to yon
-green hill, and now I'm a fairy, lithe and limber. In
-Fairyland we know neither sickness nor pain. We
-quit our body, or repair unto them, when we please.
-We can inhabit, earth, or air, as we will. Our shapes and
-size we can convert to either large or small. We sleep
-in rose-buds, revel in the stream, wanton lightly on the
-wind, or glide on a sunbeam. I would never tire, Janet,
-to dwell in Elfland, were it not that every seven years
-a tithe is paid to hell, and I am so fair of flesh, I fear
-'twill be myself. If you dare to win your true love,
-you have no time to lose. To-night is Hallowe'en, and
-the fairy folk ride. If you would win your true love,
-bide at Miles Cross." Miles Cross is about half a mile
-from Carterhaugh, and Janet asked how she should know
-Tamlane among so many unearthly knights. "The
-first company that passes by, let them go. The next
-company that passes by, let them go. The third
-company that passes by, I'll be one of those. First
-let pass the black steed, Janet, then let pass the
-brown; but grip the milk-white steed, and pull down
-the rider—
-
- | "For I ride on the milk-white steed,
- | And aye nearest the town;
- | Because I was a christened knight,
- | They gave me that renown."
- |
-
-Tamlane went on to explain that his fairy comrades
-would make every effort to disgust her with her captive.
-They would turn him in her very arms into an adder;
-they would change him into a burning faggot, into a
-red-hot iron goad, but she must hold him fast. In order
-to remove the enchantment, she must dip him in a
-churn of milk, and then in a barrel of water. She must
-still persevere, for they would shape him in her arms
-into a badger, eel, dove, swan, and, last of all, into a
-naked man, but
-
- | "Cast your green mantle over me,
- | I'll be myself again."
- |
-
-So fair Janet in her green mantle went that gloomy
-night to Miles Cross. The heavens were black, the
-place was inexpressibly dreary, a north wind raged;
-but there she stood, eagerly wishing to embrace her
-lover. Between the hours of twelve and one she heard
-strange eldrich sounds and the ringing of elfin bridles,
-which gladdened her heart. The oaten pipes of the
-faires grew shrill, the hemlock blew clear. The fairies
-cannot bear solemn sounds or sober thoughts; they
-sing like skylarks, inspired by love and joy. Fair Janet
-stood upon the dreary heath, and the sounds waxed
-louder as the fairy train came riding on. Will o' the
-Wisp shone out as a twinkling light before them, and
-soon she saw the fairy bands passing. She let the black
-steed go by, and then the brown. But she gripped fast
-the milk-white steed, and pulled down the rider. Then
-up rose an eldrich cry, "He's won among us all!" As
-Janet grasped him in her arms the fairies changed
-him into a newt, an adder, and many other fantastic
-and terrifying shapes. She held him fast in every
-shape. They turned him at last into a naked man in
-her arms, but she wrapped him in her green mantle.
-At last her stedfast courage was rewarded, she redeemed
-the fairies' captive, and by so doing won his true love!
-Then up spoke the Queen of Fairies, "She that has
-borrowed young Tamlane has got a stately groom!
-She's taken the bonniest knight in all my company!
-But had I known, Tamlane," said the fairy queen,
-"had I known that a lady would borrow thee, I would
-have taken out thy two grey eyes, and put in wooden
-eyes. I would have taken out thy heart of flesh, Tamlane,
-and put in a heart of stone. I would have paid my
-tithe seven times to hell ere I would have let her win
-you away."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Gay Goss-Hawk`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter IX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Gay Goss-Hawk
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-In the opening lines of this old ballad Lord William
-is talking to the goss-hawk, who tells his master
-that he is looking pale and thin, and seeks to know
-che cause.
-
- | "O waly, waly, my gay goss-hawk,
- | Gin your feathering be sheen!"
- | "And waly, waly, my master dear,
- | Gin ye look pale and lean!
-
- | O have ye tint[#] at tournament
- | Your sword, or yet your spear?
- | Or mourn ye for the Southern lass,
- | Whom ye may not win near?"
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] lost
-
-..
-
- | "I have not tint at tournament
- | My sword, nor yet my spear;
- | But sair[#] I mourn for my true love,
- | Wi' mony a bitter tear.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] sore
-
-..
-
- | But weel's me on ye, my gay goss-hawk,
- | Ye can baith speak and flee;
- | Ye sall carry a letter to my love,
- | Bring an answer back to me."
-
- | "But how sall I your true love find,
- | Or how suld I her know?
- | I bear a tongue ne'er wi' her spake,
- | An eye that ne'er her saw."
-
- | "O weel sall ye my true love ken,
- | Sae sune[#] as ye her see;
- | For, of a' the flowers of fair England,
- | The fairest flower is she.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] soon.
-
-..
-
- | The red that's on my true love's cheek
- | Is like blood-drops on the snaw;
- | The white that is on her breast bare,
- | Like the down o' the white sea-maw.
-
- | And even at my love's bour-door
- | There grows a flowering birk;[#]
- | And ye maun sit and sing thereon
- | As she gangs to the kirk.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] birch.
-
-..
-
- | And four-and-twenty fair ladyes
- | Will to the Mass repair;
- | But weel may ye my ladye ken,
- | The fairest ladye there."
-
- | Lord William has written a love-letter,
- | Put it under his pinion grey;
- | An' he is awa' to Southern land
- | As fast as wings can gae.
-
- | And even at the ladye's bour[#]
- | There grew a flowering birk;
- | And he sat down and sung thereon
- | As she gaed to the kirk.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] bower.
-
-..
-
- | And weel he kent that ladye fair
- | Amang her maidens free,
- | For the flower that springs in May morning
- | Was not sae sweet as she.
-
- | He lighted at the ladye's yate[#]
- | And sat him on a pin,[#]
- | And sang fu' sweet the notes o' love,
- | Till a' was cosh[#] within.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] gate.
-[#] pine.
-[#] quiet.
-
-..
-
- | And first he sang a low low note,
- | And syne[#] he sang a clear;
- | And aye the o'erword[#] o' the sang
- | Was—"Your love can no win here."
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] then.
-[#] refrain.
-
-..
-
- | "Feast on, feast on, my maidens a',
- | The wine flows you amang,
- | While I gang to my shot-window
- | And hear yon bonnie bird's sang.
-
- | Sing on, sing on, my bonny bird,
- | The sang ye sung yestreen,
- | For weel I ken, by your sweet singing
- | Ye are frae my true love sen."[#]
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] sent.
-
-..
-
- | O first he sang a merry song,
- | And syne he sang a grave;
- | And syne he picked his feathers grey,
- | To her the letter gave.
-
- | "Have there a letter from Lord William;
- | He says he's sent ye three;
- | He canna wait your love langer,
- | But for your sake he'll die."
-
- | "Gae bid him bake his bridal bread,
- | And brew his bridal ale;
- | And I shall meet him in Mary's Kirk,
- | Lang, lang ere it be stale."
-
- | The lady's gane to her chamber,
- | And a moanfu' woman was she;
- | As gin[#] she had taken a sudden brash[#]
- | And were about to die.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] if
-[#] illness.
-
-..
-
- | "A boon, a boon, my father dear,
- | A boon I beg of thee!"
- | "Ask not that haughty Scottish lord,
- | For him ye ne'er shall see.
-
- | But for your honest asking else,
- | Weel granted it shall be."
- | "Then, gin I die in Southern land,
- | In Scotland gar[#] bury me.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] cause
-
-..
-
- | And the first kirk that ye come to,
- | Ye's gar the mass be sung;
- | And the next kirk that ye come to
- | Ye's gar the bells be rung.
-
- | And when ye come to St Mary's Kirk,
- | Ye's tarry there till night."
- | And so her father pledged his word,
- | And so his promise plight.
-
- | She has ta'en her to her bigly bower
- | As fast as she could fare;
- | And she has drank a sleepy draught,
- | That she had mixed wi' care.
-
- | And pale, pale grew her rosy cheek,
- | That was sae bright of blee,[#]
- | And she seemed to be as surely dead
- | As any one could be.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] bloom.
-
-..
-
- | Then spake her cruel step-minnie,[#]
- | "Tak ye the burning lead,
- | And drap a drap on her bosome,
- | To try if she be dead."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] mother.
-
-..
-
- | They took a drap o' boiling lead,
- | They drapped it on her breast;
- | "Alas! alas!" her father cried,
- | "She's dead without the priest."
-
- | She neither chattered with her teeth,
- | Nor shivered with her chin;
- | "Alas! alas!" her father cried,
- | "There is nae breath within."
-
- | Then up arose her seven brethren,
- | And hewed to her a bier;
- | They hewed it frae the solid aik,[#]
- | Laid it o'er wi' silver clear.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] oak.
-
-..
-
- | Then up and gat her seven sisters,
- | And sewed to her a kell,[#]
- | And every steek[#] that they put in
- | Sewed to a siller bell.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] shroud.
-[#] stitch.
-
-..
-
- | The first Scots kirk that they cam to,
- | They garred the bells be rung;
- | The next Scots kirk that they cam to,
- | They garred fhe mass be sung.
-
- | But when they cam to St Mary's Kirk,
- | There stude spearmen all on a row;
- | And up and started Lord William,
- | The chieftaine amang them a'.
-
- | "Set down, set down the bier," he said,
- | "Let me look her upon;"
- | But as soon as Lord William touched her hand,
- | Her colour began to come.
-
- | She brightened like the lily flower,
- | Till her pale colour was gone;
- | With rosy cheek, and ruby lip,
- | She smiled her love upon.
-
- | "A morsel of your bread, my lord,
- | And one glass of your wine;
- | For I have fasted these three lang days,
- | All for your sake and mine.
-
- | Gae hame, gae hame, my seven bauld brothers,
- | Gae hame and blaw your horn!
- | I trow[#] ye wad hae gi'en me the skaith,[#]
- | But I've gi'en you the scorn.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] reckon.
-[#] harm.
-
-..
-
- | Commend me to my grey father,
- | That wished my soul gude rest;
- | But wae be to my cruel step-dame,
- | Garred burn me on the breast."
-
- | "Ah! woe to you, you light woman!
- | And ill death may ye die!
- | For we left father and sisters at hame,
- | Breaking their hearts for thee."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Corbies`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter X
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Corbies
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Two ancient songs have come down to us in which
-the principal speakers are supposed to be
-Corbies, carrion-crows or ravens, birds which
-feed on the flesh of the dead. In both songs the birds
-discuss a dead knight upon whose rich body they wish
-to feed. But deep interest lies in the fact that the two
-song-writers present entirely different views of the case.
-One appeals to our feelings with a beautiful and touching
-picture of devotion, the knight's companions proving
-true to him in death. The other is far more grim, and
-causes us to shudder at the utter loneliness of the dead
-man, deserted by all those who in life were beholden to
-his friendship. Both are powerful and striking examples
-of ancient vigour and directness.
-
-.. class:: center large
-
- THE TWA CORBIES
-
-..
-
- | As I was walking all alane,
- | I heard twa corbies making a mane;[#]
- | The tane unto the t'other say,
- | "Where sall we gang and dine to-day?"—
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] moan.
-
-..
-
- | "In behint yon auld fail dyke,
- | I wot there lies a new-slain knight;
- | And naebody kens that he lies there,
- | But his hawk, his hound, and lady fair.
-
- | His hound is to the hunting gane,
- | His hawk, to fetch the wild-fowl hame,
- | His lady's ta'en another mate,
- | Sa we may mak our dinner sweet.
-
- | Ye'll sit on his white hause-bane,[#]
- | And I'll pick out his bonny blue een:
- | Wi' ae lock o' his gowden hair,
- | We'll theek[#] our nest when it grows bare.[#]
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] neck.
-[#] thatch.
-[#] Variant reading—"We'll theek our nest—it's a' blawn hare."
-
-..
-
- | Mony a one for him makes mane,
- | But nane sall ken where he is gane;
- | O'er his white banes, when they are bare,
- | The wind sall blaw for evermair."
-
-.. _`The Twa Corbies`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-070.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: The Twa Corbies
-
- The Twa Corbies
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. class:: center large
-
- THE THREE RAVENS
-
-..
-
- | There were three ravens sat on a tre,
- | They were as black as they might be:
-
- | The one of them said to his mate,
- | "Where shall we our breakfast take?"—
-
- | "Downe in yonder greene field,
- | There lies a knight slain under his shield;
-
- | "His hounds they lie downe at his feete,
- | So well they their master keepe;
-
- | "His hawkes they flie so eagerlie,
- | There's no fowle dare come him nie.
-
- | "Down there comes a fallow doe,
- | As great with yong as she might goe.
-
- | "She lift up his bloudy hed,
- | And kist his wounds that were so red.
-
- | "She got him up upon her backe,
- | And carried him to earthen lake.
-
- | "She buried him before the prime,
- | She was dead her selfe ere even song time.
-
- | "God send every gentleman,
- | Such hawkes, such houndes, and such a leman."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Otterbourne and Chevy Chase`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Otterbourne and Chevy Chase
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "It fell about the Lammas-tide,
- | When moor-men win their hay,
- | The doughty Douglas bound him to ride
- | Into England, to drive a prey."
- |
-
-The ballads of *Otterbourne* and *Chevy Chase*
-record the Scottish and English versions of a
-most stubborn Border battle. Whichever of the
-two contains the greater amount of truth, it is clear that
-the day was a bloody one, and that, moreover, it was
-fought on both sides with a chivalrous admiration for
-the powers of the other which is characteristic of those
-strife-loving days. Sir Philip Sidney wrote of it: "I
-never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas, that I
-found not my heart moved more than with a trumpet."
-
-The ballad of *Chevy Chase* is of later date than its
-rival, and it contains certainly one misstatement of
-historical fact, since Hotspur outlived the fight at Chevy
-Chase (1388) and was slain some fifteen years later at the
-battle of Shrewsbury (1403).
-
-The Scottish version of the battle of Otterbourne tells
-us that it was about the Lammas-tide or haymaking time
-of the year 1388 when the brave Earl of Douglas, with his
-brother, the Earl of Murray, made a foray into England,
-with a gay band of Gordons, Graemes, and Lindsays. He
-burned Tynedale and half of Bamborough and Otterdale,
-and marching up to Newcastle, rode round about the
-castle, crying, "Who is lord of this castle, and who is
-its lady?"
-
-Then up spake proud Lord Percy, known as *Hotspur*,
-and said, "I am the lord of this castle, and my wife is the
-gay lady of it."
-
-"That pleases me well," answered Douglas, "yet, ere I
-cross the Border hills, one of us shall die."
-
-Then Percy took his long spear, shod with metal, and
-rode right furiously at the Douglas; but his lady, looking
-from the castle wall, grew pale as she saw her proud
-lord go down before the Scottish spear.
-
-"Had we two been alone, with never an eye to see, I
-would have slain thee, but thy lance I will carry with
-me," said Douglas, and, to complete the disgrace, this
-lance bore attached to it the Percy pennon.
-
-"Go then to Otterbourne," said Percy, "and wait
-there for me, and if I come not before the end of three
-days, call me a false knight."
-
-"Otterbourne is a pleasant and a bonny place,"
-answered Douglas; "but though the deer run wild among
-the hills and dales, and the birds fly wild from tree to
-tree, yet is there neither bread nor kale nor aught else to
-feed me and my men. Yet will I wait thee at Otterbourne
-to give thee welcome, and if thou come not in
-three days' time, false lord, will I call thee!"
-
-"By the might of Our Lady, I will come," cried the
-proud Percy. "And I," answered Douglas, "plight thee
-my troth that I will meet thee there."
-
-So Douglas and his men encamped at Otterbourne,
-and sent out their horses to pasture.
-
-But before the peep of dawn, up spake a little page:
-"Waken ye, waken ye, my good lord; the Percy is upon
-us!" "Ye lie, ye lie," shouted Douglas; "yesterday,
-Percy had not men enough to fight us. But if thou lie
-not, the finest bower in Otterbourne shall be thy reward,
-and if what thou sayest prove false, thou shalt be hanged
-on the highest tree in Otterbourne. Yet I have dreamed
-a dreary dream; I dreamed that a dead man won a battle
-and that I was that dead man."
-
-So Douglas belted on his good broadsword, and ran to
-the field, but forgot his helmet, and Percy and the Douglas
-fought with their swords together till the blood ran down
-like rain, and the Douglas fell, wounded on the brow.
-
-Then he called to him his little foot-page and told him
-to run quickly and bring to him his sister's son, Sir Hugh
-Montgomery.
-
-"My good nephew," said Douglas, "the death of one
-matters not; last night I dreamed a dreary dream, but
-yet I know the day is thine. My wound is deep; take
-thou the vanguard; bury me in the bracken high that
-grows on yonder lea, and let no man living know that a
-Scot lies there. And know that I am glad to die in battle,
-like my good forefathers, and not on a bed of sickness."
-
-Montgomery lifted up his noble lord, while his eyes
-wept salt tears, and hid him in the bracken bush that his
-followers might not see, and before daylight the Scots
-slew many a gallant Englishman. The good Gordons
-steeped hose and shoes in the blood of the English; the
-Lindsays flew about like fire till the battle was ended, and
-Percy and Montgomery fought till the blood ran down
-between them.
-
-"Now, yield thee, yield thee, Percy," cried Sir Hugh,
-"or I vow I will lay thee low!"
-
-"Since it must be so," quoth Earl Percy, "to whom
-shall I yield?"
-
-"Thou shalt not yield to me or to any lord, but to the
-bracken bush that grows on yonder lea!"
-
-"I will not yield to briar or bracken bush, but I would
-yield to Lord Douglas or to Sir Hugh Montgomery, if he
-were here."
-
-Then Montgomery made himself known, and as soon
-as Percy knew that it was Montgomery, he struck the
-point of his sword into the ground, and Montgomery, who
-was a courteous knight, took him up by the hand.
-
-This deed was done at Otterbourne at daybreak, where
-Earl Douglas was buried by the bracken bush, and
-Percy led captive into Scotland, and it is said that
-Hotspur, for his ransom, built for Montgomery the castle of
-Penoon, in Ayrshire.
-
-But the English version of these stirring events can
-also claim to be heard; the ballad upon it is called *Chevy
-Chase*, which means the Chase on the Cheviots; and so
-popular was this ballad that its name was given to a boys'
-game, which is so called even to this day. It tells how
-the Percy, from his castle in Northumberland, vowed that
-within three days he would hunt on the mountains of
-Cheviot in spite of the doughty Douglas and his men, and
-that he would kill and carry away the fattest deer in
-Cheviot.
-
-"By my faith," said Douglas, when he heard of the
-boast, "but I will hinder his hunting."
-
-Percy left Bamborough Castle with a mighty company,
-no less than fifteen hundred bold archers chosen out of
-three shires.
-
-The foray began on a Monday morning in the high
-Cheviot Hills, and many a child yet unborn was to rue the
-day.
-
-The drivers went through the woods and raised the deer,
-and the bowmen shot them with their broad arrows. Then
-the wild deer rushed through the woods, only to be met
-and killed by the greyhounds, and before noontide a
-hundred fat deer lay dead. The bugles sounded, "A
-mort!" and on all sides Percy and his men assembled
-to see the cutting up of the venison.
-
-Said Percy: "The Douglas promised to meet me
-here this day, yet right well did I know that he would
-fail." But a Northumberland squire saw the doughty
-Douglas coming with a mighty company, with spear
-and batter-axe and sword. Never were men hardier of
-heart and hand seen in Christendom—two thousand
-spearmen born along the banks of the Tweed and Teviotdale.
-Then said Lord Percy: "Now leave off the cutting of the
-deer, and take good heed to your bows, for never had ye
-more need of them since ye were born."
-
-Earl Douglas rode before his men, his armour glittering
-like a burning coal, and never was such a bold baron.
-"Tell me whose men ye are," said he, "and who gave ye
-leave to hunt in Cheviot without word asked of me?"
-
-Then answered Lord Percy, "We will not tell thee
-whose men we are, and we will hunt here in spite of thee.
-We have killed the fattest harts in Cheviot and will
-carry them away."
-
-"By my troth," said Douglas, "one of us shall die this
-day. Yet it were great pity to kill all these guiltless
-men. Thou, Percy, art a lord of land, and I am called
-an earl in my country; let our men stand by, and we will
-fight together."
-
-"Now a curse on his crown, who says nay to that,"
-cried Lord Percy. "By my troth, Douglas, thou shalt
-never see the day either in England, Scotland, or France,
-when I fear to meet one, man to man."
-
-Then spoke Richard Witherington, a squire of Northumberland.
-"Never shall this be told in England, to the
-shame of good King Harry the Fourth. I wot ye be two
-great lords, and I but a poor squire, yet would I never
-stand and look on while my captain fought. While I
-can wield a weapon, I will not fail, both heart and
-hand."
-
-So the English with good heart bent their bows, and
-slew seven score spearmen with the first arrows they shot.
-
-Earl Douglas stayed on the field, but that he was a
-good captain was truly seen, for he wrought great woe
-and mischief. He parted his host in three like a proud
-chieftain, and they came in on every side with their
-mighty spears, wounding the English archers and slaying
-many a brave man.
-
-Then the English pulled out their brands, and it was a
-heavy sight to see the bright swords light on the helmets,
-striking through the rich mail, and the cloth of many folds
-under it, and laying many low.
-
-At last the Douglas and the Percy met and fought with
-swords of Milan steel till the blood spurted like rain and
-hail from their helmets.
-
-"Hold thee, Percy," said Douglas, "and I will bring
-thee to James, our Scottish king, where thou shalt have an
-earl's wages and free ransom, for thou art the manfullest
-man that ever yet I conquered fighting in the field."
-
-"Nay, then," said Lord Percy. "I told thee before
-that never would I yield to any man of woman born."
-
-With that there came an arrow hastily from a mighty
-man, and struck Earl Douglas through the breast bone,
-and never more did he speak a word but only this:
-"Fight, my merry men, while ye may—my life's days are
-done."
-
-Then Percy leaned on his hand, and when he saw the
-Douglas die, he said, "Woe is me. I would have parted
-with my land for three years to have saved thy life, for a
-better man of heart and hand was not in all the north
-country."
-
-But Sir Hugh Montgomery, a Scottish knight, when
-he saw the Douglas done to death, grasped a spear and
-rode through a hundred archers, never slackening his
-pace till he came to Lord Percy, whom he set upon,
-sending his mighty spear clean through his body, so that
-a man might see a long cloth-yard and more at the other
-side. There were no two better captains in Christendom
-than were that day slain.
-
-When one of the Northumberland archers saw this,
-he drew an arrow to his bow and set upon Montgomery,
-until the swan feathers of his arrows were wet with his
-heart's blood.
-
-Not one man gave way, but still they stood hewing at
-each other, while they were able.
-
-This battle began in Cheviot, an hour before noon, nor
-was it half done at evensong, but they fought on by
-moonlight though many had scarce the strength to stand.
-Of fifteen hundred English archers only fifty-three
-remained, and of two thousand Scottish spearmen only
-fifty-five remained, all the rest being slain in Cheviot.
-
-With Lord Percy were slain, Sir John of Agerstone,
-Sir Roger the gentle Hartly, Sir William the bold Heron,
-Sir George the worthy Lovel, a renowned knight, and Sir
-Ralph the rich Rugby. Woe was it that Witherington
-was slain, for when both his legs were hewn in two he
-kneeled and fought on his knees.
-
-With the brave Douglas were slain Sir Hugh Montgomery,
-and worthy Sir Davy Liddle, that was his sister's
-son; Sir Charles, a Murray who refused to flee, and Sir
-Hugh Maxwell. On the morrow they made biers of birch
-and grey hazel, and many widows bore weeping from the
-field the bodies of their dead husbands. Well may
-Teviotdale and Northumberland wail and moan for two
-such great captains.
-
-Word came to James the Scottish king at Edinburgh,
-that the brave Douglas, Lieutenant of the Marches, lay
-slain in Cheviot, and he wept and wrung his hands, and
-said, "Alas! Woe is me; there will never be such another
-captain in Scotland."
-
-Word came also to London, to Harry the Fourth, that
-Lord Percy, Lieutenant of the Marches, lay slain in
-Cheviot. "God have mercy on his soul," said King
-Harry; "I have a hundred captains in England as good
-as he, yet I wager my life that his death shall be well
-avenged"; and this vow he kept, at the Battle of
-Homildon Hill, where he beat down six and thirty Scottish
-knights on one day.
-
-But so real to the Borderers was their grief over their
-dead that the ballad ends with a quaint but heartfelt
-appeal to the Prince of Peace:—
-
- | "Jesus Christ our ills abate,
- | And to His bliss us bring!
- | Thus was the hunting of the Cheviot;
- | God send us all good ending!"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Douglas Clan`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Douglas Clan
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Douglas clan was at one time the strongest
-of all the great Scotch families on the Border;
-they were wild and proud and recklessly brave,
-and no account of the Borders would be complete
-without the broad details of their tragic history.
-
-The first to raise the fame of the family to the highest
-place in honour was the brave Sir James Douglas, the
-friend of Bruce, and, after Bruce himself, the greatest
-hero among the Scots of that stormy period. He was a
-powerful, black-haired man with a dark complexion, and
-was called by the English "The Black Douglas." So
-great was the terror of his name that English mothers
-on the Border, when their children were naughty, would
-tell them that the Black Douglas would get them, or if
-they were fretful they would comfort them with the
-assurance—
-
- | "Hush ye, hush ye, little pet ye,
- | Hush ye, hush ye, do not fret ye,
- | The Black Douglas shall not get ye."
- |
-
-Sir Walter Scott relates how, when the garrison of
-Roxburgh Castle were making merry at Shrovetide, the
-castle was surprised by the Douglas, who mounted to
-the ramparts where a woman was crooning the refrain
-to her babe. "You are not so sure of that," he said,
-laying his hand upon her shoulder. It is pleasant to
-read that on this occasion the Black Douglas did not
-turn out so black as he was painted, and beyond her
-fright the woman came to no harm at the hands of Sir
-James and his followers.
-
-At one time the English had seized the Douglas
-castle in Lanarkshire, and Sir James and his men
-disguised themselves and came to church on Palm
-Sunday, when the English soldiers were worshipping there.
-Suddenly in the midst of the service Douglas dropped his
-cloak and drew his sword and shouted: "A Douglas! a
-Douglas!"
-
-The English soldiers were taken by surprise, and were
-killed before they could recover themselves. This deed
-brought Douglas great fame, but after all it was hardly a
-fair fight.
-
-In 1327, when Edward III. was only fifteen years old,
-Douglas led a raid into Northumberland and Durham
-which did the English much damage. Edward came
-after them with an English army, and the Scots, being
-outnumbered, were compelled to dodge up and down
-in order to avoid a pitched battle. But in one bold
-night attack, Douglas and five hundred of the Scots
-penetrated to the king's tent, and almost succeeded in
-taking him prisoner. Failing in this, they returned
-unharmed to their own country, and shortly afterwards,
-at the Treaty of Northampton in 1328, King Edward
-III. agreed to acknowledge Robert Bruce as King of Scotland,
-and the long war between Scotland and England ended.
-
-A year later Bruce died, but after a romantic custom of
-that day he bequeathed his heart to his gallant friend,
-Sir James Douglas. Douglas had this heart enclosed in
-a silver casket and carried it hung about his neck. The
-war with England being over, this restless knight sought
-adventures in Spain, fighting against the Saracen
-followers of Mahomet. In one fierce battle, he and his
-men were surrounded by their enemies. Douglas,
-probably realising that this was his last fight, took the
-casket and flung it into the midst of his foes, crying:
-"Go first in fight, as thou wert used to do; Douglas will
-follow thee or die!" He then rushed desperately after
-it, fighting his way on till at last his dead body fell on
-this dearly prized relic, which he guarded to the end.
-The casket lies buried in the Abbey of Melrose, but
-Douglas's body was laid in his own church.
-
-Of the bold Earl Douglas who fought and died at
-Otterbourne the tale is told in our last chapter. We
-may pass on to another famous Douglas, this time a
-heroine, who lived in the reign of James I. of Scotland
-(quite a different king from James I. of England).
-When James was only twelve years old, he was taken
-prisoner by Henry IV. of England, and kept captive till
-he was thirty. But he was given an education fit for a
-king, and in England he met the lady he devotedly
-loved, Lady Joan Beaufort, daughter of the Earl of
-Somerset. He addressed a beautiful poem to her and
-married her, and these two always most dearly loved one
-another. When at last his long captivity came to an
-end, he got back to Scotland to find the kingdom in
-disorder, and the nobles defying the law and acting as they
-pleased. James, a strong and able king, set his strength
-against their strength, and gradually got his whole
-kingdom into order and ruled with wisdom and justice.
-
-But in these days it was impossible to be firm without
-sternness, and James made enemies. When he was staying
-at Perth one Christmas-time, these enemies, led by a
-bold villain called Sir Robert Graham, secretly encircled
-the house where he was staying. The unarmed king
-only heard of their presence when they were advancing,
-fully armed, to his room. He tore up a plank in the
-floor, seeking thus to find a hiding-place. The enemies
-were almost at the door, and it was necessary to delay
-their entrance, for one minute might save his life. All
-the bars of the door had been removed beforehand, but
-a brave heroine, Kate Douglas, thrust her arm through
-the staples. The villains were angered to find the door
-barred against them, and hurled their weight upon it.
-
-The Douglas heroine stood there, her pale face set
-hard, without a cry, as the crash broke the bone of her
-brave strong arm, and the would-be murderers staggered
-in. But alas! the sacrifice of Kate Douglas availed
-nothing except to place her name upon the immortal
-roll of the heroes of the ages, for after a brief search the
-murderers found the king and slew him.
-
-The queen, who had loved James with the utmost
-devotion, found her love give added fierceness to her
-hate against his murderers. They were all tracked down,
-and she caused them to die with terrible tortures, the
-cruellest of which she reserved for Graham. Thus did
-great King James's "milk-white dove" revenge the
-slaying of the husband she loved dearer than life itself.
-
-Till this time it had seemed as if the Douglases were
-devoted to the good of Scotland. But in those wild,
-reckless times qualities that were strong for good could
-also be strong for evil.
-
-When James I. of Scotland was murdered, his young
-son was only six years old. This meant that for many
-years there would be no strong king able to cope with
-the lawless spirit of the nobles, strongest among whom
-were the proud, bold Douglases.
-
-The lawlessness of the times is well shown by an act
-of foul treachery committed by Sir William Crichton,
-Governor of Edinburgh, and an enemy of the Douglas
-family. He invited one of the earls to dinner at the
-castle, and while there had him seized and beheaded.
-It is said that a bull's head was placed on the dish in
-front of Douglas, this being a sign that he was to be
-killed. The people called this "Douglas's black dinner,"
-and sang of the wicked deed in sorrowful verse:—
-
- | "Edinburgh Castle, town and tower
- | God grant thou sink for sin!
- | And even for that black dinner
- | Earl Douglas got therein."
- |
-
-But the new King James found, before he was twenty
-years old, that the Douglases themselves could act with
-equal cruelty and lawlessness.
-
-The king was fond of a brave young soldier named
-Maclellan, who, having some quarrel with Earl Douglas,
-was thrown by him into a dungeon in his castle. So
-the king wrote a letter to Douglas, saying he must set
-Maclellan free, and sent this letter by Maclellan's uncle,
-Sir Patrick Gray. When Douglas saw Gray riding up to
-his castle, he at once guessed the errand. So he came
-out as though he were delighted to see him, and insisted
-on his sitting down and having dinner with him, before
-the king's letter was opened and discussed. But the
-treacherous earl had given secret orders that Maclellan
-should be beheaded while they were dining, so that after
-dinner was over, and the letter was read, he could say
-that this had been done before he had seen the king's
-message.
-
-Gray dared not show his anger, for fear he too should
-be killed. He mounted his swift horse and rode away,
-but the moment he was outside the castle walls he shook
-his mailed fist at Douglas and cried out—
-
-"Treacherous earl, disgrace to knighthood, some day
-you shall pay for this black, base deed!"
-
-Douglas mounted his men, and they pursued Gray
-almost to the gates of Edinburgh; but he rode for his
-life, and faster than they.
-
-When Douglas and the king next met there was a
-stormy scene. The earl was so proud and wilful that
-he would not bend to any of the king's wishes or heed
-the king's anger in the least. So King James, mad with
-rage, stabbed the reckless earl with his dagger, and Sir
-Patrick Gray, seeing this, struck him a death-blow with
-his axe.
-
-The king was in Stirling Castle, a powerful fortress at
-the top of a steep hill, when the new earl, the younger
-brother of the murdered man, rode up with six hundred
-followers, and burnt and plundered the town before the
-king's very eyes, and added to the insult by publicly
-declaring that King James II. was a law-breaker.
-
-For three years the quarrel went on between the king
-and the Douglases, but it was then evident that there
-could be no peace between them. So at last the king's
-army attacked the collected forces of the strong Douglas
-family at a place on the Borders then called Arkinholm,
-where the picturesque little town of Langholm now stands.
-Here the beautiful river Esk receives the water of two
-smaller streams, and so it was a good place to make a
-stand for a fight. The battle was long and desperate;
-three brothers of the bold black Douglases were there, and
-they withstood the king's men till the rivers ran red;
-but their cause was hopeless. One was slain in battle;
-one was taken and executed; one escaped into England;
-and the power of the Black Douglases was gone.
-
-Thus it was that the strongest and most famous family
-of the Borders was broken up, because its proud leaders
-dared to dictate to the king himself.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Alnwick Castle and the Percies`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Alnwick Castle and the Percies
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The castle of Alnwick stands on a hill on the
-south bank of the river Alne; being protected
-on one side by the river and on another by a
-deep gorge, it stands in a strong natural position. There
-are traces of earthworks that seem to show that the
-spot was fortified in the old British days, but the earliest
-fact which we know certainly is that there was a Saxon
-fortress here, held by a Gilbert Tyson, when William
-the Conqueror claimed England. Tyson hastened south
-to fight on Harold's side, and was killed at the battle
-of Hastings.
-
-The fortress seems to have got into the hands of a
-Norman knight, Ivo de Vesci, who married the
-grand-daughter of Gilbert Tyson. King Malcolm of Scotland
-was killed in front of it, in 1093, with three thousand of
-his men. De Vesci's son-in-law was probably the knight
-who rebuilt the castle in the Norman style, some portions
-of which still remain.
-
-In 1174, William the Lion, King of Scotland, who
-had claimed Northumberland as his own, attacked
-the castles of Wark and of Alnwick. Wark was
-defended by a gallant knight named Roger de Stuteville.
-William's brave men tried in vain to force their way
-through the portcullis, but were beaten back. Then
-William ordered up his *perière*, a machine made for
-hurling stones. "This," said the king, "will soon
-smash down the gate for us!" With great expectations
-the machine was set in motion, but it acted so badly
-that it threw the stones on to William's own men, and
-nearly killed one of his best knights! William raved in
-his fury, and swore he would rather have been captured
-in fair fight than be made to look so foolish in the eyes of
-his enemies. He gave word to burn the castle, but the
-wind was in the wrong quarter and blew back the flames.
-So he had to give up the siege. Stuteville, like a gallant
-enemy, told his men not to shout taunts and jeers at the
-departing Scots. But instead they blew trumpets and
-horns, and sang songs, and called out a very loud and
-hearty "Good-bye."
-
-Shortly afterwards, William came before Alnwick, and
-it was then De Vesci's turn. It was Saturday morning on
-a hot July day, and the Scottish king's knights
-flatteringly told him that the English were bound to give way
-to him, and Northumberland would be his. The king
-was dining in front of the castle, with no helmet on, when
-suddenly a part of the English army made a surprise
-attack. The bold king leapt on to his grey charger, and
-unhorsed the first knight he met. So quick and brave
-were the Scots that they had almost defeated the English
-when an English foot-soldier stabbed the king's horse
-with his lance, and it fell, bringing William down to the
-ground and pinning him there. This turned the course
-of battle; the Scots were beaten back, and William
-taken prisoner.
-
-In was in 1309 that the great Percy family first
-obtained possession of Alnwick and its domain. Henry
-Percy purchased it from Anthony Bek, Bishop of Durham,
-who had somehow obtained power over it, and the brave
-De Vesci family disappear. About this date Northumberland
-was in a miserable condition; it was the reign
-of the feeble Edward II., and Bruce had invaded the
-four northernmost counties of England, and was exacting
-tribute from them. The English were safe only within
-their fortresses.
-
-However, the brave Sir Thomas Gray, who held
-Norham Castle, did much to uphold the falling honour
-of England, and Henry Percy almost rebuilt the castle
-of Alnwick, which in his son's time successfully withstood
-a siege. But at last peace was restored by the Treaty of
-Northampton in 1328, by the terms of which the English
-king renounced all claim to Scotland.
-
-The Percy family were of Norman origin, deriving
-their name from a Norman village. William de Percy
-crossed to England just after the battle of Hastings, and
-received grants of land in Yorkshire. Agnes de Percy
-married Jocelin, Count of Louvain, and their son Henry
-took his mother's surname. From that year onward, the
-the Christian name of Henry was always given to the
-eldest son; there were fourteen Henry Percies!
-
-Even in these wild times the Percies were distinguished
-by the boldness of their spirits. One of the Counts of
-Louvain, grandfather of the first Henry Percy, shocked
-the men of his day by hanging some of his enemies with
-the church bell-ropes. It was not the hanging that was
-objected to—hanging was common enough; but the use
-of church-ropes for the purpose was thought very
-wicked!
-
-After they had rebuilt Alnwick Castle and settled down
-there, the Percies soon established their power in the
-North. At the coronation of Richard II., in 1377, a
-Henry Percy was Marshal of England, and he was then
-made Earl of Northumberland. His son, "Hotspur,"
-was the most famous of all the Percies. In their time, the
-battles of Otterbourne and Homildon Hill were fought.
-But they rebelled against Henry IV. and Hotspur was
-killed at the battle of Shrewsbury (1403), while his father
-was slain a few years later at Bramham Moor, his head
-set up on London Bridge, and quarters of his body on the
-gates of Berwick, Newcastle, Lincoln, and London, to
-discourage others from following in his footsteps!
-
-Henry, son of "Hotspur," was the second earl. He
-repaired and added to the castle and was present at the
-battle of Agincourt. It was not the habit of the Percies
-to die in their beds, and this one was killed in the Wars
-of the Roses, at the first battle of St Albans, in 1455.
-
-The fact of their having taken the losing Lancastrian
-side in these wars kept the family under a cloud for a
-number of years. One of them deserted Richard III. on
-Bosworth field in 1485; one of them was beheaded at
-York in 1572, for taking part in the "Rising of the
-North"; one of them was found shot in his bed in 1585,
-and another died in the Tower in 1632. So that the
-family could hardly be said to be quieting down.
-
-They sided with Parliament during the Civil War, but
-later on they favoured the Restoration. At last there
-came a time when there were no male heirs left in this
-great line, but only a daughter, Elizabeth. She married
-the Duke of Somerset, and had thirteen children, the
-eldest surviving of whom was created Earl of Northumberland
-in 1748. But he died the year after, leaving only
-a daughter, who had married a very able baronet, to
-whom was given the title of Duke of Northumberland
-in 1766. He very wisely took the surname of Percy,
-and again restored the castle of Alnwick, putting the
-family estates and affairs in good order. So that the
-Percies of Alnwick Castle are Dukes of Northumberland
-to this day.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Hexham and Queen Margaret`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XIV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Hexham and Queen Margaret
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The town of Hexham stands on the south bank
-of the Tyne, rising gradually up the hill and
-presenting a most picturesque appearance.
-About two miles above Hexham the North and the
-South Tyne meet, and the combined river is broad
-and noble, and the hills around Hexham give
-strength and beauty to the scene. The commanding
-appearance and central position of the priory church
-adds its note of dignity, and the total effect of the town
-is very pleasing to the eye.
-
-There is no doubt that from very early times there was
-a town in this fine natural position. The burial-grounds
-of primitive races have been discovered here, with stone
-and bronze implements. The Romans had a town here
-of some importance, although it was four miles south of
-their great wall. A Roman tombstone was discovered
-here, nine feet by three and a half feet, showing a Roman
-officer on horseback, overthrowing in fierce fight a
-savage and scowling foe. This fine relic is set up in the
-church, and is not the only thing to see there. The
-original church upon this spot was built in 674, in the
-reign of King Egfrid of Northumbria. Wilfrid, the
-very able and influential Bishop of York, was the
-man who presided at the building of it, and there
-were bishops at Hexham for a couple of centuries. In
-875 the Danes ruthlessly burnt the town; and nearly
-one thousand years later, in 1832, there was found buried
-in the ground a bronze vessel containing about nine
-thousand Saxon coins of the eighth and ninth century,
-evidently buried to protect this treasure from the
-invaders. Those who buried them were probably slain
-before they had time to dig them up again. There was a
-legend of another treasure hidden between Hexham and
-Corbridge, and King John came to Hexham in 1201 to
-search for it. He returned in 1208 and in 1212, but found
-nothing. Time passed, and this tale of hidden treasure
-ceased even to be local gossip, but in 1735 by accident it
-was found.
-
-The present handsome priory church must have been
-built about the time of King John's visits to Hexham.
-It is a noble building, well worth a visit. In 1725, when
-some work was being done in the church, a wonderful
-discovery was made. It was found that there was an
-old Saxon crypt, a narrow vault with several passages,
-underneath the church! This was so carefully hidden
-that it was evidently intended as a place of refuge in
-danger. It was built of Roman stones, several of which
-have Roman inscriptions.
-
-The Scots several times attacked Hexham. Once
-Sir William Wallace came there with his army, but he
-would not let his Scots damage the church, so that
-Hexham, on the whole, had a less stormy life than many
-of the Border towns, although in 1537, when Henry
-VIII. caused the monastery to be suppressed, the prior and
-five of the leading monks were hanged before the gates
-as a gentle reminder that they were to live there no
-longer.
-
-But by far the most stirring event in Hexham's history
-was the battle which raged there in 1464. The Wars of
-the Roses do not form a pleasing episode in English
-history. They were pitiless, and treachery was mingled
-with bloodshed; desertions and executions were the
-accompaniment of every battle. Edward IV. was coldly
-cruel and unscrupulous, one of the blackest figures of a
-black time. But romance centres round Queen Margaret,
-the dauntless and resourceful wife of the feeble King
-Henry VI., with whom Edward disputed the throne.
-She it was who, making up for her husband's weakness,
-urged ever bravely and hopefully the cause of her son.
-Thus she pressed on to the very end, till that son, worthy
-of his heroic mother, proudly answered the taunts of his
-base enemies, even though in their power, preferring
-speedy death to any lessening of his tragic dignity, and
-dying before the eyes of the successful and exultant
-Edward.
-
-In this fierce drama, Hexham was but an episode.
-The Lancastrians had scattered after their heavy defeat
-at Towton. Margaret in person had begged a little help
-of the King of Scotland, a little more of the King of
-France. The Borderland was favourable to her, and
-she gathered her forces together there, King Henry
-VI. staying in Alnwick Castle.
-
-Lord Montague, brother to the powerful but crafty
-Earl of Warwick, was warden of the East Marches for
-Edward, and he hastily collected the Yorkist forces. He
-was swift, able, and unscrupulous. He attacked a small
-body of Lancastrians on Hedgeley Moor, only ten miles
-from Alnwick, and defeated them, killing their leader,
-Sir Ralph Percy, son of Hotspur. As this gallant man
-died he consoled himself by saying, "I have saved the
-bird in my bosom," by which poetical phrase he meant
-that he had saved his honour by being true to his queen.
-In May the greater battle of Hexham was fought. King
-Henry was there in person, with the dauntless Queen
-Margaret and her son, and their brave general, the
-Duke of Somerset. They marched out of Hexham to
-attack Lord Montague; the battle began by the village
-of Linnels, on the south side of the Devil's Water, a
-stream that runs into the Tyne. The fight was
-desperate, for both sides knew that no quarter would
-be given. It is said by some that the Scots, having
-no interest in the war, deserted Margaret; anyway, bit
-by bit the Lancastrians were forced back, to the very
-streets of Hexham itself, two miles away. In these
-narrow streets, in the quarter that is still called Battle
-Hill, the last desperate fighters on the side of the Red
-Rose made their final and unavailing stand.
-
-At last the remnant fled, and no doubt many a
-Hexham maid and dame, at the risk of her own life or
-limb, hid that day some devoted follower of Margaret.
-
-The gallant Duke of Somerset was taken prisoner, and
-there and then was brought to the block in the
-market-place and beheaded. The cruel Montague had not the
-true soldier's respect for a brave enemy, whose blood thus
-mingled with that of his men. Other nobles were taken
-as prisoners to Newcastle, but Edward also was devoid
-of mercy, and all perished.
-
-.. _`The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-094.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham*
-
- *The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham*
-
-Till the last moment the queen hoped on. She was
-not daunted by scenes of strife and bloodshed. When
-defeat was an accomplished fact, she and her young son
-fled to the Dipton Woods, where they fell into the hands
-of rough men, some say a party of Yorkist stragglers.
-Whilst these men were eagerly dividing and quarrelling
-over the queen's jewels, she and the prince slipped away.
-Deeper into the dangerous woods they had to go, for
-worse than robbers were hunting for them around
-Hexham. Suddenly an outlaw stood in their path with
-drawn sword. Even after that day of stir and terror
-Margaret's courage did not fail her. She boldly declared
-to the man that she was the Queen of England, and with
-her was her only son. Now, if he chose to betray them
-he could do so; but if he had that natural nobility that
-hailed gladly great chances to do great deeds, now was his
-time to prove himself a man, and to save the ill-fated
-prince and his queen.
-
-The robber bowed before her as though she were on
-her throne, and as if the trees were her army around her.
-He swore to die a hundred deaths rather than betray his
-rightful sovereign and her prince. He honourably kept
-his word; and through his safe guidance and steady
-devotion, both queen and prince were able to join King
-Henry in Scotland, to which place he had safely escaped.
-
-Thus the bandit of Hexham proved himself to be a
-truer man than either Lord Montague, or Warwick, the
-King-maker, or King Edward IV. of England.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Fair Helen of Kirkconnell`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Fair Helen of Kirkconnell
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Very simple, very touching, is the story of fair
-Helen of Kirkconnell. This beautiful maiden
-had two lovers, one rich, one poor. Her friends
-favoured the rich one, she loved the poor one. She and
-her chosen lover used to meet secretly in the romantic
-churchyard of Kirkconnell, by the side of the river
-Kirtle. Learning this, the rejected lover crept up one
-evening, with his carbine, to shoot his luckier rival;
-Helen saw him at the moment of firing, and threw herself
-forward to receive the shot in her bosom, and so save her
-lover's life at the cost of her own.
-
-The ballad describing the grief of her lover is one of
-the most beautiful and touching pieces of poetry in
-existence, and must be given here entire.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- FAIR HELEN
-
-..
-
- | I wish I were where Helen lies;
- | Night and day on me she cries;
- | O that I were where Helen lies,
- | On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- | Curst be the heart that thought the thought,
- | And curst the hand that shot the shot,
- | When in my arms burd Helen dropt,
- | And died to succour me.
-
- | O think ye not my heart was sair,
- | When my love dropt and spak nae mair!
- | There did she swoon wi' meikle care,
- | On fair Kirkconnell Lee.
-
- | As I went down the water-side,
- | None but my foe to be my guide,
- | None but my foe to be my guide,
- | On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- | I lighted down my sword to draw,
- | I hacked him in pieces sma',
- | I hacked him in pieces sma',
- | For her sake that died for me.
-
- | O Helen fair beyond compare,
- | I'll make a garland of thy hair,
- | Shall bind my heart for evermair,
- | Until the day I die.
-
- | O that I were where Helen lies,
- | Night and day on me she cries;
- | Out of my bed she bids me rise,
- | Says, "Haste and come to me!"
-
- | O Helen fair! O Helen chaste!
- | If I were with thee, I were blest,
- | Where thou lies low, and takes thy rest,
- | On fair Kirkconnell Lee.
-
- | O that my grave were growing green,
- | A winding sheet drawn ower my een,
- | And I in Helen's arms were lying,
- | On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- | I wish I were where Helen lies!
- | Night and day on me she cries,
- | And I am weary of the skies,
- | For her sake that died for me.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Johnie of Breadislee`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XVI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Johnie of Breadislee
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Johnie of Breadislee, outlaw and deer-stealer,
-was one of the "broken men," as they were
-called, the Ishmaels of the Border. Johnie rose
-up one May morning, and called for water to wash his
-hands. He ordered to be unleashed his good grey dogs,
-that were bound with iron chains. When his mother
-heard that he had called for the dogs, she wrung her hands.
-"O Johnie!" she cried, "for my blessing, do not go to
-the greenwood to-day. Ye have enough of good wheat
-bread, enough blood-red wine, therefore, Johnie, I pray,
-stir not from home for any venison." But despite his
-mother's tears, Johnie busked up his good bent bow, and
-his arrows, and went off to Durrisdeer to hunt down the
-dun deer. As he came by Merriemass he espied a deer
-lying beneath a bush of furze. Johnie let fly an arrow,
-and the deer leapt as the pitiless shaft found its mark,
-and between the water and the brae his good hounds
-"laid her pride." So Johnie cut up the venison, giving
-the liver and lungs to his faithful hounds, as if they had
-been earl's sons. With such zest did they eat and drink
-that Johnie and the dogs fell asleep, as if they had been
-dead. Then as they lay, there came by a silly old man,
-and, as soon as he saw the poachers, he ran away to
-Hislinton, where the Seven Foresters were. "What
-news?" they asked. "What news bring ye, ye
-grey-headed carle?" "I bring no news," said the grey-headed
-carle, "save what my eyes did see. As I came
-down by Merrimass among the stunted trees, the bonniest
-child I ever saw lay asleep among his dogs. The shirt
-upon his back was of fine Holland, his doubtlet, over that,
-was of Lincoln twine, his buttons were of the good gold,
-the mouths of his good grey hounds were dyed with blood."
-
-Now Johnie, like many another free-hearted outlaw,
-was a well-liked man. So the chief forester said, "If
-this be Johnie of Breadislee we will draw no nearer." But
-this was not the spirit of his men. Quoth the sixth
-Forester, "If it indeed be he, rather let us slay
-him." Cautiously they went through the thicket, and when they
-saw their man, asleep and helpless, they shot a flight
-of arrows. Johnie sprang up, sore wounded on the knee.
-The seventh forester cried out, "The next flight will
-kill him," but little chance did the outlaw give them for
-such an easy victory. He set his back against an oak
-and propped his wounded leg upon a stone; with bow
-or with sword he was a better man by far than any of his
-foes.
-
-In the short, sharp fight that followed, he killed six of
-the foresters, some with arrow, and some with steel;
-and when the seventh turned to flee, Johnie seized him
-from behind and threw him on to the ground with a force
-that broke three of his ribs. Then he laid him on his
-steed, and bade him carry the tidings home.
-
-.. _`Johnie of Breadislee.`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-100.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *Johnie of Breadislee*
-
- *Johnie of Breadislee*
-
-But Johnie himself was hurt to death. "Is there no
-bonnie singing bird," he cried, "that can fly to my
-mother's bower and tell her to fetch Johnie away?" A
-starling flew to his mother's window sill, and sang and
-whistled, and the burden of its tune was ever the same.
-"Johnie tarries long." So the men made a litter from
-rods of the hazel bush and of the thorn and fetched
-Johnie away. Then his old mother's tears flowed fast,
-and she said, "Ye would not be warned, my son Johnie,
-to bide away from the hunting. Oft have I brought to
-Breadislee the less or greater gear, but never what grieved
-my heart so sorely. But woe betide that silly old
-grey-headed carle! An ill death shall he die! The highest
-tree in Merriemass shall be his reward."
-
- | "Now Johnie's gude bent bow is brake,
- | And his gude grey dogs are slain,
- | And his body lies dead in Durrisdeer,
- | And his hunting it is done."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Katharine Janfarie`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XVII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Katharine Janfarie
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-This ballad is evidently the original of Sir
-Walter Scott's "Lochinvar," though Sir
-Walter reversed the names of the two leading
-male characters. In "Katharine Janfarie"
-Lochinvar plays the part of the craven bridegroom.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-..
-
- | There was a may,[#] and a weel-far'd may,
- | Lived high up in yon glen;
- | Her name was Katharine Janfarie,
- | She was courted by mony men.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] maiden.
-
-..
-
- | Up there came Lord Lauderdale,
- | Up frae the Lowland Border,
- | And he has come to court this may,
- | A' mounted in good order.
-
- | He told na her father, he told na her mother,
- | And he told na ane o' her kin,
- | But he whispered the bonnie lassie hersell,
- | And has her favour won.
-
- | But out there cam Lord Lochinvar,
- | Out frae the English Border,
- | All for to court this bonny may,
- | Weel mounted, and in order.
-
- | He told her father, he told her mother,
- | And a' the lave[#] o' her kin;
- | But he told na the bonny may hersell,
- | Till on her wedding e'en.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] rest.
-
-..
-
- | She sent to the Lord o' Lauderdale,
- | Gin[#] he wad come and see,
- | And he has sent back word again,
- | Weel answered he suld[#] be.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] if.
-[#] should.
-
-..
-
- | And he has sent a messenger
- | Right quickly through the land,
- | And raised mony an armed man
- | To be at his command.
-
- | The bride looked out at a high window,
- | Beneath baith dale and down,
- | And she was aware of her first true love,
- | With riders mony a one.
-
- | She scoffed him, and scorned him,
- | Upon her wedding-day;
- | And said, "It was the Fairy Court,
- | To see him in array!
-
- | "O come ye here to fight, young lord,
- | Or come ye here to play?
- | Or come ye here to drink good wine,
- | Upon the wedding-day?"
-
- | "I come na here to fight," he said,
- | "I come na here to play,
- | I'll but lead a dance wi' the bonny bride,
- | And mount, and go my way."
-
- | It is a glass of the blood-red wine
- | Was filled up them between,
- | And aye she drank to Lauderdale,
- | Wha[#] her true love had been.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] who.
-
-..
-
- | He's taen[#] her by the milk-white hand,
- | And by the grass-green sleeve;
- | He's mounted her hie behind himsell,
- | At her kinsmen speired[#] na leave.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] taken.
-[#] asked.
-
-..
-
- | "Now take your bride, Lord Lochinvar!
- | Now take her if ye may!
- | But if you take your bride again,
- | We'll call it but foul play."
-
- | There were four-and-twenty bonnie boys,
- | A' clad in the Johnstone grey;
- | They said they would take the bride again,
- | By the strong hand, if they may.
-
- | Some o' them were right willing men,
- | But they were na willing a';
- | And four-and-twenty Leader lads
- | Bid them mount and ride awa'.
-
- | Then whingers flew frae gentles' sides,
- | And swords flew frae the shea's,[#]
- | And red and rosy was the blood
- | Ran down the lily braes.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] sheathes.
-
-..
-
- | The blood ran down by Caddon bank,
- | And down by Caddon brae,
- | And, sighing, said the bonnie bride—
- | "O wae's me for foul play."
-
- | My blessing on your heart, sweet thing!
- | Wae to your wilfu' will!
- | There's mony a gallant gentleman
- | Whae's bluid ye have garred[#] to spill.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] caused.
-
-..
-
- | Now a' the lords of fair England,
- | And that dwell by the English Border,
- | Come never here to seek a wife,
- | For fear of sic[#] disorder.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] such.
-
-..
-
- | They'll track ye up, and settle ye bye,
- | Till on your wedding-day;
- | Then gie ye frogs instead of fish,
- | And play ye foul foul play.
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- LOCHINVAR
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-In Sir Walter Scott's poem, Lochinvar is the hero,
-and the story has a happier ending. The song was
-supposed to have been sung to James IV. by Lady
-Heron at Holyrood shortly before the fatal battle of
-Flodden.
-
- | O young Lochinvar has come out of the west,
- | Through all the wide border his steel was the best;
- | And save his good broadsword, he weapons had none,
- | He rode all unarmed, and he rode all alone,
- | So faithful in love, and so dauntless in war,
- | There never was knight like the young Lochinvar.
-
- | He staid not for brake, and he stopped not for stone,
- | He swam the Eske river where ford there was none,
- | But ere he alighted at Netherby gate,
- | The bride had consented, the gallant came late;
- | For a laggard in love, and a dastard in war,
- | Was to wed the fair Ellen of brave Lochinvar.
-
- | So boldly he entered the Netherby Hall,
- | Among bride's men, and kinsmen, and brothers, and all,
- | Then spoke the bride's father, his hand on his sword
- | (For the poor craven bridegroom said never a word),
- | "O come ye in peace here, or come ye in war,
- | Or to dance at our bridal, young Lord Lochinvar?"
-
- | "I long wooed your daughter, my suit you denied;
- | Love swells like the Solway, but ebbs like its tide,
- | And now am I come, with this lost love of mine,
- | To lead but one measure, drink one cup of wine,
- | There are maidens in Scotland, more lovely by far,
- | That would gladly be bride to the young Lochinvar."
-
- | The bride kissed the goblet; the knight took it up,
- | He quaffed off the wine, and he threw down the cup.
- | She looked down to blush, and she looked up to sigh,
- | With a smile on her lips, and a tear in her eye.
- | He took her soft hand, ere her mother could bar,
- | "Now tread we a measure!" said young Lochinvar.
-
- | So stately her form, and so lovely her face,
- | That never a hall such a galliard did grace;
- | While her brother did fret, and her father did fume,
- | And the bridgroom stood dangling his bonnet and plume,
- | And the bride-maidens whispered, "'Twere better by far,
- | To have matched our fair cousin with young Lochinvar."
-
- | One touch to her hand, and one word in her ear,
- | When they reached the hall-door, and the charger stood near;
- | So light to the croupe the fair lady he swung,
- | So light to the saddle before her he sprung!
- | "She is won! we have gone over bank, bush, and scaur;
- | They'll have fleet steeds that follow," quoth young Lochinvar.
-
- | There was mounting 'mong Graemes of the Netherby clan;
- | Fosters, Fenwicks, and Musgraves, they rode and they ran,
- | There was racing and chasing, on Cannobie Lee,
- | But the lost bride of Netherby ne'er did they see.
- | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war,
- | Have ye e'er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar?
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`By Lauder Bridge`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XVIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- By Lauder Bridge
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Ancient Royal Burgh of Lauder, a quaint
-little border town with hardly more than one
-street, is on the banks of the river Leader, on
-the high road between Edinburgh and Kelso. It stands
-very picturesquely, among the bold hills and fine woods
-of Berwickshire, and the valley is called Lauderdale,
-extending to where the Leader joins the Tweed, just
-below Melrose. Peacefully beautiful is the spot; and
-yet it was once the scene of a harsh, grim tragedy.
-
-It was in the reign of King James III. of Scotland,
-who offended his subjects in two particulars.
-
-First, to get wealth for himself, he mixed brass and lead
-with his silver money, and put it into circulation as pure
-silver; next, he chose favourites from the common people,
-and set these above the proud noblemen of Scotland.
-
-This latter would not have been so bad a fault if the
-king had always chosen wisely; but, as often in such
-cases, he was led by flatterers rather than by worthy men.
-
-In 1482 the king declared war against England, and,
-as in these warlike days the nobles were the leaders
-of the army, this brought the discontented lords
-together.
-
-When the Scottish army reached Lauder in their
-southward march, the proud nobles met in Lauder
-church; all were angry with the king, yet each was
-afraid to make the first move. So Lord Gray told them
-a mocking fable.
-
-"Do you remember," said he, "how all the mice got
-together and agreed that it would be a splendid thing if a
-bell were hung round the cat's neck, so that wherever
-she went she could be heard; the only difficulty was
-to find a mouse to bell the cat!"
-
-These warlike nobles did not like to be spoken of
-as if they were mice, and it roused them to deeper rage.
-
-Then out spoke Archibald Douglas, Earl of Angus, the
-head of the younger branch of the Douglas family.
-"Trust me, I'll bell the cat!"
-
-There was a knock at the door; Cochrane, the architect,
-whom the nobles said had been a mason, but was now the
-king's chief favourite, entered, dressed in black velvet,
-with a heavy chain of gold round his neck, a horn of gold
-tipped with precious stones, and all his attire of the
-costliest. Angus caught the chain in his hands and said,
-"A rope would suit that neck better!"
-
-Then the nobles laid violent hands on all the king's
-low-born favourites and hanged them by the bridge of
-Lauder, in front of the king's very eyes! Cochrane
-was proud and brave to the last. He said that as the
-king had made him an earl he should be hanged with a
-rope made of silk; little did the nobles care for his
-protests, the halter of a horse was in their opinion good
-enough for him.
-
-From this time onward the headstrong Earl of
-Angus was known by the nick-name of "Bell-the-Cat." It
-may be taken for granted that neither he nor
-the nobles who supported him would have dared to
-act so arrogantly and violently unless they felt quite
-sure that the king had not the power to punish them.
-He returned sullenly to Edinburgh, more the captive
-of the nobles than their master.
-
-A parliament appointed the Duke of Albany lieutenant-general
-of the kingdom, but he in turn soon lost favour,
-for he was suspected of too great a friendship for Edward
-IV., King of England, and fled for safety to France,
-giving James another chance to govern his kingdom for
-himself.
-
-This weak and unhappy monarch, however, was not
-destined to have much peace. Before very long,
-another quarrel with his nobles led to their taking up
-arms with a view of deposing him and placing his son on
-the throne. The king and his nobles met in battle near
-Stirling, but, at the very beginning of the fight, James
-was thrown from his horse and stabbed by a soldier,
-whose name remained unknown. Thus died this weak
-but amiable and unfortunate king.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Battle of Flodden Field`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XIX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Battle of Flodden Field
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-One of the most tragic episodes in the History
-of the Borders was the battle of Flodden Field,
-when the flower of the Scottish nobility fell
-around their sovereign, James IV., while fighting against
-the English under Surrey.
-
-The causes of the war were many. Henry of England
-refused to give up the jewels which had been promised
-as the dowry of his sister Margaret on her marriage with
-James IV.
-
-The Lord High Admiral of England, Sir Edmund
-Howard, had attacked and taken two Scottish ships, and
-slain their captain, Sir Andrew Barton. James, who
-was fond of Barton, demanded redress, but Henry
-insolently replied that kings should not quarrel about
-pirates.
-
-But the immediate cause was the friendship between
-France and Scotland. Henry was preparing for war
-with France, and James stood by his ally, declaring that
-if Henry warred with France, he would lead an army
-into England. The Queen of France sent James a
-turquoise ring, asking him to carry out his threat to
-serve her interests.
-
-James had been warned that his action would have
-terrible consequences. A man appeared to him at
-Linlithgow, clad in a long blue gown, with bare head, and
-carrying a pikestaff, and having told the king that his
-dead mother had sent him to warn him not to go to
-war against England, he disappeared as suddenly as he
-had come.
-
-Also at the dead of night a voice had been heard
-proclaiming aloud at the market Cross in Edinburgh the
-names of those who, within forty days, would be no more.
-It was thought at the time that these happenings were
-instigated by Queen Margaret, but the king still
-persisted in his policy, and led his army across the Border,
-in spite of the warnings of his counsellors and his queen.
-
-A fine description of his army is given by Sir Walter
-Scott, when Lord Marmion watches the scene from
-Blackford Hill.
-
-
- | "Thousand pavilions, white as snow,
- | Spread all the Borough-moor below,
- | Upland, and dale, and down:—
- | A thousand, did I say? I ween,
- | Thousands and thousands, there were seen,
- | That chequer'd all the heath between
- | The streamlet and the town;
- | In crossing ranks extending far,
- | Forming a camp irregular;
- | Oft giving way, where still there stood
- | Some relics of the old oak wood,
- | That darkly huge did intervene,
- | And tamed the glaring white with green,
- | In these extended lines there lay,
- | A martial kingdom's vast array.
-
- | For from Hebudes, dark with rain,
- | To eastern Lodon's fertile plain,
- | And from the southern Redswire edge,
- | To farthest Rosse's rocky ledge,
- | From west to east, from south to north,
- | Scotland sent all her warriors forth,
- | Marmion might hear the mingled hum,
- | Of myriads up the mountain come;
- | The horses' tramp, and tingling clank,
- | Where chiefs reviewed their vassal rank,
- | And charger's shrilling neigh;
- | And see the shifting lines advance
- | Whilst frequent flash'd, from shield and lance,
- | The sun's reflected ray.
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | They saw, slow rolling on the plain,
- | Full many a baggage-cart and wain,
- | And dire artillery's clumsy car.
- | By sluggish oxen tugg'd to war;
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | Nor mark'd they less, where in the air
- | A thousand streamers flaunted fair,
- | Various in shape, device, and hue,
- | Green, sanguine, purple, red, and blue,
- | Broad, narrow, swallow-tailed, and square,
- | Scroll, pennon, pensil, bandrol,[#] there
- | O'er the pavilions flew.
- | Highest and midmost, was descried
- | The royal banner floating wide;
- | The staff, a pine-tree, strong and straight,
- | Pitch'd deeply in a massive stone,
- | Which still in memory is shown,
- | Yet bent beneath the standard's weight.
- | Whene'er the western breeze unroll'd,
- | With toil, the huge and cumbrous fold,
- | And gave to view the dazzling field,
- | Where, in proud Scotland's royal shield,
- | The ruddy lion ramp'd in gold."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Each feudal ensign intimated the rank of those who displayed
-them.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Marmion wondered that with such a glorious army at
-his back anyone should try to dissuade James from
-battle, yet Sir David Lindesay of the Mount answered
-him,
-
- | "'twere good
- | That Kings would think withal,
- | When peace and wealth their land has bless'd,
- | 'Tis better to sit still at rest,
- | Than rise, perchance to fall."
- |
-
-Men-at-arms were there, sheathed in plate armour,
-with battle-axe and spear, and mounted on Flemish
-steeds. Young knights and squires practised their
-chargers on the plain. Hardy burghers marched on
-foot, armed with long pikes and two-handed swords and
-bright bucklers.
-
-The yeoman, too, was on foot, dressed in steel-jack
-quilted well with iron, and bearing at his back,
-provisions for forty days. He seemed sad of cheer, and
-loth to leave his humble cottage, wondering who would
-till the land during his absence.
-
-There, too, was the Borderer:—
-
- | "bred to war,
- | He knew the battle's din afar,
- | And joy'd to hear it swell.
- | His peaceful day was slothful ease,
- | Nor harp nor pipe his ear could please
- | Like the loud slogan yell."
-
-for
-
- | "War's the Borderer's game,
- | Their gain, their glory, their delight,
- | To sleep the day, maraud the night,
- | O'er mountain, moss, and moor."
-
-.. _`Flodden Field`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-116.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *Flodden Field*
-
- *Flodden Field*
-
-There, too, were the Celts, with savage eyes looking
-out wildly through red and sable hair, with sinewy
-frames and legs bare above the knees, their chiefs known
-by the eagle's plumage. They wore the skin of the red
-deer, a graceful bonnet, and a plaid hung from the
-shoulders, and carried as weapons a broadsword, a
-dagger, and quivers, bows, and shafts.
-
-The Isles-men, too, were there, carrying the ancient
-Danish battle-axe. While the army was mustering
-together, James feasted the chiefs in Holyrood Palace,
-for at dawn they were to march southward.
-
- | "Well loved that splendid monarch aye
- | The banquet and the song,
- | By day the tourney, and by night
- | The merry dance, traced fast and light,
- | The maskers quaint, the pageant bright,
- | The revel loud and long.
- | This feast outshone his banquets past;
- | It was his blithest and his last."
-
- | And hazel was his eagle eye,
- | And auburn of the darkest dye,
- | His short curl'd beard and hair.
- | Light was his footstep in the dance,
- | And firm his stirrup in the lists;
- | And oh! he had that merry glance,
- | That seldom lady's heart resists."
- |
-
-Yet no fair lady was as dear to James as his own
-Queen Margaret, who sat alone in the tower of Linlithgow
-weeping for the war against her native country, and for
-the danger of her lord.
-
-On the morrow, James marched south, crossed the
-Tweed, and encamped on the banks of the Till, near
-Twisel Bridge. The Scottish army moved down the side
-of the Tweed to Flodden Hill taking Norham Castle, and
-the Border towns of Etal, Wark, and Ford. Much time
-was wasted in these petty enterprises, time which should
-have been spent in marching to Newcastle before the
-English were prepared to offer resistance. When the
-castle of Ford was stormed, Lady Heron, wife of Sir
-William Heron, then a prisoner in Scotland, was taken,
-and this beautiful and artful woman induced James to
-idle away his time until all chance was lost of defeating
-the enemy.
-
-The army suffered severely from want of provisions,
-and many of the Highlanders and Isles-men returned
-home, many who had come only for booty, deserted,
-and the numbers were reduced to about thirty
-thousand.
-
-Meanwhile, the Earl of Surrey had raised twenty-six
-thousand men, and received other enforcements as he
-came north from Durham. He therefore challenged
-James to fight, and charged him with violating the
-treaty of peace between the two kingdoms.
-
-The Scottish nobles were unwilling to fight, and said it
-was impossible to remain in a country so plundered;
-also, if fight the king must, he would fight to much
-greater advantage in his own country, to whose welfare
-the loss of this battle would be fatal; while he had
-sufficiently indicated his honour by crossing the Border.
-
-James would not listen to the counsel of his nobles,
-though even the aged Earl of Angus expostulated with
-him. To this old warrior he angrily said, "Angus, if you
-are afraid, you may go home," at which insult the aged
-Earl burst into tears.
-
-The English army crossed the Till by Twisel Bridge
-and pressed on while the Scottish army stood idly by,
-the Scottish nobles in vain entreating the king to attack
-the English while they were crossing.
-
-When the English army had drawn up in order of
-battle on the left bank of the river, the Scots, setting fire
-to their temporary huts, came down the ridge of Flodden.
-The clouds of smoke from the burning huts were driven
-into the face of the English, so that the Scots had got to
-within a quarter of a mile of them before they perceived
-them.
-
- | "No martial shout, nor minstrel tone,
- | Announced their march; their tread alone,
- | At times one warning trumpet blown,
- | At times a stifled hum,
- | Told England, from his mountain-throne,
- | King James did rushing come:
- | Scarce could they hear or see their foes
- | Until at weapon-point they close."
- |
-
-With clanging blows and arrows that fell like rain, with
-yelling and clamour and sword-sway and lance-thrust,
-the battle continued until the evening, and when even
-fell, the Scots still fought in an unbroken ring round their
-king. But when darkness came, and Surrey withdrew
-his men, the flower of Scotland's chivalry had fallen, and
-the king lay dead on the field.
-
- | "Afar, the royal standard flies,
- | And round it toils and bleeds and dies.
- | Our Caledonian pride!"
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | But yet, though thick the shafts as now,
- | Though charging knights like whirlwinds go,
- | Though billmen ply the ghastly bow,
- | Unbroken was the ring.
- | The stubborn spearmen still made good
- | Their dark impenetrable wood,
- | Each stepping where his comrade stood
- | The instant that he fell.
- | No thought was there of dastard flight:
- | Link'd in the serried phalanx tight,
- | Groom fought like noble, squire like knight,
- | As fearlessly and well;
- | Till utter darkness closed her wing
- | O'er their thin host and wounded King.
- | Then skilful Surrey's sage commands
- | Led back from strife his shattered bands;
- | And from the charge they drew,
- | As mountain-waves, from wasted lands,
- | Sweep back to ocean blue.
- | Then did their loss his foemen know;
- | Their King, their lords, their mightiest low,
- | They melted from the field as snow,
- | When streams are swoln and south winds blow
- | Dissolves in silent dew.
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | Still from the sire the son shall hear
- | Of the stern fight and carnage drear
- | Of Flodden's fatal field,
- | Where shiver'd was fair Scotland's spear,
- | And broken was her shield!
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | And well in death his trusty brand,
- | Firm clench'd within his manly hand
- | Beseem'd the Monarch slain."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`After Flodden`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- After Flodden
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-So deeply did the tragic result of Flodden touch
-the hearts of the Scottish people that no Scot
-could for many a long day hear it mentioned
-without a heart-thrill.
-
-Many are the songs written about it, the most famous
-perhaps, being the "Flowers of the Forest," written
-two centuries later, though partly founded upon an older
-and almost forgotten song.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-..
-
- | I've heard them lilting, at our ewe-milking,
- | Lasses a' lilting, before dawn o' day;
- | But now they are moaning on ilka green loaning[#]
- | The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] a broad grassy lane used as milking-ground.
-
-..
-
- | At bughts, in the morning, nae blythe lads are scorning;[#]
- | The lasses are lonely, and dowie, and wae;
- | Wae daffing,[#] nae gabbing,[#] but sighing and sabbing;
- | Ilk ane lifts her leglin,[#] and hies her away.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] rallying.
-[#] joking.
-[#] chatting.
-[#] milking-pail.
-
-..
-
- | In hair'st, at the shearing, nae youths now are jeering,
- | The bandsters[#] are runkled,[#] and lyart[#] or gray;
- | At fair, or at preaching, nae wooing, nae fleeching;[#]
- | The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] sheaf-binders.
-[#] wrinkled.
-[#] inclining to grey.
-[#] coaxing.
-
-..
-
- | At e'en, in the gloaming, nae younkers are roaming
- | 'Bout stacks with the lasses at bogle to play;
- | But ilk maid sits dreary, lamenting her deary—
- | The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
- | Dool and wae for the order, sent our lads to the Border!
- | The English, for ance, by guile wan the day:
- | The Flowers of the Forest, that fought aye the foremost,
- | The prime of our land, are cauld in the clay.
-
- | We'll hear nae mair lilting at the ewe-milking;
- | Women and bairns are heartless and wae:
- | Sighing and moaning on ilka green loaning—
- | The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
- | JEAN ELLIOT (1727-1805).
- |
-
-The following poem also gives eloquent and touching
-expression to the deep gloom which descended upon
-the Border after the fatal battle, and tells of the despair
-felt in almost every Ettrick home:—
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- SELKIRK AFTER FLODDEN
-
-.. class:: center
-
- (A WIDOW'S DIRGE, OCTOBER 1513)
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-..
-
- | It's but a month the morn
- | Sin' a' was peace and plenty;
- | Oor hairst was halflins shorn,
- | Eident men and lasses denty.
- | But noo it's a' distress—
- | Never mair a merry meetin ';
- | For half the bairns are faitherless,
- | And a' the women greetin'.
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | Miles and miles round Selkirk toun,
- | Where forest flow'rs are fairest,
- | Ilka lassie's stricken doun,
- | Wi' the fate that fa's the sairest.
- | A' the lads they used to meet
- | By Ettrick braes or Yarrow
- | Lyin' thrammelt head and feet
- | In Brankstone's deadly barrow!
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | Frae every cleuch and clan
- | The best o' the braid Border
- | Rose like a single man
- | To meet the royal order.
- | Oor Burgh toun itsel'
- | Sent its seventy doun the glen;
- | Ask Fletcher[#] how they fell,
- | Bravely fechtin', ane to ten!
- | O Flodden Field!
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] This was the man who brought an English flag back to Selkirk
-from Flodden. Four brothers of that name are said to have perished
-in the battle.
-
-..
-
- | Round about their gallant king,
- | For country and for croun,
- | Stude the dauntless Border ring,
- | Till the last was hackit doun.
- | I blame na what has been—
- | They maun fa' that canna flee—
- | But oh, to see what I hae seen,
- | To see what now I see!
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | The souters a' fu' croose,
- | O'er their leather and their lingle,
- | Wi' their shoon in ilka hoose,
- | Sat contentit round the ingle.
- | Noo there's naething left but dool,—
- | Never mair their work will cheer them;
- | In Flodden's bluidy pool
- | They'll neither wait nor wear them!
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | Whar the weavers used to meet,
- | In ilka bieldy corner,
- | Noo there's nane in a' the street,
- | Savin' here and there a mourner,
- | Walkin' lonely as a wraith,
- | Or if she meet anither,
- | Just a word below their braith
- | O' some slauchtered son or brither!
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | There stands the gudeman's loom
- | That used tae gang sae cheerie,
- | Untentit noo, and toom,
- | Makin' a' the hoose sae eerie,
- | Till the sicht I canna dree;
- | For the shuttles lyin' dumb
- | Speak the loudlier to me
- | O' him that wunna come.
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | Sae at nicht I cover't o'er,
- | Just to haud it frae my een,
- | But I haena yet the pow'r
- | To forget what it has been;
- | And I listen through the hoose
- | For the chappin o' the lay,
- | Till the scrapin' o' a moose
- | Tak's my very braith away.
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | Then I turn to sister Jean,
- | And my airms aboot her twine,
- | And I kiss her sleepless een,
- | For her heart's as sair as mine,—
- | A heart ance fu' o' fun,
- | And hands that ne'er were idle,
- | Wi' a' her cleedin' spun
- | Against her Jamie's bridal.
- | O Flodden Field!
-
- | Noo we've naether hands nor hairt—
- | In oor grief the wark's forgotten,
- | Though it's wantit every airt,
- | And the craps are lyin' rotten.
- | War's awsome blast's gane bye,
- | And left a land forlorn;
- | In daith's dool hairst they lie,
- | The shearers and the shorn.
- | O Flodden Field.
-
- | Wi' winter creepin' near us,
- | When the nichts are drear and lang,
- | Nane to help us, nane to hear us,
- | On the weary gate we gang!
- | Lord o' the quick an' deed,
- | Sin' oor ain we canna see,
- | In mercy mak gude speed,
- | And bring us whar they be,
- | Far, far, frae Flodden Field!
- | "J. B. Selkirk" (JAMES B. BROWN).
- | *By permission of W. Cuthbertson, Esq.*
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Another lyric, relating to the fatal battle of Flodden,
-refers to the gallantry of the Souters, or shoemakers of
-Selkirk, who, to the number of eighty, and headed by
-their town-clerk, joined the army as it entered England.
-They distinguished themselves greatly, and few returned.
-The "yellow and green" are the liveries of the house
-of Home, taxed by some with being the cause of the
-defeat.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- THE SOUTERS OF SELKIRK
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-..
-
- | Up wi' the Souters of Selkirk,
- | And doun wi' the Earl of Home;
- | And up wi' a' the braw lads
- | That sew the single-soled shoon.
-
- | Fye upon yellow and yellow,
- | And fye upon yellow and green,
- | But up wi' the true blue and scarlet,
- | And up wi' the single-soled sheen.
-
- | Up wi' the Souters of Selkirk,
- | For they are baith trusty and leal;
- | And up wi' the men o' the Forest,
- | And doun wi' the Merse to the deil.
- |
-
-In Aytoun's "Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers," the
-following well-known poem tells how the news of the
-disaster at Flodden Field was received in Edinburgh:—
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- EDINBURGH AFTER FLODDEN
-
-.. class:: center
-
- \I
-
-..
-
- | News of battle! news of battle!
- | Hark! 'tis ringing down the street:
- | And the archways and the pavement
- | Bear the clang of hurrying feet.
- | News of battle! Who hath brought it?
- | News of triumph! Who should bring
- | Tidings from our noble army,
- | Greetings from our gallant King?
- | All last night we watched the beacons
- | Blazing on the hills afar,
- | Each one bearing, as it kindled,
- | Message of the opened war.
- | All night long the northern streamers
- | Shot across the trembling sky:
- | Fearful lights that never beckon
- | Save when kings or heroes die.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- II
-
-..
-
- | News of battle! Who hath brought it?
- | All are thronging to the gate;
- | "Warder—warder! open quickly!
- | Man—is this a time to wait?"
- | And the heavy gates are opened;
- | Then a murmur long and loud,
- | And a cry of fear and wonder
- | Bursts from out the bending crowd.
- | For they see in battered harness
- | Only one hard-stricken man;
- | And his weary steed is wounded,
- | And his cheek is pale and wan.
- | Spearless hangs a bloody banner
- | In his weak and drooping hand—
- | God! can that be Randolph Murray,
- | Captain of the city band?
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- III
-
-..
-
- | Round him crush the people, crying,
- | "Tell us all—oh, tell us true!
- | Where are they who went to battle,
- | Randolph Murray, sworn to you?
- | Where are they, our brothers—children?
- | Have they met the English foe?
- | Why art thou alone, unfollowed?
- | Is it weal, or is it woe?"
- | Like a corpse the grisly warrior
- | Looks from out his helm of steel;
- | But no word he speaks in answer—
- | Only with his armèd heel
- | Chides his weary steed, and onward
- | Up the city streets they ride;
- | Fathers, sisters, mothers, children,
- | Shrieking, praying by his side.
- | "By the God that made thee, Randolph!
- | Tell us what mischance hath come."
- | Then he lifts his riven banner,
- | And the asker's voice is dumb.
-
-.. _`"Tell us all—oh, tell us true!"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-126.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "*Tell us all—oh, tell us true!*"
-
- "*Tell us all—oh, tell us true!*"
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- IV
-
-..
-
- | The elders of the city
- | Have met within their hall—
- | The men whom good King James had charged
- | To watch the tower and wall.
- | "Your hands are weak with age," he said,
- | "Your hearts are stout and true;
- | So bide ye in the maiden town,
- | While others fight for you.
- | My trumpet from the Border-side
- | Shall send a blast so clear,
- | That all who wait within the gate
- | That stirring sound may hear.
- | Or, if it be the will of Heaven
- | That back I never come,
- | And if, instead of Scottish shout,
- | Ye hear the English drum,
- | Then let the warning bells ring out,
- | Then gird you to the fray,
- | Then man the walls like burghers stout,
- | And fight while fight you may.
- | 'Twere better that in fiery flame
- | The roofs should thunder down,
- | Than that the foot of foreign foe
- | Should trample in the town!"
-
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- \V
-
-..
-
- | Then in came Randolph Murray,
- | His step was slow and weak,
- | And, as he doffed his dinted helm,
- | The tears ran down his cheek:
- | They fell upon his corslet
- | And on his mailed hand,
- | As he gazed around him wistfully,
- | Leaning sorely on his brand.
- | And none who then beheld him
- | But straight were smote with fear,
- | For a bolder and a sterner man
- | Had never couched a spear.
- | They knew so sad a messenger
- | Some ghastly news must bring;
- | And all of them were fathers,
- | And their sons were with the King.
-
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- VI
-
-..
-
- | And up then rose the Provost—
- | A brave old man was he,
- | Of ancient name, and knightly fame,
- | And chivalrous degree.
- | He ruled our city like a Lord
- | Who brooked no equal here,
- | And ever for the townsmen's rights
- | Stood up 'gainst prince and peer.
- | And he had seen the Scottish host
- | March from the Borough muir,
- | With music-storm and clamorous shout,
- | And all the din that thunders out
- | When youth's of victory sure.
- | But yet a dearer thought had he;—
- | For, with a father's pride,
- | He saw his last remaining son
- | Go forth by Randolph's side,
- | With casque on head and spur on heel,
- | All keen to do and dare;
- | And proudly did that gallant boy
- | Dunedin's banner bear.
- | Oh! woeful now was the old man's look,
- | And he spake right heavily—
- | "Now, Randolph, tell thy tidings,
- | However sharp they be!
- | Woe is written on thy visage,
- | Death is looking from thy face;
- | Speak! though it be of overthrow—
- | It cannot be disgrace!"
-
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- VII
-
-..
-
- | Right bitter was the agony
- | That wrung that soldier proud;
- | Thrice did he strive to answer,
- | And thrice he groaned aloud.
- | Then he gave the riven banner
- | To the old man's shaking hand,
- | Saying—"That is all I bring ye
- | From the bravest of the land!
- | Ay! ye may look upon it—
- | It was guarded well and long,
- | By your brothers and your children,
- | By the valiant and the strong.
- | One by one they fell around it,
- | As the archers laid them low,
- | Grimly dying, still unconquered,
- | With their faces to the foe.
- | Ay! ye may well look upon it—
- | There is more than honour there,
- | Else, be sure, I had not brought it
- | From the field of dark despair.
- | Never yet was royal banner
- | Steeped in such a costly dye;
- | It hath lain upon a bosom
- | Where no other shroud shall lie.
- | Sirs! I charge you, keep it holy;
- | Keep it as a sacred thing,
- | For the stain ye see upon it
- | Was the life-blood of your King!"
-
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- VIII
-
-..
-
- | Woe and woe and lamentation!
- | What a piteous cry was there!
- | Widows, maidens, mothers, children,
- | Shrieking, sobbing in despair!
- | Through the streets the death-word rushes,
- | Spreading terror, sweeping on.
- | "Jesu Christ! our King has fallen—
- | O Great God, King James is gone!
- | Holy mother Mary, shield us,
- | Thou who erst did lose thy Son!
- | O the blackest day for Scotland
- | That she ever knew before!
- | O our King—the good, the noble,
- | Shall we see him never more?
- | Woe to us, and woe to Scotland!
- | O our sons, our sons and men!
- | Surely some have 'scaped the Southron,
- | Surely some will come again!"
- |
-
-Randolph Murray describes how the monarch lies
-dead on the field with his nobles round him.
-
- | "All so thick they lay together,
- | When the stars lit up the sky,
- | That I knew not who were stricken,
- | Or who yet remained to die."
- |
-
-A hollow knell is rung and the miserere is sung,
-and all is terror and disorder until the Provost rouses
-them.
-
- | "If our King be taken from us,
- | We are left to guard his son.
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | Up! and haste ye through the city,
- | Stir the burghers stout and true!
- | Gather all our scattered people,
- | Fling the banner out once more—
- | Randolph Murray! do thou bear it,
- | As it erst was borne before:
- | Never Scottish heart will leave it,
- | When they see their monarch's gore!"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Graeme and Bewick`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Graeme and Bewick
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Good Lord Graeme and Sir Robert Bewick were
-friends. They met one day in Carlisle, and
-went arm in arm to the wine, and, as was too
-oft the custom of these days, they stayed and drank till
-they were both merry. Good Lord Graeme took up the
-cup. "Sir Robert, and here's to thee!" he said, "and
-here's to our two sons at home, for they like us best in
-our own country."
-
-"O were your son a lad like mine," answered Bewick,
-boastfully, "and learnt some books that he could read,
-they might be two brothers in arms, and lord it over the
-Borderside.
-
- | 'But your son's a lad, and he's but bad,
- | And billie[#] to my son he cannot be.'
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Comrade, or brother-in-arms.
-
-..
-
-You sent him to school, and he would not learn; you
-bought him books, and he would not read!"
-
-Lord Graeme called angrily for the reckoning. "My
-blessing shall he never earn," said he, "till I see how his
-arm can defend his head." He threw down a crown,
-and went to the stable, took his horse, and rode home.
-"Welcome, my old father," said his son, Christie Graeme,
-"but where were ye so long from home?" "I have
-been at Carlisle town, and a shamed man I am by thee,"
-answered his father with a black look; "I have been at
-Carlisle town, where Sir Robert Bewick met me. He
-says you are but a bad, wild youth, and can never be
-billie to his boy. I sent you to the school, and you would
-not learn. I bought you books, and you would not read;
-therefore you shall never have my blessing till I see
-you save your head in fight with young Bewick." "Now
-God forbid, my old father, that ever such a thing should
-be! Billie Bewick was my master, and I his scholar, in
-spite of the pains he wasted in teaching me." "O hold
-thy tongue, thou foolish lad! If thou dost not soon end
-this quarrel, there's my glove, I'll fight with thee myself."
-
-Then Christie Graeme stooped low. "Father, put on
-your glove again, the wind has blown it from your hand."
-
- | "What's that, thou sayst, thou limmer loon?
- | How darest thou stand to speak to me?
- | If thou do not end this quarrel soon,
- | There's my right hand, thou'lt fight with me!"
- |
-
-Then went Christie to his chamber, to consider what
-should happen. Should he fight with his own father, or
-with his brother-in-arms, Bewick?
-
- | "If I should kill my billie dear,
- | God's blessing I shall never win;
- | But if I strike at my auld father,
- | I think 'twould be a mortal sin.
- | But if I kill my billie dear
- | It is God's will, so let it be;
- | But I make a vow, ere I go from home,
- | That I shall be the next man's die."
-
-He put a good old jack or quilted doublet on his back,
-and on his head he put a cap of steel, and well did he
-become them with his sword and buckler by his side!
-
-Now young Bewick had taken his father's sword under
-his arm, and walked about his father's close. He looked
-between himself and the sun, to see some approaching
-object, and was aware of a man in bright armour, riding
-that way most hastily.
-
- | "O who is yon, that comes this way,
- | So hastily that hither came?
- | I think it be my brother dear,
- | I think it be young Christie Graeme.
- | Your welcome here, my billie dear,
- | And thrice you're welcome unto me."
- |
-
-Christie explained that he was come to fight, that his
-father had been to Carlisle, and had met with the elder
-Bewick. He retailed what had passed, "and so I'll never
-earn my father's blessing, till he sees how my arm can
-guard my head in fight against thee."
-
- | "O God forbid, my billie dear,
- | That ever such a thing should be!
- | We'll take three men on either side,
- | And see if we can our fathers agree."
- |
-
-Christie shook his head. He knew that it was useless.
-"O hold thy tongue, billie Bewick. If thou'rt a man, as
-I'm sure thou art, come over the dyke and fight with me."
-
-"But I have no harness, billie, as I see you have."
-
-"As little harness as is on your back shall be on mine."
-
-With that Christie threw off his coat of mail and cap of
-steel, stuck his spear into the ground, and tied his horse
-up to a tree. Bewick threw off his cloak, and cast aside
-his psalter book. He laid his hand upon the dyke, and
-vaulted over. The two fought for two long hours. The
-sweat dropped fast from them both, but not a drop of
-blood could be seen to satisfy the requirements of honour.
-At last Graeme hit Bewick under the left breast, and he
-fell to the ground wounded mortally.
-
- | "Rise up, rise up, now, billie dear,
- | Arise and speak three words to me!
- | Whether thou's gotten thy deadly wound,
- | Or if God and good leeching[#] may succour thee?"
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Doctoring.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Bewick groaned. "Get to horse, billie Graeme, and
-get thee hence speedily. Get thee out of this country—that
-none may know who has done this." "O have I
-slain thee, billie Bewick? But I made a vow, ere I
-came from home, that I would be the next man to
-die!" Thereupon he pitched his sword hilt downwards into a
-mole-hill, took a run of some three and twenty feet, and
-on his own sword's point he fell to the ground dead.
-
-Then up came Sir Robert Bewick. "Rise up, my
-son," he said, "for I think you have got the victory."
-
-"O hold your tongue, my father dear. Let me be
-spared your prideful talking. You might have drunken
-your wine in peace, and let me and my billie be! Go
-dig a grave, both wide and deep, and a grave to hold us
-both; but lay Christie Graeme on the sunny side, for
-full sure I know that the victory was to him."
-
-"Alas," cried old Bewick, "I've lost the liveliest
-lad that ever was born unto my name." "Alas," quoth
-good Lord Graeme, "my loss is the greater.
-
- | 'I've lost my hopes, I've lost my joy,
- | I've lost the key, but and the lock;
- | I durst have ridden the world around,
- | Had Christie Graeme been at my back!'"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Song of the Outlaw Murray`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Song of the Outlaw Murray
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "Word is gone to our noble king,
- | In Edinburgh where that he lay,
- | That there was an Outlaw in Ettrick Forest
- | Counted him nought, nor all his Court so gay."
- |
-
-The King mentioned in the ballad is supposed
-to have been either James IV. or James V.
-This places the date somewhere in the early
-part of the sixteenth century.
-
-The Outlaw Murray and his lady kept royal state in
-Ettrick Forest. Here he lived with five hundred men,
-all gaily clad in livery of Lincoln green. His castle,
-built of lime and stone, stood fair and pleasantly in the
-midst of the Forest, surrounded by pine trees under
-which wandered many a hart and hind, many a doe and
-roe and other wild creatures. In the forefront of the
-castle stood two unicorns, with the picture of a knight
-and lady with green holly above their brows.
-
-The King in Edinburgh heard of all this royal state
-and that the Outlaw in Ettrick Forest cared nought for
-the King of Scotland and his court.
-
-"I make a vow," said the King, "that either I shall be
-King of Ettrick Forest, or the Outlaw shall be King of
-Scotland."
-
-Then up spoke Lord Hamilton to the noble King, "my
-sovereign prince, take counsel of your nobles and of me.
-I counsel ye to send to the fine Outlaw and see if he will
-come and be your man and hold the Forest in fee from
-you. If he refuse, we will conquer both him and his
-lands, throw his castle down, and make a widow of his
-gay lady."
-
-Then the King called to him James Boyd, son of the
-Earl of Arran, and when Boyd came and knelt before him,
-"Welcome, James Boyd," said the noble King; "you
-must go for me to Ettrick Forest where bides yonder
-Outlaw, ask him of whom he holds his lands, and who is
-his master, and desire him to come and be my man, and
-hold the Forest free from me. I will give him safe
-warrant to and from Edinburgh, and if he refuse we will
-conquer him and his lands, and throw down his castle,
-and make a widow of his gay lady; and hang his merry
-men pair by pair wherever we see them."
-
-James Boyd took leave of the King and went blithely
-on his way, until he came to the fair Ettrick Forest, the
-first view of which he got coming down Birkendale Brae.
-He saw the doe and roe, the hart and hind and wild
-beasts in plenty, and heard blows ringing boldly, and
-arrows whizzing near by him.
-
-He saw, too, the fair castle, the like of which he had
-never seen before, with the two gay unicorns on the
-forefront, and the picture of the knight and lady with the
-green holly above their brow.
-
-Then he spied the five hundred men, all clad in livery
-of Lincoln green, and shooting with their bows on
-Newark Lee. In the midst of them was a knight armed
-from head to foot, mounted on a milk-white steed, with
-bended bow, all fine to look upon; whom Boyd knew
-at once to be the Outlaw himself.
-
-"God save thee, brave Outlaw Murray, thy lady, and
-all thy chivalry!"
-
-"Marry, thou art welcome, gentleman; thou seemst
-to be a King's messenger."
-
-"The King of Scotland sent me here, good Outlaw,
-to know of whom you hold your lands, and who is your
-master."
-
-"These lands are *mine*. I know no King in
-Christendom. I won this Forest from the English when
-neither the King nor his knights were there to see."
-
-"The King desires that you come to Edinburgh, and
-hold the Forest then of him. If you refuse, he will
-conquer your lands and you, and he has vowed to throw
-down your castle, make a widow of your gay lady, and
-hang your knights pair by pair wherever he finds them."
-
-"Ay, by my troth! I should indeed be far behind.
-Before the King should get my fair native land, many of
-his nobles would be cold, and their ladies right weary."
-
-Then spoke the lady of the Outlaw, fair of face.
-"That an Outlaw should come before the King without
-my consent makes me fear much that there is treason.
-Bid him be good to his lords at home, for my lord shall
-ne'er see Edinburgh."
-
-James Boyd took leave of the bold Outlaw and went
-back to Edinburgh, and when he came to the King, knelt
-lowly on his knee.
-
-"Welcome, James Boyd," said the noble King, "of
-whom is Ettrick Forest held?"
-
-"Ettrick Forest is the fairest forest that ever man
-saw. There are doe and roe and hart and hind and wild
-beasts in plenty; there's a fine castle of lime and stone
-standing there pleasantly, and in the forefront of the
-castle two unicorns all fine to see, with a picture of a
-knight and a lady, and the green holly above their
-brows. There the Outlaw keeps a royal company—five
-hundred merry men, all gaily clad in Lincoln green, and
-the Outlaw and his lady in purple. Surely they live
-right royally. He says that the forest is his own, that
-he won it from the English, and that as he won it, so will
-he keep it against all the Kings in Christendom."
-
-"Go warn me Perthshire and Angus," cried the
-King, "go warn Fife up and down and the three Lothians,
-and harness my own horse, for I will myself to Ettrick
-Forest."
-
-When the Outlaw heard that the King was coming to
-his country to conquer him and his lands:
-
-"I make a vow," said he. "I make a vow, and that
-truly, that the King's coming shall be a dear one."
-
-Then he called messengers and sent them in haste
-hither and thither.
-
-"One of you go to Halliday, Laird of Corehead, my
-sister's son. Tell him to come quickly to my aid, for that
-the King comes to Ettrick Forest, and we shall all be
-landless."
-
-"What news? What news, man, from thy master?"
-said Halliday.
-
-"No news thou carest to hear; I come seeking your
-aid; the King is his mortal enemy."
-
-"By my troth, I am sorry for that; if Murray lose
-fair Ettrick Forest, the King will take Moffatdale from
-me. I'll meet him with five hundred men, and more if
-need be, and before he gets to Ettrick Forest, we will all
-die on Newark Lee."
-
-Another messenger went from the Outlaw to Andrew
-Murray of Cockpool, his dear cousin, to desire him to
-come and help him with all the power he could get together.
-
-"It is hard," said Andrew Murray, "very hard to go
-against a crowned King and put my lands in jeopardy;
-but if I come not by day I shall be there at night."
-
-A messenger went also to Sir James Murray of
-Traquair.
-
-"What news? What news, man, from your master
-to me?" said James Murray.
-
-"What need I tell? Well ye know that the King is
-his mortal enemy and that he is coming to Ettrick Forest
-to make ye all landless men."
-
-"By my troth," said James Murray, "with yonder
-Outlaw will I live and die; the King has long ago given
-away my lands, so matters can be no worse for me."
-
-So the King came on with five thousand men through
-Caddon Ford. They saw the dark forest before them
-and thought it awesome to look upon, and Lord Hamilton
-begged that the King should take counsel of his nobles
-and should desire the Outlaw to meet him at Permanscore
-with four of his company and that the King should
-go there also accompanied by five Earls. "If he refuse
-to do that, we'll conquer both him and his lands; there
-shall never a Murray after him hold lands free in Ettrick
-Forest."
-
-The Laird of Buckscleuth, a man stalwart and stern,
-thought it beneath the state and dignity of a King to
-go and meet an Outlaw. "The man that lives in yonder
-forest, lives by robbery and felony! wherefore, ride on,
-my liege; we will follow thee with fire and sword; or if
-your courtier lords fall back, our Borderers will make the
-onset."
-
-But the King spoke forth, casting a wily glance
-around. "Thou mayest hold *thy* tongue, Sir Walter
-Scott, nor speak more of robbery and felony, for if every
-honest man had his own cattle thy clan would be a poor
-one."
-
-The King then called to him a gentleman, a royal
-banner-bearer, James Hoppringle of Torsonse by name,
-who came and knelt before him. "Welcome, James
-Pringle of Torsonse, ye must take a message for me; go to
-yonder Outlaw Murray, where he bideth so boldly; bid
-him meet me at Permanscore with four of his company,
-I myself will come to him with five Earls. If he
-refuse, bid him look for no favour from me. There shall
-never a Murray after him have free land in Ettrick Forest."
-
-So James Pringle came before the Outlaw. "Welcome
-James Pringle of Torsonse! What message bringst thou
-from the King to me?"
-
-"He bids ye meet him at Permanscore, with four of
-your company, and he will go there himself with no more
-than five Earls. If you refuse, he will cast down your
-bonny castle, make a widow of your gay lady, and loose
-on you the bloodhound Borderers to harry you with fire
-and sword. Never shall a Murray after you hold free
-land in Ettrick Forest."
-
-"It goes hard with me," said the Outlaw; "judge if it
-go not very hard. I mind not the losing of myself, but
-when I think of my offspring after me, my merry men's
-lives, my widow's tears, that is the pang that pinches
-me. Yonder castle will be right dreary when I am laid
-in bloody earth. Auld Halliday, young Halliday, ye
-two shall go with me, with Andrew and James Murray."
-
-When they came before the King they fell on their
-knees. "Mercy, mercy, noble King, for His sake who
-died on the Cross."
-
-"Such mercy shall ye have; ye shall be hanged on the
-gallows."
-
-"May God forbid, and may your mercy be better than
-that, else, when ye come to the port of Edinburgh, ye
-shall be thinly guarded. These lands of fair Ettrick
-Forest I won from the Southrons, and as I won them
-so will I keep them, against all the Kings in
-Christendom."
-
-The nobles round the King thought it a pity that he
-should die.
-
-"Grant me mercy, sovereign prince, and extend me
-favour. If thou wilt make me Sheriff of Ettrick Forest,
-and my offspring after me, I will give thee the keys of
-my castle, and the blessing of my gay lady."
-
-"If thou wilt give me thy castle keys and the blessing
-of thy gay lady, I'll make thee Sheriff of Ettrick Forest
-as long as the trees grow upward, and never shalt thou
-forfeit it, if thou be not a traitor to the King."
-
-"But Prince, what shall become of my men? When
-I go back they will call me traitor. I had rather lose
-both life and land than be rebuked by my merry-men."
-
-"I will pardon them all if they amend their lives.
-Name thy lands where they lie, and I will render them
-back to thee."
-
-"Philiphaugh and Lewinhope are mine by right,
-Newark, Foulshiells and Tinnies I won by my bow and
-arrow. I have farms at Newark Lee and Hangingshaw
-which are mine by birth, and I have many farms in the
-Forest whose names I do not know." Thereupon he
-gave the King the key of his castle, with the blessing of
-his fair lady, and the King made him Sheriff of Ettrick
-Forest for as long as the trees should grow upward,
-never to be forfeited while he and his descendants
-remained faithful to the King. Much of this land belongs
-to Murray's heirs, even to this day.
-
- | "Wha ever heard in, in ony times,
- | Sicken an outlaw in his degré,
- | Sic favour got befor a King,
- | As did the Outlaw Murray of the Foreste free?"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Johnie Armstrong`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Johnie Armstrong
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "When Johnie came before the King,
- | With all his men so brave to see,
- | The King he moved his bonnet to him;
- | He knew he was a King as well as he."
- |
-
-In 1529 James V. visited the Border country to
-execute justice on the wild freebooters.
-Of these the chief was Johnie Armstrong of
-Gilnockie, who levied blackmail for many miles round his
-residence at the Hollows, and spread the terror of his
-name as far as Newcastle. Acting on the evil counsel
-of false friends, Johnie presented himself before the
-King in all the pomp of Border chivalry.
-
-According to the old ballad the King wrote with his
-own hand a loving letter to Johnie Armstrong, Laird of
-Gilnockie, bidding him come and speak with him speedily.
-Whereupon the Elliots and Armstrongs convened a
-meeting, to which they came in gallant company, and
-decided to ride out to meet the King and bring him to
-Gilnockie.
-
-"Make ready rabbits and capon and venison in
-plenty," said Johnie, "and we'll welcome home our
-royal King to dine at Gilnockie."
-
-So they ran out their horses on Langholm Down, and
-broke their spears, and the ladies, looking from their
-high windows, cried "God send our men safe home again."
-
-When Johnie came before the King with all his brave
-fellows, the King took off his bonnet to him as to an
-equal.
-
-"My name is Johnie Armstrong," said the freebooter,
-"your subject, my liege; let me find grace for my loyal
-men and me."
-
-But the King cried, "Away with thee, thou traitor,
-out of my sight! Never have I granted a traitor's life,
-nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a
-bonnie gift—four-and-twenty milk-white steeds, newly
-foaled—I'll give thee four-and-twenty milk-white steeds
-that prance and neigh at a spear, and as much English
-gold as four of their broad backs are able to bear."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight!
-Never have I granted a traitor's life, nor will I now begin
-with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a
-bonnie gift—four-and-twenty mills that are working all
-the year round for me—four-and-twenty mills that shall
-go for thee all the year round, and as much good red
-wheat as all their happers are able to bear."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight!
-Never have I granted a traitor's life, nor will I now begin
-with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a
-great gift—four-and-twenty sisters' sons shall fight for
-thee though all should flee."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight!
-Never have I granted a traitor's life, nor will I now begin
-with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a
-brave gift. All between here and Newcastle town shall
-pay thee yearly rent."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight!
-Never have I granted a traitor's life, nor will I now begin
-with thee!"
-
-"Ye lie, calling me traitor; ye lie now, King, although
-ye be King and Prince. Well dare I say it, that all my
-life I have loved naught but honesty, a fleet horse, a
-fair woman, and two bonny dogs to kill a deer; yet had
-I lived for another hundred years, England should have
-still found me meal and malt and plenty of beef and
-mutton. Never would a Scot's wife have been able to
-say that I robbed her of aught. But surely it is great
-folly to seek for hot water beneath cold ice. I have asked
-grace of a graceless King, but there is none for me and
-my men. But had I known before I came how unkind
-thou wouldst prove to me, I would have kept the Borderside
-in spite of thee and thy nobles. How glad would be
-England's King if he but knew that I was taken, for once
-I slew his sister's son and broke a tree over his breastbone."
-
-Now Johnie had a girdle round his waist embroidered
-and spangled with burning gold, very beautiful to look
-upon, and from his hat hung down nine tassels, each
-worth three hundred pounds. "What wants that
-knave that a King should have, but the sword of honour
-and the crown?" cried the King.
-
-"Where did ye get those tassels, Johnie, that shine
-so bravely above your brow?"
-
-"I got them fighting in the field where thou darest
-not be," replied Johnie. "And had I now my horse and
-good harness, and were I riding as I am used to do, this
-meeting between us should have been told these hundred
-years. God be with thee, my brother Christy, long shalt
-thou live Laird of Mangertown on the Border-side ere thou
-see thy brother ride by again. God be with *thee*, my son
-Christy, where thou sitst on thy nurse's knee; thou'lt
-ne'er be a better man than thy father, though thou live
-a hundred years. Farewell, bonnie Hall of Gilnockie,
-standing strong on Eskside; if I had lived but seven
-more years, I would have gilded thee round about."
-
-Then Johnie Armstrong was slain by the King's orders
-at Carlinrigg with all his gallant company, and Scotland's
-heart was sad to see the death of so many brave men,
-who had saved their country from the Englishmen.
-None were so brave as they, and while Johnie lived on
-the Border-side no Englishman durst come near his
-stronghold.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Lament of the Border Widow`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXIV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Lament of the Border Widow
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-How King James V. of Scotland, in 1529,
-set forth to strike terror into the Border
-freebooters, has been already told in the
-account of Johnie Armstrong. A less celebrated
-moss-trooper, Cockburne of Henderland, was hanged
-by the pitiless King over the gate of his own tower.
-The wife of Cockburne loved him most dearly, and when
-she found the King would show no mercy, fled away
-to the rocks behind the castle whilst the cruel sentence
-was carried out. She sat by a roaring torrent of the
-Henderland burn, the noise of which in her ears drowned
-the savage shouts of the King's soldiers. The beautiful
-song which describes the grief of this loving woman is
-one of the gems of ancient poetry, and is here printed
-entire.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- THE LAMENT OF THE BORDER WIDOW
-
-..
-
- | My love he built me a bonny bower,
- | And clad it a' wi' lilye flower,
- | A brawer bower ye ne'er did see,
- | Than my true love he built for me.
-
- | There came a man by middle day,
- | He spied his sport, and went away;
- | And brought the King that very night,
- | Who brake my bower, and slew my knight.
-
- | He slew my knight to me sae dear;
- | He slew my knight, and took his gear;
- | My servants all for life did flee,
- | And left me in extremitie.
-
- | I sew'd his sheet, making my moan;
- | I watch'd the corpse, myself alone;
- | I watch'd his body, night and day;
- | No living creature came that way.
-
- | I took his body on my back,
- | And whiles I gaed, and whiles I sat;
- | I digg'd a grave, and laid him in,
- | And happ'd him with the sod sae green.
-
- | But think na ye my heart was sair,
- | When I laid the moul' on his yellow hair;
- | O think na ye my heart was wae,
- | When I turn'd about, away to gae?
-
- | Nae living man I'll love again,
- | Since that my lovely knight was slain,
- | Wi' ae lock of his yellow hair,
- | I'll chain my heart for evermair.
-
-.. _`The Border Widow`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-148.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "*I sew'd his sheet, making my moan; I watch'd the corpse, myself alone.*"
-
- "*I sew'd his sheet, making my moan; I watch'd the corpse, myself alone.*"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Raid of the Kers`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Raid of the Kers
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The spirited ballad that describes this raid is
-quite modern, since it was written by Hogg,
-"the Ettrick Shepherd," in 1830. But the
-rash raid it describes took place in 1549. The Kers were
-an important Border family, the leaders of whom
-afterwards became Earls of Roxburgh. Sir Andrew Ker was
-warden of the Border at the time of the raid, but he
-proved that it took place without his consent. The
-Kers were all left-handed men, and puzzled their enemies
-by their left-handed swordsmanship. Even to-day in
-some parts of the borders a left-handed man is called
-"Ker-handed."
-
-On a fine September evening Tam Ker rode out, with
-fifty in his company. They were armed for a fight and
-their swords were keen; they rode by the Maiden Crags
-and down the Osway burn, going carefully till the
-daylight closed, for they were soon in Northumberland.
-Their bold plan was to get down the valley of the Coquet
-even as far as Rothbury where Withrington, the
-English warden, kept a magnificent herd of cattle.
-They had one castle to pass, that of Biddleston, which
-had been held by the Selby family since the reign of
-Henry III., and still belongs to them to this day.
-Biddleston Castle guarded the Allanton or Alwinton ford,
-where the Alwin stream enters the Coquet. So they
-sent the reckless Mark Ker first, to scout along by the
-ford, and told him to set up marks on the cairns to show
-his progress. Having nothing else to mark with, he
-tore the shirt off his back, and left strips of it on the
-cairns. At the ford a sentry challenged him, and he
-answered that he had a message for Withrington.
-The sentry demanded his sealed warrant, and the Scot
-drew his sword. They fought bravely and long before
-the Englishman was killed, and the Scot marvelled that
-a common soldier should so withstand him, for he was
-the best swordsman of his race. On he galloped, on
-and on, till he met a comely maiden, and addressing
-her he tried to imitate the Northumberland speech,
-saying that he had lost his way. She told him at once
-that she knew he was a Scot, but so also was she. She
-had been taken captive, but word had came by an
-English spy that the Kers were out upon a raid, and
-while the English had set a hundred soldiers to guard
-their cattle she had slipped away to warn the Scots and
-to return with them. Being a gallant after the manner
-of that day, he sprang from his horse, kissed her, and
-invited her to mount his saddle even if he had to run
-beside till he could capture another steed. But an
-English soldier came up and warned him roughly off the
-road. Mark Ker had been brought up to answer rough
-words with rougher blows; out leapt his sword, and he
-cut the rude words short by slashing the man's head off.
-Then he disguised the maid in the dead man's clothes,
-and they retraced their steps that he might warn his
-companions. They very soon came upon them, and all
-together hid in the lowest dell of the Larbottle burn while
-they made their plans. Tam Ker, with twenty of the
-men, was to draw off the English, while Mark with
-thirty others slipped round and drove off the cattle
-unperceived. This was done, and till after midnight,
-Tam, aided by the darkness and by the difficulties of
-the wild locality, held the English at bay.
-
-Then he heard the bugle signal, and knew that Mark
-was well on the road with the beasts, and that he must
-follow quickly. But Withrington also guessed what the
-signal meant, and pursued with all the speed he knew.
-Mark had not long crossed the ford at Biddleston before
-the English were on him. First Mark and Withrington
-fought in single combat, hand to hand, all their men
-watching eagerly; it was still very dark, but the
-clash of sword against sword lit the air with sparks.
-Withrington was badly wounded, but Mark was killed.
-With desperate shouts the Scots fell upon the English;
-then up came Tam and his men from behind to help the
-Scots, but the Captain of Biddleston had also been
-awakened, and galloped down with his men to aid the
-English. Tam smote his head off with his sword, but
-the horse galloped on with his headless body right into
-the ranks of the Scots. They thought it must be a demon
-and began to scatter in full flight to the Border. Tam
-was slain, trying to follow them, and his men, seeing that
-they had work enough to gallop for their lives, slew
-the cattle they could no longer hope to steal. On and
-on the hard-pressed remnant spurred their weary horses.
-It was daylight now, and the English along the road
-shot arrows at them as they galloped past. Out of
-fifty-one hardy, healthy Kers who had started forth
-in the raid, only seventeen, weary and wounded, saw
-their homes again.
-
-And back in the south country, the comely Scottish
-maiden lay dead across the breast of the gallant Mark,
-their hearts' blood mingling in a common stream. Small
-wonder that a Scot should make a ballad of the story
-and that Borderers should sing it even to this day.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Merrie Carlisle`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXVI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Merrie Carlisle
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The city of Carlisle stands in the midst of a
-beautiful and fertile district with pleasant but
-not too steep hills around. In the old days an
-easy water-supply was a first essential, and at Carlisle
-three rivers meet, the Caldew and the Petterill running
-here into the broad stream of the Eden. These
-three rivers almost enclose the ground upon which
-the city is built, so that it is most probable that
-there was an ancient British settlement upon so
-advantageous a site, before the Roman invasion. Our
-earliest record, however, goes back no further than
-Roman days, and it is certain there was then a Roman
-city here called *Luguvallium* (the trench of the legion).
-Even to-day, when new gas-pipes are being laid in the
-ground, it is by no means rare to dig up Roman relics.
-The long Roman name became gradually corrupted into
-"Luel," or "Liel," and the Britons added their word
-"Caer," which means a city, hence "Caer-luel"—an
-earlier form of the modern Carlisle. The Roman city
-stood, as might be expected, by the great Roman wall,
-guarding the spot where the wall crossed the river Eden.
-And visitors may see to-day that the centre of Carlisle
-consists of a market-place with two main streets leading
-therefrom, the usual plan in cities of Roman origin.
-
-Carlisle was destined to have a stormy history. Draw
-a line from the Solway eastward, straight through
-Carlisle, and it will be seen that here the mainland of
-Britain is about at its narrowest, hardly so much as
-seventy miles wide, as the crow flies. Note, too, that the
-wild hills of the Pennines and the Cheviots fill in most
-of this narrow district, and that the mainland of Scotland
-strikes sharply off to the west. It is plain from these
-facts that Carlisle commands the main road between
-Scotland and England, and they provide the reason why
-at the present day seven different railways, most of them
-important ones, run their trains into Carlisle station.
-The very same reason was responsible for the fact
-that in the good old times no English town was more
-often burnt down by enemies than "Merrie Carlisle."
-
-Even in Roman days, during the reign of Nero, Carlisle
-was burnt down at least once by the wild Picts, who
-were brave enough to venture against the well-armed
-troops of Rome. After the Romans left Britain this
-town was one of the strongholds of King Arthur; to
-be sure, nothing very definite is known about this
-romantic king, but the old ballads tell us that he was
-victorious over Gauls, Dacians, Spaniards, and Romans.
-This sounds very unlikely to those who do not realise
-that when Rome called home her best men for her own
-defence she may have left behind many rough soldiers,
-of various nations, to guard the wall. Although we know
-nothing about King Arthur save what is vague and
-legendary, we do know that the Roman legions were
-recruited from all the provinces of the empire.
-Cumberland had many connexions with King Arthur; within
-twenty miles of Carlisle, near Penrith, is a big round
-hill called "King Arthur's Table"; while nearer still,
-on the Penrith and Carlisle road, is shown the spot where
-stood Tearne-Wadling Lake and Castle, where King
-Arthur was bewitched and taken prisoner by the "foul,
-discourteous knight," only to be released provided one
-of his men would consent to marry the hideous lady
-with hair like serpents! When at last Sir Gawaine
-married this hag for his King's sake, she, of course,
-changed at once into a beautiful young woman! This
-does not sound very convincing, it is true, but in the old
-days many tales just as unlikely were told of famous men.
-At any rate the ballad begins with the lilting line:—
-
- | "King Arthur lives in merrie Carleile,"
-
-and all that concerns us at the moment is that perhaps
-he really did live there, and did do some very real fighting
-along the debateable line of the wall.
-
-We next learn of Carlisle that King Egfrid of
-Northumbria rebuilt the city about the year 675,
-wherefore we can only suppose that it had suffered its
-somewhat usual fate, perhaps at the hands of that savage
-Saxon warrior called The Burner. But in any case,
-Carlisle never belonged to the Northumbrians for any
-considerable space of time, but was the capital of the
-Celtic or Welsh kingdom of Cumbria, from which the
-present name of Cumberland is derived.
-
-In 875 the Danes had a turn at pillaging and harrying
-Carlisle, which was again in sorry plight. Both Cumbria
-and Northumbria were faring very badly in the struggle
-between the various kingdoms which then divided up
-Britain, and for a while it looked as if the energetic
-kings of the Scots would annex both these northern
-dominions. But the coming of the strong-handed
-Normans altered all this; and by far the most noteworthy
-event in the history of Carlisle was the fact that
-during 1092 and 1093 William Rufus seized Cumberland,
-and for the first time added it definitely to England.
-
-Recognising at once the strength and value of Carlisle,
-Rufus caused a strong Norman castle to be built where the
-old Roman fort used to stand. To-day, despite the many
-rough adventures which have befallen this northern city,
-there yet remain portions of William Rufus's castle,
-side by side with fragments of the old Roman walls.
-Many of the modern buildings put up in King George's
-day are crumbling, but the old Norman and Roman
-remains are firm as a rock!
-
-The castle was strengthened by King Henry I., but
-this did not prevent its seizure in 1135 by King David
-of Scotland, who added to it in turn. The Scots held the
-keep till 1157, when it was retaken by Henry II., but a
-few years later, in 1173, William the Lion, King of
-Scotland, besieged it, and for the next fifty years it
-changed hands several times, according to the fortunes
-of war. It is significant that a main street in the
-northern part of Carlisle is called "Scotch Street,"
-while another in the southern part is called "English
-Street!"
-
-Edward I. held a parliament here after defeating
-Wallace at Falkirk; and it was from Carlisle that this
-English King conducted his later operations against
-Scotland. It is a pathetic picture, that of this stern
-warrior in his old age, on his last march, trying to carry
-out his pet scheme of uniting the entire island under
-one rule. He was so ill that he had to be carried in a
-litter as far as Carlisle. Finding himself again so near
-the border, he felt the old fire glow within him, and sprang
-upon his horse—but at Burgh-on-Sands, on the shore of
-the Solway, whence he could view the goal of his
-ambition, the brave King died.
-
-During the next thirty years Carlisle was frequently
-attacked by the Scots, but they were usually defeated.
-In 1337, however, they partly, and in 1345 almost
-entirely burnt it down. Again in 1380 they burnt part
-of what had been rebuilt! Had there been fire insurance
-in these wild days, the premiums in Carlisle would have
-been heavy!
-
-After the Wars of the Roses, the city seemed to settle
-down somewhat, and was chiefly known on the Border as
-the place where Scottish freebooters were hanged if
-caught. In one of the Border villages there is a famous
-churchyard where of old only the graves of women and
-children were to be seen. The explanation was given to
-a passing traveller by an old woman, who said that the
-men were all buried "in merrie Carlisle," meaning, that
-is, that they had all been hanged there!
-
-In 1537 there was a rising in England known as the
-"Pilgrimage of Grace," in opposition to the savage policy
-of Henry's minister, Thomas Cromwell, and no less than
-eighty thousand insurgents are said to have attacked
-Carlisle; but after much fighting the rebels were
-defeated and seventy-four of their leaders were executed
-on the city walls.
-
-When Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned in Carlisle
-in 1568 it was vainly besieged by a force that sought to
-rescue her; but less than thirty years afterwards, in 1596,
-by a bold stroke of daring, Lord Scott of Buccleuch
-succeeded in surprising the castle and in liberating the
-well-known freebooter, "Kinmont Willie."
-
-When King James united England and Scotland, the
-troubles of Carlisle might have been thought to be over.
-But in the civil war between King and Parliament it was
-again a storm centre, and was held alternately by each
-of the parties.
-
-The last warlike operations against this much-besieged
-city were undertaken in 1745, when it was first
-taken by Prince Charlie, who made a triumphal entry
-without any serious fighting, and afterwards retaken
-almost as easily by the cruel Duke of Cumberland,
-whose entry into the place was followed, as usual, by a
-series of executions.
-
-Among those who suffered was Sir A. Primrose, a
-gallant ancestor of the present Lord Rosebery. The
-victims were executed, with the cruelties of the old law
-against treason, on the celebrated Gallows Hill, at
-Harraby, and were buried in nameless graves in the
-Kirkyard of St Cuthbert's. Passing down the Botchergate
-(the London Road), past the site of the old Roman
-cemetery, the wayfarer may see Gallows Hill rise where
-a deep cut has been made to avoid a steep rise in the road.
-It was just outside the boundary of old Carlisle, and
-executions were witnessed from the walls, by men and
-women alike. Climb the hill—it is worth while. The
-little river Petteril sparkles at our feet; the view, fresh
-and green, stretches away nobly to the Pennines and the
-Border Hills. Keep a warm thought in your heart for
-all the gallant fellows who met death bravely in this
-place.
-
-No history of Carlisle could omit to mention the
-Cathedral. English cathedrals are shaped like a cross
-lying on the ground; the long stem of the cross is the
-*nave* of the cathedral; the two arms are the *transepts*;
-and the upper end that continues the main stem is the
-*choir*. Where choir, nave and transepts meet, the *tower*
-rises. But unlike every other English cathedral, that of
-Carlisle has height and width, but is too short in length,
-two-thirds of the nave having been hurled down by the
-Scots!
-
-Every cathedral has its history written in its stones,
-for those who know how to read it. That of Carlisle
-shows a stormy history, stormier than any other. It
-is not a peaceful building carried out very much in one
-style and undisturbed. It is a building full of signs of
-disturbance, the builders of which were interrupted in
-their plans by war and frequently had their building
-seriously damaged by their enemies. It is a mixture of
-styles, a mass of re-buildings and afterthoughts, but for
-that very reason it is a fitting symbol of the
-much-harassed city. With all its signs of storm and stress
-it has much beauty, and possesses the finest window in
-all England, one of the finest in the world. Just outside
-the Cathedral is a noble stretch of the old West Wall of
-the city, which gives a vivid idea of its strength in the
-old days.
-
-The bishops of Carlisle live at Rose Castle, five miles
-south of the Cathedral. This has been their residence
-for over six hundred years. No doubt they thought it
-advisable not to live in the "merrie city"!
-
-In this castle King Edward I. stayed. It was once
-partly burnt by Bruce, and again partly by the Puritans,
-but this is a comparatively clean record for such a district!
-In 1745 Captain Macdonald and his Scots came down
-to besiege it, but hearing that the bishop's baby daughter
-was about to be christened, the gallant captain would not
-let warfare spoil so peaceful a ceremony, and not only
-withdrew his men, but also left a white cockade behind
-him as a sign that the place was not to be molested. In
-all this he showed that true courtesy that always marks
-the real Highland gentleman.
-
-Standing to-day in this bustling, breezy, pleasant little
-city, it is not easy to realise the wild scenes it has
-witnessed. The charming rivers that hem it in show
-no traces of the bloodshed of the past. Yet here have
-contended painted Pict and war-trained Roman; here
-the most skilful leaders of the Celts, Saxons, and Danes
-have led their brave and sturdy men to battle; here
-Norman knight has fought with hardy Scot, and fierce
-Border factions have wrangled and sought speedy
-justice; Puritan has fought Cavalier, and Jacobite
-has faced Hanoverian; kings, generals, and warriors of
-many centuries have found a fitting meeting-place before
-or behind the walls of Carlisle.
-
-An open, airy, quaint city. There is not very much
-that is old in it, for the old was not allowed to stand long
-enough! But on the top of its principal hill the tall
-truncated Cathedral presents a picturesque figure, and
-if we stand there or by the castle the eye commands fine,
-ancient walls and very delightful distances. It is a
-place of lingering memories, and if these are chiefly
-of strife and bloodshed we do not forget that to the
-Border folk the city was "Merrie Carlisle."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Kinmont Willie`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXVII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Kinmont Willie
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "O have ye not heard of the false Sakelde,
- | O have ye not heard of the keen Lord Scroope,
- | How they have taken bold Kinmont Willie
- | On Haribee to hang him oop?"
- |
-
-The story of this famous freebooter, William
-Armstrong of Kinmonth, belongs to the time
-of Queen Elizabeth, when Lord Scroope was
-Warden of the Western Marches, and Mr Sakelde of
-Corby Castle was his Deputy.
-
-Kinmont Willie was a descendant of the famous Johnie
-Armstrong of Gilnockie, and his capture was a violation
-of the existing truce between Scroope and Buccleuch,
-the Keeper of Liddesdale. Elizabeth was indignant at
-Buccleuch's action in rescuing Willie, and as the Scots
-at that time were very anxious not to offend her,
-Buccleuch was sent to England and came before the
-Queen, who asked him how he dared to undertake such
-an adventure. "What is it," answered he, "that a
-man dare not do?"
-
-"With ten thousand such men," said Elizabeth, turning
-to a lord-in-waiting, "our brother of Scotland might
-shake the firmest throne of Europe."
-
-The ballad tells of the capture of Kinmont Willie,
-and how the false Sakelde and his men treacherously
-seized him.
-
-They bound his legs beneath his horse, and tied his
-hands behind his back, and with five men on each side
-to guard him, brought him over Liddel ford and through
-Carlisle sands to Carlisle castle.
-
-When he arrived there, Willie addressed his captor in
-these words:
-
-"My hands are tied, but my tongue is free. Who will
-avow this deed or answer for it to bold Buccleuch?"
-
-"Hold thy tongue, thou rank robber! Never a Scot
-shall set thee free. Ye shall take farewell of me before
-ye cross my castle gate," said Scroope.
-
-"Fear ye not that, my lord," answers Willie, "for by
-the faith of my body, never did I yet lodge in a hostelry
-but that I paid my reckoning before I went."
-
-Word was sent to Branksome Hall to the Keeper of
-Liddesdale that Lord Scroope had captured Kinmont
-Willie, whereupon the Keeper smote the table with
-his hand till the red wine sprang on high, "A curse on my
-head," he cried, "if I be not avenged of Lord Scroope. Is
-my helmet a widow's cap, or my lance a twig from a
-willow-tree, or my fist a lady's lily hand, that an English
-lord should appraise me so lightly? Have they taken
-Kinmont Willie in spite of the truce, and forgotten that
-the bold Buccleuch is Keeper on the Scottish side?
-Have they taken Kinmont Willie so fearlessly, and
-forgotten that the bold Buccleuch can back a steed and
-wield a weapon? Were there but war between the lands,
-then would I slight Carlisle Castle though it were built of
-marble; I would set it on fire and drench it with English
-blood. But since there is peace and not war, I'll set the
-Kinmont free yet never harm English lad or lass!"
-
-So Buccleuch called forty bold Marchmen, all of his
-own name and kin except one, Sir Gilbert Elliot, Laird of
-Stobs. They came spur on heel and armour on shoulder,
-with gloves of green and feathers of blue. Five and five
-came first with hunting-horns and bugles; five and five
-more came with Buccleuch like Warden's men arrayed
-for battle; five and five came like a gang of masons,
-carrying long high ladders; and five and five came like
-broken men, and so they reached Woodhouselee.
-
-When they had crossed to the English side, the first
-man they met was the false Sakelde.
-
-"Where are ye going, ye keen hunters?" quoth Sakelde.
-
-"We go to hunt an English stag that has trespassed
-on Scottish ground."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye martial men?"
-
-"We go to catch a rank robber that has broken faith
-with the bold Buccleuch."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye mason lads, with all these
-long high ladders?"
-
-"We go to harry a corbie's nest not far from here."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye broken men?" said false Sakelde.
-
-But Dickie of Dryhope, leader of the broken men, had
-never a word of learning, and answered nothing.
-
-"Why trespass ye on the English side? Stand! ye
-raw-footed outlaws!"
-
-Never a word yet said Dickie, but for answer ran his
-lance clean through the body of the false Sakelde.
-
-On then they went to Carlisle town, crossing the Eden
-at Staneshaw-bank, nor lost they either horse or man,
-though the water was high in flood.
-
-When they reached Staneshaw-bank the wind was rising,
-and the Laird ordered them to leave there their horses
-for fear they should stamp and neigh. The wind blew
-loudly enough then, but when they came beneath the
-castle wall there was wind and rain and flying sleet. On
-they crept on their knees and held their breath till they
-placed the ladders against the wall. Buccleuch himself
-mounted first, took the watchman by the throat and
-flung him down upon the leads. "Thou hadst gone on
-the other side," said he, "had there not been peace
-between our lands."
-
-.. _`The Escape of Kinmont Willie`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-162.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *The Escape of Kinmont Willie*
-
- *The Escape of Kinmont Willie*
-
-"Sound out the trumpets!" quoth he; "let's wake
-up Lord Scroope!" Then loud blew the Warden's
-trumpet to the tune of "O wha dare meddle wi' me?"
-
-To work they went speedily, and cut a hole through
-the lead, gaining thus the castle hall.
-
-Those inside thought the castle had been taken by
-King James and all his men, yet it was only twenty Scots
-and ten that had put a thousand in such a stir. They
-hammered and banged at the bars until they came to
-the inner prison, where lay Kinmont Willie.
-
-"Do ye sleep or wake, Kinmont Willie, on the morn
-when ye shall die?"
-
-"O I sleep lightly and wake often; it's long since sleep
-was frightened from me. Give my service to my wife
-and bairns and all good fellows that enquire after me."
-
-Red Rowan, the strongest man in Teviotdale, lifted
-him up. "Stay now, Red Rowan, till I take farewell of
-Lord Scroope. Farewell, farewell, my good Lord
-Scroope," he cried. "I will pay ye for my lodging
-when first we meet on the Border."
-
-With shout and cry Red Rowan bore him on his
-shoulders down the long ladder, the irons clanking at
-every stride.
-
-"Many a time," said Kinmont Willie, "have I ridden
-a horse both wild and unruly, but never have my legs
-bestrode a rougher beast than Red Rowan. Many a
-time have I pricked a horse over the furrows, but never
-since I backed a steed have I worn such cumbrous spurs."
-
-Scarcely had they won the Staneshaw-bank when all
-the bells in Carlisle were ringing and Lord Scroope was
-after them with a thousand men on horse and on foot.
-But—
-
- | "Buccleuch has turn'd to Eden water
- | Even where it flowed frae bank to brim,
- | And he has plunged in wi' a' his band,
- | And safely swam them through the stream.
-
- | He turn'd him on the other side,
- | And at Lord Scroope his glove flung he—
- | 'If ye like na my visit to merry England,
- | In fair Scotland come visit me!'
-
- | All sore astonished stood Lord Scroope,
- | He stood as still as rock of stane;
- | He scarcely dared to trew[#] his eyes,
- | When through the water they had gane.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Trust
-
-..
-
- | 'He is either himsell a devil frae hell,
- | Or else his mother a witch maun be;
- | I wadna have ridden that wan water,
- | For a' the gowd[#] in Christentie.'"
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Gold
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Dick o' the Cow`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXVIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Dick o' the Cow
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "Fair Johnie Armstrong to Willie did say
- | 'Billie, a-riding we will gae.'"
- |
-
-The ballad of this name, a popular one in
-Liddesdale, relates, like that of Kinmont
-Willie, to the time when Lord Scroope was
-Warden of the West Marches and Governor of Carlisle.
-Dick o' the Cow seems to have been his fool or jester.
-Dickie, some years after the events described in the
-ballad, fell a victim to the vengeance of the Armstrongs.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-There had been no raids from Liddesdale for a
-considerable time, and no riding, and the horses had all
-grown so fat that they dare scarcely stir out of the stall.
-Then fair Johnie Armstrong said to his brother Willie,
-"Brother, we will go a-riding. We have long been at
-feud with England, and perhaps we shall find some spoil."
-
-So they rode to Hulton Hall and round about it, but
-the laird, a wise man, had left neither goods nor cattle
-outside to steal, except six sheep in a meadow. Said
-Johnie, "I'd rather die in England than take those
-six sheep to Liddesdale."
-
-"But who was that man we last met as we came over
-the hill?"
-
-"Oh, he is an innocent fool, and men call him Dick o'
-the Cow."
-
-"That fool has three good cows of his own, as good
-as there are in Cumberland. Betide me life or death,
-they shall go to Liddesdale with me!"
-
-So they came to the house of the poor fool, broke down
-his thick wall, loosed his three cows, and took also three
-coverlets from his wife's bed.
-
-In the morning at daylight when the loss was
-discovered, there were loud lamentations. "Hold thy
-tongue, wife," said Dickie, "and stop thy crying. I'll
-bring thee back three cows for each one that thou hast
-lost."
-
-So Dickie went to Lord Scroope. "Hold thy tongue,
-fool," said Scroope. "I have no time for jesting."
-
-"A shame on your jesting, my lord!" said Dickie,
-"jesting agrees not with me. Liddesdale was in my
-house last night and has taken my three cows. I can
-no longer dwell in Cumberland as your poor faithful fool,
-unless you give me leave to steal in Liddesdale."
-
-"I give thee leave, fool!" said Scroope; "but thou
-speakest against me and my honour unless thou give me
-thy hand and pledge that thou wilt steal from none but
-those who stole from thee."
-
-"There is my right hand and pledge! May my head
-hang on Haribee, and may I never again cross Carlisle
-sands if I steal from any man who stole not from me.",
-
-Dickie joyfully took leave of his lord and master,
-and went and bought a bridle and a pair of new spurs
-which he packed up in the thigh of his breeches, then he
-came on as fast as he could to Pudding-burn house, where
-were thirty-three Armstrongs.
-
-"O what has come to me now?" said Dickie, "what
-great trouble is this? For here is but one innocent
-fool against thirty-three Armstrongs?" Yet he went
-courteously up to the Hall board.
-
-"Well may ye be, my good Laird's Jock, but the devil
-bless all your company. I'm come to complain of your
-man, Johnie Armstrong, and of his brother Willie, that
-they came to my house last night and took away my
-three cows."
-
-Quoth fair Johnie Armstrong, "We'll hang him."
-
-"Nay," said Willie, "we'll slay him."
-
-But up spoke another young Armstrong, "We'll give
-him a thrashing and let him go."
-
-Then up spoke the good Laird's Jock, the best fellow
-in all the company, "Sit down a while, Dickie, and we'll
-give thee a bit of thine own cow's thigh."
-
-Dickie's heart was so sore that he could not eat a bit,
-but he went and lay down in an old peat-house where he
-thought to sleep the night, and all the prayers the poor
-fool prayed were, "I wish I had amends for my three
-good cows."
-
-Now it was the custom of Pudding-burn house and of
-the house of Mangerton, whose laird was chief of the
-Armstrong clan, that any who came not to the table at
-the first summons got no more meat till the next meal, so
-some of the lads, hungry and weary, had thrown the key
-of the stable above the door-head. Dickie took good
-notice of that to turn it to his own account, went into
-the stable where stood thirty-three horses and tied thirty
-of them with St Mary's knot, tight to their stalls.
-
-Of the remaining three, Dickie took two, which
-belonged to Johnie and Willie Armstrong, and the one
-belonging to the Laird's Jock he left loose in the stable.
-Leaping on one, he took the other along with him, and
-rode off as fast as he could.
-
-When day came, there were great shouts and cries.
-
-"Who has done this," quoth the good Laird's Jock;
-"see that ye tell me the truth."
-
-"It is Dickie that has been in the stable last night,
-and has taken the horses."
-
-"Ye never would listen to me," said the good Laird's
-Jock, "though I told ye true tales. Ye would never
-stay out of England but would steal everything, till ye
-were crooked and blind."
-
-"Lend me thy bay," said fair Johnie; "he is the only
-horse loose in the stable, and I'll either fetch back Dick
-o' the Cow, or he shall die."
-
-"Lend thee my bay!" said Jock; "he is worth gold
-and good money. Dick o' the Cow has taken two horses;
-I would not ye make them three."
-
-Johnie, however, took the Laird's steel jacket on his
-back, and a two-handed sword by his side, and a steel
-cap on his head, and galloped after Dickie, who was
-barely three miles from the town when Johnie overtook
-him on Cannobie Lee, on the borders of Liddesdale.
-
-"Abide, abide, thou traitor thief!" cried Armstrong;
-"the day is come that thou shalt die!"
-
-Dickie looked over his left shoulder and said, "Johnie,
-hast thou no more in thy company? There is a preacher
-in our chapel who teaches all the livelong day, and when
-day is gone and night has come, there are only three words
-I remember—the first and second are Faith and
-Conscience—the third is 'Ne'er let a traitor free.' What faith
-and conscience was thine, Johnie, when thou tookest away
-my three cows? And when thou hadst taken them
-away, thou wast not satisfied. Thou sentest thy brother
-Willie, and took away three coverlets off my wife's bed!"
-
-Then Johnie let his spear fall low by his side, and
-thought he would have killed Dickie, but the powers
-above were stronger than he, and he only succeeded in
-running through the fool's jerkin. Dickie out with his
-sword and ran after him, and when he could not get at
-him with the blade, he felled him with the butt-end over
-the eye, felled Johnie Armstrong, the finest man in the
-south country. "Gramercy," said Dickie, "I had but
-two horses, thou hast made them three!"—and he took
-Johnie's steel jacket off his back and his two-handed
-sword, and his steel cap. "Farewell, Johnie," said he,
-"I'll tell my master I met thee."
-
-When Johnie wakened out of his swoon, he was a sad
-man. "Art thou gone, Dickie?" he said. "Then the
-shame and woe are left with me. Art thou gone? Then,
-Dickie, the devil go in thy company, for if I live to be a
-hundred, I'll never again fight with a fool."
-
-Dickie came home to the good Lord Scroope as fast as
-he could. "Now, Dickie, I'll neither eat nor drink till
-thou art hanged on high." "Shame speed the liars, my
-lord," said Dickie, "this was not the promise ye made
-me, for I would never have gone to Liddesdale to steal
-if I had not got leave from thee." "But why did ye steal
-the Laird's Jock's horse? Ye might have lived long in
-Cumberland before the Laird's Jock had stolen from thee."
-
-"Indeed, I knew ye lied, my lord. I won the horse from
-fair Johnie Armstrong hand to hand on Cannobie Lee.
-There is the jacket that was on his back, and the
-two-handed sword that hung by his side, and the steel cap that
-was on his head. I brought all these tokens to show thee."
-
-"If that be true that thou tellest me (and I think thou
-durst not lie) I'll give thee fifteen pounds for the horse, all
-told out in the lap of thy cloak; I'll give thee one of my
-best milk cows to maintain thy wife and three children,
-and they will be as good as any two of thine would be."
-
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord!" said Dickie.
-"Do ye think aye to make a fool of me? I'll either have
-twenty pounds for the horse or else I'll take him to
-Mortan fair."
-
-So Scroope gave him twenty pounds for the horse, all
-in gold and good money, and one of his best milk cows to
-maintain his wife and three children.
-
-Then Dickie rode as fast as he could through Carlisle
-town, and the first man he met was my lord's brother,
-Ralph Scroope, Bailiff of Glozenburrie.
-
-"Well be ye met, Ralph Scroope!" said Dickie.
-
-"Welcome, my brother's fool!" said Ralph. "Where
-did ye get Johnie Armstrong's horse?"
-
-"Where did I get him? I stole him," said Dickie.
-
-"Wilt thou sell me the bonny horse?"
-
-"Ay, if thou count out the money in the lap of my
-cloak, for never a penny will I trust thee."
-
-"I'll give thee ten pounds for the horse and count it
-into the lap of thy cloak, and one of my best milk cows to
-maintain thy wife and three children."
-
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord! Do ye think aye
-to make a fool of me? I'll either have twenty pounds
-for the horse, or I'll take him to Mortan fair."
-
-So Ralph gave him twenty pounds for the horse, all in
-gold and good money, and one of his milk cows to
-maintain his wife and three children.
-
-Then Dickie leaped and laughed, and cried, "May the
-neck of the third horse be broken if either of the two were
-better than he!"
-
-So he came home to his wife and ye may judge how
-the poor fool had succeeded. For her three stolen
-coverlets he gave her two score English pounds, and two cows
-as good as her own three. "And here," said he, "is a
-white-footed nag that I reckon will carry us both. But
-if I stay longer in Cumberland the Armstrongs will
-hang me." So Dickie took leave of his lord and went to
-live at Burgh under Stanmuir.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Lochmaben Harper`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXIX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Lochmaben Harper
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The castle of Lochmaben is said to have been
-the residence of Robert Bruce while Lord
-of Allandale. Hence, as a royal fortress, the
-keeping of it was always granted to some powerful lord.
-There is extant a grant giving to one of these, Robert
-Lauder, the office of Captain and Keeper of Lochmaben
-Castle for seven years, and among his perquisites were
-"lands stolen from the King"!
-
-The inhabitants of four small villages near the castle
-have each still to this day a right to a small piece of
-ground. These people are descendants of Robert
-Bruce's retainers, to whom he assigned these portions
-of land in reward for faithful service, and there are still
-to be found some families (*e.g.* the Richardsons of
-Lochmaben) who hold their lands direct from the times of
-Bruce without a break.
-
- | "O heard ye na o' the silly blind Harper,
- | How long he lived in Lochmaben town?
- | And how he wad gang to fair England,
- | To steal the Lord Warden's Wanton Brown?
-
- | But first he gaed to his gude wyfe,
- | Wi' a' the haste that he could thole[#]
- | 'This wark,' quo' he, 'will ne'er gae well
- | Without a mare that has a foal.'
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Suffer.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Quoth his wife, "Thou hast a good grey mare that
-can jump both high and low; so set thee on her
-back and leave the foal at home with me." Away
-went the Harper to England as fast as he might, and
-when he came to Carlisle gate, who should be there
-but the Warden himself?
-
- | "'Come into my hall, thou silly blind Harper,
- | And of thy harping let me hear!'
- | 'O, by my sooth,' quo' the silly blind Harper,
- | 'I wad rather hae stabling for my mare."
-
- | The Warden looked o'er his left shoulder,
- | And said unto his stable groom—
- | 'Gae take the silly blind Harper's mare,
- | And tie her beside my Wanton Brown.'"
- |
-
-So the Harper harped and sang, the lordlings danced,
-and so sweet was the music that the groom forgot all
-about the stable door. Still the Harper harped on till
-all the nobles were fast asleep, when he quickly took off
-his shoes, crept softly down the stair, and hied with
-light tread to the stable door, which he opened and
-entered. He found there three-and-thirty steeds. He
-took a colt's halter which he had hidden in his hose,
-slipped it over Wanton Brown, tied it to the grey mare's
-tail, and turned them both loose at the castle gate.
-
-Away they went over moor and moss and dale, and the
-mare never let Wanton rest a moment, but kept him
-galloping home to her foal. So swift of foot was she, and
-knew her way so well, that she reached Lochmaben a
-good three hours before daybreak.
-
-When she came to the Harper's door, she neighed and
-snorted. "Rise up," shouted the Harper's wife, "thou
-lazy lass, and let in thy master and his mare." The lass
-rose up, put on her clothes and looked through the
-lock-hole. "By my sooth," cried she, "our mare has got a
-fine brown foal!"
-
-"Hold thy tongue, thou foolish wench, the light is
-dazzling thine eyes. I'll wager all I have against a groat
-that it's bigger than ever our foal will be."
-
-Still in merry Carlisle the Harper harped to high and
-low, and nought could they do but listen to him until
-day-dawn. But when it was daylight they discovered
-that Wanton Brown was gone and also the poor blind
-Harper's mare.
-
-"Alas! alas!" cried the cunning old Harper,
-"alas that I came here; in Scotland I have lost a brown
-colt foal and in England they have stolen my good grey
-mare."
-
-"Cease thy lamenting, thou silly blind Harper, and go
-on harping; we'll pay thee well for the loss of thy colt
-foal and thou shalt have a far better mare." So the
-harper harped and sang, and so sweet were his harpings
-that he was paid for the foal he never had lost and
-three times over for the gray mare.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Rookhope Ride`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Rookhope Ride
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-This Durham border song is supposed to be
-spoken by a Weardale man, who begins by
-denouncing the inhabitants of the Tyne valley,
-"and all their companies there about" as false thieves,
-
- | "minded to do mischief
- | And at their stealing stands not out."
- |
-
-It must be confessed that the Tynedale men had an
-unenviable reputation. They were such lawless
-desperadoes, so addicted to rapine, that during more than
-two centuries the merchants of Newcastle regularly
-refused to take an apprentice born in that district. The
-date is December 1572. The rebel Earl of Northumberland,
-who had taken up arms for Mary Queen of Scots,
-and for the old religion, had been betrayed by the Scots
-and beheaded at York. Owing to this rebellion there
-was great confusion in the northern counties, hence the
-time was well chosen by the "limmer thieves" of
-Tynedale to make a predatory raid on their neighbours.
-They gathered together the stoutest men of arms and the
-best in gear, a hundred or more in number, and in the
-forenoon, about eleven o'clock, they came into a
-"bye-fell" and stopped for a meal—the last which some of
-them would eat. When they had eaten, they chose their
-captains, Harry Corbyl, Simon Fell, and Martin Ridley.
-Then they rode on over the moss, "with many a brank
-and whew," saying to one another that they were men
-enough,
-
- | "For Weardale-men have a journey ta'en,
- | They are so far out o'er yon fell,
- | That some of them's with the two earls,
- | And others fast in Bernard castell.
-
- | There we shall get gear enough,
- | For there is nane but women at hame;
- | The sorrowful fend that they can make.
- | Is loudly cries as they were slain."
- |
-
-They came in at Rookhope Head, which is the top of
-a rocky valley, about five miles long, at the end of which
-Rookhope Burn empties itself into the river Wear. This
-valley is as wild and open to-day as it was then. In some
-four hours they gathered together about six hundred
-sheep and they were engaged in "shifting" the horses,
-when the hue and cry was raised by one Rowley, whose
-horse they tried to take. He was the first man to see
-them. The cry spread rapidly down Rookhope burn
-and through Weardale, and word came to the bailiff's
-house at the East-gate. He was out, but his wife had
-his horse saddled and sent it to him, together with his
-sword, spear, and jacket quilted with iron plates, the
-sort of harness worn by the moss-troopers and other
-light horsemen of the time. The bailiff had already
-heard the bad news, and was sorely troubled thereby.
-His own brother had been attacked three days before by
-marauders, and lay sick with nineteen wounds. Yet the
-bailiff shrank not at all, but hied fast after the
-sheep-stealers, with as many of the neighbours as he could
-gather to bear him company.
-
-The pursuers overtook the thieves in Nuketon Cleugh,
-and gave them all the fighting they wanted. Not one
-of them ever thought to see his wife again. They bore
-three banners against the Weardale men, "as if the world
-had been all their own." The fray lasted only an hour,
-but many a tall man lay weaponless and sore wounded
-before that hour was done, and four of the Northumbrian
-prickers were slain, including Harry Corbyl whom they
-had chosen to be their captain. Eleven of them were
-taken prisoners. Only one of the Weardale men fell
-but—
-
- | "These Weardale-men, they have good hearts,
- | They are as stiff as any tree;
- | For, if they'd everyone been slain,
- | Never a foot back man would flee.
-
- | And such a storm amongst them fell,
- | As I think you never heard the like;
- | For he that bears his head on high,
- | He oft-tymes falls into the dyke.
-
- | And now I do entreat you all,
- | As many as are present here,
- | To pray for the singer of this song,
- | For he sings to make blythe your cheer."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Barthram's Dirge`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Barthram's Dirge
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The story of how this ballad came to be
-preserved to us is a very interesting one. A
-Mr Surtees, who was very interested in the old
-ballads, used to give work to a poor old Scotswoman to
-weed in his garden. Finding that she had learnt ballads
-in her young days, he encouraged her to talk about
-them, and this was amongst those which she recited to
-him. She told him that it referred to a young man
-named Bertram or Barthrum, who made love to a young
-lady against the wish of her brothers. The cruel
-brothers slew him, but the lady had him buried at the
-very spot where he was wont to come to visit her in the
-days of their love. Sir Walter Scott thinks that perhaps
-Barthram was an Englishman and the lady was Scottish,
-and that the anger of the lady's brothers against him
-was partly on that account.
-
-It must be remembered that in those stormy days,
-when Border rivalry was keen, and all the Border
-chiefs, on both sides, were men of war-like mould,
-intermarriage between the two races was punishable by
-Border law. Each side felt equally that such mixed
-marriages would sooner or later produce a race that
-was neither loyal English nor loyal Scotch. A spirit of
-aloofness and rivalry was deliberately encouraged, right
-up to the time of the union of the two countries under
-one king.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- BARTHRAM'S DIRGE
-
-..
-
- | They shot him dead at the Nine-Stone Rig,
- | Beside the Headless Cross,
- | And they left him lying in his blood,
- | Upon the moor and moss.
- |
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- |
- | They made a bier of the broken bough,
- | The sauch and the aspin gray,
- | And they bore him to the Lady Chapel,
- | And waked him there all day.
-
- | A lady came to that lonely bower,
- | And threw her robes aside,
- | She tore her long yellow hair,
- | And knelt at Barthram's side.
-
- | She bathed him in the Lady-Well,
- | His wounds so deep and sair,
- | And she plaited a garland for his breast,
- | And a garland for his hair.
-
- | They rowed him in a lily-sheet,
- | And bare him to his earth,
- | And the Gray Friars sung the dead man's mass,
- | As they pass'd the Chapel Garth.
-
- | They buried him at the mirk midnight,
- | When the dew fell cold and still,
- | When the aspin gray forgot to play,
- | And the mist clung to the hill.
-
- | They dug his grave but a bare foot deep,
- | By the edge of the Ninestone Burn,
- | And they covered him o'er with the heather-flower,
- | The moss and the Lady fern.
-
- | A Gray Friar staid upon the grave,
- | And sang till the morning tide,
- | And a friar shall sing for Barthram's soul,
- | While the Headless Cross shall bide.[#]
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Mr Surtees observes, on this passage, that in the return made by
-the commissioners, on the dissolution of Newminster Abbey, there is
-an item of a Chauntery, for one priest to sing daily *ad crucem lapideam*.
-Probably many of these crosses had the like expiatory solemnities for
-persons slain there. They certainly did bury, in former days, near the
-Ninestone Burn, for Sir Walter Scott found there, lying among the
-heather, a small monumental cross, with initials, which he reverently
-placed upright.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Queen Mary and the Borders`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Queen Mary and the Borders
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The brief reign of Mary, Queen of Scots, was so
-crowded with incident that she was left with
-little time to visit the disturbed borderland of
-her kingdom. None-the-less her few visits to this district
-were fraught with important consequences. In 1565, when
-she married her cousin Lord Darnley, the head of the
-Douglas faction and a Roman Catholic, the Protestant
-nobles took up arms. In her very honeymoon she headed
-her soldiers, pursued the rebels to Dumfries, entered
-the town with a pistol in each hand, and laughed heartily
-at the fun of making her enemies "skip like rabbits"
-over the Border. She was only twenty-two years old—a
-fearless, dashing, attractive woman, with a clever
-head, a strong will, and a wild and lawless disposition.
-
-In the next year she again visited the Border, but on a
-very different errand. Mary had developed an extreme
-fancy for that bold Border Lord, the Earl of Bothwell,
-whose Castle of Hermitage commanded the picturesque
-and important valley of the Liddel. The Queen had
-given him authority to control the fierce Borderers; and
-when the earl was riding out he met the most lawless
-of them, Jock Elliot, of whom the couplet—
-
- | "My name is little Jock Elliot
- | And who dare meddle wi' me?"
-
-Bothwell fired straight at Elliot with his pistol, wounding
-him in the leg. Elliot aimed a mighty blow at Bothwell
-with his two-handed sword, giving the earl so sore a
-wound that he was glad enough to gallop home while
-there was yet time to save his life.
-
-Mary was holding solemn court at Jedburgh when
-she heard of her favourite's danger. She straightway
-took horse and rode to Hermitage, a hard cross-country
-ride of twenty miles, through a district infested with
-reckless men. When she galloped back to Jedburgh, she
-was in high fever and nearly died. Later on, in the
-misery of her long imprisonment, she often said,
-"Would I had died at Jedburgh!" Years later, a
-broken piece of a silver spur was found at Queensmire,
-on this difficult and dangerous road, just where Queen
-Mary's horse was said to have come to grief.
-
-Yet another time Queen Mary came to the Border,
-this time to cross it—after her imprisonment at Lochleven,
-her escape, and the disastrous rout of her followers
-at Langside. Daring and resourceful as ever, she fled
-across the Solway in an open boat; Scotland had failed
-her, she sought the protection of England. She landed
-at Cockermouth, and was led to Carlisle by Sir
-R. Lowther, and kept there, in reality a prisoner, while
-Elizabeth was musing of the dangers of the position.
-The Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland took
-up Mary's cause and attempted to rescue her, but the
-Warden of Carlisle, Lord Scroope, defended the town
-successfully against the two earls, and they were soon
-in flight, eastward for their very lives. After this
-attempt at rescue Mary was, for greater safety, sent
-down to Bolton Castle in Yorkshire.
-
-.. _`Queen Mary crossing the Solway`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-180.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Queen Mary crossing the Solway
-
- Queen Mary crossing the Solway
-
-Leonard Dacre, a member of the powerful Cumberland
-family of the Dacres, seems to have played a treacherous
-part, first promising the earls his help, and then betraying
-them to Elizabeth. He seized Nawarth Castle, which
-properly belonged to his young niece, and collected
-together three thousand men to the old Border war-cry,
-"A Red Bull, a Red Bull!" (probably the nickname of
-some fierce red-haired Celtic champion). The defeated
-earls came to Nawarth for shelter, and Dacre refused to
-harbour them. But by this time Elizabeth was
-convinced of Dacre's treason, and ordered Lord Hudson,
-the Governor of Berwick, to arrest him.
-
-Hudson appears to have marched by rather a round-about
-way, for Dacre met him at Geltbridge, on the
-west of Nawarth. A bridge is always a good point of
-vantage for meeting an enemy, especially when the river
-runs, as the Gelt does, through a deep and wooded gorge.
-The enemy has only a narrow way by which to approach,
-and no doubt Dacre posted his archers behind the trees
-and among the great rocks. The fight was a desperate
-one, but Hudson's men prevailed and pursued their foes
-far up the hill of Gelt, scuffling fiercely among the forest
-trees and dyeing a deeper hue the red sandstone cliffs
-and quarries.
-
-All the rebels who could escape fled across the Border
-to Scotland, where the Borderers, who were till then
-their enemies, received them with that open and fair
-hospitality which was one of their many great qualities.
-Elizabeth demanded that the leading noblemen should
-be given up to her; but although the Scottish Regent,
-Murray, made a pretence of trying to secure the Earl of
-Westmoreland, the Scots had too much sense of honour
-to allow him to proceed.
-
-The Earl of Northumberland, was however betrayed
-to the Scottish Regent by Hector Armstrong of Harelaw;
-but this the gallant Borderers held to be shameful, and
-Armstrong was a ruined man from that day forth.
-
-Two years later, this Earl was actually sold to Elizabeth
-and beheaded at York. Thus ended this small rebellion,
-called in history the Rising of the North, but which is
-known locally in Cumberland as Dacre's Raid.
-
-There is a little stream which rushes down a deep and
-beautiful glade to join the river Gelt above Geltbridge;
-this stream is known as "Hellbeck," and villagers tell
-us that the reason for this name is that it was stained
-with blood for two whole days after some battle that
-took place there. This battle is probably the one spoken
-of here.
-
-A wicket gate by Geltbridge leads us to the path
-through Gelt woods. The noble gorge is deeply cleft
-through the grand red sandstone rocks. Below roars and
-dashes the impetuous river; the path winds, sometimes
-high, sometimes low, through wonderful weeds, carpeted
-with beautiful mosses, gemmed with delightful flowers.
-On one of the rocks is an inscription carved by a Roman
-soldier, over fifteen hundred years ago. Follow the river,
-up, up, till the little Hellbeck is seen trickling down from
-the east; cross the little bridge and follow the streamlet
-on its opposite bank, along a path so little trod as to be
-scarcely visible; wander among ferns along one of the
-loneliest glens in the whole of Britain, passing the great
-railway bridge (*under* if the stream be low or *over* if it be
-high) till you join the main road again. There is no spot
-more beautiful or more peaceful. Yet this is the Hellbeck
-where men fought and hacked, and slashed and slew,
-among these woods, up and down these steep hillsides.
-These old trees, when young, have felt warm blood at
-their roots; and all because of a young, wild wilful
-queen, who fascinated men's hearts then, and the
-memory of whom fascinates them still.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Raid of the Reidswire`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Raid of the Reidswire
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "To deal with proud men is but pain,
- | For either must ye fight or flee,
- | Or else no answer make again,
- | But play the beast, and let them be."
- |
-
-Reidswire, the name of a place about ten miles
-from Jedburgh, means the Red Swire. Swire
-is an old northern term for the descent of a
-hill, and the epithet red may refer to the colour of the
-heath.
-
-The affair about which we are to tell took place on the
-7th of July 1575, at a meeting held, on a day of truce,
-by the Wardens of the Marches, for redressing wrongs and
-adjusting difficulties which could not be prevented from
-arising upon the Border. The Scottish Warden was Sir
-John Carmichael, and among his following were the
-Armstrongs and Elliots, Douglas of Cavers (a descendant
-of the Douglas who fell at Otterbourne), Cranstoun, whose
-ferocious motto was "Ye shall want ere I want,"
-Gladstain, "good at need," and the ancient head of the
-Rutherfoords, called in tradition the Cock of Hunthill,
-"with his nine sons him about." The English Warden
-was the haughty Sir John Forster, and he had full fifteen
-hundred men with him, chiefly Northumbrians, Tynedale,
-and Reedsdale men, who looked with scorn upon the
-much smaller array of their hereditary foes.
-
-The meeting, however, began meekly enough, with
-merriment and jests. Such Border meetings of truce,
-though they might wind up in blood, as was to happen
-now, always began as occasions of marketing and
-revelry. Both parties came fully armed to such a
-tryst, yet intermixed in mutual sports and familiar
-intercourse,
-
- | "Some gaed to drink, and some stood still,
- | And some to cards and dice them sped."
- |
-
-The Scots planted their pavilions or tents and feared
-no ill, even when they saw five hundred Fenwicks (a
-powerful Northumbrian clan) "marching in a flock." The
-clerk began to call the rolls, and to deal with one
-complaint after another for the loss of cows or ewes or
-other property. In the course of the proceedings an
-accusation was raised against an English freebooter
-named Farnstein, at the instance of a Scotch complainant.
-A "true bill" was found against the man, which means
-that he ought to be handed over to justice. But the
-English Warden alleged that he had fled, and could not
-be found. Carmichael, considering this as a pretext to
-avoid making compensation for the felony, bade the
-Northumbrians speak out plainly, and "cloke no cause
-for ill nor good." Upon this Sir John Forster, a proud
-and insolent man, "began to reckon kin and blood,"
-by which picturesque phrase the ballad probably means
-that he swiftly added up his forces. Then he drew
-himself up, backed by his Dalesmen, all fingering their bows,
-and with insulting expressions against Carmichael's kin
-he bade him "match with his equals." The men of
-Tynedale, who only wanted a pretext for a quarrel, drew
-their bows and let off a flight of arrows among the Scots.
-The more moderate men on both sides at first tried to
-quell the tumult, but in vain. The fight was bound to
-come.
-
- | "Then there was naught but bow and spear,
- | And every man pulled out a brand."
- |
-
-The English showed their usual dexterity with the bow.
-The Scots, for some reason, never took to this weapon;
-they had fire-arms, pistolets, and the like. The terrible
-cloth-yard arrows "from tackles flew," and the old
-proverb bade fair to justify itself, that every English archer
-carried twenty-four Scots under his belt—an allusion to
-his bundle of shafts. Success seemed certain for the
-English side; some of the foremost men among the Scots
-fell, and even Carmichael was thrown to the ground and
-was within an ace of being made a prisoner. The air
-resounded with the rallying cries of the English, the
-names of their captains, "A Shaftoe! A Shaftoe!" "A
-Fenwick! A Fenwick!" The Scots had little
-harness among them, only a few had the jack which
-served them as a defence for the body. Nevertheless,
-they laid about them sturdily, with "dints full dour,"
-and there was many a cracked crown. Then suddenly a
-shout was heard. "Jedburgh's here!" A body of
-Jedburgh burgesses appear to have arrived just in the nick
-of time to add to the outnumbered force of Scots. They
-probably wore armour and what were called "white
-hats," that is steel caps. Meanwhile, the English, too
-confident of easy victory, instead of slaying more Scots
-and turning the repulse into a rout, thought only to
-plunder the unhappy merchants, who, trusting to the
-truce which had been proclaimed, had attached
-themselves to the meeting. Had it not been for the English
-greed, the Scots would have been defeated. As it was,
-the Tynedale men, throwing themselves on the merchants'
-packs, fell into disorder, their adversaries recovered from
-their surprise, and the timely arrival of the Jedburgh men
-turned the tables. A short, sharp bout ended in the
-triumph of the Scots and the Northumbrians fled,
-"Down ower the brae, like clogged bees." The Scots
-took many prisoners, amongst whom were the English
-Warden, and his son-in-law, Sir Francis Russell; but the
-most gallant soldier taken that day was that courteous
-knight, Sir Cuthbert Collingwood, to whose family
-Admiral Collingwood belonged. Several of those
-"Fenwicks fierce," who had turned up five hundred
-strong at the commencement of the fray, had the
-mortification of being carried off in triumph by their
-enemies. All these prisoners were sent to the Earl of
-Morton, Regent of Scotland, who detained them at
-Dalkeith for some days, until the bitter feeling natural
-after such an affair had died down, at any rate in part,
-and by this prudent precaution the Regent is thought to
-have probably averted a war between the two kingdoms.
-He ultimately permitted them to return to their own
-country, parting from them with great expressions of
-regard. The interest taken in the matter by Queen
-Elizabeth, and the representations of her Ambassador
-at Edinburgh, no doubt had something to do with this
-happy issue.
-
-It will probably occur to the careful reader of this
-book as somewhat strange to find the ruling powers of
-England and Scotland both so set upon peace; but it
-must be remembered that at this period in the reign
-of Queen Elizabeth the heir-apparent to the English
-throne was the young James VI., King of Scotland,
-who would naturally not wish for any quarrel with
-the country which he hoped later on to rule.
-Elizabeth, on the other hand, had Mary Queen of Scots as
-her prisoner, and did not wish in any further way
-to strain the already delicate relations between the
-two countries.
-
-The Carmichael mentioned in this ballad, known in full
-as Sir John Carmichael of Edrom, Scottish Warden of the
-Middle Marches, was afterwards murdered by one of the
-wild Armstrongs, who is said to have composed, the
-night before his execution, the following manly and
-pathetic "Good-night." The third and fourth lines
-show clearly the disrepute into which this once honoured
-clan was falling; the seventh and eighth lines could only
-have been written by one who, despite his faults, had
-the true gallant instincts deep in his blood.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- ARMSTRONG'S GOOD-NIGHT
-
-..
-
- | "This night is my departing night,
- | For here nae langer must I stay;
- | There's neither friend nor foe o' mine,
- | But wishes me away.
-
- | What I have done thro' lack of wit,
- | I never, never can recall;
- | I hope ye're a' my friends as yet;
- | Good-night and joy be with you all!"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Jock o' the Side`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXIV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Jock o' the Side
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "He is well kend, John of the Syde,
- | A greater thief did never ryde."
- |
-
-The subject of this ballad bears some resemblance
-to Kinmont Willie, and such adventures were
-not uncommon in those turbulent times. The
-events we are to relate originated in a raid ridden by the
-famous Liddesdale spearmen (the hardiest of the Scotch
-moss-troopers) upon English ground.
-
-"They had better hae staid at home," for the outcome
-was that one of their best men, Michael of Winfield, was
-killed, and Jock o' the Side, nephew to the Laird of
-Mangerton, was taken prisoner, and promptly lodged in
-Newcastle Jail. When the news reached Jock's mother
-she kilted her coats up to her knee, and ran down the
-water with the tears falling in torrents from her eyes.
-She ran to Mangerton House, on the banks of the Liddel,
-and told her brother, the good old lord, the bad news.
-"Michael is killed, and they have taken my son John." "Never
-fear, sister," quoth Mangerton, "I have eighty-three
-yokes of oxen, my barns, my byres, my folds are all
-filled, I'll part with them all ere Johnie shall die." Then
-he thought out his plan. "Three men I'll send to set him
-free, all harnessed in the best steel; the English loons
-shall feel the weight of their broad swords. The Laird's
-Jock shall be one, the Laird's Wat two, and Hobbie
-Noble, thou must be the third. Thy coat is blue, and
-since England banished thee thou hast been true to
-me." Now this Hobbie was an Englishman, born in Bewcastledale,
-the wildest district in Cumberland. Like numerous
-other English outlaws, he had made his own country too
-hot to hold him; his misdeeds had banished him to
-Liddesdale, and he was now in high favour with the Laird
-of Mangerton. The Laird gave the dauntless three
-orders to reverse the shoes of their horses, so that anyone
-crossing their trail might think they were proceeding in a
-contrary direction. He also warned them not to seem
-gentlemen, but to look like corn-carriers; not to show
-their good armour, nor appear like men of war, but to
-be arrayed as country lads, with halter and cart-collar
-on each mare. So Hobbie mounted his grey, Jack his
-lively bay, and Wat his white horse, and they rode for
-Tyne water. When they reached the Tyne they lighted
-down at a ford, and by the moonlight they cut a tree,
-with fifteen nogs on each side, to serve them as a scaling
-ladder, to climb Newcastle wall with. However, when
-they came to Newcastle town and alighted at the wall,
-their tree proved three ells too short, and there was
-nothing for it but to force the gates. At the gate a proud
-porter attempted to withstand them. The Armstrongs
-wrung his neck, took his life and his keys at once, and
-cast his body behind the wall. Soon they reached the
-jail, and called to the prisoner,
-
- | "Sleeps thou, wakes thou, Jock o' the Side,
- | Or art thou weary of thy thrall?"
- |
-
-Jock answered dolefully, "Often I wake, nay,
-sleep seldom comes to me—but who's this knows my
-name so well?" Then out and spoke the Laird's
-Jock, his cousin and namesake, "Now fear ye not,
-my billie!" quoth he; "for here are the Laird's Jock,
-the Laird's Wat, and Hobbie Noble the Englishman
-come to set you free." Jock o' the Side did not think it
-possible that they could effect his release. "Now hold
-thy tongue, my good cousin," said he. "This cannot be—
-
- | 'For if all Liddesdale were here the night,
- | The morn's the day that I must die.'
-
-They have laid full fifteen stone of Spanish iron on me,
-I am fast bound with locks and keys in this dark and
-dreary dungeon." But the Laird's Jock replied. "Fear
-not that; faint heart never won fair lady. Work thou
-within, we'll work without, and I'll be sworn we'll set
-thee free." They loosed the first strong door without a
-key, the next chained door they split to flinders. The
-Laird's Jock got the prisoner on his back, irons and all,
-and brought him down the stairs with no small speed
-and joy. Hobbie Noble offered to bear some of his
-weight, but the Laird's Jock said that he was lighter than
-a flea. When they had all gone out at the gates, the
-prisoner was set on horseback, and they all joked
-wantonly. "O Jock," they cried, "you ride like a
-winsome lady, with your feet all on one side." The night
-was wet, but they did not mind. They hied them on full
-merrily until they came to the ford at Cholerford, above
-Hexham. There the water was running mountains
-high. They asked an old man, "Honest man, tell us in
-haste, will the water ride?" "I've lived here thirty
-years and three," replied he, "and I never saw the Tyne
-so big, nor running so like a sea." The Laird's Wat
-counselled them to halt. "We need not try it, the
-day is come we all must die!" "Poor faint-hearted
-thief!" cried the Laird's Jock. "There'll no man die
-but him that's fated; I'll guide you safely through; lift
-the prisoner behind me." With that they took to the
-water and managed to swim through. "Here we are all
-safe," said the Laird's Jock triumphantly. "Poor faint
-Wat, what think ye now?" They now saw twenty men
-pursuing them, sent from Newcastle, all English lads,
-stout and true. But when their leader saw the water he
-shook his head. "It won't ride, my lads," said he.
-Then he cried to the party of Scots: "Take the prisoner,
-but leave me my fetters." But the Laird's Jock was not
-a Scot for nothing. "I wat weel no," he shouted back,
-"I'll keep them, they'll make horse-shoes for my
-mare—for I am sure she's bought them right dear from
-thee." Then they went on their way to Liddesdale, as fast as
-they could, and did not rest until they had brought the
-rescued prisoner to his own fireside, and made him free
-of his irons.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Hobbie Noble`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Hobbie Noble
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "Keep ye weel frae the traitor Mains!
- | For gold and gear he'll sell ye a'."
- |
-
-In the ballad of "Jock o' the Side," we have seen
-Hobbie Noble act a distinguished part in the deliverance
-from captivity of Jock, cousin of the Laird of
-Mangerton, chief of the Armstrong clan. Now in the
-following ballad we shall learn how ungrateful the
-Armstrongs were for his faithful services. The Armstrongs
-were one of those outlawed or broken clans, whose hand
-was against every man, and living as they did in what
-was called the Debateable Land, on the frontier between
-Liddesdale and England, these stark cattle-lifters and
-arrant thieves levied tribute from English and Scotch
-alike. Halbert or Hobbie Noble was an Englishman, a
-Cumbrian born and bred, but his misdeeds were so great,
-they banished him never to return, and he established
-himself among the Armstrongs. From their territory he
-continued his depredations upon the English, in
-resentment of which they at length offered a bribe to the
-Armstrongs to decoy him into England under pretence of
-inviting him to join them in a foray.
-
- | "At Kershope foot the tryst was set,
- | Kershope of the lily lee,"
-
-and the name of the chief traitor and leader of the gang
-was Sim o' the Mains. Hobbie harnessed himself "both
-with the iron and with the steel," buckled spur on his
-heel and belted brand to his side, leaped upon his
-"fringed grey," and rode down the banks of the Liddel.
-As soon as he saw the others, "Well be ye met, my
-comrades five," he cried. "Now, what is your will with
-me?" They all answered, with one consent, "Thou'rt
-welcome here, brave Noble; wilt thou ride with us into
-England, and we will be thy safe warrant? If we get a
-horse worth a hundred pounds thou shalt soon be upon
-its back." But Hobbie said that he dared not ride into
-England by day, as he had a feud with the Land-Sergeant
-(an officer under the Warden, to whom was entrusted the
-arrest of delinquents).
-
- | "But will ye stay till the day gae down,
- | Until the night come o'er the ground,
- | And I'll be a guide worth any two
- | That may in Liddesdale be found?
- | Though the night be black as pitch and tar,
- | I'll guide ye o'er yon hill so high;
- | And bring ye all in safety back,
- | If ye'll be true and follow me."
- |
-
-They let him guide them over moss and moor, over hill
-and hope, and over many a down, until they came to the
-Foulbogshiel. But meanwhile word was gone to the
-Land-Sergeant, in Askerton, about seventeen miles from
-Carlisle. "The deer that you have hunted so long, is in
-Bewcastle Waste this day." The Sergeant understood
-at once. Quoth he, "Hobbie Noble is that deer! He
-carries the style full high. He has often driven our
-bloodhounds back. Now go, warn the bows of Hartlie
-Burn, see they sharpen their arrows on the wall! Warn
-Willeva and Speir Edom, take word to them that they
-meet me on the Rodric-haugh at break of day. We will
-on to Conscouthart-green, for there, I think, we'll get our
-quarry." In the meantime Hobbie had alighted and
-was sleeping in the Foulbogshiel. He dreamed that his
-horse was shot beneath him, and he himself was hard
-put to it to get away. The cocks crowed, the day
-dawned, and if Hobbie had not wakened he would have
-been taken or slain in his sleep.
-
- | "Awake, awake, my comrades five!
- | I trow here makes a full ill day;
- | Yet the worst cloak o' this company
- | I hope shall cross the Waste this day,"
-
-Thus cried he to his companions, thinking the gates were
-clear. But alas! it was not so. They were beset by
-the Land-Sergeant's men, cruel and keen, and while
-the Englishmen came before, the traitor Sim o' the Mains
-came behind. Had Noble been as masterful a champion
-as Wallace himself, he could not have won under such
-untoward circumstances. He had but a laddie's sword,
-but he did more than a laddie's deeds, for that sword
-would have cleared Conscouthart-green had it not broken
-over one of the English heads. So his treacherous
-companions delivered Hobbie up to the officers of justice;
-they bound him with his own bowstring, but what made
-his heart feel sorest of all, was that it was his own five
-who bound him. They took him on to Carlisle. They
-asked him mockingly if he knew the way. He thought
-much, but said little, though he knew it as well as they
-did. As they took him up the Carlisle streets, the old
-wives cast their windows wide, every woman whispering
-to another, "That's the man loosed Jock o' the Side." The
-poor fellow cried out, "Fie on ye, women! why
-call ye me man? It's no like a man that I'm used, but
-like a beaten hound that's been fighting in the gutter." They
-had him up through Carlisle town, and set him by a
-chimney fire, where they gave him a wheaten loaf to eat,
-and a can of beer. "Confess my lord's horse, Hobbie,"
-they said, "and to-morrow in Carlisle thou shalt not
-die." "How can I confess them," says the poor man,
-"when I never saw them." And he swore a great oath,
-by the day that he was born, that he had never had
-anything of my lord's. He had but short shrift and
-they hung him the next morning.
-
-According to the ballad, his last words were of manly
-pride:—
-
- | "Yet wad I rather be ca'd Hobbie Noble,
- | In Carlisle, where he suffers for his fault,
- | Than I'd be ca'd the traitor Mains,
- | That eats and drinks o' meal and malt."
- |
-
-Thus died the doughty Noble. It is proper to add,
-however, that the Armstrong's chief, Lord Mangerton,
-with whom Hobbie had been a favourite, took a severe
-revenge on the traitors who betrayed him. The
-contriver of the scheme, Sim o' the Mains, fled into England
-to escape the resentment of his chief, and was there caught
-by the English, and himself executed at Carlisle, two
-months after Hobbie's death in the same place! Such
-is, at least, the tradition of Liddesdale.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Laird o' Logie`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXVI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Laird o' Logie
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-In 1592, the Earl of Bothwell, Francis Stuart, failed
-in an attempt against King James VI., whom
-he tried to surprise in the palace of Falkland.
-Amongst his adherents, whom he sought about the King's
-person, was the hero of this ballad, the Laird of Logie,
-who was taken prisoner and laid in Edinburgh chapel in
-the keeping of Sir John Carmichael, the hero of the ballad
-called the "Raid of Reidswire." Carmichael was at this
-time captain of the King's Guard, and had the keeping
-of State criminals.
-
- | I will sing, if ye will hearken,
- | If ye will hearken unto me;
- | The King has ta'en a poor prisoner,
- | The wanton laird o' young Logie.
-
- | Young Logie's laid in Edinburgh chapel,
- | Carmichael's the keeper o' the key;
- | And may Margaret's lamenting sair,
- | A' for the love of young Logie.
-
- | "Lament, lament na, may Margaret,
- | And of your weeping let me be;
- | For ye maun to the King himsell,
- | To seek the life of young Logie."
-
- | May Margaret has kilted her green cleiding,[#]
- | And she has curl'd back her yellow hair—
- | "If I canna get young Logie's life,
- | Farewell to Scotland for evermair."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Clothing.
-
-..
-
- | When she came before the King,
- | She kneelit lowly on her knee—
- | "O what's the matter, may Margaret?
- | And what needs a' this courtesie?"
-
- | "A boon, a boon, my noble liege,
- | A boon, a boon, I beg o' thee!
- | And the first boon that I come to crave,
- | Is to grant me the life of young Logie."
-
-.. _`"A boon, a boon, my noble liege!"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-198.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "*A boon, a boon, my noble liege, A boon, a boon, I beg o' thee!*"
-
- "*A boon, a boon, my noble liege,
- A boon, a boon, I beg o' thee!*"
-
-..
-
- | "O na, O na, may Margaret,
- | Forsooth, and so it mauna be;
- | For a' the gowd o' fair Scotland
- | Shall not save the life of young Logie."
-
- | But she has stown[#] the King's redding kaim,[#]
- | Likewise the Queen her wedding knife,
- | And sent the tokens to Carmichael,
- | To cause young Logie get his life.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] Stolen.
-[#] Dressing comb.
-
-..
-
- | She sent him a purse of the red gowd,
- | Another o' the white monie;
- | She sent him a pistol for each hand,
- | And bade him shoot when he gat free.
-
- | When he came to the Tolbooth stair,
- | There he let his volley flee;
- | It made the King in his chamber start,
- | E'en in the bed where he might be.
-
- | "Gae out, gae out, my merrymen a',
- | And bid Carmichael come speak to me;
- | For I'll lay my life the pledge o' that,
- | That yon's the shot o' young Logie."
-
- | When Carmichael came before the King,
- | He fell low down upon his knee;
- | The very first word that the King spake,
- | Was—"Where's the laird of young Logie?"
-
- | Carmichael turn'd him round about
- | (I wot the tear blinded his ee),
- | "There came a token frae your grace,
- | Has ta'en away the laird frae me."
-
- | "Hast thou play'd me that, Carmichael?
- | And hast thou play'd me that?" quoth he;
- | "The morn the justice-court's to stand,
- | And Logie's place ye maun supplie."
-
- | Carmichael's awa to Margaret's bower,
- | Even as fast as he may dree—
- | "O if young Logie be within,
- | Tell him to come and speak with me!"
-
- | May Margaret turn'd her round about
- | (I wot a loud laugh laughed she),
- | "The egg is chipp'd, the bird is flown,
- | Ye'll see nae mair of young Logie."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXVII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "'Tis I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead,
- | And a harried man I think I be!
- | There's nothing left at the fair Dodhead
- | But a woeful wife and bairnies three!"
- |
-
-About Martinmas time, when Border steeds get
-corn and hay, the Captain of Bewcastle rode
-over to Tividale to forage. And first he met a
-guide high up in Hardhaughswire, and next he met a
-guide low down in Borthwick water.
-
-"What tidings, what tidings, my trusty guide?"
-"No tidings have I—yet if ye go to the fair Dodhead,
-I'll let ye see many a cow's calf." Right hastily they
-came to the fair Dodhead, loosed the cows and ransacked
-the house.
-
-Jamie Telfer's[#] heart was sore when he saw this, and
-the tears ran down his cheeks, and he pleaded with the
-Captain to give him back his gear, or else he would have
-revenge upon him. But the Captain only laughed and
-said, "Man, there's nothing in thy house but an old sword
-without a sheath that could scarcely kill a mouse."
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] The Telfers, though they had become Scotch at the time of this
-ballad, were originally a Norman family, descended from the knight
-"Taille-fer" (cut-iron), who came over with William the Conqueror.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-The sun was not up though the moon had gone down,
-and there was a sprinkling of new-fallen snow upon the
-ground when Jamie Telfer ran ten miles a-foot between
-the Dodhead and Stob's Hall. When he came to the
-tower gate he shouted aloud, and old Gibby Elliot came
-out and asked the meaning of such disturbance.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a
-harried man am I, for nothing is left at fair Dodhead but
-a sad wife and three bairnies."
-
-"Go and seek help at Branksome Hall, for ye shall
-get none from me—seek help where ye paid blackmail,
-for, man, never did ye pay *me* any."
-
-James turned him about, his eyes blinded with tears.
-"Never shall I pay blackmail again to Elliot. My hounds
-may all run masterless, my hawks may fly as they will
-from tree to tree, and my lord may seize the lands of his
-vassal, for never shall I see again the fair Dodhead."
-
-He turned him to Tiviotside and made as fast as he
-could for Coultart cleugh, and there he shouted aloud
-until out came old Jock Grieve, and asked who it was
-that made such a noise.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a
-harried man am I, for nothing is left at fair Dodhead
-but a weeping wife and three bairnies, and six poor calves
-stand in the stall crying aloud for their mothers."
-
-"Alack!" quoth Jock Grieve, "alack, my heart is
-sore for thee! for I married the eldest of three sisters, and
-you married the youngest."
-
-So he took out his bonny black horse, right well fed
-with corn and hay, and set Jamie Telfer on his back, to
-take his troubles to Catslockhill. When he came to
-Catslockhill he shouted aloud until out came William's
-Wat to ask what was the matter.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a
-harried man am I. The Captain of Bewcastle has driven
-away my gear; for God's sake rise and help me."
-
-"Alas and alack," quoth William's Wat, "my heart is
-sore for thee. Never did I yet come to the fair Dodhead
-and found thy basket bare."
-
-He set his two sons on coal-black steeds, and he himself
-mounted a freckled grey, and with Jamie they rode to
-Branksome Hall, where they shouted so loud and high
-that old Buccleuch came out to ask what was the matter.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a
-harried man am I; there is nought left at fair Dodhead
-but a weeping wife and three bairnies."
-
-"Alack," quoth the good old lord, "my heart is sorry
-for thee; go call Willie, my son, to come speedily. Go
-call up hastily the men that live by the waterside. They
-who will not ride for Telfer's cattle, let them never again
-look me in the face. Call up Wat o'Harden and his sons,
-call up Borthwick Water, Gaudilands and Allanhaugh,
-call Gilmanscleugh and Commonside; ride by the gate
-at Priesthaughswire and call the Currors of the Lee, and
-call brave Willie of Gorrinberry as ye come down the
-Hermitage slack."
-
-So the Scotts rode and ran bravely and steadily,
-shouting "Ride for Branksome," and when Willie
-looked ahead he saw the cattle being driven fast up the
-Frostylee brook, and to the plain.
-
-"Who drives yon cattle?" cried Willie Scott, "to
-make us a laughing stock?" "'Tis I, the Captain of
-Bewcastle; I will not hide my name from thee."
-
-"Let Telfer's cattle go back, or by the faith of my
-body," said Willie, "I'll ware my dame's calf-skin on
-thee."
-
-"I will not let the cattle go back neither for thy love
-nor fear; I will drive Jamie Telfer's cattle in spite of all
-your company of Scotts."
-
-"Set on them, lads!" cried Willie; "set on them
-cruelly; there will be many an empty saddle before they
-come to Ritterford."
-
-So they set to with heart and hand, and blows fell like
-hail until many were slain and many a horse ran
-masterless. But Willie was struck by a sword through the
-headpiece and fell to the ground, and auld Wat of Harden
-wept for rage when he saw that his son was slain. He
-took off his steel cap and waved it thrice, and the snow
-on the Dinlay mountain was never whiter than the locks
-of his hair.
-
-"Revenge! revenge!" he cried; "lay on them, lads.
-Willie's death shall be revenged or we will never see
-Teviotside again."
-
-The lances flew into splinters, and many another brave
-rider fell, and before the Kershope ford was reached,
-the Scots had got the victory. John of Brigham was
-slain, and John of Barlow, and thirty more of the
-Captain's men lay bleeding on the ground. The Captain
-himself was run through the right thigh and the bone
-broken, and never would woman love him again, if he
-should live a hundred years.
-
-"Take back the kye!" said he; "they are dear kye
-to some of us; never will a fair lady smile on me if I
-should live to be a hundred."
-
-Word came to the Captain's bride in her bower, that
-her lord had been taken prisoner. "I would rather have
-had a winding-sheet," said she, "and helped to put it over
-his head than that he should have been disgraced by the
-Border Scot when he led his men over Liddel."
-
-There was a wild gallant there named Watty
-Wudspurs (Madspurs) who cried, "Let us on to his
-house in Stanegirthside, if any man will ride with us!"
-
-So they came to Stanegirthside, pulled down the trees,
-burst open the door, and drove out all the Captain's kye
-before them.
-
-An old woman of the Captain's kin cried, "Who dare
-loose the Captain's kye, or answer to him and his men?"
-
-"It is I, Watty Wudspurs, that loose the kye; I will
-not hide my name from thee; and I will loose them in
-spite of him and his men."
-
-When they came to the fair Dodhead they were a
-welcome sight, for instead of his own ten milk kye Jamie
-Telfer had now got thirty-three. He paid the rescue shot
-in gold and silver, and at Willie Scott's burial, there were
-many weeping eyes.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Muckle-mou'd Meg`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXVIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Muckle-mou'd Meg
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Scott family was very powerful on the
-Border in the days of Queen Elizabeth, the
-bravest and strongest of them being the bold
-Lord of Buccleuch. His name is often mentioned in
-Border history, and so is that of another Scott, "auld
-Wat Scott of Harden." He was a fit man for these wild
-times, being both brave and canny. He married a
-beautiful Border lass, "the Flower of Yarrow," and it is
-surprising how many able men have descended from this
-marriage. Not only did Sir Walter Scott and Robert
-Louis Stevenson claim descent from this fine old
-freebooter; his daughter Maggie married Gilbert Elliot of
-Stobs, nicknamed "Gibbie wi' the Golden Garters,"
-and from them were descended George Augustus Elliot
-(Lord Heathfield), famous for his splendid defence of
-Gibraltar, worthy of the best Border traditions, and also
-the Elliots of Minto, who have twice been Viceroys of
-India, once late in the eighteenth and once early in the
-twentieth century.
-
-But on one occasion one of the sons of Scott of Harden
-came perilously near to finding out how far his neck was
-capable of carrying the weight of his body. It was late
-in Queen Elizabeth's reign, and King James VI. of
-Scotland was extra anxious to live at peace with England,
-for he expected now very soon to be King over both
-countries. So he told his Warden, the bold Buccleuch,
-to restrain the wild Scotch freebooters; and you may
-imagine that the order was little to their liking. Young
-Willie Scott, Scott of Harden's son, quickly determined
-that cattle he must steal anyhow; he was his father's
-son, and did not his father once say, as he gazed longingly
-at a fine English haystack, "if only ye'd got four legs,
-haystack, ye would not be standing there!" So as
-Willie Scott was forbidden to steal English cattle, he
-decided to steal Scotch.
-
-Sir Gideon Murray, of Elibank Castle, was an old
-enemy of the Scott family, having once been told off to
-punish them for some audacious act of theirs. And Sir
-Gideon had some cattle that would make any Borderer's
-mouth water and his arm itch to drive them home. So
-Willie and a few boon companions started off one night
-for Elibank. But a warning voice had reached Sir
-Gideon, and Willie received a warm reception, and was
-taken prisoner. He lay in the castle dungeon all night,
-reflecting on the folly of being caught, and fully expecting
-to be hanged very early next morning, perhaps without
-even his breakfast to comfort him!
-
-But early on the fatal morning, Lady Murray startled
-her husband by asking him if he really meant to hang
-Willie Scott. He looked at her as if she were mad; of
-course, what else was there to do? Then she unfolded
-her scheme. She had a very plain-looking daughter
-known as "Muckle mou'd Meg," or Margaret with the
-extremely large mouth. Young Scott was handsome
-and of good family, and poor Meg would never again have
-such a chance of getting a good husband. Why not
-release Willie Scott, if only he would marry
-Mucklemou'd Meg?
-
-They were men of action in those days, and the priest
-was instantly sent for. Then, all being ready, the
-prisoner was brought forth. He was shown on the one
-hand the priest and the girl, and on the other hand the
-tree and the noose, and was asked to take his choice. His
-first proud feeling was that he would be mocked at if he
-married such a girl on such terms, and he walked bravely
-towards the rope. But the nearer he got to it the uglier
-it looked. He had to confess to himself that it was not
-at all a comfortable looking rope; he had a nasty feeling
-round his neck from merely looking at it, and thought it
-would probably feel worse when it got round his throat.
-Then he looked at the girl; she certainly was not as
-beautiful as his mother, the lovely Flower of Yarrow; and
-a Borderer loved a beautiful wife. But if he hanged he
-would have no wife at all! Then he suggested that he
-should have three days to think it over, but Murray said
-no, neither priest nor noose was prepared to wait, he
-must decide at once. Then he looked again at Meg and
-saw a kind glance in her eye; she felt sorry for the
-handsome young fellow. Then he knew she had a good heart,
-and that decided the matter; he went up and kissed her
-with a good grace, and the priest married them straight
-away.
-
-Afterwards he became Sir William Scott, and an
-important man on the Border. And, best of all, Meg
-proved to be a real good wife to him, and he never
-regretted the day when he elected to suffer the knot to be
-tied by the priest instead of by the hangman.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Dowie Dens of Yarrow`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XXXIX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Dowie Dens of Yarrow
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-This is one of the most famous and widely known
-of all the Border ballads, and has proved a
-source of inspiration to several poets, including
-Wordsworth, who wrote three poems upon the subject.
-The bard does not relate the full particulars, but gives
-only the barest outlines of facts, which were well known
-in his day, and still live in tradition. The story tells of a
-duel between two brothers-in-law. The very spot where
-it took place is still pointed out, a low muir on the Yarrow
-banks. The slain knight was apparently Walter Scott,
-one of the ancestors of Lord Napier. His murderer was
-his brother-in-law, John Scott. "Dowie" means
-melancholy, and "den" is a word used to describe a
-narrow, rocky valley, usually wildly beautiful.
-
-
- | Late at e'en drinking the wine,
- | And e'er they paid the lawing,
- | They set a combat them between,
- | To fight it in the dawing.[#]
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Dawn.
-
-..
-
- | "O stay at home my noble lord,
- | O stay at home my marrow.
- | My cruel brother will you betray,
- | On the dowie houms[#] of Yarrow."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Hillocks.
-
-..
-
- | "O fare ye well, my lady gay!
- | O fare ye well, my Sarah!
- | For I must go, though I ne'er return
- | From the dowie banks of Yarrow."
-
- | She kissed his cheek, she combed his hair,
- | As oft she had done before, O,
- | She belted him with his noble brand,
- | "And he's away to Yarrow."
-
- | As he gaed up the Tennies bank
- | I wot he gaed with sorrow,
- | Till down in a den he spied nine armed men,
- | On the dowie houms of Yarrow.
-
- | "O come ye here to part your land,
- | The bonnie forest thorough?
- | Or come ye here to wield your brand,
- | On the dowie houms of Yarrow?"
-
- | "I come not here to part my land,
- | And neither to beg nor borrow,
- | I come to wield my noble brand
- | On the bonnie banks of Yarrow.
-
- | "If I see all, ye're nine to ane;
- | And that's an unequal marrow;
- | Yet will I fight, while lasts my brand,
- | On the bonnie banks of Yarrow."
-
- | Four has he hurt, and five has slain,
- | On the bloody braes of Yarrow,
- | Till that stubborn knight came him behind,
- | And ran his body thorough.
-
- | "Gae hame, gae hame, good brother John,
- | And tell your sister Sarah,
- | To come and lift her leafu'[#] lord;
- | He's sleepin' sound on Yarrow."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Lawful.
-
-..
-
- | "Yestreen I dreamed a dolefu' dream,
- | I fear there will be sorrow!
- | I dreamed I pu'd the heather green,
- | Wi' my true love on Yarrow.
-
- | "O gentle wind, that bloweth south,
- | From where my love repaireth,
- | Convey a kiss from his dear mouth,
- | And tell me how he fareth!
-
- | "But in the glen strive armed men;
- | They've wrought me dole and sorrow;
- | They've slain—the comeliest knight they've slain,
- | He bleeding lies on Yarrow."
-
- | As she sped down yon high, high hill,
- | She gaed wi' dole and sorrow,
- | And in the den spied ten slain men,
- | On the dowie banks of Yarrow.
-
- | She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair,
- | She searched his wounds all thorough,
- | She kiss'd them till her lips grew red,
- | On the dowie houms of Yarrow.
-
- | "Now haud[#] your tongue, my daughter dear,
- | For a' this breeds but sorrow;
- | I'll wed ye to a better lord,
- | Than him ye lost on Yarrow."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Hold.
-
-..
-
- | "O haud your tongue, my father dear!
- | Ye mind me but of sorrow;
- | A fairer rose did never bloom
- | Than now lies cropp'd on Yarrow."
-
-.. _`"She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-210.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "*She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair, She searched his wounds all thorough.*"
-
- "*She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair,
- She searched his wounds all thorough.*"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XL
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "When for the lists they sought the plain
- | The stately lady's silken rein
- | Did noble Howard hold;
- | Unarmed by her side he walk'd
- | And much, in courteous phrase they talk'd
- | Of feats of arms of old.
- | Costly his garb; his Flemish ruff
- | Fell o'er his doublet, shaped of buff,
- | With satin slashed and lined;
- | Tawny his boot and gold his spur,
- | His cloak was all of Poland fur,
- | His hose with silver twined.
- | His Bilboa blade, by Marchmen felt,
- | Hung in a broad and studded belt;
- | Hence, in rude phrase, the Borderers still
- | Call'd noble Howard, Belted Will."
- | SCOTT, *Lay of the Last Minstrel*.
- |
-
-One of the many picturesque figures of Border
-history was "Belted Will," or to call him
-by his proper name and title, Lord William
-Howard, a younger son of the powerful Duke of Norfolk.
-
-His mother had died when he was an infant, and
-his father, the foremost Roman Catholic nobleman in
-England, took up the cause of Mary Queen of Scots,
-whom he wished to marry. For this treason against
-Queen Elizabeth he was beheaded in 1572, when young
-Lord William was only nine years old. At the age of
-fourteen the young lord's guardians arranged for him a
-marriage with Elizabeth Dacre, a member of a powerful
-Border family, and heiress to the Baronry of Gilsland.
-As the bride was even younger than her boy-husband,
-let us hope that they both went to school again
-immediately after the marriage!
-
-When he grew to manhood, Lord William warmly
-supported the Roman Catholic cause and was imprisoned
-by Elizabeth; but when James became King, he was
-released and restored to his estates on the Border.
-Throughout the remainder of his career he was the most
-notable man of his district. He knew how to make
-himself respected by his wild neighbours. His fame and
-power were great. He founded the fortunes of his family
-so surely that he it is who is usually thought of as the
-ancestor of the Earls of Carlisle, though his great-grandson
-was the first to hold the title.
-
-Lord William had great energy and many interests, and
-was remarkable as being an "all-round" man. He was
-equally a leader of men and a lover of books; no detail
-in the management of his estates was too small for him
-to study; he was a good husband to his wife, and a
-splendid father to his fifteen children. He selected the
-most beautiful of his several castles, that of Naworth, and
-repaired and almost rebuilt it; he took there the fine old
-oak ceiling from the ancient castle of Kirkoswald, which
-was ornamented with portraits of all the kings of England.
-Visitors to Naworth can see to-day the "hall of Belted
-Will," by kind permission of the present Earl of Carlisle.
-
-He was something of a poet and very much of an
-antiquarian. His estates were full of interesting things,
-and none knew them better than he. There were miles of
-the Roman wall, still in excellent condition; there were
-many Roman altars and inscriptions, which he copied and
-translated; quite near him, at Coome Crags, was a Roman
-quarry, which can still be seen to-day, with marks of Roman
-tools on its stones. It stands in a beautiful wood by the
-side of the lovely river Irthing. And only a little further
-on, standing on a fine cliff overlooking the river, is the old
-Roman station of Amboglanna, a fort that covered
-five and a half acres, with walls that were once five feet
-thick, the main foundations of which are still standing,
-clear enough for anyone to trace them out. It is quieter
-there to-day than it was in Roman times, or in the stirring
-days of Belted Will!
-
-It is good to think that this broad-shouldered,
-gallant, powerful nobleman, who could ride, shoot, fight
-and keep this wild district in order, was at the same time
-such a clever student and book-worm. They tell a story
-that he was once sitting in his library intent on a book
-when his men brought in a robber whom they had caught
-red-handed, and asked Lord William to try him. Belted
-Will, angry at being interrupted, cried out:—"Don't
-disturb me; hang him!" Half an hour later he rose
-and came down to try the man, but finding that he
-was already hanged he went on with his book. It is
-only fair to add that robbers in those days expected no
-mercy when caught.
-
-One of the many clever things that Lord William did
-was to have figures carved in oak to represent soldiers;
-these he placed on the top of his high towers, and deceived
-the Scots into thinking that he had a large and very
-watchful garrison! These figures can still be seen at Naworth.
-Near Naworth Castle is Lanercost Priory, where King
-Edward I. stayed on his way to Scotland. There is a
-secret passage from Naworth tower which is supposed
-to run under the river to Lanercost. No one is allowed
-to go through it, as it is considered dangerous; the
-people of the district say that the last man to do so was
-Oliver Cromwell.
-
-Visitors to Naworth to-day should certainly go on
-to Gilsland itself, the picturesque straggling little town,
-which was the head of the Baronry which Elizabeth
-Dacre brought to her boy-husband. The Irthing at
-Gilsland runs through a wonderfully beautiful gorge,
-rocky and wooded, wild and romantic. Stand on the
-venturesome stepping stones near the old church, with
-the river rushing at your very feet, and see if this is an
-exaggeration of the beauties of the scene. Right in the
-midst of the glen you can see the "Popping-stone" where
-Sir Walter Scott walked with the lady of his choice and
-asked her to marry him. Readers of "Guy Mannering"
-can see in Over Denton church near Gilsland the grave of
-Meg Merrilees, who died here at the age of ninety-eight.
-The town is also interesting for the fact that the county
-border is at Gilsland, and there is an inn so built that it
-stands in both counties, and contains a bed in which you
-can sleep with your head in Northumberland and your
-feet in Cumberland!
-
-There is a story of Belted Will that tells eloquently of
-the strength of his character. When he was released
-from prison by King James he found his estates so ruined
-by careless management that he knew that great care was
-needed to put things right again; so until he got his
-affairs into order, all the pocket-money that he would
-allow himself was twenty shillings per month!
-
-Bold William, Belted Will, gallant Lord Howard, as
-you will, died at Naworth in 1640 aged seventy-seven,
-one year after the death of his devoted wife. His
-descendants were, like himself, students and men of
-action; the present Earl of Carlisle is directly sprung
-from him, and is very proud of the fact.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Gilderoy`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Gilderoy
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Gilderoy was a celebrated and most daring
-highwayman, who roamed far, and was well-known
-all over Scotland and indeed in London.
-His death inspired a very striking ballad, but this is
-hardly a Border Lowland ballad, but refers chiefly to
-another Border district, namely, that between the
-Lowlands and Highlands. Just as the Scottish Lowlanders
-thought the English their legitimate quarry, so the
-Highlanders in turn looked upon the Lowlanders as
-created to supply them with all they lacked. There is a
-story on record of a Highland chief who, finding his men
-had carelessly robbed another Highlander, returned the
-spoil with a handsome apology, and issued stringent
-orders that in future nothing was to be taken except in
-the Lowlands, "where all men make their prey."
-
-Among the robber clans of the Highlands, the
-MacGregors stand easily in the first rank. In a long series
-of Scottish Acts of Parliament, they are habitually
-referred to as "the wicked clan Gregor, so long continuing
-in blood, slaughter, theft, and robbery." One of their
-most famous exploits was the battle of Glenfruin, when
-they defeated their enemies, the Colquhouns, and slew
-two hundred of them. The Colquhouns appeared before
-the King at Stirling with the bloody shirts stripped off
-their dead, and the law was put in motion against the
-MacGregors more vigorously than ever. This was in
-1603. The execution of Gilderoy, as described in our
-poem, took place in 1638. His real name was Patrick
-MacGregor, and the fact that he belonged to this
-Ishmaelite clan, whose hand was directed against every
-man, and whose very name had been solemnly abolished,
-may well serve as an excuse for his career of crime.
-Gilderoy, in Gaelic, means the red-haired gillie or lad,
-and besides the name there are many other points of
-similarity between him and Rob Roy, who was the head
-of the Clan MacGregor in the following century. Both
-Gilderoy and Rob Roy were professional blackmailers,
-that is, they could be relied on never to plunder anyone
-who was prudent enough to buy them off by paying a
-fixed contribution. This is what is meant in the
-following lines of the ballad—
-
- | "All these did honestly possess
- | He never did annoy,
- | Who never failed to pay their cess
- | To my love, Gilderoy."
- |
-
-The "cess" is the blackmail, or insurance against
-robbery. The widespread reputation of Gilderoy is
-attested by the many legends of him which are printed
-in the old chap-books and "Lives of the Highwaymen." According
-to these authorities, Gilderoy once robbed
-Oliver Cromwell near Glasgow; but an even more
-romantic episode of his career was a roaming trip upon the
-continent, in the course of which he is said to have picked
-Cardinal Richelieu's pocket while he was celebrating
-mass in the King's presence, at the church of St Denis in
-Paris. He made his way even to Madrid, where he
-succeeded in carrying off the Duke of Medina-Cell's
-plate. Altogether a most notorious and dashing cateran.
-The ballad is supposed to be spoken by a young
-woman who had all her life been attached to him.
-
- | "Gilderoy was a bonnie boy,
- | Had roses to his shoon;[#]
- | His stockings were of silken soy,
- | With garters hanging down.
- | It was, I ween, a comely sight
- | To see so trim a boy;
- | He was my jo, and heart's delight,
- | My handsome Gilderoy.
- | \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
- | My Gilderoy and I were born
- | Both in one town together;
- | We scant were seven years before
- | We 'gan to love each other.
- | Our daddies and our mammies they
- | Were filled with meikle joy,
- | To think upon the bridal day
- | Of me and Gilderoy."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Shoes.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-But there intervened the spirit of adventure which
-had ever been the birthright of all of his surname,
-
- | "Oh, that he still had been content
- | With me to lead his life!
- | But ah! his manful heart was bent
- | To stir in deeds of strife;
- | And he in many a venturous deed
- | His courage bold would try;
- | And now this gars[#] my heart to bleed
- | For my dear Gilderoy."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Makes.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-No doubt those who knew Gilderoy personally would
-have agreed, as was actually said of Rob Roy, that he
-was a benevolent and humane man "in his way."
-
- | "My Gilderoy, both far and near,
- | Was feared in every town;
- | And boldly bore away the gear
- | Of many a Lowland loun,
- | For man to man durst meet him none,
- | He was so brave a boy;
- | At length with numbers he was ta'en,
- | My winsome Gilderoy."
- |
-
-He was not so fortunate as Rob Roy, who ultimately
-died peacefully in his bed. Gilderoy had lost the game,
-and he had to pay the stakes.
-
- | "Of Gilderoy so feared they were,
- | They bound him fast and strong;
- | To Edinbro' they led him there,
- | And on a gallows hung.
- | They hung him high above the rest,
- | He was so trim a boy;
- | There died the youth whom I loved best,
- | My handsome Gilderoy."
- |
-
-Thus perished one of the characteristic products of
-an age whose standards were so different from ours that
-we can hardly judge him fairly. He was banned before
-his birth, a scion of a race so indomitably and innately
-ferocious that the law attempted to extirpate them, root
-and branch. The very name of Gregor could be given
-by no clergyman at baptism, under penalty of
-deprivation and banishment. Cunning and politic neighbours
-were not slow to take advantage of the stubborn
-disposition of the MacGregors, and gradually stripped them
-of their once extensive lands in Argyle and Perthshire.
-Gilderoy might well consider that he was "an honester
-man than stood on any of their shanks," and we may be
-excused for feeling a very lively sympathy with him, and
-for echoing in our inmost hearts the exquisitely feminine
-point of view expressed by the lady composer of the
-ballad.
-
- | "If Gilderoy had done amiss,
- | He might have banished been;
- | Ah! what sore cruelty is this
- | To hang such handsome men!
- | To hang the flower of Scottish land,
- | So sweet and fair a boy!
- | No lady had so white a hand
- | As thee, my Gilderoy!
-
- | When he had yielded up his breath
- | I bare his corpse away;
- | With tears, that trickled for his death,
- | I washt his comely clay;
- | And sicker[#] in a grave sae deep
- | I laid the dear lo'ed boy;
- | And now for ever maun I weep,
- | My winsome Gilderoy."
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Safely.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Archie Armstrong's Oath`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Archie Armstrong's Oath
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-..
-
- | "And oft since then, to England's King,
- | The story he has told;
- | And aye, when he 'gan rock and sing,
- | Charlie his sides would hold."
- |
-
-Archie Armstrong lived in Eskdale, where
-he did his best to keep up the grand reputation
-of his family as being among the very boldest
-sheep-stealers of the Border. His house was at Stubholm,
-where the Wauchope stream runs into the river Esk,
-near where the picturesque town of Langholm now
-stands. Living in the reign of Charles I., after the union
-of crowns, the profession of freebooter was far less
-honourable than of old. He could not now plead that he was
-a Border soldier, fighting against his nation's enemy.
-The wild Border blood in him might cry out for the old
-adventurous career, but he could no longer hope for the
-aid of powerful Border families. When cornered, his sole
-protector would be his own wits, and woe betide him if
-they failed!
-
-Archie's house was about eight miles from the Border,
-and he could not help strolling towards the fascinating
-line and tasting the sweetness of temptation. When
-the chance came that seemed to him sufficiently safe,
-he would go home in company though he had walked out
-alone; the "company" being a good fat English sheep.
-One night a shepherd had marked him lingering about,
-and had watched him, and raised an alarm. Away went
-stout Archie at a Marathon pace; half way home he
-passed Gilnockie tower, where his ancestor bold Johnie
-Armstrong lived so gaily. "Alas!" thought Archie,
-dolefully, "he too was hanged in the end!"
-
-He got home well in front of his pursuers, but his wife
-gave him small encouragement. With typical Scottish
-dourness she remarked to him, "Ye will be ta'en this
-night and hanged i' the morning."
-
-But Archie put a braw face on it, and declared that he
-would never hang for one silly sheep. Quicker than any
-butcher he skinned and roughly trimmed the dead animal,
-throwing the rejected parts into the swift stream.
-Then rejoicing in the fact that his child was away with
-its aunt, he put the carcase carefully in the cradle and
-began rocking it and singing a lullaby to it, as if he were
-the most loving father in all the British Isles.
-
-The pursuers now rushed in, and began to accuse
-Archie triumphantly; but he rebuked them for making
-so much noise, telling them that his child was at death's
-door! As for stealing their sheep, he took a solemn oath
-that if he had done such a thing he would ask to be
-doomed to "eat the flesh this very cradle holds!"
-
-Such an oath on the Borders was a very serious matter;
-they little knew that the only flesh in the cradle was
-sheep's flesh, which Archie asked nothing better than to
-devour!
-
-Impressed but not convinced, his enemies carefully
-searched the whole of Archie's house and garden; it
-was only with very great unwillingness that they at last
-decided that they must miss the supreme pleasure of
-hanging him! They went away saying that they must
-have been deluded by the devil or by witches; and the
-shepherd resolved to hang a branch of rowan-tree
-(mountain-ash) by his fold, for that was well-known to
-have the power to keep witches away.
-
-As soon as they were all on their road to England again,
-Archie skipped about like a dancing fiddler. "Wife,"
-he said, "I never knew before that I would make such
-a good nurse."
-
-After this Archie wandered down to London, and his
-wild jests becoming famous, he was made Court Jester
-by King Charles I. And many a time he acted the story
-to the King, rocking a pretended cradle, and singing a
-persuasive lullaby, to the King's intense amusement.
-
-Nevertheless, Archie lost his place by his boldness.
-These were the days of Archbishop Laud (1637), who was
-hated by the Scots. One day, as the archbishop was
-about to say grace before dinner, Archie asked the King's
-permission to say grace instead. The King consented,
-and the jester's double-meaning words were as follows:—
-
-"All *praise* to God, and little *laud* to the devil!"
-
-The archbishop, in many senses a little man, had Archie
-dismissed in disgrace. But, such were the chances of
-these uncertain times, the archbishop was executed in the
-end, while the sheepstealer escaped that fate!
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Christie's Will`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Christie's Will
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The resourceful Archie, whose tale we have just
-told, was not the only one of the reckless
-Armstrongs to keep up the old freebooting habits
-in the reign of Charles I. There lived at Gilnockie tower
-(the old residence of the famous Johnie Armstrong) in
-the parish of Cannobie, a notorious Willie Armstrong,
-known as Christie's Will. Like Archie, he more than
-once owed his life to his ready wit. He was shut up
-in Jedburgh jail when the Earl of Traquair, Lord High
-Treasurer, paid the prison an official visit. When he
-asked Will the cause of his being there, the freebooter
-answered:—
-
-"For stealing two halters, my lord."
-
-Traquair was surprised, but Will afterwards owned
-that there was a fine colt at the end of each halter.
-
-Traquair was amused and pleased by the boldness of
-the man, and had him set free.
-
-Some little time afterwards Traquair was involved in
-a law-suit which was set down to be decided by Lord
-Durie, who seems to have let it be known before-hand
-what his opinion was upon the case. Nothing would save
-Traquair's interests except that Durie must be got out
-of the way before the case began. But how was it to be
-done?
-
-Christie's Will was appealed to, and merely said
-"Leave it to me."
-
-It was the judge's habit to take horseback exercise on
-the sands of Leith without any attendant. One
-morning, whilst so riding, a well-dressed and gentlemanly
-stranger, on a good horse, happened to overtake him;
-a courteous greeting led to a friendly conversation, in
-which the stranger proved himself so affable and entertaining
-that the judge rode on by his side without suspicion.
-Suddenly, when they had come to a lonely spot, Lord
-Durie found himself seized by this muscular gentleman,
-smothered up in a big cloak, whisked off his horse and on
-to the stranger's, who galloped off, mischief knows where!
-It was Christie's Will, carrying out his promise.
-
-The judge's horse galloped home, riderless. Search
-was made, but the judge could not be found. It could
-only be supposed that he had been thrown off into the sea.
-His successor was appointed, and Lord Traquair's case
-was heard and won!
-
-Lord Durie had languished for several months in a
-dreary underground vault. I wonder if he thought of
-the many poor wretches he had sentenced to a similar
-fate? Suddenly at midnight he was roughly awakened,
-muffled up as before, and carried away again by his
-captor on horseback. Next morning, by the light of the
-newly-risen sun, he found himself on the very spot by
-the sands of Leith from which he had been kidnapped!
-We will hope that every one, including his successor, was
-glad when he thus came to life again.
-
-When the Civil War began, the Earl of Traquair was
-faithful to King Charles I. Having some papers of
-importance that he wished to have given into the King's
-own hands, he entrusted these to the bold freebooter.
-Christie's Will did his errand, and received an equally
-important answer. But spies at Court had given
-Cromwell word of the matter, and the command was
-sent up to Carlisle that Will Armstrong must be
-intercepted there. Not knowing his danger, Will halted in
-the town to refresh his horse, then pushed forward to
-the bridge which crossed the Eden on the Northern
-boundary of the city. Cromwell's soldiers were waiting
-for him; the bridge was high and narrow, the broad
-Eden waters were swirling in high flood.
-
-Christie's Will, without one second's hesitation, spurred
-his horse over the parapet. He sank ... he came up
-... he sank ... he came up ... he sank ... he
-came up, this time at the very bank. He cut his
-heavy, dripping cloak from his shoulders; relieved of
-the weight, his horse struggled to the land. Away went
-Will, away went the troopers after him. It was a hard
-race to the river Esk, and this also Will had to swim.
-But now he was in Scotland, and his friends were at
-hand; gaily Will turned to his pursuers, who dared not
-cross the water; "Good friends," cried he, "come over
-and drink with me!" But they showed him their backs,
-and their horses's tails, and he saw no more of them.
-
-Such were the exploits of Christie's Will; he was the
-last of the free-booters, but he certainly knew how to
-live up to their boldest traditions.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Northumberland at the time of the Civil War`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLIV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Northumberland at the time of the Civil War
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-During the stormy days of King Charles I., the
-Borders, and especially Northumberland, saw
-many stirring scenes. It must be remembered
-that shortly before the Long Parliament was elected, King
-Charles almost came to war with the Scottish Presbyterians,
-because they would not obey the harsh rule of
-Archbishop Laud. The Scots raised an army under the
-lead of shrewd general Alexander Leslie, the "old, little,
-crooked soldier," of great experience, trained by the great
-Gustavus of Sweden. In 1639 Charles sent ships up to
-the Forth, in reply to which Leslie marched his army to
-threaten the border. The old quarrel between the two
-countries began to blaze up again. King Charles led an
-army to the border and was received with splendid
-applause at Newcastle. Many joined his army, and
-shouted with joy at the thought of meeting the Scots in
-battle. But they were an untrained disorderly crew, who
-fired their guns off at random and kept no military order
-whatever. Gallant Leslie marched his men down to
-Duns Law, in South Berwickshire, and was ready to
-fight. But King Charles would not trust his army that
-length; he made terms with his opponents, promising
-them the reforms they set their hearts upon, and the two
-armies melted away like school-boys at the end of the
-term.
-
-Things were soon as bad as before. Lord Conway
-was sent by the King to put Newcastle into a strong
-defensive state. His greatest difficulty was to get money
-for the purpose, for the King's quarrel with his various
-Parliaments had deprived him of supplies. The badly
-paid troops mutinied, and the ring-leader was shot.
-Very soon the Scottish army came across the Tweed, the
-Highlanders armed with bows and arrows.
-
-They pitched their camp on Heddon Law, and soon
-proved to the country folk that they had not come for
-plunder, but would pay for all they wanted to eat. This
-re-assured the country people, who had no real quarrel
-with the Scots, and even became most friendly to them.
-
-With Lord Conway it was otherwise; he was the
-King's officer, and was bound to offer resistance. His
-opinion was that if once the Scots crossed the Tyne, and
-attacked Newcastle from the south or Gateshead side,
-they were sure of victory. Accordingly, leaving a strong
-garrison to protect the town, he marched out with two
-thousand or more foot and fully one thousand horse to
-command the important ford across the Tyne at Newburn,
-a place five or six miles due west of Newcastle. It
-is interesting to remember that here also the Romans had
-had fortifications, along the line of the wall, and the very
-spot where the Scots and English fought may well have
-been the scene of contests between the Roman Legions
-and the wild Picts.
-
-The English arrived first, on the south bank of the
-river, and threw up earth-works hastily. Very soon
-they saw the Scots march into Newburn village, on the
-north bank, where they employed themselves by hauling
-their cannon up to the church tower. Remarkable
-cannon they were, made out of bar-iron hooped together
-with cord and wet, raw hides! But they were not
-required to carry any distance, the foe was only on the
-other side of the Tyne. All the morning the enemies
-looked at one another across the river, each hesitating
-to fire the first shot of the war. At last an English
-officer shot a Scotch officer, and the fight began. The
-Scots were on the higher ground, and their cannon, rough
-as they were, sent heavy shot on to the English. Then
-when the river tide went down, the Scots rushed across
-the ford, and the battle was soon won, the royal standard
-being taken. English runaways rushed through the
-woods and into Newcastle, crying, "Fly for your lives,
-naked devils have destroyed us!" Whether they
-referred to kilted Highlanders is uncertain. Anyway,
-Leslie and his Scots entered Newcastle in triumph, but
-were afterwards bought off with a payment of £60,000
-and recrossed the Tweed into Scotland.
-
-This was in 1641, a year in which King Charles was
-quarrelling bitterly with his Long Parliament, though
-the actual civil war in England did not begin till 1642.
-Early in 1642 it was decided that so important a
-town as Newcastle ought to be put in a stronger state
-of defence.
-
-William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle, was made
-governor of the town, but he was much hindered in his
-plans by lack of money. King Charles, however,
-promoted him from Earl to Marquis of Newcastle, and the
-lack of funds he made up as best he was able. However,
-the Governor of Holy Island, off the Northumberland
-shore, found himself left for sixteen months without any
-pay! He wrote to the King's treasury a protest in verse,
-beginning:—
-
- | "*The great commander o' the Cormorants,*
- | *The geese and ganders of these hallowed lands,*
- | *Where Lindisfarne and Holy Island stands,*
- | *These worthless lines sends to your worthy hands.*"
- |
-
-The allusion in the first two lines is to the fact that
-Holy Island and the Farne Islands were then, and are still
-to-day, so thinly peopled that sea-birds gather there in
-large numbers, adding greatly to the wild beauties of
-these islets and rocks.
-
-In January 1644 a serious struggle began. Leslie and
-his soldiers crossed the Tweed at Berwick bridge and
-again entered Northumberland. General Bayly marched
-his men from Kelso across the frozen river and joined
-Leslie at Alnwick. Warkworth Castle, though it
-contained cannon and provisions, surrendered at once. The
-Scottish general gravely told Bemerton, the governor,
-that if he had learnt to fight as well as he had learnt to
-dance his castle could never have been taken! The
-country districts of Northumberland had no quarrel with
-the Scots, and it was soon evident that the real fight
-would be at Newcastle, bravely held by the Marquis
-and by the Mayor, Sir John Marley.
-
-The Scottish "murthering pieces," as the cannon were
-called, were brought down by sea, and the obstinate
-conflict began. Despite the terrible weather of a very
-rough February, frequent skirmishes took place, while
-the Scots closed nearer and nearer round the gallantly
-defended town. Leslie soon found that the defences
-had been put into good order; the ditch round the town
-was dug deep, and close to the walls; the walls
-themselves were strongly underpinned. The battlements were
-strengthened by stone and lime, but the top stones were
-loosened so as to slip if the enemy attempted to mount
-them. Every cannon was placed carefully, to the best
-advantage.
-
-.. _`The Storming of Newcastle`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-228.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: *The Storming of Newcastle*
-
- *The Storming of Newcastle*
-
-But the Marquis of Newcastle was called southward
-by the needs of his King. With him were his thousand
-brave "White coats," so called because they wore white
-coats which they promised to dye in the blood of the
-enemy. But they met the terrible Ironsides at Marston
-Moor, and in a conflict of furious bravery on both sides,
-all of the gallant thousand except thirty were slain on
-the field of battle.
-
-This was in July of 1644, but it did not affect the siege
-of Newcastle, which still dragged obstinately on, under
-the skilful guidance of the dauntless Mayor. By
-October, Sir John Marley was so buoyed up by his success
-that he sent a letter to General Leslie to ask if he was
-still alive! This the Scots took to be an insult, and a
-grand assault was begun. The Scots were furious, and
-the defence was desperate. The roar of the cannon and
-the rattle of the musketry were succeeded, as the assault
-got nearer and nearer to its aim, by the clashing of swords
-and the clanging of pikes. At last, the regiments of
-Loudoun and Buccleugh succeeded in forcing their way
-into the town. In vain the defenders made their last
-gallant charge; their cause was now hopeless, and soon
-the market-place was filled with fugitives, who flung
-down their arms and cried aloud for quarter at the hands
-of the triumphant Scots.
-
-In these days the defender was often made to feel the
-anger of the victors, who in the flush and cruelty of
-victory avenged their dead, only too terribly, upon the
-losing side. Not so at Newcastle. Prominent in its day,
-it stands out because of the mercy of the Scottish
-conquerors as much as for the heroism of its defence. In
-this, the last great struggle on English ground between
-Scots and English, it is pleasing indeed to recall facts
-that redound to the high honour of both parties.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`Montrose and Lesly`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLV
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- Montrose and Lesly
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-James Graham, the great Marquis of Montrose
-who at first sided with the Scottish Covenanters
-against Charles I., was so out of sympathy with
-the extreme turn which affairs took later against that
-unhappy monarch that he went over to the King's side.
-Gathering the Highland Clans under his standard, he
-marched Southward and defeated the Covenanters in
-a series of brilliantly fought battles. He occupied
-Edinburgh, and laid great plans to complete the conquest of
-Scotland by subduing the Borderland.
-
-If the Borders had remained in their old fighting state
-no doubt many a Border chief would have joined
-Montrose's army and aided his bold plans. But,
-unfortunately for King Charles, the Borders had been
-tamed and disarmed since the union of England and
-Scotland under James I. Only a few adventurous spirits like
-Christie's Will remained as examples of the old wild days.
-
-The remnant of the army of the Covenanters was
-commanded by the stern General David Lesly (not the
-Alexander Leslie who figures in the preceding chapter),
-and was somewhere in the Border district. Gay Gallant
-Montrose did not bother as to exactly where this army
-was; he despised it too heartily. He himself was at
-Selkirk, while his army was encamped on the
-neighbouring plain of Philiphaugh.
-
-Montrose was busy writing a cheering message to King
-Charles to the effect that he had now no enemy left in
-Scotland who could offer an effective resistance to his
-arms. Little did he think that General Lesly was
-gradually creeping nearer, nearer, and was now actually within
-four miles of his army. With the advantage of a thick
-Scotch mist, Lesly's men actually burst upon Montrose's
-infantry without a single scout having seen them to give
-warning of their approach! In such confusion,
-Montrose's men had no chance whatever.
-
-The Marquis galloped up, only to find his soldiers
-hopelessly defeated and great numbers slain. There was
-nothing left but for those to escape who could. The
-Marquis succeeded in cutting his way through, and
-gathered his troops to fight again later on; but his
-efforts were doomed to failure.
-
-A popular ditty of these days, sung to a stirring tune,
-was called "Lesly's March." Sir Walter Scott seems to
-regard this as wholly serious, and ranks it as a Covenanter
-song. It appears to me, however, that many of the lines
-have a very sarcastic flavour; no doubt the Covenanters
-did really think that
-
- | "There's none in the right but we,
- | Of the old Scottish nation";
-
-but they would probably have phrased it a little less
-baldly. To me it appears as if this song were the work of
-an onlooker and not a partisan; one ready to see the
-faults of both sides, and very much inclined to hold back
-his final opinion till he saw which was going to win.
-But let the March speak for itself.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- LESLY'S MARCH
-
-..
-
- | March! march:
- | Why the de'il do ye na march?
- | Stand to your arms, my lads,
- | Fight in good order;
- | Front about, ye musketeers all,
- | Till ye come to the English Border;
- | Stand till 't, and fight like men,
- | True gospel to maintain.
- | The parliament's blythe to see us a' coming!
- | When to the kirk we come,
- | We'll purge it ilka room,
- | Frae popish relics, and a' sic innovation,
- | That a' the world may see,
- | There's nane in the right but we,
- | Of the auld Scottish nation.
- |
-
-A truly partisan ballad of the day describes the battle
-of Philiphaugh and exults in the defeat of Montrose,
-"our cruel enemy," it calls him. As a ballad it has no
-great poetic merit; the very sober Covenanters probably
-regarded ballad-making as a frivolity. But it describes
-rather graphically how an "aged father," from the
-country-side, led Lesly's army very cautiously and
-wisely to the very tents of the foe. These details are no
-doubt accurate; though the ballad-writer (whoever
-he was) displays his ignorance of other matters by making
-the old soldier say that he was at the battle of Solway
-Moss (which took place one hundred years before) and at
-that of Dunbar, which was not fought till five years
-later!
-
-The following are the opening verses of the ballad,
-giving an idea of its plain, straightforward style:—
-
- | On Philiphaugh a fray began,
- | At Hairhead-wood it ended;
- | The Scots out o'er the Graemes they ran,
- | Sae merrily they bended;
-
- | Sir David frae the Border came,
- | Wi' heart an' hand came he;
- | Wi' him three thousand bonny Scots,
- | To bear him company.
-
- | Wi' him three thousand valiant men,
- | A noble sight to see!
- | A cloud o' mist them weel conceal'd,
- | As close as e'er might be.
-
- | When they came to the Shaw burn,
- | Said he, "Sae weel we frame.
- | I think it is convenient
- | That we should sing a psalm."
- |
-
-It is not necessary to quote more of it, but it may be
-remarked that in place of the last line as given here, the
-*unregenerate* substituted,
-
- | "That we should take a dram."
-
-In point of actual fact, *both* versions are probably true!
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Death of Montrose`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLVI
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Death of Montrose
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-During the imprisonment of King Charles I., at
-a time when active war on his behalf might
-do the unhappy monarch more harm than good,
-the gallant Montrose had retired to France. His bright
-military fame, his courteous manners, and manly bearing
-made him friends everywhere, and when he visited
-Germany the Emperor conferred on him the rank of
-Marshal. Hearing of the execution of Charles I.,
-Montrose at once placed himself at the disposal of Charles II.,
-now a fugitive in Holland. This prince named him
-Captain General of Scotland, and the daring hero set out
-for the Orkney Islands with about five hundred paid
-soldiers, mostly adventurous Germans and Dutchmen.
-Only a reckless spirit like Montrose would have
-undertaken so wild a commission.
-
-Scotland was heartily sick of war, and learnt with
-consternation of the arrival of this firebrand. Lesly was
-sent forward with four thousand men to attack Montrose's
-five hundred! Colonel Strachan led the advanced
-guard, which fell unexpectedly upon the invading army,
-and, after a brief, fierce struggle, totally defeated it.
-
-Montrose, disguised as a peasant, entrusted his life to
-one he believed to be his friend, M'Leod, Laird of
-Assaint. But this unworthy man betrayed him to his
-bitterest enemy, General Lesly. Thus, at last, this
-brilliant commander was in the hands of the bitter
-Covenanters, into whose hearts his brilliant victories
-had once spread such terror. Their treatment of him is
-a black stain upon their memory. For days he was led
-about in the peasant's disguise, which he had put
-on; he was carted through the streets of Edinburgh,
-accompanied by such insults that the populace cried
-shame upon his captors.
-
-When tried before the Scottish Parliament for treason,
-he made a most eloquent defence, one of the most notable
-of his assertions being that he had never stained his
-victories by slaughtering his foes in cold blood after the
-battle. In this he was far above his enemies, who had
-disgraced their victory of Philiphaugh by many an
-execution, and who were now bent upon taking the life of
-Montrose himself. The sentence against him was
-probably decided before his defence had been heard; it
-ran thus:—
-
-"That James Graham should next day be carried to
-Edinburgh cross and there hanged on a gibbet 30 feet
-high for the space of three hours; then to be taken down,
-his head to be struck off on a scaffold and affixed to the
-prison; his arms and legs to be stuck up on the four
-chief towns of the Kingdom, his body to be buried
-in the place set aside for common criminals."
-
-To this sentence the great Marquis haughtily replied
-that he would rather have his head so placed than his
-picture in the King's bedchamber, and that he wished he
-had limbs enough to be dispersed into all the cities of
-Christendom, to prove his dying attachment to his king.
-And in the one evening of life that still remained to him,
-this accomplished and fearless nobleman employed his
-time in turning these loyal sentiments into verse.
-
-Despite the fact that he triumphed undaunted over all
-the mean inventions of their malice, his enemies persisted
-to the end.
-
-The executioner tied mockingly round his neck the
-book that had been published describing his victories;
-Montrose thanked him, saying that he wore it with more
-pride than he had ever worn the garter of honour. He
-uttered a short prayer; then asking them what more
-indignities they had prepared for him, he patiently and
-with unbroken spirit yielded his life to the hangman, at
-the too early age of thirty-eight.
-
-Whatever opinions we may have as to the rights and
-wrongs of the quarrel, this brutal killing of a gallant
-soldier and accomplished gentleman can only rank as a
-hideous blot upon all concerned in it. Every insult
-hurled at Montrose has returned in the verdict of time
-with redoubled force against the malice of those who
-stooped to such vindictiveness. The execution of a
-soldier who has violated no rule of war is at any time
-a thing that revolts the human conscience, and a
-sentence hoarse with the vile taunts of its utterers has so
-far lost all semblance of justice that it is needless to
-argue upon it.
-
-In the verdict of history, the great Marquis of
-Montrose, whether right or wrong in his political views,
-lived and died like a man of honour.
-
-The ballad of the "Gallant Grahams," written about
-this time, reflects very sincerely and touchingly the
-devotion and affection surrounding the great Marquis,
-accompanied by the very Scottish feeling that in
-addition to his own personal power and genius, he
-was also the head of the great Border family of Grahams.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center bold
-
- THE GALLANT GRAHAMS
-
-..
-
- | Now, fare thee well, sweet Ennerdale![#]
- | Baith kith and countrie I bid adieu;
- | For I maun away, and I may not stay,
- | To some uncouth land which I never knew.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] A corruption of Endrickdale.
-The principal and most ancient
-possessions of the Montrose family lie
-along the water of Endrick, in
-Dumbartonshire.
-
-..
-
- | To wear the blue I think it best,
- | Of all the colours that I see;
- | And I'll wear it for the gallant Grahams,
- | That are banished from their countrie.
-
- | I have no gold, I have no land,
- | I have no pearl nor precious stane;
- | But I wald sell my silken snood,
- | To see the gallant Grahams come hame.
-
- | In Wallace days, when they began,
- | Sir John the Graham[#] did bear the gree
- | Through all the lands of Scotland wide:
- | He was lord of the south countrie.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] The faithful friend and adherent of the
-immortal Wallace slain at
-the battle of Falkirk.
-
-..
-
- | And so was seen full many a time;
- | For the summer flowers did never spring,
- | But every Graham, in armour bright,
- | Would then appear before the king.
-
- | They were all drest in armour sheen,
- | Upon the pleasant banks of Tay;
- | Before a king they might be seen,
- | These gallant Grahams in their array.
-
- | At the Goukhead our camp we set,
- | Our leaguer down there for to lay;
- | And, in the bonny summer light,
- | We rode our white horse and our gray.
-
- | Our false commander sold our king,
- | Unto his deadly enemie,
- | Who was the traitor, Cromwell, then;
- | So I care not what they do with me.
-
- | They have betray'd our noble prince,
- | And banished him from his royal crown;'
- | But the gallant Grahams have ta'en in hand
- | For to command those traitors down.
-
- | In Glen-Prosen[#] we rendezvous'd,
- | March'd to Glenshie by night and day.
- | And took the town of Aberdeen,
- | And met the Campbells in their array.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] Glen-Prosen is in Angusshire,
-usually called Forfarshire. The
-Glenshee road, over the Grampians,
-is the highest road in Great
-Britain.
-
-..
-
- | Five thousand men, in armour strong,
- | Did meet the gallant Grahams that day
- | At Inverlochie, where war began,
- | And scarce two thousand men were they.
-
- | Gallant Montrose, that chieftan bold,
- | Courageous in the best degree,
- | Did for the king fight well that day;—
- | The Lord preserve his majestie!
-
- | Then woe to Strachan, and Ilacket baith!
- | And, Lesly, ill death may thou die!
- | For ye have betray'd the gallant Grahams,
- | Who aye were true to majestie.
-
- | And the Laird of Assaint has seized Montrose,
- | And had him into Edinburgh town;
- | And frae his body taken the head,
- | And quarter'd him upon a trone,
-
- | And Huntly's[#] gone the self-same way,
- | And our noble king is also gone;
- | He suffer'd death for our nation,
- | Our mourning tears can ne'er be done.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] The Marquis of Huntly,
-one of the few Scottish nobles who never
-wavered in his devotion to King Charles I.,
-was beheaded by the
-sentence of the Parliament of Scotland.
-
-..
-
- | But our brave young king is now come home,
- | King Charles the Second in degree;
- | The Lord send peace into his time,
- | And God preserve his majestie!
- |
-
-The ballad-writer's reference to the "coming home"
-of Charles II. probably means his signing of the Covenant
-and placing himself entirely at the mercy of the violent
-bigots who had killed his most faithful servant, Montrose.
-To this was Charles reduced by the desperate nature of
-his fortunes. But this course of action entirely severed
-the Scottish Covenanters from the English Puritans, and
-admirers of the gallant Montrose can take a grim pleasure
-in the fact that his arch-enemy, General Lesly, was most
-disastrously defeated by Cromwell at the battle of
-Dunbar.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Borderers and the Jacobites`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLVII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Borderers and the Jacobites
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-During the Jacobite Rising, many of the Border
-chiefs took up arms in the Stuart cause. Two
-of these, Lord Derwentwater and Viscount
-Kenmure, were beheaded on Tower Hill for their part in
-the unsuccessful rising of 1715, and another, Lord
-Nithsdale, was only saved from the same fate by the
-courage of his wife.
-
-This brave woman travelled in the depth of winter
-from Scotland, but when she reached York the snow was
-so deep that the stage coach could go no further. She
-continued her journey alone, though the snow was
-above the horse's knees, and by good luck she reached
-London and the Tower in safety, where, by bribing the
-guards, she managed to see her husband.
-
-She then resolved to petition the King for his life, and
-she herself tells in a letter to her sister how she waited
-in the ante-room to see the King (George I.), and how she
-threw herself at his feet to present the petition. The
-King tried to get away from her, but she seized hold of his
-coat, and was dragged on her knees along the floor. This
-scene produced no result, and as other efforts to procure
-Nithsdale's release also failed, the Countess determined to
-save him by a stratagem. She again bribed the guards
-to let her in, telling them she had joyful news for her
-husband about the petition. She dressed him in woman's
-clothes, which she had smuggled in for the occasion, and
-painted his face, and brought him out, speaking to him
-as to the woman friend who had accompanied her, but
-who had already left the prison, calling him "Mrs Betty,"
-and asking him for the love of God to go as quickly as he
-could to her lodging and fetch her maid, as she wished
-to go and present her final petition for the release.
-
-All went well, and Nithsdale escaped to France; but
-the King was highly incensed and declared that the
-Countess cost him more trouble than any woman in Europe.
-
-Her adventures were not yet over, however. In spite
-of the fact that the King had wished for her arrest, she
-travelled to Scotland to fetch her son, and the valuable
-papers which she had taken the precaution to bury
-underground on her departure for London.
-
-She was successful in this second journey, and, after
-concealing herself and her son, until no further search
-was made for them, this noble and enterprising
-woman escaped to France and joined her husband.
-They afterwards went to Rome, where they lived
-happily for many years.
-
-In an old ballad called "Lord Nithsdale's Dream," he
-is described as dreaming in the Tower the night before
-his execution, after having said farewell to his beloved
-wife.
-
- | "Farewell to thee, Winifred, pride of thy kind,
- | Sole ray in my darkness, sole joy in my pain."
-
-He listens for the last sound of her footfall, and catches
-the last glimpse of her robe at the door, and then all
-joy and gladness depart out of his life, and he prays
-alone in his dungeon, thinking of the dreadful dawn
-that awaits him.
-
-He falls asleep and dreams that he is a frolicsome boy
-again, playing amongst the bracken on the braes of the
-Nith, bathing in its waters and treading joyfully the
-green heather. Or again he is riding to the hunt on his
-gallant grey steed, with a plume in his bonnet and a star
-on his breast, chasing the red deer and the wild mountain
-roe.
-
-The vision changes, and he dreams that he is telling
-his love to Winifred, and swearing to be faithful to
-her, watching the red blushes rise on her cheeks at his
-words of love, and hearing her sweet voice replying.
-
-Again he is riding at the head of his gallant band.
-
- | "For the pibroch was heard on the hills far away,
- | And the clans were all gathered from mountain and glen.
- | For the darling of Scotland, their exile adored,
- | They raised the loud slogan—they rushed to the strife;
- | Unfurl'd was the banner, unsheathed was the sword,
- | For the cause of their heart, that was dearer than life."
- |
-
-And now the darksome morn has come, the priest is
-standing by his side, saying the prayers for the dead.
-He hears the muffled drum and the bells tolling his death
-knell; the block is prepared, the headsman comes; and
-the victim is led bare-headed from his cell.
-
-Waking, he turns on his straw pallet, and sees, by the
-pale, misty light of a taper, the form of his wife.
-
- | "'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!" softly she said,
- | "Arouse thee and follow, be bold, never fear,
- | There was danger ahead, but my errand has sped,
- | I promised to save thee, and lo! I am here!"
-
-.. _`"'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-242.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "*'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!*"
-
- "*'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!*"
-
-Then she puts woman's garb upon him, and together
-they pass the unsuspecting guards and weary sentinels.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: center white-space-pre-line
-
- \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-When the peasantry on the Nithsdale estates heard of
-their Lord's escape their joy was unbounded.
-
-One of the songs published and sung everywhere at the
-time, begins:—
-
- | "What news to me, carlin'?
- | What news to me?"
- | "What news!" quo' the carlin',
- | The best that God can gie."
- |
-
-The speaker asks if the true king has come to his own,
-and the carlin' answers.
-
- | "Our ain Lord Nithsdale
- | Will soon be 'mang us here.
- |
-
-Then the speaker says:—
-
- | "Brush me my coat, carlin',
- | Brush me my shoon;
- | I'll awa and meet Lord Nithsdale,
- | When he comes to our town."
- |
-
-"Alack-a-day," says the carlin'. "He has escaped to
-France, with scarce a penny."
-
-"Then," says the first speaker, "we'll sell our corn
-and everything we have and send the money to our lord,
-and we'll make the pipers blow and lads and maidens
-dance, and we'll all be glad and joyful and play 'The
-Stuarts back again,' and make the Whigs go mad."
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: center white-space-pre-line
-
- \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Lord Derwentwater's fate was not so happy as that of
-Lord Nithsdale, though Lady Derwentwater made a
-desperate effort to save him.
-
-It was she indeed who had urged him to throw in his
-lot with the Stuarts, saying that it was not good that he
-should hide his head when other gentlemen were mustering
-for the cause.
-
-The peasantry still think that Lady Derwentwater
-sits on her ruined tower lamenting the evil counsel she
-gave her husband, and they hasten by in fear when they
-see her lamp-light flickering.
-
-Derwentwater is described in the old ballads, as "a
-bonny lord," with hair of gold, and kind love dwelling
-in his hawk-like eyes.
-
-He passionately loved his beautiful home in Tynedale,
-the foundations of which may still be seen. The wooded
-glen below the castle, with the little burn running through
-it, spanned by a grey bridge is romantically beautiful.
-
-His "Farewell" to all this beauty is pathetic.
-
- | "Farewell to pleasant Ditson Hall,
- | My father's ancient seat;
- | A stranger now must call thee his,
- | Which gars[#] my heart to greet.[#]
- | Farewell each kindly well-known face,
- | My heart has held so dear:
- | My tenants now must leave their lands,
- | Or hold their lives in fear.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] makes.
-[#] weep.
-
-..
-
- | No more along the banks of Tyne,
- | I'll rove in autumn grey;
- | No more I'll hear, at early dawn,
- | The lav'rocks[#] wake the day:
- | Then fare thee well, brave Witherington,
- | And Forster ever true.
- | Dear Shaftsbury and Errington,
- | Receive my last adieu.
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
-[#] larks.
-
-..
-
- | And fare thee well, George Collingwood,
- | Since fate has put us down,
- | If thou and I have lost our lives,
- | Our King has lost his crown.
- | Farewell, farewell, my lady dear,
- | Ill, ill thou counsell'dst me:
- | I never more may see thy babe
- | That smiles upon thy knee.
-
- | And fare thee well, my bonny grey steed,
- | That carried me aye so free;
- | I wish I had been asleep in my bed,
- | The last time I mounted thee.
- | The warning bell now bids me cease;
- | My troubles nearly o'er;
- | Yon sun that rises from the sea,
- | Shall rise on me no more.
-
- | Albeit that here in London town
- | It is my fate to die,
- | O carry me to Northumberland,
- | In my father's grave to lie:
- | There chant my solemn requiem
- | In Hexham's holy towers,
- | And let six maids of fair Tynedale
- | Scatter my grave with flowers.
-
- | And when the head that wears the crown,
- | Shall be laid low like mine,
- | Some honest hearts may then lament
- | For Radcliff's fallen line.
- | Farewell to pleasant Ditson Hall,
- | My father's ancient seat;
- | A stranger now must call thee his,
- | Which gars my heart to greet."
- |
-
-Before his death, Earl Derwentwater signed a paper
-acknowledging "King James the Third" as his
-sovereign, and saying that he hoped his death would
-contribute to the service of his King.
-
-He is said to have looked closely at the block, and
-to have asked the executioner to chip off a rough place
-that might hurt his neck. Then, pulling off his coat
-and waistcoat, he tried if the block would fit his head,
-and told the executioner that when he had repeated
-"Lord Jesus receive my soul" for the third time, he
-was to do his office, which the executioner accordingly
-did at one blow.
-
-History tells that Derwentwater was brave and
-open-hearted and generous, and that his fate drew tears from
-the spectators, and was a great misfortune to his country.
-He was kind to the people on his estates, to the poor, the
-widow and the orphan.
-
-His request to be buried with his ancestors was refused,
-and he was interred at St Giles, Holborn, but his corpse
-was afterwards removed and carried secretly to
-Northumberland, where it was deposited in Dilston Chapel. The
-aurora borealis, which appeared remarkably vivid on
-the night of his execution, was long called in that part
-of the country "Lord Derwentwater's Lights."
-
-Immediately after Derwentwater's execution, Lord
-Kenmure also suffered death. After his execution, a
-letter was found in his pocket addressed to the Pretender,
-by the title of King James, saying that he died in his
-faithful service, and asking him to provide for his wife
-and children.
-
-The following ballad describes his rising in the Stuart
-cause—
-
- | "O Kenmure's on and awa', Willie,
- | O Kenmure's on and awa';
- | And Kenmure's lord's the bravest lord
- | That ever Galloway saw.
- | Success to Kenmure's band, Willie!
- | Success to Kenmure's band!
- | There's no a heart that fears a Whig,
- | That rides by Kenmure's hand.
-
- | His lady's cheek was red, Willie,
- | His lady's cheek was red,
- | When she saw his steely jupes[#] put on,
- | Which smell'd o' deadly feud.
- | Here's Kenmure's health in wine, Willie,
- | Here's Kenmure's health in wine;
- | There ne'er was a coward o' Kenmure's blude,
- | Nor yet o' Gordon's line.
-
-.. class:: noindent small white-space-pre-line
-
-[#] armour.
-
-..
-
- | There's a rose in Kenmure's cap, Willie,
- | There's a rose in Kenmure's cap,
- | He'll steep it red in ruddie heart's blade,
- | Afore the battle drap.
- | Here's him that's far awa', Willie,
- | Here's him that's far awa',
- | And here's the flower that I lo'e best,
- | The rose that's like the snaw.
-
- | O Kenmure's lads are men, Willie,
- | O Kenmure's lads are men,
- | Their hearts and swords are metal true,
- | And that their foes shall ken.
- | They'll live, or die wi' fame, Willie,
- | They'll live, or die wi' fame,
- | And soon wi' sound o' victorie
- | May Kenmure's lord come hame."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLVIII
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-If you stand upon Rose Hill, which rises from the
-banks of the river Irthing just where Northumberland
-meets Cumberland, you have lying around you
-one of the finest wild prospects in the United Kingdom.
-Hills to the north, stretching away into Scotland; hills
-to the east, broken into picturesque valleys, especially
-the great gap through which rushes the young Tyne;
-hills to the south, dominated by the powerful head of
-Cross Fell, a great sprawling mountain, not a peaked one,
-the highest stretch of which is nearly three thousand feet
-above sea level.
-
-But while drinking in the glories of the distances, the
-eye will note with curiosity a strange-looking but
-picturesque hill only a couple of miles to the South-east,
-with a long rocky ridge at its top deeply cut into or
-"nicked" in nine different places, this giving it a very
-wild appearance. It is one of these hills which tempts
-the keen observer to go on and explore it. If we cut
-direct to it, over the fields, it is rough going, but the view
-is good all the way. And there are four special objects of
-interest, all close together; the rushing Tipalt river,
-Thirlwall Castle, the Roman wall, and the Nine Nicks.
-
-Thirlwall Castle rises tall, square, and stern, with a dark
-fir-wood behind it at the foot of the hill, where a bend in
-the river makes a natural moat. Approaching it from
-Rose Hill, it looks as if the building were still nearly
-complete, but the south side has almost entirely fallen
-away and all the floors and the roof are out. Edward
-I. slept in this Castle when it was newly built, in 1306;
-but now it is grass-grown and moss-grown, and its
-three bare walls rise gaunt and grim to the sky. It is
-entirely built out of stones with Roman chisel marks,
-taken from the great Roman wall, which unfortunately
-was once regarded as a handy stone-quarry for anyone
-to take from.
-
-The name "Thirlwall" means "Drill-wall," and marks
-the spot as that at which the wild Northern tribes first
-"drilled" or broke through the wall. The name was,
-of course, given to the place long before this castle was
-built.
-
-To mount from Thirlwall Castle to the top of the Nine
-Nicks is an easy enough task for any vigorous person.
-It is just a fine healthy scramble. When at the top, it
-becomes evident that some sort of fortification once
-existed there. In point of fact this was the important
-Roman station called "Magna" which stood at about
-the middle of the Roman Wall. The wall ran from sea
-to sea, that is to say, from the mouth of the Tyne to the
-Solway. Thus it was nearly eighty miles long, and a
-very elaborate structure indeed.
-
-It consisted of three distinct portions:—
-
-1. The main stone wall, with a ditch to the north
-of it.
-
-2. An earth-work to the south of this, consisting of
-either two or three ramparts about seventy feet apart,
-with a ditch between.
-
-8. Stations, Castles and Watch-towers. Sometimes
-these were to the north of the wall, sometimes in the
-middle, sometimes south, according to the nature of the
-country.
-
-The height of the main wall was from sixteen to twenty
-feet, including battlements. It was six to nine feet
-thick. Fancy a powerful military wall of about eighteen
-feet high stretching nearly eighty miles right across
-England! It hardly seems possible that the Romans
-could undertake such a work. The square strong stones
-were carefully selected and often brought from quarries
-at a distance. These stones flanked the outsides of the
-wall, and in between was strong concrete which was
-poured in while in liquid.
-
-The second wall was of earth and stones, and, of
-course, lower than the first. Then there was a castle
-every mile, some of which can still be clearly traced, and
-a "station," about every four miles, of which several
-interesting ruins remain. There was a road eighteen feet
-wide between the two walls.
-
-Those who have the energy to toil on for a full dozen
-miles of rough walking, along the wall, eastward from
-Thirlwall, will be rewarded by some of the most romantic
-scenes in Britain. They will see the wall at its best.
-They will pass Whinshields, the highest point in the wall,
-1230 feet above sea level. The wild Northumbrian
-lakes will lie at their feet; if the day is fine, the Solway
-will be seen glistening, thirty miles to the west; and on
-the east the eye follows the Tyne almost to the sea. The
-Pennine Ridge bars the view twenty miles to the south,
-while on the North the High Cheviot is clear and strong,
-thirty miles away.
-
-Passing Whinshields, it is not far to Borcovicus (often
-called Housteads) where lie the remains of a large Roman
-Station, wonderful remains, showing the whole outline
-with startling clearness. This station covered five acres,
-and here was quartered a cohort of the Tungrian infantry,
-consisting of a thousand brave soldiers, servants of
-Imperial Rome.
-
-But, after all, nothing is so impressive as the remains
-of the wall itself. Stand at the top either of Whinshields
-or of the Nine Nicks, and try to imagine what it looked
-like in Roman days. Eastward along the Tyne valley
-and westward along the Irthing valley ran this wonderful
-work, this powerful girdle of stone. The very spot was
-chosen with great judgment, for these valleys gave the
-Romans a district protected by the bleak hills, where
-they could live and where they could keep cattle and grow
-grain. But the hilly nature of the ground must have
-added to the difficulty of the builders. The wall had to
-run up steep hill sides and cling to the edge of cliffs, and
-precipices; it had to be carried by bridges over roaring
-torrents, and when it reached low-lying ground it had to
-avoid the treacherous swamps and morasses. And yet,
-despite every obstacle, the great wall ran on its direct
-way, as strong and persistent as the great people who
-built it.
-
-It withstood the shock of war, it was not flung down
-by soldiers marching against it. But to the people who
-wanted to build castles or houses or farms, or even to
-mend roads, the wall offered a mass of material ready to
-hand, and it suffered not from man's energy so much as
-from his laziness. Century after century it was robbed
-of its stones; to-day a series of long grass-grown mounds,
-a few feet high, running across the meadows, are nearly all
-that remain of one of the most wonderful pieces of
-building that was ever erected in Great Britain. Even today,
-in its decay, it is one of the most romantic features
-of a highly romantic district.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`In Wild Northumberland To-day`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- Chapter XLIX
-
-
-.. class:: center medium bold
-
- In Wild Northumberland To-day
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-These tales of the Borders would hardly be
-complete without a few concluding words about
-the great romantic charm which still invests
-the Borderline. Let us, for example, make a brief survey
-of some of the haunting spots in wild Northumberland.
-We will pass over such towns as Warkworth, Alnwick,
-Alnmouth; beautiful as they are, they have moved with
-the times and are too modern to be more than mentioned
-here. But in a place like Holy Island we feel the call
-of the old days, and the charm that was theirs. This
-Island was the scene of the first efforts of Christianity to
-curb the wild and warlike Northumbrians; St Aidan,
-and St Cuthbert, both men of remarkable genius and
-great influence, taught there lessons of peace and justice
-without which every warlike state would descend into
-mere savagery. The island is about two miles square,
-and at low tide it is easy to walk across the sands to or
-from the mainland of Northumberland. The distance is
-two and a half miles, and it is necessary to take off shoes
-and stockings, for the water on the sands will often be
-six inches deep. A row of posts marks the way, and some
-of them have ladders, reaching up to a barrel on the top,
-so that any caught by the tide can find a safe harbour
-wherein they will suffer nothing more serious than a long
-wait! The island is inhabited by fishing folk, living
-simple healthy lives. There are fine rocks and splendid
-sands; beautiful flowers and lovely shells. The
-seabirds are wonderful. The ruins of the old Cathedral
-and castle are very interesting, it is a delightful
-old-world place, out of the rush and hurry of modern life.
-
-Retracing our steps to the mainland, and proceeding
-westward for a dozen or so miles as the crow flies, we
-reach the River Till, and the field of Flodden. Here we
-are near to the big wild wall of the Cheviot hills, and to
-keep on the English side of the border we need to turn
-due south. It is then about thirty miles of rough
-walking through these grandly rugged hills before
-we come to the field of Otterburn.
-
-But we realise in that walk how it was that the district
-produced and still produces a hardy race of hunters and
-sheep-farmers, and why it is that the towns and farms
-nestle in the valleys, so that the Borderers, when they
-meant to say, "Rouse the neighbourhood," used the
-phrase, "Raise the *water*" (meaning, of course, the houses
-along the waterside). Further south, still going among
-splendid shaggy hills, we reach the North Tyne River,
-and soon afterwards some highly interesting Roman
-remains, including the arches of a fine bridge over the
-river at the Roman Station of Cilurnum, near Chollerford.
-This is on the Roman Wall, which has already been
-described under the heading of Thirlwall. A few miles
-to the west would bring us to the picturesque but
-little-known Northumberland Lakes, where the wild swans
-nest. If we continue south and south-west we can follow
-the beautiful valleys of the Allan or the South Tyne.
-This is a district of hills, roads, and castles; the domain
-of the fated Lord Derwentwater was near here. For
-beauty the whole of this neighbourhood would be hard to
-beat; yet it is too little known.
-
-If we still go south, the scenery grows wilder and
-wilder as we approach the huge mountain of Cross Fell.
-We may cross into south-east Cumberland and visit
-the quaint old town of Alston, one of the highest towns
-in England. Here were once the royal silver mines,
-when English coins were made from Alston silver.
-Lead is chiefly mined there now, and the mines are
-worth a visit. Near Cross Fell also is a rough road
-called the "Maiden Way," and an old legend says it
-was made by women, who carried the stones in their
-aprons! The western slope of the Fell is famous for
-a specially violent wind called the "Helm wind,"
-which rages there at certain seasons. It is just as if
-it were rushing fiercely down the hill, with a roaring
-noise and strength enough to overturn a horse and cart,
-and to beat the grass and grain till it is black! But
-though it does a deal of damage it is very exhilarating,
-making people feel merry in spite of themselves. And
-on Cross Fell slopes can be seen the beautiful River
-Tees, which can be followed to its grand waterfalls of the
-the Cauldron and the High Force. In the first the
-water dashes on to huge rocks, and is thrown back
-on itself, roaring, foaming, and fighting; in the second,
-it tumbles sheer down a dark and noble cliff. And
-everywhere on the heights there are splendid views.
-
-In making any such excursions as the ones here
-outlined, into the out-of-the-way parts of Northumberland
-and the Borders, we find an added pleasure in the
-character of the people. The Borderers are still a
-grand race; big men, vigorous, honest, courteous,
-hospitable, free from all that is mean and small. In
-some districts you can hear "thou" and "thee"
-still used, and meet old men who have never seen a
-railway. One dear old farmer, a real picture of a
-simple honest man, hearing I had come from London,
-asked me if the London men had got their hay-crop
-in yet! One typical Northumbrian, of great natural
-intelligence, bearing a name famous on the Borders,
-is station-master at a local station that stands in a wood,
-and between trains, studies bird and wild-flower till
-he has made himself a most interesting naturalist. A
-stranger who has lost his way will find these courteous
-folk ready to walk a mile or two with him, out of their
-own way, just to set him right; and he who is tired
-and hungry will be invited to step in and eat, and
-perhaps find himself introduced to all the family and
-treated like an honoured guest; then, not a penny of
-payment taken, they will set him on his way with a
-bunch of the best flowers from the garden! For hearts
-on the Border are very human and warm. So that
-in due time he who knows the Borderers will delight
-to hear the unmistakeable Northumbrian or the
-pronounced Border accent. And he will say to himself:
-Splendid is the Border scenery, and stirring are the
-Border ballads, but best of all are the Border men.
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center white-space-pre-line
-
- \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large
-
- TOLD THROUGH THE AGES
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line
-
-Legends of Greece and Rome
-Favourite Greek Myths
-Stories of Robin Hood and his Merry Outlaws
-Stories of King Arthur and his Knights
-Stories from Herodotus
-Stories from Wagner
-Britain Long Ago
-Stories from Scottish History
-Stories from Greek Tragedy
-Stories from Dickens
-Stories from the Earthly Paradise
-Stories from the Æneid
-The Book of Rustem
-Stories from Chaucer
-Stories from the Old Testament
-Stories from the Odyssey
-Stories from the Iliad
-Told by the Northmen
-Stories from Don Quixote
-The Story of Roland
-Stories from Thucydides
-The Story of Hereward
-Stories from the Faerie Queene
-Cuchulain: The Hound of Ulster
-Stories from Xenophon
-Old Greek Nature Stories
-Stories from Shakespeare
-Stories from Dante
-Famous Voyages of the Great Discoverers
-The Story of Napoleon
-Stories of Pendennis and the Charterhouse
-Sir Guy of Warwick
-Heroes of the Middle Ages
-The Story of the Crusades
-The Story of Nelson
-Stories from George Eliot
-Froissart's Chronicles
-Shakespeare's Stories of the English Kings
-Heroes of Modern Europe
-The Story of King Robert the Bruce
-Stories of the Scottish Border
-The Story of the French Revolution
-The Story of Lord Kitchener
-Stories of the Saints
-The Story of St Elizabeth of Hungary
-In Feudal Times
-The High Deeds of Finn
-Early English Travel and Discovery
-Legends of Ancient Egypt
-The Story of the Renaissance
-Boyhood Stories of Famous Men
-Stories from French History
-Stories from English History
-Famous English Books and their Stories
-Women of the Classics
-In the Days of the Guilds
-Science through the Ages
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent small
-
- *Other volumes in active preparation*
-
-.. vspace:: 6
-
-.. pgfooter::
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- STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-
-
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: Stories of the Scottish Border
-Author: Mr and Mrs William Platt
-Release Date: July 17, 2013 [EBook #38845]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _The Rookhope Ride_]
-
-
-
-
- STORIES OF THE
- SCOTTISH BORDER
-
-
- BY
-
- Mr and Mrs WILLIAM PLATT
-
-
-
- WITH SIXTEEN FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- M. MEREDITH WILLIAMS
-
-
-
- GEORGE G. HARRAP & CO. LTD.
- LONDON BOMBAY SYDNEY
-
-
-
-
- _First published December 1910_
- _by_ GEORGE G. HARRAP & COMPANY
- _39-41 Parker Street, Kingsway, London, W.C.2
- Reprinted: December 1916; March 1919;
- April 1929_
-
-
-
- _Printed in Great Britain by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh_
-
-
-
-
- *Contents*
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
- I. THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS
- II. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER
- III. WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US
-
-
-CHAP.
-
- I. Bamburgh and its Coast
- II. Athelstan at Vinheath
- III. Monks and Minstrels
- IV. Sir Patrick Spens
- V. Auld Maitland
- VI. The Mystery of the Eildons
- VII. Black Agnes of Dunbar
- VIII. The Young Tamlane
- IX. The Gay Goss-Hawk
- X. The Corbies
- XI. Otterbourne and Chevy Chase
- XII. The Douglas Clan
- XIII. Alnwick Castle and the Percies
- XIV. Hexham and Queen Margaret
- XV. Fair Helen of Kirkconnell
- XVI. Johnie of Breadislee
- XVII. Katharine Janfarie
- XVIII. By Lauder Bridge
- XIX. The Battle of Flodden Field
- XX. After Flodden
- XXI. Graeme and Bewick
- XXII. The Song of the Outlaw Murray
- XXIII. Johnie Armstrong
- XXIV. The Lament of the Border Widow
- XXV. The Raid of the Kers
- XXVI. Merrie Carlisle
- XXVII. Kinmont Willie
- XXVIII. Dick o' the Cow
- XXIX. The Lochmaben Harper
- XXX. The Rookhope Ride
- XXXI. Barthram's Dirge
- XXXII. Queen Mary and the Borders
- XXXIII. The Raid of the Reidswire
- XXXIV. Jock o' the Side
- XXXV. Hobbie Noble
- XXXVI. The Laird o' Logie
- XXXVII. Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead
-XXXVIII. Muckle-Mou'd Meg
- XXXIX. The Dowie Dens of Yarrow
- XL. Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland
- XLI. Gilderoy
- XLII. Archie Armstrong's Oath
- XLIII. Christie's Will
- XLIV. Northumberland at the Time of the Civil War
- XLV. Montrose and Lesly
- XLVI. The Death of Montrose
- XLVII. The Borderers and the Jacobites
- XLVIII. The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall
- XLIX. In Wild Northumberland To-Day
-
-
-
-
- *Illustrations*
-
-The Rookhope Ride. . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-Egil at Vinheath
-
-The Siege of Maitland Castle
-
-Black Agnes
-
-The Twa Corbies
-
-The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham
-
-Johnie of Breadislee.
-
-Flodden Field
-
-"Tell Us All--Oh, Tell Us True!"
-
-The Border Widow
-
-The Escape of Kinmont Willie
-
-Queen Mary crossing the Solway
-
-"A Boon, a Boon, my Noble Liege!"
-
-"She Kissed his Cheek, She Kaim'd his Hair"
-
-The Storming of Newcastle
-
-"'Tis I, 'Tis thy Winifred!"
-
-
-
-
-_In liquid murmurs Yarrow sings_
- _Her reminiscent tune_
-_Of bygone Autumn, bygone Springs,_
- _And many a leafy June._
-
-_No more the morning beacons gleam_
- _Upon the silent hills;_
-_The far back years are years of dream--_
- _Now peace the valley fills._
-
-_No more the reivers down the vale_
- _On raid and foray ride;_
-_No more is heard the widow's wail_
- _O'er those who fighting died._
-
-_When morning damns with all its joys_
- _Then from the meadows rise_
-_A hundred throbbing hearts to voice_
- _Their anthems to the skies._
-
-_When noontide sleeps where brackens wave,_
- _Ere shadows yet grow long,_
-_No sound awakes the echoes save_
- _The Yarrow's pensive song._
-
-_And when the eve, with calm delight,_
- _Betokens night is nigh,_
-_Beneath the first star's tender light_
- _Is heard the owlet's cry._
-
-_While Yarrow's liquid cadence swells_
- _By meadow, moor, and hill,_
-_At morn or noon or eve there dwells_
- _A mournful memory still._
-
-W. CUTHBERTSON.
-
-
-
-
- *Stories of The Scottish Border*
-
-
- *Introduction*
-
- *I.--THE CHARACTER OF THE BORDERS*
-
-
-The district called the Border is one of the most interesting in Great
-Britain. It consists of that part of England that is nearest Scotland,
-and that part of Scotland that is nearest England, mainly the counties
-of Northumberland, Cumberland, Berwickshire, Roxburghshire, and
-Dumfriesshire.
-
-The country is very picturesque and highly romantic. It abounds in great
-rolling, breezy hills, with swift streamlets or "burns" running down
-their sides to swell the rushing rivers. No part of our island has more
-beautiful valleys than those of the Border.
-
-This bold, rough district, well adapted to defence, and situated also
-just where the island of Great Britain is almost at its narrowest,
-became, after many a struggle, the boundary between England and
-Scotland. The character of the country was suited to the rearing of
-hardy Moorland sheep and cattle; its inhabitants therefore were a tough,
-open-air race of men, strong, strapping fellows, fearless riders, always
-ready for an adventure, especially if it meant a fight.
-
-In those days of Border strife there was hardly such a thing as
-international justice, that is to say, the people of one nation were not
-very particular as to what they did to people of another nation;
-therefore these bold, hardy Border men, Englishmen and Scot alike, were
-fond of creeping across the boundary to steal the cattle of their
-neighbours. Men devoted to such raids were called "Freebooters" or
-"Mosstroopers," the name "Moss" being given in the North Country to
-boggy tracts that lie about the hill-sides.
-
-So it happened that the Border was in a perpetual state of petty
-warfare, conducted, it is true, with a certain amount of good-will and a
-rough approach to chivalry, and with the concurrence of the powerful
-Border nobles of both nations, who often played an important part
-therein. At times these raids developed into important warlike
-expeditions, when a fierce noble, or even a king, had some reckless game
-to play. Hence, among the ballads which give us so vivid an account of
-Border strife, we find descriptions not only of the minor doings of
-picturesque sheep-stealers, but also of pitched battles such as Chevy
-Chase and Homildon Hill.
-
-The union of England and Scotland in 1603 naturally put an end to all
-the former excuses for raiding, and therefore terminated the true
-Freebooter period. After this, despite one or two belated attempts,
-such as Elliot's big raid in 1611, sheep-stealing ceased to be looked
-upon as an honourable calling, and became mere thieving. The men who
-would have raided one another's farms in 1602 became friendly neighbours
-after the Border Commission of 1605. There had been little malice in
-their former freebooting. Both sides were of one race; and they had the
-pleasure of finding that their lands went up greatly in value in
-consequence of the Border peace.
-
-To-day, the Border presents scenes of peaceful cattle-farming. But
-Romance is still in the air, hangs about the fine, breezy moorlands and
-beautiful dales, and is seen clearly in the faces of the healthy
-Border-folk. A holiday at any Border farm would prove a most enjoyable
-one. There are wonderful Roman remains, for here it was that the Romans
-built their wall; there are castles of the Border barons; the views are
-wide and grand; the river-valleys are unmatched for beauty, and
-delightful wild flowers are plentiful, chief among which are fox-gloves,
-the giant wild Canterbury Bells, the handsome North Country wild
-geranium, several interesting kinds of wild orchids, and a variety of
-others too numerous to mention. Last, but not least, it is often
-possible in the evenings to see the farmers' sons engaged in friendly
-wrestling in the meadows, when we can realise that these great manly
-fellows are of the same vigorous race that kept the Borders lively a few
-centuries ago.
-
-
-
- II.--A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BORDER
-
-
-Before dealing in detail with the stirring stories of Border history and
-legend, to retell which is the purpose of this book, we will first
-inquire--What is it that settles exactly the position of the border-line
-between two countries? To find the answer we must think what happens
-when a country is invaded.
-
-If the invaders are stronger than the people whom they attack, they go
-on thrusting back their foes till these reach some strong position
-where, by the aid of mountain, river, or marsh, they are able, at any
-rate for a time, to hold their own. Thus, a border-line is always
-determined by some natural feature of the country which gives the
-defenders an advantage.
-
-The attackers will not always operate from the same locality, and the
-defenders will not always fall back in the same direction; the two
-sides, also, will vary in power from time to time. For these reasons a
-border-line, especially in the old fighting days, was often altered.
-
-When the Romans invaded Britain they gradually conquered the southern
-part of it, but they could not subdue the wilder north; one of their
-boundary lines was drawn from the Solway to the Tyne; then they fought
-their way further north and their next definite boundary was a line
-running from the Forth to the Clyde. Along each of these boundaries they
-built a great wall, and to this day parts of these Roman walls remain.
-But it is worth noting that neither of these wall border-lines stands
-upon the present border, one being all in England and the other all in
-Scotland.
-
-When the Romans left Britain, called back to defend their own native
-land from invasion, there followed a brief period for which we have no
-definite record of events in this island. This is the period of King
-Arthur, and none can say how much is true in the Arthurian legends.
-
-But history begins to become clear again about the time that the Angles
-came in their ships across the North Sea, bent on conquest. They landed
-on all the natural harbours of the east coast, driving the Britons back
-and taking the land for themselves. The fact that they landed on the
-East and drove the Britons westward, leads us to think that sooner or
-later a boundary would have been formed dividing the island into the
-east side (for the Angles) and the west side (for the Britons).
-
-Now that is exactly what did happen. The border-lines were nowhere like
-the present ones. The northern kingdom of the Angles reached to the
-Forth, where these people founded Edinburgh (Edwin's burgh). On the
-west the Britons had sway in Cornwall (Corn-Walles), Wales, Cumbria
-(which stretched from the Mersey to the Solway), and Strathclyde (from
-the Solway to the Clyde). North of the Forth was the country of the
-Picts; while the Scots were a race recently come from Ireland, and they
-only owned what we now call Argyleshire, and the islands lying near to
-it. Not one inch of the present Border was at that day in the
-border-line!
-
-Of the various races that lay round about where the Border now is, the
-Northumbrians seemed at first to be the strongest. The capital of their
-kingdom was Bamburgh, a place still famous for its castle, though to-day
-it is not important enough to have a railway station! But it still
-looks very picturesque on the wild coast, with the Farne Islands, the
-first seat of Northumbrian Christianity, in the near distance.
-
-Ambition had much to do with the downfall of Northumbria. The famous
-King Eadbert would not rest content till he had scaled Dumbarton, the
-capital of Strathclyde. This was to his career what the march to Moscow
-was to Napoleon's, for, though Eadbert got safely to Dumbarton (756) his
-army was cut to pieces in getting back again. The Northumbrians seem to
-have lost some of their northern lands, for they moved their capital
-further south, to the old Roman city of Corbridge which stood on the
-Tyne just where the delightful country town of that name stands to-day.
-
-In 844 a king of the Scots, named Kenneth MacAlpin, became (we don't
-quite know how) king of the Picts also, joining two strong races under
-one ruler, and thus was powerful enough to give great trouble to the
-weakened kingdom of Northumbria. He several times led his army through
-Lothian, the district belonging to the Angles between the Forth and the
-Tweed, but was never quite able to conquer it. It is important to
-remember that up to that date Lothian had never belonged to Scotland.
-The appearance of the Danes added to the confusion of those restless
-days. For some few years it was doubtful whether Scot, Dane, or Angle
-would get the best of it in Northumbria. But at last the genius of
-Athelstan of Wessex revived the power of the Angles over the whole of
-that large part of the island which they had settled, right up to the
-Forth itself. Edinburgh was still English in 957, and the border-line
-was still very far from the present one. But there was no longer a king
-of Northumbria; only an earl, who was subject to the will of the
-West-Saxon kings.
-
-This fact of the dominance of the West Saxons, whose capital was far to
-the south at Winchester, must have added to the weakness of the
-Northumbrian border. By the year 963 the Scots had conquered Edinburgh,
-and it was now never again to return to English rule. Before very long
-the whole of Lothian had passed under Scottish control; but it was not
-yet held to be part of Scotland. Nor must it be thought that this
-conquest of Lothian fixed the border-line in its present position, for
-the king of the Scots was at that time ruler over Cumberland, which had
-never yet been English and was all that was left of the old British
-kingdom of Cumbria.
-
-Frontier wars with varying successes between Scot, Angle, and Dane mark
-the stormy history of this time. The power of Cnut held back the Scotch
-attempts upon Nothumberland; but during a lull in the wars the grand-son
-of the Scottish king married the sister of Earl Siward, and received as
-her dowry twelve towns in the valley of the Tyne, an astonishingly
-imprudent arrangement.
-
-At the time of the battle of Hastings, the earldom of Northumberland was
-so far distant from Winchester as to be somewhat out of the control of
-the King of England; the power of the Scottish kings threatened it; they
-held twelve towns in Tynedale, and Cumberland was a part of Scotland.
-The Northumbrians refused to accept William the Conqueror as their king;
-and had they been able to make good their refusal, they must sooner or
-later have been conquered by the Scots, and the border-line between
-England and Scotland would then most probably have been formed by the
-Tees, the mountain boundary of Westmoreland, and Morecambe Bay.
-
-But William was not a king to be played with. He reduced Northumberland
-to subjection and carried his army into Scotland as far as the river
-Tay, where he forced the King of Scotland to admit that he, William, was
-his overlord.
-
-Notwithstanding this humiliation, when King William returned to
-Winchester, the Scots several times went back to their favourite
-amusement of raiding unhappy Northumberland.
-
-One of these invasions took place in the reign of William Rufus (1093),
-who went north in person. He doubtless recognised the fact that owing
-to the Scots possessing Cumberland they were in the strong position of
-being able to attack Northumberland on two sides. He took Cumberland by
-force of arms, and thus for the first time it became a part of England
-(the word "Cumberland" means the land of the Cumbrians or Welsh, a Saxon
-form of the Welsh word Cymry).
-
-Rufus rebuilt the strong fortress of Carlisle to defend his new border
-at its weakest corner. For the most part this border is excellently
-protected by the natural rampart of the wild Cheviot Hills, and is in
-every way as good a border as could be devised. It runs in a fairly
-straight line from south-west to north-east, across a narrow part of the
-island.
-
-But although this border-line proved to be a permanent one, it must not
-be thought that it remained undisputed. The times were rough, and hardy
-fighting folk lived on the Border. They had many grounds for quarrel,
-and took advantage of them all. For one thing, the exact boundary of
-North Cumberland was never quite defined till 1552; up to which year
-there was a tract of land between the rivers Esk and Sark, which was
-claimed by both countries, and therefore called the "Debateable Land."
-Then the Scots maintained that they were overlords of Northumberland,
-while the English kings cherished the notion that they were overlords of
-the whole island of Britain, and the wild spirits on both sides were
-always ready to fight.
-
-Out of this fighting spirit sprung the stirring history of the Border,
-which forms the theme of the deathless Ballads, the stories of which it
-is now our purpose to retell.
-
-
-
- III.--WHAT THE BORDER NAMES TELL US
-
-
-Many a name holds a meaning wrapt up within itself like a nut in its
-shell. For instance, "Edinburgh" is a Saxon name--Edwin's burgh--and
-the word tells us that this noble city, though now the capital of
-Scotland, was originally founded by and belonged to a Saxon king of
-Northumbria. The Highlanders, in their own Gaelic language, called it
-Dunedin. This has the same signification as Edinburgh, but, like most
-Gaelic names, it is arranged in the reverse order to that in which an
-English name is generally put together. "Dun" means burgh, "Edin" is
-Edwin. This is the same Dun that we have in "Dundee," which means the
-burgh on the Tay, and might be translated as "Tayburgh." "Dumbarton"
-means the burgh of the Britons, and teaches us another notable lesson,
-namely, how far north in the old times the British influence extended.
-For "British" in this case means "Welsh." Nowadays we associate the
-Welsh with Wales only. Formerly there must have been a numerous colony
-of Welsh in Scotland, as the name "Dumbarton" testifies, as also many
-Scottish family names. The great name of Wallace itself, for instance,
-suggests such an origin, for "Wallace" is merely a corrupt form of the
-word "Welsh," and proves that the great national hero was of Welsh
-extraction. Then "Cumberland"--Cymry land--means the land of the Welsh,
-or Cymry, as they call themselves. The county of Cumberland did not
-really belong to the English till the time of William Rufus. The first
-syllable of "Carlisle" denotes a Celtic fortified town, and must be
-compared with the first syllable of "Carnarvon."
-
-The presence of the Roman wall is shown in many names in Northumberland,
-such as "Wallsend," "Walltown," "Wallridge," "Heddon-on-the-Wall,"
-"Wallhouses," and "Thirlwall."
-
-For a very interesting instance of what a name tells us we may leave the
-Border for a moment and consider why the northernmost part of Scotland
-is called "Sutherland." It must have been so named by people living in
-the Orkney and Shetland isles, of a different race from the Scotch--that
-is, Norse settlers in those islands.
-
-With regard to surnames, how many stop to think that "Oliphant" is
-merely a form of "elephant," and was originally an allusion to a big,
-burly ancestor? "Grant," which is the same as "grand," must also have
-been once applied to one who was a giant in size. The Frazers somehow
-got their name from the French word for a strawberry, fraise. The
-odd-looking "Scrymgeour" means simply a scrimmager or skirmisher.
-"Turnbull" recalls one who turned the bull at a bull-baiting. The
-well-known "Gladstains" or "Gladstone" has nothing to do with "glad,"
-but is from "glede," an old word for the kite, and commemorates some
-stone where these birds frequented. "Buccleuch" is from the killing of
-a buck in a cleugh or ravine.
-
-The Christian names of the Borderers are full of life and local colour,
-and differ much from those of Southern England. "Barthram" is the
-northern form of "Bertram," "Nigel" of "Neil," "Jellon" of "Julian,"
-"Ringan" of "Ninian." It was the general custom to abbreviate Christian
-names or use them in the diminutive form, as is constantly the practice
-in these Border ballads. "Hobbie" stands for "Halbert," a fine old name
-which must not be confused with "Albert." "Dandie" or "Dandrie" is
-"Andrew," "Eckie" is "Hector," "Lammie" is "Lambert," "Lennie" is
-"Leonard." "Adam" becomes, in the familiar form, "Aicky," "Christian"
-becomes "Christy," "Gilbert" becomes "Gibby."
-
-Another peculiarity of the ballads is the regular recurrence of such
-phrases as "the Laird's Jock," "the Laird's Wat," "Ringan's Wat," etc.
-These expressions mean, "John the son of the Laird," "Walter the son of
-the Laird," "Walter the son of Ringan or Ninian."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter I*
-
- *Bamburgh and its Coast*
-
-
-The little town of Bamburgh has two striking features--the great castle
-upon its stern rock, and the wild coast-line at its feet where dash the
-storms of the North Sea.
-
-To-day it is not important enough to have a railway station of its own;
-yet once it was the capital of the great Saxon kingdom of Northumbria.
-Its original name was Bebbanburgh, so called after Queen Bebba; of its
-Saxon fortress hardly a trace remains, the present building being partly
-the old Norman castle, with repairs and additions of a later date. The
-ancient pile has a strength, dignity, and grandeur which accords well
-with its truly noble situation.
-
-The North Saxons in choosing such a spot for their capital showed a very
-evident desire to keep in touch with the sea. Over the sea they had
-come; and over the sea would come both friends and enemies. Many a
-meeting of both friend and foe has taken place at Bamburgh!
-
-Perhaps the fiercest of the enemies was Ragnar of the hairy-breeches, a
-famous viking who plundered, ravaged, and burnt without mercy. These
-vikings, powerful men and fearless sea-rovers, were a standing terror to
-Northumbria. Men with frames and muscles strong as iron; at home both
-on the sea and on the battle-field; fair-haired, blue-eyed men, guarded
-by helmet, breast-plate, and shield, armed with heavy weapons, because
-at that date the art of the smith was not equal to making them sharp,
-light, and strong at once. So these mighty warriors hewed their way
-through the field of battle with great strokes, and when their foes fled
-in terror, the vikings took back to their ships all the treasure they
-could find, and away they went across the sea again. But with all their
-fierceness they loved poetry (wild war-poetry, most of it) and they
-loved their strong, brave women.
-
-Ragnar was a thorough viking. He loved fighting, and his handsome wife,
-and the battle songs he made. But the Saxons had no cause to love him,
-and when his ship ran aground near Jarrow, they bound him and cast him
-into a pit of snakes, and watched him slowly die. The viking had no fear
-of death. He sang as he lay there, of his life and his deeds--of the
-great banquets he had given to the wolves and the vultures and the
-fierce battles he had won, spreading the terrors of his name from the
-Orkneys to the Mediterranean; of his beautiful wife and strong sons, and
-of how they would avenge him; and of how Woden, the lord of all
-warriors, was calling him to his Hall.
-
-Many a battle has been fought on that wild coast since Ragnar died; much
-history has been made thereabouts, and many legends have attached
-themselves to Bamburgh. Like most famous places, it had its own special
-dragon, the "Laidly Worm" or loathsome serpent of the ancient ballad.
-
- "For seven miles east, and seven miles west,
- And seven miles north and south,
- No blade of grass or corn would grow,
- So venomous was her mouth!"
-
-
-And yet, when the gallant knight gave her "kisses three," she changed at
-once into a beautiful lady!
-
-But despite its castle, its battles, and its legends, Bamburgh slowly
-declined in importance. As the capital of Northumbria it had been one
-of the chief towns in England. But the gallant Northumbria of the
-Saxons was more open to enemies than any other part of the country;
-Cumbrians were on the west and Scots on the north, and this was of all
-Saxon kingdoms the most exposed to the ravages of the Danes. From the
-capital of a kingdom it became the capital of a county (Bamburghshire),
-returning two members to Parliament in the reign of Edward I.; but it
-grew of less and still less importance, till at last it was known only
-to the student of history. It shared this fate with Lindisfarne, called
-Holy Island, once the Canterbury of the North, on whose rocky shores
-still stand the ruins of the fine Norman cathedral which took the place
-of the old Saxon one. Lindisfarne and Bamburgh--neighbours, divided
-only by a narrow belt of sea--two names that conjure up vivid pictures
-of romantic history. Yet suddenly, early in the nineteenth century, the
-great deed of a splendid heroine lent new glory to the wild, sea-girt
-town.
-
-Grace Darling was born at Bamburgh in 1817, in a cottage on the south
-side of the village street, which can still be seen to-day. Her father
-became keeper of the lighthouse on the Langstone, a rocky islet five
-miles from the coast, guarding ships from the dangerous Farne Islands, a
-group of iron-bound rocks where seabirds dwell. In the early morning of
-September 7, 1838, during the raging of a most terrible storm, she heard
-the crash of a ship dashed upon the rocks, and anguished cries; as soon
-as dawn enabled them to see, the girl and her father made out the dark
-outline of the wreck, and the miserable forms of the mariners crouching
-on rocks from which the rising tide would sweep them inevitably to
-death. With superb heroism Grace and her father pushed their small boat
-into the furious waters, and after strenuous and dauntless efforts,
-always at the peril of their own lives, they saved the whole ship's
-company, nine souls in all. So fierce was the storm that it was three
-days before a boat dared take them from the Langstone to the mainland.
-
-The roar of approbation which greeted her from the whole country found
-her as modest as she was brave. But for all her courage, this noble girl
-was not strong. She died four years later, and lies buried at Bamburgh,
-within sound of the sea. And the Langstone is known to-day as "Grace
-Darling's Island," and the tomb of the brave girl rouses sweeter
-memories than the frowning fortress of Bamburgh.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter II*
-
- *Athelstan at Vinheath*
-
-
-Famous among the old Norse sea-rovers was Egil, son of Skallagrim. In
-the course of his many voyages, he visited all the lands between the
-White Sea and the Bay of Biscay, and when at last he settled down in his
-Iceland home, where he lived on till well past the age of eighty, he
-loved to gather his children and grandchildren around him by the
-fireside during the long Icelandic winter, and to tell the story of his
-adventures. He was a true Norseman, fond of the sea and the fight, fond
-of his wife and children, fond of song, at which he was highly skilled.
-His songs and his stories of adventure were listened to with eagerness,
-and they were repeated after him, and were at last written down,
-probably between one hundred and fifty and two hundred years after his
-death. Books were scarce in those days, and stories were treasured and
-faithfully re-told. So this story of Egil was probably written out very
-much in the simple, vigorous style in which the old warrior would have
-told it to his grandchildren, as they listened to him with wide-open,
-wondering eyes. And as the old man had taken part in an early battle
-between Saxon-English and Scots, upon the Border, we have here a fine
-picture of how fights were fought in the reign of King Athelstan.
-
-Egil was speaking to Icelandic children who knew little about England,
-so he began by telling how in the days when Harold Fairhair was king of
-Norway, Alfred the Great was the first supreme king over all England.
-When Alfred died he was succeeded by his son Edward, who was followed by
-Athelstan the Victorious. In Egil's day Athelstan was young and had but
-just been made king, and many chieftains, who had kept quiet before, now
-thought that the time had come when they could do as they pleased again.
-But Athelstan meant to show them that he too could rule England strongly
-and wisely.
-
-These were the days of brute force, and the king had first to get an
-army together. Besides his own English folk, many roving Norsemen came
-to take his pay, and among the number were Egil and his elder brother
-Thorolf, with their men. They saw the king himself, who received them
-well. Athelstan was a good Christian, known as the Faithful, and he
-desired that Thorolf and Egil should submit to be marked with the Cross,
-that they might take their place by his Christian soldiers without
-quarrel. This they agreed to, and the king gave them command over three
-hundred men. Now Olaf the Red was king in Scotland. His father was a
-Scot, but his mother was a Dane of the family of Ragnar
-with-the-hairy-breeches, that savage old viking. Northumberland, which
-in those days extended to the Humber, and included York as its chief
-city, was half-full of Danes, and King Olaf wished to claim it for his
-own, and add it to Scotland.
-
-Athelstan had set Earl Alfgeir and Earl Gudrek to rule Northumberland
-and defend it from the Scots. But Olaf of Scotland came south with his
-mighty host; there was a fierce battle; Earl Gudrek was slain and Earl
-Alfgeir fled. When Athelstan heard of the triumph of Olaf, he began at
-once to march northward with all the men he could get together; but he
-was yet young, and some of the treacherous earls, hearing that Olaf had
-so far been victor, deserted King Athelstan. Chief among these traitors
-were Earl Hring and Earl Adils, who should have been in the very front
-of the English army, but who basely went over to the Scots. Thus Olaf's
-host became exceeding great, greater by far than the English army.
-
-Then Athelstan called together his captains and his counsellors; Egil
-was there, and heard all the grave talk as to what should be done. At
-last a plan was made that all thought good, and this is what followed.
-
-First, messengers were sent to King Olaf, saying that King Athelstan
-would meet him in fair fight at Vinheath by Vinwood, in Northumberland,
-where he would mark out the field of battle with rods of hazel. He who
-won the battle should be king over all England. The armies should meet
-a week hence, and whichever was first on the ground should wait a week
-for the other. King Olaf should bide quiet, and not harry the land till
-the battle was ended. North of the heath was a town; there King Olaf
-stayed, for there he could best get provisions for his army. But some
-of his men he sent to the heath, to view it.
-
-The hazel-poles were already set up on the large level plain. A river
-was on one side, and a wood was on the other. And where river and wood
-were nearest to one another, there King Athelstan's tents were pitched.
-
-Many tents there were, but the front line of tents stood high, so that
-the Scots could not see how many were behind. Every third tent was
-empty, but many men were sleeping on the grass in the open, so that the
-Scots might think that the English had a large army there. Every day
-more English troops came in, and when the time was come that was fixed
-for the battle, English envoys went to the King of the Scots asking if
-there need be the great fight and bloodshed that threatened; if Olaf
-would go peaceably home, Athelstan would give him a shilling of silver
-for every plough that ploughed in England. The Scots took counsel
-together and said they must have more than this. Then the messengers
-begged a three days' truce to consider this. On the third day they came
-again, saying that King Athelstan would give what he offered before and
-also to the Scottish army a silver shilling for every freeman soldier, a
-silver mark for every lesser officer, a gold mark for every captain, and
-five gold marks for every earl. But the Scots asked not only for this,
-but also for Northumberland to be yielded to them. Then the English
-messengers answered that Scottish messengers must ride back with them,
-to take the answer from Athelstan himself.
-
-Now the truth is this: that the Scottish king had taken Athelstan by
-such surprise that he needed time to get his men together; all these
-messages were but a trick to gain time till the king should come up
-himself with all the men he could gather. When, therefore, the
-messengers rode up to King Athelstan, he had but just arrived on the
-scene of battle. And when he heard the message he said: "Tell King Olaf
-this, that I will give him leave to return to Scotland safely if only he
-give back all he has unjustly taken from this land, and if he own
-himself my under-king, holding Scotland for me and at my behest."
-
-This proud answer made the Scottish messengers at once see what had been
-going on. So they hastened back to their king to tell him how they had
-been received and what the meaning of it was.
-
-When the Scots found that the English had thus outwitted them, they took
-counsel together in some anger. Earl Adils, he who had deserted the
-English, said that he and his brother, Earl Hring, would that very night
-make a surprise attack; if it succeeded, well and good; if not, then
-they could easily withdraw, and the main battle could begin in the
-morning. This the King of Scots held to be good advice.
-
-So the two traitor earls and their men moved southward under cover of
-the darkness. But Thorolf the Norseman was used to the ways of war, and
-his sentries were alert and blew a great war-blast on their horns. And
-thus the fight began.
-
-Thorolf was armed with a massy halberd that stood taller than a man;
-broad was its blade and thick its socket, and it ended in a four-edged
-spike. He had a strong sword by his side and a big, heavy shield on his
-left arm; he had a helmet but no shirt of mail. His brother Egil was
-armed in much the same way. The Norsemen's standard was borne by Thorfid
-the strong.
-
-Next to the Norsemen, in the first rank also, was the division led by
-Earl Alfgeir, he who had once before fled from the Scots. King
-Athelstan gave him this chance to redeem himself. Now when the first
-onslaught of the Scots took place, Earl Adils came against Earl Alfgeir,
-while Earl Hring came against the Norsemen.
-
-And now the battle began. The two traitor earls urged on their men, who
-charged with spirit. The fight was fierce, and soon Alfgeir gave
-ground; this made the foe press on the fiercer, and before long Alfgeir
-was in full flight. He avoided the town where Athelstan was, and fled
-night and day to the coast, where he took ship out of the country he had
-served so ill.
-
-Adils did not dare to pursue him far, for fear of being himself cut off
-from his friends. So he returned to help his brother Hring against the
-Norsemen. Thorolf, like a true general, saw the danger of this, and at
-once told Egil to turn aside with half their force to prevent Adils from
-joining his brother. The Norsemen fought a grand fight, but were badly
-outnumbered, and the battle seemed to be going against them. Then
-Thorolf became furious. Disdainful of life, he cast his shield behind
-his back, grasped his great halberd with both hands, and sprang forward,
-hacking down all who opposed him. Straight for Hring's standard he went,
-nothing could stop him. He slew the standard-bearer, cut through the
-standard-pole, and with a mighty stroke thrust his halberd right through
-the body of Hring, the traitor earl, and lifted him up in the air that
-all might see that he was slain. Then Adils and the rest of the men
-fled to the wood, and thus ended the first part of the fight. More was
-to come on the morrow.
-
-At dawn next day King Athelstan came forward with his main army. He had
-heard of the great deeds of the brothers Thorolf and Egil; most
-courteously he thanked them, and said that he would always reckon them
-as his friends. Then with his captains he made his plans for the
-battle. Egil he put in command of the front ranks of his men, and
-Thorolf he set aside to face those of the Scots who might charge the
-English in loose array.
-
-[Illustration: Egil at Vinheath]
-
-"For this is the way of the Scots," he said; "they dash to and fro, rush
-forward and hither and thither, and are dangerous except to a commander
-who is both wary and bold."
-
-Egil said, "I would rather that Thorolf and I were near together"; but
-Thorolf answered, "As the king commands, so will we do."
-
-The battle began, and soon waged furiously. Thorolf and his men pressed
-forward along the woodside, hoping to take the enemy on the flank. Now,
-unknown to him, Adils and his followers were hiding among the trees, and
-of a sudden Adils sprang out and smote him down. Thorfid, too, the brave
-standard-bearer, was pressed back, but rallied the men, who fought
-desperately.
-
-The Scots had raised a great shout at the fall of Thorolf, and this was
-heard by Egil, who, when he saw the standard forced back, feared that
-his brother was dead, for Thorolf had never drawn back from any foe. So
-with a fierce cry Egil hacked his way through to that part of the field,
-and when he learnt the truth from his men, he never rested till he had
-slain Adils with his own hand.
-
-The followers of Adils then fled, and Egil and the Norsemen hewed their
-way through the flank of the Scottish force towards the place where King
-Olaf's standard was. Noting this, King Athelstan, that wary general,
-caused his own standard to be set forward and all his army to attack at
-once. Fierce and furious was the fight, and great was the slaughter.
-King Olaf was slain, with great numbers of his men, and the rest fled in
-confusion. The English victory was complete.
-
-As soon as Athelstan saw that victory was his, he left the pursuit to
-his captains and hastened to the town to make his arrangements. Egil
-pursued far and fiercely, and when at last he came back to the
-battlefield his first thought was for his dead brother. Worn out though
-he was, he would take no rest until he had buried the warrior with full
-honours, with his arms and his raiment; and before the sad farewell was
-said Egil clasped a gold bracelet on both of Thorolf's wrists to show
-his deep love. Then they buried the hero deep and put a high cairn of
-stones over him.
-
-Then one last tribute Egil paid to his brother, the greatest of them
-all. Among these old Norse warriors there existed a great love of song;
-the great fighters strove also to be great song-makers, and Egil was
-famous above most for this power. The Norsemen's poems had not rhymes
-like ours; they had short vigorous lines, and in each pair of lines
-three of the important words had to begin with the same letter. Wild
-strong chants they were. This is the song that Egil sang at the burial
-of his brother, Thorolf Skallagrimsson:--
-
- "The halberd of the hero
- Hewed down the foe before him;
- Then in the brunt of battle
- Was spilt brave Thorolf's blood.
- The grass is green on Vinheath
- Where sleeps my great-souled brother;
- But death, in doubled sorrow,
- Our doleful hearts must bear."
-
-
-When Egil got to the town he found the king and his army making merry
-over their victory at a huge feast. The courteous king saw Egil and bade
-him come and sit near to him. The king watched the burly Norseman, who
-was tall, with broad shoulders, a powerful head and mighty strength; but
-now his head was bent forward, and he kept his sword across his knees,
-and now and again half drew it and then clashed it back into its
-scabbard like a man who fights with heavy thoughts. He ate little and
-drank less. Then King Athelstan, watchful and courteous, took a gold
-ring from his arm, and placing it on his sword-point, handed it thus to
-where Egil sat. At this mark of honour the Norseman's face grew
-brighter. Then the king sent round his own horn for Egil to drink; so
-he drank to the king and sang a verse of wild poetry in his praise, made
-on the spur of the moment; and with this the king was much pleased.
-
-Then the king sent also for two chests full of silver, and said to
-Egil:--
-
-"These chests carry to thy father; it is fitting that King Athelstan
-make him some gift for the loss of his son. And do thou stay with me
-long, and I will give thee honour and dignity."
-
-Thus the great king in kindness and courtesy did what he could to soothe
-the grief of the warrior; and Egil stayed the winter with Athelstan, but
-when the summer came he wished to go back to his own people. But he had
-much respect for King Athelstan, and ere he bade him farewell he made a
-long poem to his glory.
-
-_From the Song of Egil Skallagrimsson, to the Glory of King Athelstan._
-
- "See how the kingly warrior,
- Land-warder, battle-wakener,
- Smites even to the earth
- The earls who rise against him!
- Glad is now Northumberland,
- This the king she needed,
- Wise and bold of race and blood,
- Dauntless in the battle-field!"
-
-
-Many were the verses of this stirring song; and after each came the
-refrain:--
-
- "Scottish hills where reindeer roam
- Own the rule of Athelstan!"
-
-
-The king gave Egil two heavy gold rings and a handsome cloak that he
-himself had worn; then the Norseman sailed away, for always near to his
-heart was the welfare of his dead brother's wife and child. Yea, for
-the rest of his long life he loved this child even as he loved his own.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter III*
-
- *Monks and Minstrels*
-
-
-The wild Borderland was the scene of the labours of many ol the first
-great Christian leaders. Where the arts of war were so much practised,
-it was needful that the arts of peace should flourish also. Great was
-the influence, even in the wildest times, of these able, serious,
-devoted leaders of early religious thought, men like Ninian and
-Kentigern.
-
-Christianity first came into Britain in Roman times, and some of the
-Britons were converted. After the Romans quitted the country, King
-Arthur was the leader of the Christian Britons, and he is said to have
-fought with the pagan Britons, the pagan Picts, the pagan Saxons, who
-had begun their invasions, and the disorderly soldiers of various races,
-probably pagans whom the Romans left behind along the wall.
-
-In due time the fight developed into a struggle between Christian
-Britons and pagan Saxons, and then the Saxons themselves began to accept
-the new religion. Oswald, a Northumbrian prince, had in a time of peril
-hidden in the island of Iona, to where the great Irishman Columba had
-come from Ireland as a missionary. When Oswald returned to power he
-summoned to his kingdom Aidan, a high-minded Christian teacher, whom he
-made first bishop of Lindisfarne (Holy Island). Aidan being a Celt, had
-to do his work through interpreters, but he did it well, and laid the
-foundations of Christianity and learning in Northumbria. Cuthbert was
-another famous missionary. Rising from shepherd-boy to bishop, he
-impressed both king and peasant by the dignified simplicity and
-sincerity of his life. His place of meditation was a sea-girt rock by
-Lindisfarne, lonely and picturesque, and still called after his name. A
-curious fossil, with the mark of a cross, is plentiful there, and goes
-by the name of St Cuthbert's beads. Other famous teachers were Wilfrid
-of York, who founded the churches of Hexham and Ripon; Boisil, who
-founded Melrose, and Biscop, who founded Jarrow.
-
-But perhaps the most celebrated of all was Bede, the "Venerable Bede,"
-who lived at Jarrow and wrote forty-five learned books on all subjects,
-including music, astronomy, and medicine. All the scholars in England
-flocked to hear his teachings, and he was justly called "the father of
-English learning." He it was who first introduced into England the art
-of making glass.
-
-His last work was to translate the Gospel of St John into Northumbrian
-English. This was in the year 735. Being too ill to hold a pen, he
-dictated to his favourite pupil. "Write quickly," he said, for he felt
-that he was dying. "It is finished," answered the lad, and the old
-man's heart was satisfied. In a faint, brave voice he chanted the
-_Gloria_, and so died singing.
-
-In those days there was, of course, no such thing as printing. Every
-manuscript was written and rewritten, carefully, by hand, and treasured
-as a sacred possession in the seats of learning. So proud were they of
-their manuscripts that they beautified them with illustrations in
-colour. Many of these manuscripts have, of course, been destroyed; for
-instance, the Danes in 875 burnt the priceless library of Bishop Acca at
-Hexham, destroying in one day the treasured collection of a lifetime;
-but many remain to show the love of learning which existed even then.
-Bishop Edfrid, who lived in the little rocky island of Lindisfarne, made
-a copy of the Gospels, which is looked upon with wonder even to-day.
-Strings of beautiful birds and quaint animals are drawn upon his pages;
-evangelists with mantles of purple and tunics of blue, pink, or green.
-With the writing clear and beautiful, the decorations showing the
-greatest care and devotion, this manuscript of one thousand two hundred
-years ago has been the delight of thousands, and comes down to us to
-witness to the loving care of the scholars of old in the days before
-printing was known.
-
-Great as was their love of beautiful manuscripts, they had an equally
-noble passion for grand buildings. A superb monument of simple dignity
-and religious grandeur is the Norman Cathedral at Durham, commenced by
-Bishop Carilef in 1093, and finished by Bishop Flambard in 1128.
-Occupying a wonderful position at the top of a wooded hill, around which
-flows the beautiful river Wear, Durham Cathedral is in itself one of the
-noblest buildings in the world. While the Church in those troublous
-times kept thus a storehouse of learning for serious scholars, other
-methods kept the people informed of the more stirring events of their
-day.
-
-In the old days, when no newspapers existed to tell people the news,
-when books were scarce and history was not taught to every lad as a part
-of his training, the ballad-writer and the wandering minstrel played a
-very important part. Ballads, sometimes really fine pieces of poetry,
-sometimes a mere halting troop of lame lines, were made upon every
-occasion of local or general interest. They were sung to simple and
-often beautiful tunes or chants. The best of the minstrels were welcome
-to the halls of the nobles, and even to the king himself; the poorest of
-them sang on the village green. The ballads were learnt and repeated by
-the folk of the country-side; some were in later times printed on loose
-sheets, but at first they were handed on from mouth to mouth.
-Alterations and errors often crept in; mistakes due to a sameness of
-sound. For instance, in the old ballad of _Mary Ambree_, a soldier is
-referred to as "Sir John Major," probably meaning Sergeant-major. In
-one of the versions of the battle of Chevy Chase, Henry Percy was said
-to have been killed there, whereas he really lived on to be slain at
-Shrewsbury. But, despite such occasional blunders, the ballads on the
-whole throw a vivid light on the manners and customs of the old days, as
-well as being usually stirring and sometimes strikingly noble and
-pathetic pieces of poetry. They deal as a rule rather with the side
-currents than with the main stream of history; but they express
-themselves with such homely force and directness that they bring home to
-us with wonderful clearness the character of the vigorous manly men with
-whose doings they are chiefly concerned.
-
-During the last one hundred and fifty years many able men have laboured
-to collect old ballads, writing them down from the mouths of the
-country-folk and printing them in books with notes of explanation. One
-of the earliest thus to collect ballads seriously was Bishop Percy; the
-best known is Sir Walter Scott, of whose interest in the subject
-Lockhart, his biographer, writes very pleasantly.
-
-Prefaced to many of the stirring tales in this present book are lines
-from the old Border ballads from which they are taken. It is to be
-hoped that readers will be tempted sooner or later to read the rest of
-these fine ballads for themselves.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter IV*
-
- *Sir Patrick Spens*
-
-
- "The king sits in Dunfermline town
- Drinking the blood-red wine;
- 'O where shall I get a well-skilled skipper
- To sail this new ship of mine?'"
-
-
-Almost every collection of Scottish songs contains this picturesque old
-ballad, which refers to a very remote time in Scottish history, probably
-the end of the thirteenth century. King Alexander III. of Scotland died
-in 1285; he had the bitter grief of seeing all his children die before
-him. His daughter Margaret had been married to Eric, King of Norway,
-and she left a daughter also called Margaret, and known as the "Maid of
-Norway." This maid was now heiress to the Scottish throne, and it is
-natural to suppose that the lonely king should wish her to return to
-Scotland, and should send a richly appointed ship to fetch her back.
-And although there is no strictly historical record of such an
-expedition, the truth of the ballad is made more probable by the fact
-that it opens in the fine old town of Dunfermline.
-
-Dunfermline was a favourite residence of Alexander, who was killed in
-its neighbourhood by a fall from his horse, and was buried in the abbey
-there, the ruins of which beautiful structure still remain.
-
-In this ballad the king is feasting at Dunfermline town, and calls for a
-skilful mariner to sail his new ship. An old knight at the king's right
-hand answers that the best sailor who ever sailed the sea is Sir Patrick
-Spens. So the king writes a letter, sealing it with his own hand, and
-sends it to Sir Patrick, commanding him to sail away to Norway over the
-white sea-foam and bring home the maid.
-
-Now every good sailor dreaded the rough Northern seas in winter, so
-though the brave Sir Patrick laughed aloud when he began to read, he
-wept blinding tears before he had ended. "Who has done this deed?" he
-cried; "who has told the king of me and urged him to send us out at this
-time of the year to sail on the stormy sea? Yet, wind, wet, hail, or
-sleet, we must set out, for 'tis we who must fetch home the maid."
-
-So they set sail on a Monday morning, and reached Norway on a Wednesday.
-History tells us that Eric of Norway was very unwilling to part with his
-daughter. This probably accounts for the fact that the old ballad tells
-us that the Scotsmen had only been there a fortnight when the lords of
-Norway began to say that Sir Patrick and his men were spending the gold
-of their king and queen. "Ye lie," cried Sir Patrick, "loudly I hear ye
-lie, for I brought with me over the sea enough red gold and white money
-to supply the wants of my men. Make ready, make ready, my merry men; we
-will sail at daybreak." "Alack," quoth the men, "a deadly storm is
-brewing. Yesterday evening the new moon was seen carrying the old moon
-in her arms; we shall certainly come to harm if we go to sea."
-
-Barely had they sailed three leagues when the sky darkened, the wind
-blew loudly, and the sea grew boisterous. Soon they were in the midst
-of a terrible storm. The anger of the sea was far more dreadful than
-the anger of the lords of Norway. The anchors broke away, the topmasts
-snapped, and the waves came over the broken ship, tearing her sides
-asunder. "O where shall I get a good sailor to take the helm while I
-climb the tall topmast to see if I can espy land?" "That I fear ye
-never will," cried a sailor as he took the helm, and scarcely had Sir
-Patrick gone a step when a plank started in the ship's side and the
-water came pouring in.
-
-"Fetch a web of silken cloth, and fetch a web of twine," cried Sir
-Patrick, "and cast them down to our ship's side!" For it was the custom
-in those days, when a leak could not be reached from inside the vessel,
-to cast down some closely woven stuff in the hope that the suction of
-the water would drag it across the leak and stop thus the fatal inrush
-of water. Alas! all their efforts failed. Then the ballad-writer says
-somewhat grimly of the dandies among the Scottish lords that whereas at
-first they grumbled to see the water spoil their fine cork-heeled shoes,
-when the storm had done its fatal work the sea was "above their hats"!
-
- "And many was the feather bed
- That fluttered on the foam;
- And many was the gude lord's son
- That never mair came home!
-
- The ladyes wrang their fingers white;
- The maidens tore their hair,
- A' for the sake of their true loves;
- For them they'll see nae mair.
-
- O lang, lang may the ladyes sit,
- Wi' their fans into their hand,
- Before they see Sir Patrick Spens
- Come sailing to the strand!
-
- And lang, lang may the maidens sit,
- With their goud kaims[#] in their hair,
- A' waiting for their ain dear loves!
- For them they'll see nae mair.
-
-[#] Golden combs.
-
- O forty miles off Aberdeen,
- 'Tis fifty fathoms deep,
- And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
- Wi' the Scots lords at his feet."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter V*
-
- *Auld Maitland*
-
-
- "'Wha holds this house?' young Edward cried,
- 'Or wha gives it o'er to me?'
- ''Tis I will keep my good old house,
- While my house will keep me!'"
-
-
-The story of Auld Maitland is said to be taken from a very old ballad,
-and known chiefly to the people who lived in the neighbourhood of
-Ettrick Forest. The old folks there would while away the long winter
-evenings by singing of the deeds of their ancestors, and the ballad of
-_Auld Maitland_, as thus chanted, was written down by the mother of
-James Hogg, the "Ettrick Shepherd."
-
-The castle of Thirlestane stood on the river Leader, and still, in its
-restored form, deserves its name of "the darksome house." It may have
-often withstood the English during the Baliol wars, and hatred of the
-English and of Edward I. is expressed with extreme virulence throughout
-the poem. Here is the story:--
-
-There lived in the south country a king named Edward, who wore the crown
-unworthily for fifty years. This king had a nephew, strong in blood and
-bone, who bore the same hateful name. One day the young man came before
-the king, and kneeling low, he said, "A boon, a boon I crave of thee, my
-good uncle. Oft have I wished to take part in our long wars in fair
-Scotland. Grant me fifteen hundred chosen strong men to ride there with
-me."
-
-"Certainly thou shalt have them, and more, and I myself, though old and
-grey, will see thy host arrayed for battle."
-
-King Edward sent hither and thither, and assembled fifteen hundred men
-on Tyne side, and three times as many at North Berwick, all bound for
-battle. They marched up the banks of Tweed, burning the Merse and
-Teviotdale, and up and down the Lammermoor Hills, until they came to the
-darksome house called, by some, "Leader-Town."
-
-"Who holds this house?" cried young Edward, "or who gives it over to
-me?" He was answered, as proudly, by a grey-haired knight: "I hold my
-house of Scotland's king, who pays me in meat and fee, and I will hold
-it as long as it will stand together."
-
-Thereupon the English brought up their sows[#] to the wall with many a
-heavy sound, but the soldiers on the wall cast down blazing pitch and
-tar barrels, to consume the formidable machine. They also threw down
-stones and beams and darts from their springalds,[#] and slew many of
-the English.
-
-[#] A military engine framed of wood, covered with hides and mounted on
-wheels, so that, being rolled forward to the foot of the wall, it served
-as a shed to defend the miners underneath it and their battering-rams
-from the stones and arrows of the soldiers above.
-
-[#] Large crossbows worked by machinery.
-
-Fifteen days they besieged the castle of Auld Maitland, but left him at
-the end of that time unhurt within his stone stronghold.
-
-[Illustration: _The Siege of Maitland Castle_]
-
-They loaded fifteen ships with as much spoil as they could carry away
-from the district around, and claimed that now they had conquered
-Scotland with buckler, bow, and brand. So they sailed away to France to
-meet the old King Edward, who was burning every castle, tower, and town
-that he met with. They came at last to the town of Billop-Grace, where
-Auld Maitland's three sons were at school.
-
-Edward had quartered the arms of Scotland with his own. "See'st thou
-what I see?" said the eldest son to the youngest; "if that be true that
-yonder standard says, then are we all three fatherless, and Scotland
-conquered up and down. Never will we bow to the conquerer. Let us go,
-my two brothers, and try our chance in an adventure?" Thereupon they
-saddled two black horses and a grey, and rode before day-dawn to King
-Edward's army. Arrived there, they hovered round, and Maitland begged
-to be allowed to carry the king's standard, the Golden Dragon.
-
-"Where wast thou born and bred, and in what country?" demanded the
-knight who bore the banner. "I was born in the north of England,"
-answered Maitland; "my father was a knight and my mother a lady, and I
-myself am a squire of high renown, and may well carry the banner of a
-king." "Never had the son of an Englishmen such an eye or brow,"
-answered the knight; "thou art more like Auld Maitland than any man I
-have ever seen; yet God grant that such a gloomy brow I never see again;
-he slew and wounded many of our men."
-
-At the mention of his father's name Maitland's anger burst out, and
-lifting up a gilded dagger that hung low by his knee, he struck fiercely
-at the standard-bearer, and, catching hold of the corner of the
-standard, rode swiftly away with it, crying to his brothers, "Is it not
-time to flee?" "Ay, by my sooth," they both shouted, "we will bear you
-company." So they rode off at hot speed, the pursuers following. The
-youngest Maitland, turning round in the path, drew his brand and killed
-fifteen of the foremost, and the rest fell back. Then he dug his spurs
-into the sides of his faithful grey, until both the sides ran blood.
-"Thou must carry me away, or my life lies in pledge," he cried.
-
-About daybreak the brothers arrived at their uncle's castle, who, seeing
-the three Scottish lads with pursuers riding hard at their heels,
-ordered the portcullis to be drawn up and the drawbridge let down, for
-that they should lodge with him that night in spite of all England.
-
-When the three came inside the gate, they leapt down from their horses,
-and taking three long spears in their hands, they fought till it was
-full daylight, killing and wounding many of the Englishmen round the
-drawbridge. Some of the dead were carted away in waggons, and stones
-were heaped upon the rest as they lay in the gutter.
-
-King Edward proclaimed at his pavilion door that three lads of France,
-disguised, and with false words, had come and stolen away the standard,
-and had slain his men in their lawful attempt to regain it.
-
-"It ill befits a crowned king to lie," said the youngest Maitland, "and
-he shall be reproved for it before I taste meat or drink."
-
-Straightway he went before King Edward, and, kneeling low, begged leave
-to speak a word with him. "Man, thou shalt have leave to speak, even
-though thou shouldst speak all day," answered the king.
-
-"Ye said," spoke the youngest Maitland, "that three young lads of France
-had stolen away the standard with a false tale, and slain many men. But
-we are not lads of France, and never have pretended to be; we are three
-lads of fair Scotland, and the sons of Auld Maitland, nor are there men
-in all your host dare fight us three to three."
-
-"Now, by my sooth," said the young Edward, who stood by, "Ye shall be
-well fitted, for Percy shall fight with the eldest, and Egbert Lunn with
-thee, and William of Lancaster with the other, and the surviving brother
-shall fight with me. Remember, Percy, how oft the Scot has cowered
-before thee; I will give thee a rig of land for every drop of Maitland
-blood."
-
-So they set to, and the eldest Maitland clanked Percy over the head and
-wounded him so deeply that the best blood of his body ran down his hair.
-"I have slain one," shouted Maitland to his brothers; "slay ye the other
-two, and that will be good company, and if the two shall slay ye both,
-ye shall get no help from me."[#]
-
-[#] According to the laws of chivalry, having slain his own man, he
-could, if he pleased, come to the assistance of the others.
-
-But Egbert Lunn was like a baited bear and had seen many battles, and
-when Maitland saw that his youngest brother was having the worst of it,
-he could not restrain himself longer, and shouting, "I am no king; my
-word shall not stand," he struck Egbert over the head and slew him.
-"Now I have slain two; slay ye one for good company," he cried; "neither
-shall ye get any help from me even if the one shall slay ye both." So
-the two brothers slew the third, and hung him over the drawbridge for
-all the host to see.
-
-Then they rode and ran, but still got not away, but hovered round,
-boasting: "We be three lads of fair Scotland that fain would see some
-fighting."
-
-When young Edward heard this, he cried wrathfully, "I'll take yon lad
-and bind him, and bring him bound to thee."
-
-"Now God forbid that ever thou shouldst try that," said the king; "we
-have lost three worthy leaders; wouldst thou be the fourth? Never again
-would I be happy if thou wert to hang on yonder drawbridge."
-
-But Edward struck fiercely at Maitland, cleaving his stout helmet and
-biting right near his brain. When Maitland saw his own blood flowing he
-threw away his weapon, and springing angrily at young Edward's throat,
-he swung him thrice about and flung him on the ground, holding him there
-though he was of great strength.
-
-"Now let him up," cried King Edward, "let him come to me, and for thy
-deed thou shalt have three earldoms."
-
-"Nay," replied Maitland, "never shall it be said in France or in
-Scotland that Edward once lay under me and got up again," and with that
-he pierced him through the heart and hung him over the drawbridge with
-the other three.
-
-"Now take from me my bed of feathers," said the king, "make me a bed of
-straw. Would that I had not lived to see the day that makes my heart so
-sad."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter VI*
-
- *The Mystery of the Eildons*
-
-
- "Before their eyes the Wizard lay
- As if he had not been dead a day.
- His hoary beard in silver roll'd,
- He seemed some seventy winters old.
- High and majestic was his look,
- At which the fellest friends had shook,
- And all unruffled was his face;
- They trusted his soul had gotten grace."
- SCOTT: _Lay of the Last Minstrel._
-
-
-Just above Melrose, the ruined abbey of which is one of the beauties of
-Scotland, there rises a striking mass of three hills known as "the
-triple Eildons." They rise very high above the surrounding land, and
-are steep enough to need a very hard scramble to mount to the very
-summit; but once at the top the view is wonderful indeed. On a fine day
-the Tweed can be seen winding in and out most picturesquely, till it
-loses itself in the low distant haze of the North Sea, thirty miles
-away. But even grander is the view of the entire line of the Cheviots,
-like a huge wall, fifty miles long, seen to immense advantage from
-Eildon, which towers over the rich valleys of Tweed and Teviot that lie
-between. One of the legends of the triple Eildons is that King Arthur
-lies sleeping beneath them, some day to awaken. Tradition says that he
-fought a great battle near here, by Gala Water, in the Vale of Woe.
-
-However that may be, it is certain that at the foot of Eildon lie many
-famous dead. In Melrose Abbey lies the heart of Robert Bruce, and also
-the body of the strong King Alexander II., he who first subdued and made
-obedient the wild tribes of Argyle. Here, too, is buried the brave
-Douglas who died so gallantly on the field of Otterbourne; and also of
-another brave Douglas who got his death wound at Poictiers.
-
-Sir Walter Scott, who did more than any other man to spread all over the
-world the knowledge of Scotland, Scottish history, Scottish romance, and
-Scottish character, lies buried on the southern side of Eildon, in the
-rival abbey of Dryburgh. But Melrose can claim a man who in his day was
-an object of the deepest wonder and terror--Michael Scott, the famous
-wizard of the thirteenth century, he who brought the learning of
-Aristotle to expound to Western Europe, he whom Dante described as
-learned in every deep spell of the magic arts. Perhaps he was only a
-scientist, born before his time; yet even to-day old folk in the country
-remember that it was he who is said to have cleft the head of Eildon
-Hill into three!
-
-One of the many strange tales told of Michael Scott is this:--
-
-They say that the lord of Morpeth, in Northumberland, promised the great
-wizard a rich reward if he would only make the sea roll up the valley of
-the pretty river Wansbeck till it reached Morpeth, so that vessels could
-sail up to the town. The distance is seven miles, and the wizard,
-declaring the matter a most simple one, prepared his magic spell. He
-then said that if a certain man would run from the sea to the town, and
-on no account look back, whatever he heard, the desire of the lord would
-be satisfied. The man no sooner started to run than he heard the waters
-following him. Faster and faster he went, and faster and faster came
-the ocean, dashing and roaring, never overtaking him, but always so near
-his heels as to fill him with ever greater and greater terror.
-
-Before he had finished the third mile he was in such a state of alarm
-that he could not resist the impulse to see what was happening. He
-turned round, and the spell was broken; the waters had followed him thus
-far, but would come no further. Even the best of wizards will fail when
-his instructions are not obeyed.
-
-So says the story. People are free to believe it or not, as they
-please. It is certain that the sea runs nearly three miles up the
-Wansbeck valley, and there stops; but many people think that that is
-explained by the natural rise of the land!
-
-The story of how Michael Scott came to divide the Eildon Hill into three
-runs as follows:--
-
-The wizard had one very active little demon, who was always bothering
-his master to give him something to do. First Michael commanded him to
-put a barrier across the Tweed at Kelso, thinking to keep him quiet for
-at least a week; it was done in a single night, and again the demon
-demanded work. Then Michael set him to divide Eildon into three; this
-also was done in a night, and again the demon came clamouring for
-employment. So in despair the wizard ordered him to make ropes out of
-sea-sand! This, of course, is impossible, as the sand will not hold
-together. But if you go down to the shore on the south-east coast of
-Scotland on a dark and stormy night, you can still hear what sounds like
-the demon moaning and groaning over his impossible task; and there is
-certainly a barrier across the Tweed at Kelso, and the Eildon Hill is
-certainly divided into three! So you may believe as much as you please
-of this story.
-
-Another tale that is told of the magic powers of this famous man relates
-that he was once chosen to go as ambassador from the King of Scotland to
-the King of France on urgent business. Instead of going, as is usual in
-such cases, with a number of followers, he conjured up a demon shaped
-like a huge black horse, and rode away over the sea. When half-way
-across the North Sea the horse said to his rider:--
-
-"What do the old women of Scotland say at bed-time?" Had the magician
-fallen into the trap and named a prayer, the demon would have
-disappeared and the wizard would have been drowned! But Michael Scott
-merely commanded his steed to go on quickly and not to talk. Very soon
-he came to Paris, tied his horse to the gate of the French king's
-palace, and boldly entered and stated his business. The French king
-sneered at an ambassador who was not followed by a train of knights, and
-began at once to refuse all he asked. "Wait a moment, your Majesty,"
-said Michael, "till you have seen my horse stamp three times."
-
-At the first stamp the ground so shook that every steeple in Paris
-rocked, making all the bells ring loudly; at the second stamp the king
-heard behind him a loud crash that made him leap three feet in the air;
-looking round, he saw that three of the towers of his palace had fallen;
-the horse raised his foot to stamp a third time, but the king was so
-terrified that he shouted hastily that he would grant all that Michael
-asked if only he would keep his horse from stamping!
-
-Whether this tale is true or not, Michael Scott was certainly one of the
-ambassadors sent to bring back the Maid of Norway to Scotland on the
-death of King Alexander III. He wrote many learned books, and possessed
-many others; and they say that when he was buried at Melrose many of
-these same magic books were buried with him.
-
-To this romantic district of the Eildons belonged True Thomas, Thomas
-the Rhymer, or Thomas of Ercildoune, as he was variously called, who was
-held in awe by Border-folks as a prophet. The ruins of his tower are
-still shown by the pretty river Leader, just about two miles above the
-spot where it joins the Tweed. The Rhymer seems to have died a few
-years before 1300; but despite the passing of six centuries he is still
-remembered. The story of how he gained his prophetic powers is quite
-worth hearing, whether we believe it or not.
-
-The tale goes that Thomas was on Huntlie bank, near the Eildon Hills,
-when he saw a wonderful lady approaching him. She was dressed in
-grass-green silk, with a mantle of fine velvet, and the noble horse on
-which she rode had silver bells in its mane. Thomas was so surprised at
-this remarkable sight that when the lady came near he dropped on his
-knee and pulled off his cap, and cried out, reverently, that she must be
-the Queen of Heaven. But she answered that she was Queen of fair
-Elfland, and dared him, with a witching glance, to kiss her lips. The
-bold and gallant Thomas did not need a second invitation, and promptly
-kissed the fairy, when she seized upon him and fled away with him
-swifter than the wind.
-
-Soon all living land was left behind, and they came to a wild place
-where three roads met. One was a narrow path, beset with thorns and
-briers; and this the fairy said was the road of righteousness, which
-very few people ever troubled to find. Another was a broad and
-attractive road, which was the way of sinners; whilst the third, a
-pretty winding road, led to Elfland, and thither they went together.
-
-Soon there was neither sun nor moon to lighten the way, and Thomas and
-his companion waded through rivers above the knee. The sea moaned and
-roared in the dread darkness, and Thomas somehow found that they waded
-oft through streams of red blood--blood that had been shed on earth.
-Then they came to a beautiful garden, and the Elfland queen gave Thomas
-an apple to eat, saying:--
-
-"Take this for thy wages, true Thomas; it will give thee the tongue that
-can never lie." Poor Thomas turned pale at the thought of such a gift.
-"Let my tongue be my own!" he pleaded; "how shall I buy or sell in any
-market, flatter a prince, or compliment a lady, if you give me such a
-tongue!"
-
-But the Elfland queen would take no denial, and Thomas had to do her
-behest, wherefore for the rest of his life Thomas carried with him this
-gift of truthfulness.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter VII*
-
- *Black Agnes of Dunbar*
-
-
-The fortress of Dunbar was always a very important one to the Scots. It
-commanded the coast road from England across the Border to Edinburgh,
-not only one of the best routes in itself, but one which had the
-additional advantage to the English that by following it they could keep
-in touch with their ships. So it is not surprising that many stirring
-events in history took place at this historic town.
-
-King Edward I. of England won a very important victory at Dunbar during
-his first invasion of Scotland, and to the place which had witnessed the
-triumph of the father, his son, Edward II., fled for safety after his
-defeat at Bannockburn, taking ship thence back to England. In the time
-of Mary Queen of Scots the fortress was held by Earl Bothwell; from here
-he consented to the surrender of poor Mary, and here he rested in safety
-before his final flight to Scandinavia. Oliver Cromwell fought and won
-at Dunbar his desperate battle with the Scottish Presbyterians, the fate
-of which for some time hung in the balance. Cromwell considered the
-place so valuable that he had new harbour works made there, and a
-portion of his work, forming part of the east pier of the present much
-larger harbour, is still to be seen.
-
-The last time that Dunbar resounded to the march of an army bent on
-immediate fight was in 1745, when the boastful English general, Sir John
-Cope, landed here to engage the Highland followers of Prince Charles
-Edward (called the "Young Pretender"). Prince Charlie was at Edinburgh,
-and Dunbar Castle commanded the road into England. Cope asserted that
-the Highlanders would run away at the mere sight of his army. He
-marched westward, but was surprised in the early morning by his enemies
-when near Prestonpans. In less than ten minutes it was the unprepared
-English who were flying in disorder, utterly routed.
-
-The foregoing is but a brief outline of the stormy history of those grey
-and ruined battlements overlooking the bleak North Sea at the
-southernmost point of entrance to the noble Firth of Forth. The mention
-of these stirring incidents, however, will serve to show what a very
-important place Dunbar was, and that it was necessary to Scottish safety
-that a strong hand should have charge of its fortress. We are now to
-see how at one of the most critical hours a woman was to hold command,
-and to hold it worthily.
-
-Early in the reign of King Edward III. of England Scottish affairs were
-in some confusion. King Robert Bruce had lately died, leaving a son,
-King David II., then only five years old. That great leader and friend
-of Bruce, Randolph, Earl of Moray, was appointed Guardian of Scotland,
-but he too soon died. Edward III., anxious to interfere in Scottish
-affairs, agreed to help Edward Balliol to make himself king of the
-Scots. So an English army was again in Scotland, and one of the places
-they were keenest to take was the fortress of Dunbar.
-
-[Illustration: _Black Agnes_]
-
-The castle was a very strong one. It was built on a chain of great
-rocks that stretched out to sea, and could only be reached from land by
-one road, which was, of course, strictly guarded. The lord of the
-castle was the Earl of March (the word March in those days meant a
-border-land), but he was away with the Scottish army, and his wife was
-in charge of the castle. She was the daughter of that brave Earl of
-Moray, Guardian of Scotland, who has just been mentioned. The English
-army was led by an experienced general, the Earl of Salisbury, and he
-probably thought that he would not have much trouble in overcoming
-"Black Agnes," as the dark-haired countess was called.
-
-He soon discovered that she was of heroic mould, however, for though he
-himself led the storming-parties, she on her side, urging on her men in
-person, hurled back his every attack. The Lady Agnes was quite
-fearless, and treated the siege as if it were a pastime to be enjoyed.
-When the English, with machines made for the purpose, hurled heavy
-stones against the walls, Black Agnes would call one of her maidens with
-a napkin to wipe off the dust that they made! The biggest of all the
-English war-machines was called a sow, and when it was brought to the
-walls the countess cried out in rough jest that it was surrounded by
-little pigs. At the same moment a mass of rock, which she had caused to
-be loosened, was hurled by her men on to the English, crushing their sow
-and many soldiers with it.
-
-At last there seemed a chance for the English. Near midnight a Scot
-came into their camp, saying that he was ready to betray the castle for
-a reward. The Earl of Salisbury and some chosen knights rode carefully
-forward, and found the gate open and the portcullis raised, as the man
-had promised. But for all that, they doubted if Black Agnes could so
-far relax her vigilance; wherefore instead of the earl entering first,
-he sent forward a retainer. His caution was soon justified, for no
-sooner had this man passed the gate than the portcullis fell. It was a
-trick to capture the earl, but the Scots were disappointed this time.
-
-The gallant English lord was loud in admiration of the brave Scottish
-lady who was thus defying him. Once when examining the defences with a
-lieutenant, an arrow struck his companion dead. "The countess's
-love-arrows pierce to the heart," said Salisbury, on his return to the
-camp. Despite the courtly manner in which the well-bred baron referred
-to the lady, however, he did not relax his efforts to overcome her.
-
-Salisbury's land forces had now surrounded the castle on the land side,
-while his ships at sea completed the blockade. The garrison was
-threatened with starvation. Greater and greater became the privations
-of the heroic defenders. The countess, no less brave than ever, hoped
-on, though ground for hope grew less and less. She could not bring
-herself to think of defeat, and her brave, bright face still gave
-courage and inspiration to all.
-
-Meantime the story of the struggle and difficulties of the defenders was
-raising up helpers, and Sir Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie got ready a
-light vessel filled with provisions and manned by forty brave Scots, who
-only waited for a dark night to make the attempt to steal past the
-English fleet. They lay hidden by the Bass Rock, a lofty islet at the
-mouth of the Firth of Forth, some seven or eight miles from Dunbar,
-until one starless night they stole very cautiously down the wild
-coast-line of Haddingtonshire, sometimes all but bumping into an English
-vessel in the dark. Fortune favours the brave, and despite dangers and
-difficulties they got safely at last to the castle, whose distant light
-had been their guide. Be sure Black Agnes welcomed them! This proved to
-be the turning-point of the long siege. With fresh hope, the garrison
-made a sudden sally on the English, driving back their advance guard,
-and after five months of fierce but fruitless attempts, Salisbury was
-compelled to withdraw his forces and admit defeat. Nevertheless, the
-English were gallant enough to sing their praises of this Scottish
-heroine; their minstrels made songs in her honour, in one of which
-Salisbury is made to say:--
-
- "Came I early, came I late,
- I found Black Agnes at the gate."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter VIII*
-
- *The Young Tamlane*
-
-
- "He's ta'en her by the milk-white hand,
- Among the leaves so green."
-
-
-This tale belongs to the romantic side of the Border minstrelsy, and
-illustrates some of the common superstitions of olden times concerning
-elves and fairies. The scene is laid in the Selkirk or Ettrick Forest,
-a mountainous tract covered with the remains of the old Caledonian
-Forest. About a mile above Selkirk is a plain called Carterhaugh, and
-here may still be seen those fairy rings of which it was believed that
-anyone sleeping upon one will wake in a fairy city. And here was, and
-perhaps still is, an ancient well. The ballad opens by telling how all
-young maids were forbidden to come or go by way of Carterhaugh, "for
-young Tamlane (or Thomalin) is there," and every one going by
-Carterhaugh is obliged to leave him something in pledge. But the Lady
-Janet, the fairest of the Selkirk lasses, was obstinate, and declared
-that she would come or go to Carterhaugh, as she pleased, "and ask no
-leave of him," since the land there belonged to her by hereditary right.
-She kilted her green mantle above her knee, and braided her yellow hair
-above her brow, and off she went to Carterhaugh. When she got to the
-well, she found the steed of the elfin knight Tamlane standing there,
-but he himself was away.
-
- "She hadna pu'd a red, red rose,
- A rose but barely three;
- Till up and starts a wee, wee man
- At Lady Janet's knee.
-
- Says--'Why pu' ye the rose, Janet?
- What gars (makes) ye break the tree?
- Or why come ye to Carterhaugh,
- Withouten leave of me?'
-
- Says--'Carterhaugh it is mine ain;
- My daddy gave it me:
- I'll come and gang to Carterhaugh,
- And ask nae leave o' thee.'"
-
-
-But Tamlane took her by the hand and worked upon her his spells, which
-no maiden might resist, however proud she might be.
-
-When she came back to her father's hall, she looked pale and wan; and it
-seemed that she had some sore sickness. She ceased to take any pleasure
-in combing her yellow hair, and everything she ate seemed like to be her
-death. When her ladies played at ball, she, once the strongest player,
-was now the faintest. One day her father spoke out, and said he, "Full
-well I know that you must have some lover." She said:--
-
- "'If my love were an earthly knight,
- As he's an elfin grey,
- I wouldna give my own true love
- For no lord that ye hae.'"
-
-
-Then she prinked herself, and preened herself, all by the light of the
-moon alone, and went away to Carterhaugh, to speak with Tamlane. When
-she got to the well, she found the steed standing, but Tamlane was away.
-She had barely pulled a double rose, when up started the elf.
-
-"Why pull ye the rose, Janet?" says he; "why pull ye the rose within
-this garden green?" "The truth ye'll tell me, Tamlane; were ye ever in
-holy chapel, or received into the Christian Church?" "The truth I'll
-tell thee, Janet; a knight was my father, and a lady was my mother, like
-your own parents. Randolph, Earl Moray, was my sire; Dunbar, Earl
-March, is thine. We loved when we were children, which yet you may
-remember. When I was a boy just turned nine, my uncle sent for me to
-hunt, and hawk, and ride with him, and keep him company. There came a
-wind out of the north, a deep sleep came over me, and I fell from my
-horse. The queen of the fairies took me off to yon green hill, and now
-I'm a fairy, lithe and limber. In Fairyland we know neither sickness
-nor pain. We quit our body, or repair unto them, when we please. We can
-inhabit, earth, or air, as we will. Our shapes and size we can convert
-to either large or small. We sleep in rose-buds, revel in the stream,
-wanton lightly on the wind, or glide on a sunbeam. I would never tire,
-Janet, to dwell in Elfland, were it not that every seven years a tithe
-is paid to hell, and I am so fair of flesh, I fear 'twill be myself. If
-you dare to win your true love, you have no time to lose. To-night is
-Hallowe'en, and the fairy folk ride. If you would win your true love,
-bide at Miles Cross." Miles Cross is about half a mile from
-Carterhaugh, and Janet asked how she should know Tamlane among so many
-unearthly knights. "The first company that passes by, let them go. The
-next company that passes by, let them go. The third company that passes
-by, I'll be one of those. First let pass the black steed, Janet, then
-let pass the brown; but grip the milk-white steed, and pull down the
-rider--
-
- "For I ride on the milk-white steed,
- And aye nearest the town;
- Because I was a christened knight,
- They gave me that renown."
-
-
-Tamlane went on to explain that his fairy comrades would make every
-effort to disgust her with her captive. They would turn him in her very
-arms into an adder; they would change him into a burning faggot, into a
-red-hot iron goad, but she must hold him fast. In order to remove the
-enchantment, she must dip him in a churn of milk, and then in a barrel
-of water. She must still persevere, for they would shape him in her
-arms into a badger, eel, dove, swan, and, last of all, into a naked man,
-but
-
- "Cast your green mantle over me,
- I'll be myself again."
-
-
-So fair Janet in her green mantle went that gloomy night to Miles Cross.
-The heavens were black, the place was inexpressibly dreary, a north wind
-raged; but there she stood, eagerly wishing to embrace her lover.
-Between the hours of twelve and one she heard strange eldrich sounds and
-the ringing of elfin bridles, which gladdened her heart. The oaten
-pipes of the faires grew shrill, the hemlock blew clear. The fairies
-cannot bear solemn sounds or sober thoughts; they sing like skylarks,
-inspired by love and joy. Fair Janet stood upon the dreary heath, and
-the sounds waxed louder as the fairy train came riding on. Will o' the
-Wisp shone out as a twinkling light before them, and soon she saw the
-fairy bands passing. She let the black steed go by, and then the brown.
-But she gripped fast the milk-white steed, and pulled down the rider.
-Then up rose an eldrich cry, "He's won among us all!" As Janet grasped
-him in her arms the fairies changed him into a newt, an adder, and many
-other fantastic and terrifying shapes. She held him fast in every
-shape. They turned him at last into a naked man in her arms, but she
-wrapped him in her green mantle. At last her stedfast courage was
-rewarded, she redeemed the fairies' captive, and by so doing won his
-true love! Then up spoke the Queen of Fairies, "She that has borrowed
-young Tamlane has got a stately groom! She's taken the bonniest knight
-in all my company! But had I known, Tamlane," said the fairy queen, "had
-I known that a lady would borrow thee, I would have taken out thy two
-grey eyes, and put in wooden eyes. I would have taken out thy heart of
-flesh, Tamlane, and put in a heart of stone. I would have paid my tithe
-seven times to hell ere I would have let her win you away."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter IX*
-
- *The Gay Goss-Hawk*
-
-
-In the opening lines of this old ballad Lord William is talking to the
-goss-hawk, who tells his master that he is looking pale and thin, and
-seeks to know che cause.
-
- "O waly, waly, my gay goss-hawk,
- Gin your feathering be sheen!"
- "And waly, waly, my master dear,
- Gin ye look pale and lean!
-
- O have ye tint[#] at tournament
- Your sword, or yet your spear?
- Or mourn ye for the Southern lass,
- Whom ye may not win near?"
-
-[#] lost
-
- "I have not tint at tournament
- My sword, nor yet my spear;
- But sair[#] I mourn for my true love,
- Wi' mony a bitter tear.
-
-[#] sore
-
- But weel's me on ye, my gay goss-hawk,
- Ye can baith speak and flee;
- Ye sall carry a letter to my love,
- Bring an answer back to me."
-
- "But how sall I your true love find,
- Or how suld I her know?
- I bear a tongue ne'er wi' her spake,
- An eye that ne'er her saw."
-
- "O weel sall ye my true love ken,
- Sae sune[#] as ye her see;
- For, of a' the flowers of fair England,
- The fairest flower is she.
-
-[#] soon.
-
- The red that's on my true love's cheek
- Is like blood-drops on the snaw;
- The white that is on her breast bare,
- Like the down o' the white sea-maw.
-
- And even at my love's bour-door
- There grows a flowering birk;[#]
- And ye maun sit and sing thereon
- As she gangs to the kirk.
-
-[#] birch.
-
- And four-and-twenty fair ladyes
- Will to the Mass repair;
- But weel may ye my ladye ken,
- The fairest ladye there."
-
- Lord William has written a love-letter,
- Put it under his pinion grey;
- An' he is awa' to Southern land
- As fast as wings can gae.
-
- And even at the ladye's bour[#]
- There grew a flowering birk;
- And he sat down and sung thereon
- As she gaed to the kirk.
-
-[#] bower.
-
- And weel he kent that ladye fair
- Amang her maidens free,
- For the flower that springs in May morning
- Was not sae sweet as she.
-
- He lighted at the ladye's yate[#]
- And sat him on a pin,[#]
- And sang fu' sweet the notes o' love,
- Till a' was cosh[#] within.
-
-[#] gate.
-[#] pine.
-[#] quiet.
-
- And first he sang a low low note,
- And syne[#] he sang a clear;
- And aye the o'erword[#] o' the sang
- Was--"Your love can no win here."
-
-[#] then.
-[#] refrain.
-
- "Feast on, feast on, my maidens a',
- The wine flows you amang,
- While I gang to my shot-window
- And hear yon bonnie bird's sang.
-
- Sing on, sing on, my bonny bird,
- The sang ye sung yestreen,
- For weel I ken, by your sweet singing
- Ye are frae my true love sen."[#]
-
-[#] sent.
-
- O first he sang a merry song,
- And syne he sang a grave;
- And syne he picked his feathers grey,
- To her the letter gave.
-
- "Have there a letter from Lord William;
- He says he's sent ye three;
- He canna wait your love langer,
- But for your sake he'll die."
-
- "Gae bid him bake his bridal bread,
- And brew his bridal ale;
- And I shall meet him in Mary's Kirk,
- Lang, lang ere it be stale."
-
- The lady's gane to her chamber,
- And a moanfu' woman was she;
- As gin[#] she had taken a sudden brash[#]
- And were about to die.
-
-[#] if
-[#] illness.
-
- "A boon, a boon, my father dear,
- A boon I beg of thee!"
- "Ask not that haughty Scottish lord,
- For him ye ne'er shall see.
-
- But for your honest asking else,
- Weel granted it shall be."
- "Then, gin I die in Southern land,
- In Scotland gar[#] bury me.
-
-[#] cause
-
- And the first kirk that ye come to,
- Ye's gar the mass be sung;
- And the next kirk that ye come to
- Ye's gar the bells be rung.
-
- And when ye come to St Mary's Kirk,
- Ye's tarry there till night."
- And so her father pledged his word,
- And so his promise plight.
-
- She has ta'en her to her bigly bower
- As fast as she could fare;
- And she has drank a sleepy draught,
- That she had mixed wi' care.
-
- And pale, pale grew her rosy cheek,
- That was sae bright of blee,[#]
- And she seemed to be as surely dead
- As any one could be.
-
-[#] bloom.
-
- Then spake her cruel step-minnie,[#]
- "Tak ye the burning lead,
- And drap a drap on her bosome,
- To try if she be dead."
-
-[#] mother.
-
- They took a drap o' boiling lead,
- They drapped it on her breast;
- "Alas! alas!" her father cried,
- "She's dead without the priest."
-
- She neither chattered with her teeth,
- Nor shivered with her chin;
- "Alas! alas!" her father cried,
- "There is nae breath within."
-
- Then up arose her seven brethren,
- And hewed to her a bier;
- They hewed it frae the solid aik,[#]
- Laid it o'er wi' silver clear.
-
-[#] oak.
-
- Then up and gat her seven sisters,
- And sewed to her a kell,[#]
- And every steek[#] that they put in
- Sewed to a siller bell.
-
-[#] shroud.
-[#] stitch.
-
- The first Scots kirk that they cam to,
- They garred the bells be rung;
- The next Scots kirk that they cam to,
- They garred fhe mass be sung.
-
- But when they cam to St Mary's Kirk,
- There stude spearmen all on a row;
- And up and started Lord William,
- The chieftaine amang them a'.
-
- "Set down, set down the bier," he said,
- "Let me look her upon;"
- But as soon as Lord William touched her hand,
- Her colour began to come.
-
- She brightened like the lily flower,
- Till her pale colour was gone;
- With rosy cheek, and ruby lip,
- She smiled her love upon.
-
- "A morsel of your bread, my lord,
- And one glass of your wine;
- For I have fasted these three lang days,
- All for your sake and mine.
-
- Gae hame, gae hame, my seven bauld brothers,
- Gae hame and blaw your horn!
- I trow[#] ye wad hae gi'en me the skaith,[#]
- But I've gi'en you the scorn.
-
-[#] reckon.
-[#] harm.
-
- Commend me to my grey father,
- That wished my soul gude rest;
- But wae be to my cruel step-dame,
- Garred burn me on the breast."
-
- "Ah! woe to you, you light woman!
- And ill death may ye die!
- For we left father and sisters at hame,
- Breaking their hearts for thee."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter X*
-
- *The Corbies*
-
-
-Two ancient songs have come down to us in which the principal speakers
-are supposed to be Corbies, carrion-crows or ravens, birds which feed on
-the flesh of the dead. In both songs the birds discuss a dead knight
-upon whose rich body they wish to feed. But deep interest lies in the
-fact that the two song-writers present entirely different views of the
-case. One appeals to our feelings with a beautiful and touching picture
-of devotion, the knight's companions proving true to him in death. The
-other is far more grim, and causes us to shudder at the utter loneliness
-of the dead man, deserted by all those who in life were beholden to his
-friendship. Both are powerful and striking examples of ancient vigour
-and directness.
-
- THE TWA CORBIES
-
- As I was walking all alane,
- I heard twa corbies making a mane;[#]
- The tane unto the t'other say,
- "Where sall we gang and dine to-day?"--
-
-[#] moan.
-
- "In behint yon auld fail dyke,
- I wot there lies a new-slain knight;
- And naebody kens that he lies there,
- But his hawk, his hound, and lady fair.
-
- His hound is to the hunting gane,
- His hawk, to fetch the wild-fowl hame,
- His lady's ta'en another mate,
- Sa we may mak our dinner sweet.
-
- Ye'll sit on his white hause-bane,[#]
- And I'll pick out his bonny blue een:
- Wi' ae lock o' his gowden hair,
- We'll theek[#] our nest when it grows bare.[#]
-
-[#] neck.
-[#] thatch.
-[#] Variant reading--"We'll theek our nest--it's a' blawn hare."
-
- Mony a one for him makes mane,
- But nane sall ken where he is gane;
- O'er his white banes, when they are bare,
- The wind sall blaw for evermair."
-
-[Illustration: The Twa Corbies]
-
-
-
- THE THREE RAVENS
-
- There were three ravens sat on a tre,
- They were as black as they might be:
-
- The one of them said to his mate,
- "Where shall we our breakfast take?"--
-
- "Downe in yonder greene field,
- There lies a knight slain under his shield;
-
- "His hounds they lie downe at his feete,
- So well they their master keepe;
-
- "His hawkes they flie so eagerlie,
- There's no fowle dare come him nie.
-
- "Down there comes a fallow doe,
- As great with yong as she might goe.
-
- "She lift up his bloudy hed,
- And kist his wounds that were so red.
-
- "She got him up upon her backe,
- And carried him to earthen lake.
-
- "She buried him before the prime,
- She was dead her selfe ere even song time.
-
- "God send every gentleman,
- Such hawkes, such houndes, and such a leman."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XI*
-
- *Otterbourne and Chevy Chase*
-
-
- "It fell about the Lammas-tide,
- When moor-men win their hay,
- The doughty Douglas bound him to ride
- Into England, to drive a prey."
-
-
-The ballads of _Otterbourne_ and _Chevy Chase_ record the Scottish and
-English versions of a most stubborn Border battle. Whichever of the two
-contains the greater amount of truth, it is clear that the day was a
-bloody one, and that, moreover, it was fought on both sides with a
-chivalrous admiration for the powers of the other which is
-characteristic of those strife-loving days. Sir Philip Sidney wrote of
-it: "I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas, that I found not
-my heart moved more than with a trumpet."
-
-The ballad of _Chevy Chase_ is of later date than its rival, and it
-contains certainly one misstatement of historical fact, since Hotspur
-outlived the fight at Chevy Chase (1388) and was slain some fifteen
-years later at the battle of Shrewsbury (1403).
-
-The Scottish version of the battle of Otterbourne tells us that it was
-about the Lammas-tide or haymaking time of the year 1388 when the brave
-Earl of Douglas, with his brother, the Earl of Murray, made a foray into
-England, with a gay band of Gordons, Graemes, and Lindsays. He burned
-Tynedale and half of Bamborough and Otterdale, and marching up to
-Newcastle, rode round about the castle, crying, "Who is lord of this
-castle, and who is its lady?"
-
-Then up spake proud Lord Percy, known as _Hotspur_, and said, "I am the
-lord of this castle, and my wife is the gay lady of it."
-
-"That pleases me well," answered Douglas, "yet, ere I cross the Border
-hills, one of us shall die."
-
-Then Percy took his long spear, shod with metal, and rode right
-furiously at the Douglas; but his lady, looking from the castle wall,
-grew pale as she saw her proud lord go down before the Scottish spear.
-
-"Had we two been alone, with never an eye to see, I would have slain
-thee, but thy lance I will carry with me," said Douglas, and, to
-complete the disgrace, this lance bore attached to it the Percy pennon.
-
-"Go then to Otterbourne," said Percy, "and wait there for me, and if I
-come not before the end of three days, call me a false knight."
-
-"Otterbourne is a pleasant and a bonny place," answered Douglas; "but
-though the deer run wild among the hills and dales, and the birds fly
-wild from tree to tree, yet is there neither bread nor kale nor aught
-else to feed me and my men. Yet will I wait thee at Otterbourne to give
-thee welcome, and if thou come not in three days' time, false lord, will
-I call thee!"
-
-"By the might of Our Lady, I will come," cried the proud Percy. "And
-I," answered Douglas, "plight thee my troth that I will meet thee
-there."
-
-So Douglas and his men encamped at Otterbourne, and sent out their
-horses to pasture.
-
-But before the peep of dawn, up spake a little page: "Waken ye, waken
-ye, my good lord; the Percy is upon us!" "Ye lie, ye lie," shouted
-Douglas; "yesterday, Percy had not men enough to fight us. But if thou
-lie not, the finest bower in Otterbourne shall be thy reward, and if
-what thou sayest prove false, thou shalt be hanged on the highest tree
-in Otterbourne. Yet I have dreamed a dreary dream; I dreamed that a
-dead man won a battle and that I was that dead man."
-
-So Douglas belted on his good broadsword, and ran to the field, but
-forgot his helmet, and Percy and the Douglas fought with their swords
-together till the blood ran down like rain, and the Douglas fell,
-wounded on the brow.
-
-Then he called to him his little foot-page and told him to run quickly
-and bring to him his sister's son, Sir Hugh Montgomery.
-
-"My good nephew," said Douglas, "the death of one matters not; last
-night I dreamed a dreary dream, but yet I know the day is thine. My
-wound is deep; take thou the vanguard; bury me in the bracken high that
-grows on yonder lea, and let no man living know that a Scot lies there.
-And know that I am glad to die in battle, like my good forefathers, and
-not on a bed of sickness."
-
-Montgomery lifted up his noble lord, while his eyes wept salt tears, and
-hid him in the bracken bush that his followers might not see, and before
-daylight the Scots slew many a gallant Englishman. The good Gordons
-steeped hose and shoes in the blood of the English; the Lindsays flew
-about like fire till the battle was ended, and Percy and Montgomery
-fought till the blood ran down between them.
-
-"Now, yield thee, yield thee, Percy," cried Sir Hugh, "or I vow I will
-lay thee low!"
-
-"Since it must be so," quoth Earl Percy, "to whom shall I yield?"
-
-"Thou shalt not yield to me or to any lord, but to the bracken bush that
-grows on yonder lea!"
-
-"I will not yield to briar or bracken bush, but I would yield to Lord
-Douglas or to Sir Hugh Montgomery, if he were here."
-
-Then Montgomery made himself known, and as soon as Percy knew that it
-was Montgomery, he struck the point of his sword into the ground, and
-Montgomery, who was a courteous knight, took him up by the hand.
-
-This deed was done at Otterbourne at daybreak, where Earl Douglas was
-buried by the bracken bush, and Percy led captive into Scotland, and it
-is said that Hotspur, for his ransom, built for Montgomery the castle of
-Penoon, in Ayrshire.
-
-But the English version of these stirring events can also claim to be
-heard; the ballad upon it is called _Chevy Chase_, which means the Chase
-on the Cheviots; and so popular was this ballad that its name was given
-to a boys' game, which is so called even to this day. It tells how the
-Percy, from his castle in Northumberland, vowed that within three days
-he would hunt on the mountains of Cheviot in spite of the doughty
-Douglas and his men, and that he would kill and carry away the fattest
-deer in Cheviot.
-
-"By my faith," said Douglas, when he heard of the boast, "but I will
-hinder his hunting."
-
-Percy left Bamborough Castle with a mighty company, no less than fifteen
-hundred bold archers chosen out of three shires.
-
-The foray began on a Monday morning in the high Cheviot Hills, and many
-a child yet unborn was to rue the day.
-
-The drivers went through the woods and raised the deer, and the bowmen
-shot them with their broad arrows. Then the wild deer rushed through
-the woods, only to be met and killed by the greyhounds, and before
-noontide a hundred fat deer lay dead. The bugles sounded, "A mort!" and
-on all sides Percy and his men assembled to see the cutting up of the
-venison.
-
-Said Percy: "The Douglas promised to meet me here this day, yet right
-well did I know that he would fail." But a Northumberland squire saw
-the doughty Douglas coming with a mighty company, with spear and
-batter-axe and sword. Never were men hardier of heart and hand seen in
-Christendom--two thousand spearmen born along the banks of the Tweed and
-Teviotdale. Then said Lord Percy: "Now leave off the cutting of the
-deer, and take good heed to your bows, for never had ye more need of
-them since ye were born."
-
-Earl Douglas rode before his men, his armour glittering like a burning
-coal, and never was such a bold baron. "Tell me whose men ye are," said
-he, "and who gave ye leave to hunt in Cheviot without word asked of me?"
-
-Then answered Lord Percy, "We will not tell thee whose men we are, and
-we will hunt here in spite of thee. We have killed the fattest harts in
-Cheviot and will carry them away."
-
-"By my troth," said Douglas, "one of us shall die this day. Yet it were
-great pity to kill all these guiltless men. Thou, Percy, art a lord of
-land, and I am called an earl in my country; let our men stand by, and
-we will fight together."
-
-"Now a curse on his crown, who says nay to that," cried Lord Percy. "By
-my troth, Douglas, thou shalt never see the day either in England,
-Scotland, or France, when I fear to meet one, man to man."
-
-Then spoke Richard Witherington, a squire of Northumberland. "Never
-shall this be told in England, to the shame of good King Harry the
-Fourth. I wot ye be two great lords, and I but a poor squire, yet would
-I never stand and look on while my captain fought. While I can wield a
-weapon, I will not fail, both heart and hand."
-
-So the English with good heart bent their bows, and slew seven score
-spearmen with the first arrows they shot.
-
-Earl Douglas stayed on the field, but that he was a good captain was
-truly seen, for he wrought great woe and mischief. He parted his host
-in three like a proud chieftain, and they came in on every side with
-their mighty spears, wounding the English archers and slaying many a
-brave man.
-
-Then the English pulled out their brands, and it was a heavy sight to
-see the bright swords light on the helmets, striking through the rich
-mail, and the cloth of many folds under it, and laying many low.
-
-At last the Douglas and the Percy met and fought with swords of Milan
-steel till the blood spurted like rain and hail from their helmets.
-
-"Hold thee, Percy," said Douglas, "and I will bring thee to James, our
-Scottish king, where thou shalt have an earl's wages and free ransom,
-for thou art the manfullest man that ever yet I conquered fighting in
-the field."
-
-"Nay, then," said Lord Percy. "I told thee before that never would I
-yield to any man of woman born."
-
-With that there came an arrow hastily from a mighty man, and struck Earl
-Douglas through the breast bone, and never more did he speak a word but
-only this: "Fight, my merry men, while ye may--my life's days are done."
-
-Then Percy leaned on his hand, and when he saw the Douglas die, he said,
-"Woe is me. I would have parted with my land for three years to have
-saved thy life, for a better man of heart and hand was not in all the
-north country."
-
-But Sir Hugh Montgomery, a Scottish knight, when he saw the Douglas done
-to death, grasped a spear and rode through a hundred archers, never
-slackening his pace till he came to Lord Percy, whom he set upon,
-sending his mighty spear clean through his body, so that a man might see
-a long cloth-yard and more at the other side. There were no two better
-captains in Christendom than were that day slain.
-
-When one of the Northumberland archers saw this, he drew an arrow to his
-bow and set upon Montgomery, until the swan feathers of his arrows were
-wet with his heart's blood.
-
-Not one man gave way, but still they stood hewing at each other, while
-they were able.
-
-This battle began in Cheviot, an hour before noon, nor was it half done
-at evensong, but they fought on by moonlight though many had scarce the
-strength to stand. Of fifteen hundred English archers only fifty-three
-remained, and of two thousand Scottish spearmen only fifty-five
-remained, all the rest being slain in Cheviot.
-
-With Lord Percy were slain, Sir John of Agerstone, Sir Roger the gentle
-Hartly, Sir William the bold Heron, Sir George the worthy Lovel, a
-renowned knight, and Sir Ralph the rich Rugby. Woe was it that
-Witherington was slain, for when both his legs were hewn in two he
-kneeled and fought on his knees.
-
-With the brave Douglas were slain Sir Hugh Montgomery, and worthy Sir
-Davy Liddle, that was his sister's son; Sir Charles, a Murray who
-refused to flee, and Sir Hugh Maxwell. On the morrow they made biers of
-birch and grey hazel, and many widows bore weeping from the field the
-bodies of their dead husbands. Well may Teviotdale and Northumberland
-wail and moan for two such great captains.
-
-Word came to James the Scottish king at Edinburgh, that the brave
-Douglas, Lieutenant of the Marches, lay slain in Cheviot, and he wept
-and wrung his hands, and said, "Alas! Woe is me; there will never be
-such another captain in Scotland."
-
-Word came also to London, to Harry the Fourth, that Lord Percy,
-Lieutenant of the Marches, lay slain in Cheviot. "God have mercy on his
-soul," said King Harry; "I have a hundred captains in England as good as
-he, yet I wager my life that his death shall be well avenged"; and this
-vow he kept, at the Battle of Homildon Hill, where he beat down six and
-thirty Scottish knights on one day.
-
-But so real to the Borderers was their grief over their dead that the
-ballad ends with a quaint but heartfelt appeal to the Prince of Peace:--
-
- "Jesus Christ our ills abate,
- And to His bliss us bring!
- Thus was the hunting of the Cheviot;
- God send us all good ending!"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XII*
-
- *The Douglas Clan*
-
-
-The Douglas clan was at one time the strongest of all the great Scotch
-families on the Border; they were wild and proud and recklessly brave,
-and no account of the Borders would be complete without the broad
-details of their tragic history.
-
-The first to raise the fame of the family to the highest place in honour
-was the brave Sir James Douglas, the friend of Bruce, and, after Bruce
-himself, the greatest hero among the Scots of that stormy period. He
-was a powerful, black-haired man with a dark complexion, and was called
-by the English "The Black Douglas." So great was the terror of his name
-that English mothers on the Border, when their children were naughty,
-would tell them that the Black Douglas would get them, or if they were
-fretful they would comfort them with the assurance--
-
- "Hush ye, hush ye, little pet ye,
- Hush ye, hush ye, do not fret ye,
- The Black Douglas shall not get ye."
-
-
-Sir Walter Scott relates how, when the garrison of Roxburgh Castle were
-making merry at Shrovetide, the castle was surprised by the Douglas, who
-mounted to the ramparts where a woman was crooning the refrain to her
-babe. "You are not so sure of that," he said, laying his hand upon her
-shoulder. It is pleasant to read that on this occasion the Black
-Douglas did not turn out so black as he was painted, and beyond her
-fright the woman came to no harm at the hands of Sir James and his
-followers.
-
-At one time the English had seized the Douglas castle in Lanarkshire,
-and Sir James and his men disguised themselves and came to church on
-Palm Sunday, when the English soldiers were worshipping there. Suddenly
-in the midst of the service Douglas dropped his cloak and drew his sword
-and shouted: "A Douglas! a Douglas!"
-
-The English soldiers were taken by surprise, and were killed before they
-could recover themselves. This deed brought Douglas great fame, but
-after all it was hardly a fair fight.
-
-In 1327, when Edward III. was only fifteen years old, Douglas led a raid
-into Northumberland and Durham which did the English much damage.
-Edward came after them with an English army, and the Scots, being
-outnumbered, were compelled to dodge up and down in order to avoid a
-pitched battle. But in one bold night attack, Douglas and five hundred
-of the Scots penetrated to the king's tent, and almost succeeded in
-taking him prisoner. Failing in this, they returned unharmed to their
-own country, and shortly afterwards, at the Treaty of Northampton in
-1328, King Edward III. agreed to acknowledge Robert Bruce as King of
-Scotland, and the long war between Scotland and England ended.
-
-A year later Bruce died, but after a romantic custom of that day he
-bequeathed his heart to his gallant friend, Sir James Douglas. Douglas
-had this heart enclosed in a silver casket and carried it hung about his
-neck. The war with England being over, this restless knight sought
-adventures in Spain, fighting against the Saracen followers of Mahomet.
-In one fierce battle, he and his men were surrounded by their enemies.
-Douglas, probably realising that this was his last fight, took the
-casket and flung it into the midst of his foes, crying: "Go first in
-fight, as thou wert used to do; Douglas will follow thee or die!" He
-then rushed desperately after it, fighting his way on till at last his
-dead body fell on this dearly prized relic, which he guarded to the end.
-The casket lies buried in the Abbey of Melrose, but Douglas's body was
-laid in his own church.
-
-Of the bold Earl Douglas who fought and died at Otterbourne the tale is
-told in our last chapter. We may pass on to another famous Douglas,
-this time a heroine, who lived in the reign of James I. of Scotland
-(quite a different king from James I. of England). When James was only
-twelve years old, he was taken prisoner by Henry IV. of England, and
-kept captive till he was thirty. But he was given an education fit for
-a king, and in England he met the lady he devotedly loved, Lady Joan
-Beaufort, daughter of the Earl of Somerset. He addressed a beautiful
-poem to her and married her, and these two always most dearly loved one
-another. When at last his long captivity came to an end, he got back to
-Scotland to find the kingdom in disorder, and the nobles defying the law
-and acting as they pleased. James, a strong and able king, set his
-strength against their strength, and gradually got his whole kingdom
-into order and ruled with wisdom and justice.
-
-But in these days it was impossible to be firm without sternness, and
-James made enemies. When he was staying at Perth one Christmas-time,
-these enemies, led by a bold villain called Sir Robert Graham, secretly
-encircled the house where he was staying. The unarmed king only heard
-of their presence when they were advancing, fully armed, to his room.
-He tore up a plank in the floor, seeking thus to find a hiding-place.
-The enemies were almost at the door, and it was necessary to delay their
-entrance, for one minute might save his life. All the bars of the door
-had been removed beforehand, but a brave heroine, Kate Douglas, thrust
-her arm through the staples. The villains were angered to find the door
-barred against them, and hurled their weight upon it.
-
-The Douglas heroine stood there, her pale face set hard, without a cry,
-as the crash broke the bone of her brave strong arm, and the would-be
-murderers staggered in. But alas! the sacrifice of Kate Douglas availed
-nothing except to place her name upon the immortal roll of the heroes of
-the ages, for after a brief search the murderers found the king and slew
-him.
-
-The queen, who had loved James with the utmost devotion, found her love
-give added fierceness to her hate against his murderers. They were all
-tracked down, and she caused them to die with terrible tortures, the
-cruellest of which she reserved for Graham. Thus did great King James's
-"milk-white dove" revenge the slaying of the husband she loved dearer
-than life itself.
-
-Till this time it had seemed as if the Douglases were devoted to the
-good of Scotland. But in those wild, reckless times qualities that were
-strong for good could also be strong for evil.
-
-When James I. of Scotland was murdered, his young son was only six years
-old. This meant that for many years there would be no strong king able
-to cope with the lawless spirit of the nobles, strongest among whom were
-the proud, bold Douglases.
-
-The lawlessness of the times is well shown by an act of foul treachery
-committed by Sir William Crichton, Governor of Edinburgh, and an enemy
-of the Douglas family. He invited one of the earls to dinner at the
-castle, and while there had him seized and beheaded. It is said that a
-bull's head was placed on the dish in front of Douglas, this being a
-sign that he was to be killed. The people called this "Douglas's black
-dinner," and sang of the wicked deed in sorrowful verse:--
-
- "Edinburgh Castle, town and tower
- God grant thou sink for sin!
- And even for that black dinner
- Earl Douglas got therein."
-
-
-But the new King James found, before he was twenty years old, that the
-Douglases themselves could act with equal cruelty and lawlessness.
-
-The king was fond of a brave young soldier named Maclellan, who, having
-some quarrel with Earl Douglas, was thrown by him into a dungeon in his
-castle. So the king wrote a letter to Douglas, saying he must set
-Maclellan free, and sent this letter by Maclellan's uncle, Sir Patrick
-Gray. When Douglas saw Gray riding up to his castle, he at once guessed
-the errand. So he came out as though he were delighted to see him, and
-insisted on his sitting down and having dinner with him, before the
-king's letter was opened and discussed. But the treacherous earl had
-given secret orders that Maclellan should be beheaded while they were
-dining, so that after dinner was over, and the letter was read, he could
-say that this had been done before he had seen the king's message.
-
-Gray dared not show his anger, for fear he too should be killed. He
-mounted his swift horse and rode away, but the moment he was outside the
-castle walls he shook his mailed fist at Douglas and cried out--
-
-"Treacherous earl, disgrace to knighthood, some day you shall pay for
-this black, base deed!"
-
-Douglas mounted his men, and they pursued Gray almost to the gates of
-Edinburgh; but he rode for his life, and faster than they.
-
-When Douglas and the king next met there was a stormy scene. The earl
-was so proud and wilful that he would not bend to any of the king's
-wishes or heed the king's anger in the least. So King James, mad with
-rage, stabbed the reckless earl with his dagger, and Sir Patrick Gray,
-seeing this, struck him a death-blow with his axe.
-
-The king was in Stirling Castle, a powerful fortress at the top of a
-steep hill, when the new earl, the younger brother of the murdered man,
-rode up with six hundred followers, and burnt and plundered the town
-before the king's very eyes, and added to the insult by publicly
-declaring that King James II. was a law-breaker.
-
-For three years the quarrel went on between the king and the Douglases,
-but it was then evident that there could be no peace between them. So
-at last the king's army attacked the collected forces of the strong
-Douglas family at a place on the Borders then called Arkinholm, where
-the picturesque little town of Langholm now stands. Here the beautiful
-river Esk receives the water of two smaller streams, and so it was a
-good place to make a stand for a fight. The battle was long and
-desperate; three brothers of the bold black Douglases were there, and
-they withstood the king's men till the rivers ran red; but their cause
-was hopeless. One was slain in battle; one was taken and executed; one
-escaped into England; and the power of the Black Douglases was gone.
-
-Thus it was that the strongest and most famous family of the Borders was
-broken up, because its proud leaders dared to dictate to the king
-himself.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XIII*
-
- *Alnwick Castle and the Percies*
-
-
-The castle of Alnwick stands on a hill on the south bank of the river
-Alne; being protected on one side by the river and on another by a deep
-gorge, it stands in a strong natural position. There are traces of
-earthworks that seem to show that the spot was fortified in the old
-British days, but the earliest fact which we know certainly is that
-there was a Saxon fortress here, held by a Gilbert Tyson, when William
-the Conqueror claimed England. Tyson hastened south to fight on
-Harold's side, and was killed at the battle of Hastings.
-
-The fortress seems to have got into the hands of a Norman knight, Ivo de
-Vesci, who married the grand-daughter of Gilbert Tyson. King Malcolm of
-Scotland was killed in front of it, in 1093, with three thousand of his
-men. De Vesci's son-in-law was probably the knight who rebuilt the
-castle in the Norman style, some portions of which still remain.
-
-In 1174, William the Lion, King of Scotland, who had claimed
-Northumberland as his own, attacked the castles of Wark and of Alnwick.
-Wark was defended by a gallant knight named Roger de Stuteville.
-William's brave men tried in vain to force their way through the
-portcullis, but were beaten back. Then William ordered up his
-_periere_, a machine made for hurling stones. "This," said the king,
-"will soon smash down the gate for us!" With great expectations the
-machine was set in motion, but it acted so badly that it threw the
-stones on to William's own men, and nearly killed one of his best
-knights! William raved in his fury, and swore he would rather have been
-captured in fair fight than be made to look so foolish in the eyes of
-his enemies. He gave word to burn the castle, but the wind was in the
-wrong quarter and blew back the flames. So he had to give up the siege.
-Stuteville, like a gallant enemy, told his men not to shout taunts and
-jeers at the departing Scots. But instead they blew trumpets and horns,
-and sang songs, and called out a very loud and hearty "Good-bye."
-
-Shortly afterwards, William came before Alnwick, and it was then De
-Vesci's turn. It was Saturday morning on a hot July day, and the
-Scottish king's knights flatteringly told him that the English were
-bound to give way to him, and Northumberland would be his. The king was
-dining in front of the castle, with no helmet on, when suddenly a part
-of the English army made a surprise attack. The bold king leapt on to
-his grey charger, and unhorsed the first knight he met. So quick and
-brave were the Scots that they had almost defeated the English when an
-English foot-soldier stabbed the king's horse with his lance, and it
-fell, bringing William down to the ground and pinning him there. This
-turned the course of battle; the Scots were beaten back, and William
-taken prisoner.
-
-In was in 1309 that the great Percy family first obtained possession of
-Alnwick and its domain. Henry Percy purchased it from Anthony Bek,
-Bishop of Durham, who had somehow obtained power over it, and the brave
-De Vesci family disappear. About this date Northumberland was in a
-miserable condition; it was the reign of the feeble Edward II., and
-Bruce had invaded the four northernmost counties of England, and was
-exacting tribute from them. The English were safe only within their
-fortresses.
-
-However, the brave Sir Thomas Gray, who held Norham Castle, did much to
-uphold the falling honour of England, and Henry Percy almost rebuilt the
-castle of Alnwick, which in his son's time successfully withstood a
-siege. But at last peace was restored by the Treaty of Northampton in
-1328, by the terms of which the English king renounced all claim to
-Scotland.
-
-The Percy family were of Norman origin, deriving their name from a
-Norman village. William de Percy crossed to England just after the
-battle of Hastings, and received grants of land in Yorkshire. Agnes de
-Percy married Jocelin, Count of Louvain, and their son Henry took his
-mother's surname. From that year onward, the the Christian name of
-Henry was always given to the eldest son; there were fourteen Henry
-Percies!
-
-Even in these wild times the Percies were distinguished by the boldness
-of their spirits. One of the Counts of Louvain, grandfather of the
-first Henry Percy, shocked the men of his day by hanging some of his
-enemies with the church bell-ropes. It was not the hanging that was
-objected to--hanging was common enough; but the use of church-ropes for
-the purpose was thought very wicked!
-
-After they had rebuilt Alnwick Castle and settled down there, the
-Percies soon established their power in the North. At the coronation of
-Richard II., in 1377, a Henry Percy was Marshal of England, and he was
-then made Earl of Northumberland. His son, "Hotspur," was the most
-famous of all the Percies. In their time, the battles of Otterbourne
-and Homildon Hill were fought. But they rebelled against Henry IV. and
-Hotspur was killed at the battle of Shrewsbury (1403), while his father
-was slain a few years later at Bramham Moor, his head set up on London
-Bridge, and quarters of his body on the gates of Berwick, Newcastle,
-Lincoln, and London, to discourage others from following in his
-footsteps!
-
-Henry, son of "Hotspur," was the second earl. He repaired and added to
-the castle and was present at the battle of Agincourt. It was not the
-habit of the Percies to die in their beds, and this one was killed in
-the Wars of the Roses, at the first battle of St Albans, in 1455.
-
-The fact of their having taken the losing Lancastrian side in these wars
-kept the family under a cloud for a number of years. One of them
-deserted Richard III. on Bosworth field in 1485; one of them was
-beheaded at York in 1572, for taking part in the "Rising of the North";
-one of them was found shot in his bed in 1585, and another died in the
-Tower in 1632. So that the family could hardly be said to be quieting
-down.
-
-They sided with Parliament during the Civil War, but later on they
-favoured the Restoration. At last there came a time when there were no
-male heirs left in this great line, but only a daughter, Elizabeth. She
-married the Duke of Somerset, and had thirteen children, the eldest
-surviving of whom was created Earl of Northumberland in 1748. But he
-died the year after, leaving only a daughter, who had married a very
-able baronet, to whom was given the title of Duke of Northumberland in
-1766. He very wisely took the surname of Percy, and again restored the
-castle of Alnwick, putting the family estates and affairs in good order.
-So that the Percies of Alnwick Castle are Dukes of Northumberland to
-this day.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XIV*
-
- *Hexham and Queen Margaret*
-
-
-The town of Hexham stands on the south bank of the Tyne, rising
-gradually up the hill and presenting a most picturesque appearance.
-About two miles above Hexham the North and the South Tyne meet, and the
-combined river is broad and noble, and the hills around Hexham give
-strength and beauty to the scene. The commanding appearance and central
-position of the priory church adds its note of dignity, and the total
-effect of the town is very pleasing to the eye.
-
-There is no doubt that from very early times there was a town in this
-fine natural position. The burial-grounds of primitive races have been
-discovered here, with stone and bronze implements. The Romans had a
-town here of some importance, although it was four miles south of their
-great wall. A Roman tombstone was discovered here, nine feet by three
-and a half feet, showing a Roman officer on horseback, overthrowing in
-fierce fight a savage and scowling foe. This fine relic is set up in
-the church, and is not the only thing to see there. The original church
-upon this spot was built in 674, in the reign of King Egfrid of
-Northumbria. Wilfrid, the very able and influential Bishop of York, was
-the man who presided at the building of it, and there were bishops at
-Hexham for a couple of centuries. In 875 the Danes ruthlessly burnt the
-town; and nearly one thousand years later, in 1832, there was found
-buried in the ground a bronze vessel containing about nine thousand
-Saxon coins of the eighth and ninth century, evidently buried to protect
-this treasure from the invaders. Those who buried them were probably
-slain before they had time to dig them up again. There was a legend of
-another treasure hidden between Hexham and Corbridge, and King John came
-to Hexham in 1201 to search for it. He returned in 1208 and in 1212,
-but found nothing. Time passed, and this tale of hidden treasure ceased
-even to be local gossip, but in 1735 by accident it was found.
-
-The present handsome priory church must have been built about the time
-of King John's visits to Hexham. It is a noble building, well worth a
-visit. In 1725, when some work was being done in the church, a
-wonderful discovery was made. It was found that there was an old Saxon
-crypt, a narrow vault with several passages, underneath the church!
-This was so carefully hidden that it was evidently intended as a place
-of refuge in danger. It was built of Roman stones, several of which
-have Roman inscriptions.
-
-The Scots several times attacked Hexham. Once Sir William Wallace came
-there with his army, but he would not let his Scots damage the church,
-so that Hexham, on the whole, had a less stormy life than many of the
-Border towns, although in 1537, when Henry VIII. caused the monastery to
-be suppressed, the prior and five of the leading monks were hanged
-before the gates as a gentle reminder that they were to live there no
-longer.
-
-But by far the most stirring event in Hexham's history was the battle
-which raged there in 1464. The Wars of the Roses do not form a pleasing
-episode in English history. They were pitiless, and treachery was
-mingled with bloodshed; desertions and executions were the accompaniment
-of every battle. Edward IV. was coldly cruel and unscrupulous, one of
-the blackest figures of a black time. But romance centres round Queen
-Margaret, the dauntless and resourceful wife of the feeble King Henry
-VI., with whom Edward disputed the throne. She it was who, making up for
-her husband's weakness, urged ever bravely and hopefully the cause of
-her son. Thus she pressed on to the very end, till that son, worthy of
-his heroic mother, proudly answered the taunts of his base enemies, even
-though in their power, preferring speedy death to any lessening of his
-tragic dignity, and dying before the eyes of the successful and exultant
-Edward.
-
-In this fierce drama, Hexham was but an episode. The Lancastrians had
-scattered after their heavy defeat at Towton. Margaret in person had
-begged a little help of the King of Scotland, a little more of the King
-of France. The Borderland was favourable to her, and she gathered her
-forces together there, King Henry VI. staying in Alnwick Castle.
-
-Lord Montague, brother to the powerful but crafty Earl of Warwick, was
-warden of the East Marches for Edward, and he hastily collected the
-Yorkist forces. He was swift, able, and unscrupulous. He attacked a
-small body of Lancastrians on Hedgeley Moor, only ten miles from
-Alnwick, and defeated them, killing their leader, Sir Ralph Percy, son
-of Hotspur. As this gallant man died he consoled himself by saying, "I
-have saved the bird in my bosom," by which poetical phrase he meant that
-he had saved his honour by being true to his queen. In May the greater
-battle of Hexham was fought. King Henry was there in person, with the
-dauntless Queen Margaret and her son, and their brave general, the Duke
-of Somerset. They marched out of Hexham to attack Lord Montague; the
-battle began by the village of Linnels, on the south side of the Devil's
-Water, a stream that runs into the Tyne. The fight was desperate, for
-both sides knew that no quarter would be given. It is said by some that
-the Scots, having no interest in the war, deserted Margaret; anyway, bit
-by bit the Lancastrians were forced back, to the very streets of Hexham
-itself, two miles away. In these narrow streets, in the quarter that is
-still called Battle Hill, the last desperate fighters on the side of the
-Red Rose made their final and unavailing stand.
-
-At last the remnant fled, and no doubt many a Hexham maid and dame, at
-the risk of her own life or limb, hid that day some devoted follower of
-Margaret.
-
-The gallant Duke of Somerset was taken prisoner, and there and then was
-brought to the block in the market-place and beheaded. The cruel
-Montague had not the true soldier's respect for a brave enemy, whose
-blood thus mingled with that of his men. Other nobles were taken as
-prisoners to Newcastle, but Edward also was devoid of mercy, and all
-perished.
-
-[Illustration: _The Final Battle in the Streets of Hexham_]
-
-Till the last moment the queen hoped on. She was not daunted by scenes
-of strife and bloodshed. When defeat was an accomplished fact, she and
-her young son fled to the Dipton Woods, where they fell into the hands
-of rough men, some say a party of Yorkist stragglers. Whilst these men
-were eagerly dividing and quarrelling over the queen's jewels, she and
-the prince slipped away. Deeper into the dangerous woods they had to go,
-for worse than robbers were hunting for them around Hexham. Suddenly an
-outlaw stood in their path with drawn sword. Even after that day of
-stir and terror Margaret's courage did not fail her. She boldly
-declared to the man that she was the Queen of England, and with her was
-her only son. Now, if he chose to betray them he could do so; but if he
-had that natural nobility that hailed gladly great chances to do great
-deeds, now was his time to prove himself a man, and to save the
-ill-fated prince and his queen.
-
-The robber bowed before her as though she were on her throne, and as if
-the trees were her army around her. He swore to die a hundred deaths
-rather than betray his rightful sovereign and her prince. He honourably
-kept his word; and through his safe guidance and steady devotion, both
-queen and prince were able to join King Henry in Scotland, to which
-place he had safely escaped.
-
-Thus the bandit of Hexham proved himself to be a truer man than either
-Lord Montague, or Warwick, the King-maker, or King Edward IV. of
-England.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XV*
-
- *Fair Helen of Kirkconnell*
-
-
-Very simple, very touching, is the story of fair Helen of Kirkconnell.
-This beautiful maiden had two lovers, one rich, one poor. Her friends
-favoured the rich one, she loved the poor one. She and her chosen lover
-used to meet secretly in the romantic churchyard of Kirkconnell, by the
-side of the river Kirtle. Learning this, the rejected lover crept up
-one evening, with his carbine, to shoot his luckier rival; Helen saw him
-at the moment of firing, and threw herself forward to receive the shot
-in her bosom, and so save her lover's life at the cost of her own.
-
-The ballad describing the grief of her lover is one of the most
-beautiful and touching pieces of poetry in existence, and must be given
-here entire.
-
-
- *FAIR HELEN*
-
- I wish I were where Helen lies;
- Night and day on me she cries;
- O that I were where Helen lies,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- Curst be the heart that thought the thought,
- And curst the hand that shot the shot,
- When in my arms burd Helen dropt,
- And died to succour me.
-
- O think ye not my heart was sair,
- When my love dropt and spak nae mair!
- There did she swoon wi' meikle care,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee.
-
- As I went down the water-side,
- None but my foe to be my guide,
- None but my foe to be my guide,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- I lighted down my sword to draw,
- I hacked him in pieces sma',
- I hacked him in pieces sma',
- For her sake that died for me.
-
- O Helen fair beyond compare,
- I'll make a garland of thy hair,
- Shall bind my heart for evermair,
- Until the day I die.
-
- O that I were where Helen lies,
- Night and day on me she cries;
- Out of my bed she bids me rise,
- Says, "Haste and come to me!"
-
- O Helen fair! O Helen chaste!
- If I were with thee, I were blest,
- Where thou lies low, and takes thy rest,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee.
-
- O that my grave were growing green,
- A winding sheet drawn ower my een,
- And I in Helen's arms were lying,
- On fair Kirkconnell Lee!
-
- I wish I were where Helen lies!
- Night and day on me she cries,
- And I am weary of the skies,
- For her sake that died for me.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XVI*
-
- *Johnie of Breadislee*
-
-
-Johnie of Breadislee, outlaw and deer-stealer, was one of the "broken
-men," as they were called, the Ishmaels of the Border. Johnie rose up
-one May morning, and called for water to wash his hands. He ordered to
-be unleashed his good grey dogs, that were bound with iron chains. When
-his mother heard that he had called for the dogs, she wrung her hands.
-"O Johnie!" she cried, "for my blessing, do not go to the greenwood
-to-day. Ye have enough of good wheat bread, enough blood-red wine,
-therefore, Johnie, I pray, stir not from home for any venison." But
-despite his mother's tears, Johnie busked up his good bent bow, and his
-arrows, and went off to Durrisdeer to hunt down the dun deer. As he
-came by Merriemass he espied a deer lying beneath a bush of furze.
-Johnie let fly an arrow, and the deer leapt as the pitiless shaft found
-its mark, and between the water and the brae his good hounds "laid her
-pride." So Johnie cut up the venison, giving the liver and lungs to his
-faithful hounds, as if they had been earl's sons. With such zest did
-they eat and drink that Johnie and the dogs fell asleep, as if they had
-been dead. Then as they lay, there came by a silly old man, and, as
-soon as he saw the poachers, he ran away to Hislinton, where the Seven
-Foresters were. "What news?" they asked. "What news bring ye, ye
-grey-headed carle?" "I bring no news," said the grey-headed carle,
-"save what my eyes did see. As I came down by Merrimass among the
-stunted trees, the bonniest child I ever saw lay asleep among his dogs.
-The shirt upon his back was of fine Holland, his doubtlet, over that,
-was of Lincoln twine, his buttons were of the good gold, the mouths of
-his good grey hounds were dyed with blood."
-
-Now Johnie, like many another free-hearted outlaw, was a well-liked man.
-So the chief forester said, "If this be Johnie of Breadislee we will
-draw no nearer." But this was not the spirit of his men. Quoth the
-sixth Forester, "If it indeed be he, rather let us slay him."
-Cautiously they went through the thicket, and when they saw their man,
-asleep and helpless, they shot a flight of arrows. Johnie sprang up,
-sore wounded on the knee. The seventh forester cried out, "The next
-flight will kill him," but little chance did the outlaw give them for
-such an easy victory. He set his back against an oak and propped his
-wounded leg upon a stone; with bow or with sword he was a better man by
-far than any of his foes.
-
-In the short, sharp fight that followed, he killed six of the foresters,
-some with arrow, and some with steel; and when the seventh turned to
-flee, Johnie seized him from behind and threw him on to the ground with
-a force that broke three of his ribs. Then he laid him on his steed,
-and bade him carry the tidings home.
-
-[Illustration: _Johnie of Breadislee_]
-
-But Johnie himself was hurt to death. "Is there no bonnie singing
-bird," he cried, "that can fly to my mother's bower and tell her to
-fetch Johnie away?" A starling flew to his mother's window sill, and
-sang and whistled, and the burden of its tune was ever the same. "Johnie
-tarries long." So the men made a litter from rods of the hazel bush and
-of the thorn and fetched Johnie away. Then his old mother's tears
-flowed fast, and she said, "Ye would not be warned, my son Johnie, to
-bide away from the hunting. Oft have I brought to Breadislee the less
-or greater gear, but never what grieved my heart so sorely. But woe
-betide that silly old grey-headed carle! An ill death shall he die!
-The highest tree in Merriemass shall be his reward."
-
- "Now Johnie's gude bent bow is brake,
- And his gude grey dogs are slain,
- And his body lies dead in Durrisdeer,
- And his hunting it is done."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XVII*
-
- *Katharine Janfarie*
-
-
-This ballad is evidently the original of Sir Walter Scott's "Lochinvar,"
-though Sir Walter reversed the names of the two leading male characters.
-In "Katharine Janfarie" Lochinvar plays the part of the craven
-bridegroom.
-
- There was a may,[#] and a weel-far'd may,
- Lived high up in yon glen;
- Her name was Katharine Janfarie,
- She was courted by mony men.
-
-[#] maiden.
-
- Up there came Lord Lauderdale,
- Up frae the Lowland Border,
- And he has come to court this may,
- A' mounted in good order.
-
- He told na her father, he told na her mother,
- And he told na ane o' her kin,
- But he whispered the bonnie lassie hersell,
- And has her favour won.
-
- But out there cam Lord Lochinvar,
- Out frae the English Border,
- All for to court this bonny may,
- Weel mounted, and in order.
-
- He told her father, he told her mother,
- And a' the lave[#] o' her kin;
- But he told na the bonny may hersell,
- Till on her wedding e'en.
-
-[#] rest.
-
- She sent to the Lord o' Lauderdale,
- Gin[#] he wad come and see,
- And he has sent back word again,
- Weel answered he suld[#] be.
-
-[#] if.
-[#] should.
-
- And he has sent a messenger
- Right quickly through the land,
- And raised mony an armed man
- To be at his command.
-
- The bride looked out at a high window,
- Beneath baith dale and down,
- And she was aware of her first true love,
- With riders mony a one.
-
- She scoffed him, and scorned him,
- Upon her wedding-day;
- And said, "It was the Fairy Court,
- To see him in array!
-
- "O come ye here to fight, young lord,
- Or come ye here to play?
- Or come ye here to drink good wine,
- Upon the wedding-day?"
-
- "I come na here to fight," he said,
- "I come na here to play,
- I'll but lead a dance wi' the bonny bride,
- And mount, and go my way."
-
- It is a glass of the blood-red wine
- Was filled up them between,
- And aye she drank to Lauderdale,
- Wha[#] her true love had been.
-
-[#] who.
-
- He's taen[#] her by the milk-white hand,
- And by the grass-green sleeve;
- He's mounted her hie behind himsell,
- At her kinsmen speired[#] na leave.
-
-[#] taken.
-[#] asked.
-
- "Now take your bride, Lord Lochinvar!
- Now take her if ye may!
- But if you take your bride again,
- We'll call it but foul play."
-
- There were four-and-twenty bonnie boys,
- A' clad in the Johnstone grey;
- They said they would take the bride again,
- By the strong hand, if they may.
-
- Some o' them were right willing men,
- But they were na willing a';
- And four-and-twenty Leader lads
- Bid them mount and ride awa'.
-
- Then whingers flew frae gentles' sides,
- And swords flew frae the shea's,[#]
- And red and rosy was the blood
- Ran down the lily braes.
-
-[#] sheathes.
-
- The blood ran down by Caddon bank,
- And down by Caddon brae,
- And, sighing, said the bonnie bride--
- "O wae's me for foul play."
-
- My blessing on your heart, sweet thing!
- Wae to your wilfu' will!
- There's mony a gallant gentleman
- Whae's bluid ye have garred[#] to spill.
-
-[#] caused.
-
- Now a' the lords of fair England,
- And that dwell by the English Border,
- Come never here to seek a wife,
- For fear of sic[#] disorder.
-
-[#] such.
-
- They'll track ye up, and settle ye bye,
- Till on your wedding-day;
- Then gie ye frogs instead of fish,
- And play ye foul foul play.
-
-
-
- *LOCHINVAR*
-
-In Sir Walter Scott's poem, Lochinvar is the hero, and the story has a
-happier ending. The song was supposed to have been sung to James IV. by
-Lady Heron at Holyrood shortly before the fatal battle of Flodden.
-
- O young Lochinvar has come out of the west,
- Through all the wide border his steel was the best;
- And save his good broadsword, he weapons had none,
- He rode all unarmed, and he rode all alone,
- So faithful in love, and so dauntless in war,
- There never was knight like the young Lochinvar.
-
- He staid not for brake, and he stopped not for stone,
- He swam the Eske river where ford there was none,
- But ere he alighted at Netherby gate,
- The bride had consented, the gallant came late;
- For a laggard in love, and a dastard in war,
- Was to wed the fair Ellen of brave Lochinvar.
-
- So boldly he entered the Netherby Hall,
- Among bride's men, and kinsmen, and brothers, and all,
- Then spoke the bride's father, his hand on his sword
- (For the poor craven bridegroom said never a word),
- "O come ye in peace here, or come ye in war,
- Or to dance at our bridal, young Lord Lochinvar?"
-
- "I long wooed your daughter, my suit you denied;
- Love swells like the Solway, but ebbs like its tide,
- And now am I come, with this lost love of mine,
- To lead but one measure, drink one cup of wine,
- There are maidens in Scotland, more lovely by far,
- That would gladly be bride to the young Lochinvar."
-
- The bride kissed the goblet; the knight took it up,
- He quaffed off the wine, and he threw down the cup.
- She looked down to blush, and she looked up to sigh,
- With a smile on her lips, and a tear in her eye.
- He took her soft hand, ere her mother could bar,
- "Now tread we a measure!" said young Lochinvar.
-
- So stately her form, and so lovely her face,
- That never a hall such a galliard did grace;
- While her brother did fret, and her father did fume,
- And the bridgroom stood dangling his bonnet and plume,
- And the bride-maidens whispered, "'Twere better by far,
- To have matched our fair cousin with young Lochinvar."
-
- One touch to her hand, and one word in her ear,
- When they reached the hall-door, and the charger stood near;
- So light to the croupe the fair lady he swung,
- So light to the saddle before her he sprung!
- "She is won! we have gone over bank, bush, and scaur;
- They'll have fleet steeds that follow," quoth young Lochinvar.
-
- There was mounting 'mong Graemes of the Netherby clan;
- Fosters, Fenwicks, and Musgraves, they rode and they ran,
- There was racing and chasing, on Cannobie Lee,
- But the lost bride of Netherby ne'er did they see.
- So daring in love, and so dauntless in war,
- Have ye e'er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar?
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XVIII*
-
- *By Lauder Bridge*
-
-
-The Ancient Royal Burgh of Lauder, a quaint little border town with
-hardly more than one street, is on the banks of the river Leader, on the
-high road between Edinburgh and Kelso. It stands very picturesquely,
-among the bold hills and fine woods of Berwickshire, and the valley is
-called Lauderdale, extending to where the Leader joins the Tweed, just
-below Melrose. Peacefully beautiful is the spot; and yet it was once
-the scene of a harsh, grim tragedy.
-
-It was in the reign of King James III. of Scotland, who offended his
-subjects in two particulars.
-
-First, to get wealth for himself, he mixed brass and lead with his
-silver money, and put it into circulation as pure silver; next, he chose
-favourites from the common people, and set these above the proud
-noblemen of Scotland.
-
-This latter would not have been so bad a fault if the king had always
-chosen wisely; but, as often in such cases, he was led by flatterers
-rather than by worthy men.
-
-In 1482 the king declared war against England, and, as in these warlike
-days the nobles were the leaders of the army, this brought the
-discontented lords together.
-
-When the Scottish army reached Lauder in their southward march, the
-proud nobles met in Lauder church; all were angry with the king, yet
-each was afraid to make the first move. So Lord Gray told them a
-mocking fable.
-
-"Do you remember," said he, "how all the mice got together and agreed
-that it would be a splendid thing if a bell were hung round the cat's
-neck, so that wherever she went she could be heard; the only difficulty
-was to find a mouse to bell the cat!"
-
-These warlike nobles did not like to be spoken of as if they were mice,
-and it roused them to deeper rage.
-
-Then out spoke Archibald Douglas, Earl of Angus, the head of the younger
-branch of the Douglas family. "Trust me, I'll bell the cat!"
-
-There was a knock at the door; Cochrane, the architect, whom the nobles
-said had been a mason, but was now the king's chief favourite, entered,
-dressed in black velvet, with a heavy chain of gold round his neck, a
-horn of gold tipped with precious stones, and all his attire of the
-costliest. Angus caught the chain in his hands and said, "A rope would
-suit that neck better!"
-
-Then the nobles laid violent hands on all the king's low-born favourites
-and hanged them by the bridge of Lauder, in front of the king's very
-eyes! Cochrane was proud and brave to the last. He said that as the
-king had made him an earl he should be hanged with a rope made of silk;
-little did the nobles care for his protests, the halter of a horse was
-in their opinion good enough for him.
-
-From this time onward the headstrong Earl of Angus was known by the
-nick-name of "Bell-the-Cat." It may be taken for granted that neither
-he nor the nobles who supported him would have dared to act so
-arrogantly and violently unless they felt quite sure that the king had
-not the power to punish them. He returned sullenly to Edinburgh, more
-the captive of the nobles than their master.
-
-A parliament appointed the Duke of Albany lieutenant-general of the
-kingdom, but he in turn soon lost favour, for he was suspected of too
-great a friendship for Edward IV., King of England, and fled for safety
-to France, giving James another chance to govern his kingdom for
-himself.
-
-This weak and unhappy monarch, however, was not destined to have much
-peace. Before very long, another quarrel with his nobles led to their
-taking up arms with a view of deposing him and placing his son on the
-throne. The king and his nobles met in battle near Stirling, but, at
-the very beginning of the fight, James was thrown from his horse and
-stabbed by a soldier, whose name remained unknown. Thus died this weak
-but amiable and unfortunate king.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XIX*
-
- *The Battle of Flodden Field*
-
-
-One of the most tragic episodes in the History of the Borders was the
-battle of Flodden Field, when the flower of the Scottish nobility fell
-around their sovereign, James IV., while fighting against the English
-under Surrey.
-
-The causes of the war were many. Henry of England refused to give up
-the jewels which had been promised as the dowry of his sister Margaret
-on her marriage with James IV.
-
-The Lord High Admiral of England, Sir Edmund Howard, had attacked and
-taken two Scottish ships, and slain their captain, Sir Andrew Barton.
-James, who was fond of Barton, demanded redress, but Henry insolently
-replied that kings should not quarrel about pirates.
-
-But the immediate cause was the friendship between France and Scotland.
-Henry was preparing for war with France, and James stood by his ally,
-declaring that if Henry warred with France, he would lead an army into
-England. The Queen of France sent James a turquoise ring, asking him to
-carry out his threat to serve her interests.
-
-James had been warned that his action would have terrible consequences.
-A man appeared to him at Linlithgow, clad in a long blue gown, with bare
-head, and carrying a pikestaff, and having told the king that his dead
-mother had sent him to warn him not to go to war against England, he
-disappeared as suddenly as he had come.
-
-Also at the dead of night a voice had been heard proclaiming aloud at
-the market Cross in Edinburgh the names of those who, within forty days,
-would be no more. It was thought at the time that these happenings were
-instigated by Queen Margaret, but the king still persisted in his
-policy, and led his army across the Border, in spite of the warnings of
-his counsellors and his queen.
-
-A fine description of his army is given by Sir Walter Scott, when Lord
-Marmion watches the scene from Blackford Hill.
-
- "Thousand pavilions, white as snow,
- Spread all the Borough-moor below,
- Upland, and dale, and down:--
- A thousand, did I say? I ween,
- Thousands and thousands, there were seen,
- That chequer'd all the heath between
- The streamlet and the town;
- In crossing ranks extending far,
- Forming a camp irregular;
- Oft giving way, where still there stood
- Some relics of the old oak wood,
- That darkly huge did intervene,
- And tamed the glaring white with green,
- In these extended lines there lay,
- A martial kingdom's vast array.
-
- For from Hebudes, dark with rain,
- To eastern Lodon's fertile plain,
- And from the southern Redswire edge,
- To farthest Rosse's rocky ledge,
- From west to east, from south to north,
- Scotland sent all her warriors forth,
- Marmion might hear the mingled hum,
- Of myriads up the mountain come;
- The horses' tramp, and tingling clank,
- Where chiefs reviewed their vassal rank,
- And charger's shrilling neigh;
- And see the shifting lines advance
- Whilst frequent flash'd, from shield and lance,
- The sun's reflected ray.
- * * * * *
- They saw, slow rolling on the plain,
- Full many a baggage-cart and wain,
- And dire artillery's clumsy car.
- By sluggish oxen tugg'd to war;
- * * * * *
- Nor mark'd they less, where in the air
- A thousand streamers flaunted fair,
- Various in shape, device, and hue,
- Green, sanguine, purple, red, and blue,
- Broad, narrow, swallow-tailed, and square,
- Scroll, pennon, pensil, bandrol,[#] there
- O'er the pavilions flew.
- Highest and midmost, was descried
- The royal banner floating wide;
- The staff, a pine-tree, strong and straight,
- Pitch'd deeply in a massive stone,
- Which still in memory is shown,
- Yet bent beneath the standard's weight.
- Whene'er the western breeze unroll'd,
- With toil, the huge and cumbrous fold,
- And gave to view the dazzling field,
- Where, in proud Scotland's royal shield,
- The ruddy lion ramp'd in gold."
-
-[#] Each feudal ensign intimated the rank of those who displayed them.
-
-
-Marmion wondered that with such a glorious army at his back anyone
-should try to dissuade James from battle, yet Sir David Lindesay of the
-Mount answered him,
-
- "'twere good
- That Kings would think withal,
- When peace and wealth their land has bless'd,
- 'Tis better to sit still at rest,
- Than rise, perchance to fall."
-
-
-Men-at-arms were there, sheathed in plate armour, with battle-axe and
-spear, and mounted on Flemish steeds. Young knights and squires
-practised their chargers on the plain. Hardy burghers marched on foot,
-armed with long pikes and two-handed swords and bright bucklers.
-
-The yeoman, too, was on foot, dressed in steel-jack quilted well with
-iron, and bearing at his back, provisions for forty days. He seemed sad
-of cheer, and loth to leave his humble cottage, wondering who would till
-the land during his absence.
-
-There, too, was the Borderer:--
-
- "bred to war,
- He knew the battle's din afar,
- And joy'd to hear it swell.
- His peaceful day was slothful ease,
- Nor harp nor pipe his ear could please
- Like the loud slogan yell."
-
-for
-
- "War's the Borderer's game,
- Their gain, their glory, their delight,
- To sleep the day, maraud the night,
- O'er mountain, moss, and moor."
-
-[Illustration: _Flodden Field_]
-
-There, too, were the Celts, with savage eyes looking out wildly through
-red and sable hair, with sinewy frames and legs bare above the knees,
-their chiefs known by the eagle's plumage. They wore the skin of the
-red deer, a graceful bonnet, and a plaid hung from the shoulders, and
-carried as weapons a broadsword, a dagger, and quivers, bows, and
-shafts.
-
-The Isles-men, too, were there, carrying the ancient Danish battle-axe.
-While the army was mustering together, James feasted the chiefs in
-Holyrood Palace, for at dawn they were to march southward.
-
- "Well loved that splendid monarch aye
- The banquet and the song,
- By day the tourney, and by night
- The merry dance, traced fast and light,
- The maskers quaint, the pageant bright,
- The revel loud and long.
- This feast outshone his banquets past;
- It was his blithest and his last."
-
- And hazel was his eagle eye,
- And auburn of the darkest dye,
- His short curl'd beard and hair.
- Light was his footstep in the dance,
- And firm his stirrup in the lists;
- And oh! he had that merry glance,
- That seldom lady's heart resists."
-
-
-Yet no fair lady was as dear to James as his own Queen Margaret, who sat
-alone in the tower of Linlithgow weeping for the war against her native
-country, and for the danger of her lord.
-
-On the morrow, James marched south, crossed the Tweed, and encamped on
-the banks of the Till, near Twisel Bridge. The Scottish army moved down
-the side of the Tweed to Flodden Hill taking Norham Castle, and the
-Border towns of Etal, Wark, and Ford. Much time was wasted in these
-petty enterprises, time which should have been spent in marching to
-Newcastle before the English were prepared to offer resistance. When
-the castle of Ford was stormed, Lady Heron, wife of Sir William Heron,
-then a prisoner in Scotland, was taken, and this beautiful and artful
-woman induced James to idle away his time until all chance was lost of
-defeating the enemy.
-
-The army suffered severely from want of provisions, and many of the
-Highlanders and Isles-men returned home, many who had come only for
-booty, deserted, and the numbers were reduced to about thirty thousand.
-
-Meanwhile, the Earl of Surrey had raised twenty-six thousand men, and
-received other enforcements as he came north from Durham. He therefore
-challenged James to fight, and charged him with violating the treaty of
-peace between the two kingdoms.
-
-The Scottish nobles were unwilling to fight, and said it was impossible
-to remain in a country so plundered; also, if fight the king must, he
-would fight to much greater advantage in his own country, to whose
-welfare the loss of this battle would be fatal; while he had
-sufficiently indicated his honour by crossing the Border.
-
-James would not listen to the counsel of his nobles, though even the
-aged Earl of Angus expostulated with him. To this old warrior he
-angrily said, "Angus, if you are afraid, you may go home," at which
-insult the aged Earl burst into tears.
-
-The English army crossed the Till by Twisel Bridge and pressed on while
-the Scottish army stood idly by, the Scottish nobles in vain entreating
-the king to attack the English while they were crossing.
-
-When the English army had drawn up in order of battle on the left bank
-of the river, the Scots, setting fire to their temporary huts, came down
-the ridge of Flodden. The clouds of smoke from the burning huts were
-driven into the face of the English, so that the Scots had got to within
-a quarter of a mile of them before they perceived them.
-
- "No martial shout, nor minstrel tone,
- Announced their march; their tread alone,
- At times one warning trumpet blown,
- At times a stifled hum,
- Told England, from his mountain-throne,
- King James did rushing come:
- Scarce could they hear or see their foes
- Until at weapon-point they close."
-
-
-With clanging blows and arrows that fell like rain, with yelling and
-clamour and sword-sway and lance-thrust, the battle continued until the
-evening, and when even fell, the Scots still fought in an unbroken ring
-round their king. But when darkness came, and Surrey withdrew his men,
-the flower of Scotland's chivalry had fallen, and the king lay dead on
-the field.
-
- "Afar, the royal standard flies,
- And round it toils and bleeds and dies.
- Our Caledonian pride!"
- * * * * *
- But yet, though thick the shafts as now,
- Though charging knights like whirlwinds go,
- Though billmen ply the ghastly bow,
- Unbroken was the ring.
- The stubborn spearmen still made good
- Their dark impenetrable wood,
- Each stepping where his comrade stood
- The instant that he fell.
- No thought was there of dastard flight:
- Link'd in the serried phalanx tight,
- Groom fought like noble, squire like knight,
- As fearlessly and well;
- Till utter darkness closed her wing
- O'er their thin host and wounded King.
- Then skilful Surrey's sage commands
- Led back from strife his shattered bands;
- And from the charge they drew,
- As mountain-waves, from wasted lands,
- Sweep back to ocean blue.
- Then did their loss his foemen know;
- Their King, their lords, their mightiest low,
- They melted from the field as snow,
- When streams are swoln and south winds blow
- Dissolves in silent dew.
- * * * * *
- Still from the sire the son shall hear
- Of the stern fight and carnage drear
- Of Flodden's fatal field,
- Where shiver'd was fair Scotland's spear,
- And broken was her shield!
- * * * * *
- And well in death his trusty brand,
- Firm clench'd within his manly hand
- Beseem'd the Monarch slain."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XX*
-
- *After Flodden*
-
-
-So deeply did the tragic result of Flodden touch the hearts of the
-Scottish people that no Scot could for many a long day hear it mentioned
-without a heart-thrill.
-
-Many are the songs written about it, the most famous perhaps, being the
-"Flowers of the Forest," written two centuries later, though partly
-founded upon an older and almost forgotten song.
-
-
- *THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST*
-
- I've heard them lilting, at our ewe-milking,
- Lasses a' lilting, before dawn o' day;
- But now they are moaning on ilka green loaning[#]
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
-[#] a broad grassy lane used as milking-ground.
-
- At bughts, in the morning, nae blythe lads are scorning;[#]
- The lasses are lonely, and dowie, and wae;
- Wae daffing,[#] nae gabbing,[#] but sighing and sabbing;
- Ilk ane lifts her leglin,[#] and hies her away.
-
-[#] rallying.
-[#] joking.
-[#] chatting.
-[#] milking-pail.
-
- In hair'st, at the shearing, nae youths now are jeering,
- The bandsters[#] are runkled,[#] and lyart[#] or gray;
- At fair, or at preaching, nae wooing, nae fleeching;[#]
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
-[#] sheaf-binders.
-[#] wrinkled.
-[#] inclining to grey.
-[#] coaxing.
-
- At e'en, in the gloaming, nae younkers are roaming
- 'Bout stacks with the lasses at bogle to play;
- But ilk maid sits dreary, lamenting her deary--
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
-
- Dool and wae for the order, sent our lads to the Border!
- The English, for ance, by guile wan the day:
- The Flowers of the Forest, that fought aye the foremost,
- The prime of our land, are cauld in the clay.
-
- We'll hear nae mair lilting at the ewe-milking;
- Women and bairns are heartless and wae:
- Sighing and moaning on ilka green loaning--
- The Flowers of the Forest are a' wede away.
- JEAN ELLIOT (1727-1805).
-
-
-The following poem also gives eloquent and touching expression to the
-deep gloom which descended upon the Border after the fatal battle, and
-tells of the despair felt in almost every Ettrick home:--
-
-
- *SELKIRK AFTER FLODDEN*
-
- (A WIDOW'S DIRGE, OCTOBER 1513)
-
- It's but a month the morn
- Sin' a' was peace and plenty;
- Oor hairst was halflins shorn,
- Eident men and lasses denty.
- But noo it's a' distress--
- Never mair a merry meetin ';
- For half the bairns are faitherless,
- And a' the women greetin'.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Miles and miles round Selkirk toun,
- Where forest flow'rs are fairest,
- Ilka lassie's stricken doun,
- Wi' the fate that fa's the sairest.
- A' the lads they used to meet
- By Ettrick braes or Yarrow
- Lyin' thrammelt head and feet
- In Brankstone's deadly barrow!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Frae every cleuch and clan
- The best o' the braid Border
- Rose like a single man
- To meet the royal order.
- Oor Burgh toun itsel'
- Sent its seventy doun the glen;
- Ask Fletcher[#] how they fell,
- Bravely fechtin', ane to ten!
- O Flodden Field!
-
-[#] This was the man who brought an English flag back to Selkirk from
-Flodden. Four brothers of that name are said to have perished in the
-battle.
-
- Round about their gallant king,
- For country and for croun,
- Stude the dauntless Border ring,
- Till the last was hackit doun.
- I blame na what has been--
- They maun fa' that canna flee--
- But oh, to see what I hae seen,
- To see what now I see!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- The souters a' fu' croose,
- O'er their leather and their lingle,
- Wi' their shoon in ilka hoose,
- Sat contentit round the ingle.
- Noo there's naething left but dool,--
- Never mair their work will cheer them;
- In Flodden's bluidy pool
- They'll neither wait nor wear them!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Whar the weavers used to meet,
- In ilka bieldy corner,
- Noo there's nane in a' the street,
- Savin' here and there a mourner,
- Walkin' lonely as a wraith,
- Or if she meet anither,
- Just a word below their braith
- O' some slauchtered son or brither!
- O Flodden Field!
-
- There stands the gudeman's loom
- That used tae gang sae cheerie,
- Untentit noo, and toom,
- Makin' a' the hoose sae eerie,
- Till the sicht I canna dree;
- For the shuttles lyin' dumb
- Speak the loudlier to me
- O' him that wunna come.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Sae at nicht I cover't o'er,
- Just to haud it frae my een,
- But I haena yet the pow'r
- To forget what it has been;
- And I listen through the hoose
- For the chappin o' the lay,
- Till the scrapin' o' a moose
- Tak's my very braith away.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Then I turn to sister Jean,
- And my airms aboot her twine,
- And I kiss her sleepless een,
- For her heart's as sair as mine,--
- A heart ance fu' o' fun,
- And hands that ne'er were idle,
- Wi' a' her cleedin' spun
- Against her Jamie's bridal.
- O Flodden Field!
-
- Noo we've naether hands nor hairt--
- In oor grief the wark's forgotten,
- Though it's wantit every airt,
- And the craps are lyin' rotten.
- War's awsome blast's gane bye,
- And left a land forlorn;
- In daith's dool hairst they lie,
- The shearers and the shorn.
- O Flodden Field.
-
- Wi' winter creepin' near us,
- When the nichts are drear and lang,
- Nane to help us, nane to hear us,
- On the weary gate we gang!
- Lord o' the quick an' deed,
- Sin' oor ain we canna see,
- In mercy mak gude speed,
- And bring us whar they be,
- Far, far, frae Flodden Field!
- "J. B. Selkirk" (JAMES B. BROWN).
- _By permission of W. Cuthbertson, Esq._
-
-
-Another lyric, relating to the fatal battle of Flodden, refers to the
-gallantry of the Souters, or shoemakers of Selkirk, who, to the number
-of eighty, and headed by their town-clerk, joined the army as it entered
-England. They distinguished themselves greatly, and few returned. The
-"yellow and green" are the liveries of the house of Home, taxed by some
-with being the cause of the defeat.
-
-
- *THE SOUTERS OF SELKIRK*
-
- Up wi' the Souters of Selkirk,
- And doun wi' the Earl of Home;
- And up wi' a' the braw lads
- That sew the single-soled shoon.
-
- Fye upon yellow and yellow,
- And fye upon yellow and green,
- But up wi' the true blue and scarlet,
- And up wi' the single-soled sheen.
-
- Up wi' the Souters of Selkirk,
- For they are baith trusty and leal;
- And up wi' the men o' the Forest,
- And doun wi' the Merse to the deil.
-
-
-In Aytoun's "Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers," the following well-known
-poem tells how the news of the disaster at Flodden Field was received in
-Edinburgh:--
-
-
- *EDINBURGH AFTER FLODDEN*
-
- I
-
- News of battle! news of battle!
- Hark! 'tis ringing down the street:
- And the archways and the pavement
- Bear the clang of hurrying feet.
- News of battle! Who hath brought it?
- News of triumph! Who should bring
- Tidings from our noble army,
- Greetings from our gallant King?
- All last night we watched the beacons
- Blazing on the hills afar,
- Each one bearing, as it kindled,
- Message of the opened war.
- All night long the northern streamers
- Shot across the trembling sky:
- Fearful lights that never beckon
- Save when kings or heroes die.
-
-
- II
-
- News of battle! Who hath brought it?
- All are thronging to the gate;
- "Warder--warder! open quickly!
- Man--is this a time to wait?"
- And the heavy gates are opened;
- Then a murmur long and loud,
- And a cry of fear and wonder
- Bursts from out the bending crowd.
- For they see in battered harness
- Only one hard-stricken man;
- And his weary steed is wounded,
- And his cheek is pale and wan.
- Spearless hangs a bloody banner
- In his weak and drooping hand--
- God! can that be Randolph Murray,
- Captain of the city band?
-
-
- III
-
- Round him crush the people, crying,
- "Tell us all--oh, tell us true!
- Where are they who went to battle,
- Randolph Murray, sworn to you?
- Where are they, our brothers--children?
- Have they met the English foe?
- Why art thou alone, unfollowed?
- Is it weal, or is it woe?"
- Like a corpse the grisly warrior
- Looks from out his helm of steel;
- But no word he speaks in answer--
- Only with his armed heel
- Chides his weary steed, and onward
- Up the city streets they ride;
- Fathers, sisters, mothers, children,
- Shrieking, praying by his side.
- "By the God that made thee, Randolph!
- Tell us what mischance hath come."
- Then he lifts his riven banner,
- And the asker's voice is dumb.
-
-[Illustration: "_Tell us all--oh, tell us true!_"]
-
-
- IV
-
- The elders of the city
- Have met within their hall--
- The men whom good King James had charged
- To watch the tower and wall.
- "Your hands are weak with age," he said,
- "Your hearts are stout and true;
- So bide ye in the maiden town,
- While others fight for you.
- My trumpet from the Border-side
- Shall send a blast so clear,
- That all who wait within the gate
- That stirring sound may hear.
- Or, if it be the will of Heaven
- That back I never come,
- And if, instead of Scottish shout,
- Ye hear the English drum,
- Then let the warning bells ring out,
- Then gird you to the fray,
- Then man the walls like burghers stout,
- And fight while fight you may.
- 'Twere better that in fiery flame
- The roofs should thunder down,
- Than that the foot of foreign foe
- Should trample in the town!"
-
-
- V
-
- Then in came Randolph Murray,
- His step was slow and weak,
- And, as he doffed his dinted helm,
- The tears ran down his cheek:
- They fell upon his corslet
- And on his mailed hand,
- As he gazed around him wistfully,
- Leaning sorely on his brand.
- And none who then beheld him
- But straight were smote with fear,
- For a bolder and a sterner man
- Had never couched a spear.
- They knew so sad a messenger
- Some ghastly news must bring;
- And all of them were fathers,
- And their sons were with the King.
-
-
- VI
-
- And up then rose the Provost--
- A brave old man was he,
- Of ancient name, and knightly fame,
- And chivalrous degree.
- He ruled our city like a Lord
- Who brooked no equal here,
- And ever for the townsmen's rights
- Stood up 'gainst prince and peer.
- And he had seen the Scottish host
- March from the Borough muir,
- With music-storm and clamorous shout,
- And all the din that thunders out
- When youth's of victory sure.
- But yet a dearer thought had he;--
- For, with a father's pride,
- He saw his last remaining son
- Go forth by Randolph's side,
- With casque on head and spur on heel,
- All keen to do and dare;
- And proudly did that gallant boy
- Dunedin's banner bear.
- Oh! woeful now was the old man's look,
- And he spake right heavily--
- "Now, Randolph, tell thy tidings,
- However sharp they be!
- Woe is written on thy visage,
- Death is looking from thy face;
- Speak! though it be of overthrow--
- It cannot be disgrace!"
-
-
- VII
-
- Right bitter was the agony
- That wrung that soldier proud;
- Thrice did he strive to answer,
- And thrice he groaned aloud.
- Then he gave the riven banner
- To the old man's shaking hand,
- Saying--"That is all I bring ye
- From the bravest of the land!
- Ay! ye may look upon it--
- It was guarded well and long,
- By your brothers and your children,
- By the valiant and the strong.
- One by one they fell around it,
- As the archers laid them low,
- Grimly dying, still unconquered,
- With their faces to the foe.
- Ay! ye may well look upon it--
- There is more than honour there,
- Else, be sure, I had not brought it
- From the field of dark despair.
- Never yet was royal banner
- Steeped in such a costly dye;
- It hath lain upon a bosom
- Where no other shroud shall lie.
- Sirs! I charge you, keep it holy;
- Keep it as a sacred thing,
- For the stain ye see upon it
- Was the life-blood of your King!"
-
-
- VIII
-
- Woe and woe and lamentation!
- What a piteous cry was there!
- Widows, maidens, mothers, children,
- Shrieking, sobbing in despair!
- Through the streets the death-word rushes,
- Spreading terror, sweeping on.
- "Jesu Christ! our King has fallen--
- O Great God, King James is gone!
- Holy mother Mary, shield us,
- Thou who erst did lose thy Son!
- O the blackest day for Scotland
- That she ever knew before!
- O our King--the good, the noble,
- Shall we see him never more?
- Woe to us, and woe to Scotland!
- O our sons, our sons and men!
- Surely some have 'scaped the Southron,
- Surely some will come again!"
-
-
-Randolph Murray describes how the monarch lies dead on the field with
-his nobles round him.
-
- "All so thick they lay together,
- When the stars lit up the sky,
- That I knew not who were stricken,
- Or who yet remained to die."
-
-
-A hollow knell is rung and the miserere is sung, and all is terror and
-disorder until the Provost rouses them.
-
- "If our King be taken from us,
- We are left to guard his son.
- * * * * *
- Up! and haste ye through the city,
- Stir the burghers stout and true!
- Gather all our scattered people,
- Fling the banner out once more--
- Randolph Murray! do thou bear it,
- As it erst was borne before:
- Never Scottish heart will leave it,
- When they see their monarch's gore!"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXI*
-
- *Graeme and Bewick*
-
-
-Good Lord Graeme and Sir Robert Bewick were friends. They met one day
-in Carlisle, and went arm in arm to the wine, and, as was too oft the
-custom of these days, they stayed and drank till they were both merry.
-Good Lord Graeme took up the cup. "Sir Robert, and here's to thee!" he
-said, "and here's to our two sons at home, for they like us best in our
-own country."
-
-"O were your son a lad like mine," answered Bewick, boastfully, "and
-learnt some books that he could read, they might be two brothers in
-arms, and lord it over the Borderside.
-
- 'But your son's a lad, and he's but bad,
- And billie[#] to my son he cannot be.'
-
-[#] Comrade, or brother-in-arms.
-
-You sent him to school, and he would not learn; you bought him books,
-and he would not read!"
-
-Lord Graeme called angrily for the reckoning. "My blessing shall he
-never earn," said he, "till I see how his arm can defend his head." He
-threw down a crown, and went to the stable, took his horse, and rode
-home. "Welcome, my old father," said his son, Christie Graeme, "but
-where were ye so long from home?" "I have been at Carlisle town, and a
-shamed man I am by thee," answered his father with a black look; "I have
-been at Carlisle town, where Sir Robert Bewick met me. He says you are
-but a bad, wild youth, and can never be billie to his boy. I sent you
-to the school, and you would not learn. I bought you books, and you
-would not read; therefore you shall never have my blessing till I see
-you save your head in fight with young Bewick." "Now God forbid, my old
-father, that ever such a thing should be! Billie Bewick was my master,
-and I his scholar, in spite of the pains he wasted in teaching me." "O
-hold thy tongue, thou foolish lad! If thou dost not soon end this
-quarrel, there's my glove, I'll fight with thee myself."
-
-Then Christie Graeme stooped low. "Father, put on your glove again, the
-wind has blown it from your hand."
-
- "What's that, thou sayst, thou limmer loon?
- How darest thou stand to speak to me?
- If thou do not end this quarrel soon,
- There's my right hand, thou'lt fight with me!"
-
-
-Then went Christie to his chamber, to consider what should happen.
-Should he fight with his own father, or with his brother-in-arms,
-Bewick?
-
- "If I should kill my billie dear,
- God's blessing I shall never win;
- But if I strike at my auld father,
- I think 'twould be a mortal sin.
- But if I kill my billie dear
- It is God's will, so let it be;
- But I make a vow, ere I go from home,
- That I shall be the next man's die."
-
-He put a good old jack or quilted doublet on his back, and on his head
-he put a cap of steel, and well did he become them with his sword and
-buckler by his side!
-
-Now young Bewick had taken his father's sword under his arm, and walked
-about his father's close. He looked between himself and the sun, to see
-some approaching object, and was aware of a man in bright armour, riding
-that way most hastily.
-
- "O who is yon, that comes this way,
- So hastily that hither came?
- I think it be my brother dear,
- I think it be young Christie Graeme.
- Your welcome here, my billie dear,
- And thrice you're welcome unto me."
-
-
-Christie explained that he was come to fight, that his father had been
-to Carlisle, and had met with the elder Bewick. He retailed what had
-passed, "and so I'll never earn my father's blessing, till he sees how
-my arm can guard my head in fight against thee."
-
- "O God forbid, my billie dear,
- That ever such a thing should be!
- We'll take three men on either side,
- And see if we can our fathers agree."
-
-
-Christie shook his head. He knew that it was useless. "O hold thy
-tongue, billie Bewick. If thou'rt a man, as I'm sure thou art, come
-over the dyke and fight with me."
-
-"But I have no harness, billie, as I see you have."
-
-"As little harness as is on your back shall be on mine."
-
-With that Christie threw off his coat of mail and cap of steel, stuck
-his spear into the ground, and tied his horse up to a tree. Bewick
-threw off his cloak, and cast aside his psalter book. He laid his hand
-upon the dyke, and vaulted over. The two fought for two long hours.
-The sweat dropped fast from them both, but not a drop of blood could be
-seen to satisfy the requirements of honour. At last Graeme hit Bewick
-under the left breast, and he fell to the ground wounded mortally.
-
- "Rise up, rise up, now, billie dear,
- Arise and speak three words to me!
- Whether thou's gotten thy deadly wound,
- Or if God and good leeching[#] may succour thee?"
-
-[#] Doctoring.
-
-Bewick groaned. "Get to horse, billie Graeme, and get thee hence
-speedily. Get thee out of this country--that none may know who has done
-this." "O have I slain thee, billie Bewick? But I made a vow, ere I
-came from home, that I would be the next man to die!" Thereupon he
-pitched his sword hilt downwards into a mole-hill, took a run of some
-three and twenty feet, and on his own sword's point he fell to the
-ground dead.
-
-Then up came Sir Robert Bewick. "Rise up, my son," he said, "for I
-think you have got the victory."
-
-"O hold your tongue, my father dear. Let me be spared your prideful
-talking. You might have drunken your wine in peace, and let me and my
-billie be! Go dig a grave, both wide and deep, and a grave to hold us
-both; but lay Christie Graeme on the sunny side, for full sure I know
-that the victory was to him."
-
-"Alas," cried old Bewick, "I've lost the liveliest lad that ever was
-born unto my name." "Alas," quoth good Lord Graeme, "my loss is the
-greater.
-
- 'I've lost my hopes, I've lost my joy,
- I've lost the key, but and the lock;
- I durst have ridden the world around,
- Had Christie Graeme been at my back!'"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXII*
-
- *The Song of the Outlaw Murray*
-
-
- "Word is gone to our noble king,
- In Edinburgh where that he lay,
- That there was an Outlaw in Ettrick Forest
- Counted him nought, nor all his Court so gay."
-
-
-The King mentioned in the ballad is supposed to have been either James
-IV. or James V. This places the date somewhere in the early part of the
-sixteenth century.
-
-The Outlaw Murray and his lady kept royal state in Ettrick Forest. Here
-he lived with five hundred men, all gaily clad in livery of Lincoln
-green. His castle, built of lime and stone, stood fair and pleasantly
-in the midst of the Forest, surrounded by pine trees under which
-wandered many a hart and hind, many a doe and roe and other wild
-creatures. In the forefront of the castle stood two unicorns, with the
-picture of a knight and lady with green holly above their brows.
-
-The King in Edinburgh heard of all this royal state and that the Outlaw
-in Ettrick Forest cared nought for the King of Scotland and his court.
-
-"I make a vow," said the King, "that either I shall be King of Ettrick
-Forest, or the Outlaw shall be King of Scotland."
-
-Then up spoke Lord Hamilton to the noble King, "my sovereign prince,
-take counsel of your nobles and of me. I counsel ye to send to the fine
-Outlaw and see if he will come and be your man and hold the Forest in
-fee from you. If he refuse, we will conquer both him and his lands,
-throw his castle down, and make a widow of his gay lady."
-
-Then the King called to him James Boyd, son of the Earl of Arran, and
-when Boyd came and knelt before him, "Welcome, James Boyd," said the
-noble King; "you must go for me to Ettrick Forest where bides yonder
-Outlaw, ask him of whom he holds his lands, and who is his master, and
-desire him to come and be my man, and hold the Forest free from me. I
-will give him safe warrant to and from Edinburgh, and if he refuse we
-will conquer him and his lands, and throw down his castle, and make a
-widow of his gay lady; and hang his merry men pair by pair wherever we
-see them."
-
-James Boyd took leave of the King and went blithely on his way, until he
-came to the fair Ettrick Forest, the first view of which he got coming
-down Birkendale Brae. He saw the doe and roe, the hart and hind and wild
-beasts in plenty, and heard blows ringing boldly, and arrows whizzing
-near by him.
-
-He saw, too, the fair castle, the like of which he had never seen
-before, with the two gay unicorns on the forefront, and the picture of
-the knight and lady with the green holly above their brow.
-
-Then he spied the five hundred men, all clad in livery of Lincoln green,
-and shooting with their bows on Newark Lee. In the midst of them was a
-knight armed from head to foot, mounted on a milk-white steed, with
-bended bow, all fine to look upon; whom Boyd knew at once to be the
-Outlaw himself.
-
-"God save thee, brave Outlaw Murray, thy lady, and all thy chivalry!"
-
-"Marry, thou art welcome, gentleman; thou seemst to be a King's
-messenger."
-
-"The King of Scotland sent me here, good Outlaw, to know of whom you
-hold your lands, and who is your master."
-
-"These lands are _mine_. I know no King in Christendom. I won this
-Forest from the English when neither the King nor his knights were there
-to see."
-
-"The King desires that you come to Edinburgh, and hold the Forest then
-of him. If you refuse, he will conquer your lands and you, and he has
-vowed to throw down your castle, make a widow of your gay lady, and hang
-your knights pair by pair wherever he finds them."
-
-"Ay, by my troth! I should indeed be far behind. Before the King should
-get my fair native land, many of his nobles would be cold, and their
-ladies right weary."
-
-Then spoke the lady of the Outlaw, fair of face. "That an Outlaw should
-come before the King without my consent makes me fear much that there is
-treason. Bid him be good to his lords at home, for my lord shall ne'er
-see Edinburgh."
-
-James Boyd took leave of the bold Outlaw and went back to Edinburgh, and
-when he came to the King, knelt lowly on his knee.
-
-"Welcome, James Boyd," said the noble King, "of whom is Ettrick Forest
-held?"
-
-"Ettrick Forest is the fairest forest that ever man saw. There are doe
-and roe and hart and hind and wild beasts in plenty; there's a fine
-castle of lime and stone standing there pleasantly, and in the forefront
-of the castle two unicorns all fine to see, with a picture of a knight
-and a lady, and the green holly above their brows. There the Outlaw
-keeps a royal company--five hundred merry men, all gaily clad in Lincoln
-green, and the Outlaw and his lady in purple. Surely they live right
-royally. He says that the forest is his own, that he won it from the
-English, and that as he won it, so will he keep it against all the Kings
-in Christendom."
-
-"Go warn me Perthshire and Angus," cried the King, "go warn Fife up and
-down and the three Lothians, and harness my own horse, for I will myself
-to Ettrick Forest."
-
-When the Outlaw heard that the King was coming to his country to conquer
-him and his lands:
-
-"I make a vow," said he. "I make a vow, and that truly, that the King's
-coming shall be a dear one."
-
-Then he called messengers and sent them in haste hither and thither.
-
-"One of you go to Halliday, Laird of Corehead, my sister's son. Tell
-him to come quickly to my aid, for that the King comes to Ettrick
-Forest, and we shall all be landless."
-
-"What news? What news, man, from thy master?" said Halliday.
-
-"No news thou carest to hear; I come seeking your aid; the King is his
-mortal enemy."
-
-"By my troth, I am sorry for that; if Murray lose fair Ettrick Forest,
-the King will take Moffatdale from me. I'll meet him with five hundred
-men, and more if need be, and before he gets to Ettrick Forest, we will
-all die on Newark Lee."
-
-Another messenger went from the Outlaw to Andrew Murray of Cockpool, his
-dear cousin, to desire him to come and help him with all the power he
-could get together.
-
-"It is hard," said Andrew Murray, "very hard to go against a crowned
-King and put my lands in jeopardy; but if I come not by day I shall be
-there at night."
-
-A messenger went also to Sir James Murray of Traquair.
-
-"What news? What news, man, from your master to me?" said James Murray.
-
-"What need I tell? Well ye know that the King is his mortal enemy and
-that he is coming to Ettrick Forest to make ye all landless men."
-
-"By my troth," said James Murray, "with yonder Outlaw will I live and
-die; the King has long ago given away my lands, so matters can be no
-worse for me."
-
-So the King came on with five thousand men through Caddon Ford. They
-saw the dark forest before them and thought it awesome to look upon, and
-Lord Hamilton begged that the King should take counsel of his nobles and
-should desire the Outlaw to meet him at Permanscore with four of his
-company and that the King should go there also accompanied by five
-Earls. "If he refuse to do that, we'll conquer both him and his lands;
-there shall never a Murray after him hold lands free in Ettrick Forest."
-
-The Laird of Buckscleuth, a man stalwart and stern, thought it beneath
-the state and dignity of a King to go and meet an Outlaw. "The man that
-lives in yonder forest, lives by robbery and felony! wherefore, ride on,
-my liege; we will follow thee with fire and sword; or if your courtier
-lords fall back, our Borderers will make the onset."
-
-But the King spoke forth, casting a wily glance around. "Thou mayest
-hold _thy_ tongue, Sir Walter Scott, nor speak more of robbery and
-felony, for if every honest man had his own cattle thy clan would be a
-poor one."
-
-The King then called to him a gentleman, a royal banner-bearer, James
-Hoppringle of Torsonse by name, who came and knelt before him.
-"Welcome, James Pringle of Torsonse, ye must take a message for me; go
-to yonder Outlaw Murray, where he bideth so boldly; bid him meet me at
-Permanscore with four of his company, I myself will come to him with
-five Earls. If he refuse, bid him look for no favour from me. There
-shall never a Murray after him have free land in Ettrick Forest."
-
-So James Pringle came before the Outlaw. "Welcome James Pringle of
-Torsonse! What message bringst thou from the King to me?"
-
-"He bids ye meet him at Permanscore, with four of your company, and he
-will go there himself with no more than five Earls. If you refuse, he
-will cast down your bonny castle, make a widow of your gay lady, and
-loose on you the bloodhound Borderers to harry you with fire and sword.
-Never shall a Murray after you hold free land in Ettrick Forest."
-
-"It goes hard with me," said the Outlaw; "judge if it go not very hard.
-I mind not the losing of myself, but when I think of my offspring after
-me, my merry men's lives, my widow's tears, that is the pang that
-pinches me. Yonder castle will be right dreary when I am laid in bloody
-earth. Auld Halliday, young Halliday, ye two shall go with me, with
-Andrew and James Murray."
-
-When they came before the King they fell on their knees. "Mercy, mercy,
-noble King, for His sake who died on the Cross."
-
-"Such mercy shall ye have; ye shall be hanged on the gallows."
-
-"May God forbid, and may your mercy be better than that, else, when ye
-come to the port of Edinburgh, ye shall be thinly guarded. These lands
-of fair Ettrick Forest I won from the Southrons, and as I won them so
-will I keep them, against all the Kings in Christendom."
-
-The nobles round the King thought it a pity that he should die.
-
-"Grant me mercy, sovereign prince, and extend me favour. If thou wilt
-make me Sheriff of Ettrick Forest, and my offspring after me, I will
-give thee the keys of my castle, and the blessing of my gay lady."
-
-"If thou wilt give me thy castle keys and the blessing of thy gay lady,
-I'll make thee Sheriff of Ettrick Forest as long as the trees grow
-upward, and never shalt thou forfeit it, if thou be not a traitor to the
-King."
-
-"But Prince, what shall become of my men? When I go back they will call
-me traitor. I had rather lose both life and land than be rebuked by my
-merry-men."
-
-"I will pardon them all if they amend their lives. Name thy lands where
-they lie, and I will render them back to thee."
-
-"Philiphaugh and Lewinhope are mine by right, Newark, Foulshiells and
-Tinnies I won by my bow and arrow. I have farms at Newark Lee and
-Hangingshaw which are mine by birth, and I have many farms in the Forest
-whose names I do not know." Thereupon he gave the King the key of his
-castle, with the blessing of his fair lady, and the King made him
-Sheriff of Ettrick Forest for as long as the trees should grow upward,
-never to be forfeited while he and his descendants remained faithful to
-the King. Much of this land belongs to Murray's heirs, even to this
-day.
-
- "Wha ever heard in, in ony times,
- Sicken an outlaw in his degre,
- Sic favour got befor a King,
- As did the Outlaw Murray of the Foreste free?"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXIII*
-
- *Johnie Armstrong*
-
-
- "When Johnie came before the King,
- With all his men so brave to see,
- The King he moved his bonnet to him;
- He knew he was a King as well as he."
-
-
-In 1529 James V. visited the Border country to execute justice on the
-wild freebooters. Of these the chief was Johnie Armstrong of Gilnockie,
-who levied blackmail for many miles round his residence at the Hollows,
-and spread the terror of his name as far as Newcastle. Acting on the
-evil counsel of false friends, Johnie presented himself before the King
-in all the pomp of Border chivalry.
-
-According to the old ballad the King wrote with his own hand a loving
-letter to Johnie Armstrong, Laird of Gilnockie, bidding him come and
-speak with him speedily. Whereupon the Elliots and Armstrongs convened a
-meeting, to which they came in gallant company, and decided to ride out
-to meet the King and bring him to Gilnockie.
-
-"Make ready rabbits and capon and venison in plenty," said Johnie, "and
-we'll welcome home our royal King to dine at Gilnockie."
-
-So they ran out their horses on Langholm Down, and broke their spears,
-and the ladies, looking from their high windows, cried "God send our men
-safe home again."
-
-When Johnie came before the King with all his brave fellows, the King
-took off his bonnet to him as to an equal.
-
-"My name is Johnie Armstrong," said the freebooter, "your subject, my
-liege; let me find grace for my loyal men and me."
-
-But the King cried, "Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight!
-Never have I granted a traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a bonnie
-gift--four-and-twenty milk-white steeds, newly foaled--I'll give thee
-four-and-twenty milk-white steeds that prance and neigh at a spear, and
-as much English gold as four of their broad backs are able to bear."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a bonnie
-gift--four-and-twenty mills that are working all the year round for
-me--four-and-twenty mills that shall go for thee all the year round, and
-as much good red wheat as all their happers are able to bear."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a great
-gift--four-and-twenty sisters' sons shall fight for thee though all
-should flee."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Grant me my life, my King, and I will give thee a brave gift. All
-between here and Newcastle town shall pay thee yearly rent."
-
-"Away with thee, thou traitor, out of my sight! Never have I granted a
-traitor's life, nor will I now begin with thee!"
-
-"Ye lie, calling me traitor; ye lie now, King, although ye be King and
-Prince. Well dare I say it, that all my life I have loved naught but
-honesty, a fleet horse, a fair woman, and two bonny dogs to kill a deer;
-yet had I lived for another hundred years, England should have still
-found me meal and malt and plenty of beef and mutton. Never would a
-Scot's wife have been able to say that I robbed her of aught. But
-surely it is great folly to seek for hot water beneath cold ice. I have
-asked grace of a graceless King, but there is none for me and my men.
-But had I known before I came how unkind thou wouldst prove to me, I
-would have kept the Borderside in spite of thee and thy nobles. How
-glad would be England's King if he but knew that I was taken, for once I
-slew his sister's son and broke a tree over his breastbone."
-
-Now Johnie had a girdle round his waist embroidered and spangled with
-burning gold, very beautiful to look upon, and from his hat hung down
-nine tassels, each worth three hundred pounds. "What wants that knave
-that a King should have, but the sword of honour and the crown?" cried
-the King.
-
-"Where did ye get those tassels, Johnie, that shine so bravely above
-your brow?"
-
-"I got them fighting in the field where thou darest not be," replied
-Johnie. "And had I now my horse and good harness, and were I riding as
-I am used to do, this meeting between us should have been told these
-hundred years. God be with thee, my brother Christy, long shalt thou
-live Laird of Mangertown on the Border-side ere thou see thy brother
-ride by again. God be with _thee_, my son Christy, where thou sitst on
-thy nurse's knee; thou'lt ne'er be a better man than thy father, though
-thou live a hundred years. Farewell, bonnie Hall of Gilnockie, standing
-strong on Eskside; if I had lived but seven more years, I would have
-gilded thee round about."
-
-Then Johnie Armstrong was slain by the King's orders at Carlinrigg with
-all his gallant company, and Scotland's heart was sad to see the death
-of so many brave men, who had saved their country from the Englishmen.
-None were so brave as they, and while Johnie lived on the Border-side no
-Englishman durst come near his stronghold.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXIV*
-
- *The Lament of the Border Widow*
-
-
-How King James V. of Scotland, in 1529, set forth to strike terror into
-the Border freebooters, has been already told in the account of Johnie
-Armstrong. A less celebrated moss-trooper, Cockburne of Henderland, was
-hanged by the pitiless King over the gate of his own tower. The wife of
-Cockburne loved him most dearly, and when she found the King would show
-no mercy, fled away to the rocks behind the castle whilst the cruel
-sentence was carried out. She sat by a roaring torrent of the
-Henderland burn, the noise of which in her ears drowned the savage
-shouts of the King's soldiers. The beautiful song which describes the
-grief of this loving woman is one of the gems of ancient poetry, and is
-here printed entire.
-
-
- *THE LAMENT OF THE BORDER WIDOW*
-
- My love he built me a bonny bower,
- And clad it a' wi' lilye flower,
- A brawer bower ye ne'er did see,
- Than my true love he built for me.
-
- There came a man by middle day,
- He spied his sport, and went away;
- And brought the King that very night,
- Who brake my bower, and slew my knight.
-
- He slew my knight to me sae dear;
- He slew my knight, and took his gear;
- My servants all for life did flee,
- And left me in extremitie.
-
- I sew'd his sheet, making my moan;
- I watch'd the corpse, myself alone;
- I watch'd his body, night and day;
- No living creature came that way.
-
- I took his body on my back,
- And whiles I gaed, and whiles I sat;
- I digg'd a grave, and laid him in,
- And happ'd him with the sod sae green.
-
- But think na ye my heart was sair,
- When I laid the moul' on his yellow hair;
- O think na ye my heart was wae,
- When I turn'd about, away to gae?
-
- Nae living man I'll love again,
- Since that my lovely knight was slain,
- Wi' ae lock of his yellow hair,
- I'll chain my heart for evermair.
-
-[Illustration: "_I sew'd his sheet, making my moan; I watch'd the
-corpse, myself alone._"]
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXV*
-
- *The Raid of the Kers*
-
-
-The spirited ballad that describes this raid is quite modern, since it
-was written by Hogg, "the Ettrick Shepherd," in 1830. But the rash raid
-it describes took place in 1549. The Kers were an important Border
-family, the leaders of whom afterwards became Earls of Roxburgh. Sir
-Andrew Ker was warden of the Border at the time of the raid, but he
-proved that it took place without his consent. The Kers were all
-left-handed men, and puzzled their enemies by their left-handed
-swordsmanship. Even to-day in some parts of the borders a left-handed
-man is called "Ker-handed."
-
-On a fine September evening Tam Ker rode out, with fifty in his company.
-They were armed for a fight and their swords were keen; they rode by the
-Maiden Crags and down the Osway burn, going carefully till the daylight
-closed, for they were soon in Northumberland. Their bold plan was to get
-down the valley of the Coquet even as far as Rothbury where Withrington,
-the English warden, kept a magnificent herd of cattle. They had one
-castle to pass, that of Biddleston, which had been held by the Selby
-family since the reign of Henry III., and still belongs to them to this
-day. Biddleston Castle guarded the Allanton or Alwinton ford, where the
-Alwin stream enters the Coquet. So they sent the reckless Mark Ker
-first, to scout along by the ford, and told him to set up marks on the
-cairns to show his progress. Having nothing else to mark with, he tore
-the shirt off his back, and left strips of it on the cairns. At the
-ford a sentry challenged him, and he answered that he had a message for
-Withrington. The sentry demanded his sealed warrant, and the Scot drew
-his sword. They fought bravely and long before the Englishman was
-killed, and the Scot marvelled that a common soldier should so withstand
-him, for he was the best swordsman of his race. On he galloped, on and
-on, till he met a comely maiden, and addressing her he tried to imitate
-the Northumberland speech, saying that he had lost his way. She told
-him at once that she knew he was a Scot, but so also was she. She had
-been taken captive, but word had came by an English spy that the Kers
-were out upon a raid, and while the English had set a hundred soldiers
-to guard their cattle she had slipped away to warn the Scots and to
-return with them. Being a gallant after the manner of that day, he
-sprang from his horse, kissed her, and invited her to mount his saddle
-even if he had to run beside till he could capture another steed. But
-an English soldier came up and warned him roughly off the road. Mark
-Ker had been brought up to answer rough words with rougher blows; out
-leapt his sword, and he cut the rude words short by slashing the man's
-head off. Then he disguised the maid in the dead man's clothes, and they
-retraced their steps that he might warn his companions. They very soon
-came upon them, and all together hid in the lowest dell of the Larbottle
-burn while they made their plans. Tam Ker, with twenty of the men, was
-to draw off the English, while Mark with thirty others slipped round and
-drove off the cattle unperceived. This was done, and till after
-midnight, Tam, aided by the darkness and by the difficulties of the wild
-locality, held the English at bay.
-
-Then he heard the bugle signal, and knew that Mark was well on the road
-with the beasts, and that he must follow quickly. But Withrington also
-guessed what the signal meant, and pursued with all the speed he knew.
-Mark had not long crossed the ford at Biddleston before the English were
-on him. First Mark and Withrington fought in single combat, hand to
-hand, all their men watching eagerly; it was still very dark, but the
-clash of sword against sword lit the air with sparks. Withrington was
-badly wounded, but Mark was killed. With desperate shouts the Scots fell
-upon the English; then up came Tam and his men from behind to help the
-Scots, but the Captain of Biddleston had also been awakened, and
-galloped down with his men to aid the English. Tam smote his head off
-with his sword, but the horse galloped on with his headless body right
-into the ranks of the Scots. They thought it must be a demon and began
-to scatter in full flight to the Border. Tam was slain, trying to
-follow them, and his men, seeing that they had work enough to gallop for
-their lives, slew the cattle they could no longer hope to steal. On and
-on the hard-pressed remnant spurred their weary horses. It was daylight
-now, and the English along the road shot arrows at them as they galloped
-past. Out of fifty-one hardy, healthy Kers who had started forth in the
-raid, only seventeen, weary and wounded, saw their homes again.
-
-And back in the south country, the comely Scottish maiden lay dead
-across the breast of the gallant Mark, their hearts' blood mingling in a
-common stream. Small wonder that a Scot should make a ballad of the
-story and that Borderers should sing it even to this day.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXVI*
-
- *Merrie Carlisle*
-
-
-The city of Carlisle stands in the midst of a beautiful and fertile
-district with pleasant but not too steep hills around. In the old days
-an easy water-supply was a first essential, and at Carlisle three rivers
-meet, the Caldew and the Petterill running here into the broad stream of
-the Eden. These three rivers almost enclose the ground upon which the
-city is built, so that it is most probable that there was an ancient
-British settlement upon so advantageous a site, before the Roman
-invasion. Our earliest record, however, goes back no further than Roman
-days, and it is certain there was then a Roman city here called
-_Luguvallium_ (the trench of the legion). Even to-day, when new
-gas-pipes are being laid in the ground, it is by no means rare to dig up
-Roman relics. The long Roman name became gradually corrupted into
-"Luel," or "Liel," and the Britons added their word "Caer," which means
-a city, hence "Caer-luel"--an earlier form of the modern Carlisle. The
-Roman city stood, as might be expected, by the great Roman wall,
-guarding the spot where the wall crossed the river Eden. And visitors
-may see to-day that the centre of Carlisle consists of a market-place
-with two main streets leading therefrom, the usual plan in cities of
-Roman origin.
-
-Carlisle was destined to have a stormy history. Draw a line from the
-Solway eastward, straight through Carlisle, and it will be seen that
-here the mainland of Britain is about at its narrowest, hardly so much
-as seventy miles wide, as the crow flies. Note, too, that the wild
-hills of the Pennines and the Cheviots fill in most of this narrow
-district, and that the mainland of Scotland strikes sharply off to the
-west. It is plain from these facts that Carlisle commands the main road
-between Scotland and England, and they provide the reason why at the
-present day seven different railways, most of them important ones, run
-their trains into Carlisle station. The very same reason was responsible
-for the fact that in the good old times no English town was more often
-burnt down by enemies than "Merrie Carlisle."
-
-Even in Roman days, during the reign of Nero, Carlisle was burnt down at
-least once by the wild Picts, who were brave enough to venture against
-the well-armed troops of Rome. After the Romans left Britain this town
-was one of the strongholds of King Arthur; to be sure, nothing very
-definite is known about this romantic king, but the old ballads tell us
-that he was victorious over Gauls, Dacians, Spaniards, and Romans. This
-sounds very unlikely to those who do not realise that when Rome called
-home her best men for her own defence she may have left behind many
-rough soldiers, of various nations, to guard the wall. Although we know
-nothing about King Arthur save what is vague and legendary, we do know
-that the Roman legions were recruited from all the provinces of the
-empire. Cumberland had many connexions with King Arthur; within twenty
-miles of Carlisle, near Penrith, is a big round hill called "King
-Arthur's Table"; while nearer still, on the Penrith and Carlisle road,
-is shown the spot where stood Tearne-Wadling Lake and Castle, where King
-Arthur was bewitched and taken prisoner by the "foul, discourteous
-knight," only to be released provided one of his men would consent to
-marry the hideous lady with hair like serpents! When at last Sir
-Gawaine married this hag for his King's sake, she, of course, changed at
-once into a beautiful young woman! This does not sound very convincing,
-it is true, but in the old days many tales just as unlikely were told of
-famous men. At any rate the ballad begins with the lilting line:--
-
- "King Arthur lives in merrie Carleile,"
-
-and all that concerns us at the moment is that perhaps he really did
-live there, and did do some very real fighting along the debateable line
-of the wall.
-
-We next learn of Carlisle that King Egfrid of Northumbria rebuilt the
-city about the year 675, wherefore we can only suppose that it had
-suffered its somewhat usual fate, perhaps at the hands of that savage
-Saxon warrior called The Burner. But in any case, Carlisle never
-belonged to the Northumbrians for any considerable space of time, but
-was the capital of the Celtic or Welsh kingdom of Cumbria, from which
-the present name of Cumberland is derived.
-
-In 875 the Danes had a turn at pillaging and harrying Carlisle, which
-was again in sorry plight. Both Cumbria and Northumbria were faring
-very badly in the struggle between the various kingdoms which then
-divided up Britain, and for a while it looked as if the energetic kings
-of the Scots would annex both these northern dominions. But the coming
-of the strong-handed Normans altered all this; and by far the most
-noteworthy event in the history of Carlisle was the fact that during
-1092 and 1093 William Rufus seized Cumberland, and for the first time
-added it definitely to England.
-
-Recognising at once the strength and value of Carlisle, Rufus caused a
-strong Norman castle to be built where the old Roman fort used to stand.
-To-day, despite the many rough adventures which have befallen this
-northern city, there yet remain portions of William Rufus's castle, side
-by side with fragments of the old Roman walls. Many of the modern
-buildings put up in King George's day are crumbling, but the old Norman
-and Roman remains are firm as a rock!
-
-The castle was strengthened by King Henry I., but this did not prevent
-its seizure in 1135 by King David of Scotland, who added to it in turn.
-The Scots held the keep till 1157, when it was retaken by Henry II., but
-a few years later, in 1173, William the Lion, King of Scotland, besieged
-it, and for the next fifty years it changed hands several times,
-according to the fortunes of war. It is significant that a main street
-in the northern part of Carlisle is called "Scotch Street," while
-another in the southern part is called "English Street!"
-
-Edward I. held a parliament here after defeating Wallace at Falkirk; and
-it was from Carlisle that this English King conducted his later
-operations against Scotland. It is a pathetic picture, that of this
-stern warrior in his old age, on his last march, trying to carry out his
-pet scheme of uniting the entire island under one rule. He was so ill
-that he had to be carried in a litter as far as Carlisle. Finding
-himself again so near the border, he felt the old fire glow within him,
-and sprang upon his horse--but at Burgh-on-Sands, on the shore of the
-Solway, whence he could view the goal of his ambition, the brave King
-died.
-
-During the next thirty years Carlisle was frequently attacked by the
-Scots, but they were usually defeated. In 1337, however, they partly,
-and in 1345 almost entirely burnt it down. Again in 1380 they burnt
-part of what had been rebuilt! Had there been fire insurance in these
-wild days, the premiums in Carlisle would have been heavy!
-
-After the Wars of the Roses, the city seemed to settle down somewhat,
-and was chiefly known on the Border as the place where Scottish
-freebooters were hanged if caught. In one of the Border villages there
-is a famous churchyard where of old only the graves of women and
-children were to be seen. The explanation was given to a passing
-traveller by an old woman, who said that the men were all buried "in
-merrie Carlisle," meaning, that is, that they had all been hanged there!
-
-In 1537 there was a rising in England known as the "Pilgrimage of
-Grace," in opposition to the savage policy of Henry's minister, Thomas
-Cromwell, and no less than eighty thousand insurgents are said to have
-attacked Carlisle; but after much fighting the rebels were defeated and
-seventy-four of their leaders were executed on the city walls.
-
-When Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned in Carlisle in 1568 it was
-vainly besieged by a force that sought to rescue her; but less than
-thirty years afterwards, in 1596, by a bold stroke of daring, Lord Scott
-of Buccleuch succeeded in surprising the castle and in liberating the
-well-known freebooter, "Kinmont Willie."
-
-When King James united England and Scotland, the troubles of Carlisle
-might have been thought to be over. But in the civil war between King
-and Parliament it was again a storm centre, and was held alternately by
-each of the parties.
-
-The last warlike operations against this much-besieged city were
-undertaken in 1745, when it was first taken by Prince Charlie, who made
-a triumphal entry without any serious fighting, and afterwards retaken
-almost as easily by the cruel Duke of Cumberland, whose entry into the
-place was followed, as usual, by a series of executions.
-
-Among those who suffered was Sir A. Primrose, a gallant ancestor of the
-present Lord Rosebery. The victims were executed, with the cruelties of
-the old law against treason, on the celebrated Gallows Hill, at Harraby,
-and were buried in nameless graves in the Kirkyard of St Cuthbert's.
-Passing down the Botchergate (the London Road), past the site of the old
-Roman cemetery, the wayfarer may see Gallows Hill rise where a deep cut
-has been made to avoid a steep rise in the road. It was just outside the
-boundary of old Carlisle, and executions were witnessed from the walls,
-by men and women alike. Climb the hill--it is worth while. The little
-river Petteril sparkles at our feet; the view, fresh and green,
-stretches away nobly to the Pennines and the Border Hills. Keep a warm
-thought in your heart for all the gallant fellows who met death bravely
-in this place.
-
-No history of Carlisle could omit to mention the Cathedral. English
-cathedrals are shaped like a cross lying on the ground; the long stem of
-the cross is the _nave_ of the cathedral; the two arms are the
-_transepts_; and the upper end that continues the main stem is the
-_choir_. Where choir, nave and transepts meet, the _tower_ rises. But
-unlike every other English cathedral, that of Carlisle has height and
-width, but is too short in length, two-thirds of the nave having been
-hurled down by the Scots!
-
-Every cathedral has its history written in its stones, for those who
-know how to read it. That of Carlisle shows a stormy history, stormier
-than any other. It is not a peaceful building carried out very much in
-one style and undisturbed. It is a building full of signs of
-disturbance, the builders of which were interrupted in their plans by
-war and frequently had their building seriously damaged by their
-enemies. It is a mixture of styles, a mass of re-buildings and
-afterthoughts, but for that very reason it is a fitting symbol of the
-much-harassed city. With all its signs of storm and stress it has much
-beauty, and possesses the finest window in all England, one of the
-finest in the world. Just outside the Cathedral is a noble stretch of
-the old West Wall of the city, which gives a vivid idea of its strength
-in the old days.
-
-The bishops of Carlisle live at Rose Castle, five miles south of the
-Cathedral. This has been their residence for over six hundred years.
-No doubt they thought it advisable not to live in the "merrie city"!
-
-In this castle King Edward I. stayed. It was once partly burnt by
-Bruce, and again partly by the Puritans, but this is a comparatively
-clean record for such a district! In 1745 Captain Macdonald and his
-Scots came down to besiege it, but hearing that the bishop's baby
-daughter was about to be christened, the gallant captain would not let
-warfare spoil so peaceful a ceremony, and not only withdrew his men, but
-also left a white cockade behind him as a sign that the place was not to
-be molested. In all this he showed that true courtesy that always marks
-the real Highland gentleman.
-
-Standing to-day in this bustling, breezy, pleasant little city, it is
-not easy to realise the wild scenes it has witnessed. The charming
-rivers that hem it in show no traces of the bloodshed of the past. Yet
-here have contended painted Pict and war-trained Roman; here the most
-skilful leaders of the Celts, Saxons, and Danes have led their brave and
-sturdy men to battle; here Norman knight has fought with hardy Scot, and
-fierce Border factions have wrangled and sought speedy justice; Puritan
-has fought Cavalier, and Jacobite has faced Hanoverian; kings, generals,
-and warriors of many centuries have found a fitting meeting-place before
-or behind the walls of Carlisle.
-
-An open, airy, quaint city. There is not very much that is old in it,
-for the old was not allowed to stand long enough! But on the top of its
-principal hill the tall truncated Cathedral presents a picturesque
-figure, and if we stand there or by the castle the eye commands fine,
-ancient walls and very delightful distances. It is a place of lingering
-memories, and if these are chiefly of strife and bloodshed we do not
-forget that to the Border folk the city was "Merrie Carlisle."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXVII*
-
- *Kinmont Willie*
-
-
- "O have ye not heard of the false Sakelde,
- O have ye not heard of the keen Lord Scroope,
- How they have taken bold Kinmont Willie
- On Haribee to hang him oop?"
-
-
-The story of this famous freebooter, William Armstrong of Kinmonth,
-belongs to the time of Queen Elizabeth, when Lord Scroope was Warden of
-the Western Marches, and Mr Sakelde of Corby Castle was his Deputy.
-
-Kinmont Willie was a descendant of the famous Johnie Armstrong of
-Gilnockie, and his capture was a violation of the existing truce between
-Scroope and Buccleuch, the Keeper of Liddesdale. Elizabeth was
-indignant at Buccleuch's action in rescuing Willie, and as the Scots at
-that time were very anxious not to offend her, Buccleuch was sent to
-England and came before the Queen, who asked him how he dared to
-undertake such an adventure. "What is it," answered he, "that a man
-dare not do?"
-
-"With ten thousand such men," said Elizabeth, turning to a
-lord-in-waiting, "our brother of Scotland might shake the firmest throne
-of Europe."
-
-The ballad tells of the capture of Kinmont Willie, and how the false
-Sakelde and his men treacherously seized him.
-
-They bound his legs beneath his horse, and tied his hands behind his
-back, and with five men on each side to guard him, brought him over
-Liddel ford and through Carlisle sands to Carlisle castle.
-
-When he arrived there, Willie addressed his captor in these words:
-
-"My hands are tied, but my tongue is free. Who will avow this deed or
-answer for it to bold Buccleuch?"
-
-"Hold thy tongue, thou rank robber! Never a Scot shall set thee free.
-Ye shall take farewell of me before ye cross my castle gate," said
-Scroope.
-
-"Fear ye not that, my lord," answers Willie, "for by the faith of my
-body, never did I yet lodge in a hostelry but that I paid my reckoning
-before I went."
-
-Word was sent to Branksome Hall to the Keeper of Liddesdale that Lord
-Scroope had captured Kinmont Willie, whereupon the Keeper smote the
-table with his hand till the red wine sprang on high, "A curse on my
-head," he cried, "if I be not avenged of Lord Scroope. Is my helmet a
-widow's cap, or my lance a twig from a willow-tree, or my fist a lady's
-lily hand, that an English lord should appraise me so lightly? Have
-they taken Kinmont Willie in spite of the truce, and forgotten that the
-bold Buccleuch is Keeper on the Scottish side? Have they taken Kinmont
-Willie so fearlessly, and forgotten that the bold Buccleuch can back a
-steed and wield a weapon? Were there but war between the lands, then
-would I slight Carlisle Castle though it were built of marble; I would
-set it on fire and drench it with English blood. But since there is
-peace and not war, I'll set the Kinmont free yet never harm English lad
-or lass!"
-
-So Buccleuch called forty bold Marchmen, all of his own name and kin
-except one, Sir Gilbert Elliot, Laird of Stobs. They came spur on heel
-and armour on shoulder, with gloves of green and feathers of blue. Five
-and five came first with hunting-horns and bugles; five and five more
-came with Buccleuch like Warden's men arrayed for battle; five and five
-came like a gang of masons, carrying long high ladders; and five and
-five came like broken men, and so they reached Woodhouselee.
-
-When they had crossed to the English side, the first man they met was
-the false Sakelde.
-
-"Where are ye going, ye keen hunters?" quoth Sakelde.
-
-"We go to hunt an English stag that has trespassed on Scottish ground."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye martial men?"
-
-"We go to catch a rank robber that has broken faith with the bold
-Buccleuch."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye mason lads, with all these long high ladders?"
-
-"We go to harry a corbie's nest not far from here."
-
-"Where are ye going, ye broken men?" said false Sakelde.
-
-But Dickie of Dryhope, leader of the broken men, had never a word of
-learning, and answered nothing.
-
-"Why trespass ye on the English side? Stand! ye raw-footed outlaws!"
-
-Never a word yet said Dickie, but for answer ran his lance clean through
-the body of the false Sakelde.
-
-On then they went to Carlisle town, crossing the Eden at Staneshaw-bank,
-nor lost they either horse or man, though the water was high in flood.
-
-When they reached Staneshaw-bank the wind was rising, and the Laird
-ordered them to leave there their horses for fear they should stamp and
-neigh. The wind blew loudly enough then, but when they came beneath the
-castle wall there was wind and rain and flying sleet. On they crept on
-their knees and held their breath till they placed the ladders against
-the wall. Buccleuch himself mounted first, took the watchman by the
-throat and flung him down upon the leads. "Thou hadst gone on the other
-side," said he, "had there not been peace between our lands."
-
-[Illustration: _The Escape of Kinmont Willie_]
-
-"Sound out the trumpets!" quoth he; "let's wake up Lord Scroope!" Then
-loud blew the Warden's trumpet to the tune of "O wha dare meddle wi'
-me?"
-
-To work they went speedily, and cut a hole through the lead, gaining
-thus the castle hall.
-
-Those inside thought the castle had been taken by King James and all his
-men, yet it was only twenty Scots and ten that had put a thousand in
-such a stir. They hammered and banged at the bars until they came to
-the inner prison, where lay Kinmont Willie.
-
-"Do ye sleep or wake, Kinmont Willie, on the morn when ye shall die?"
-
-"O I sleep lightly and wake often; it's long since sleep was frightened
-from me. Give my service to my wife and bairns and all good fellows
-that enquire after me."
-
-Red Rowan, the strongest man in Teviotdale, lifted him up. "Stay now,
-Red Rowan, till I take farewell of Lord Scroope. Farewell, farewell, my
-good Lord Scroope," he cried. "I will pay ye for my lodging when first
-we meet on the Border."
-
-With shout and cry Red Rowan bore him on his shoulders down the long
-ladder, the irons clanking at every stride.
-
-"Many a time," said Kinmont Willie, "have I ridden a horse both wild and
-unruly, but never have my legs bestrode a rougher beast than Red Rowan.
-Many a time have I pricked a horse over the furrows, but never since I
-backed a steed have I worn such cumbrous spurs."
-
-Scarcely had they won the Staneshaw-bank when all the bells in Carlisle
-were ringing and Lord Scroope was after them with a thousand men on
-horse and on foot. But--
-
- "Buccleuch has turn'd to Eden water
- Even where it flowed frae bank to brim,
- And he has plunged in wi' a' his band,
- And safely swam them through the stream.
-
- He turn'd him on the other side,
- And at Lord Scroope his glove flung he--
- 'If ye like na my visit to merry England,
- In fair Scotland come visit me!'
-
- All sore astonished stood Lord Scroope,
- He stood as still as rock of stane;
- He scarcely dared to trew[#] his eyes,
- When through the water they had gane.
-
-[#] Trust
-
- 'He is either himsell a devil frae hell,
- Or else his mother a witch maun be;
- I wadna have ridden that wan water,
- For a' the gowd[#] in Christentie.'"
-
-[#] Gold
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXVIII*
-
- *Dick o' the Cow*
-
-
- "Fair Johnie Armstrong to Willie did say
- 'Billie, a-riding we will gae.'"
-
-
-The ballad of this name, a popular one in Liddesdale, relates, like that
-of Kinmont Willie, to the time when Lord Scroope was Warden of the West
-Marches and Governor of Carlisle. Dick o' the Cow seems to have been his
-fool or jester. Dickie, some years after the events described in the
-ballad, fell a victim to the vengeance of the Armstrongs.
-
-
-There had been no raids from Liddesdale for a considerable time, and no
-riding, and the horses had all grown so fat that they dare scarcely stir
-out of the stall. Then fair Johnie Armstrong said to his brother Willie,
-"Brother, we will go a-riding. We have long been at feud with England,
-and perhaps we shall find some spoil."
-
-So they rode to Hulton Hall and round about it, but the laird, a wise
-man, had left neither goods nor cattle outside to steal, except six
-sheep in a meadow. Said Johnie, "I'd rather die in England than take
-those six sheep to Liddesdale."
-
-"But who was that man we last met as we came over the hill?"
-
-"Oh, he is an innocent fool, and men call him Dick o' the Cow."
-
-"That fool has three good cows of his own, as good as there are in
-Cumberland. Betide me life or death, they shall go to Liddesdale with
-me!"
-
-So they came to the house of the poor fool, broke down his thick wall,
-loosed his three cows, and took also three coverlets from his wife's
-bed.
-
-In the morning at daylight when the loss was discovered, there were loud
-lamentations. "Hold thy tongue, wife," said Dickie, "and stop thy
-crying. I'll bring thee back three cows for each one that thou hast
-lost."
-
-So Dickie went to Lord Scroope. "Hold thy tongue, fool," said Scroope.
-"I have no time for jesting."
-
-"A shame on your jesting, my lord!" said Dickie, "jesting agrees not
-with me. Liddesdale was in my house last night and has taken my three
-cows. I can no longer dwell in Cumberland as your poor faithful fool,
-unless you give me leave to steal in Liddesdale."
-
-"I give thee leave, fool!" said Scroope; "but thou speakest against me
-and my honour unless thou give me thy hand and pledge that thou wilt
-steal from none but those who stole from thee."
-
-"There is my right hand and pledge! May my head hang on Haribee, and
-may I never again cross Carlisle sands if I steal from any man who stole
-not from me.",
-
-Dickie joyfully took leave of his lord and master, and went and bought a
-bridle and a pair of new spurs which he packed up in the thigh of his
-breeches, then he came on as fast as he could to Pudding-burn house,
-where were thirty-three Armstrongs.
-
-"O what has come to me now?" said Dickie, "what great trouble is this?
-For here is but one innocent fool against thirty-three Armstrongs?" Yet
-he went courteously up to the Hall board.
-
-"Well may ye be, my good Laird's Jock, but the devil bless all your
-company. I'm come to complain of your man, Johnie Armstrong, and of his
-brother Willie, that they came to my house last night and took away my
-three cows."
-
-Quoth fair Johnie Armstrong, "We'll hang him."
-
-"Nay," said Willie, "we'll slay him."
-
-But up spoke another young Armstrong, "We'll give him a thrashing and
-let him go."
-
-Then up spoke the good Laird's Jock, the best fellow in all the company,
-"Sit down a while, Dickie, and we'll give thee a bit of thine own cow's
-thigh."
-
-Dickie's heart was so sore that he could not eat a bit, but he went and
-lay down in an old peat-house where he thought to sleep the night, and
-all the prayers the poor fool prayed were, "I wish I had amends for my
-three good cows."
-
-Now it was the custom of Pudding-burn house and of the house of
-Mangerton, whose laird was chief of the Armstrong clan, that any who
-came not to the table at the first summons got no more meat till the
-next meal, so some of the lads, hungry and weary, had thrown the key of
-the stable above the door-head. Dickie took good notice of that to turn
-it to his own account, went into the stable where stood thirty-three
-horses and tied thirty of them with St Mary's knot, tight to their
-stalls.
-
-Of the remaining three, Dickie took two, which belonged to Johnie and
-Willie Armstrong, and the one belonging to the Laird's Jock he left
-loose in the stable. Leaping on one, he took the other along with him,
-and rode off as fast as he could.
-
-When day came, there were great shouts and cries.
-
-"Who has done this," quoth the good Laird's Jock; "see that ye tell me
-the truth."
-
-"It is Dickie that has been in the stable last night, and has taken the
-horses."
-
-"Ye never would listen to me," said the good Laird's Jock, "though I
-told ye true tales. Ye would never stay out of England but would steal
-everything, till ye were crooked and blind."
-
-"Lend me thy bay," said fair Johnie; "he is the only horse loose in the
-stable, and I'll either fetch back Dick o' the Cow, or he shall die."
-
-"Lend thee my bay!" said Jock; "he is worth gold and good money. Dick
-o' the Cow has taken two horses; I would not ye make them three."
-
-Johnie, however, took the Laird's steel jacket on his back, and a
-two-handed sword by his side, and a steel cap on his head, and galloped
-after Dickie, who was barely three miles from the town when Johnie
-overtook him on Cannobie Lee, on the borders of Liddesdale.
-
-"Abide, abide, thou traitor thief!" cried Armstrong; "the day is come
-that thou shalt die!"
-
-Dickie looked over his left shoulder and said, "Johnie, hast thou no
-more in thy company? There is a preacher in our chapel who teaches all
-the livelong day, and when day is gone and night has come, there are
-only three words I remember--the first and second are Faith and
-Conscience--the third is 'Ne'er let a traitor free.' What faith and
-conscience was thine, Johnie, when thou tookest away my three cows? And
-when thou hadst taken them away, thou wast not satisfied. Thou sentest
-thy brother Willie, and took away three coverlets off my wife's bed!"
-
-Then Johnie let his spear fall low by his side, and thought he would
-have killed Dickie, but the powers above were stronger than he, and he
-only succeeded in running through the fool's jerkin. Dickie out with
-his sword and ran after him, and when he could not get at him with the
-blade, he felled him with the butt-end over the eye, felled Johnie
-Armstrong, the finest man in the south country. "Gramercy," said
-Dickie, "I had but two horses, thou hast made them three!"--and he took
-Johnie's steel jacket off his back and his two-handed sword, and his
-steel cap. "Farewell, Johnie," said he, "I'll tell my master I met
-thee."
-
-When Johnie wakened out of his swoon, he was a sad man. "Art thou gone,
-Dickie?" he said. "Then the shame and woe are left with me. Art thou
-gone? Then, Dickie, the devil go in thy company, for if I live to be a
-hundred, I'll never again fight with a fool."
-
-Dickie came home to the good Lord Scroope as fast as he could. "Now,
-Dickie, I'll neither eat nor drink till thou art hanged on high."
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord," said Dickie, "this was not the promise
-ye made me, for I would never have gone to Liddesdale to steal if I had
-not got leave from thee." "But why did ye steal the Laird's Jock's
-horse? Ye might have lived long in Cumberland before the Laird's Jock
-had stolen from thee."
-
-"Indeed, I knew ye lied, my lord. I won the horse from fair Johnie
-Armstrong hand to hand on Cannobie Lee. There is the jacket that was on
-his back, and the two-handed sword that hung by his side, and the steel
-cap that was on his head. I brought all these tokens to show thee."
-
-"If that be true that thou tellest me (and I think thou durst not lie)
-I'll give thee fifteen pounds for the horse, all told out in the lap of
-thy cloak; I'll give thee one of my best milk cows to maintain thy wife
-and three children, and they will be as good as any two of thine would
-be."
-
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord!" said Dickie. "Do ye think aye to make
-a fool of me? I'll either have twenty pounds for the horse or else I'll
-take him to Mortan fair."
-
-So Scroope gave him twenty pounds for the horse, all in gold and good
-money, and one of his best milk cows to maintain his wife and three
-children.
-
-Then Dickie rode as fast as he could through Carlisle town, and the
-first man he met was my lord's brother, Ralph Scroope, Bailiff of
-Glozenburrie.
-
-"Well be ye met, Ralph Scroope!" said Dickie.
-
-"Welcome, my brother's fool!" said Ralph. "Where did ye get Johnie
-Armstrong's horse?"
-
-"Where did I get him? I stole him," said Dickie.
-
-"Wilt thou sell me the bonny horse?"
-
-"Ay, if thou count out the money in the lap of my cloak, for never a
-penny will I trust thee."
-
-"I'll give thee ten pounds for the horse and count it into the lap of
-thy cloak, and one of my best milk cows to maintain thy wife and three
-children."
-
-"Shame speed the liars, my lord! Do ye think aye to make a fool of me?
-I'll either have twenty pounds for the horse, or I'll take him to Mortan
-fair."
-
-So Ralph gave him twenty pounds for the horse, all in gold and good
-money, and one of his milk cows to maintain his wife and three children.
-
-Then Dickie leaped and laughed, and cried, "May the neck of the third
-horse be broken if either of the two were better than he!"
-
-So he came home to his wife and ye may judge how the poor fool had
-succeeded. For her three stolen coverlets he gave her two score English
-pounds, and two cows as good as her own three. "And here," said he, "is
-a white-footed nag that I reckon will carry us both. But if I stay
-longer in Cumberland the Armstrongs will hang me." So Dickie took leave
-of his lord and went to live at Burgh under Stanmuir.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXIX*
-
- *The Lochmaben Harper*
-
-
-The castle of Lochmaben is said to have been the residence of Robert
-Bruce while Lord of Allandale. Hence, as a royal fortress, the keeping
-of it was always granted to some powerful lord. There is extant a grant
-giving to one of these, Robert Lauder, the office of Captain and Keeper
-of Lochmaben Castle for seven years, and among his perquisites were
-"lands stolen from the King"!
-
-The inhabitants of four small villages near the castle have each still
-to this day a right to a small piece of ground. These people are
-descendants of Robert Bruce's retainers, to whom he assigned these
-portions of land in reward for faithful service, and there are still to
-be found some families (_e.g._ the Richardsons of Lochmaben) who hold
-their lands direct from the times of Bruce without a break.
-
- "O heard ye na o' the silly blind Harper,
- How long he lived in Lochmaben town?
- And how he wad gang to fair England,
- To steal the Lord Warden's Wanton Brown?
-
- But first he gaed to his gude wyfe,
- Wi' a' the haste that he could thole[#]
- 'This wark,' quo' he, 'will ne'er gae well
- Without a mare that has a foal.'
-
-[#] Suffer.
-
-
-Quoth his wife, "Thou hast a good grey mare that can jump both high and
-low; so set thee on her back and leave the foal at home with me." Away
-went the Harper to England as fast as he might, and when he came to
-Carlisle gate, who should be there but the Warden himself?
-
- "'Come into my hall, thou silly blind Harper,
- And of thy harping let me hear!'
- 'O, by my sooth,' quo' the silly blind Harper,
- 'I wad rather hae stabling for my mare."
-
- The Warden looked o'er his left shoulder,
- And said unto his stable groom--
- 'Gae take the silly blind Harper's mare,
- And tie her beside my Wanton Brown.'"
-
-
-So the Harper harped and sang, the lordlings danced, and so sweet was
-the music that the groom forgot all about the stable door. Still the
-Harper harped on till all the nobles were fast asleep, when he quickly
-took off his shoes, crept softly down the stair, and hied with light
-tread to the stable door, which he opened and entered. He found there
-three-and-thirty steeds. He took a colt's halter which he had hidden in
-his hose, slipped it over Wanton Brown, tied it to the grey mare's tail,
-and turned them both loose at the castle gate.
-
-Away they went over moor and moss and dale, and the mare never let
-Wanton rest a moment, but kept him galloping home to her foal. So swift
-of foot was she, and knew her way so well, that she reached Lochmaben a
-good three hours before daybreak.
-
-When she came to the Harper's door, she neighed and snorted. "Rise up,"
-shouted the Harper's wife, "thou lazy lass, and let in thy master and
-his mare." The lass rose up, put on her clothes and looked through the
-lock-hole. "By my sooth," cried she, "our mare has got a fine brown
-foal!"
-
-"Hold thy tongue, thou foolish wench, the light is dazzling thine eyes.
-I'll wager all I have against a groat that it's bigger than ever our
-foal will be."
-
-Still in merry Carlisle the Harper harped to high and low, and nought
-could they do but listen to him until day-dawn. But when it was
-daylight they discovered that Wanton Brown was gone and also the poor
-blind Harper's mare.
-
-"Alas! alas!" cried the cunning old Harper, "alas that I came here; in
-Scotland I have lost a brown colt foal and in England they have stolen
-my good grey mare."
-
-"Cease thy lamenting, thou silly blind Harper, and go on harping; we'll
-pay thee well for the loss of thy colt foal and thou shalt have a far
-better mare." So the harper harped and sang, and so sweet were his
-harpings that he was paid for the foal he never had lost and three times
-over for the gray mare.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXX*
-
- *The Rookhope Ride*
-
-
-This Durham border song is supposed to be spoken by a Weardale man, who
-begins by denouncing the inhabitants of the Tyne valley, "and all their
-companies there about" as false thieves,
-
- "minded to do mischief
- And at their stealing stands not out."
-
-
-It must be confessed that the Tynedale men had an unenviable reputation.
-They were such lawless desperadoes, so addicted to rapine, that during
-more than two centuries the merchants of Newcastle regularly refused to
-take an apprentice born in that district. The date is December 1572.
-The rebel Earl of Northumberland, who had taken up arms for Mary Queen
-of Scots, and for the old religion, had been betrayed by the Scots and
-beheaded at York. Owing to this rebellion there was great confusion in
-the northern counties, hence the time was well chosen by the "limmer
-thieves" of Tynedale to make a predatory raid on their neighbours. They
-gathered together the stoutest men of arms and the best in gear, a
-hundred or more in number, and in the forenoon, about eleven o'clock,
-they came into a "bye-fell" and stopped for a meal--the last which some
-of them would eat. When they had eaten, they chose their captains,
-Harry Corbyl, Simon Fell, and Martin Ridley. Then they rode on over the
-moss, "with many a brank and whew," saying to one another that they were
-men enough,
-
- "For Weardale-men have a journey ta'en,
- They are so far out o'er yon fell,
- That some of them's with the two earls,
- And others fast in Bernard castell.
-
- There we shall get gear enough,
- For there is nane but women at hame;
- The sorrowful fend that they can make.
- Is loudly cries as they were slain."
-
-
-They came in at Rookhope Head, which is the top of a rocky valley, about
-five miles long, at the end of which Rookhope Burn empties itself into
-the river Wear. This valley is as wild and open to-day as it was then.
-In some four hours they gathered together about six hundred sheep and
-they were engaged in "shifting" the horses, when the hue and cry was
-raised by one Rowley, whose horse they tried to take. He was the first
-man to see them. The cry spread rapidly down Rookhope burn and through
-Weardale, and word came to the bailiff's house at the East-gate. He was
-out, but his wife had his horse saddled and sent it to him, together
-with his sword, spear, and jacket quilted with iron plates, the sort of
-harness worn by the moss-troopers and other light horsemen of the time.
-The bailiff had already heard the bad news, and was sorely troubled
-thereby. His own brother had been attacked three days before by
-marauders, and lay sick with nineteen wounds. Yet the bailiff shrank
-not at all, but hied fast after the sheep-stealers, with as many of the
-neighbours as he could gather to bear him company.
-
-The pursuers overtook the thieves in Nuketon Cleugh, and gave them all
-the fighting they wanted. Not one of them ever thought to see his wife
-again. They bore three banners against the Weardale men, "as if the
-world had been all their own." The fray lasted only an hour, but many a
-tall man lay weaponless and sore wounded before that hour was done, and
-four of the Northumbrian prickers were slain, including Harry Corbyl
-whom they had chosen to be their captain. Eleven of them were taken
-prisoners. Only one of the Weardale men fell but--
-
- "These Weardale-men, they have good hearts,
- They are as stiff as any tree;
- For, if they'd everyone been slain,
- Never a foot back man would flee.
-
- And such a storm amongst them fell,
- As I think you never heard the like;
- For he that bears his head on high,
- He oft-tymes falls into the dyke.
-
- And now I do entreat you all,
- As many as are present here,
- To pray for the singer of this song,
- For he sings to make blythe your cheer."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXI*
-
- *Barthram's Dirge*
-
-
-The story of how this ballad came to be preserved to us is a very
-interesting one. A Mr Surtees, who was very interested in the old
-ballads, used to give work to a poor old Scotswoman to weed in his
-garden. Finding that she had learnt ballads in her young days, he
-encouraged her to talk about them, and this was amongst those which she
-recited to him. She told him that it referred to a young man named
-Bertram or Barthrum, who made love to a young lady against the wish of
-her brothers. The cruel brothers slew him, but the lady had him buried
-at the very spot where he was wont to come to visit her in the days of
-their love. Sir Walter Scott thinks that perhaps Barthram was an
-Englishman and the lady was Scottish, and that the anger of the lady's
-brothers against him was partly on that account.
-
-It must be remembered that in those stormy days, when Border rivalry was
-keen, and all the Border chiefs, on both sides, were men of war-like
-mould, intermarriage between the two races was punishable by Border law.
-Each side felt equally that such mixed marriages would sooner or later
-produce a race that was neither loyal English nor loyal Scotch. A
-spirit of aloofness and rivalry was deliberately encouraged, right up to
-the time of the union of the two countries under one king.
-
-
- *BARTHRAM'S DIRGE*
-
- They shot him dead at the Nine-Stone Rig,
- Beside the Headless Cross,
- And they left him lying in his blood,
- Upon the moor and moss.
-
- * * * * *
-
- They made a bier of the broken bough,
- The sauch and the aspin gray,
- And they bore him to the Lady Chapel,
- And waked him there all day.
-
- A lady came to that lonely bower,
- And threw her robes aside,
- She tore her long yellow hair,
- And knelt at Barthram's side.
-
- She bathed him in the Lady-Well,
- His wounds so deep and sair,
- And she plaited a garland for his breast,
- And a garland for his hair.
-
- They rowed him in a lily-sheet,
- And bare him to his earth,
- And the Gray Friars sung the dead man's mass,
- As they pass'd the Chapel Garth.
-
- They buried him at the mirk midnight,
- When the dew fell cold and still,
- When the aspin gray forgot to play,
- And the mist clung to the hill.
-
- They dug his grave but a bare foot deep,
- By the edge of the Ninestone Burn,
- And they covered him o'er with the heather-flower,
- The moss and the Lady fern.
-
- A Gray Friar staid upon the grave,
- And sang till the morning tide,
- And a friar shall sing for Barthram's soul,
- While the Headless Cross shall bide.[#]
-
-[#] Mr Surtees observes, on this passage, that in the return made by the
-commissioners, on the dissolution of Newminster Abbey, there is an item
-of a Chauntery, for one priest to sing daily _ad crucem lapideam_.
-Probably many of these crosses had the like expiatory solemnities for
-persons slain there. They certainly did bury, in former days, near the
-Ninestone Burn, for Sir Walter Scott found there, lying among the
-heather, a small monumental cross, with initials, which he reverently
-placed upright.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXII*
-
- *Queen Mary and the Borders*
-
-
-The brief reign of Mary, Queen of Scots, was so crowded with incident
-that she was left with little time to visit the disturbed borderland of
-her kingdom. None-the-less her few visits to this district were fraught
-with important consequences. In 1565, when she married her cousin Lord
-Darnley, the head of the Douglas faction and a Roman Catholic, the
-Protestant nobles took up arms. In her very honeymoon she headed her
-soldiers, pursued the rebels to Dumfries, entered the town with a pistol
-in each hand, and laughed heartily at the fun of making her enemies
-"skip like rabbits" over the Border. She was only twenty-two years
-old--a fearless, dashing, attractive woman, with a clever head, a strong
-will, and a wild and lawless disposition.
-
-In the next year she again visited the Border, but on a very different
-errand. Mary had developed an extreme fancy for that bold Border Lord,
-the Earl of Bothwell, whose Castle of Hermitage commanded the
-picturesque and important valley of the Liddel. The Queen had given him
-authority to control the fierce Borderers; and when the earl was riding
-out he met the most lawless of them, Jock Elliot, of whom the couplet--
-
- "My name is little Jock Elliot
- And who dare meddle wi' me?"
-
-Bothwell fired straight at Elliot with his pistol, wounding him in the
-leg. Elliot aimed a mighty blow at Bothwell with his two-handed sword,
-giving the earl so sore a wound that he was glad enough to gallop home
-while there was yet time to save his life.
-
-Mary was holding solemn court at Jedburgh when she heard of her
-favourite's danger. She straightway took horse and rode to Hermitage, a
-hard cross-country ride of twenty miles, through a district infested
-with reckless men. When she galloped back to Jedburgh, she was in high
-fever and nearly died. Later on, in the misery of her long
-imprisonment, she often said, "Would I had died at Jedburgh!" Years
-later, a broken piece of a silver spur was found at Queensmire, on this
-difficult and dangerous road, just where Queen Mary's horse was said to
-have come to grief.
-
-Yet another time Queen Mary came to the Border, this time to cross
-it--after her imprisonment at Lochleven, her escape, and the disastrous
-rout of her followers at Langside. Daring and resourceful as ever, she
-fled across the Solway in an open boat; Scotland had failed her, she
-sought the protection of England. She landed at Cockermouth, and was
-led to Carlisle by Sir R. Lowther, and kept there, in reality a
-prisoner, while Elizabeth was musing of the dangers of the position. The
-Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland took up Mary's cause and
-attempted to rescue her, but the Warden of Carlisle, Lord Scroope,
-defended the town successfully against the two earls, and they were soon
-in flight, eastward for their very lives. After this attempt at rescue
-Mary was, for greater safety, sent down to Bolton Castle in Yorkshire.
-
-[Illustration: Queen Mary crossing the Solway]
-
-Leonard Dacre, a member of the powerful Cumberland family of the Dacres,
-seems to have played a treacherous part, first promising the earls his
-help, and then betraying them to Elizabeth. He seized Nawarth Castle,
-which properly belonged to his young niece, and collected together three
-thousand men to the old Border war-cry, "A Red Bull, a Red Bull!"
-(probably the nickname of some fierce red-haired Celtic champion). The
-defeated earls came to Nawarth for shelter, and Dacre refused to harbour
-them. But by this time Elizabeth was convinced of Dacre's treason, and
-ordered Lord Hudson, the Governor of Berwick, to arrest him.
-
-Hudson appears to have marched by rather a round-about way, for Dacre
-met him at Geltbridge, on the west of Nawarth. A bridge is always a
-good point of vantage for meeting an enemy, especially when the river
-runs, as the Gelt does, through a deep and wooded gorge. The enemy has
-only a narrow way by which to approach, and no doubt Dacre posted his
-archers behind the trees and among the great rocks. The fight was a
-desperate one, but Hudson's men prevailed and pursued their foes far up
-the hill of Gelt, scuffling fiercely among the forest trees and dyeing a
-deeper hue the red sandstone cliffs and quarries.
-
-All the rebels who could escape fled across the Border to Scotland,
-where the Borderers, who were till then their enemies, received them
-with that open and fair hospitality which was one of their many great
-qualities. Elizabeth demanded that the leading noblemen should be given
-up to her; but although the Scottish Regent, Murray, made a pretence of
-trying to secure the Earl of Westmoreland, the Scots had too much sense
-of honour to allow him to proceed.
-
-The Earl of Northumberland, was however betrayed to the Scottish Regent
-by Hector Armstrong of Harelaw; but this the gallant Borderers held to
-be shameful, and Armstrong was a ruined man from that day forth.
-
-Two years later, this Earl was actually sold to Elizabeth and beheaded
-at York. Thus ended this small rebellion, called in history the Rising
-of the North, but which is known locally in Cumberland as Dacre's Raid.
-
-There is a little stream which rushes down a deep and beautiful glade to
-join the river Gelt above Geltbridge; this stream is known as
-"Hellbeck," and villagers tell us that the reason for this name is that
-it was stained with blood for two whole days after some battle that took
-place there. This battle is probably the one spoken of here.
-
-A wicket gate by Geltbridge leads us to the path through Gelt woods.
-The noble gorge is deeply cleft through the grand red sandstone rocks.
-Below roars and dashes the impetuous river; the path winds, sometimes
-high, sometimes low, through wonderful weeds, carpeted with beautiful
-mosses, gemmed with delightful flowers. On one of the rocks is an
-inscription carved by a Roman soldier, over fifteen hundred years ago.
-Follow the river, up, up, till the little Hellbeck is seen trickling
-down from the east; cross the little bridge and follow the streamlet on
-its opposite bank, along a path so little trod as to be scarcely
-visible; wander among ferns along one of the loneliest glens in the
-whole of Britain, passing the great railway bridge (_under_ if the
-stream be low or _over_ if it be high) till you join the main road
-again. There is no spot more beautiful or more peaceful. Yet this is
-the Hellbeck where men fought and hacked, and slashed and slew, among
-these woods, up and down these steep hillsides. These old trees, when
-young, have felt warm blood at their roots; and all because of a young,
-wild wilful queen, who fascinated men's hearts then, and the memory of
-whom fascinates them still.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXIII*
-
- *The Raid of the Reidswire*
-
-
- "To deal with proud men is but pain,
- For either must ye fight or flee,
- Or else no answer make again,
- But play the beast, and let them be."
-
-
-Reidswire, the name of a place about ten miles from Jedburgh, means the
-Red Swire. Swire is an old northern term for the descent of a hill, and
-the epithet red may refer to the colour of the heath.
-
-The affair about which we are to tell took place on the 7th of July
-1575, at a meeting held, on a day of truce, by the Wardens of the
-Marches, for redressing wrongs and adjusting difficulties which could
-not be prevented from arising upon the Border. The Scottish Warden was
-Sir John Carmichael, and among his following were the Armstrongs and
-Elliots, Douglas of Cavers (a descendant of the Douglas who fell at
-Otterbourne), Cranstoun, whose ferocious motto was "Ye shall want ere I
-want," Gladstain, "good at need," and the ancient head of the
-Rutherfoords, called in tradition the Cock of Hunthill, "with his nine
-sons him about." The English Warden was the haughty Sir John Forster,
-and he had full fifteen hundred men with him, chiefly Northumbrians,
-Tynedale, and Reedsdale men, who looked with scorn upon the much smaller
-array of their hereditary foes.
-
-The meeting, however, began meekly enough, with merriment and jests.
-Such Border meetings of truce, though they might wind up in blood, as
-was to happen now, always began as occasions of marketing and revelry.
-Both parties came fully armed to such a tryst, yet intermixed in mutual
-sports and familiar intercourse,
-
- "Some gaed to drink, and some stood still,
- And some to cards and dice them sped."
-
-
-The Scots planted their pavilions or tents and feared no ill, even when
-they saw five hundred Fenwicks (a powerful Northumbrian clan) "marching
-in a flock." The clerk began to call the rolls, and to deal with one
-complaint after another for the loss of cows or ewes or other property.
-In the course of the proceedings an accusation was raised against an
-English freebooter named Farnstein, at the instance of a Scotch
-complainant. A "true bill" was found against the man, which means that
-he ought to be handed over to justice. But the English Warden alleged
-that he had fled, and could not be found. Carmichael, considering this
-as a pretext to avoid making compensation for the felony, bade the
-Northumbrians speak out plainly, and "cloke no cause for ill nor good."
-Upon this Sir John Forster, a proud and insolent man, "began to reckon
-kin and blood," by which picturesque phrase the ballad probably means
-that he swiftly added up his forces. Then he drew himself up, backed by
-his Dalesmen, all fingering their bows, and with insulting expressions
-against Carmichael's kin he bade him "match with his equals." The men
-of Tynedale, who only wanted a pretext for a quarrel, drew their bows
-and let off a flight of arrows among the Scots. The more moderate men on
-both sides at first tried to quell the tumult, but in vain. The fight
-was bound to come.
-
- "Then there was naught but bow and spear,
- And every man pulled out a brand."
-
-
-The English showed their usual dexterity with the bow. The Scots, for
-some reason, never took to this weapon; they had fire-arms, pistolets,
-and the like. The terrible cloth-yard arrows "from tackles flew," and
-the old proverb bade fair to justify itself, that every English archer
-carried twenty-four Scots under his belt--an allusion to his bundle of
-shafts. Success seemed certain for the English side; some of the
-foremost men among the Scots fell, and even Carmichael was thrown to the
-ground and was within an ace of being made a prisoner. The air
-resounded with the rallying cries of the English, the names of their
-captains, "A Shaftoe! A Shaftoe!" "A Fenwick! A Fenwick!" The Scots
-had little harness among them, only a few had the jack which served them
-as a defence for the body. Nevertheless, they laid about them sturdily,
-with "dints full dour," and there was many a cracked crown. Then
-suddenly a shout was heard. "Jedburgh's here!" A body of Jedburgh
-burgesses appear to have arrived just in the nick of time to add to the
-outnumbered force of Scots. They probably wore armour and what were
-called "white hats," that is steel caps. Meanwhile, the English, too
-confident of easy victory, instead of slaying more Scots and turning the
-repulse into a rout, thought only to plunder the unhappy merchants, who,
-trusting to the truce which had been proclaimed, had attached themselves
-to the meeting. Had it not been for the English greed, the Scots would
-have been defeated. As it was, the Tynedale men, throwing themselves on
-the merchants' packs, fell into disorder, their adversaries recovered
-from their surprise, and the timely arrival of the Jedburgh men turned
-the tables. A short, sharp bout ended in the triumph of the Scots and
-the Northumbrians fled, "Down ower the brae, like clogged bees." The
-Scots took many prisoners, amongst whom were the English Warden, and his
-son-in-law, Sir Francis Russell; but the most gallant soldier taken that
-day was that courteous knight, Sir Cuthbert Collingwood, to whose family
-Admiral Collingwood belonged. Several of those "Fenwicks fierce," who
-had turned up five hundred strong at the commencement of the fray, had
-the mortification of being carried off in triumph by their enemies. All
-these prisoners were sent to the Earl of Morton, Regent of Scotland, who
-detained them at Dalkeith for some days, until the bitter feeling
-natural after such an affair had died down, at any rate in part, and by
-this prudent precaution the Regent is thought to have probably averted a
-war between the two kingdoms. He ultimately permitted them to return to
-their own country, parting from them with great expressions of regard.
-The interest taken in the matter by Queen Elizabeth, and the
-representations of her Ambassador at Edinburgh, no doubt had something
-to do with this happy issue.
-
-It will probably occur to the careful reader of this book as somewhat
-strange to find the ruling powers of England and Scotland both so set
-upon peace; but it must be remembered that at this period in the reign
-of Queen Elizabeth the heir-apparent to the English throne was the young
-James VI., King of Scotland, who would naturally not wish for any
-quarrel with the country which he hoped later on to rule. Elizabeth, on
-the other hand, had Mary Queen of Scots as her prisoner, and did not
-wish in any further way to strain the already delicate relations between
-the two countries.
-
-The Carmichael mentioned in this ballad, known in full as Sir John
-Carmichael of Edrom, Scottish Warden of the Middle Marches, was
-afterwards murdered by one of the wild Armstrongs, who is said to have
-composed, the night before his execution, the following manly and
-pathetic "Good-night." The third and fourth lines show clearly the
-disrepute into which this once honoured clan was falling; the seventh
-and eighth lines could only have been written by one who, despite his
-faults, had the true gallant instincts deep in his blood.
-
-
- ARMSTRONG'S GOOD-NIGHT
-
- "This night is my departing night,
- For here nae langer must I stay;
- There's neither friend nor foe o' mine,
- But wishes me away.
-
- What I have done thro' lack of wit,
- I never, never can recall;
- I hope ye're a' my friends as yet;
- Good-night and joy be with you all!"
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXIV*
-
- *Jock o' the Side*
-
-
- "He is well kend, John of the Syde,
- A greater thief did never ryde."
-
-
-The subject of this ballad bears some resemblance to Kinmont Willie, and
-such adventures were not uncommon in those turbulent times. The events
-we are to relate originated in a raid ridden by the famous Liddesdale
-spearmen (the hardiest of the Scotch moss-troopers) upon English ground.
-
-"They had better hae staid at home," for the outcome was that one of
-their best men, Michael of Winfield, was killed, and Jock o' the Side,
-nephew to the Laird of Mangerton, was taken prisoner, and promptly
-lodged in Newcastle Jail. When the news reached Jock's mother she
-kilted her coats up to her knee, and ran down the water with the tears
-falling in torrents from her eyes. She ran to Mangerton House, on the
-banks of the Liddel, and told her brother, the good old lord, the bad
-news. "Michael is killed, and they have taken my son John." "Never
-fear, sister," quoth Mangerton, "I have eighty-three yokes of oxen, my
-barns, my byres, my folds are all filled, I'll part with them all ere
-Johnie shall die." Then he thought out his plan. "Three men I'll send
-to set him free, all harnessed in the best steel; the English loons
-shall feel the weight of their broad swords. The Laird's Jock shall be
-one, the Laird's Wat two, and Hobbie Noble, thou must be the third. Thy
-coat is blue, and since England banished thee thou hast been true to
-me." Now this Hobbie was an Englishman, born in Bewcastledale, the
-wildest district in Cumberland. Like numerous other English outlaws, he
-had made his own country too hot to hold him; his misdeeds had banished
-him to Liddesdale, and he was now in high favour with the Laird of
-Mangerton. The Laird gave the dauntless three orders to reverse the
-shoes of their horses, so that anyone crossing their trail might think
-they were proceeding in a contrary direction. He also warned them not
-to seem gentlemen, but to look like corn-carriers; not to show their
-good armour, nor appear like men of war, but to be arrayed as country
-lads, with halter and cart-collar on each mare. So Hobbie mounted his
-grey, Jack his lively bay, and Wat his white horse, and they rode for
-Tyne water. When they reached the Tyne they lighted down at a ford, and
-by the moonlight they cut a tree, with fifteen nogs on each side, to
-serve them as a scaling ladder, to climb Newcastle wall with. However,
-when they came to Newcastle town and alighted at the wall, their tree
-proved three ells too short, and there was nothing for it but to force
-the gates. At the gate a proud porter attempted to withstand them. The
-Armstrongs wrung his neck, took his life and his keys at once, and cast
-his body behind the wall. Soon they reached the jail, and called to the
-prisoner,
-
- "Sleeps thou, wakes thou, Jock o' the Side,
- Or art thou weary of thy thrall?"
-
-
-Jock answered dolefully, "Often I wake, nay, sleep seldom comes to
-me--but who's this knows my name so well?" Then out and spoke the
-Laird's Jock, his cousin and namesake, "Now fear ye not, my billie!"
-quoth he; "for here are the Laird's Jock, the Laird's Wat, and Hobbie
-Noble the Englishman come to set you free." Jock o' the Side did not
-think it possible that they could effect his release. "Now hold thy
-tongue, my good cousin," said he. "This cannot be--
-
- 'For if all Liddesdale were here the night,
- The morn's the day that I must die.'
-
-They have laid full fifteen stone of Spanish iron on me, I am fast bound
-with locks and keys in this dark and dreary dungeon." But the Laird's
-Jock replied. "Fear not that; faint heart never won fair lady. Work
-thou within, we'll work without, and I'll be sworn we'll set thee free."
-They loosed the first strong door without a key, the next chained door
-they split to flinders. The Laird's Jock got the prisoner on his back,
-irons and all, and brought him down the stairs with no small speed and
-joy. Hobbie Noble offered to bear some of his weight, but the Laird's
-Jock said that he was lighter than a flea. When they had all gone out
-at the gates, the prisoner was set on horseback, and they all joked
-wantonly. "O Jock," they cried, "you ride like a winsome lady, with
-your feet all on one side." The night was wet, but they did not mind.
-They hied them on full merrily until they came to the ford at
-Cholerford, above Hexham. There the water was running mountains high.
-They asked an old man, "Honest man, tell us in haste, will the water
-ride?" "I've lived here thirty years and three," replied he, "and I
-never saw the Tyne so big, nor running so like a sea." The Laird's Wat
-counselled them to halt. "We need not try it, the day is come we all
-must die!" "Poor faint-hearted thief!" cried the Laird's Jock.
-"There'll no man die but him that's fated; I'll guide you safely
-through; lift the prisoner behind me." With that they took to the water
-and managed to swim through. "Here we are all safe," said the Laird's
-Jock triumphantly. "Poor faint Wat, what think ye now?" They now saw
-twenty men pursuing them, sent from Newcastle, all English lads, stout
-and true. But when their leader saw the water he shook his head. "It
-won't ride, my lads," said he. Then he cried to the party of Scots:
-"Take the prisoner, but leave me my fetters." But the Laird's Jock was
-not a Scot for nothing. "I wat weel no," he shouted back, "I'll keep
-them, they'll make horse-shoes for my mare--for I am sure she's bought
-them right dear from thee." Then they went on their way to Liddesdale,
-as fast as they could, and did not rest until they had brought the
-rescued prisoner to his own fireside, and made him free of his irons.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXV*
-
- *Hobbie Noble*
-
-
- "Keep ye weel frae the traitor Mains!
- For gold and gear he'll sell ye a'."
-
-
-In the ballad of "Jock o' the Side," we have seen Hobbie Noble act a
-distinguished part in the deliverance from captivity of Jock, cousin of
-the Laird of Mangerton, chief of the Armstrong clan. Now in the
-following ballad we shall learn how ungrateful the Armstrongs were for
-his faithful services. The Armstrongs were one of those outlawed or
-broken clans, whose hand was against every man, and living as they did
-in what was called the Debateable Land, on the frontier between
-Liddesdale and England, these stark cattle-lifters and arrant thieves
-levied tribute from English and Scotch alike. Halbert or Hobbie Noble
-was an Englishman, a Cumbrian born and bred, but his misdeeds were so
-great, they banished him never to return, and he established himself
-among the Armstrongs. From their territory he continued his
-depredations upon the English, in resentment of which they at length
-offered a bribe to the Armstrongs to decoy him into England under
-pretence of inviting him to join them in a foray.
-
- "At Kershope foot the tryst was set,
- Kershope of the lily lee,"
-
-and the name of the chief traitor and leader of the gang was Sim o' the
-Mains. Hobbie harnessed himself "both with the iron and with the
-steel," buckled spur on his heel and belted brand to his side, leaped
-upon his "fringed grey," and rode down the banks of the Liddel. As soon
-as he saw the others, "Well be ye met, my comrades five," he cried.
-"Now, what is your will with me?" They all answered, with one consent,
-"Thou'rt welcome here, brave Noble; wilt thou ride with us into England,
-and we will be thy safe warrant? If we get a horse worth a hundred
-pounds thou shalt soon be upon its back." But Hobbie said that he dared
-not ride into England by day, as he had a feud with the Land-Sergeant
-(an officer under the Warden, to whom was entrusted the arrest of
-delinquents).
-
- "But will ye stay till the day gae down,
- Until the night come o'er the ground,
- And I'll be a guide worth any two
- That may in Liddesdale be found?
- Though the night be black as pitch and tar,
- I'll guide ye o'er yon hill so high;
- And bring ye all in safety back,
- If ye'll be true and follow me."
-
-
-They let him guide them over moss and moor, over hill and hope, and over
-many a down, until they came to the Foulbogshiel. But meanwhile word
-was gone to the Land-Sergeant, in Askerton, about seventeen miles from
-Carlisle. "The deer that you have hunted so long, is in Bewcastle Waste
-this day." The Sergeant understood at once. Quoth he, "Hobbie Noble is
-that deer! He carries the style full high. He has often driven our
-bloodhounds back. Now go, warn the bows of Hartlie Burn, see they
-sharpen their arrows on the wall! Warn Willeva and Speir Edom, take
-word to them that they meet me on the Rodric-haugh at break of day. We
-will on to Conscouthart-green, for there, I think, we'll get our
-quarry." In the meantime Hobbie had alighted and was sleeping in the
-Foulbogshiel. He dreamed that his horse was shot beneath him, and he
-himself was hard put to it to get away. The cocks crowed, the day
-dawned, and if Hobbie had not wakened he would have been taken or slain
-in his sleep.
-
- "Awake, awake, my comrades five!
- I trow here makes a full ill day;
- Yet the worst cloak o' this company
- I hope shall cross the Waste this day,"
-
-Thus cried he to his companions, thinking the gates were clear. But
-alas! it was not so. They were beset by the Land-Sergeant's men, cruel
-and keen, and while the Englishmen came before, the traitor Sim o' the
-Mains came behind. Had Noble been as masterful a champion as Wallace
-himself, he could not have won under such untoward circumstances. He
-had but a laddie's sword, but he did more than a laddie's deeds, for
-that sword would have cleared Conscouthart-green had it not broken over
-one of the English heads. So his treacherous companions delivered
-Hobbie up to the officers of justice; they bound him with his own
-bowstring, but what made his heart feel sorest of all, was that it was
-his own five who bound him. They took him on to Carlisle. They asked
-him mockingly if he knew the way. He thought much, but said little,
-though he knew it as well as they did. As they took him up the Carlisle
-streets, the old wives cast their windows wide, every woman whispering
-to another, "That's the man loosed Jock o' the Side." The poor fellow
-cried out, "Fie on ye, women! why call ye me man? It's no like a man
-that I'm used, but like a beaten hound that's been fighting in the
-gutter." They had him up through Carlisle town, and set him by a
-chimney fire, where they gave him a wheaten loaf to eat, and a can of
-beer. "Confess my lord's horse, Hobbie," they said, "and to-morrow in
-Carlisle thou shalt not die." "How can I confess them," says the poor
-man, "when I never saw them." And he swore a great oath, by the day
-that he was born, that he had never had anything of my lord's. He had
-but short shrift and they hung him the next morning.
-
-According to the ballad, his last words were of manly pride:--
-
- "Yet wad I rather be ca'd Hobbie Noble,
- In Carlisle, where he suffers for his fault,
- Than I'd be ca'd the traitor Mains,
- That eats and drinks o' meal and malt."
-
-
-Thus died the doughty Noble. It is proper to add, however, that the
-Armstrong's chief, Lord Mangerton, with whom Hobbie had been a
-favourite, took a severe revenge on the traitors who betrayed him. The
-contriver of the scheme, Sim o' the Mains, fled into England to escape
-the resentment of his chief, and was there caught by the English, and
-himself executed at Carlisle, two months after Hobbie's death in the
-same place! Such is, at least, the tradition of Liddesdale.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXVI*
-
- *The Laird o' Logie*
-
-
-In 1592, the Earl of Bothwell, Francis Stuart, failed in an attempt
-against King James VI., whom he tried to surprise in the palace of
-Falkland. Amongst his adherents, whom he sought about the King's person,
-was the hero of this ballad, the Laird of Logie, who was taken prisoner
-and laid in Edinburgh chapel in the keeping of Sir John Carmichael, the
-hero of the ballad called the "Raid of Reidswire." Carmichael was at
-this time captain of the King's Guard, and had the keeping of State
-criminals.
-
- I will sing, if ye will hearken,
- If ye will hearken unto me;
- The King has ta'en a poor prisoner,
- The wanton laird o' young Logie.
-
- Young Logie's laid in Edinburgh chapel,
- Carmichael's the keeper o' the key;
- And may Margaret's lamenting sair,
- A' for the love of young Logie.
-
- "Lament, lament na, may Margaret,
- And of your weeping let me be;
- For ye maun to the King himsell,
- To seek the life of young Logie."
-
- May Margaret has kilted her green cleiding,[#]
- And she has curl'd back her yellow hair--
- "If I canna get young Logie's life,
- Farewell to Scotland for evermair."
-
-[#] Clothing.
-
- When she came before the King,
- She kneelit lowly on her knee--
- "O what's the matter, may Margaret?
- And what needs a' this courtesie?"
-
- "A boon, a boon, my noble liege,
- A boon, a boon, I beg o' thee!
- And the first boon that I come to crave,
- Is to grant me the life of young Logie."
-
-[Illustration: "_A boon, a boon, my noble liege, A boon, a boon, I beg
-o' thee!_"]
-
- "O na, O na, may Margaret,
- Forsooth, and so it mauna be;
- For a' the gowd o' fair Scotland
- Shall not save the life of young Logie."
-
- But she has stown[#] the King's redding kaim,[#]
- Likewise the Queen her wedding knife,
- And sent the tokens to Carmichael,
- To cause young Logie get his life.
-
-[#] Stolen.
-[#] Dressing comb.
-
- She sent him a purse of the red gowd,
- Another o' the white monie;
- She sent him a pistol for each hand,
- And bade him shoot when he gat free.
-
- When he came to the Tolbooth stair,
- There he let his volley flee;
- It made the King in his chamber start,
- E'en in the bed where he might be.
-
- "Gae out, gae out, my merrymen a',
- And bid Carmichael come speak to me;
- For I'll lay my life the pledge o' that,
- That yon's the shot o' young Logie."
-
- When Carmichael came before the King,
- He fell low down upon his knee;
- The very first word that the King spake,
- Was--"Where's the laird of young Logie?"
-
- Carmichael turn'd him round about
- (I wot the tear blinded his ee),
- "There came a token frae your grace,
- Has ta'en away the laird frae me."
-
- "Hast thou play'd me that, Carmichael?
- And hast thou play'd me that?" quoth he;
- "The morn the justice-court's to stand,
- And Logie's place ye maun supplie."
-
- Carmichael's awa to Margaret's bower,
- Even as fast as he may dree--
- "O if young Logie be within,
- Tell him to come and speak with me!"
-
- May Margaret turn'd her round about
- (I wot a loud laugh laughed she),
- "The egg is chipp'd, the bird is flown,
- Ye'll see nae mair of young Logie."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXVII*
-
- *Jamie Telfer of the Fair Dodhead*
-
-
- "'Tis I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead,
- And a harried man I think I be!
- There's nothing left at the fair Dodhead
- But a woeful wife and bairnies three!"
-
-
-About Martinmas time, when Border steeds get corn and hay, the Captain
-of Bewcastle rode over to Tividale to forage. And first he met a guide
-high up in Hardhaughswire, and next he met a guide low down in Borthwick
-water.
-
-"What tidings, what tidings, my trusty guide?" "No tidings have I--yet
-if ye go to the fair Dodhead, I'll let ye see many a cow's calf." Right
-hastily they came to the fair Dodhead, loosed the cows and ransacked the
-house.
-
-Jamie Telfer's[#] heart was sore when he saw this, and the tears ran
-down his cheeks, and he pleaded with the Captain to give him back his
-gear, or else he would have revenge upon him. But the Captain only
-laughed and said, "Man, there's nothing in thy house but an old sword
-without a sheath that could scarcely kill a mouse."
-
-[#] The Telfers, though they had become Scotch at the time of this
-ballad, were originally a Norman family, descended from the knight
-"Taille-fer" (cut-iron), who came over with William the Conqueror.
-
-The sun was not up though the moon had gone down, and there was a
-sprinkling of new-fallen snow upon the ground when Jamie Telfer ran ten
-miles a-foot between the Dodhead and Stob's Hall. When he came to the
-tower gate he shouted aloud, and old Gibby Elliot came out and asked the
-meaning of such disturbance.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I, for
-nothing is left at fair Dodhead but a sad wife and three bairnies."
-
-"Go and seek help at Branksome Hall, for ye shall get none from me--seek
-help where ye paid blackmail, for, man, never did ye pay _me_ any."
-
-James turned him about, his eyes blinded with tears. "Never shall I pay
-blackmail again to Elliot. My hounds may all run masterless, my hawks
-may fly as they will from tree to tree, and my lord may seize the lands
-of his vassal, for never shall I see again the fair Dodhead."
-
-He turned him to Tiviotside and made as fast as he could for Coultart
-cleugh, and there he shouted aloud until out came old Jock Grieve, and
-asked who it was that made such a noise.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I, for
-nothing is left at fair Dodhead but a weeping wife and three bairnies,
-and six poor calves stand in the stall crying aloud for their mothers."
-
-"Alack!" quoth Jock Grieve, "alack, my heart is sore for thee! for I
-married the eldest of three sisters, and you married the youngest."
-
-So he took out his bonny black horse, right well fed with corn and hay,
-and set Jamie Telfer on his back, to take his troubles to Catslockhill.
-When he came to Catslockhill he shouted aloud until out came William's
-Wat to ask what was the matter.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I.
-The Captain of Bewcastle has driven away my gear; for God's sake rise
-and help me."
-
-"Alas and alack," quoth William's Wat, "my heart is sore for thee.
-Never did I yet come to the fair Dodhead and found thy basket bare."
-
-He set his two sons on coal-black steeds, and he himself mounted a
-freckled grey, and with Jamie they rode to Branksome Hall, where they
-shouted so loud and high that old Buccleuch came out to ask what was the
-matter.
-
-"It is I, Jamie Telfer, of the fair Dodhead, and a harried man am I;
-there is nought left at fair Dodhead but a weeping wife and three
-bairnies."
-
-"Alack," quoth the good old lord, "my heart is sorry for thee; go call
-Willie, my son, to come speedily. Go call up hastily the men that live
-by the waterside. They who will not ride for Telfer's cattle, let them
-never again look me in the face. Call up Wat o'Harden and his sons,
-call up Borthwick Water, Gaudilands and Allanhaugh, call Gilmanscleugh
-and Commonside; ride by the gate at Priesthaughswire and call the
-Currors of the Lee, and call brave Willie of Gorrinberry as ye come down
-the Hermitage slack."
-
-So the Scotts rode and ran bravely and steadily, shouting "Ride for
-Branksome," and when Willie looked ahead he saw the cattle being driven
-fast up the Frostylee brook, and to the plain.
-
-"Who drives yon cattle?" cried Willie Scott, "to make us a laughing
-stock?" "'Tis I, the Captain of Bewcastle; I will not hide my name from
-thee."
-
-"Let Telfer's cattle go back, or by the faith of my body," said Willie,
-"I'll ware my dame's calf-skin on thee."
-
-"I will not let the cattle go back neither for thy love nor fear; I will
-drive Jamie Telfer's cattle in spite of all your company of Scotts."
-
-"Set on them, lads!" cried Willie; "set on them cruelly; there will be
-many an empty saddle before they come to Ritterford."
-
-So they set to with heart and hand, and blows fell like hail until many
-were slain and many a horse ran masterless. But Willie was struck by a
-sword through the headpiece and fell to the ground, and auld Wat of
-Harden wept for rage when he saw that his son was slain. He took off
-his steel cap and waved it thrice, and the snow on the Dinlay mountain
-was never whiter than the locks of his hair.
-
-"Revenge! revenge!" he cried; "lay on them, lads. Willie's death shall
-be revenged or we will never see Teviotside again."
-
-The lances flew into splinters, and many another brave rider fell, and
-before the Kershope ford was reached, the Scots had got the victory.
-John of Brigham was slain, and John of Barlow, and thirty more of the
-Captain's men lay bleeding on the ground. The Captain himself was run
-through the right thigh and the bone broken, and never would woman love
-him again, if he should live a hundred years.
-
-"Take back the kye!" said he; "they are dear kye to some of us; never
-will a fair lady smile on me if I should live to be a hundred."
-
-Word came to the Captain's bride in her bower, that her lord had been
-taken prisoner. "I would rather have had a winding-sheet," said she,
-"and helped to put it over his head than that he should have been
-disgraced by the Border Scot when he led his men over Liddel."
-
-There was a wild gallant there named Watty Wudspurs (Madspurs) who
-cried, "Let us on to his house in Stanegirthside, if any man will ride
-with us!"
-
-So they came to Stanegirthside, pulled down the trees, burst open the
-door, and drove out all the Captain's kye before them.
-
-An old woman of the Captain's kin cried, "Who dare loose the Captain's
-kye, or answer to him and his men?"
-
-"It is I, Watty Wudspurs, that loose the kye; I will not hide my name
-from thee; and I will loose them in spite of him and his men."
-
-When they came to the fair Dodhead they were a welcome sight, for
-instead of his own ten milk kye Jamie Telfer had now got thirty-three.
-He paid the rescue shot in gold and silver, and at Willie Scott's
-burial, there were many weeping eyes.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXVIII*
-
- *Muckle-mou'd Meg*
-
-
-The Scott family was very powerful on the Border in the days of Queen
-Elizabeth, the bravest and strongest of them being the bold Lord of
-Buccleuch. His name is often mentioned in Border history, and so is
-that of another Scott, "auld Wat Scott of Harden." He was a fit man for
-these wild times, being both brave and canny. He married a beautiful
-Border lass, "the Flower of Yarrow," and it is surprising how many able
-men have descended from this marriage. Not only did Sir Walter Scott
-and Robert Louis Stevenson claim descent from this fine old freebooter;
-his daughter Maggie married Gilbert Elliot of Stobs, nicknamed "Gibbie
-wi' the Golden Garters," and from them were descended George Augustus
-Elliot (Lord Heathfield), famous for his splendid defence of Gibraltar,
-worthy of the best Border traditions, and also the Elliots of Minto, who
-have twice been Viceroys of India, once late in the eighteenth and once
-early in the twentieth century.
-
-But on one occasion one of the sons of Scott of Harden came perilously
-near to finding out how far his neck was capable of carrying the weight
-of his body. It was late in Queen Elizabeth's reign, and King James VI.
-of Scotland was extra anxious to live at peace with England, for he
-expected now very soon to be King over both countries. So he told his
-Warden, the bold Buccleuch, to restrain the wild Scotch freebooters; and
-you may imagine that the order was little to their liking. Young Willie
-Scott, Scott of Harden's son, quickly determined that cattle he must
-steal anyhow; he was his father's son, and did not his father once say,
-as he gazed longingly at a fine English haystack, "if only ye'd got four
-legs, haystack, ye would not be standing there!" So as Willie Scott was
-forbidden to steal English cattle, he decided to steal Scotch.
-
-Sir Gideon Murray, of Elibank Castle, was an old enemy of the Scott
-family, having once been told off to punish them for some audacious act
-of theirs. And Sir Gideon had some cattle that would make any
-Borderer's mouth water and his arm itch to drive them home. So Willie
-and a few boon companions started off one night for Elibank. But a
-warning voice had reached Sir Gideon, and Willie received a warm
-reception, and was taken prisoner. He lay in the castle dungeon all
-night, reflecting on the folly of being caught, and fully expecting to
-be hanged very early next morning, perhaps without even his breakfast to
-comfort him!
-
-But early on the fatal morning, Lady Murray startled her husband by
-asking him if he really meant to hang Willie Scott. He looked at her as
-if she were mad; of course, what else was there to do? Then she
-unfolded her scheme. She had a very plain-looking daughter known as
-"Muckle mou'd Meg," or Margaret with the extremely large mouth. Young
-Scott was handsome and of good family, and poor Meg would never again
-have such a chance of getting a good husband. Why not release Willie
-Scott, if only he would marry Mucklemou'd Meg?
-
-They were men of action in those days, and the priest was instantly sent
-for. Then, all being ready, the prisoner was brought forth. He was
-shown on the one hand the priest and the girl, and on the other hand the
-tree and the noose, and was asked to take his choice. His first proud
-feeling was that he would be mocked at if he married such a girl on such
-terms, and he walked bravely towards the rope. But the nearer he got to
-it the uglier it looked. He had to confess to himself that it was not
-at all a comfortable looking rope; he had a nasty feeling round his neck
-from merely looking at it, and thought it would probably feel worse when
-it got round his throat. Then he looked at the girl; she certainly was
-not as beautiful as his mother, the lovely Flower of Yarrow; and a
-Borderer loved a beautiful wife. But if he hanged he would have no wife
-at all! Then he suggested that he should have three days to think it
-over, but Murray said no, neither priest nor noose was prepared to wait,
-he must decide at once. Then he looked again at Meg and saw a kind
-glance in her eye; she felt sorry for the handsome young fellow. Then
-he knew she had a good heart, and that decided the matter; he went up
-and kissed her with a good grace, and the priest married them straight
-away.
-
-Afterwards he became Sir William Scott, and an important man on the
-Border. And, best of all, Meg proved to be a real good wife to him, and
-he never regretted the day when he elected to suffer the knot to be tied
-by the priest instead of by the hangman.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XXXIX*
-
- *The Dowie Dens of Yarrow*
-
-
-This is one of the most famous and widely known of all the Border
-ballads, and has proved a source of inspiration to several poets,
-including Wordsworth, who wrote three poems upon the subject. The bard
-does not relate the full particulars, but gives only the barest outlines
-of facts, which were well known in his day, and still live in tradition.
-The story tells of a duel between two brothers-in-law. The very spot
-where it took place is still pointed out, a low muir on the Yarrow
-banks. The slain knight was apparently Walter Scott, one of the
-ancestors of Lord Napier. His murderer was his brother-in-law, John
-Scott. "Dowie" means melancholy, and "den" is a word used to describe a
-narrow, rocky valley, usually wildly beautiful.
-
- Late at e'en drinking the wine,
- And e'er they paid the lawing,
- They set a combat them between,
- To fight it in the dawing.[#]
-
-[#] Dawn.
-
- "O stay at home my noble lord,
- O stay at home my marrow.
- My cruel brother will you betray,
- On the dowie houms[#] of Yarrow."
-
-[#] Hillocks.
-
- "O fare ye well, my lady gay!
- O fare ye well, my Sarah!
- For I must go, though I ne'er return
- From the dowie banks of Yarrow."
-
- She kissed his cheek, she combed his hair,
- As oft she had done before, O,
- She belted him with his noble brand,
- "And he's away to Yarrow."
-
- As he gaed up the Tennies bank
- I wot he gaed with sorrow,
- Till down in a den he spied nine armed men,
- On the dowie houms of Yarrow.
-
- "O come ye here to part your land,
- The bonnie forest thorough?
- Or come ye here to wield your brand,
- On the dowie houms of Yarrow?"
-
- "I come not here to part my land,
- And neither to beg nor borrow,
- I come to wield my noble brand
- On the bonnie banks of Yarrow.
-
- "If I see all, ye're nine to ane;
- And that's an unequal marrow;
- Yet will I fight, while lasts my brand,
- On the bonnie banks of Yarrow."
-
- Four has he hurt, and five has slain,
- On the bloody braes of Yarrow,
- Till that stubborn knight came him behind,
- And ran his body thorough.
-
- "Gae hame, gae hame, good brother John,
- And tell your sister Sarah,
- To come and lift her leafu'[#] lord;
- He's sleepin' sound on Yarrow."
-
-[#] Lawful.
-
- "Yestreen I dreamed a dolefu' dream,
- I fear there will be sorrow!
- I dreamed I pu'd the heather green,
- Wi' my true love on Yarrow.
-
- "O gentle wind, that bloweth south,
- From where my love repaireth,
- Convey a kiss from his dear mouth,
- And tell me how he fareth!
-
- "But in the glen strive armed men;
- They've wrought me dole and sorrow;
- They've slain--the comeliest knight they've slain,
- He bleeding lies on Yarrow."
-
- As she sped down yon high, high hill,
- She gaed wi' dole and sorrow,
- And in the den spied ten slain men,
- On the dowie banks of Yarrow.
-
- She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair,
- She searched his wounds all thorough,
- She kiss'd them till her lips grew red,
- On the dowie houms of Yarrow.
-
- "Now haud[#] your tongue, my daughter dear,
- For a' this breeds but sorrow;
- I'll wed ye to a better lord,
- Than him ye lost on Yarrow."
-
-[#] Hold.
-
- "O haud your tongue, my father dear!
- Ye mind me but of sorrow;
- A fairer rose did never bloom
- Than now lies cropp'd on Yarrow."
-
-[Illustration: "_She kissed his cheek, she kaim'd his hair, She searched
-his wounds all thorough._"]
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XL*
-
- *Belted Will and the Baronry of Gilsland*
-
-
- "When for the lists they sought the plain
- The stately lady's silken rein
- Did noble Howard hold;
- Unarmed by her side he walk'd
- And much, in courteous phrase they talk'd
- Of feats of arms of old.
- Costly his garb; his Flemish ruff
- Fell o'er his doublet, shaped of buff,
- With satin slashed and lined;
- Tawny his boot and gold his spur,
- His cloak was all of Poland fur,
- His hose with silver twined.
- His Bilboa blade, by Marchmen felt,
- Hung in a broad and studded belt;
- Hence, in rude phrase, the Borderers still
- Call'd noble Howard, Belted Will."
- SCOTT, _Lay of the Last Minstrel_.
-
-
-One of the many picturesque figures of Border history was "Belted Will,"
-or to call him by his proper name and title, Lord William Howard, a
-younger son of the powerful Duke of Norfolk.
-
-His mother had died when he was an infant, and his father, the foremost
-Roman Catholic nobleman in England, took up the cause of Mary Queen of
-Scots, whom he wished to marry. For this treason against Queen
-Elizabeth he was beheaded in 1572, when young Lord William was only nine
-years old. At the age of fourteen the young lord's guardians arranged
-for him a marriage with Elizabeth Dacre, a member of a powerful Border
-family, and heiress to the Baronry of Gilsland. As the bride was even
-younger than her boy-husband, let us hope that they both went to school
-again immediately after the marriage!
-
-When he grew to manhood, Lord William warmly supported the Roman
-Catholic cause and was imprisoned by Elizabeth; but when James became
-King, he was released and restored to his estates on the Border.
-Throughout the remainder of his career he was the most notable man of
-his district. He knew how to make himself respected by his wild
-neighbours. His fame and power were great. He founded the fortunes of
-his family so surely that he it is who is usually thought of as the
-ancestor of the Earls of Carlisle, though his great-grandson was the
-first to hold the title.
-
-Lord William had great energy and many interests, and was remarkable as
-being an "all-round" man. He was equally a leader of men and a lover of
-books; no detail in the management of his estates was too small for him
-to study; he was a good husband to his wife, and a splendid father to
-his fifteen children. He selected the most beautiful of his several
-castles, that of Naworth, and repaired and almost rebuilt it; he took
-there the fine old oak ceiling from the ancient castle of Kirkoswald,
-which was ornamented with portraits of all the kings of England.
-Visitors to Naworth can see to-day the "hall of Belted Will," by kind
-permission of the present Earl of Carlisle.
-
-He was something of a poet and very much of an antiquarian. His estates
-were full of interesting things, and none knew them better than he.
-There were miles of the Roman wall, still in excellent condition; there
-were many Roman altars and inscriptions, which he copied and translated;
-quite near him, at Coome Crags, was a Roman quarry, which can still be
-seen to-day, with marks of Roman tools on its stones. It stands in a
-beautiful wood by the side of the lovely river Irthing. And only a
-little further on, standing on a fine cliff overlooking the river, is
-the old Roman station of Amboglanna, a fort that covered five and a half
-acres, with walls that were once five feet thick, the main foundations
-of which are still standing, clear enough for anyone to trace them out.
-It is quieter there to-day than it was in Roman times, or in the
-stirring days of Belted Will!
-
-It is good to think that this broad-shouldered, gallant, powerful
-nobleman, who could ride, shoot, fight and keep this wild district in
-order, was at the same time such a clever student and book-worm. They
-tell a story that he was once sitting in his library intent on a book
-when his men brought in a robber whom they had caught red-handed, and
-asked Lord William to try him. Belted Will, angry at being interrupted,
-cried out:--"Don't disturb me; hang him!" Half an hour later he rose
-and came down to try the man, but finding that he was already hanged he
-went on with his book. It is only fair to add that robbers in those
-days expected no mercy when caught.
-
-One of the many clever things that Lord William did was to have figures
-carved in oak to represent soldiers; these he placed on the top of his
-high towers, and deceived the Scots into thinking that he had a large
-and very watchful garrison! These figures can still be seen at Naworth.
-Near Naworth Castle is Lanercost Priory, where King Edward I. stayed on
-his way to Scotland. There is a secret passage from Naworth tower which
-is supposed to run under the river to Lanercost. No one is allowed to
-go through it, as it is considered dangerous; the people of the district
-say that the last man to do so was Oliver Cromwell.
-
-Visitors to Naworth to-day should certainly go on to Gilsland itself,
-the picturesque straggling little town, which was the head of the
-Baronry which Elizabeth Dacre brought to her boy-husband. The Irthing
-at Gilsland runs through a wonderfully beautiful gorge, rocky and
-wooded, wild and romantic. Stand on the venturesome stepping stones
-near the old church, with the river rushing at your very feet, and see
-if this is an exaggeration of the beauties of the scene. Right in the
-midst of the glen you can see the "Popping-stone" where Sir Walter Scott
-walked with the lady of his choice and asked her to marry him. Readers
-of "Guy Mannering" can see in Over Denton church near Gilsland the grave
-of Meg Merrilees, who died here at the age of ninety-eight. The town is
-also interesting for the fact that the county border is at Gilsland, and
-there is an inn so built that it stands in both counties, and contains a
-bed in which you can sleep with your head in Northumberland and your
-feet in Cumberland!
-
-There is a story of Belted Will that tells eloquently of the strength of
-his character. When he was released from prison by King James he found
-his estates so ruined by careless management that he knew that great
-care was needed to put things right again; so until he got his affairs
-into order, all the pocket-money that he would allow himself was twenty
-shillings per month!
-
-Bold William, Belted Will, gallant Lord Howard, as you will, died at
-Naworth in 1640 aged seventy-seven, one year after the death of his
-devoted wife. His descendants were, like himself, students and men of
-action; the present Earl of Carlisle is directly sprung from him, and is
-very proud of the fact.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLI*
-
- *Gilderoy*
-
-
-Gilderoy was a celebrated and most daring highwayman, who roamed far,
-and was well-known all over Scotland and indeed in London. His death
-inspired a very striking ballad, but this is hardly a Border Lowland
-ballad, but refers chiefly to another Border district, namely, that
-between the Lowlands and Highlands. Just as the Scottish Lowlanders
-thought the English their legitimate quarry, so the Highlanders in turn
-looked upon the Lowlanders as created to supply them with all they
-lacked. There is a story on record of a Highland chief who, finding his
-men had carelessly robbed another Highlander, returned the spoil with a
-handsome apology, and issued stringent orders that in future nothing was
-to be taken except in the Lowlands, "where all men make their prey."
-
-Among the robber clans of the Highlands, the MacGregors stand easily in
-the first rank. In a long series of Scottish Acts of Parliament, they
-are habitually referred to as "the wicked clan Gregor, so long
-continuing in blood, slaughter, theft, and robbery." One of their most
-famous exploits was the battle of Glenfruin, when they defeated their
-enemies, the Colquhouns, and slew two hundred of them. The Colquhouns
-appeared before the King at Stirling with the bloody shirts stripped off
-their dead, and the law was put in motion against the MacGregors more
-vigorously than ever. This was in 1603. The execution of Gilderoy, as
-described in our poem, took place in 1638. His real name was Patrick
-MacGregor, and the fact that he belonged to this Ishmaelite clan, whose
-hand was directed against every man, and whose very name had been
-solemnly abolished, may well serve as an excuse for his career of crime.
-Gilderoy, in Gaelic, means the red-haired gillie or lad, and besides the
-name there are many other points of similarity between him and Rob Roy,
-who was the head of the Clan MacGregor in the following century. Both
-Gilderoy and Rob Roy were professional blackmailers, that is, they could
-be relied on never to plunder anyone who was prudent enough to buy them
-off by paying a fixed contribution. This is what is meant in the
-following lines of the ballad--
-
- "All these did honestly possess
- He never did annoy,
- Who never failed to pay their cess
- To my love, Gilderoy."
-
-
-The "cess" is the blackmail, or insurance against robbery. The
-widespread reputation of Gilderoy is attested by the many legends of him
-which are printed in the old chap-books and "Lives of the Highwaymen."
-According to these authorities, Gilderoy once robbed Oliver Cromwell
-near Glasgow; but an even more romantic episode of his career was a
-roaming trip upon the continent, in the course of which he is said to
-have picked Cardinal Richelieu's pocket while he was celebrating mass in
-the King's presence, at the church of St Denis in Paris. He made his
-way even to Madrid, where he succeeded in carrying off the Duke of
-Medina-Cell's plate. Altogether a most notorious and dashing cateran.
-The ballad is supposed to be spoken by a young woman who had all her
-life been attached to him.
-
- "Gilderoy was a bonnie boy,
- Had roses to his shoon;[#]
- His stockings were of silken soy,
- With garters hanging down.
- It was, I ween, a comely sight
- To see so trim a boy;
- He was my jo, and heart's delight,
- My handsome Gilderoy.
- * * * * *
- My Gilderoy and I were born
- Both in one town together;
- We scant were seven years before
- We 'gan to love each other.
- Our daddies and our mammies they
- Were filled with meikle joy,
- To think upon the bridal day
- Of me and Gilderoy."
-
-[#] Shoes.
-
-
-But there intervened the spirit of adventure which had ever been the
-birthright of all of his surname,
-
- "Oh, that he still had been content
- With me to lead his life!
- But ah! his manful heart was bent
- To stir in deeds of strife;
- And he in many a venturous deed
- His courage bold would try;
- And now this gars[#] my heart to bleed
- For my dear Gilderoy."
-
-[#] Makes.
-
-
-No doubt those who knew Gilderoy personally would have agreed, as was
-actually said of Rob Roy, that he was a benevolent and humane man "in
-his way."
-
- "My Gilderoy, both far and near,
- Was feared in every town;
- And boldly bore away the gear
- Of many a Lowland loun,
- For man to man durst meet him none,
- He was so brave a boy;
- At length with numbers he was ta'en,
- My winsome Gilderoy."
-
-
-He was not so fortunate as Rob Roy, who ultimately died peacefully in
-his bed. Gilderoy had lost the game, and he had to pay the stakes.
-
- "Of Gilderoy so feared they were,
- They bound him fast and strong;
- To Edinbro' they led him there,
- And on a gallows hung.
- They hung him high above the rest,
- He was so trim a boy;
- There died the youth whom I loved best,
- My handsome Gilderoy."
-
-
-Thus perished one of the characteristic products of an age whose
-standards were so different from ours that we can hardly judge him
-fairly. He was banned before his birth, a scion of a race so
-indomitably and innately ferocious that the law attempted to extirpate
-them, root and branch. The very name of Gregor could be given by no
-clergyman at baptism, under penalty of deprivation and banishment.
-Cunning and politic neighbours were not slow to take advantage of the
-stubborn disposition of the MacGregors, and gradually stripped them of
-their once extensive lands in Argyle and Perthshire. Gilderoy might well
-consider that he was "an honester man than stood on any of their
-shanks," and we may be excused for feeling a very lively sympathy with
-him, and for echoing in our inmost hearts the exquisitely feminine point
-of view expressed by the lady composer of the ballad.
-
- "If Gilderoy had done amiss,
- He might have banished been;
- Ah! what sore cruelty is this
- To hang such handsome men!
- To hang the flower of Scottish land,
- So sweet and fair a boy!
- No lady had so white a hand
- As thee, my Gilderoy!
-
- When he had yielded up his breath
- I bare his corpse away;
- With tears, that trickled for his death,
- I washt his comely clay;
- And sicker[#] in a grave sae deep
- I laid the dear lo'ed boy;
- And now for ever maun I weep,
- My winsome Gilderoy."
-
-[#] Safely.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLII*
-
- *Archie Armstrong's Oath*
-
-
- "And oft since then, to England's King,
- The story he has told;
- And aye, when he 'gan rock and sing,
- Charlie his sides would hold."
-
-
-Archie Armstrong lived in Eskdale, where he did his best to keep up the
-grand reputation of his family as being among the very boldest
-sheep-stealers of the Border. His house was at Stubholm, where the
-Wauchope stream runs into the river Esk, near where the picturesque town
-of Langholm now stands. Living in the reign of Charles I., after the
-union of crowns, the profession of freebooter was far less honourable
-than of old. He could not now plead that he was a Border soldier,
-fighting against his nation's enemy. The wild Border blood in him might
-cry out for the old adventurous career, but he could no longer hope for
-the aid of powerful Border families. When cornered, his sole protector
-would be his own wits, and woe betide him if they failed!
-
-Archie's house was about eight miles from the Border, and he could not
-help strolling towards the fascinating line and tasting the sweetness of
-temptation. When the chance came that seemed to him sufficiently safe,
-he would go home in company though he had walked out alone; the
-"company" being a good fat English sheep. One night a shepherd had
-marked him lingering about, and had watched him, and raised an alarm.
-Away went stout Archie at a Marathon pace; half way home he passed
-Gilnockie tower, where his ancestor bold Johnie Armstrong lived so
-gaily. "Alas!" thought Archie, dolefully, "he too was hanged in the
-end!"
-
-He got home well in front of his pursuers, but his wife gave him small
-encouragement. With typical Scottish dourness she remarked to him, "Ye
-will be ta'en this night and hanged i' the morning."
-
-But Archie put a braw face on it, and declared that he would never hang
-for one silly sheep. Quicker than any butcher he skinned and roughly
-trimmed the dead animal, throwing the rejected parts into the swift
-stream. Then rejoicing in the fact that his child was away with its
-aunt, he put the carcase carefully in the cradle and began rocking it
-and singing a lullaby to it, as if he were the most loving father in all
-the British Isles.
-
-The pursuers now rushed in, and began to accuse Archie triumphantly; but
-he rebuked them for making so much noise, telling them that his child
-was at death's door! As for stealing their sheep, he took a solemn oath
-that if he had done such a thing he would ask to be doomed to "eat the
-flesh this very cradle holds!"
-
-Such an oath on the Borders was a very serious matter; they little knew
-that the only flesh in the cradle was sheep's flesh, which Archie asked
-nothing better than to devour!
-
-Impressed but not convinced, his enemies carefully searched the whole of
-Archie's house and garden; it was only with very great unwillingness
-that they at last decided that they must miss the supreme pleasure of
-hanging him! They went away saying that they must have been deluded by
-the devil or by witches; and the shepherd resolved to hang a branch of
-rowan-tree (mountain-ash) by his fold, for that was well-known to have
-the power to keep witches away.
-
-As soon as they were all on their road to England again, Archie skipped
-about like a dancing fiddler. "Wife," he said, "I never knew before
-that I would make such a good nurse."
-
-After this Archie wandered down to London, and his wild jests becoming
-famous, he was made Court Jester by King Charles I. And many a time he
-acted the story to the King, rocking a pretended cradle, and singing a
-persuasive lullaby, to the King's intense amusement.
-
-Nevertheless, Archie lost his place by his boldness. These were the days
-of Archbishop Laud (1637), who was hated by the Scots. One day, as the
-archbishop was about to say grace before dinner, Archie asked the King's
-permission to say grace instead. The King consented, and the jester's
-double-meaning words were as follows:--
-
-"All _praise_ to God, and little _laud_ to the devil!"
-
-The archbishop, in many senses a little man, had Archie dismissed in
-disgrace. But, such were the chances of these uncertain times, the
-archbishop was executed in the end, while the sheepstealer escaped that
-fate!
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLIII*
-
- *Christie's Will*
-
-
-The resourceful Archie, whose tale we have just told, was not the only
-one of the reckless Armstrongs to keep up the old freebooting habits in
-the reign of Charles I. There lived at Gilnockie tower (the old
-residence of the famous Johnie Armstrong) in the parish of Cannobie, a
-notorious Willie Armstrong, known as Christie's Will. Like Archie, he
-more than once owed his life to his ready wit. He was shut up in
-Jedburgh jail when the Earl of Traquair, Lord High Treasurer, paid the
-prison an official visit. When he asked Will the cause of his being
-there, the freebooter answered:--
-
-"For stealing two halters, my lord."
-
-Traquair was surprised, but Will afterwards owned that there was a fine
-colt at the end of each halter.
-
-Traquair was amused and pleased by the boldness of the man, and had him
-set free.
-
-Some little time afterwards Traquair was involved in a law-suit which
-was set down to be decided by Lord Durie, who seems to have let it be
-known before-hand what his opinion was upon the case. Nothing would
-save Traquair's interests except that Durie must be got out of the way
-before the case began. But how was it to be done?
-
-Christie's Will was appealed to, and merely said "Leave it to me."
-
-It was the judge's habit to take horseback exercise on the sands of
-Leith without any attendant. One morning, whilst so riding, a
-well-dressed and gentlemanly stranger, on a good horse, happened to
-overtake him; a courteous greeting led to a friendly conversation, in
-which the stranger proved himself so affable and entertaining that the
-judge rode on by his side without suspicion. Suddenly, when they had
-come to a lonely spot, Lord Durie found himself seized by this muscular
-gentleman, smothered up in a big cloak, whisked off his horse and on to
-the stranger's, who galloped off, mischief knows where! It was
-Christie's Will, carrying out his promise.
-
-The judge's horse galloped home, riderless. Search was made, but the
-judge could not be found. It could only be supposed that he had been
-thrown off into the sea. His successor was appointed, and Lord
-Traquair's case was heard and won!
-
-Lord Durie had languished for several months in a dreary underground
-vault. I wonder if he thought of the many poor wretches he had
-sentenced to a similar fate? Suddenly at midnight he was roughly
-awakened, muffled up as before, and carried away again by his captor on
-horseback. Next morning, by the light of the newly-risen sun, he found
-himself on the very spot by the sands of Leith from which he had been
-kidnapped! We will hope that every one, including his successor, was
-glad when he thus came to life again.
-
-When the Civil War began, the Earl of Traquair was faithful to King
-Charles I. Having some papers of importance that he wished to have
-given into the King's own hands, he entrusted these to the bold
-freebooter. Christie's Will did his errand, and received an equally
-important answer. But spies at Court had given Cromwell word of the
-matter, and the command was sent up to Carlisle that Will Armstrong must
-be intercepted there. Not knowing his danger, Will halted in the town
-to refresh his horse, then pushed forward to the bridge which crossed
-the Eden on the Northern boundary of the city. Cromwell's soldiers were
-waiting for him; the bridge was high and narrow, the broad Eden waters
-were swirling in high flood.
-
-Christie's Will, without one second's hesitation, spurred his horse over
-the parapet. He sank ... he came up ... he sank ... he came up ... he
-sank ... he came up, this time at the very bank. He cut his heavy,
-dripping cloak from his shoulders; relieved of the weight, his horse
-struggled to the land. Away went Will, away went the troopers after
-him. It was a hard race to the river Esk, and this also Will had to
-swim. But now he was in Scotland, and his friends were at hand; gaily
-Will turned to his pursuers, who dared not cross the water; "Good
-friends," cried he, "come over and drink with me!" But they showed him
-their backs, and their horses's tails, and he saw no more of them.
-
-Such were the exploits of Christie's Will; he was the last of the
-free-booters, but he certainly knew how to live up to their boldest
-traditions.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLIV*
-
- *Northumberland at the time of the Civil War*
-
-
-During the stormy days of King Charles I., the Borders, and especially
-Northumberland, saw many stirring scenes. It must be remembered that
-shortly before the Long Parliament was elected, King Charles almost came
-to war with the Scottish Presbyterians, because they would not obey the
-harsh rule of Archbishop Laud. The Scots raised an army under the lead
-of shrewd general Alexander Leslie, the "old, little, crooked soldier,"
-of great experience, trained by the great Gustavus of Sweden. In 1639
-Charles sent ships up to the Forth, in reply to which Leslie marched his
-army to threaten the border. The old quarrel between the two countries
-began to blaze up again. King Charles led an army to the border and was
-received with splendid applause at Newcastle. Many joined his army, and
-shouted with joy at the thought of meeting the Scots in battle. But
-they were an untrained disorderly crew, who fired their guns off at
-random and kept no military order whatever. Gallant Leslie marched his
-men down to Duns Law, in South Berwickshire, and was ready to fight.
-But King Charles would not trust his army that length; he made terms
-with his opponents, promising them the reforms they set their hearts
-upon, and the two armies melted away like school-boys at the end of the
-term.
-
-Things were soon as bad as before. Lord Conway was sent by the King to
-put Newcastle into a strong defensive state. His greatest difficulty
-was to get money for the purpose, for the King's quarrel with his
-various Parliaments had deprived him of supplies. The badly paid troops
-mutinied, and the ring-leader was shot. Very soon the Scottish army came
-across the Tweed, the Highlanders armed with bows and arrows.
-
-They pitched their camp on Heddon Law, and soon proved to the country
-folk that they had not come for plunder, but would pay for all they
-wanted to eat. This re-assured the country people, who had no real
-quarrel with the Scots, and even became most friendly to them.
-
-With Lord Conway it was otherwise; he was the King's officer, and was
-bound to offer resistance. His opinion was that if once the Scots
-crossed the Tyne, and attacked Newcastle from the south or Gateshead
-side, they were sure of victory. Accordingly, leaving a strong garrison
-to protect the town, he marched out with two thousand or more foot and
-fully one thousand horse to command the important ford across the Tyne
-at Newburn, a place five or six miles due west of Newcastle. It is
-interesting to remember that here also the Romans had had
-fortifications, along the line of the wall, and the very spot where the
-Scots and English fought may well have been the scene of contests
-between the Roman Legions and the wild Picts.
-
-The English arrived first, on the south bank of the river, and threw up
-earth-works hastily. Very soon they saw the Scots march into Newburn
-village, on the north bank, where they employed themselves by hauling
-their cannon up to the church tower. Remarkable cannon they were, made
-out of bar-iron hooped together with cord and wet, raw hides! But they
-were not required to carry any distance, the foe was only on the other
-side of the Tyne. All the morning the enemies looked at one another
-across the river, each hesitating to fire the first shot of the war. At
-last an English officer shot a Scotch officer, and the fight began. The
-Scots were on the higher ground, and their cannon, rough as they were,
-sent heavy shot on to the English. Then when the river tide went down,
-the Scots rushed across the ford, and the battle was soon won, the royal
-standard being taken. English runaways rushed through the woods and
-into Newcastle, crying, "Fly for your lives, naked devils have destroyed
-us!" Whether they referred to kilted Highlanders is uncertain. Anyway,
-Leslie and his Scots entered Newcastle in triumph, but were afterwards
-bought off with a payment of L60,000 and recrossed the Tweed into
-Scotland.
-
-This was in 1641, a year in which King Charles was quarrelling bitterly
-with his Long Parliament, though the actual civil war in England did not
-begin till 1642. Early in 1642 it was decided that so important a town
-as Newcastle ought to be put in a stronger state of defence.
-
-William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle, was made governor of the town, but
-he was much hindered in his plans by lack of money. King Charles,
-however, promoted him from Earl to Marquis of Newcastle, and the lack of
-funds he made up as best he was able. However, the Governor of Holy
-Island, off the Northumberland shore, found himself left for sixteen
-months without any pay! He wrote to the King's treasury a protest in
-verse, beginning:--
-
- "_The great commander o' the Cormorants,_
- _The geese and ganders of these hallowed lands,_
- _Where Lindisfarne and Holy Island stands,_
- _These worthless lines sends to your worthy hands._"
-
-
-The allusion in the first two lines is to the fact that Holy Island and
-the Farne Islands were then, and are still to-day, so thinly peopled
-that sea-birds gather there in large numbers, adding greatly to the wild
-beauties of these islets and rocks.
-
-In January 1644 a serious struggle began. Leslie and his soldiers
-crossed the Tweed at Berwick bridge and again entered Northumberland.
-General Bayly marched his men from Kelso across the frozen river and
-joined Leslie at Alnwick. Warkworth Castle, though it contained cannon
-and provisions, surrendered at once. The Scottish general gravely told
-Bemerton, the governor, that if he had learnt to fight as well as he had
-learnt to dance his castle could never have been taken! The country
-districts of Northumberland had no quarrel with the Scots, and it was
-soon evident that the real fight would be at Newcastle, bravely held by
-the Marquis and by the Mayor, Sir John Marley.
-
-The Scottish "murthering pieces," as the cannon were called, were
-brought down by sea, and the obstinate conflict began. Despite the
-terrible weather of a very rough February, frequent skirmishes took
-place, while the Scots closed nearer and nearer round the gallantly
-defended town. Leslie soon found that the defences had been put into
-good order; the ditch round the town was dug deep, and close to the
-walls; the walls themselves were strongly underpinned. The battlements
-were strengthened by stone and lime, but the top stones were loosened so
-as to slip if the enemy attempted to mount them. Every cannon was
-placed carefully, to the best advantage.
-
-[Illustration: _The Storming of Newcastle_]
-
-But the Marquis of Newcastle was called southward by the needs of his
-King. With him were his thousand brave "White coats," so called because
-they wore white coats which they promised to dye in the blood of the
-enemy. But they met the terrible Ironsides at Marston Moor, and in a
-conflict of furious bravery on both sides, all of the gallant thousand
-except thirty were slain on the field of battle.
-
-This was in July of 1644, but it did not affect the siege of Newcastle,
-which still dragged obstinately on, under the skilful guidance of the
-dauntless Mayor. By October, Sir John Marley was so buoyed up by his
-success that he sent a letter to General Leslie to ask if he was still
-alive! This the Scots took to be an insult, and a grand assault was
-begun. The Scots were furious, and the defence was desperate. The roar
-of the cannon and the rattle of the musketry were succeeded, as the
-assault got nearer and nearer to its aim, by the clashing of swords and
-the clanging of pikes. At last, the regiments of Loudoun and Buccleugh
-succeeded in forcing their way into the town. In vain the defenders
-made their last gallant charge; their cause was now hopeless, and soon
-the market-place was filled with fugitives, who flung down their arms
-and cried aloud for quarter at the hands of the triumphant Scots.
-
-In these days the defender was often made to feel the anger of the
-victors, who in the flush and cruelty of victory avenged their dead,
-only too terribly, upon the losing side. Not so at Newcastle.
-Prominent in its day, it stands out because of the mercy of the Scottish
-conquerors as much as for the heroism of its defence. In this, the last
-great struggle on English ground between Scots and English, it is
-pleasing indeed to recall facts that redound to the high honour of both
-parties.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLV*
-
- *Montrose and Lesly*
-
-
-James Graham, the great Marquis of Montrose who at first sided with the
-Scottish Covenanters against Charles I., was so out of sympathy with the
-extreme turn which affairs took later against that unhappy monarch that
-he went over to the King's side. Gathering the Highland Clans under his
-standard, he marched Southward and defeated the Covenanters in a series
-of brilliantly fought battles. He occupied Edinburgh, and laid great
-plans to complete the conquest of Scotland by subduing the Borderland.
-
-If the Borders had remained in their old fighting state no doubt many a
-Border chief would have joined Montrose's army and aided his bold plans.
-But, unfortunately for King Charles, the Borders had been tamed and
-disarmed since the union of England and Scotland under James I. Only a
-few adventurous spirits like Christie's Will remained as examples of the
-old wild days.
-
-The remnant of the army of the Covenanters was commanded by the stern
-General David Lesly (not the Alexander Leslie who figures in the
-preceding chapter), and was somewhere in the Border district. Gay
-Gallant Montrose did not bother as to exactly where this army was; he
-despised it too heartily. He himself was at Selkirk, while his army was
-encamped on the neighbouring plain of Philiphaugh.
-
-Montrose was busy writing a cheering message to King Charles to the
-effect that he had now no enemy left in Scotland who could offer an
-effective resistance to his arms. Little did he think that General
-Lesly was gradually creeping nearer, nearer, and was now actually within
-four miles of his army. With the advantage of a thick Scotch mist,
-Lesly's men actually burst upon Montrose's infantry without a single
-scout having seen them to give warning of their approach! In such
-confusion, Montrose's men had no chance whatever.
-
-The Marquis galloped up, only to find his soldiers hopelessly defeated
-and great numbers slain. There was nothing left but for those to escape
-who could. The Marquis succeeded in cutting his way through, and
-gathered his troops to fight again later on; but his efforts were doomed
-to failure.
-
-A popular ditty of these days, sung to a stirring tune, was called
-"Lesly's March." Sir Walter Scott seems to regard this as wholly
-serious, and ranks it as a Covenanter song. It appears to me, however,
-that many of the lines have a very sarcastic flavour; no doubt the
-Covenanters did really think that
-
- "There's none in the right but we,
- Of the old Scottish nation";
-
-but they would probably have phrased it a little less baldly. To me it
-appears as if this song were the work of an onlooker and not a partisan;
-one ready to see the faults of both sides, and very much inclined to
-hold back his final opinion till he saw which was going to win. But let
-the March speak for itself.
-
-
- *LESLY'S MARCH*
-
- March! march:
- Why the de'il do ye na march?
- Stand to your arms, my lads,
- Fight in good order;
- Front about, ye musketeers all,
- Till ye come to the English Border;
- Stand till 't, and fight like men,
- True gospel to maintain.
- The parliament's blythe to see us a' coming!
- When to the kirk we come,
- We'll purge it ilka room,
- Frae popish relics, and a' sic innovation,
- That a' the world may see,
- There's nane in the right but we,
- Of the auld Scottish nation.
-
-
-A truly partisan ballad of the day describes the battle of Philiphaugh
-and exults in the defeat of Montrose, "our cruel enemy," it calls him.
-As a ballad it has no great poetic merit; the very sober Covenanters
-probably regarded ballad-making as a frivolity. But it describes rather
-graphically how an "aged father," from the country-side, led Lesly's
-army very cautiously and wisely to the very tents of the foe. These
-details are no doubt accurate; though the ballad-writer (whoever he was)
-displays his ignorance of other matters by making the old soldier say
-that he was at the battle of Solway Moss (which took place one hundred
-years before) and at that of Dunbar, which was not fought till five
-years later!
-
-The following are the opening verses of the ballad, giving an idea of
-its plain, straightforward style:--
-
- On Philiphaugh a fray began,
- At Hairhead-wood it ended;
- The Scots out o'er the Graemes they ran,
- Sae merrily they bended;
-
- Sir David frae the Border came,
- Wi' heart an' hand came he;
- Wi' him three thousand bonny Scots,
- To bear him company.
-
- Wi' him three thousand valiant men,
- A noble sight to see!
- A cloud o' mist them weel conceal'd,
- As close as e'er might be.
-
- When they came to the Shaw burn,
- Said he, "Sae weel we frame.
- I think it is convenient
- That we should sing a psalm."
-
-
-It is not necessary to quote more of it, but it may be remarked that in
-place of the last line as given here, the _unregenerate_ substituted,
-
- "That we should take a dram."
-
-In point of actual fact, _both_ versions are probably true!
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLVI*
-
- *The Death of Montrose*
-
-
-During the imprisonment of King Charles I., at a time when active war on
-his behalf might do the unhappy monarch more harm than good, the gallant
-Montrose had retired to France. His bright military fame, his courteous
-manners, and manly bearing made him friends everywhere, and when he
-visited Germany the Emperor conferred on him the rank of Marshal.
-Hearing of the execution of Charles I., Montrose at once placed himself
-at the disposal of Charles II., now a fugitive in Holland. This prince
-named him Captain General of Scotland, and the daring hero set out for
-the Orkney Islands with about five hundred paid soldiers, mostly
-adventurous Germans and Dutchmen. Only a reckless spirit like Montrose
-would have undertaken so wild a commission.
-
-Scotland was heartily sick of war, and learnt with consternation of the
-arrival of this firebrand. Lesly was sent forward with four thousand
-men to attack Montrose's five hundred! Colonel Strachan led the
-advanced guard, which fell unexpectedly upon the invading army, and,
-after a brief, fierce struggle, totally defeated it.
-
-Montrose, disguised as a peasant, entrusted his life to one he believed
-to be his friend, M'Leod, Laird of Assaint. But this unworthy man
-betrayed him to his bitterest enemy, General Lesly. Thus, at last, this
-brilliant commander was in the hands of the bitter Covenanters, into
-whose hearts his brilliant victories had once spread such terror. Their
-treatment of him is a black stain upon their memory. For days he was
-led about in the peasant's disguise, which he had put on; he was carted
-through the streets of Edinburgh, accompanied by such insults that the
-populace cried shame upon his captors.
-
-When tried before the Scottish Parliament for treason, he made a most
-eloquent defence, one of the most notable of his assertions being that
-he had never stained his victories by slaughtering his foes in cold
-blood after the battle. In this he was far above his enemies, who had
-disgraced their victory of Philiphaugh by many an execution, and who
-were now bent upon taking the life of Montrose himself. The sentence
-against him was probably decided before his defence had been heard; it
-ran thus:--
-
-"That James Graham should next day be carried to Edinburgh cross and
-there hanged on a gibbet 30 feet high for the space of three hours; then
-to be taken down, his head to be struck off on a scaffold and affixed to
-the prison; his arms and legs to be stuck up on the four chief towns of
-the Kingdom, his body to be buried in the place set aside for common
-criminals."
-
-To this sentence the great Marquis haughtily replied that he would
-rather have his head so placed than his picture in the King's
-bedchamber, and that he wished he had limbs enough to be dispersed into
-all the cities of Christendom, to prove his dying attachment to his
-king. And in the one evening of life that still remained to him, this
-accomplished and fearless nobleman employed his time in turning these
-loyal sentiments into verse.
-
-Despite the fact that he triumphed undaunted over all the mean
-inventions of their malice, his enemies persisted to the end.
-
-The executioner tied mockingly round his neck the book that had been
-published describing his victories; Montrose thanked him, saying that he
-wore it with more pride than he had ever worn the garter of honour. He
-uttered a short prayer; then asking them what more indignities they had
-prepared for him, he patiently and with unbroken spirit yielded his life
-to the hangman, at the too early age of thirty-eight.
-
-Whatever opinions we may have as to the rights and wrongs of the
-quarrel, this brutal killing of a gallant soldier and accomplished
-gentleman can only rank as a hideous blot upon all concerned in it.
-Every insult hurled at Montrose has returned in the verdict of time with
-redoubled force against the malice of those who stooped to such
-vindictiveness. The execution of a soldier who has violated no rule of
-war is at any time a thing that revolts the human conscience, and a
-sentence hoarse with the vile taunts of its utterers has so far lost all
-semblance of justice that it is needless to argue upon it.
-
-In the verdict of history, the great Marquis of Montrose, whether right
-or wrong in his political views, lived and died like a man of honour.
-
-The ballad of the "Gallant Grahams," written about this time, reflects
-very sincerely and touchingly the devotion and affection surrounding the
-great Marquis, accompanied by the very Scottish feeling that in addition
-to his own personal power and genius, he was also the head of the great
-Border family of Grahams.
-
-
- *THE GALLANT GRAHAMS*
-
- Now, fare thee well, sweet Ennerdale![#]
- Baith kith and countrie I bid adieu;
- For I maun away, and I may not stay,
- To some uncouth land which I never knew.
-
-[#] A corruption of Endrickdale. The principal and most ancient
-possessions of the Montrose family lie along the water of Endrick, in
-Dumbartonshire.
-
- To wear the blue I think it best,
- Of all the colours that I see;
- And I'll wear it for the gallant Grahams,
- That are banished from their countrie.
-
- I have no gold, I have no land,
- I have no pearl nor precious stane;
- But I wald sell my silken snood,
- To see the gallant Grahams come hame.
-
- In Wallace days, when they began,
- Sir John the Graham[#] did bear the gree
- Through all the lands of Scotland wide:
- He was lord of the south countrie.
-
-[#] The faithful friend and adherent of the immortal Wallace slain at
-the battle of Falkirk.
-
- And so was seen full many a time;
- For the summer flowers did never spring,
- But every Graham, in armour bright,
- Would then appear before the king.
-
- They were all drest in armour sheen,
- Upon the pleasant banks of Tay;
- Before a king they might be seen,
- These gallant Grahams in their array.
-
- At the Goukhead our camp we set,
- Our leaguer down there for to lay;
- And, in the bonny summer light,
- We rode our white horse and our gray.
-
- Our false commander sold our king,
- Unto his deadly enemie,
- Who was the traitor, Cromwell, then;
- So I care not what they do with me.
-
- They have betray'd our noble prince,
- And banished him from his royal crown;'
- But the gallant Grahams have ta'en in hand
- For to command those traitors down.
-
- In Glen-Prosen[#] we rendezvous'd,
- March'd to Glenshie by night and day.
- And took the town of Aberdeen,
- And met the Campbells in their array.
-
-[#] Glen-Prosen is in Angusshire, usually called Forfarshire. The
-Glenshee road, over the Grampians, is the highest road in Great Britain.
-
- Five thousand men, in armour strong,
- Did meet the gallant Grahams that day
- At Inverlochie, where war began,
- And scarce two thousand men were they.
-
- Gallant Montrose, that chieftan bold,
- Courageous in the best degree,
- Did for the king fight well that day;--
- The Lord preserve his majestie!
-
- Then woe to Strachan, and Ilacket baith!
- And, Lesly, ill death may thou die!
- For ye have betray'd the gallant Grahams,
- Who aye were true to majestie.
-
- And the Laird of Assaint has seized Montrose,
- And had him into Edinburgh town;
- And frae his body taken the head,
- And quarter'd him upon a trone,
-
- And Huntly's[#] gone the self-same way,
- And our noble king is also gone;
- He suffer'd death for our nation,
- Our mourning tears can ne'er be done.
-
-[#] The Marquis of Huntly, one of the few Scottish nobles who never
-wavered in his devotion to King Charles I., was beheaded by the sentence
-of the Parliament of Scotland.
-
- But our brave young king is now come home,
- King Charles the Second in degree;
- The Lord send peace into his time,
- And God preserve his majestie!
-
-
-The ballad-writer's reference to the "coming home" of Charles II.
-probably means his signing of the Covenant and placing himself entirely
-at the mercy of the violent bigots who had killed his most faithful
-servant, Montrose. To this was Charles reduced by the desperate nature
-of his fortunes. But this course of action entirely severed the
-Scottish Covenanters from the English Puritans, and admirers of the
-gallant Montrose can take a grim pleasure in the fact that his
-arch-enemy, General Lesly, was most disastrously defeated by Cromwell at
-the battle of Dunbar.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLVII*
-
- *The Borderers and the Jacobites*
-
-
-During the Jacobite Rising, many of the Border chiefs took up arms in
-the Stuart cause. Two of these, Lord Derwentwater and Viscount Kenmure,
-were beheaded on Tower Hill for their part in the unsuccessful rising of
-1715, and another, Lord Nithsdale, was only saved from the same fate by
-the courage of his wife.
-
-This brave woman travelled in the depth of winter from Scotland, but
-when she reached York the snow was so deep that the stage coach could go
-no further. She continued her journey alone, though the snow was above
-the horse's knees, and by good luck she reached London and the Tower in
-safety, where, by bribing the guards, she managed to see her husband.
-
-She then resolved to petition the King for his life, and she herself
-tells in a letter to her sister how she waited in the ante-room to see
-the King (George I.), and how she threw herself at his feet to present
-the petition. The King tried to get away from her, but she seized hold
-of his coat, and was dragged on her knees along the floor. This scene
-produced no result, and as other efforts to procure Nithsdale's release
-also failed, the Countess determined to save him by a stratagem. She
-again bribed the guards to let her in, telling them she had joyful news
-for her husband about the petition. She dressed him in woman's clothes,
-which she had smuggled in for the occasion, and painted his face, and
-brought him out, speaking to him as to the woman friend who had
-accompanied her, but who had already left the prison, calling him "Mrs
-Betty," and asking him for the love of God to go as quickly as he could
-to her lodging and fetch her maid, as she wished to go and present her
-final petition for the release.
-
-All went well, and Nithsdale escaped to France; but the King was highly
-incensed and declared that the Countess cost him more trouble than any
-woman in Europe.
-
-Her adventures were not yet over, however. In spite of the fact that
-the King had wished for her arrest, she travelled to Scotland to fetch
-her son, and the valuable papers which she had taken the precaution to
-bury underground on her departure for London.
-
-She was successful in this second journey, and, after concealing herself
-and her son, until no further search was made for them, this noble and
-enterprising woman escaped to France and joined her husband. They
-afterwards went to Rome, where they lived happily for many years.
-
-In an old ballad called "Lord Nithsdale's Dream," he is described as
-dreaming in the Tower the night before his execution, after having said
-farewell to his beloved wife.
-
- "Farewell to thee, Winifred, pride of thy kind,
- Sole ray in my darkness, sole joy in my pain."
-
-He listens for the last sound of her footfall, and catches the last
-glimpse of her robe at the door, and then all joy and gladness depart
-out of his life, and he prays alone in his dungeon, thinking of the
-dreadful dawn that awaits him.
-
-He falls asleep and dreams that he is a frolicsome boy again, playing
-amongst the bracken on the braes of the Nith, bathing in its waters and
-treading joyfully the green heather. Or again he is riding to the hunt
-on his gallant grey steed, with a plume in his bonnet and a star on his
-breast, chasing the red deer and the wild mountain roe.
-
-The vision changes, and he dreams that he is telling his love to
-Winifred, and swearing to be faithful to her, watching the red blushes
-rise on her cheeks at his words of love, and hearing her sweet voice
-replying.
-
-Again he is riding at the head of his gallant band.
-
- "For the pibroch was heard on the hills far away,
- And the clans were all gathered from mountain and glen.
- For the darling of Scotland, their exile adored,
- They raised the loud slogan--they rushed to the strife;
- Unfurl'd was the banner, unsheathed was the sword,
- For the cause of their heart, that was dearer than life."
-
-
-And now the darksome morn has come, the priest is standing by his side,
-saying the prayers for the dead. He hears the muffled drum and the bells
-tolling his death knell; the block is prepared, the headsman comes; and
-the victim is led bare-headed from his cell.
-
-Waking, he turns on his straw pallet, and sees, by the pale, misty light
-of a taper, the form of his wife.
-
- "'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!" softly she said,
- "Arouse thee and follow, be bold, never fear,
- There was danger ahead, but my errand has sped,
- I promised to save thee, and lo! I am here!"
-
-[Illustration: "_'Tis I, 'tis thy Winifred!_"]
-
-Then she puts woman's garb upon him, and together they pass the
-unsuspecting guards and weary sentinels.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the peasantry on the Nithsdale estates heard of their Lord's escape
-their joy was unbounded.
-
-One of the songs published and sung everywhere at the time, begins:--
-
- "What news to me, carlin'?
- What news to me?"
- "What news!" quo' the carlin',
- The best that God can gie."
-
-
-The speaker asks if the true king has come to his own, and the carlin'
-answers.
-
- "Our ain Lord Nithsdale
- Will soon be 'mang us here.
-
-
-Then the speaker says:--
-
- "Brush me my coat, carlin',
- Brush me my shoon;
- I'll awa and meet Lord Nithsdale,
- When he comes to our town."
-
-
-"Alack-a-day," says the carlin'. "He has escaped to France, with scarce
-a penny."
-
-"Then," says the first speaker, "we'll sell our corn and everything we
-have and send the money to our lord, and we'll make the pipers blow and
-lads and maidens dance, and we'll all be glad and joyful and play 'The
-Stuarts back again,' and make the Whigs go mad."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lord Derwentwater's fate was not so happy as that of Lord Nithsdale,
-though Lady Derwentwater made a desperate effort to save him.
-
-It was she indeed who had urged him to throw in his lot with the
-Stuarts, saying that it was not good that he should hide his head when
-other gentlemen were mustering for the cause.
-
-The peasantry still think that Lady Derwentwater sits on her ruined
-tower lamenting the evil counsel she gave her husband, and they hasten
-by in fear when they see her lamp-light flickering.
-
-Derwentwater is described in the old ballads, as "a bonny lord," with
-hair of gold, and kind love dwelling in his hawk-like eyes.
-
-He passionately loved his beautiful home in Tynedale, the foundations of
-which may still be seen. The wooded glen below the castle, with the
-little burn running through it, spanned by a grey bridge is romantically
-beautiful.
-
-His "Farewell" to all this beauty is pathetic.
-
- "Farewell to pleasant Ditson Hall,
- My father's ancient seat;
- A stranger now must call thee his,
- Which gars[#] my heart to greet.[#]
- Farewell each kindly well-known face,
- My heart has held so dear:
- My tenants now must leave their lands,
- Or hold their lives in fear.
-
-[#] makes.
-[#] weep.
-
- No more along the banks of Tyne,
- I'll rove in autumn grey;
- No more I'll hear, at early dawn,
- The lav'rocks[#] wake the day:
- Then fare thee well, brave Witherington,
- And Forster ever true.
- Dear Shaftsbury and Errington,
- Receive my last adieu.
-
-[#] larks.
-
- And fare thee well, George Collingwood,
- Since fate has put us down,
- If thou and I have lost our lives,
- Our King has lost his crown.
- Farewell, farewell, my lady dear,
- Ill, ill thou counsell'dst me:
- I never more may see thy babe
- That smiles upon thy knee.
-
- And fare thee well, my bonny grey steed,
- That carried me aye so free;
- I wish I had been asleep in my bed,
- The last time I mounted thee.
- The warning bell now bids me cease;
- My troubles nearly o'er;
- Yon sun that rises from the sea,
- Shall rise on me no more.
-
- Albeit that here in London town
- It is my fate to die,
- O carry me to Northumberland,
- In my father's grave to lie:
- There chant my solemn requiem
- In Hexham's holy towers,
- And let six maids of fair Tynedale
- Scatter my grave with flowers.
-
- And when the head that wears the crown,
- Shall be laid low like mine,
- Some honest hearts may then lament
- For Radcliff's fallen line.
- Farewell to pleasant Ditson Hall,
- My father's ancient seat;
- A stranger now must call thee his,
- Which gars my heart to greet."
-
-
-Before his death, Earl Derwentwater signed a paper acknowledging "King
-James the Third" as his sovereign, and saying that he hoped his death
-would contribute to the service of his King.
-
-He is said to have looked closely at the block, and to have asked the
-executioner to chip off a rough place that might hurt his neck. Then,
-pulling off his coat and waistcoat, he tried if the block would fit his
-head, and told the executioner that when he had repeated "Lord Jesus
-receive my soul" for the third time, he was to do his office, which the
-executioner accordingly did at one blow.
-
-History tells that Derwentwater was brave and open-hearted and generous,
-and that his fate drew tears from the spectators, and was a great
-misfortune to his country. He was kind to the people on his estates, to
-the poor, the widow and the orphan.
-
-His request to be buried with his ancestors was refused, and he was
-interred at St Giles, Holborn, but his corpse was afterwards removed and
-carried secretly to Northumberland, where it was deposited in Dilston
-Chapel. The aurora borealis, which appeared remarkably vivid on the
-night of his execution, was long called in that part of the country
-"Lord Derwentwater's Lights."
-
-Immediately after Derwentwater's execution, Lord Kenmure also suffered
-death. After his execution, a letter was found in his pocket addressed
-to the Pretender, by the title of King James, saying that he died in his
-faithful service, and asking him to provide for his wife and children.
-
-The following ballad describes his rising in the Stuart cause--
-
- "O Kenmure's on and awa', Willie,
- O Kenmure's on and awa';
- And Kenmure's lord's the bravest lord
- That ever Galloway saw.
- Success to Kenmure's band, Willie!
- Success to Kenmure's band!
- There's no a heart that fears a Whig,
- That rides by Kenmure's hand.
-
- His lady's cheek was red, Willie,
- His lady's cheek was red,
- When she saw his steely jupes[#] put on,
- Which smell'd o' deadly feud.
- Here's Kenmure's health in wine, Willie,
- Here's Kenmure's health in wine;
- There ne'er was a coward o' Kenmure's blude,
- Nor yet o' Gordon's line.
-
-[#] armour.
-
- There's a rose in Kenmure's cap, Willie,
- There's a rose in Kenmure's cap,
- He'll steep it red in ruddie heart's blade,
- Afore the battle drap.
- Here's him that's far awa', Willie,
- Here's him that's far awa',
- And here's the flower that I lo'e best,
- The rose that's like the snaw.
-
- O Kenmure's lads are men, Willie,
- O Kenmure's lads are men,
- Their hearts and swords are metal true,
- And that their foes shall ken.
- They'll live, or die wi' fame, Willie,
- They'll live, or die wi' fame,
- And soon wi' sound o' victorie
- May Kenmure's lord come hame."
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLVIII*
-
- *The Nine Nicks o' Thirlwall*
-
-
-If you stand upon Rose Hill, which rises from the banks of the river
-Irthing just where Northumberland meets Cumberland, you have lying
-around you one of the finest wild prospects in the United Kingdom. Hills
-to the north, stretching away into Scotland; hills to the east, broken
-into picturesque valleys, especially the great gap through which rushes
-the young Tyne; hills to the south, dominated by the powerful head of
-Cross Fell, a great sprawling mountain, not a peaked one, the highest
-stretch of which is nearly three thousand feet above sea level.
-
-But while drinking in the glories of the distances, the eye will note
-with curiosity a strange-looking but picturesque hill only a couple of
-miles to the South-east, with a long rocky ridge at its top deeply cut
-into or "nicked" in nine different places, this giving it a very wild
-appearance. It is one of these hills which tempts the keen observer to
-go on and explore it. If we cut direct to it, over the fields, it is
-rough going, but the view is good all the way. And there are four
-special objects of interest, all close together; the rushing Tipalt
-river, Thirlwall Castle, the Roman wall, and the Nine Nicks.
-
-Thirlwall Castle rises tall, square, and stern, with a dark fir-wood
-behind it at the foot of the hill, where a bend in the river makes a
-natural moat. Approaching it from Rose Hill, it looks as if the
-building were still nearly complete, but the south side has almost
-entirely fallen away and all the floors and the roof are out. Edward I.
-slept in this Castle when it was newly built, in 1306; but now it is
-grass-grown and moss-grown, and its three bare walls rise gaunt and grim
-to the sky. It is entirely built out of stones with Roman chisel marks,
-taken from the great Roman wall, which unfortunately was once regarded
-as a handy stone-quarry for anyone to take from.
-
-The name "Thirlwall" means "Drill-wall," and marks the spot as that at
-which the wild Northern tribes first "drilled" or broke through the
-wall. The name was, of course, given to the place long before this
-castle was built.
-
-To mount from Thirlwall Castle to the top of the Nine Nicks is an easy
-enough task for any vigorous person. It is just a fine healthy scramble.
-When at the top, it becomes evident that some sort of fortification once
-existed there. In point of fact this was the important Roman station
-called "Magna" which stood at about the middle of the Roman Wall. The
-wall ran from sea to sea, that is to say, from the mouth of the Tyne to
-the Solway. Thus it was nearly eighty miles long, and a very elaborate
-structure indeed.
-
-It consisted of three distinct portions:--
-
-1. The main stone wall, with a ditch to the north of it.
-
-2. An earth-work to the south of this, consisting of either two or
-three ramparts about seventy feet apart, with a ditch between.
-
-8. Stations, Castles and Watch-towers. Sometimes these were to the
-north of the wall, sometimes in the middle, sometimes south, according
-to the nature of the country.
-
-The height of the main wall was from sixteen to twenty feet, including
-battlements. It was six to nine feet thick. Fancy a powerful military
-wall of about eighteen feet high stretching nearly eighty miles right
-across England! It hardly seems possible that the Romans could
-undertake such a work. The square strong stones were carefully selected
-and often brought from quarries at a distance. These stones flanked the
-outsides of the wall, and in between was strong concrete which was
-poured in while in liquid.
-
-The second wall was of earth and stones, and, of course, lower than the
-first. Then there was a castle every mile, some of which can still be
-clearly traced, and a "station," about every four miles, of which
-several interesting ruins remain. There was a road eighteen feet wide
-between the two walls.
-
-Those who have the energy to toil on for a full dozen miles of rough
-walking, along the wall, eastward from Thirlwall, will be rewarded by
-some of the most romantic scenes in Britain. They will see the wall at
-its best. They will pass Whinshields, the highest point in the wall,
-1230 feet above sea level. The wild Northumbrian lakes will lie at
-their feet; if the day is fine, the Solway will be seen glistening,
-thirty miles to the west; and on the east the eye follows the Tyne
-almost to the sea. The Pennine Ridge bars the view twenty miles to the
-south, while on the North the High Cheviot is clear and strong, thirty
-miles away.
-
-Passing Whinshields, it is not far to Borcovicus (often called
-Housteads) where lie the remains of a large Roman Station, wonderful
-remains, showing the whole outline with startling clearness. This
-station covered five acres, and here was quartered a cohort of the
-Tungrian infantry, consisting of a thousand brave soldiers, servants of
-Imperial Rome.
-
-But, after all, nothing is so impressive as the remains of the wall
-itself. Stand at the top either of Whinshields or of the Nine Nicks,
-and try to imagine what it looked like in Roman days. Eastward along
-the Tyne valley and westward along the Irthing valley ran this wonderful
-work, this powerful girdle of stone. The very spot was chosen with
-great judgment, for these valleys gave the Romans a district protected
-by the bleak hills, where they could live and where they could keep
-cattle and grow grain. But the hilly nature of the ground must have
-added to the difficulty of the builders. The wall had to run up steep
-hill sides and cling to the edge of cliffs, and precipices; it had to be
-carried by bridges over roaring torrents, and when it reached low-lying
-ground it had to avoid the treacherous swamps and morasses. And yet,
-despite every obstacle, the great wall ran on its direct way, as strong
-and persistent as the great people who built it.
-
-It withstood the shock of war, it was not flung down by soldiers
-marching against it. But to the people who wanted to build castles or
-houses or farms, or even to mend roads, the wall offered a mass of
-material ready to hand, and it suffered not from man's energy so much as
-from his laziness. Century after century it was robbed of its stones;
-to-day a series of long grass-grown mounds, a few feet high, running
-across the meadows, are nearly all that remain of one of the most
-wonderful pieces of building that was ever erected in Great Britain.
-Even today, in its decay, it is one of the most romantic features of a
-highly romantic district.
-
-
-
-
- *Chapter XLIX*
-
- *In Wild Northumberland To-day*
-
-
-These tales of the Borders would hardly be complete without a few
-concluding words about the great romantic charm which still invests the
-Borderline. Let us, for example, make a brief survey of some of the
-haunting spots in wild Northumberland. We will pass over such towns as
-Warkworth, Alnwick, Alnmouth; beautiful as they are, they have moved
-with the times and are too modern to be more than mentioned here. But
-in a place like Holy Island we feel the call of the old days, and the
-charm that was theirs. This Island was the scene of the first efforts
-of Christianity to curb the wild and warlike Northumbrians; St Aidan,
-and St Cuthbert, both men of remarkable genius and great influence,
-taught there lessons of peace and justice without which every warlike
-state would descend into mere savagery. The island is about two miles
-square, and at low tide it is easy to walk across the sands to or from
-the mainland of Northumberland. The distance is two and a half miles,
-and it is necessary to take off shoes and stockings, for the water on
-the sands will often be six inches deep. A row of posts marks the way,
-and some of them have ladders, reaching up to a barrel on the top, so
-that any caught by the tide can find a safe harbour wherein they will
-suffer nothing more serious than a long wait! The island is inhabited
-by fishing folk, living simple healthy lives. There are fine rocks and
-splendid sands; beautiful flowers and lovely shells. The seabirds are
-wonderful. The ruins of the old Cathedral and castle are very
-interesting, it is a delightful old-world place, out of the rush and
-hurry of modern life.
-
-Retracing our steps to the mainland, and proceeding westward for a dozen
-or so miles as the crow flies, we reach the River Till, and the field of
-Flodden. Here we are near to the big wild wall of the Cheviot hills,
-and to keep on the English side of the border we need to turn due south.
-It is then about thirty miles of rough walking through these grandly
-rugged hills before we come to the field of Otterburn.
-
-But we realise in that walk how it was that the district produced and
-still produces a hardy race of hunters and sheep-farmers, and why it is
-that the towns and farms nestle in the valleys, so that the Borderers,
-when they meant to say, "Rouse the neighbourhood," used the phrase,
-"Raise the _water_" (meaning, of course, the houses along the
-waterside). Further south, still going among splendid shaggy hills, we
-reach the North Tyne River, and soon afterwards some highly interesting
-Roman remains, including the arches of a fine bridge over the river at
-the Roman Station of Cilurnum, near Chollerford. This is on the Roman
-Wall, which has already been described under the heading of Thirlwall.
-A few miles to the west would bring us to the picturesque but
-little-known Northumberland Lakes, where the wild swans nest. If we
-continue south and south-west we can follow the beautiful valleys of the
-Allan or the South Tyne. This is a district of hills, roads, and
-castles; the domain of the fated Lord Derwentwater was near here. For
-beauty the whole of this neighbourhood would be hard to beat; yet it is
-too little known.
-
-If we still go south, the scenery grows wilder and wilder as we approach
-the huge mountain of Cross Fell. We may cross into south-east Cumberland
-and visit the quaint old town of Alston, one of the highest towns in
-England. Here were once the royal silver mines, when English coins were
-made from Alston silver. Lead is chiefly mined there now, and the mines
-are worth a visit. Near Cross Fell also is a rough road called the
-"Maiden Way," and an old legend says it was made by women, who carried
-the stones in their aprons! The western slope of the Fell is famous for
-a specially violent wind called the "Helm wind," which rages there at
-certain seasons. It is just as if it were rushing fiercely down the
-hill, with a roaring noise and strength enough to overturn a horse and
-cart, and to beat the grass and grain till it is black! But though it
-does a deal of damage it is very exhilarating, making people feel merry
-in spite of themselves. And on Cross Fell slopes can be seen the
-beautiful River Tees, which can be followed to its grand waterfalls of
-the the Cauldron and the High Force. In the first the water dashes on
-to huge rocks, and is thrown back on itself, roaring, foaming, and
-fighting; in the second, it tumbles sheer down a dark and noble cliff.
-And everywhere on the heights there are splendid views.
-
-In making any such excursions as the ones here outlined, into the
-out-of-the-way parts of Northumberland and the Borders, we find an added
-pleasure in the character of the people. The Borderers are still a
-grand race; big men, vigorous, honest, courteous, hospitable, free from
-all that is mean and small. In some districts you can hear "thou" and
-"thee" still used, and meet old men who have never seen a railway. One
-dear old farmer, a real picture of a simple honest man, hearing I had
-come from London, asked me if the London men had got their hay-crop in
-yet! One typical Northumbrian, of great natural intelligence, bearing a
-name famous on the Borders, is station-master at a local station that
-stands in a wood, and between trains, studies bird and wild-flower till
-he has made himself a most interesting naturalist. A stranger who has
-lost his way will find these courteous folk ready to walk a mile or two
-with him, out of their own way, just to set him right; and he who is
-tired and hungry will be invited to step in and eat, and perhaps find
-himself introduced to all the family and treated like an honoured guest;
-then, not a penny of payment taken, they will set him on his way with a
-bunch of the best flowers from the garden! For hearts on the Border are
-very human and warm. So that in due time he who knows the Borderers
-will delight to hear the unmistakeable Northumbrian or the pronounced
-Border accent. And he will say to himself: Splendid is the Border
-scenery, and stirring are the Border ballads, but best of all are the
-Border men.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- TOLD THROUGH THE AGES
-
-Legends of Greece and Rome
-Favourite Greek Myths
-Stories of Robin Hood and his Merry Outlaws
-Stories of King Arthur and his Knights
-Stories from Herodotus
-Stories from Wagner
-Britain Long Ago
-Stories from Scottish History
-Stories from Greek Tragedy
-Stories from Dickens
-Stories from the Earthly Paradise
-Stories from the AEneid
-The Book of Rustem
-Stories from Chaucer
-Stories from the Old Testament
-Stories from the Odyssey
-Stories from the Iliad
-Told by the Northmen
-Stories from Don Quixote
-The Story of Roland
-Stories from Thucydides
-The Story of Hereward
-Stories from the Faerie Queene
-Cuchulain: The Hound of Ulster
-Stories from Xenophon
-Old Greek Nature Stories
-Stories from Shakespeare
-Stories from Dante
-Famous Voyages of the Great Discoverers
-The Story of Napoleon
-Stories of Pendennis and the Charterhouse
-Sir Guy of Warwick
-Heroes of the Middle Ages
-The Story of the Crusades
-The Story of Nelson
-Stories from George Eliot
-Froissart's Chronicles
-Shakespeare's Stories of the English Kings
-Heroes of Modern Europe
-The Story of King Robert the Bruce
-Stories of the Scottish Border
-The Story of the French Revolution
-The Story of Lord Kitchener
-Stories of the Saints
-The Story of St Elizabeth of Hungary
-In Feudal Times
-The High Deeds of Finn
-Early English Travel and Discovery
-Legends of Ancient Egypt
-The Story of the Renaissance
-Boyhood Stories of Famous Men
-Stories from French History
-Stories from English History
-Famous English Books and their Stories
-Women of the Classics
-In the Days of the Guilds
-Science through the Ages
-
-_Other volumes in active preparation_
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
-***
-
-
-
-
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