President Whjte Library, CORN E LL U N 1 VERS JTY. ■Ili^iS' IHIZII^'^I DA 430.M13""' ""'""'"' "-'""^ ®'^lSiiBKifii«ii!i,KS!;fj addressed to W 3 1924 027 981 145 ^ Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924027981145 S T A T E - P APE R S AND LETTERS, ADDRESSED TO WILLIAM QARSTARES, Confidential SECRETARY to K. WILLIAM during the whole of his Reign; afterwards Principal of the Univerfity of Edinburgh. Relating to Public Affairs in Great-Britain, but more particularly in Scotland, during the Reigns of K. William and (^ Anne. TO WHICH" IS PREFIXED The LIFE of Mr C A R S T A R E S. Publiftied from the Originals, By JOSEPH M'CORMICK, D. D. Minifter at Preftonpans. EDINBURGH: Printed for W. STRAHAN and T. C A D K L L, Undrnt and JOHN BALFOUR, Edinhrgh. M,DCC,LXXIV. R E F A C E. THE utility oi State-Papers is univerfally underftoodand acknow- ledged. It is from the evidence which thefe furnifh, that hiftory derives its full degree of authenticity. Every perfon engaged in great tranfadions is influenced by a particular fyftem of opinions, and isbiaffed by afFedion to thofe with whom he ads, or antipathy to thofe whom he oppofes. If he undertakes to inform pofterity with refpedt to what he has known or doney his fyftem and paflions mingle imper- ceptibly with his narrative, and tinge with their own colour the fads which he relates. Contemporary hiftorians are often, for this reafon, not the moft authentic; and adors in confiderable fcenes do not defcribe them with -the greateft impartiality. A difcerning reader perufes them with diftruft, and with-holds his aflent until their teftimony be con- firmed by the more unfufpicious evidence of original papers. With refped to periods which are remote and" uninterefting, we may reft fatisfied with the information of contemporary authors, leaving it to the induftrious curiofity of antiquaries to glean whaf farther in- telligence they can pick up from imperfed records : But, where tranf- adions are recent, and of great importance, when they belong to times in" which a nation is divided into political fadions of repugnant prin- ciples, and purfuing different objeds, there is no fource of hiftorical -knowledge fo genuine and pure as that of State-Papers. By exami- ning and comparing thefe, we difcover the real views, not only of indi- viduals, but of parties; we can trace the means which tl^ey empIoyet valuable work, it was a confufed chaos, without any certain ligKt to guide to the knowledge of fadts, or any proper documents to authenti- cate them. But, while the antien^ hiftory of Great Britain, and that of the two great periods preceeding the reftoration, received fuch illuftration from colle£tions of ftate-papers, our hiftory, fubfequent to that aera, cannot pretend to the fame advantages. Some light has indeed been thrown upon the reign of Charles II. by the letters of Temple, Arlington, and of Danby j but it is only of late that an^ papers of moment relating, to the reigns of James II. and William III. have been publiflied; and none of any confequence have yet appeared concerning the reign of Queen Anne. The public curiofity, fatiated, in a great meafure, with refpedt to the two former periods which have beea mentioned, is ftill eager and unabated with regard to the latter. This is manifeft from the extraordi- nary attention paid to the interefting colledion publiflied by Sir Joha Dalrymple. There is, indeed:, an obvious reafon for the fcantinefs of hiftorical: materials during the reigns of thefe three princes. A certain period of time muft elapfe before the tranfaCtions of any age, efpeeially of a tur- bulent and fadious one, become a proper iubjedt for hiftory.. Not'on- ly the capital adors themfelves, but then- immediate defcendcnts, muft go off' the ftage, before we can exped that their cabinets will be open- ed, and the papers whicli they contain be expofed to the public eye There are in the repofitories of feveral great families in both kingdoms,, large colLe£tions of papers concerning public aff'airs under each of thefe princes. The maturity of time is now arrived, when they may be made public without impropriety. It will afford the publiflier real fa~ tisfadtjon, if his example, and the. inftruQiion. or, amufement received frfiim vl PREFACE. from the papers which he communicates, fhall excite others to open their ftores, . and no longer with-hold from the public information which it is not now neceflary to conceal. What degree of merit the following colledion may poffefs, it be- comes not the publifher to fay. He has confined himfelf to his own humble province, without prefuming to encroach upon that of the hi- ftorian ; and, as much as poffible, has avoided entering into any hifto- ' rical or critical detail concerning the faOis to which the collection re- fers. Satisfied with his own. patient induftry in laying in the materi- als, he leaves it to the genius of the hiftbrian, by arranging them in pro- per order, to raife the ftrudiure. Even with regard to the firft intention of publiftiing this colle£tion, he can claim but little merit. He has fuffered himfelf to be guided entirely by the opinion of far better judges of its importance than he is himfelf ; judges, to whofe opinion, in matters of this nature, he knows that the public is difpofed to pay the greateft deference *. To the papers is prefixed a life of Mr Cafftares. This he thought neceflary, not only in order to do juftice to the charader and talents of a refpe£table man, but to explain the peculiar circumftances in his fi- tuation which gave rife to his extenfive correfpondence concerning pu- blic affairs. There are fome yet alive who remember Mr Carftares in thofe ftations, which he filled with fo much honour to himfelf and to his country, in the latter period of his life. But, during the reign of King William, when he was the confidential minifter of that -great prince in all Scottifh bufinefs, as he held no public office, and was a man of much difcretion, as well as of real modefty, he was fo far from thrufting himfelf forward, or making a difplay of the credit which he poffefled, that his influence and operations were frequently unobferved, and he is feldom mentioned by the memoir-writers of the times. It is in the following papers, and in thofe preferved in the fa- milies of the great officers of ftate in both kingdoms, during the reign of * Sir David Dalrymple will forgive the editor for taking this opportunity of inform- ing the public, that, if this colleftion has* any merit, it is to him the world is indebted for the firft fuggeftion of its being made public, and the editor for his advice and af- fiftance in the publication. , ,P R E F A C E vli of King William, that we difcover his influence in public tranfadlons, from the acceffion of that monarch to his death. But, though few particulars concerning Mr Carftares are to be learned from the imperfe£t hiftories of King William's reign which have hitherto appeared, feveral circumftances determined the publiftier to attempt giving an account of his life. As thefe circumftances {erve to eftablifti the authenticity of the papers now made public, he confi^ ders it as his duty to mention them. Thefe papers came into the hands of Mr Charles Macky, late Profef- for of civil hiftory apd antiquities in the univerfity of Edinburgh, as exe- cutor to Mrs Carftares. That gentlernan preferved them with a religious care. Several years before his death, he informed the publiflier that he intended to leave them to him, on account of his near relation to Mr Carftares. At the fame time, he fignified his defire, that, if ever they were made public, fome account of the life of Mr Carftares fhould ac- company them into the world. With this view, Mr Macky was at confiderable pains to furnifh him. with fuch materials as might enable him to comply with his inclina- "tion. He had lived much in Mr Carftares's family in the early part of his, life, and, by that means, had accefs to be acquainted with many circumftances in his private deportment and charader, unknown to the world. Thefe, together with the original papers now publifhed, he com- municated from time to time to the publifher, and from them the ac- count of the life of Mr Carftares was taken-. ~ , He mentions this circumftance the rather, becaufe Mr Macky's well known character, in point of candour and integrity, as well as accuracy in hiftorical refearches, gives the publiflier an entire confidence In the truth of fuch particulars, in the following account, as have no other vouchers. But, whatever reception this part of the publication may meet with from the world, it affords fome fatisfa£tion to the publifher, that, in at- tempting to do fome juftice to the memory of one departed friend, he has fulfilled the obligation he lies under to another. A D V E R-^ ADVERTISEMENT, A S the editor has pledged himfelf to the public for the whole of Mr Carftares's correfpondence relative to affairs of ftate, he has not only thought it incumbent upon him to publifh the letters in cyphers to which, after no fmall labour, he difcovered a key ; but does not think himfelf at liberty to with-hold a few letters which he has attempted to decypher in vain ; becaufe it is poffible thefe may fall into the hands of fome more verfant in matters of this kind, who may prove more fuccefsful in the attempt. The letters in this publication a:re printed according to the ortho- graphy of the originals. Any want of uniformity in this particular, in letters from the fame correfpondents, is entirely owing to this cir-, cumftance, that fome of the letters which are figned by the principals, were written by their fecretaries. To the life of Mr Carftares are annexed fome (hort memoirs of the ftatefmen whofe letters are contained in this collection. Thefe are ex- cerpted from a manufcript in the paffeffion of the Earl of Hyndford, which the editor found to be more compleat, and lefs partial, than the copy from which an anonymous writer publifhed, in 1732, The Cba- racers of the Court of Great Britain^ CONTENTS. LIFE of Mr Carftares, page i — 91. Memoirs of correfpondeiifs, 92 — 102. Earl of Argyle's correfpondence with Monmouth, RulTel, and the exclufionifts, decyphered, p. 106- 124. Secret intelligence concerning the tranfadtions of King James and his friends in France and Scotland ; — and the negociations of Breadalbine with the Highland clans in the year 1691, p. 126. Debates in the privy-council concerning a militia in Scotland, p. 143. Proceedings in the parliament of Scotland in 1693, in a feries pf letters from Secre- tary Johnfton.— His method of managing a Scottifh parliament, p. 157. Aflaffination-plot. The means ufed to difcover one ; but without fuccefs. Fid. Alexander Johnfton's letters ^d^;^. , Lord Tarbat foUicits a pardon, and demits his office of regifter. Proceedings in parliament, and fecret committee in the affair of Glenco. Mutual complaints of the leading-men in the oppofite faaions upon that fubjedl, p. 229. Of a bond of affociation, — and contefts about it. The Africanc ompany ^Vio- lent complaints of TuUibardine's adminiftration. — —State of the kingdom. Choice of a ptefident to the Court of Seffion, &c. p. 279. Lord Portland's embaffy to Frartce. ^Tranfaftions in Scotland in the year 1698. — Change of the miniftry. Violent oppofition in Parliament by TuUibardine and his friends.-^^ — His profecution of the Frazers ; who are Supported by Argyle. African company's addrefs.— — Free chara£bers of the leading men in the oppofition, p. 372. More changes neceffary. Violent conteft betwixt Argyle and Teviot. The Earl of Portland's refignation. — ^Bitter complaints by Argyle of Seafield's treachery. — Full detail of the proceedings in the African company and parliament relative to the Darien expedition, Lord Bafil Hamilton fent up with an addrefs. The ferment aver the whole kingdom. ^The rabble at Edinburgh. The deplorable condition of the country, -p. 441. The cowardice and timidity of moft of the King's fervants in Scotland. The King's perfonal prefence required, to fave the nation from ruin, p. 543. Captain Pinkerton and his company feized and condemned, as pyrates, by the Spaniards. A-parliament. Annandale fufpedled, though penfioned. Duke of Hamilton, and Marquis of TuUibardine, at the head of oppofition, carry all before them Various plans of accommodation propofed to the King.- Titles, penfions, and places, necef- fary, and to whom, p. 558. Duke of Glocefter's death. Sentence of the rabblers, and its execution. More money and penfions requifite, p. 594. The King refufes to affert the right of the Scots to Caledonia. But makes certain conceffions, which have a good effeft. Of the vacancies in the court of feffion. b Prepa- X C O N T E N T * S. Preparations for King William's coming to Scotland.- ^Meafures for fecuring a majority in next feffion of parliament. More money demanded. ^flow to be iemitted,and in what manner difpofed of;— Balcarras. — Paterfon's fcheme of trade. Argyle and Seaficld's fuccefs in gaining profelyteSb' King William's letter and in- ftruftions. Repeated entreaties that he would be prefent during the fitting of the parliament. Of his lodgings in the abbey.— —And the way of his difpenfing wfth his coronation, p. 6oi. Parliament meets, debates and proceedings, p. 669.1 Of trade with France. Jealoufies and diffetences among the King's Servants. Of the African company's ad- drefs. Titles, penfions, and offices, p. 694. Proceedings in the parliament, which met upon the Queen's acceffion, p. 714. Of fettling the fucceffion to the crown of Scotland. And the averfion of the Scots to the fame fucceflbr with Eng- land, p. 717. Of the union of the two kingdoms, p. 737.^ Of the invafion in 1708, p. 764. — —The privy-council in Scotland, reafons for and againft taking it away Of the Englifli liturgy. The bath of abjuration, and pa- tronages, p. 766. • Appendix. Aft of patliament in favour of Mr Carftares, p. t^j. Overture for fettling church-government in Scotland, p. 794, Aft for fettling the peace of the church, p. 795. Petition of Mr Carftares, and others, concerning the bill for reftoring patronages,, p. 796. , Remarks on the reprefentation made by the kirk of Scotland concerning patronages,, p. 798. A L P H A- ^y-fi }■ ■ .: >/ u ALPHABETICAL INDEX of the LETTERS. A. \ Nnandale, page 649, 670, 675, 789 Argyle, Earl of, 107, 109, 113 Argyle, Earl, afterwards Duke of, 232, 272, 274, 277, 279, 285, 289, 316, 327, 370, 388, 389, 392, 393, 4ii,42i,43i.442.447»449>4S7>4<54»46s>4<58,469>472j> 475, 480, 494, 565, 588, J98, 636, 647, 665,, 69,7 Argyle John, Duke of, 735 ~ B. Boyle of Kelburn, afterwards Earl of Glafgow, 394, 408, 7*3 Buchan, EprI of, 460 Blantyre Lord, 377> S°^ Blair David, 254^ 264, 364, 365 C. Crawfurd, Earl of, I25^ I43» 5S3 Cunninghaihe Hugh, 4.3?, 463 _ '■ Alexander, 360, 109, 710 Cockburn of Ormifton, Lord Juflice-clerk and Treafurer-dqpute, 256, 287, 365, ^6^ 367, 378> 444» 476* 506. S°7> S°9> S^o> 5»2> i^5> SS^> SS4> S75> S9^ 608,6^7^ 704,709,929 Carmiehael Lord, 265, 487, 489,, ^24, si^, 560, 568, 600, 701 . ■ ■■ ■■- ■" ■ " 'D._; -\ '■ " ■'' ' Dalrymple, Sir Hew, Lord Pf efident, 380, 559, 652, 666 F. Frazer of Beaufort, alias Lgrd Lovat, 434, 6gs Forbes, Mafter of, 265 H. Harley Robert, afterwards Earl of Oxford, Lord High-treafurer of Great Britain, 7^8, 719. 72i»724, 727. 7S<5. 774 ' Hay, Earl of, 779, 781, 786, 7891 79 1 J. Johnfton James, Secretary of State, 1J3, 154, 155, 157, 158, 159, 161, 166, tjo,^ 178, 181, 183, 184. - ■ Alexander, his brother, 185, 187, 188, 192, 196, 197, i98i 201, 203,, 204, 206, 209,-211, 213, 216, 218, 222, 224, 225, 239. Kennedy, Sir Andrew, 271, 359. L. Loudori, Earl of, 739, 770 Leven, Earl ofj, 479, 7i7,..7Sh753 « - M. Mart. ^11 INDEX of LETTERS. M. Marr, Earl of, 6i8, 738, 743, 746, 752, 763,787 Marchmont, Earl of, 299, 385, 404, 407, 409, 4^9, 42^1 474. 4i i> S73i 606, 694, 699, 713. 714- Melvill, Earl of, 399, 514, 543, 549, 578. Murray of Philiphaugh, 381, 518, 529, 539, S4i» 5S^* <5oi, 6^9, 684, 690, 714 M«Kay John, 128, 130, 131, 133 135,191 Maxwell, Sir John, 376 N. ' Nairne Sir David, 740, 761, 769 Napier Lord, 523 O. Ogilvy Sir James, afterwards Earl of Seafield, 257, 263, 269, 270, 295, 299, 302, 306, 307, 309, 301, 3 14, 3 18, 319, 326, 335, 34i> 344> 347> 349> 35 1. 3 ?2. 3SS> 3S^> S^i, 379> 384, 386, 39°> 39h S^Si 397» 403. 40S> 4°9> 4i4. 4^5^ 426, 427, 429, 437> 441, 445, 482, 484. 4925 493> 498* SSO. 577. 581. 583. 590> 616, 628, 632, 650, 663, (J69, 671, 699, 702, 705, 708, 725, 73i> 73i> 932, 733> 735> 737. 745. 764, 766, 780,792 P. Portland, Earl of, 505, 648, 717, 742, 749, 762, 765 Pringk Robert, 3^8, 772, 777, 778, 784 Queenfberry, Duke of, 291, 292, 312, 333, 400,420, 452, 574, 483, 535, 548, 561, 571, 594, 602, 625, 630, 637* 661, 667, 706 S. Stairs, Earl of, 750 Sunderland, Earl of, 776, 785 Stewart Sir James, Lord-advocate, 200, 262, 282, 283, 290, 298, 330, 338, 343, 354^ 454, 471. 490. 495, S33. 547, 553, 554, 574, 586, 607, 620, 624, 767 Stewart John, 570, 61 1, 621, 626, 633, 645, 655 Sutherland, Earl of, 296 *. T. TarbatLord, afterwards Earl of Cromarty, 229, 23 ij 233 Tullibardine, Marquis of, afterwards Diike of Athole, 284, 293, 305,315,322,324, 346. ■*ij-+**+'t'S-i*f4"»"V*4"|-**4f***4f4»**4'**4**4'4'*4>4'4'*M4'**4'*****44"!'4'****'l'* THE LIFE O F Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. -4f.+*f+4>**+f**+**f^'*'******+****Mf****t****f*M***t*4.*#t*^^^4. THE I F E O F Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. MR WILLIAM CARSTARES was bom upon the His birth; nth day of February 1649, ^^ Cathcart, in the neigh- bourhood of Glafgow. His father, Mr John Carftares, a clergyman, was a younger branch of a very ancient family of that name, in the county of Fife. His mother was a daughter of Muir of Glanderfton, a refpec- table family in the county of Renfrew, As William gave early indications of an uncommon genius, his His educati- father determined to give him the beft education this country could afford. With this view, he fent him, when very young, to Ormif- ton, a village in Eaft-Lothian, and put him under the tuition of Mr Sinclair, an indulged Prefbyterian clergyman, and a particular friend of his own, who kept an academy, where many young gen- tlemen of the chief families in Scotland were educated. It was at this early period that Mr Carftares formed thofe con- nedions which fubfifted betwixt him and fome of the greateft men in the nation during the whole of his future life. It was here too, that he firft acquired that tafte for the learned languages for which he was ^afterwards diftinguiftied. It was the cuftora in all the public fchools A a in 4 THELIFEOF in Scotland, in thofe days, to teach the very elements of the Latins in that language, and to fpeak nothing but Latin in fchool. Mr Sinclair carried this point ftill farther ; for he would fufFer no other language to be fpoken in his family. To this circumf|:ance, along with another which we fhall have occafion to mention afterwards, he was wont to" afcribe the eafe with which he could write and fpealc in that tongue. Upon his leaving this academy, his father fent him to the uni- verfity of Edinburgh, under the particular infpediion of Mr Paterfon, theli one of the regents of the college, afterwards Sir William Pater- fon, and clerk to the privy-council of Scotland.. Under this gentle- man's care he made great proficiency in the feveral branches of the fchool-philofophy then in vogue, and afterwards devoted himfelf particularly to the ftudy of divinity, the profeffion to which he was- naturally inclined, and for which his father intended him. But the unhappy fituation of his country, at that period, greatly damped the ardour of his literary purfuits, and drew his attention to- wards objedis of a very different nature, but no lefs fuited to thofe talents of which he was poiTeifed. Naturally of an a£tive, bold, and enterpri- zing fpirit, conne£ted by blood with fome, and by habits of friendfhip with others, whofe families had fmarted moft feverely under the rod of perfecution, he was ready to lend a willing ear to the complaints they uttered,' and gave early fymptoms of his difpofition to concur with them in obtaining redrefs of thofe grieyances under which- they groaned, and in defence of the civil and religious liberties of his country. Hjsfatherre- His father, apprehending that the natural warmth of his fon^ folves to fend . . . ° ^ ■^'-"* O" him abroad.' temper, joined to the impetuofity of youth, and his avowed detefta- tion of the court-meafures, might hurry him too far, under pretence of affording him the beft opportunity of finifhing his ftudies in di- vinity, fent him to the univerfity of Utrecht. . When he fet out from Scotland, his father gave him a letter to a phyfician at London, a particular friend of his, recommending him to Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. $ to his klndeft offices, and beft advice. This letter, Mr Carftares ufed to obferve, laid the foundation of his future fortunes in life. At this time England had begun to take 'the alarm about the State of af- popifh fucceffion. The thoughtlefs and proiligate Charles was too ^^^l 'g^ ^ae diffipated to give that attention to affairs of ftate which their nature per»o fignation, by the papers which had pafled through his hands at Lon- -, don. Upon this, Mr Carftares was immediately ordered to be put in Mr Carftares irons, and continued in them fome weeks; Melfort vifiting him fre- irons, quently all that time, and urging him, in the mofl: earneft manner, ' to reveal what he knew, with promifes of ftill obtaining a full par- don, in To far as he himfelf was concerned, if he would comply. . However tempting this offer might appear to one in his fituation, . , who had nothing now before his eyes, in cafe of rejeding it, but perpetual imprifonment, and reiterated torture, he, without hefjta- ' tion, told his Lordfhip, that he was now firmly refolved to pttt his fortitude and fidelity fairly, to the trial.- " That if^ in violation of the rights of humanity, and -of' the regard ;He rejefts * dvte to his facred charader, they were determined to carry matters ^^^^°"'s °^' to the laft extremity, and thereby inflid upon one, whom they ought' to prefume innocent, a punifhment more fevere than would C . '• be 1 8 THE LITE OF Is broug-ht 'before the ..privy-coun' cil, be due to the moid heinous crime, one confolat.ion remained to him, that, in. the prefent ftate of his conftitution, greatly enfeebled by fo long an imprifonment, he hoped the feverity of the torture would put an end to a life now deprived of every comfort, and of every profpedt which could render it fupportable." Accordingly, when he was brought before the -Lords of council, he beheld, with great compofure, the inftruments of tor- ture prefented to his view. And, with a firmnefs that aftonifhed them, when afked by the Earl of Peith chancellor, Whether he 'twould anfwer, upon oath, fuch queflions as they would put to him? 'he anfwered. That, in matters criminal, he never would: That, if they would produce his accufers, he was ready to vindicate himfelf from any crime they could lay to his charge. The council then aflured him, that, if he would only anfwer a few queftions they were to put to him concerning others, nothing he faidftiould ever mi- litate againft himfelf: Nor ihould they ever inquire, whether it was true or falfe. He told them, that fuch a practice was fo bad a pre- cedent in criminal matters, that he wa5 determined they fliould not begin it with him. Upon which, being interrogated, If he had any thing to object a- gainft his being put to the torture? he replied. He had great ob- je£tions to a pradice that was a reproach to human nature, and, as fuch, banifhed from the criminal courts of every free country. He likewife repeated the remonftrances he had given in to the council at London, and told them, he muft confider his trial in Scotland as a breach of the habeas corpus adt. Upon this the chancellor told him, that, whatever was in this, now he was in Scotland, and muft be tried for crimes againft the ftate by the laws of this country, had they been committed in Con- ftantinople. In anfwer to this, Mr Carftares begged leave to ob- ferve, that there was this manifeft difference betwixt the cafe his Lordlhip now put and his own, that, in Conftantinople, there were no laws for the fecurity of his Majefty's perfon and govern- mentj but, in England, there were many fuch laws, and they could not. MrWILLIAMCARSTARES. 19 not, he thought, in equity, proceed to greater feverity than was con- fiftent with the laws of that country where the crimes alledged a- gainft him were committed. All his objeaions and remonftrances being over-ruled by the ma- and put to jprity of the privy-council, the public executioner was called upon ^ ^ tortiira to perform his inhuman office. A thumb-fcrew * had beeu prepared on purpofe, of a particular conftrudion ; upon its being applied, Mr Carftares maintained fuch a command of himfelf, that, whilft the fweat ftce^med over his brow, and down his cheeks, with the agony he endured, he never betrayed the fmalleft inclination to depart from his firft refolutionf. The Earl of Queenfberry was fo afFe£ted, that, after telling the chancellor that he faw the poor man would ra- ther die than confe{s,hefteppedoutof the council, along with the Duke of Hamilton, into another room, both of them being unable longer to witnefs the fcene ; whilft the inhuman Perth fat to the very laft^ without difcovering the leaft fymptom of compaffion for the fufFerer. On the contrary, when the executioner, by his exprefs order, was turning the fcrew with fuch- violence, that Mr Carftares, in the ex- tremity of his pain, cried out, that now he had fqueezed the bones in pieces, the chancellor, in great indignation, told him, that, if he continued longer obftinate, he hoped to fee every bone of his • body fqueezed to pieces. At laft, finding all their efforts, by means of this machinery, fruitlefs, after he had continued no lefs than an hour and an half under this painful operation, they found it necef- fary to have recourfe to a ftill more intimidating fpecies of torture. The executioner was ordered to produce the iron boots, and apply them to his legs; but, happily for Mr Carftares, whofe ftrength was now almoft exhaufted, the fellow, who was only admitted of late to his office, and a novice in his trade, after having attempted in C 2 vain * After the Revolution, the privy-council of Scotland made Mr Carftares a prefent pf this inftrument. f Sir George Mackenzie, Lord Advocate, in the courfe of his pleadings in Jer- vifwood's trial, obfervcs, that, u-pon this ocCafion, all admired Mr Carftares's for- titude and generofity, who flood more in awe of his love to his friends, than of the fear of torture, and hazarded rather to die. for Jervifwood, ,than. that Tervifr-- wood (hould die by him. State-Trials, Vol. IV. io- THE LIFE OP vain to faflen them properly, was obliged to give it over; and the council a4jourried for fome weeks. New ptopo- Having now found, by experience, that all attempts to bring- Mr fals made to ^ rf ■, 11 111 • %/r him by Lord Carftares to a confemon by violence would probably prove meirec- Mme°of t'h" *-"^'' ^^^y empowered Lord Melfort, one of the fecretaries of ftat6, privy-coun- to treat with "him upon milder terms. They fpecified certain que- ftions to be put to him; and, upon condition he would^anfwer them., they authorized the fecretary to promife him an ample pardon to himfelf, and that he fhould never be produced as a* witnefs in any trial. Not only fo, but, if Mr Carftares infifted upon_, it, they further engaged, that none of his anfwers to the interro- gatories they were to put to him fhould ever be produced in evi- dence, either direftly or indire£tly, againftany perfoii, or before any judicatory whatfoever. with which Upon thefe terms being propofed to him, as he knew they had al- e comp les. ^.g^j^. (jjfcQyergjj from Major Holmes- and Mr Spence all the parti- culars of which he could inform them, as they exprefsly promifed to difpenfe with his being produced as. evidence againft any one of his friends, the apprehenfion of which was the chief caufe of His fi- lence hitherto, and as he could not figure to himfelf, that a privy- council, compofed of perfons of the higheltrank in the nation, dbuld be capable of a breach of the moft folemn engagements tranfmitted to him by a fecretary of ftate, he agreed to anfwer fo hiany of the interrogatories that were fpecified, having firft ftipulated that their pronlife to him fhould be ratified by a deed of court, and recorded in their books. He told them, that the Teafon why he infifted upon • this was, not that he had any thing to reveal which could, in the eye df the law, prove hurtful to his friends, but that he was determi- ned rather to die an hundred deaths than fubmit to the difhonour of having his teftimony produced in court againft any one of thofe who were at that time under profecution before the criminal courts. The interrogatories which;.were put to him ftand uj^on record in. the regifters of 'privy-council. And there are. two blank pages which feem to have been left f^f inferting his anfwers. But, why ' they have never been filled up, whether in confequence of their pre- '').,• ' • - ■ ■ vioQsi' -^ Mr WI L LI AM CARSTAR E.S. 21 vious agreement with him, or rather, becaufe he qualified his re- plies in fuch a manner, that they could not anfwer the purpofe they meant to ferve by them, does not appear. That the firft of thefe coiiiideratlons had very little weight with them, is evident from their caufing a paper to be printed immediately after his appearanpe before the council, entitled, Mr. Carjiares's Confeffton. This p^per The privy- contained a moft lame, falfe, and imperfed account of the whole breach of tranfadion; yet it was publicly hawked about the ftreets of E^- faith to him. dinburgh. Nor was this the only breach of faith to him of which the privy-council was guilty; for, in dire£t violation of the only condition upon which he would confent to anfwer the queries propofed to him, they fufFered his evidence, as they falfely termed it, to be produced in open court againft one of his mod intimate friends, Mr Baillie of Jervifwood. His natural forti- tude £ould fupport him under perfonal fufFerings, but it almoft funk under thennjurious imputation of his being in the fmalleft degree acceflbry to the fufFerings of. a friend. However, before they went this length, they fent for him to the council, and endeavoured to prevail with him judicially to acknowledge his anfwers to their in- terrogatories before the juiliciary court- He told them, he had fpirit enough left to rejedb their propofalwith difdain, and to endure any feverities they could infli£t, rather than comply with a demand which he confidered as rio lets diflionour- able to themfelves than to him, it being a violation of the terms to which the fecretary, in their name, and by their authority, had agreed. Even the chancellor was fo convinced of the iniquity of their procedure .in -this particular, as to declare, that they could not, in boiiour, infift upon it. Notwithftanding, the advocate^ iti fupport Theadvo- of his" charge againfi: Jervifwood before the court of julliciary, pro- cate violates duced a copy of Mr Carflares's anfwers to the interrogatories of the of agreement - privy-council, as an .adminicle * of proof, without taking any no- ^ood'strial. tice of the qualifications with which they Wjere >dothed« the allevi-r iting circumflances with which the fads to which they related ' were *J\..term in the Scottifh law-. '' . 22 THE LIFE OF were accompanied, or the conditioas upon which he delivered themv Upon being queftioned by Mr Carftares for it, as diflionourable to- the privy-council, whole faith had been pledged to the contrary, the only excufe he could plead was, that, as he was not prefent in the privy-council on the day that tranfadtion was carried on, he did not confider himfelf as;bound to adhere to the articles of agreement. To- fuch fubterfuges did they ftoop, in order to bring one, whofe public ^irit merited a better fate, to an ignominious death ; a death which* he underwenl: with the courage of an antient hero, and the refigna- tion of a primitive martyr. Heisrelie- So far, however, the privy council was true to its engagements^^. confinement as to releafe Mr Carftares from his confinement to a dungeon in m tie cafile, ^j^g c^ftig^ whether they had tranfpocted him, from the tolbooth of the city, a few weeks after he arrived in Scotland. In this gloomy fituation, he had, by this time, continued for, fome months, cut off from all communication with his friends, and ftruggling under the : infirmities of a fhattered conftitution. But, even in thefe difagreeable circumftances, he fell upon an expedient for employing, himfelf in fuch a manner as contributed, greatly to his amufement in the mean time, and to his advantage af- terwards. Having, by fome means or other, procured a copy of Thuanus,. who w^as his favourite author, both as an hiftdrian and a Latin claf— fie, he fpent moft of his time in the perufalof his hiftory. As he had no variety, he read that voluminous work no lefs than three times- over. The effe other papers, without perufing them with much attention, he was extremely cau- tious of giving his afleht to any public deed in which the church 44 THE LIFE OF was concerned. Accordingly, when the original draught of the adt for the fettlement of prefbytery in Scotland was fent up to him by Lord Melvil, he fent for Mr Carftares, and, after a long converfa- tion vipon the feveral claufes contained in it, he defired him to write, whiifl he di£tati=d the following remarks. A C' py of them was fent down to the commiffioner; the original Mr Carftares kept, and it is now in the publifher's cuftody. This paper does great ho- nour to King William, as it fhews us, in one view, the clearnefs of his head, the integrity of his heart, and the moderation of his prin- ciples ; "Snd, on thefe accounts, it welt merits a pUce in this work^ It is entitled thus : His Temarks " HisMajefty's Remarks upon the Adl* for fettling Church-govern- i6°o fmlin'^ ment in Scotland, which was fent up to him by my Lord Com- <:hurch-go- xaiffioner, along with fome reafons defigned f, r clearing of it, ficoXad. ' ^^^ i'^ anfwer to fome objedions that might be made againft it. " 1/?, Whereas in the draught it is faid, that the church of Scot- land was reformed from popery by prefbyters, ivithoiit prelacy^ his Majefty thinks, that, tho' this matter of fad: may be true, which he doth not controvert ; yet, it being contradidled by fome, who fpeak of a power that fuperintendants had in the beginning of the refor- mation, which was like to that which bifhops had afterwards, it were better it' were otherwife expreffed. " idot Whereas it is faid, their Majefties do ratify the prejfbyterian church-government to be the only gonjernment of Chr'iJTs church in this kingdom, his Majefty defires it may be exprefled otherwife, thus. To be the government of the church in this kingdom efta- blilhed by law. " S^io, Whereas it is faid, that the government is to be exercifed by found prefbyterians,^ and fuch as ftiall hereafter be owned by prelbyterian judicatories asjuch^ his Majefty thinks that the rule is too general, dependmg as. to its particular determination upon par- ticular mens opinion ; and therefore he defires, that what is faid to be the meaning of the rule in the reafons that were fent along with the * See the ad itfelf in the appendix. Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 45 tKe ad may be expreffed in the ad itfelf, viz. That fuch as fubfcribe the Confeffion of Faith and Catechifms, and are willing to fubmit to the government of the church, being fober in their Uves, found in their dodiine, and qualified with gifts for the miniftry, Ihall be admitted to the government. " 4/0, Whereas it is defired to be enaded, that the general meet- ing of the minifters do appoint vifitors for purging the church, &c. his Majefty thinks fit, that, for anfwering the objedions that are propofed againft this method in the reafons fent up to him along with the ad, that what in thefe reafons is expreffed by may be, as to the concern of his privy-council in that matter, and the prefent- ing of thefe vifitors to the commiffioner, that he may fee they are moderate men, be plainly expreffed in the ad itfelf, that it Jhoiild he-, &c. " 5/0, As to what concerns the meeting of fynods, and general af- femblies, his Majefty is willing that it Ihould be enaded, that they meet at fuch and fuch times of the year, and fo often as ihall be judged neceffary, provided always that they apply to him or the privy-council, to know if there be any inconvenience as to public affairs in their meetings at fuch times, and have his approbation accordingly. " 6/0, Whereas it is defired to be enaded, that the parilhes of thofe thruft out by the people in the beginning of this revolution be declared vacant, upon this reafon, becaufe they ivere put upon con- gregations nvithout their confent, his Majefty defires it may be ex- preffed in fuch a manner, as is perfedly confiftent with the rights ' of patrons, which he hath the more reafon to infift upon, that, in the paper fent up along with the ad, it feems to be acknowledged, that this procedure is extraordinary, and, therefore, ought not to be drawn into confequence. " I A. B. do fincerely declare and promife, that I will own and fubmit to, and peaceably live under, the prefent government of the church, as it is by law eftablifhed in this kingdom, and that I will heartily concur with and under it, for the fiappreffing of vice and wicked nefs, 49 THELIFE OF wickednefs, the promoting of piety, and the purging the church ofi all erroneous and fcandalous minifters. " It is his Majefty's pleafure, that fuch as fhall declare, as is above- written, and affent and confent to the Confeffion of Faith now con- firmed by ad of parliement as the ftandard of the proteftant religion in that kingdom, fhall be reputed found and orthodox minifters. " It is his Majefty's pleafure too, that thofe who do not own and. yield fubmiflion to the prefent church-government in Scotland ftiall have the like indulgence that the preftjyterians have in England. " His Majefty thinks fit that the claufe, from 30 to 54, be left out, as not being neceflary.. " His Majefty's defire to have what he grants to the church o£ Scotland to be lafting, and not temporary, makes him incline to- have the above mentioned amendments made upon the adt *J" This * The above remarks were fent down to the Earl of Melville, along with a let- ter from the King. The original is in the pofleffion of the Right Honourable thc" Ear] of Leven, and is thus entitled, •'Remarks upon the Aft for fettling Church-Government, with the King's Letter May 22. 1690, wheieby- it will appear, Inftrudtions were exadly obferved in fo far as was poflible, without hazarding the Ruin of the Kingdom." There is only one particular in which the paper in my Lord Leven's cuftody differs from that which is in the hands of the publifher, and it is remarkable viz. after the 6th remark, in the copy fent down to Lord Melville, it runs thus- " His Majefty's refolution to becandid in what he does, and his defire that what is granted by him to the church may not be uneafy to him afterwards, incline him to have the above mentioned amendments in the aG. Then follows the letter. (Supra fcribitur) "W. R. " Right trufty, and right entirely beloved couGn and counfellor. We greet vou welL We have confidered the aik anent church-government, and have returned the fame, with the alterations we have thought proper fhould be made upon it- however, we leave you fomeiatitude, which we wiQi you would ufe vnth as much caution as you can, and in the way will be moft for our fervice. Given under-our royal hand, at our court at Kenfington, the ad of May 1690, and of our reign-. the fecond year. -y^^ ^ „ Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 47 This paper of remarks throws confiderable light upon the ftate Obferva- of church-matters at the revolution. In the preceeding feffion of the°forfgo- parllaraent, King William, being, with confiderable difficulty, pre- '";- original vailed upon to confent to the abolition of prelacy in Scotland, ftill kept fight of his favourite objeft, which was an entire union be- twixt the two kingdoms, both in church and ftate. For this rea- fon, he abfolutely refufed to give his affent to an acS, which was propofed by fome of the rigid prefbyterians, aflerting, that prefby- tery was the only form of church-government agreeable to the word of God. For the fame reafon, he fuggefts his own doubts in thefe remarks upon the aO: 1690, with refpe£t to the reformation, by means of prefbyters, in order to prevent any thing from being introduced into that a6t of parliament which might have a tenden- cy to obftru£t the union of the two churches in fome future period. Whereas, by refting the eftablifhment of church-government folely upon the inclinations of the people, he eftablifhed a precedent which might afterwards be improved for promoting that union. It is evident, from another of thefe remarks, that, when King William gave his affent to the a£t eftablifhing prefbytery, he was fo far from confidering the law of patronage as in the ieaft incon- fiftent with that form of church-government, that, in one of the a- mendments, he appears extremely tender of the rights of patrons, and folicitous to guard them againft the fmalleft encroachments. Accordingly, in the draught of an adt which was fent down by Mr Carftares to the Duke of Hamilton, then commiflioner, and by him, propofed -to the parliament in the year 1689, ^^ may fee the fentiments of King William himfelf, and of thofe with whom he confiilted, upon that fubjed. See Appendix. This overture, when offered by the commiffioner> was onpofed by another from Lord Cardrofs for aboliftiing patronages, as well as epifcopacy ; upon which the commiffioner, afraid, in the prefent temper of the parliament, to bring the two overtures to a vote, pro- pofed to delay the fettlement of the church till a further day, and. faefore that time, adjourned the parliament. As 48 THE LIFE OF Mr Carftares ^^ jyjj. Carftares was'King William's chief confident and advifer in boMon oF" church-matters, the more zealous prefbyterians blamed him at that ?he «vofu-^* time as the caufe of the King's reludance to yield to their folicita- tion, tions in the affair of patronages. On the other hand, Mr Carftares blamed them for afking more of King William when he was eftablifhed upon the throne, than a compliance with the articles in the claim of right, which, without any mention of patronage, only complains of prelacy, or the fupe- riority of any church-officerS above prefbyters, as a grievance. He knew, that, from the reformation, down to the revolution, in all the viciflltudes of church-government, patronage had been the law of the land. He knew, that, by thea£t 1592, vv-^hich has al- ways been confidered as the grand charter of prefbyterian govern- ment, patronages were incorporated with its very conftitution. And he knew King William was too tender of his prerogative, to allow any authority to the a£t of eftates in 1649, which had been exprefsly refcinded by an aft of parliament, as a violation of the conftitution. Befides, Mr Carftares was too well acquaint- ed with the circumftances of the country, with the King's temper, and with the indifcreet zeal of fome of his brethren the prefbyte- rians, not to forefee the danger of gratifying them in all their de- mands ; ■ and he found himfelf obliged, in his applications to the King in their behalf, to make a juft diftindion betwixt what was effential to that form of church-government, and what was abfo- lutely diftiniSt from it. Of this laft kind he confidered the article of patronage ; and, inftead of advifmg the repeal of that law as be- neficial to the church, he was afraid that fuch a ftep might have a quite contrary tendency, and prove, in the end, prejudicial, not on- ly to the King's intereft, but to the prefbyterians themfelves, by throwing more power into their hands than they knew how to ufe with moderation. The clergy of that perfuafion, havingbeen deprived, for nearthirty years, of the eftablifhed livings, were then reduced to a ftate of abfo- lute dependence upon their hearers fov their fubfiftence : A circum- ftance Mr WliLlAM CAR STAR IS. 4^ ftance extremely unfavourable to the dignity of the rainifferial cha- rafter, by deterring men of fpirit from entering into that profeffion, and by debafing the minds of thofe who do. Mr Carftares, fi-om the firft eftablifhment of preibytery, dreaded the confequences which might enfue, from entrufting the whole government of the church, and the difpofal of its benefices, in the hands of afet of men who were tainted with alt the, prejudices of the people, and, at the fame time,, irritated by a fenfe of recent injuries. Whilft he advifed, therefore^ the eftablifhment of prefbytery, he was of opinion, that it oaght to be of the moft moderate kind, and fo modelled, as to admit of the affumption of fuch of the epifeopal clergy as took the oaths to go- vernment, upon the mildeft terms. This he forefaw would not.be the cafe, unlefs the right of patrons were preferved, as axheckiipoa the clergy. Although my Lord Melvill did not differ, in his fentiments up- oa thefe fubjeds, from Mr Garftares^ his fituation was widely difft*- rent. As the head of the prefbyterians in Scotland, he faw that hi& whole credit and influence in adminiftration depended upon that pajjty's' maintaining the fuperiority. which it bad: acqmred, and fbuad himfelf obliged to yield to ibmieof their demandSr in church- mait-ers, whieh he did not approve; The prefl^terians,. before the revokrti^mi as well as the diflenC- LordMelvlii ers from every, legal eftablifhment, had been in ufe to ichufe their foyriSLt Qvm cLeBgy, becaufe they paid them for their-labotirs out of their- *** ^.^^ ^^ own -pockets. As this was a privilege npon which they put averT trona^f ^^' high value,, it was natural for the body of the people- to wijfH' to re^ tain the election of their fpiritual teachers, even when freed from the huxxJes of their maintenance; They- were encouraged to make thi& denjand, by the con<|efli®ns! which had already; been made to them by King Williain, and efpecially by his placing Lord Melvlll, their pfttcpn* at the head of. adminiftratirai in Scotland. And that noble- man found himfelf fo fituatedj that he mufl? either comply, or break \Hith them for ever. He chofe the former, and gave the royal a£- fent to the ad repealing patronage. > G The so THE LIFE OF Theeffefts The cfFcds of fuch liberal conceflions foon juftified Mr Car- o this aa. flares's apprehenfions. The prefbyterian clergy, inftead of con- ducing themfelves with that temper and moderation which found policy didated, and the King earrjeftly enjoinedj fo difgufted him with their proceedings, by narrowing the terms of afTumption for the epifcopal clergy, and rejeding the plan of accommodation which was offered in their name, and approved by the King, that his Commiffioner to the General Affembly, according to his inftruc- tions, fuddenly diiTolved that court in the year 1692 ; and it was with no fmall difficulty that William could be prevailed with to countenance its irieeting for the future. Their condud: in this particular likewife irritated the epifcopal clergy to fuch a degree, that few of them chofe to incorporate with the eftablifhment. In this way, whole provinces were deprived ©f the means of re- ligious inftrudion, efpecially in the north, where the moft part of tiie people was inclined to epifcopacy. As there was not a fufficient number of prefbyterian clergy to fiipply fo great a demand, prefbyteries were obliged to licence many » who were far from being poirefTed of that literature, liberality of fentiment, or thofe other accomplifhments which are deemed orna- mental to the miniflerial charader; and the want of thefe endowments was no difqualification in the eye of thofe into whofe bands the e- ledion, by this mode of church-fettlements, was fuffered to fall. For although, by the ad 1690, the eledion of minifters was vefted in the conjund body of heritors and elders, yet it was in the pow^ of the clergy, in every inftance, to throw the balance into the hands of. the elders, by increafmg their number, (to which the law had fixed no limitations), in what proportion they pleafed : And I find numberlefs complaints made to Mr Carftares upon this head by the nobility and gentry in different parts of Scotland, during the reigns both, of King William and Queen Anne. All Mr WILLIAMCARSTARES. 51 All thefe particulars were reprefented, and probably aggravated to the King, by Lord Melvill's enemies at court, as the conlequence of his yielding to give the royal aflent to the a£t abolifhing patro- nages; and they made fuch impreffion upon him, that,' although he had "once given that nobleman inftrudions, authorifmg him to paft an a£t to that purpofe, in cafe the parliament demanded if * ; yet he not only refufed to give him any exoneration for his condudt in that affair as Commiffioner, but determined to put the admini- ftratioh of Scotland into other hands. » This change of adminiftration afforded Mr Carftares another The oath of opportunity of doing an effential fervice to the church of Scotland, ^^^^f Thofe who were new employed by his Majefty, finding him dif- r^nce. gufted with the prelbyterian clergy, for their averfion to the mode- ra,te meafures he had recommended, fell upon a method of turn- ing the very weapons which the friends of prefbytery had forged for their fecurity, aglinft them. In the parliament which fat in the year 1693 ti an a thereby of withdrawing from them that countenance and protection he had hitherto afforded them. They made application, therefore, to the privy-council, who, by the law, had a power to difpenfe with the requifition of the declaration in fuch cafes as they fliould think pro- per; but the privy-council were fo far from complying with their de- mands, that they recommended to his Majefty, that an order fhould be iffued out for every minifter's taking the oath, and figning the affurance, before he fhould be allowed to take his feat in the enfuing affembly. • Some who were about his Majefly at this time took advantage ofMrCarftares's abfence from court, to urgethe King to a compliance, alledging, that it was required in the very terms of the a£t of parlia- ment. Upon this, his Majefty gave inftrudions to his commiffioner, H Lord 58 THE LIFE OF Lord Carmichael, to require all the reprefentatives of the clergy in the enfuing general aflembly to fign the aflurance ; and, If they refufed, to diffolve the aflembly in his Majefty's name, which they Upon Lord Carmichael's arriving in Edinburgh, and communi- ^^ " ^' eating his orders to fome of the clergy in town", he found them ob- ftinate in their refolutions not to comply. They aflured him, that their fentiments upon the fubje£t were the fame with thofe of aU their brethren in the country ; and that, if this meafure were perfift- ed in, it would fpread a flame over the country, which it would not be in the power of fuch as had given his Majefl:y thefe counfels to extinguifh. The commiflloner faw, that all his attempts to bring them to bet^ ter temper wouM be vain and fruitlefs. At the fame time, he was fenfible that the diflblution of the aflembly would not only prove- fatal to the church of Scotland, to which he was a real friend, but alfo to his Majefty's intereft in that kingdom. From a fincere regard to both, therefore, he undertook to lay the matter, as it flood, fairly fioner to the before the King ; and, for that purpofe, fent ofi^ a flying packet, the°^^'^^T "'^^ic^ ^^ expedted to return from London, with the King's final before the determination, the night before the aflembly was appointed to ^^' meet. At the fame time, the clergy fent up a memorial to Mr Car-^ flares, urging him to ufe his good offices, in this critical conjundure, for the prefervation of that church which he had fo adiye a hand in eftabllfliing. who renewed The flying-packet arrived at Kenfington in the forenoon of that tions. day upon which Mr Carftares returned. But, before his arrival, his Majefty, by the advice of Lord Stair and Lord Tarbat, who reprc:- fented thi& obftinacy of the clergy as an ad of rebellion againft his government, had renewed his inftrudions to the commiflSoner, and fent them ofi^ by the fame packet. Mr Carftares When Mr Carftarcs came to Kenfington and received his letters difpatches. ^^ immediately inquired what was the nature of the difpatches his Majefty had fent off for Scotland y and, upon learning their con- tents. Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 59 tents, he went diredly, and, in his Majefty's name, required the mef- fenger, who was juft fetting ofF, to deliver them up to him. It was flow late at night; and, as he knew no time was to be loft, (the gene- ral aflembly being to fit in a few days,) he ran to his Majefty's a- partment ; and, being informed by the Lord in waiting that he was gone to bed, he told him, it was a matter of the laft importance which had brought him at that unfeafonable hour, and that he muft fee the King, Upon entering the chamber, he found his M'ajefty faft afleep, upon His inter- Xvhich, turning afide the curtain, and falling down upon his knees, he the King. gently awaked him. The King, aftonifhed to fee him at fo late an hour, and in this pofture by his bed-fide, alked him what was the matter ? He anfwered, he had come to afk his life. And is it pof- fible, faid the King, that you have been guilty of a crime that de- ferves death ? He acknowledged he had, and then produced the dif- patches he had brought back from the meffenger. And have you, fays the King, with a fevere frown, have you indeed prefumed to countermand my orders ? Mr Carftares then begged leave only to be heard a few words, and he was ready to fubmit to any punifh- menthis Majefty fhould think proper to'infli£t. He faid, " That the King had now known him long, and knew his entire fideli- ty and attachment to his perfon and government. Some of his fervants in Scotland might find it their intereft to impofe upon his Majefty, to fcreen themfelves from his merited difpleafure. Others might, un- der the mafk of zeal for his fervice, feek only to gratify their own private refentments ; and, whilft they pretended to conciliate all parties to his government, might purfue fuch meafures as would only unite them in oppofing it.' " That this was the foundation of all thofe fadions which had hitherto rent that kingdom, and made its crown fit fo uneafy upon his head : That, for his own part, he could call God to witnefs, that, ever fince he entered into his Majefty's fervice, he had no intereft, for he could have none, feparate from that of his mafter : That, though he had been educated a preftjyterian, and, on that ac- count, had a natural bias to this form of church-government j yet H 2 his 6o THELIFE OF his Majefty kaew, that, when he recommended the eftablifhment of prefbytery \n Scotland, he did it, becaufe he was firmly perfua- ded the prefbyterians were the only friends his Majefly had in that country : That his regard to their principles had not rendered him blind to thefr fa.\Ms : That he had been aware of the indifcreet ufe they would make of the liberal conceflions in their favour in Lord Melville's parliament, and had freely given his fentiments upon that head : That, with the fame freedom, he had remonftrated againft the precipitate meafures adopted in the laft feflion of parliament, un- der the pretext of correfting the errors of the former : That the ef- feas had juftified his opinion of both. The firft had alienated all the epifcopals, the laft, great part of the prefbyterians, from his ad- miniftration. One thing alone was wanting to complete the wifhes of his enemies, and that was, to cement the two parties by one com- mon bond of union : That nothing could be better calculated for this purpofe, than the advice which had been given to his Majefty to pufh the adminiftration of the oaths to the minifters before the fit- ting down of the afTembly : That, although theire was nothing un- reafonable in what his Majefty required, yef fome who had credit with them had fallen upon methods to reprefent their compliance as. inconfiftent with their principles, and had been fo far fuccefsful, that they were determined not to comply : That, however unjuftifiablein other refpedfe their conduct might be, it proceeded from no difaffec— tion to his perfon and government ; and that, whilft this was the cafe^ it was more for his Majefty's intereft to confirm their attachment,, by difpenfing with the rigour of the law,* than to lofe their affedions. by enforcing it. What avail oaths and promifes to a Prince, whea he has loft the hearts of his fubjefts ? Now was the time, therefore,, to retri,eve his affairs in that kingdom : That, by countermanding the inftruftions he had fent down to his commiflioner, he conferred the higheft obligations upon the whole body of the prefbyterian, clergy, gratified all his friends in that kingdom, and effedually thwarted the infidious arts of his and their enemies." The Mr WILLIAM CAR$TARES. 6i The King heard him with, great attention, and, when he had Obtains his done, gave him the difpatches to read, and defired him to throw them in the fire ; after which, he bid him draw up the inftrudtions to the commiffioner in what terms he pleafed, and he would fign .them. Mr Carftares in>mediately wrote to. the commiffioner, fig- nifying, that it was his Miajefty'a pleafure to difpenfe with putting th^ oaths to the roinifters ; and, when the King had figned it, he imrtiediately difpatched the meffenger, who, by being detained fo many hours longer than he intended, did not arrive in Edinburgh till the morning of the day fixed for the fitting of the aflembly. By this time, both the commiffioner and the clergy were inthe iitmoft perplexity. He was obliged to diiTolve the affembly; they were determined to affert their own authority independent of the civil magiftrate. Both of them were apprehenfive of the con- fequences, and looked upon the event of this day's conteft as deci- five with refpedt to the church of Scotland; when, to their inexpreffible joy, they were relieved by the return of the packet, countermanding the diiTolution of the affembly. Next to the eftablifhment of prefbyt^ry in Scotland, no a£t of King William's- adminiftration endeared him fo much to the preflayterians as. this. They confidered it as a certain proof that his own inclina- tions were altogether favourable to them, and that any difficulties > they laboured under ought to be imputed to his minifters, not to himfelf. It was foon underftood what part Mr Carftares had adted upon this occafion ; it gave him entire credit with the whole body of the prefbyterians, who had of late begun to fufpedt that he had deferted their caufe ; and it was gratefully acknowledged by moft of the clergy after he came to refide in Scotland. In one inftance, in- deed, he was obliged to put them in remembrance of it. When fome of his zealous brethren, in the heat of debate in a general affembly, charged him with want of zeal for the intereft of the church of Scot- land ; which provoked him to fiich a degree, that, in fpite of his na- tural modefty and coolnefs of temper, he rofe up, and begged leave, injuftice to his own charader, to.obferve,' " That fuch a refledion came 63 THE LIFE OF came with a very bad grace from any man who fate in that court, which, under God, owed its exiftence to his interpofition : That if ever, in any one inftance, his zeal had carried him beyond the bounds of difcretion, it was in favour of the church of Scotland : That he ne- ver had received a frown from the greateft and the beft of mafters but one, and it was on her account. The following letter wrote immediately after the fitting down of that aflembly, to which the foregoing paffage relates, may ferve to throw fome light upon this interefting tranfad:ion. The letter is not figned, but it is written by one, who, from feveral letters of a pofterior date, feems to have been much confulted in Scottifh affairs. Edinburgh^ March 31. 1694. *' S I R, A letter to « X longed for an occafion to write to you, as it is a fort of MrCarftares -. , relative to converfe which may be held with a diftant friend. I gave your fer- ine tranfac- ^'^'^^ *° ^^ ^' °^ ^ ^^^ '^oux thankful acknowledgements, as you tion. defired me; and, in return, by a letter I had from him the other day, he fends you, by me, his thanks very heartily for your fo obliging acknowledgements. He bids me tell you, he is to be in town next week, and has fomething farther to fay upon that fubjedl, of which he will then let me give you an account. Believe me, he is very fen- fible of the injuries you have fuffered, and of what your deportment at this time (which, till of late, had been mifunderltood) has been, and does deferve. He himfelf, to deal plainly with you, has had, by his retirement, the happy opportunity of thinking, through the want of which the beft men are hurried into miitakes, and the beft meafures ruined. " Though the matter be now happily over, I cannot forbear to fay fomewhat to you of the late order that was, after our friends parted, elicite from the King, enjoining the aflembly to take the oaths before they were conftituted. I confefs I do not call to mind any fuch ftumbling a^t, in all the adminiftration of affairs fince the revo- M R W I L L I A M C A R S T A R E S. 63 revolution, as it is, nor a defign fo deeply laid, or of more pernicious confequence, or of a more dangerous tendency : It is a flrange thing for every part of it to be awry, and all over foul : It would, if you had not prevented, embroiled all matters : The aflembly muft affuredly have broke up in the greateft diforder ; and God knows what the. confequences might have been. What a heinous thing was it, and how treacherous too, to procure of the King fuch an order, as if it were in the precife terms of the a£t of parlia- ment ? This is that which makes it mofl; treacherous, to put a thing in it which might have made a King more verfant in the law than ours can be, fwallow it down. I am fure, if ever there was a grofs a(St of leifing-making, this is one. I am fure it has been originally advifed from this : I can, as plainly as fun-fhine, fee Tarbat arid old Stairs's hands in it. To fham a King, by a committee who is trufted, is a thing utterly intolerable. Your countermanding it came moft feafonably to prevent the mifchief of it, and has endeared the King mightily to the minifters ; and, I hope, may prove a great mean to make them to proceed with that moderation you recom- mend : But, as this is prevented, it were of great confequence, that . the fears of fuch future efcapes were likewife removed, which can never be, fo long as the procurer is in that poft, which may en- ■ danger a relapfe. On my confcience, he fhould lofe his head for it, if it were right ; but, to continue him in his poft is unpardonable ; , and the fooner he is turned out the better, as it would appear fuch a favour to the nation. Juftice in a Prince vigoroufly execute is more reconciling than a thoufand favours are ; befides endearing the King more to his friends, it would deter enemies. Now, pray let the King be urged to remove him, and prefently. He can have no great need of fecretaries till he return ; and thenj if he be not convinced that it is beft to reft on a fingle fecretary, let him have another. This I'll anfwer for ; and I'll do it upon the peril of my intereft with the King, and his future favour, which I would not cafily be perfuaded to part with; that all the Jacobites would be dif- couraged by it ; and that there is not a man, a thorough-hearted friend H THE LIFE OF Anecdote concerning the Earl of Portland. "friend to the King's intereft, who fhall not be well pleafed. Thus, dear Mr Carftares, you fee how my zeal tranfports me to fhow my- feif a fool perhaps. I acknovdedge it; but you will own I am an honeft fool. And I declare to you, in the fight of'God, it is not pique, or private grudge, that prompts me, but my afFed:ion to the government. Farewell." The foregoing particulars are all we have been able to learn con- cerning Mr Carftares, from his birth to the year 1693, when the regular correfpondence betwixt him and the officers of itate in Scot- land, now in the hands of the publiflier, begins : From that time to the death of King William, the beft hiftory of his life is contained in that correfpondence ; from which it appears, that, du- ring this period, he had, by his intimate friendfliip with the Earl of Portland, and his perfonal favour with the King, the chief di- Te£lion of Scottifh affairs, and was confidered by his correfpond- ents as a kind of viceroy for Scotland. As that nobleman was the greateft perfonal favourite King William ever had, and, as fome hiftorians of that period were at a lofs to account for it, we fhall make no apology for the following anecdote which Mr Carftares ufed to relate : " Mr Bentink was brought up with the Prince from his infancy: He was the chief companion of his pleafures and of his ftudies. Their friendfliip grew as they advanced in years. And, when they ' were both arrived at that time of life when the human mind is fuf- ceptible of the ftrongeft attachments, Mr Bentink gave the Prince a proof of his affection, which effedually rivetted him in his heart. " About the age of fixteen, the Prince was feized with the fmall- pox; as they proved to be of the moft malignant kind, his phyfi- cians, agreeably to the pradice then in vogue, gave it as their opi- nion, that the only chance he had for life was, to procure one of the fame age with himfelf, who never had the fmall-pox before, to lie in Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 6^ In the fame bed with him, and, by extrading the infedion from his body, to abate the virulence of the diftemper. Mr Bentink no fooner heard of the prefer iption, than he claimed it as his preroga- tive to adminifter the cure. The prefcription, in the opinion of the phyficians, had the defired effed. The Prince gradually recovered; but, to his inexpreffible grief, found his deareft companion in im- minent danger of his life. He attended him with the moftaffiduous care ; adminiftred, with his own hand, fuch remedies as were prefcribed to him ; and could fcarce be prevailed on to take neceffary food or recreation, till the difeafe left him. This' mutual intercourfe of tender offices could not. fail to endear them to one another; and, in procefs of time, gave Mr Bentink that entire afcendant over the Prince of Orange, which even weaker minds are fometimes obferved to have over the moft exalted characters. At the revolution, he came over in his retinue, was foon after made groom of the ftole, created Earl of Portland, and, loaded with marks of royal favour. Whatever other talents my Lord Portland had as a ftatefman, he pofTefTed, in an e- minent degree, the power of conciliating the affedions, and pre- serving the attachment of fuch as were connected with him in the management of public affairs. His letters to Mr Carftares, which are written after his retirement from bufmefs, breathe a heart formed for friendfhip., and are full of the warmeft expreffions of affection and efteem. • Amongft the other eminent characters with whom Mr Carftares Mr Car- cultivated a particular friendfliip, when refiding at court, was the refpondence famous Mr Harley, afterwards Earl of Oxford and Mortimer, Lord ^'"^ ^^ /- T. 1 1 Harley-j High Treafurer or England. Before Mr Harley was brought into adminiftration by King William, I find he maintained a private correfpondence with Mr Carftares, as appears by the following letter, which was probably written juft before the change of the miniftry in the year lyoo. I Monday 66 THE LIFEOF Monday night, at eighf, " Reverend Sir, " I HAVE not been able to get a moment frae to wait upom you ; but now L have fomething which, in my poor opinion, preiies- fo much, that I chufe an inconvenient time, it may be, for you, to afk to fee you this night at my houfe, any hour you will pleafe to appoint. If you like not to come in at the fore-door, I will be ready, upon your giving three knocks at the back-door, to let you. in. My back-door is the loweft door on the left hand as you come: down Villar's-ftreet, which is the- ftreet next to Charing-crofs of York Buildings, over againft the Water-houfe. I am," &c. *. Their future correfpondence relates chiefly to the fettlement of the proteftant fucceflion, the union of the kingdoms, and the ma- nagement of the church of Scotland, after Mr Carftares left Eng- land. Amidft all the torrent of party-abufe that was thrown out upon both fides during the laft four years of Queen Anne's reign,, Mr Carftares, though firmly attached to the Whigs, could not en- dure to hear any perfonal refledtions againft Lord Oxford, as in the leaft acceflbry to the defign of fetting afide the fucceflion in the houfe * From this circumftance, it is probable that his defign iii this interview with Mr Carftares was, by his means, to bring about a reconciliation between the King and the Tories. And the following letter from the Earl of Portland probably re- fers to fome particulars which had pafled between Mr Harley and Mr Carftares upon that occafion. IVindfer, November the 1 1 th. " I thank you very much for your letter. Since that, I hear bufinefs is much altered by the King's refolution of diflblving the parliament. — Your guefles where pretty wright. I dout whether the fpeaker will aflc any more to fee you; or, if hee dos, hee will jjardly know what to tell you : His enmity wil not much be feared now. Pfay, fince I. am here in my folitude, let me hear fometimes front you what the world fays, and what the opinion of the tovn is, fince the buCnefs^ is determined. — ^Your letter ia taken careof>" Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 67 lioufe of lianover, which he had a principal hand in eftablilhiiig. See Harley^s Letters to Mr Carfiares, , His principal correfpondents in Scotland, during the period above and with the mentioned, are; James Johnfton fecret?iry of ftate; LordTarbat; ^I'ftry.^ '"'" Sir James Ogilvy, afterwards Lord Seafield ; Sir James Stewart, Lord Advocate; Lord Marchmont; the Dukes of Qiieenfberry. and Argyle; Lord Carmicha.el ; Gockburn of Ormifton; Murray of Philiphaugh, &c. As this correfpondence was carried on in a moft' intereftlng pe- riod, and when faction raged in all its violence ; fo the feries of let- ters, of which it conf^s, gives us a juft pi£ture of the ftate of the nation in general, and an •exa£t portrait of ihe principal characters who aded their part in the feveral fcenes to which it relates. From this correfpondence it likewifc appears, what a difficult game Mr Carftares had to play, and with what dexterity he played it. Whilft we fee all parties pouring out their complaints to him as to their friend, and laying their feveral pretenfions before him, none of them ever accufe him of partiality or negle£t. At the fam.e time, it was impoffible for one who poffefTed fo great a fhare of power and influence, to efcape the envy of fome who were fuperior to him in rank and fortune. This tax, which is ge- nerally laid upon diftinguifhed merit, he chearfuUy paid ; and ufed to divert himfelf amongft his friends with afluming the title of Car- dinal, which fome of his enemies had beftowed upon him, alluding to Cardinal Ximenes, who boafted he could play at foot-ball with the heads of the Caftilian grandees. They even attempted, on different occafions, by their complaints The deat& and remonftrances, to fupplant him in the King's favour; but to no v^iulam purpofe: The longer the King knew him, the higher heftoodin his efteem. Nor was he ever fo much confulted by him, as between the time of Lord Portland's retirement from bufinefs and the King's death, which happened in the month of March 1702. This event , affefted him f(? deeply, that he could never afterwards fpeak of it, or hear it mentioned, without vifible concern. = I 2 To 68 T H E L I F E F £e?s'^dif. "^^ ^^'^^^ ^^° ^^^^ ^^^ following letters, it will appear al- intereRed- moft incredible, that one who was in fuch favour with the King,- who had fuch eafy accefs to him upon all occafions, who had devoted his life entirely to his fervice ; one, in Ihort, who was daily foliciting for others favours to which he was much better entitled himfelf, paid fo little attention to his own private fortune, as not to provide, againft'an event, which he could not but fore- fee a confiderabl'e time before it happened, and which, he knew, was to deprive him of all that he pofleiTed. The truth is, he had not only a fpirit above all mercenary views, but an excefs of mode- fty, which led him to fhun whatever might give his enemies any pretence for the imputation of them. Hence, with all the opportu- nities that ever an]y man poflefled of bettering his fortune, he was. left, upon his matter's death, as poor as whea he firft entered into his fervice; a circumftance which never gave him one moment's un- eafmefs. Endowed by nature with a happy equanimity of temper,, accuftomed to various viciffitudes of fortune, he could, with equal cafe, adapt himfelf to the manners of a court, or to the life of a pri- vate man ; and the only circumftance he ever regretted in the change of his fortune was the event which produced it. It was generally thought by his contemporaries, that, upon his^ coming over with King William, he had the offer of the firft vacant biftiopric in England," and that he abfolutely declined it. This ftory was probably founded upon his known intereft with the King ; but it feems to have been without foundation. In truth, Mr Carftares was of much more importance, and had it more in his power to ferve his King and his country in the fphere in which he a£ted, than if he had been promoted to any bi- ftiopric in England. As the King was abundantly fenfible of this, as he knew his talents for bufinefs, and had occafion for them, it is more than probable that he never thought of ma- king fuoh an offer to him. At the fame time, fuch were Mr Carftares's fentiments of propriety and confiftency of charader,. that,. Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 69 that, it is next to certain, if the offer of it had been made, he would 1 have rejected it. As his connexion with public bufmefs was entirely founded Queen con- upon perfonal favour with the late King, it ceafed in a great mea- j^^'^jj.' ^^^^ fure upon his demife. However, he had too many friends at °f'^i^^P'^"\ court, and was- of too great confequence to government, to be en- tirely forgotten or negleded in the fucceeding reign ; and Queen Anne, although not much inclined to countenance King William's particular favourites ; yet, without any folicitation, nominated him her chaplain for Scotland, with the fame appointments which had been annexed to that office by King William. Some time before this, the office of Principal in the college of He is made Edinburgh had become vacant, by the death of Dr Rule; a ftation the college of far from being lucrative, but,' on feveral accounts, very refpedtable; Edinburgh. efpecially when filled by one whofe learning, talents, and circum- ftances in life, are fuited to the office. In all thofe refpeds Mr Car- ■ftares was abundantly well qualified for that chair. Accordingly, when it was underftood that he was to retire from court, an invitation was given to him by the city of Edinburgh to accept of that charge; but it was with confiderable difficulty he could be prevailed upon to comply. On the one hand, the emoluments of that office were no temptation to him; the life he had led for many years was the re- verfe of academical ; and he was unwilling, at his years, to enter upon a new fcene of adion. On the other hand, it was an ho- nourable retreat from that hurry and buflle in which he had been involved ; it afforded him an opportunity of being further ferviceable to his country, by exerting that influence he had acquired, in pro- moting the intereft of literature in the univerfity, and of moderati- on in the church. But what chiefly detei-mined hini was, the uni- ted folicitations of all his friends in Scotland. To their importunity he at length yielded, and was admitted as Principal of the college, and firft profefTor of divinity in the univerfity of Edinburgh, m the year 1704. In this public character, he foon gave ample proof to the world, that his employment as a flatefman had not interrupted his literary puriuus.. 70 THELITEOF His condua purfuits. In his firft oration, which he pronounced in the common- tion. hall of the univerfity, before a very numerous and refpe£table au- • dience, he difplayed fuch a fund of erudition, fuch a thorough ac- -quaintance with claflical learning, fuch a mafterly talent in compofi- tion, and, at the fame time, fuch eafe and fluency of exprefEon in the jSureft Latin, as delighted all his auditors. Even his enemies were obliged to confefs, that in him were united the manners of a gentle- man with the fcience of a fcholar. The famous Dr Pitcairn, who was always one of his hearers upon thefe occafions, ufed to ob- ferve, that, when Mr Carftares began to addrefs his audience, he could not help fancying himfelf tranfported to the forum in the -days of antient Rome. No fooner was he placed at the head of the univerfity, than, by a certain gentlenefs and affability of manners, mixed with great dignity of deportment, he fecured the afFe£tions, whilft he com- manded the refpeft, both of matters and ftudents. As the falaries of the feveral regents were at that time extremely fmall, he immediately fet on foot a fcheme for having them aug- Procures -an mented. He went to London on purpofe, and ufed all the influ- onrftheirfa ence he had, both with Queen Anne and her minifters, to obtain a lanes to the -fj ^^j ^f ^-j^e bifhops rents, not only to the univerfity of Ediu- feveral re- » ^ • r • r n i i gents. burgh, but alfo to the other univerfities of Scotland. This was at laft granted ; and, as appears from a feries of letters betwixt him and the fecretaries of ftate upon that fubje£t, it was granted by his folicitations alone. This, they tell him, they had notified to the a- gents of the other univerfities, that they might know to whom they were obliged for the favour *. His plan for His endeavours to promote the intereft of the univerfity did not accomnno- jgfl. hgrg, ^g his reputation had brought down many fl;udents lilh ftudents from England, who complained of the want of proper accommoda- verfity."" ' tio^ ^" Edinburgh, he concerted a plan with his friends in that king- * The Queen left thediftribution of Tier royal tounty to the Univerfity of Edin- burgh folely t6 Mr Carftares, who, with his ufual generofity, refufed to appropri- ate one farthing of it to the augmentation of his own falary. A pattern which the heads of the other univerfities did not chufe to copy. Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 71 kingdom, which, if he had lived to carry it into excecution, would probably have proved of great benefit to the college and city of Edinburgh. It was propofed, that a public contribution -fhould be raifed among the whole body of the diflenters in England, for the purpofe of repairing the farbric of the college, fo as to render it fit for accommodating all the Englifli ftudents who fhould refort thither. A public table was to be kept, at which they were to be entertained at a moderate expenqe. An Englifh tutor, with proper affiftants, was to be brought down, to have a particular infpe£tion over the ftudents, to prefide at the common table, to aiTift them, in their academical exercifes, and to inftru£t them in fuch branches of education as were not taught in the univerfity. By letters ad- drefled to Mr Carftares from different parts of England, I find con- - liderable fums were a£tually fubfcribed for thefe purpofes fome little • time before his death, which event overturned the whole project. Not long after he was made principal of the college, fome of Is called to<> ° -^ '^ ° be one of the his friends, unwilling tha:t his talents as a preacher fhould be minifters ot buried in obfcurity, propofed, without acquainting him of their ^^ ^'^^ "' intention, that he fhould be called to be one of the minifters of the city. As there was no vacancy at this time, and a new eredlion was attended with fome difficulties, which the Lord Provoft happened to fuggeft when the matter was firft propofed, Mr Carftares no ' fooner got notice of what had paflTed, than he wrote the following letter to the Provoft. " My Lord, " Two of my friends, to whom your Lordfhip fpoke about an affair in which it feems I am concerned, I mean a call to be one of the minifters of your good town, have informed me that your Lordfhip is ftraitned between the kindnefs you are pleafed to have for me, and the concern you are obliged to have for the intereft of the town. " I have thought it my duty, by thefe lines, to contribute to your cafe in that matter, by afluring your Lordfhip, that, as I have had no 72 THE LIFE OF no manner of concern in feeking after fuch a call, fo I do not defire to be the occafion of the leaft prejudice to theintereft of the town of Edinburgh : And I beg that neither your Lordihip nor any others of the Magiftrates of the city, may be in any perplexity on my account. " Your Lordihip knows, that, whatever might have been the inclinations of my friends to have me fettled in my own country, it was with reludlance I brought myfelf to be fo much as paflive in accepting the honour the good town conferred upon me, by calling me to the ftation I now fill. I can fafely fay it was not the profpe£t of gain that brought me hither. I blefs God who hath been pleafed not to leave me fo deftitute either of friends or intereft, as that I might not have obtained a more lucrative fettlement elfewhere." Whatever elFe£i; this letter had upon the Provoft, Mr Caftares's friends, itfeems, ftill profecuted their defign; for, in that fame year, he received an unanimous call to be one of the minifters of Edinburgh, which he accepted, anddifcharged the duties of his paftoral office with great fidelity and diligence, qualities which attended him in every fphere of life in which he was engaged.^Such of his fermons as he* has left behind him, are written in a fhort-hand peculiar to himfelf - fo that we cannot afcertain his chara<3:er as a preacher from his compofitions. It is certain, he was much efteemed as a preacher His manner J^ thefe times. His manner was warm and animated ; his ftvle ofpreach- i i r • i n i ing. itrong and nervous, and at the lame time chalte and correct. And, although he had been for a confiderable time out of the habit of preaching, yet he had fuch a comprehenfive view of the great fubje£ts of religion, and fo happy a talent of arranging his ideas upon every fubje£t, as rendered this branch of his duty no great burthen to him. Of this the following inftance will ferve as a proo£ About the time of the union, a national faft had been ap- pointed, which the violent oppofers of that fcheme amongft the clergy would not obferve, as they could not approve the reafons for which it was appointed. Mr Carftares had given his advice againft the appointment ; but, as a zealous friend of the union, he obferved Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 73 obferved the faft. His colleague, who was equally zealous in his oppofition to that meafure, not only refufed to obferve it, but next Sunday took occafion, in the forenoon-fertnon, to throw out fome bitter reflexions upon the union in general, and upon certain con- trivers and promoters of it in particular, who, he alledged, were taltors to their country and to the church of Scotland, although fome of them were minifters of that church, and had too great influence over their deluded brethreft. As this violent attack was direflly pointed at Mr Carftares, it fixed the whole eyes of the congregation upon him, whilft, with great compofure, he began to turn over the leaves of his Bible. His colleague's difcourfe being confidered by the people as a formal challenge to Mr Carftares to vindicate his condud, a great crowd from all corners of the city were aflembled to hear him in the afternoon, when he gave out for his fubjeft thefe words pf the pfalmlft, Let the righteous fmit^ me^ it uuiU not break my bones. From which he took occafion, with great calmnefs of temper, to vindicate his colleague from any fufpicion of being deficient in point of regard and afi^edion for him : That diff^erence in opinion was the natural eff^ed; of the weaknefs and corruption of the human mind: That, though he diff^ered from him in his fentiments upon fome points, yet he was fure both of them had the fame end in view : And that, as he knew the uprightnefs of his colleague's intentions, and the goodnefs of his heart, he was determined to confider any admonitions or rebukes direded to himfelf from that place as the ftrongefl: expreflions of his love. This difcourfe had a wonderful efFed upon the whole audience: It eff^edually obliterated every prejudice they had conceived againft -him; obliged his colleague to confefs, that he had obtained a complete 'vidory; and thj^t fo foft an anfwer had turned away wrath. The firft aflembly which inet after he became a member of the He is.chofen church pf Scotland, as a proof of their gratitude and efteem, made tS°tliTgen'e- choice of him for their moderator. This houour was conferred upon ""^^ ^^^^^h- him no lefs than four feveral times in the fpace of eleven years ; K an 74 THELIFEOt' an honour to which he was juftly entitled, not only by his fervices to the church, but by his charader, which was excellently fuited to command the refpe£t and moderate the heats' of fo numerous, and, in thofe days, fo turbulent a judicatory. His manner jjjg manner of fpeakine in church-courts was calm, fententiousi of fpeaking _ , . , - - in church- and decifive; which, along with his influence over the moft conli- derable members of the houfe, gave great weight to his opinion in every debate. Such was their refpe£t for his chara£ter, that one fentence from him would often extinguifh in a moment the rhoft violent flame in the houfe. This authority which he had acquired, he knew well how to maintain. In matters of leffer moment, he feldom fpoke at all; in bufinefs of confequence, he fpoke only irr theclofeofthe debate; and itwasarare ihftancein which any adven-^ - tured to fpeak after him. By thus maintaining his influence in the church, hemadehimfelf of real importance in the ftate, and preferved his intereft with the court to the laft. A letter from my Lord Seafield to him, fome time after Mr Carftares came to Scotland;, fhews us in what light his friends confidered him at that time. " Rev. Sir, " I write this only to continue our correfpondence ; for I have- nothing to acquaint you with,, but what you will learn from other hands. My Lord Portland gave me the honour of a vifit this day, and is very welL, He afked kindly about you ; I told him, you governed the chiu-ch, the univerfity, and all your old friends here. That you lived with great fatisfadion^ and was as much his fervaht as ever. He faid, it was fome fatisfadtioii to him, to find that, you and I, in. whom King William repofed fo great truft, were ftill of fuch confideration in the prefent reign. I promifed to deliver his fervice to you, and hereby difcharge myfelf of that debt. Argyle and Annandale are as they were ; the lafl: is neither in nor out, ani I am for giving him time to confider. I am hopeful his intereft will prevail with him, which he ufes not to forget. Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 75 forget. I blefs God I am received after the old manner. They do nothing as to the treaty till the members of parliament are prepared. ' I hope the beft. The whig-party are the majority. I know yoii will take care, that lAoderate men be of the next aflem- bly. I am, with all finCerity, &c. S E A F I E L D." From a feries of letters which paffed between him and the Earls of Oxford, Portland, Seafield, Stair, Mar, Glafgow, Lou- don, Sir David Nairn, &c. for fome time before, and immediately after the union, it appears, that nothing was done relative to that impor- tant tranfadiion, without confulting him. It was perfedlly well under- ftood, both by the Queen and her miniftry, that, if the prefbyterian clergy had ftated themfelves informal oppofition to the treaty, it could not have taken efiFed ; and they feem to have been fully fenfible that the intended remonftrances and complaints of the clergy to parliament againft that meafure, were prevented folely by Mr Garftares's influence in the church. Accordingly, by a Ufes his in- letter dated the 4th February, from London, but, whether from church for' Mr Harley or fome other of the Enelifh minifters, does not appear. Promoting '^'^ the union of as it is not lubfcribed, I find great merit afcribed to Mr Carftares thetwoking- on account of his conduct upon that occafion. doms. " Reverend Sir, *' It is with great honour that you have feen e'er this, tliat the queen A letter of introduced the union into the houfe of Lords, and with great fatif- ^o'^P'^eJ^* ... ° ' to him upoa fadtion; that the majority of both houfes have received it now.; nor has ^^^^ occa- any body declared yet openly againft it in the H. of Lords, but ^'°°" my Lord Haverfham. Some have talked a little more freely againft lit in the houfe of commons. , K 2 » Give 76 THE LIFE OF " Give me leave to afture you, Sir, that the part you have a£te her interefts, than the alTaults of her enemies. So very high did the fpirit of party run, that, although the moft refpeitable . clergyman in the church, he was, perhaps, the moft unpopular. This made him often complain, both in private and in public, that . his fituation was peculiarly hard, to be forced, firft to draw up- on himfelf the cenfure of his brethren, by encountering their pre- judices, and putting a flop to their violent proceedings, and then to juftify thofe very meafures to adminiftration, which he had difapproven, and in vain attenlpted to fruftrate. He felt this, in a variety of inftances, during the courfe of thofe - profecutions which were carried" on, by his more rigid brethren, in different corners of Scotland, againft fome of the epifcopal clergy, who, by virtue of the powers entruftedwith prefbyteries, were, upon the moft frivolous pretexts, turned out of their livings. But he felt it moft of all in the cafe ofGreenfhiels * at Edinburgh. Haying in vain attempted to diffuade his brethren and the civil magiftrate from fa unpolitic a ftep as that of ftating themfelves in downright oppofi- tion to the church of England, at the bar of the houfe of peers, he ventured to progttofticate^ that their feverity in that inftance would only open a door for other encroachments, and give an advantage to their enemies^ in carrying on their projeds for the fubverfion 1 both of church and ftate. Accordingly, it is- well known to fufch as are converfant with the ? hiftory of that period, that it was the proceedings in the aff'air of Greenftiiels which laid the foundation, as it afforded the f aireft pre- text for the. nQ. of toleration, and the a£t reftoring patronages, , which, in the circumftances of the country at that time, were confi- dered as preludes to the, reftoration of prelacy and the pretender. Mr * He was the firft who introduced the liturgy of the church of England into the epifcopal fervice in i^cotlandi See Mr Robert Pringle's letters to Mr Cai-- ftares, with a letter from Greenfhiels to Mr Pringle, in the year 1701^. — Se alfo , an account of this matter by Dr Swift, in the Examiner, No. 30. So THE LIFE OF Mr Carftares certainly viewed thefe ads of parliament in this point of light, becaufe, in every other view, there was nothing in them inconliftent with his principles ; and therefore, when he con- fented to go up as one of the commiffioners from the church to the Queen and parliament to oppofe them, he told tlie commiffion that he could expe£t no fuccefs, as, in the prefent fituation of the court, he could not ufe the arguments which weighed moft with himfelf in oppofing a toleration aftdthereftitution of. patronages, without do- ing more harm than fervice to the caufe, by his application. Upon his arrival in London, he foon perceived that his conjedtures were too well founded. The event was fuch as he ex- pected, and fuch as convinced him, that all future attempts to re- peal the a£t of patronage would prove equally unfuccefsful. The arguments for and againfl that ad, as they were ftated in the houfe of peers upon that occafion, are contained in two papers, which the Reader will find in the Appendix. They contain the fubftance of all that has ever been faid or written upon the one fide or other of that fubjeft. By what particular arts the friends of that meafure prevailed in their defign, does not appear from Mr Carftares's cor- refpondence. But, that neither the Queen, nor her minifters had any intention to countenance it, a few months before the adt reflo- ring patronages was paffed, appears from the two following letters. The firft is from Lord Loudon, then Secretary of State for Scotland- the other, from Lord Oxford, then Lord High Treafurer of Great Britain. "SIR, ^/"V7.r7'.. « I had the favour of your's of the 24th of March, fome time ago. I have, by. one accident or other, been hindered from acknow- ledging it till now; which I hope you will pardon. I believe I may tell you, with very good reafon, that there will not be any^o- tion made, in either houfe, concerning patronage; there has been pains Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 8i pains taken to prevent It ; and, amongft others, I ha'nt beep want- ing in ufing my endeavours in that affair. " As to Mr Greenfhields ; I was cf a different opinion from that which was carried in the houfe, and took the liberty to, of- fer my fentiments upon it, after having taken all the pains I could to have it waved. It was unlucky, as you obferve, that the firft cafe of that kind that was brought before the parliament fhould have come upon the narrowell grounds of any thing of that kind that has been determined by out- judicatories there ; for, 'twixt you and me, it depended more upon the conftant cultom of interpreting the laws in relation to thofe matters, than upon the plain or exprefs words of our a£t of parliament. That affair is now over; and, I hope, our church will fhow their prudence, in not giving any tokens of their being alarmed at it in the enfuing affembly ; and that they will always have that confidence, which they ought, in the repeated affurances they have had of her Majefty's favour, and the many marks they have had of it. " I hope to be with you in Scotland this fummer, and to enter- tain you at large upon thefe fubje£ts. — You'll eafily perceive that this is writ in hafte; but I would not any longer delay to acknow- ledge your's, and to ^ffure you that I am, with great fmcerity, your anoft faithful friend, and moft humble fervant, Loudoun." ^th May 171 1. '" SIR, " ALTHOUGH I have not recovered fuflicient ilrength to Letter from -refill the attacks of the ill weather we have had fince I have been 'J'e Eari of Oxford to abroad, yet I cannot longer delay my acknowlegements to you for Mr Car- your mofl chrillian and affedionate letter. I do not doubt hut I have ^'^^^' had the advantage of your prayers; for which I return you my hearty thanks, and defire their continuance. My fole view is, the fervice and glory of God, and the peace and happinefs of the Queen L and 82 THE LIFE OF and countrT'. My daily fupplJcatlons are, that he who hath deliver- ed my, foul from death, would keep my feet from falling, that I may walk before him ; and that he would guide me in his truth, and teach me the way wherein he would have me to walk. " I did intend you a much longer letter; but my cold makes writing uneafy to me at prefent ; therefore I muft refer what 1 would fay to another time. But I cannot omit afluring you, that the Queen, and all who have the honour to have credit with her Majefty, are not only refolved to maintain the union in all its parts, both religi- ous and civil, but there will t>e no attention given to any propofals which may juftly alarm your friends ; and, particularly, as to that affair of patronages, it was never entertained, and was really an invention, fuggefted to two rafh perfons, with a defign to create jea- loufies; but it never was in the leafl: countenanced or entertained. As to the penfions ; I have laid your defire before the Queen, wha has commanded me to fignify to you her pleafure, that fhe intends- to continue the fame payments to the univerfities. I doubt not you will continue your heft endeavours to calm the fpirits of people in the affembly, that they may give no occafion to bkfpheme ; and I am confident they will have no juft grounds to apprehend any danger from hence. I am, with great fincerity, Reverend Sir^ yours," &c. It is probable that Lord Oxford was fincere m his profeffions up- on this occafion ;^ but a minifter of ftate is not always matter of his own fchemes, and muft fometimes facrifice his private inclinations to the fpirit of the party with whom he is connedted. He was therefore obliged, in this inftance, to give way to the friends of that motion, who were firmly attached to an adminiftration of which he was the head. Mr Car- Although Mr Carftares did not fucceed in his application to par- ftares's jour- Jiament againft the bill for reftoring patronages, yet his prefence at don of great London was of confid^rable advantage to the church of Scotland churcfof by giving him an opportunity of thwarting fome other projeftsl Scotland. ^^^ Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 83 ■which he confidered as more dangerous in their tendency, becaufe they affeded her conftitution in a more fenfible manner. Some of her enemies, who were then in adminiftration, had pro- pofed that her annual affemblies fhould be difcontinued, as the Iburce of all the oppofition to the meafures then purfued by the court: Others were of opinion, that they ought to be permitted to meet, but fhould be prorogued by her Majefty's authority, fo foon as they were conftituted. And, to take away the only pretext for holding affemblies for the future, or their fitting for any- time, a bill was propofed, obliging prefbyteries, under certain penalties, to fettle, upon a prefentation, every man to whom the church had given a licenfe to preach, without any further trial or form. Mr Carflares faw very well, that, however prejudicial thefe regu- lations might be deemed to the church of Scotland, yet, in the pre- fent temper of the parliament, they would meet with little oppofi- tion, if propofed or fupported by the court. He was willing, there- f^" P'^'^'^ent fore, to compound matters with adminiftration ; and, upon condi- on his return tion that he was authorized to affure his brethren, that no attempts ^° ^•^°''*'^^* would be made to introduce any alterations in the government or difcipline of the church, he undertook to ufe all his influence, in order to allay thofe ferments which the late proceedings in parlia- ment had occafioned. Accordingly, upon his return to Scotland, we find him exerting his utmoft endeavours in calming the fpirits of fuch of the clergy as, from a mifguided zeal, were difpofed to in- flame the minds of the people, difturb the peace of the country, and, in the end, wreath the yoke with which they were galled ftill harder about their necks. And, in doing fo, he has left a pattern which every wife man, in his circumflances, will chufe to follow, -provided he has publk fpirit enough to defpife the clamours of a ' fa£tion, and the prejudices of the people, when put in competition rwith the peace of his countryj and the good of the church. He was fo fuccefsful in his endeavours, that both the Qjieen and her miniflry were aftonifhed at the peaceable temper of the next ge- - meral affembly which fat after thefe ads of parliament were pafTedj L 2 and 84 THE LIFE OF and, by a variety of letters which he received at that time, teftified their approbation of his prudent management, to which they afcri- bed it. Is defired to ^qj only fo, but, by a letter from the Lord High Treafurer, the commiffion- Earl of Oxford, before the fitting down of the affembly in the year ertothege- j_j,^ Mr Carftares is defired to name the commiflioner to that nera a em- ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^p ^ ^^p^ of fu^h inftrudiohs as he judged fea- fonable in that jundure.. " SIR, " I received, by the laft poft, a letter from Lord Advocate, taking: notice of the near approach of the day for the meeting of the gene- ral affembly : I fend this to you by a flying packet, to defire your opinion freely, (which fliall not be made ufe of to your difadvantage), whom you would chufe to be her Majefty's commiffioner ; and that you would fend any particulars that you think fit to be added to the ftanding inftruaions ; and what you judge proper to be inferted in her Majefty's letter to that venerable affembly. I hope the laft commiffioner gave you fatisfaaion. Ifhall have occafion to wrrte far- ther to you in a little time upon many particulars relating to the re- pofe of the church, which I know you have much at heart ; and, therefore, fhall add no more at prefent, but that I am, with very great refped. Your moft faithfuU and moft humble fervant, O X F o R D." Mr Carftares, in return to this letter, recommended the Duke of Athol as the moft proper perfon for commiffioner, and fent up a draught of the Queen's letter, with the inftrudions to be given by her Majefty to the commiffioner. And, by another letter which he received from the Earl of Oxford, he is acquainted, that the Queen, in Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. Ss in confequence of his recommendation, had fent down the Duke of Athol as commiffioner. The experience of fixty years has at lafl: evinced, what it was im- Remarks up- ^ -^ •' .on the adi: of poffible for human fagacity then to difcover, that the ad of tolera- toleration, tion, and the a6t reftoring patronages, which were confidered by the ^°f j ^ °^ friends of the church of Scotland as fatal to her interefts, and which tronages. were probably intended as the preludes to greater changes, have proved the fource of her greateft fecurity, and the remedy of thpfe evils which Mr Carftares dreaded moft from the conceffions in favour of prefbytery at the revolution. Upon the one hand, the ad: of toleration, by taking the weapon of offence out of the hands of the prefbyterians, removed the chief ground of thofe refentments which the friends of prelacy entertain- ed againft them, and, in a few years, almoft annihilated epifcopacy in Scotland. Upon the other hand, the a£t reftoring ptltronages, by reftoring the nobility and gentlemen of property to their wonted in-)- fluence in the fettlement of the clergy, reconciled numbers of them to the eftabliftied church, who had conceived the moft violent pre- judices againft that mode of eledion, and againft the prefbyterian clergy who were fettled upon it. It is likewife an inconteftable fad, that, from the date of thefe two ads, the church of Scot- land has enjoyed a ftate of tranquility to which (he was an utter, ftranger before. . There is another advantage flowing from the ad of toleration, . which it was impoffible to forefee, viz. That the verv people whofe principles led them moft eagerly to oppofe it, have de- rived the greateft, if not the fole, benefit' from it. For, although the ad Was certainly intended for no other purpofe but to give relief to thofe of the epifcopal perfuafion who judged themfelves aggrieved by the church-judicatories in Scotland ; yet, by the moderation of the church fince that period, and by the lenity of ad- miniftration, diflenters of every denomination have been permitted to take the benefit of that ftatute without any moleftation j and long may 86 THELIFE-OF may they continue to enjoy it unmoleftedl It will give a fenfible pleafure to every worthy member of the church of Scotland, to re- fle(3:, that, whilft his diflenting brethren vie with him in loyalty to his fovereign, and attachment to the civil conftitution, they enjoy at leaft a legal proteftion in the exercife of their religion. That man is unworthy of thofe privileges which belong to members of an efta- blifhment, who can grudge :his fellow-citizens thofe rights which belong to them as men and as chriftians. Whilft Mr Carftares was employed in fo'othing the minds of his brethren under the repeated alarms they received during the four laft years of Queen Anne's reign, he was no lefs a£live in animating them to a becoming zeal for the proteftant fucceffion in the houfe of Hanover, as eftablifhed by law. This he thought the more necefla- ry, as feveral of the Queen's principal favourites, during that pc- ■riod, lay under heavy fufpicions of a delign to fet it afide. His zeal for In the year ly- i, Mr Carftares being moderator of the aflembly, the Hanove- ^^^iyers were ordered to be put up in all the churches for the Prin- fioa. cefs Sophia and the proteftant line in that family. Mr Carftares ac- quainted Mr St John, then fecretary of ftate, with this particular,; ^and received the following anfwer. Whitehall^ 2/[th May 171 1. »' Reverend Sir, " I acknowledge, with many thanks, the favour of your letter, and intreat you to believe I read it with all the fatisfadtion which that fpirit of moderation, and that zeal for the proteftant fucceffion, ought to infpire into every breaft who wifties well to the proteftant intereft, and to the public good, " The Duke of Queenft)erry having, by order, acquainted you, how gracioufly your applications have been received by her Maje- fty, I have nothing more to add, but my very fincere affurances of being, Rev. SIR, Your moft faithful, and moft obedient fervant, H.St JOHN.'' Although, Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 87 Although, from the ftrain of this letter, one would imagine, that nothing could have been more acceptable to the court, than the conduit of the general aflembly in this inftance, there is reafon to fufpeft, that fo ftrong a proof of its anxiety for the proteftant fuc- cefllon was far from' giving that fatisfaftion to the Queen and her fervants, which a zeal for that caufe ought to have Infpired. For, it was in the courfe of this year that thofe afts which wore i^o un- friendly an afped to the church of Scotland were devifed. Howe- ver, the more cool her Majefty became in her regards to that church, its members became the more rivetted in their attachment to the houfe of Hanover, as the moft efFeftual fecurity for the prefervatlon of their rights and privileges. Accordingly, all their addrelTes to the throne, from that time forward, till the demife of the Queen, are full of the warmeft proteftations of their inviolable attachment to the fucceffion as eftablifhed by law ; and they were among the foremoft in their congratulations of King George L upon his acceflion to the crown.. The addrefe does honour to Mr Carftares who drew it.. Thefe particulars could not fail to give the moft fa- vourable impreiEons of the, church of Scotland to that Monarch *. He * The following is tHe letter referred to aBove, ffom Monfieur Robethon fe- cretary to the Elector of Hanover, to Mr Carftares.. " M o K s I E D R, Hanover, le 3. OElobre 17 13. " Comme je compte trap fur noftre ancienne amitie, pour craindre que vous m'ayez tout a fait oublie, je me donne I'honneur de vous informer de I'extreme fatisfaftion avec laquelle Mad. I'Eleffarice et Aug. 1' Elefteur ont lie cet adver- tifiement fi chreftien et fi falutaire des commiflaires de 1' affemblie generale du ckrge prefbyterien d' Ecofle. " Comme leurs' Altefles font perfuadees, que vous avez puifTament contribue a une oeuvre fi falutaire, elles m'ont ordonne, MonCeur, de vous en remercier de leur part, et de vous dire, que vous les obligerez fort, fi vous voulez bien aflurer les perfonnes que vous jugerez a propos de la reconnoilfance qu'ont leur Alteifes de cet que le dit advertiflement contient pour elles, et pour la fucceffion. A quoi elles reponderont de leur cofte, en faiflant redreffer les griefs de la nation Ecoffoife aufliftot quelles en auront le pouvoir. «« On 88 THELIFEOF He had fignified his acknowledgements to Mr Garftares for the part he had aded, by a letter from his fecretary, two years before he came over ; and, fo foon as he was eftablifhed upon the throne, in His death. teftimony of his gratitude, he continued him in the office of his chaplain for Scotland ; which, hov>'ever, he lived not long to enjoy. In the month of Auguft 1715, he was feized with an apopledlic fit, which gave fuch a ijiock to his conflitution, as threw him into a lethargic indifpofition. This greatly impaired all his faculties, and carried him off, upon the 28th day of December, that fame year ; juftly lamented by his country, as a true patriot; by the church, as her beft benefactor ; and by the univerfity, as her greateft orna- ment. Having thus attempted to give fome imperfefl: account of Mr Garftares in his public capacity, it would be a piece of injuftice charafler.^ to his memory, were we to fay nothing of his private charafter, the rather becaufe it too often happens that the virtues of the private man fall a facrifice to the talents and ambition of the courtier and the ftatefman; and particularly, becaufe inftances are very rare of clergymen in fuch circumftances being exempt from this imputation: Whereas, to his honour, his greateft enemies in political matters were never known to charge him with deviating in one inftance from the propriety and decorum of the minifterial character. His religion was neither tinftured with the extravagancies of enthu- fiafm, nor the rigours of fuperftition. At the fame time, -amidft the greateft " On ne doit pas croire que, par raport a ces griefs, et mefme par raport a la diffolution de I'union, les Ecoflbis pourroient obtenir d' aTantage du pretendant que de leurs Altefles, dans la fucceflion des quelles (outre le redrefleinent de leurs griefs) ils trouveront la furete de leur religion, loix, biens, et libertes. I] nous importe fort que la nation foit bien ^erfuadee de cette verite. Nous vous prions d'y vouloir travailler ; et moy, je demeure toujcurs, avec refpeft, Mo N s I E tr R, Votre tres humble, et tres -obeiflant fcrriteur, F. ROBETHON." Mr WILLIAM CARSTARES. 89 greateft hurry of fecular affairs in which he was involved, he was always ready to difcharge the duties of his paftoral office *. As his piety was unfeigned, fo his charity was unbounded, more fo indeed than his circumftances could well afford; for, whilft he had one farthing remaining in his pocket, he could not turn afide from any neceffitous obje£t that claimed his affiftance. This was fo well known to the poor, that, whenever he went His charity abroad, he was perpetually harraffed by them, and was at laft obliged to fubmit to a regulation, propofed to him by one of his friends who knew his foible; which was, to put only fo much money in his pocket as he could conveniently fpare for the pur- pofes of ordinary charity. Amidft that multiplicity of bufinefs in which he was per- petually engaged, it is remarkable, that he found abundance of leifure for the duties of hofpitality. His houfe was a place of refort to all the youth of the heft families and the moft promifing and hofpita- hopes, who were generally recommended to his attention during their "^^' courfe at the univerfity; and he failed not to improve the oppor- tunities which his ftation afforded him, of inftilling into their minds, ^ong with an ardour for ftudy, the beft regulations for their future M condudt. * His lifter, who had been married to a clergyman in Fyfe, ufed to give a re- fmarkable inftance of this. A few days after her hufband's death, Mr Carftares -came down from London, to tranfa£t fome matters of importance with King William's minifters in Scotland. She hearing of his arrival^ came over to Edin- burgh to fee him. Upon calling at his lodgings in the forenoon, fhe was told he was not at leifure ; as feveral of the nobility and officers of ftate were jufl: gone in to him. She then bid his fervant only w'hifper him that fhe defired to Jinow when itiwould be moft convenient for him to fee her. He returned for ■anfwer. Immediately ; and, leaving the company, run to her, and embraced her in the njuft afFe£l;ionate manner. Upon her attempting to make fome apology for her unfeafonable interruption to bufinefs. Make yourfelf eafy, fays he ; thefe gentlemen are come hither not on my account, but their own. They will wait with patience till I return. You know I never pray long; and, after a ftiort, but fervent prayer, adapted to her melancholy circumftances, he fixed the time when he would fee her more at leifurcj and returned all in tears to his company. 90 THE LIFE OF condu£l. Many of them, who have fi nee a<-led their part in the- moft confpicuoiTS ftations, have not fcrupled to own that it was to' him they were indebted for the beft maxims both in pubhc and private hfe, Archibald Dake of Argyle, in particular, wa& early recommended to him by his father, and continued to aukc of York would not forgive his behaviour in that parlia- ment. They fummoned him. to appear at Edinburgh; which he not da- ring to do, was declared traitor, and his ellate confifcated. He re- tired to Hungary, and ferved feveral campaigns under the Duke of Lorrain ; returned to Holland after the death of King Charles II. and came over to England with the Duke of Monmouth ; had the misfortune to fhoot the mayor of Line after his landing, and upon that returned to Holland again ; from whence he came over with the Prince of Orange at the revolution. He is a zealous aflerter of the liberties of the people, and fo jea- lous of the growing power of all Princes, in whom he thinks ambi- tion to be natural, that he is not for entrufting the beft of them with a power which they can make ufe of againft the people. As he believes all Princes made by, and for the good of the people, he is for giving them no power but that of doing good. This made him oppofe King Charles, invade Kiug James, and exclaim againft giving too much power to King William, whom he never would ferve; nor docs he come into the adminiftration of Queen Anne, but ftands up as a pillar of the conftitution in the par- liament of Scotland. He is a gentleman, fteady in his principles, of nice honour, with abundance of learning, brave as the fword he wears, a fure friend, and an irreconcileable enemy, would lofe his life chearfuUy to ferve his country, but would not do a bafe thing to fave it. His thoughts are large as to religious fubjeits, and could never be brought with- in the bounds of any particular fed:, nor will he be under the diftinc- tion of a Whig or Tory; fays thefe names are but cloaks for the knaves of both fides. His I03 CHARACTER S, &c, His notions of government, however, are too fine fpun, and can hardly be lived up to by men fubjcdt to the common frailties of human nature. Neither will he give allowance for extraordinary emergen- cies ; witnefs the Duke of Shrewfberrry,;with whom he had always been intimate; yet, the Duke coming to be fecretary a fecond time, with a view to fave his country, this gentleman would never be ki common charity with him afterwards. And my Lord Spencer, now Lord Sunderland, for voting for the army, was ufed by him after the fame manner. He hath written feveral good things, but not publifhed in his own name; and hath a very fine geriius, full of fire; of low ftature, with a ftern, four look. ORIGINAL ORIGINAL S T A T E ^ P A P E R s: AND LETTERS. M*4' ORIGINAL STATE-PAPERS, AND LETTERS. ARGYLE's CORRESPONDENCE *. WHAT renders the cyphers by which the correfpond- ence with Argyle was carried on fo very intricate, is the following particulars. I. Things were exprefled by new words, fo that, in effect, the let- 'ters were written in a new language. 2. Thefe words were written in cyphers. 3. This cypher confifted of a triple alphabet. 4, Ma- ny words were intermixed with mute cyphers. 5. In fome of the letters, all the relatives are exprefled by figures ; as, in Lady Argyle's letter, the figure 43, or letter D, fliand for the relatives, he-t his, biniy &c. 6.. That, though Mr Spence was inftru£ted to fhew the way of reading the following letters", yet he knew nothing of the parti- culars contained in them. 7. The words in the long letter fub- joined were fo ordered, that 254 words, in courfe of writing, were interpofed betwixt the firfl and fecond word in fenfe, and as many betwixt the third and fourth, and fo forth, to the laft word of the O letter; * See the records of the Scottifli privy council for the year 1684. io6 S T A T -E - P A P E 11 S, letter; then beginning with the fecond word, there was 252 words between that and the next infenfe, and fo forth, till you come to the penult word ; again beginning with the third word of the letter, between which and the next in fenfe there interveens only 250 words, and fo on to the end. 8. In the Ihort letter, 62 words are interjedted betwixt the firft arid fecond ; and you proceed as in the other. By this unequal diftribution, and gradual decreafcof the inter- jedted words, the method of reading became altogether myfterious.- Thus, in the long letter, you muft firft throw it into eight columns, confifting each of 1 28 words ; and then Argyle*s way of ufing them is, he begins at the head of the firft column, and proceeds to- the foot of it ; then beginning at the bottom of the fecond column, you mount to the head of it ; next you begin at the head of the third column, and fo proceed till you come to the topinoft word of the eighth column. By this all the words are placed in their natural order, as appears from the decypher ; fo that, if one word is mif— placed, the whole letters become a chaos of nonfenfci Here follows the Alphabetical Key which opened the Countefs of Argyle's Letter. abcdefg hiklmnopqrs tuw3cyz& Alphabet I ft. 10 n 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 zo 31 22 23 24. 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 3+ 3d.40 41 42 43 44 4S 46 47 48 49 5° S' S^ 53 54 5S 5*5 57 S^ 59 60 61 62 63 64 5d.7o 71 72 7j 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 8a 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93.94 A AND' L E T T^,E R S. 107 A Letter written in the middle Alphabet from Argyle to his Lady, probably after he heard that the Confpiracy was difcovered. This Letter abounds in rnnte cyphers. "^32674845254324512(541443551404344^9283726545^4857535239 4456274744294857395053575822535340504852585764545956545357 4457685847564842445169215644435751404344285456535453584858 4853522053454459445662675847485246325148464758574442595644 3941564052436048584753595840415361645847445258534344405044 604858474148564257415958485848575253585840504.9485246604850 4353444858<546o475o5848577440544452444352444443975253584748 52434456415958574753595043455956584744564451." The above letter decyphered, and mutes pointed out, m Hands for mute. mm m Duke m Monmouth mm mm « 32 67 If 25 D 27 M 26 be 36 made 69, 28, m m m m m m prifonsger, 27 he 29 is 39 loft 22 to all intents and purpofes. 68. m Carftares mm m Thrice Mr 6921 Red f made 28 propofition 20 of every 67 thing m m Scotland battle, 32 might fecure 39 Brand without a box, and then to deal with England ; Birch ; but it Is not talking will do it ; and what has happened 3aeed not hinder, but fhould further them." O2 The * As, by the alphabet made ufe of in this letter, 40 ftands for t;he lettera, 41 for b, and fo on till you come to 64, which ftands for &, the way to diftinguifli the mutes from the fignificant cyphers is, to obferve whether any two figures fall within the compafs of the alphabet from 40 to 64. Thus, the figures 32, 67, at the beginning of the letter, are mutes, 32 being a number below the firft cypher, and 67 a number above thelaft. t This alludes to a plan which Mr Carftaces had formed for furprifing the caftle of Edinburgh- io8 STATE-PAPERS The Key of Words, whereof twoCopies were found with Major Holms; one of thembeingih Mr Carftares's Hand-writing, and confefled by him to be the Key. of their Correfpondence.. In which alfo there is an Alphabet different from the other three, for which as yet we have found no Ufe. The middle Column is thought only to be mute Figures, to confound the Defign of the Key ; fo that one Word is only fet down for another, as Ker ftands for King, Birch for Ei dglai ad. Brand for Scotland, &c. The Alphabet. King - • 40 Ker Officers 81 Ramfey a 12 D. York 71 Corfe A general 88 Barcley b 14 D. Mon. 39 White Col. Sidley 96 Ramfay c 16 E. Roch. 37 Whit. Mr Holms 53 Barclay d '9. E. Halifax 43 Whyte Commiflar. Monro 59 Reid e 23 The court 45 Weft. Sir John Cochran 49 Rae f 28 The council 5° Weftle Mr Carftares 74 Red g 2-9 One of the council 57 Eaft Mr Stewart 83 Harlay h 33 The Tories 30 Weftly Mr Alhol 84 Harlaie i 34 The Whiggs 22 Brown Mr Huntly 77 Rofs k 41 The city 18 Wilfon Scotland 10 Brand 1 43 The Mayor 27 Watfon Council there 92 Bold. m 46 Sheriffs 31 Brun. i Chancellor II Calender. n 55 55 56 60 Court of Aldermen 36 Baxter Queenlberry 1 5 Davidfon Common Council 35 Barker D.Ham. 94 Boyd p L. Ruffel 29 Wefte E. Argyle 67 Forreft, q E. Effex }^ Wilfon Scots forces 66 Forret r 63 68 Diffentiiig Lords 47 Browne Scots fanatics 42 Goven s Bifliops of England 61 Wood- Scots, n. c. minifters 13 Lands t 69 70 78 79 (•■2 The clergy 65 Child Scots clergy 5 Menzies. a Non-conformifts 64 Chyld The Weft 6 Mafon V England 73 Birch The Highlands 7 Wright w France 72 Birche The South 9 Maifon X The States 44 Heart. The North 95 Nairn V «5 86 The Prince 38 Harwood Edinburgh 26 Rofs. z Forces 17 Hal. The Caftle 25 Mafone. & 8g Horfe 28 Hilyard Dumbarton 24 Thomfon ■^v Foot 90 Hickman The Eaft 20 Tomfon 1 ooo of the one or his So many The Scots geut. 21 Grein. other, a tick after. partners. The gent, at Lond. 94 Gray. and fo forth loo — his So many The borders 76 Menzies A ftroke after, thus — neighbours Ships 99 Mr Berrie Arms 75 Chylde For their number A figure added Money 80 Hall A garrifon , - Religion Popery Papifts Scots nobility 98 Bierre 48 Bafs. 58 Sibbet. 51 Long. 52 Sibit AN A" N^ D LETTER S. log Ail A D D I T I o N to the K E Y, written by Mr Carftares Old friend Tome To furprize To fpeak with Mr Kiffin Billiop To land To go to Mr Cox Crafts To march To deal Lock Huxter To make prifoner To agree Ceflhock Cozens To fight is To talk Jervifwood' Ball To difarm To fight To kill To fee To give quarter^ To hear To overcome To find. This is a Letter, wherein Argyle gives an Account to his Confede- rates in England of the Proceedings of the King's Minifters in Scotland, with a view to difparage them ; all written with his own Hand. " Weft rhuch way daily at I if with 69415358475944503322 then or 4253514857485352 or a if to 5644693941445057 at in 5744525844.524244 of he caufe other to keep and alfd did 58445 240525357 perfons any thing they of any if gave any Mr M. did thereof knew thefe and relation 39505360435352 and go he 585 644405862 any with any in or 36485258445642535159524445 he fend Air to be 40504056514443 Shiels is as done extremi- ties to, them knew 3951485248575758445657 if 4056514457 66 others any other and knew to if a or to if perfons of and employ 394250445649 perfon him any thing others fay they pleafe will to to of money out of him if there now he the 31 57457 5-8.349 ^^ 233246504057465360 who who of perfon did or they or any to a here where any arrived the and you are 58445 2445258 you that others converfed fince write to the was employ- ed and knew or prefent kept with going 446950 to the of for the perfuade go be for fear found to or above that the 3842485642594 858 go 6942 4457525349 away drawn correfpondence 4653594 45651445-58 any of 4740514850585352 Mr the 4948524657 my or and with at had for of 485258445653464058535657 are aft no STATE - P A P E R S, as prefident is de^reous things given 44 the private or theif fend 50 party perfon M. to any other and with and or or to 425359563854 5356844 5957 effed named difluade the to or money fwear 56444 14450485352 any perfons and roll to 332246504057465360 any the if any black 6053435738 place meeting the C. and for M. any they rebels before meeting ftile L/in go what. as, Lib. .SS. * There refts juft 32 8." The D^cypher of the forefaid Letter, as it was done in England, with fome Amendments in Scotland, which anfwered exaftly with the middle Alphabet. " Weft much may daily at I if with 69 both well 33 22 then or commiffion or a if to re 69 39 bels at in fentence of the caufe other to keep and alfo did tenants perfons any thing they of any if gave any Mr M. did thereof knew thefe and relation 39 London and go he treaty any with any in or 36 intercommuned he fend Air to be alarmed Shields is as done extremities to them knew 39 minifters if ^ms be others any other and knew to if or to if perfons of and em- ploy 38 clerk perfon him any thing others fay they pleafe will to to of money out of him if their now he the 31 Cefsnockhe 23 3a Glafgow, who who of perfon^ did or they or any to a here where a- ny arrived the and you are tennant you that others converfed fince write to the was employed and knew or prefent kept with going K 69 L. to the of for the perfuade go be for fear found to or above that the 38 circuit go 69 Ceflhock away drawn correfpondence go- vernment any of Hamilton Mr the King's my or and with at had for of interrogators are as prefident is defirous things given E. the private Lib. SS. * By 32 8 at the foot of the letter, Argyle fignifiea how many words muft be placed in each column, and into how many columns the whole letter muft be divided. Thus, in the above letter, there are eight columns, each column confifting of 32 words, as in page lia. AND LETTERS. in private or the if fend L. party perfon M. to any other and with and or or to court Porteous efFe£t named diifuade the to or money fwear re- bellion any perfons and roll to 33 22 Glafgow any the if any Black- woods 38 place meeting the C. and for M. any they rebels before meetings ftile L. in go what as. Lib. SS. There reftsjuft 32 8". The C O P Y of the faid Letter, as it was given in upon Oath by Mr Spence. " Weft-Shields is arrived ; the Prefident is as much alarmed as ■ any, and as defirous what may be done where you are. Things go daily to extremities : Here are interrogatories given in at Ayr to a tenant of E. L. I fend them to you for the ftile : If he knew any that had private meetings with intercommuned minifters, or others, at or before Bothwell ? Or, if they converfed with the rebels then in arms, or fince ? And, if they, or any others, did write, or fend any commiffion with any perfon to my L. M. or any other of the King's party, for a treaty ? and who was the perfon ? And if he knew who employed. Mr M. C. to go to Glafgow and Hamilton to the re- bels ? And if he knew of any meeting at Lowdon or Ceflhock, or any other place, in relation to the prefent government, and Black- wood's fentence ? And if he kept correfpondence with any of thefe perfons how withdrawn ? And if he knew of their going a- way, or the caufe thereof ? And if E. L. Ceffnock, or any other, did employ him to go to Glafgow to Mr M. clerk of the circuit- court, to keep any perfon out of the Porteous roll, and gave him money for that efFed ? And alfo, if any of the above named per- fons did any thing to perfuade or diifuade any tenants of others to go to the rebellion ? Perfons, they fay, vv'ill be found to fwear any thing they pleafe, for fear or money." The 112 S T A T E - P A P E R S, The aforefaid Letter fet before narrated. down according to the Method of opening Weft- Shields is arrived the Prefident is as much alarmed as any and as defirous what may be done where you! are things go dayly to extremitis :a here are interrogatorie; i given in at ^ir to a tenant of E. L. I fend ■ them to you for the flile if -he knew any that had private meetings . ■with intercommuned minifters or others at or before BothweU or if they converfed with the rebels then in arms or fince and if they or any others did write or fend any commiffion with any- perfon to my L. M. or any other of the King's party for a treaty and who was the perfon and if he knew who employed Mr M. C. ts go to Glalgow and Hamilton to the rebels and if he new of any meeting at Lowdon or Ceffnock or any other place in relation to the prefect government and Blackwood's fentence and if he kept correfpondence with- any of thefe perfons now with- drawn and if ift knew of their going away or the caufe thereof and if E.,L. Ceffnock or any other did employ him to go to Glafgow to MrM. clerk of the circuit court to keep any perfon out of the Porteous roll and gave him money for that eflFefl and alfo if any of the above named perfons did any thing to perfuade or diffuade any tenants of others to go to the rebellion Perfons they fay will be] found to fwear any thing they pleafe for fear or money AND LETTERS 113 A Letter written with Argyle's own Hand, addrefled to Major Holmes. " Though I cannot by this poft fend you a full account of your affairs, yet I fend you as much as may make you take meafures what bills to draw upon me, which I hope you. will fully underftand by Mr B.'s help. The whole account amounted to feveral pages, but I only give you one to total, as fufficient. " I gone fo I and refufe obje£t firft you time much is way the our would of altogether concerned do upon abfolutely do to do efFedu- ally as that it be to is at all be 335759424244575769 money 3647 575657 of and to 69224736535657 and they have is at be that no fome their 2345535958 &c. 500004548464758 part as againft the but concurrence from be lefs nor like place and intereft is fmall and power againft need do bring which Birch that cannot time are out upon an 324753235657 to 56444256594858444367 projeded meet very may little done the been purfe I to fhall my lifts I to great venture they profpeft provided have can willing God given conference week Brown I of things faid fome the now their m-y head guard mention 324344675748465257 things which to your liope fome ago as over fome if do fpoke for of know and encourage- ment confer have and felf be order refolve and to reckoning all and -undertate: lioneft or was far be Shoes undertaking many of to for purchafe was as is the a poffibly us of by force it though fo how the credit for time Birch and fome greateft them concerned will for and to and 404843 ftation good may only the if more will if fhould ■expe£t tolerably ftanding and by and neceffary the more the hazard to it .8 and think urge fo neceffary I the that fo affairs have bufmefs very I poflible of I fend here againft my till what little upon know not which money 25405748575840524244 I fervice any what ftiall refolve the at did leaft effedually thought and far if bufinefs reckoned for ftill the there I or ftuck you upon money by firft fum if then bills 26435640464559525769455356424457 well that 3841444058 515950584858594357 need trouble fomething very P a 114 STATE-PAPERS a frighten the probably not 2000 the though the once for and 5759 424244575735 will 40575875840524244 and to mpney could foolifh Browne many the not to God's Brand befides flay Job feat yet to propofed 322240565157 a deal the things as all once lefs a- ny drink well on know I as pay whether never the received to any calculate about to that that the fuch with you I other 1 1 for confi- derable be particular add I are of left I but all have it enemies to Cannot to friends niade part I write wifh may be fervice Mr an whole there confider perfons it when knowing any and payments to I it low fhall little little meaning inteUigencq thing out had which tents, ufual whole with 673151785048584840 and by the more of if but thfe that bliffing raife a 545653.58445758405258 47535^5744 caix virgins fupply to call 485650405243 not keep imaginable though them 4853485244 {landing many number 254753565733 only at ftanding a 5159505848585943 firft confiderable with more can them country 425351514052434443 in and there 40565157 it was weeks half , I fo to at 600 think needs precife I the the it a within what requifite not fum truly this grounds, to fay Mr thing not know they a,s hath' the grounds occafioned I they both do is. Red only let I diftance in I half in I the little would 40574857584. 05242 firft fliall number very looc and the confider fmall confefs them, work propofed pleafe cannot are 2000 Brand it 5444535450 44 the be 4056515 then be 4-° 54444° 5^4^ S^4(^4^4° 5^74-4^5^4- 443 little 4553564244575758445650485244 have the but it will 455356574457 ^nd as we. yet together only it for buy it confider employ better intereft fmall fo tofome 47535657 a future the to to- tal the abfolute of and defigned and wagons are but or propofed or and becaufe what add as out middle touch of I knowing merchant there is that what is 404540485644405844515458 Red I not but I of exped of up I enforce at be that fhould a is in confiderable put I done this all have by the not to had before able will I if and a they have will is for 57535°4348535956'fliall neceflaries the or of if is is they very incident for the daily not cloaths neceflary to there theneceffary beftof the 60405639 events little to hope 5644545644 57 A N, D L E T T E 11. S. 115 57 many fum for fo in we them more will in and it had any many yet be may all 51485048584840 and will it without and not but more get triple on is very 45535959 now be God and but is what a if odds it as near named not brufh of not lefs power propofed an of thought my and go you in or refolved fo I intend hear them out 45 5648445 243 5'7 to neither to" will much till any the know on in propofition could what other I of could be the and be but that eafy were I all differ was abfolutely foon more to fent above at well right foot their together provifious the fuddenly that 404258485352 will take will of the be unwilling the will can at is get Brand not 4056 5157 no fhould the much their not and men the are be while do to advantage thehufbanding for number isbefor5747534457 only to whole provifions charges good can to I I my middle money as free- ly for the and be eftates do projefb all after .fee be I it fuch you all 4-7535657 the yet I diftance to dare them diredion Gods hands in on not prevent and have fome help may from a a be pray very I I 'neceffaries and that to a occafion prices the fubmit they but not own had made be do men fome of fum be neceflary 47535657 fuch be- ftowed nothing they one it money of Brand not to fent engaged whole with a concerned own money next prove moriey for then but fome impoffible firft be be moft to of 4744564858535657200 00 to up to do though their done cafe and yet number without hard appointed left 1200 like give will after neceffary propofed as fhould leave hard had number I peremptory I 673347535657 flood pof- fibly thofe thought jundure I do mention this as as mean other I as neither give know offer have Adieu. Gil. St. The total fum is 128 8 Wtiich will be paid to you by Mr B." P2 . The ii6 STATE-PAPERS The Decypher of the faid Letter as it was done in England, with fome Amendments fince, which anfwers exactly with the Mid- dle Alphabet found out in Scotland. S I R, THO' I cantiot by this poft fend you a full account of your af- fairs, yet I fend you as much as may make you take meafures what bills to draw upon me, which I hope you will fully under- 'ftand by MrB.'s help. The whole accompt amounted to feveral pa- ges ; but I only give you one to total as fufficient. I gone fo and refufe obje£t firft you time much is away the our • would of altogether concerned do upon abfolutely do to do effec- tually as that it be to is at all be 33 fuccefs 69 money 36 horfe of and to 6922 h 3^6 orfe and they have is at be that no fome there 23 foot &c. 50000 fight part as againfl: the but concurrence from be lefs nor like place and intereft is fmall and power againft need- do bring which Birch that cannot tirne are out upon an 32 ho 23 rfe to recruited projedled meat very may little done the ,been purfe I to fhall, my lifts I to great venture they profpedl provided have can willing God. given conference week Brown I of things faid' Ibme the now there my head guard mention 32 d 67 figns- things which to your hope fome ago as over fome if do fpoke for of know and encouragement confer have and felf be order refoive and to reckoning all and undertake honeft or was far be fhoes under- taking many of to for purchafe was as is the a poffibly us of by- forfe it tho' fo how the credit for time Birch and fome. greateft them concerned will for and to and aid ftation good may only- the if more vdll- if fhould expedl tolerably ftanding and by and ne- cefTar the the more the hazarded to it 8 and think urge fo necef— far I the that fo affairs have bufmefs very I poffibly of I fend here. againft my till what little upon know not which money 25 affift- ance I fervice any what I fhall refoive the at did kafl effedlually thought AND LETTERS. 117 thought and far if bufinefs reckoned for ftill the there I or ftuck you upon money by firft fum if then bills 20 dragoons 69 forces well that 38 beat multitudes need trouble fomething very a fright- en the probably not 2000 the tho' the once for and fuccefs 35 will afliftance and to money could foolifh Browne many the not to God's Brand befides ftay job fent yet to propofed 3222 arms a deal the things as all once lefs any drink well on know I as pay whether never the received to any calculate about to that that the fuch with you I other 1 1 for confiderable be particular add I are of left I but all have it enemies to cannot to an. accompt to friends made part I write wifh may be fervice Mr an whole their conlider perfons it when knowing any and payment to I it low fliall little little meaning intelligence thing out had which tents ufual whole with 6731 militia and by the more of if but the that bleffing raife a proteftant horfe can virgins fupply to call Ireland not keep ima- ginable tho' them join ftanding many number horfe only at ftandr- ing a multitude firft confiderable with more can them country cornmanded in and there arm« it was weeks half I fo to at 600 think needs precife I the the it a within what requifite not fum truely this groimds to fay Mr thing nor know they as hath the occafioned I they both do is Red only let I -diftance in I half in I the little would affiftance firft fhall number very 1000 and the confider fmall confefs then work propofed pleafe cannot are 2000 Brand it people the be arms them be appearing gathered little forces Stirling have the but it will forces and as we yet to- gether only it for buy it confider employ better intereft fmall fo to &me horfe a future the to total the abfolute of and defigned and waggons are but of propofed or and becaufe what add as out med- dle touch of I knowing merchant there it that what is affair at- tempt Red I not but I of expe£t of up I enforce at be that fhould a is in confiderable put I done this all have by the not to had be- fore able will I if and a they have will is for foldier fhall neceffars the or of if is is they very incident for the daily not cloaths ne- cefTar to their the neceffar beft of the war 39 events little to hope reprefs many fome were for fo in we them more will in and it had, any ri8 sTA'TE-PAPERS' any many yet be may .ail maim snd wiH it kvfithdut aaid not but more got triple on is very foot now be God and but is what a if odds itasnearpamed not brufh off not lefs power propofed an of thought my an go you in or refolved fo I intend hear them our friends to neither to will much till any the know on in proportion could what other I of could be the and be but that eafy were 1 all differ was abfolutely foon more to fent above at well right foot their to- gether provifions the fuddenly that adion will take will of the be unwilling the will can at is get Brand not arms no fhould the much there not and men the are be while do to advantage the hufbanding for number is be for Ihoes only to whole provifions charges good can to I I my meddle money as freely for the an be eftates do project all after fee be I it fuch you all horfe the yet I diftance to dare them diredtion God's hands in on not prevent and have fome help may from a a be pray very 1 1 neceffaries and that to occafion prices the fubmit they but not own had mad be do men. fome of fum be neceffar horfe fuch beftowed nothing they one it money of Brand not to fent engaged whole with a concern own money next prove money far then but fome impoffible firft be be moft to of heritors 20000 to up to do though there done cafe and yet, number without hard appointed leaft 1200 like give will after.^ neceffar propofed as fhould have hard had number I peremptor I 6733 horfe ftood poffibly thofe thought juncture I do mention this as as mean other I as neither give know offer have. Adieu. Gil. ft. The total fome is 128 — — 8, which will be paid to you by Mr B. The A 'N D LETTERS. 119 The Copy of the foregoing Letter, as it was given in by Mr Spence, according to the plain Senfe thereof, without the Pre- face or Poflfcript, being fet down already with the Cypher and Decypher. * I know not the grounds our friends have gone upon, which hath occafioned them to offer fo little money as I hear ; neither know I what afliftance they intend to give: And, till I know both, I will neither refufe my fervice, nor do fo much as objedl againft any thing isrefolved, till I firft hear what Mr Red *, or any other you fend * Qarilares. fhall fay. Only, in the mean time, I refolve to let you know as much of the grounds I go on, as is poflible at this diftance, and in this way. 1 did truly, in my propofition, mention the very leaft fum I thought could do, our bufinefs effeftually, not half of what I would have thought requifite in another jundure of affairs; aad what IpropofedT thought altogether fo far within the power of thofe concerned, that, if a little lefs could poffibly do the bufi- nefs, it would not be flood upon. I reckoned the afEflance of the horfe abfohitely neceffary for the firfl brufh ; and I do fo ftill : I fhall not be peremptor to urge the precife number named ; but I do think there needs very near that number effectually ; and I think. rooQ as eafy had as 8 or 600. And, ir were hard that it ftuck at the odds. I leave it to you to confider, if all fhould be hazarded, upon fo fmall a differ. As to the money, I confefs, what was pro- pofed is more by half than is abfolutely neceffary at the firft week's work ; but, foon after, all the fum was propofed, and more, will be necelfar, if it pleafe Godto give fuecefs; and then arms can- not be fent like money by bills. Tiiere are now above 1 200 horfe and dragoons, and 2000 foot at leaft, of ftanding forces in "j" Brand, t Scotland, very well appointed, and tolerably well commanded. It is right hard to expe£t that country-people on foot, without horfe, fhould beat them, the triple their number ; and if multitudes can be got together, yet they will need more arms, more provifion, and have more trouble with them. But the cafe is, if fomething confiderable be I20 STATE-PAPERS be not fuddenly done at the very firft appearing, and that there be only a multitude gathered without a£tion, though that may frighten a little, it will do no good. The ftanding forces will take up fome ftation, probably at Stirling, and will, to their aid, not only have the militia of 20,000 foot and 2,000 horfe, but all the heritors, &c. to the number, it may be, of 50,000. And, though many will be unwilling to fight for the ftanding forces ; yet the moft part will once join, and many will be as concerned for them as any can be againft them. And, though we had at firft the greateft fuccefs imaginable ; yet it is impoflible but fome will keep together, and * Scotland, get fome concurrence and affiftance, not only in * Brand, but from * England, t Birch and Ireland : It will not then be time to call for more ^rms, far lefs for money to buy them : No money , nor credit could fup- ply it': We ftiould prove like the foolifh virgins. Confider, in the t Diffeniing next place, how X Browne can employ fo much -money, and fo £ords. many horfe, better for their own intereft, though the proteftant in- tereft were not concerned. Is it not a fmall fum, and a fmall force, to raife fo many men with, and, by God's bleifing, to reprefs the whole power of Brand, that fome hope are engaged againft us ; be- fides, the horfe to be fent need poffibly ftay but a . little time to do a job, if future events do not bring the feat of the war to Brand, which is yet mort to the advantage of Birch, As to the total of the money that was propofed, by the beft huft)anding, it cannot purcha;fe arms, and abfolute neceflaries for one time, for a militia of the number they are to deal with ; and there is nothing out of the whole defigned to be beftowed upon many things ufual and neceflary for fuch an undertaking, as tents, waggons, cloaths, fhoes, horfe, horfe-ftio'es ; all which are not only neceflary to be once had, but daily to be recruited : Far lefs, out of the whole fum project- ed, was any thing propofed for provifions of meat or drink, in- telligence, or incident charges. Some very honeft, well-meaning, and very good men, may undertake on little, becaufe they can do little, and know little what is to be .done. All I fliall add is, I joiade the reckoning as low as if I had been to pay it out of my cwa AND LETTERS. 121 own purfe ; and, whether I meddle or meddle not, I refolve never to touch the money, but to order the payment of neceffaries as they Ihall be received ; and I fhall freely fubmit rnyfelf to any knowing foldier for the lifts, and any knowing merchant for the prices I have calculated. When there is an occafion to confer about it, . it will be a great encouragement to perfons that have eftates to ven- ture, and that confider what they do, that they know that there is a project, and profpe£t of the whole affair, and all neceffaries pro- vided for fuch an attempt. If, after 1 have fpoke with IVlr * Red, * Carftares. I fee I can do you fervice, I will be very willing ; if I be not able, I pray God fome other may : But, before it be given over, I wifli I had fuch a conference as I writ of to you a week ago ; for I ex- pe£b not all from f Browne. Some confiderable part of the horfe t Diffenting may, I hope, be made up by the help of your particular friends. I have yet fomething to add, to enforce all I have faid, which I can- not at this diftance ; and fome things are to be done to prevent th« defigns of enemies, that I dare not now mention, left it fhould put them on their guard. I have a confiderable diredion in my head ; but all is in God's hands. N. B. That the foregoing marginal notes arc fo explained by the key of words. I know 122 STATE-PAPERS The foregoing Letter In eight Columns, each Column confifting oi 128 Words. I know not the grounds our friends have gone upon which hath occafioned them to offer fo little money as I hear neither know I what affiftmce they they intend to give an for U ■ ille-al - 154 STATE-PAPERS illegal orders : That thofe you write to beyond the fea are to give notice that I have made ufe of my order to oflSciate as officer of ftate, having told the Matter of Stairs at London that I had fuch an order, but that I would not make ufe of it, in cafe he would come down, and, having received his anfwer, that he would not come. Write too, that all arts have been ufed, and will be ufed, to imbroile matters. Commiflary Smollet, a known dependant, propofed, two weeks agoe, in a meeting of the burrows, that they fhould petition the parliament that no new fupply be granted till an account be given of the mifapplications of the hearth-money,, &c. The man of war is not yet come. Tell Monfieur Dallen what's here, and that I'll write to him-, fofoon as there is matter, which will be with the Saturday's poft. Write abroad', that D. Hamilton, at my defire, has communicated the inftru£tions of the Chancellor and D. Queensberry, and my Lord Stairs. Write, that its plain the Jacobits here have got new hopes.. Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstares. Proceedings in Parliament. Edlnbnrgh, I can Only tell you, (having no time), that the parliament hath April 25, ^j^jg j^y. j,j,.gjj gH fj^g heritors of Angus to come before them for not eleding, and have fined the abfents, &c. The committee hath vo- ted L. 1 14000 fterling for raifing and paying four new regiments of foot and two new regiments of dragoons 1 8 months, againft which time they hope the war will be over. To convince them of their danger, I offered to lay proofs fully before any three of their num- ber whom they fliould name ; which I did ; and, upon their repor^^ we concluded as I have told you. But the particular of King James's being required to write in the town of Edinburgh affair happening to be in one of the letters fhewn, it was reported too, and has made a great noife. I expected this day I fhould have been complained AND LETTERS 155 complained of in parliament ; for they fancied it was a forged letter. But they are grown wifer. I wifh they may do it ; for that will pro- duce the reading of it in parliament, which will do much good. I hope the King fhall have reafon to be well fatisfied with his parlia- ment. We keep off church-affairs till thofe of the ftate are done ; but there is room enough even for them- I have not yet got decy- phered what you writ about P. but 1 guefs it. The thing will be eafily done ; but know his exprefs mind, leaft we do him hurt in- ftead of good. Poffibly it would furnifh matter to bad men in Eng- land to clamour againft him. That is my opinion. Pray keep the macer's place unfilled. I am engaged to one, Afly I think is his name, a friend of Mr Oughton's. Adieu, Secretary Johnston toMrCARSTARES. Of a Gift procured from the King. Ormiflon. Edinburgh E- legions. Major Buntyn. SIR, If that tack I fent up were worth L. loco fterling, when I fay it April 27, 4s not worth L. 400, I were the bafefl man living. I fhall make it ^^" appear what it is before I defire it to be offered to the King again ; -and if it be worth L. 400, I may fay it is worth L. 4000 flerling : And therefore I fay it is a malicious information. The King hath a third of it in his own pofTeffion. Mo ft of the rents of the abbacy- were dilapidat before Dumfermling had his tack ; and fome part of it that is -Dumfermling's tack is difponed by King Charles II. after the Expiring thereof, which I cannot have by the new one. My fon has it of me, with the baillie, conftable, and major-fees, and L. 20.0 fterling more of property that I have in Fife. Only be pleafed to look upon the perfon that hath informed you as a great ignorant, and my malicious enemy. But, if it be Mr Hog, it \?> gratis did um. Let him fee what I fhall fend up, and he fhall have a difpofition U 2 from 156 S T A T E - P A P E R S from me to all the reft that he can find more than I do fay. I vyould not take L. 1000 from the King in Scotland, though he would give it me, he not having L. 400Q. himfelf, the cuftoms, excife, fupply, and other cafualities, excepted. Ormifton is not only the man you fpoke him to be, but of a near relation to my family, being thirds of kin to my fon by my wife ;. and I doubt not to make him of a better temper than he has been. As to the bufinefs of Edinburgh ; I never thought it of fo great moment as fome at firft would have made it appear ; nor did I fuf- fer any precipitation in It j nor will it import fo much as thelofs of tyme taken about it. I am of no faction, but ftandfingly by myfelf ; and make not an eafy life among them ; but will ftand clear againft the reflection both of floth and too much haft. And it is to be fup- pofed there was fome law in the council where four judges were menibers, and prefent. I cannot be much in the dark as to the meafures at prefent, being the fame I myfelf was into when you and I parted; and I fhall be as far from trufting enemies as forfaking friends ; only I . fee not that deep reach of the Edinburgh eledlion, which I hope fhall never ferve to other ends than the former, nor bring up the defign of a clerk; which I think is fufficiently provided againft. I muft tell you, that Major Buntyn, perceiving there will need an advance for payment of the forces,, kt kaft of a month, for I have perfw:aded the tackfmen, of the inland-excife to advance one month, he begins to fall of ; and,, having got the wind of the imployment you intend for him, by fomewhat in the advocate's letter you wrote about him, I find he inclines much morqto that. And, if the. A. Bi- fliop be quitt of the defign of Mr Lockhart for that caille, you can- not do better than with the Major, But pray you fee the biftiop be once clear to fall of his defign for Lockhart. And now I know not what courfe to take for that pay-mafter and commilTar. If it were not fo great a truft, it might be rouped ; and I begin to fmell out, that the farmers of the excife would be at? it : Thefe are, Sir James Dickj and Sir Thomas Kennedy, and Fingleton, that is, James Ofwald, AND LETTERS. 157 Ofwald, and Charles Murray; and, I apprehend, my colleagues In the treafury, particularly he who is now with you, have a great mind they fhould have it; and they will poffihly take in Barntoun and Wrae ; whereby I am a little difcouraged to medle any more in it. But, if the King fends therewith Barntoun, it will be the worft courfe of all, and moft prejudiciall, efpoufe it who will. If Barntoun be fent down, the commiffioners will make a better bargain with him, or any other tliat will offer for it. But I am for men of integrity, and firm to the government. This affair is of more importance than the -eleflion of the magiflrates of Edinburgh and St Andrew's both, and if Glafgow were added. So, without ceremony, farewell. Secretary Jo H n s t on ,to Mr Carstares. Tivo Regiments of Dragoons and four of Foot 'voted by Parliament ; and by nvhat Means this ivas obtained. SIR, All that I have to add is, that the parliament this day voted the April 27. neceffity of funds, for two new regiments of dragoons and four re- giments of foot, which, with the forces already on foot, will make 6000 men, to be payed for a year and a half. We brought them to that number, by telling them, that, by all fortes of difcoveries of any defign that was or had been of an invafion in Scotland, 6000 men feemed to be the fixed intended number of invaders. My letters, I think I told you, did great fervice. Now Hugh Dalrymple has been fo foolifh as to prefs theihewing of them in parliament, think- ing that all is a ftiam. This, fmce they will have it fo, it cannot be fhunned. If they doe themfelves hurt, I cannot help it : I took the difcreeteft way, not to*negled the King's fervice; and I keeped the committee from making any report of that matter. Melfort's page tells very much. If all be true, he fpeaks pofitively of a defcent here in May. I hope the French would only amufe us j however, one 1^8 ST ATE- PAPERS one offered yefteirday to wager loD guineas that King James fliould raife this parhament. I am not deceived of feme men. Sir John Maxwell and Craigens^were this day the wrongeft men in the houfe. Parewelli ' Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstares. ■Supplies granted by Parliament, — Complaint of fome ijuho are noiv in the Government. SIR, ■^zgth A^rfl ^ ^""^^^ ^° *^^ ^^"S laft poft. You will make known that yefterday =1693. thie parliament fined the abfent noblemen, and voted L. 45,000 fieri, to be raifed by excife on malt-liquor, payable quarterly, in a year and an half. They voted too ten months cefs and an half, to be paid in a year, that is, L. 63,000 fterl. payable at three terms, Whitfun- day next, and Martinmas, and Whitfunday thereafter. There are owing of the prefent cefs feven months and an half, payable at Lambas next, and Candlemas artd Lambas thereafter. So that there are now 18 months cefs, payable in i 5 months ; which is more than Scotland ever gave. All this, with the poll-money which is to be added, will pay 6,300 men to Martinmas 1694, and fill the maga- zines with arms and provifions, and fatisfy the country for their ar- rears. -Now thofe who, at firft, were only for one regiment and three months cefs In all, and ridiculed all danger ; now, I fay, that they fee that they have llrugled in vain to hinder things, they begin to outrun others, by talking of 8 months cefs during life, though they know that ten men in parliament will not be for it, if not for. a pinch. They may know too, that, as long as they are in the go- vernment, the nation w,ll never grant any cefs during lite. It they were out of it, I believe 5 might be got ; and the King would nei- ther take nor afk more, knew he the truth. Adieu, I hope my Lord P. is very well over. Secretary AND LETTERS. 159 Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstares. Complains that the Parliament nvere not to be gratified by an Inquiry into the Majfacre at Glenco. Of the intended Invafion.— H01V the nenv Regiments ought to be commanded. I have your's the 24th Aprile, and fliall do what is defired as well ^^^ 4* as I can ; but I wonder how any thing can be expedted of a parUa- ment which is not to be gratified in any one thing that they reckon a gratification ; and the thing now retracted is that which would have pleafed them, and yet, in the event, wronged no body : Where- as now, any that have fuffered them to hope that, being neceffary to get the King's bufinefs fmoothly done, I fay, fuch perfons muft at kft lofe their credit with them, as having fuffered them to hope in vain. I am concerned that thole who mannage them now fhould be any way leffened in their opinion, fince that will not be found to be for the King's fervice. That, for my own part, I told them- from the beginning, that to addrefs againft particular men was the way to eftablifh them. Befides, credit or no credit, I have often told you that I fliall never be a Scotchman. I hope to get well thorow this feflion; and, for the next, Deus providebit. You may be fure I fliall be cautjous in communicating ; for, were what you writ known, they muft be immediately diffolved. As to the profecutions you mention, he to whom fuch bufinefs belongs a£ts plainly, in the~ fenfe of all men, as if he were to juftify the truth of all that was ob- jected to his incoming. But let not all this trouble you ; for alTure yourfelf, that I'le rather be ten times more a Have than I am, than faill to bring this feffion to a happy conclufion, in fpite of the failling of friends, as well as the oppofition of enemies. Since nothing is to be done to gratify the parliament, I mean, nothing that they rec- kon a gratification, there remained no handle by which to work up- on th^m, but to begett in them a conviction of the danger they are in ; which I have done fo fully, that, whatever others think, I do not i6o STATE-PAPERS not believe that I fliall ever be able to do the King fo confiderable a fervice again. It will be written, that I have raifed heats ; but that is a calumny : For, whatever heats I may have raifed within, there is fo much fear does accompany them, that they dare not fhow them. Bad men fee they are difcovered ; and were fo overcome by the evi- dence of proofs, and their own confciences, that even the worft of them, rather than contravert the proofs of a defigne of an invalion, they themfelves openly owned the evidence of them. They chi- can'd indeed about the paragraph of Edinburgh, but very modeft- ly. I except the commiffary, who, without ihame, faid, That Payn knew that King James was coming ; and therefore would be-fpeak the clerks place for his friends. The parliament muft addrefs to the King for an affembly. I have not yet fpoke thorowly to the mini- fters ; but I have in my own head a fcheme of an a£t, which I am fure would pleafe the King, and fave them too. I doubt not but to bring them to it, either lefs or more. The great concern of all ho- neft men is, that they be fecured ; which they will never reckon themfelves to be, unlefs the new regiments be put in honeft mens hands. My advice is, fmce thefe regiments are to ly in the country, to make the nobility colonels, and to give them men of experience to be lieutenant-colonels and majors out of the troops of Flanders, or here. The Duke, and Sir Thomas Livingfton, and I, are for a foot-regiment to my Lord Lindfay. I have written fo much to my Lord Portland, and defined that Captain Hume might be the Lieutenant-colonel. His father has behaved himfelf hitherto ex- tremely well in parliament ; and indeed his talent lyes there. Such a choife would generally pleafe. I have too, with the Duke and Sir Thomas, named Glencairn for a regiment of foot. You know its a confiderable family, and he goes right.' My Lord Carmichael will not take a regiment of dragoons. I have wrote, too, that he and the Duke, and Sir Thomas, and others, think my Lord Rofs the fitteft man for a remanent of dragoons. It is not fit all the colonels be named on the fudden, becaufe of the many difap- pointments that will be given ; but it's fit the King fignify his plea- fure AND LETTERS. i6i lure concerning the levies that he intends to have made ; and that he impower Sir Thomas, and whom elfe his Majefly pleafes, to name the captains and other fubalterns, who may be getting the men. Pray mind this. It's evident enough here that the party hath fignified, by my Lord Midleton, their inclinations, and ftrength, and opinions, to the court of France, and are full of ex- pedations. They do not diffemble, that, if IVIay pafle over with- out having a venture for it, they'll- loie hopes. M'Gill, my Lord Melfort's page's declarations, are very full ; but, how far to be cre- dited, I know not. Farewell. Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstarres. An Excife 'voted by Parliament for Twenty-three Months. Com- plaint againjl Lord Stairs and Commijfary Dalrymple. Lord Carmichael. — — Treajury^hufinefs. Earl of Arran. Duke of Gordon and Lord Seaforth to be profecuted. Sir Patrick Murray turned out, Ne'uil Paytu 1 fliall only add to my lafl long letter, that the a£t for the excife May 6. Twas paft yefterday. You know the excife of two merkupon the boll, ' which is annexed to the crown, is farmed at L. 2,0^000 per annum. The excife now granted is of three pennies on the pint ; that is, two pence, Englilh money, upon the gallon : So that, fuppofe fifteen gallons of ale brewed out of a boll of malt, as they ordinarly do, this excife will amount to half a crown upon the boll ; and there- fore fhould rife higher in the year than the annexed excife. Thus, three pennies on the pint for a year and a half, which was the time refolved on by the committee, fhould amount at leaft to the fum of L. 45,000 Englifh, which was the fam intended by the parliament to be givdn out of the excife. But the annexed excife being upon the malt, and the new excife upon the liquors, it was feared the one would interfere with the other ; therefore, the gene- X ral i62 STATE-PAPERS ral opinion was, to diflblve from the crown the two merk uport the boll, and to annex an equivalent to it upon the ale, and to add to this equivalent an additional excife. This certainly would have been better both for King and country, fince it is the equaler and more uniform way ; for a boll of malt, in one place of the country, makes but twelve gallons of ale, and, in another, it makes fifteen ; and yet the ale is of equal goodnefs ; and the charges and trouble of collection would have been the fame ; whereas now, it is double. But Duke Hamilton would hot venture on this without a pofitive order. The next expedient was, to lay the new excife upon the. malt too ; but this could not have been carried in parliament, be- caufe the gentry have a wrong notion of the thing, and which it was impoiTible, without a great deal of time, to redtify. They think all that is laid upon the malt is laid upon the heir, of which the malt is made ; and, confequently, that its paid by the landed men j but that excife upon drink is paid by the drinker. In effedt, the drinkers pay the excife in both - cafes ; but, as I have faid, they could not be convinced of this : Therefore, to make the fund ef- fedual, it was propofed, that the new excife fhould continue long- er than a year and a half; and it was" carried in the committee, that it fhould continue twenty-three months, by my Lord Craw- ford's cafting vote as prefident ; for, otherwife, the votes were e- qual. And thus it has paft in parliament ; fo that I hope, inftead of L. 45,000 Sterling, the King Ihall have near L. 60,000. It's payable for the months of June and July on the firft of Auguft next, and thereafter quarterly, to the firft of May 1695, By the aft, any brewer that gives over brewing, is to lofe the priviledge of brewing for five years. And, becaufe the ale that private men brew for their own ufe pays no excife, and that the price of ^le rifing upon this adt, every man will brew for himfelf, and fo enervate the a£t ; therefore, it is declared, that, whoever begins now to brew for his own ufe, who has not been accuftomed to do it, what he brews Ihall pay excife. Thus, this fund cannot fail ; and the cefs, you AND LETTERS. 163 you know, is certain, and the third part of it payable now at Whit- funday. I forgot to tell you in my laft, that it wis my Lord Stairs and the commiflary who would have thofe letters of Payn's, &c. brought in to the parliament. They were fo foolifh to believe the Jacobites, who told them that all was a forgery. Pray forget not that which I wrote to my Lord Portland, that the parliament be allowed to fit two or three weeks longer than the time appointed by the inftrudions ; becaufe, the bufinefs falling all to the fliare of two or three, its impoffible for them to overtake it without more time. I wifh the King would fignify his inclination that my Lord Carmichael take one of thefe regiments of dragoons : He inclines not to do it ; but he will not decline it, if the King defire it : And this will fatisfy the country mightily, who have an entire confi- dence in him ; and, if Major Wifheart be made his Lieutenant-co- lonel, he may in time have the regiment given him. If my Lord Carmichael be Colonel, he'll chufe Wifheart himfelf, as he fays to me. Indeed, all men agree, that Wifheart is both one of the ho- neflefl: men, and one of the beft officers, in the troops here : But Wifheart would rather continue Major where he is ; and therefore; he muft be ordered to be Lieutenant-colonel. As to the naming of Captains, &c. its fit the King join to Sir Thomas Livingfton the Duke, and fome others, who know mens intereft in the coun- try. It is impoffible to put the treafiiry-bufinefs right, as that comlf- fion ftands. Generally fpeaking, they do nothing, or ad in fuch a m-anner, that they had better do nothing. I do not believe that Ceffwick will get a farthing, notwithftanding of the King's letters, and of their extravagant allowances to Sir William Lockhart ; and notwithftanding all the orders that were fent down, four or five months ago, for repairing the caflle of Dumbarton ; and that 2 or L. 300 will do it; yet ftill not one farthing ordered for it; though Ma- jor Buntein declares, he'll give up his comiffion if th^y do it not ; X2 for i64 STATE-PAPERS for there are no carriages, nor indeed arms, even for the garrifonr ^ and that the walls are fallen ; but many fuch inftances might be given. I have an original letter in my hand, v^rltten by Gray the mirii- fter, that lives with my Lady Caffels at London, juftifylng Lang- ton's accufmg my Lord Melfort to King James at Paris, for this reafon, that he was obliged to do it. by the comiffion which he carried over with him from great perfons. All thofe upon bail are to be called for. I have been plain with my Lord Arran, who fliall do what is afkt of him, or go to prifon.. He is under bail. Captain Mair and Mrs Smith do abfcond ; they Ihall be cited and outlawed. There are letters of intercomunlng paft agalnft thofe in the Bafs. You'll fay. Why was not this done: fooner ? Thofe In France have been denounced for not compear- ing before the council. They muft now be cited on fixty days, in order to their trial. You'll fay. Why was- not this done fooner, fince thus they cannot be tried before the parliament ? The Duke of Gordon and my Lord Seaforth being in hands, will be tried. Its fit the King have them at mercy ; but they'll be tried only before the juftice-court. The Duke would fave the Duke of Gordon; and therefore pretends, he raufl have an order to any trial in par- liament, as if it were not a thing of courfe ; and that the King's let- ter to the council is exprefs, to proceed agalnft all thofe that were in France. Its more for the King's honour and exoneration to the foreign courts, that they be tried in parliament. The King's pleafure to the comiffioner may come time enough for that. There are two men that were condemned to die for the bufinefs of the Bafs, who have now had reprives near a twelvemonth from the council. They ought to be examples ; but the objedlon is, that men fo long reprived never ufe to be -executed. The truth is, the crimes of all thofe in hand are fo old, and there have been fuch hopes of pardons given them, and bargains of money entered into for obtaining thefe par- dons, part of .which has been paid, and pardons have been faid to have been granted, and loft, &c. that, to take away any of fuch mens. AND LETTERS. 165 mens lives, I find, would be cenfured and difapproved even by in- difFerent men. But I believe, with a little diligence, men may be eatched tampering at prefent ; and, whoever he be, he'll be very unlucky, if his fate depend on me ; for I am fully convinced, and fo are all men that I fpeak to, that examples are abfolutely necef- fary ; and that the lenity of the government encourages men to go on from plot to plot, which at laft muft end in a rebellion, which may coll multitudes their lives, whom the execution of one or two might have made wife. The comiffioner inclines to have Ofwald of Fingleton in Sir Patrick Murray's place. Therefore, remember your friend and mine. As for Sir Patrick himfelf, he manages the Marquis of Douglas now, who, with much difficulty, came to the parliament, and has refufed his comifllon for being fheriff of the fliire of Forfar. I told my Lord Lothian, that he was turned out for tattling every thing that he or the chancellor faid, to fome men that were ene- mies to government, and who made a very bad ufe of it. My Lord Lothian frankly owned, that he did not doubt of the truth of that, and had often challenged him for it. Its now well known, that Sir Thomas Kennedy was the man in- tended to be provoft of Edinburgh. Thus, Payn might well write to King James, that a letter from him would get his friend the clerk's place. The contra£b with Wyae about corn and ftraw was for three years, though the fund continues but for a year; and there were other grofs nullities in it. They paft from it immediately, and were aihamed of it ; and pretend, they can get others to do it cheaper than he, though the King exprefsly orders it to him. The month of April too is not yet ordered for the army, though it be already in Wrae's hands, and that, by the contra£t, Wrae fhould advance it. Trial will be now made, but,- 1 believe, to no purpofe, for prolonging the old five months cefs. Farewell. The members fay all exprefsly, that they will never give money further than neceffity obliges them, to be put in the hands of a treafury,. i66 STATE-PAPERS treafary, compofed of men, for the mod part, who they ia their confciences believe are not for the government. They add, that they cannot, at the fame time,' grant a cefs du- ring life, and fuch extraordinary taxes : That this would turn the fpirit of the nation againft him, which otherwife will impute what they do to the neceifity of things. Secretary Johnston to the Earl of Portland. Of trying Nevil Payne. Continuation of the Seffion. DificuU culty in hindering the Parliament from accuftng Lord Stairs. • Neiv Leviec — — Vindication of his oivn Gondii^ in Parliament. My Lord, M^y^i I. ' You'll pardon my uflng another hand : I cannot well ufe my 1693. own, for my eyes. I hope your Lordfhip has received mine of the 2d and 4th of May, and that my friend has given you an account of mine of the 6th. The papers produced in parliament are not yet publifhed ; becaufe, in all appearance, we fhall try Navil Payn for his letter. Its plain that its his hand-writing ; and other letters of his are now taken, in which he ufes the very fame borrowed names, and fpells in the fame manner ; for inftance, Wright inftead of Writ. The difficulty will be to prove, that the borrowed names, Brother and Sijier, are inftead of King James and his Queen* The fenfe convinces any man of this in his confcience ; and fo the parliament was to a man convinced of this upon the firft reading of the letter ; yet, in courts of juftice, no judge would, notwith- ftanding this convidion, find a man guilty : But parliaments pro- ceed not by fuch ftri(S rules ; and, I believe, the parliament is fully enough difpofed to find him guilty. I am to meet with the law- yers this night. On the one hand, examples are abfolutely necef- fary ; and, if he be found guilty, he'll be the example, unlefs he make a difcovery worth his life ; and then examples will not be wanting* AND LETTERS. 167 wanting. He knows the bottom of all. On the other hand, it is not fit that even the parliament fhould do any thing of that nature in their zeal, which will not bear the judgement and cenfure of mankind. If he dye, the manifefto-maker will be fent after him. I wrote already to your Lordfhip, that the coniiffioner muft have leave to continue the feffion longer than was intended. There is a new reaibn for it : There was, by a former a£t, fines and forfaultures in the late times ordered to be reftored ; and a conimittee then appointed to enquire into them, and to report to the next feffion. My Lord Melviil, and a great many other members that are men of quality, are concerned in this matter. They defire that the committy may be continued, and have power, not only to report, but to determine, even when the parliament is up. If this were put to a vote, they would carry it by far. To gain time, the commiffioner has told them, that he'll write to the King ; and defires them in the meaa time to be reporting. But. now, to allow a committy to deter- mine, were a thing of great and uncertain confequence : The only remedy is, that the King allow ten, or twelve, or fifteen days longer than the time appointed by the inftruftions ; in which time, moft of thefe reports may be taken in and determined by the parlia- ment itfelf ; and fo all heat prevented on that fubje£t, which other- wife, becaufe of the multitude of thofe concerned, cannot be pre- vented. As to my Lord Stairs, much pains have been taken to keep them from accufing him. I Ihall do all I can to keep off reprefen- tations either concerning him or any other man. Poffibly that may be got done; but then they will ftick to the point of repre- fenting things. They may be prevailed on to do this in the dif- crceteft manner imaginable; but I do not think it poffible to keep them from doing it : And therefore his Majefty would fignify his exprefs pleafi.ire to Duke Hamilton on this fubjed. Its certain all they do is in expeitatioh that they fhall be allowed to do this ; and there was a neceffity for allowing: them to expe<9; it Thus, if they be fent home by fuddain adjournment, they'll reckon themfelves. deceived. r68 S T A T E - P A P E R S deceived, which will have two bad efFefts : ly?, That they will not again, in another feflion, begin with the King's bufinefs, as they have done in this, zdly, Thofe that have mannaged them now will -have no more credit with them hereafter ; and 1 with it may always be remembered, that, whatever be the humours of this parliament, the King can never expeO: to have a parliament in Scotland that will have fewer humours. I fhould hope that they may be pre- vailed on to be fatisfyed with fome gentle and generall reprefenta- tion of things, to be made in a letter to the King at the end of the feflion. Reprefentations in England do reflect upon the adminifcra- .tion ; becaufe Kings there are fo near, that they may be fuppofed to know the grivances of the people, and that they of their own accord fhould redrefs them; but Scotland lying at a diliance, the cafes diff'er. Nor is there here any bargain, the parliament having done all ihat is aflied of them before they aflj any thing. -As to the new levies, I wrote already about my Lord Lindfay, •and my Lord Glencairn, and my Lord Rofs. All people have prefl: my Lord Carmichael fo m.uch in the matter, that now he confents to take a regiment of dragoons, if it be the King's mind that he fliould have it. If he and my Lord Rofs get the dragoons, the gentry and commonality of the weft will, of their own accord, join with thefe regiments upon any occafion. My Lord Carmichael ' begs, that, if the King name him to be Colonel, that he'll give him Wiflieart to be his Lieutenant-colonel ; becaufe, fince he fays he underftands not the matter himfelf, he would have Wifeheart, on whofe underftanding and integrity he can rely, for the man- nagement of the regiment. The King knows beft if ther be any prefent danger from the French or not ; and accordingly will haften or delay his orders about the levies. But his Majefty allowed mc to tell them, that he would raife troops ; and its fit at leaft to beginn immediately to raife fome of them, both to quyet mens mind here, and leafl: they fxiould fay that they gave money for troops which, fince not raiLd, were not neceflary ; and that they have been im- pofed on by the nqife of imaginary danger. The AND LETTERS. 169 The King allowed me to give Sir William Hamilton hopes of marks of his favour ; he behaves himfelf as well as I can defire. However, there were no neceflity for haft ; but I believe, that, if his Majefty would give him the vacancy in the feffion with the firft port, this might contribute much to calm thofe people that are fo eager againft my Lord Stairs ; for this would make a fort of ballance upon the bench. My Lord, fome men have only impudence and calumny left them, and fo muft be allowed to make the beft on't they can ; and the truth is, I have not leifure to refute their forgeries ; time and things will do that. However, I affirm, that it was never fo much as mo- tioned, either in committy or parliament, that the King fhould not name the officers, as has been averred at London, and a great dale more of that fluff ; for inftance, that it is an empty parliament, though they were the other day 1 50 upon a divifion, which is more thaii ever I knew at once in a Scotch parliament. I have feen your's to Sir Thomas Livingfton. Mr Carftares has a paper in his hands which gives a full account of Sir William Lockhart, which I never troubled the King with ; but that account fhall be owned to his face, ;and 'miicli more. Pray, order an anfwer to this letter to be fent down from England by a flying pacquet. I had almoft forgot, there will be an ad paft, by which the four regiments of foot may, whenever the King pleafes, be levyed in lefs than a month ; for the counties muft furnifti them when called for. Wee ftiall make all correfpondence with France, all going to it, or flaying in it during the war, and without leave from the King and councell, high treafon. I have good hopes too of the church-bufi- nefs ; but fuch matters cannot be done in a hurry, but muft have -more time, as I have (aid. I am, My Lord, Your moft humble, and obedient fervant, (Signed) J. J o H N s T o u N. Y Secretary lyo STATE-PA*PERS Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstares. Of Ne'vil Payne. — The Oath of Allegiance and Affurance., to ivhom to be put. — Laird of Grant, and other Pretenders to Regiments. — Tarbat falftfies the Minutes of Parliament. Of the Advocate and Sollicitor's taking Money in Parliament-bufmefs. Proofs of Danger. — Reputation, and Recruits, the only tivo Things Scot- land can give to a King of England. Gift to the Chancellor. Of Annandale. The Oath. Duke of Hamilton, Earl of Mel-- vil, and his Sons ^ Edinburgh, I wrote to you on the 6tli, and on the nth to my Lord Port-- RIayi6.i699 ^^^^^ j ^^^ ^^^^ laft to my brother, bearing, that the King had got the parliament's letter. The Mafter of Stairs's brother is one of the clerks to the parliament under Tarbat. He had orders to fefld the Mr copies of every thing that pafles. And, no doubt, the Mr had a copy of the parliament's letter, fince Halfide made print it at London, even before the King had it. Hov^ever, I wrote to my brother, vpith the fame poft, to Ihow my copie to the Mr ■ in cafe he had none. We will, in all appearance, try Payn. The proofs are full and evident that the letter is his. It's plain too that brother and filer are King James and the ^een. The point is if the parliament, upon the conviftion of this, will condemn a man fince the paper is not figned, nor any witneiTes to fwearto the mat- ter of it. We have been interrupted of late with private bufmefs Fifteen of the Angus heritors have taken the oaths this day • bv which you fee the government was not in earneft the laft fummer My Lord Perth afks leave to go out of the kingdom, and fhall have it. My Lord Athol and my Lord Arran will give their word of honour in writing not to ad againft the government. My Lord Murray has only delayed to take the oaths till he got his. father's confent ; which is now done. And Balhouffie, my nephew, the moft confiderable gentleman in that fhyre, is to follow my Lord Murray's AND L E T T ,E R S. 171 Murray's example , and will be chofen for that fhyre. Courtney , Mowet, and Balfour, in Payn's letters, are, the Earls ofSeaforth^ Arran, and Hume. The a£t about the oaths is ready. Befides thofe to whom it was put formerly, it will be now put to all Lords, and their eldeft fons;"(thus the hedging politick will berpoiled) : To all miniftcrs and preachers whatfomever ; and to thofe who call them to churches : To all the electors of magiflrates in burrows : To all fermers or coUedors of cefs or excife, or other mony belong- ing to the King : To all matters of fhips, keepers, of prifons ; and feveral others. It is not put to the heritors ; but the councell has a power to put it to whom they Ihall think fit. And to the former pains are added, fineing, confineing, or banifhment ; the fines not exceeding a year's valued rent. There is a general claufe as to all perfons whatfomever who fhall not take the oaths, whether they be put to them or not, that they may keep no arms but a walking- fword, and no horfes above five pound value. It's declared, that the allegiance and aflurancc are not to, be feparated ; and that who- ever refufes the one is to be held torefufe both. The words, as ivell de jure as de fa^o, and in the exercife of the government, ^2irt made clear 'thus ; as ivell de jure, (that is) of right King and -^een ; as de faHo, (that is) in the poffejfion and exercife of the goi)ernment. It would have argued a levity in the parliament to h9.ve taken out the l.atin ; and, without explaining it, how could illiterate men have ta- ken it ? Befides, the Queen is only in the poffeffion of the govern- ment. 1 know of no prefbyterian minifter who will not take the oaths. Many bi the epifcopal clergy too will do it, now that they fee the government in earneft, unlefs it fhould happen before the 20th of June, which is the laft day that the King of France have fome luckie hitt one where or other. I wrote of Rofs for a regi- ment of dragoons. I wrote fince, that Carmichael is now willing to have the other, if the King thinks fitt ; but defires to have Wi- fhart for his, lieutenant-colonel. In cafe of danger, the Weft will ail join with thefe regiments fo commanded. I wrote of my Lord Lindfay for a regiment of foot. All agree in this. They are Y i not 172 STATE- PAPERS not fo unanimous about my Lord Glencairn ; but thofe that are moft reafonable are for him ; and he is tojd not to expe£t even to recom- mend either his lieutenant-colonel or major. As to the other two regiments; Grant had a regiment, as there are iiooo pound owing him ; and his regiment, for the moft part, payed all to the country : Befides, he is undoubtedly the gentleman in Scotland who has the beft" intereft both in the country and in the parliament. He is, indeed, fud-- dain, and warm in his motions ; but he is honeftand fincere, and al- ways brought right again with a little pains. He is not fond of a regi- ment ; but it's the King's intereft that he have it ; for he can always in the North join as many of his own men to it; and thofe of that country that are affectionate to the government will join and con- cur with him. The commander and others are of this opinion. One other argument too weighs with me, that I can get him to quitt the regiment to a military-man whenever the King pleafes. As to the other regiment ; the Duke is for giving it to my Lord Murray, I think it cannot be better beftowed : My Lord Murray's known cha rafter is, that he may be abfolutely relyed on in any thing in which he engages. This will reconcile his Highlanders to the government, who are the beft men in the, Highlands : And. he and Argyle being right, neither Inverlochy nor Broadalbine will be fo rleceflary as they are ; and that Highland intereft will ceafe to be a bugbear. The other pretenders to regiments are, my Lord, Forfar, my Lord Blantyre, my Lord Morton, my Lord Balhaven, my Lord Eglinton, and feveral others ; of whom fome indeed ftiould be gratifyed : But it's like the King will think it for his fervice to do it fome other way than by giving them the regiments. I have not time to refute ftories ; but I aflure you it was never moved, that the King Ihould not name the officers. I would have had Queenf- berry and fome others upon the comitty for fecuring the nation ; but others faid, that it would be impoffible to prevent heat and reflections :; So I yielded. Icanaffure you, hitherto there has been no reflections in parliament, except that Tarbat hath been taxed, and catched grofsly malverfmg in his office as clerk, both in publick and private bufi- nefs AND LETTERS. 173 nefs in parliament ; and it was only to prevent noife that he was not fufpended from his office. His falfifying the minutes over and over again was made fo plainly appear in parliament, that neither he, nor any man for him, had fo much as one word to fay in his defence. And my Lord Collington, one of the non-jurants, will to-morrow petition the parliament, and decline him as clerk, for e- mitting the other day an order, in the name of the parliament, (which order they never gave), in a private procefs now depending before the parliament, betwixt my Lord Tarbat's mother and my Lord Collington. This is the third tyme my Lord Tarbat has been eatched, and the thing always fo grofs, that he loft countenance, and gave over defending himfelf; yet ftill he relapfes.. The truth is, all-, men were fo afhamed of him, that they fpared him., I have been tryed by one from him, if he might be allowed to fell his place.- He has made try Grant, if he would buy it ; and he offers to fell it : for 50,000 merks. Now, confider that he'll make this money by it in lefs than a year and a half, and imagine what can be his reafon to fell it. For my own part, I am fully fatisfyed, that, whatever ■ my Lord Midleton is a-doing, he is at the bottom of it ; and, if he be in earneft to fell his place, and to fell it fo cheap, it is becaufe he trufts to the fuccefs of the defignes now in my Lord Midleton's hands. I muft add. to this, that feveral intercepted letters from France and London bear, that matters will go as thofe they write to wilh ; and that remedies are at hand.- We find M'Gill's informa- tions true, in fo far as we have enquired into them, by examining fome perfons whom he names ; but there are other things that have not the appearance of truth.- Queenfberry fays, that his pardon was taken in the packet intercepted in the North ; the fame packet, r fuppofei in which Ballantyne's pardon (that was never granted) was taken, as my collegue/ it feems, to pleafe his lady, wrote down. The other remiffions are At, or paft the feals. I hope my Lord Port- land got my long letter of the i ith. Tell him that I wrote to you,, becaufe you'll mind him to get my anfwers ; and I cannot write with my own hand to the King. The Duke is willing that Jervif- wood 174 S T A t E - P A P rE ^l S wood be receiver. It's plain enough that the bufmefs of Edinburgh was calculatfor a defcent in the fpring, which then the difafFeded , party reckoned themfelves fure of. The Duke and I have, been plain with the advocate for taking money in parliament-buli- nefs. Hemakeaajeft of every thing, and flicks at nothing. I told him, that I would not have, for any money, had I been in his place, given my enemies fo juft a handle againft me. Even Sir George M'Kenzie did not this. Sir James Ogllvie was firm for a while ; but the advocate, to cover himfelf, brought him to it at laft. . The advocate could not deny the matter of fad:-; but hehasnowpro- mifed, and has declared publickly enough, that he'll do it no more. This occafioned no heat ; he was indeed afhamed of it. I thought to jet this alone till the parliament had been over, as I am refolved to do many other things, about which I will be plain with him at part- ing:' But I found this abfolutely neceflary, for the King's bufinefs was at a ftand ; he and the follicitor being wholly taken up with con- ;fultations. Befides, how can they judge and confult in the fame caufe ? -Or, how can the Duke and I relye upon their advice, in point of law or policy, as to" the King's interefts, when they are already tyed to the interefts of private parties, having given them their advice, and taken their money ? There are two ads ready ; one for poll- money, and another for hearth-money. I know not which of the two will carry. There is an ad ready for levying fuch men upon the country as the King (hall think fitt to raife. I have wrote, that the King knows the dangers beft ; and, accordingly, will haften or delay the levies ; but that at leaft it's fit to begin to raife fome of the regiments, both to quyet mens minds, and otherwife, they'll fay they have been impofed on, and made grant money for troops which are found not neceflary, fince they are not raifed. It's faid at Lol^don, that great difcoyeries are made, . and yet no body pu- nifhed. . You know my anfwer in part ; then borrowed names, how- ever plain the meaning nvay be, are certainly no proof in courts of juftice ; but you know too, that, by the inftrudions, this parliament is not to be gratifyed in any thing which they reckon a. gratification ; And AND LETTERS. 175, And therefore, the only handle by which to move them was, to con- vince them of their danger; of which the proofs appear fo plain, that, even Fountainhall and Tarbat, and all others, owned that they were full and convincing ; and, indeed you'll find them fo when they are laid together. In a word, affairs will be put in fuch a ftate as, unlefs the French make hafte, will not only deliver this nation from danger during the war, and put ane end to plots and confpiracies here, but which, provided the King puts the adminiftration in the hands of men that are men of fenfe, and are honeft, and reputed to be honeft,- whether they be epifcopal or prefbyterian, or rather, men that have never concerned themfelves much in fuch matters ; a ftate, I fay, which will, in a little time, make the King as- fure. of this na- tion, to all intents and purpofes, as he is of his Dutch- guards. And I am fure the reputation of this will be of more ufe to him in hisEng- - Kfh affairs, than we can be ever in any other way. I fhall particu- larly rnind this point of reputation in all our proceedings, for I have always been of opinion, that reputation and recruits are the only two things vfhich Scotland can give to a King of England. I am going to the comitty. - Communicate to Mr Stevenfon, if I have not time to write to him,, if any have informed, that the gift which Iprocuredto the chancellor is- worth more than L. 450 a year, as I informed the King. I can affure you they are miftaken, and con- found different things : He has indeed claims there worth more; but they are not in-his gift. 1 do not think that what he has got is worth more than L. 300 ; its certainly riot worth four ; but, to make all fure, I called.it to the King worth L. 450. I have as lit- tle reafon, and have ever had, to be fatisfyed as any man; but there was an equity at bottom ; he being at the head of the government, how could it be refufed him ?, Its cenfured, that Annandale fhould have been named one of the fub-committy to hear me upon the proofs of danger ; but it was not my bufinefs to oppofe whom they pleafed to name : Befides, Annandale is as much trufted as any man ; for they of the club-plot, imputing the whole difcovery of that bufmefs to him, he and they are known to be irreconcilable. ': Pray,. 176 STATE-PAPERS Pray, do not miftake in thinking, that any money is hitherto ap- propriated, or that the King is tyed to raife men ; for there is no fuch thing. The poll-money, or hearth-money, will be indeed ap- propriated for paying the arrears, and in a feverer and ftricker man- ner than in the former appropriating adt; fmce that ad was hot obferved. We will be. at church-matters the next week. Mr John Law, .and fome fuch other men, feem to be convinced, and of my mind. I make all parties eat and drink together ; that is, my Lord Stairs and my Lord Privy Seal, Queenfberry and Crawford, Tar- bat and Argyle, &c. My Lord Murray would have his brother Lord James (who has already qualified himfelf) to be a lieutenant- colonel ; he was long a captain in the Dumbarton regiment ; but whether fit to be a lieutenant-colonel or not, I know not. My Lord Rollo too, and the Laird of Dunn would be preferred ; you know they have done fervices. My Lord Argyle would have Jack- fon jnade ?. lieutenant-colonel in the new dragoons, and his own brother put in Jackfon's place; becaufe, though he himfelf will make ■.the campaign this fumm-cr, he feems not to incline to do it any longer. My Lord Forrefter too would be a lieutenant-colonel The Mafter of Forbts too afks a regiment. Pray, let all be .rcpre- fented as I have promifed ; but I advife nothing in fuch cafes t I un- derftand not military matters ; but I have done it upon prudential confiderations, of tying to the eftablifhment, both in church and ilatc, men of quality and intereft, and of fuch known characters as fhall give the body of honeft men in the nation a confidence in them, and confequently in the adminiftration, which, in a word, is the thing that is wanting ; fqr, ever fince the changes made in fpring was a year, all thinking indifferent men here believe it pof- fible for the King to be impofed on, to a degree that may prove fa- tal to the pref^nt fettlement in the three kingdoms. This impref- fion muft be wrought ofFj and, when that is done, the King's bufinefs is done here : The right naming of the officers will no doubt do it to a great degree. The employing of D. Hamilton has done much to it. Whatever people may clamour againft the Duke's AND LETTERS. 177 Duke's way, which indeed muft be born with ; yet ftill it muft be owned, that he yields to reafon, and correds his errors as frankly as any man can do ; and, which is a great advantage, whether he be right or wrong, one knows always what he is ; for he is fquare and plain ; and, even when he is in the wrong, his intentions are good. It has coft me much pains to bring the minifters, and o- thers, not to oppofe the putting of the oaths to them : However, at laft, they underftogd it to be their intereft, and were content. But now I find, at the committy, great endeavours have been ufed to oppofe it, and minifters and others inftigated to hinder it ; even fo far, that the Duke, notwithftanding his pofitive inftru£tIons, has been fliaken in the matter; and fo was the Advocate, though Mr Law, Mr Crichton, and all that I couW fpeak to, are convinced and fatisfied ; and that ^Mr Blair affures m.e, that he knows not one minifter that will refufe them : And accordingly, the thing was voted yefterday unanimoufly in the committy ; at leaft I do not remember that any oppofed it. My Lord Crawford voted pofitively for it, and is ftill of that opinion, I now find the bottom of all. The epifco- pal party, knowing that the aflurances the Mr of Stairs gave in their name, that they would take the oaths, had no other ground, ibut the fuppofition, that the prefbyterians would never confent to fuch an aft ; and now, apprehending the contrary, they had, by ar- tifice, wrought the Duke from it. At the fame time, my Lord Privy Seal, with the little ftrength he hath, has, underhand, been bufy to hinder any fuch a£t ; and has been fo imprudent, as to deal ■with members of the committy to be againft it, who had already voted for it. The truth is, he has neither intereft with the barrens -nor burrows ; but rather than have no intereft, he courts the favour of the miniftry, by joining in every foolifti humour among them. Thus, you muft know, fince I know it, that it was his family that fpoiled the aflembly, by encouraging the minifters in their humours. And thus I fee, he and his fons will fpoil all the bufinefs now, if they have ftrength enough to do it. As for the Duke, he is right again ; and, as to the Privy Seal, I have told him, that it is the Z King's 178 STATE-PAPERS King's exprefs pleafure and order, that the oaths be put to all mi- nifters. He faid, that he muft a£t according to his opinion. His o- pinion may indeed oblige him to vote againft the King's mind; but I am fure it does not oblige him to folicite againft the King's mind. I defire you to communicate this exprefsly to my Lord Portland ; for, if the King's oflBcers of ftate be allowed to make fadions and folicite againft the King, I am fundus, whatever be the event. I hope I have frighted him, and that he'll grow wifer. We'll fee how he votes to-morrow. You may write to him. I know he wilfe deny ail. I afk no better. FarewelL Secretary Jo H n s ro n to Mr Carstares. Of putting the Oaths to Mini/ierst Heritors, i^'C. Of Payne's Trial. Tarbafs Malverfation in his office of Regifter. Edinburgli, X received this day in parliament the King's letter to the Duke, May 19. , ■' ^ . - ° 1693. which was inftantly communicated. I and he have your s. No- thing is done to tye the King j he may raife only horfe, or only foot, or only dragoons, or no troops at all, if he pleafes. I mean, there is no tye upon him to do otherwife by the new adls. His Majefty indeed did allow me to tdl them, that he was refolved to raife more forces, if they gave him money, which I did oecafion- ally to Ibme in private ; and, if the King fhould raife no troops at all, they would think themfelves impofed on, as if there had been no danger : But the number of troops was condefcended on in difcourfe, and in votes, as the only efFedual way to bring them to give fuch confiderable fums. I need add little to my long ktter of the 1 6thr The next day we were upon the oaths, but concluded not. Thurfday was the faft-day. This day we voted the a£t a- bout the oaths, fuch as I told you in my laft ; only I forgot to tell you, that its put to the whole college of juftice, advocates, clerks, writers, agents, nottars, &c. The certification againft minifters is the- ANDt LETTERS 17^ the lofs of their benefices ; and againft preachers, its banilhment, or otherways, as the council fhall think fit. The Privy Seal and his fons went out on Wednefday, when it was like to come to the vote. This day, he was non-liquid to the whole ad. My Lord Craw- ford fpoke well to the point, that it fhould be put to minifters. Only one prefbyterian fpoke againft it, and he did it but faintly. The great debate this day was, If it fhould be put to all heritors, under the penalty of double cefs, as it is in England, or not ? My Lord Linlithgow, &c. were for that. I was for lodging a power in the council, to put it to all heritors whatfomever, or to any par- ticular heritor, not only under the pains of double cefs, but of a fine, even to a year's valued rent, and of imprifonment or banifh- ment. I ufed but one plain reafon, which no man anfwered, and which determined the point ; to wit, That, if the parliament put the oaths to all heritors, and that the heritors fhould refufe them, it would bring a difreputation upon the government ; whereas, this inconvenience might be prevented, if the parliament fhould lodge their power in the council ; for the council could proceed by de- grees ; and, by making examples of the leading men in the feve- ral counties, bring the heritors more effedually to their duty than a pofitive adb, with fo fmall a certification, could do : Befides, in England, its only the bare alledgeance that is put to people, which every man puts his own fenfe upon as he thinks fit ; and the go- vernment knew well that the body of the nation would take it, and fo apprehended not the difreputation of a refufal : But here we have had a rebellion, which made the affurance neceilary ; and fo room is not left for men to put their private fenfes upon the alledgeance : Then we have the experience, that the body of the heritors refufed the oaths laft fummer ; and we have no ground to believe that they'll be more forward to take them this fummer. The truth is, I know that, within thefe two days, there has been meetings among them ; and they have refblved not to take them at prefent. They have got en- couragement from abroad, and will fee the beginning of this campaign before they do any thing. Thus, if by the a6t they were required to Z 2 ' take i8o STATE-PAPERS take them, within a certain time, according to the nature of fucli- a£ts, the government would infallibly receive an affront ; whereas, as it is< the council can proceed or abftain as they fee caufe : And my advice in council will be, to proceed againfl a few men in each county, that are known to be aftive pregmatick men, and the heads of the fac- tion ; and to proceed againft them, not by the penalty of a double cefs, but by fining them in a year's valued rent, or confining or banifhing them. And I wifh the King may fignify his pleafure,, that we put not the oaths to the heritors in general, without ex- pirefs order ;^ otherwife, we fhall be apt enough, by a foolifh zeal, to fpHt the authority and reputation of his government upon a multitude, by making it known to the world, that the body of the heritors of this kingdom will not own him. This is the down- right truth; but I know it will be written, that the prefbyterians were againft putting the oaths to heritors, becaufe they are afraid of a new parliament ; whereas, the queftion was only. Which was the moft prudent way of doing it, by the parliament or the coun- cil ? But, if fuch glofles are to be allowed,'! may obferve, on the o- ther hand, that thefe members of parliament who are known to be difafFe£ted to this government, and who never vote for the King, were this day zealous and violent for putting the oaths to all heritors, though at other times they ufed to be againft all oaths : But you know a£ts of parliament are fpoikd two- ways,, that is, by being two ftrong, as well as by being too weak., Payn has got his indytment ; he denyes not his letter in private, but he'll, deny it in judgement. It will be an eafy matter to prove both that it is his, and that it is treafon : But men are much divided in their opinion, whether the taking his life will be worth the while to ba- lance the confequence of the precedent of condemning a man for a: paper unfigned, and which the matter is not otherwife proved by witneffes : However, they agreed to give him his indictment, to try if that will fright him into a confeffion. Tarbat fent to my Lord Collington word, that he would not be clerk in his concern ; and fo- prevented the cloud ready to break upon him. Now, he fays he'll. com'- AND LETTERS. i8i complain to the King of me ; but, God be thanked, he can accufe me neither of perjury nor murder ; as Shaftbury faid, the Duke would neither call him fool nor papift. The matter is this, we have taken letters of ray Lady Largoe's, fufficient to make torture her, if fhe were a man. We found inclofed the minutes of parlia- ment going to London ; and this, before they were revifed and al- lowed here. I did, at the Duke's defire, produce thefe minutes in parliament, and challenged the clerks. I had at the fame time the parliament's letter to the King, printed at London, before the King got it, though the orders were, that no copy fliould be given but one by me to be fent to the Queen. The truth is, we lofe an hour or two every day by the minutes. The defign is plain, to ridicule the parliament by ridiculous minutes. Minutes were produced in parliament, printed by my Lord Tarbat's order, in which, after it is declared that the chancellor, by the commiffioner's order, had adjourned the parliament, the parliament is made to a£t on as if they were ftill fitting. Pray, communicate with Mr Steven- fon. I have no more time. I fhall write to him fully the next poft. I think that he ftiould counter-fign, and that the thing fliould be re- prefented to the King. Farewell. I had forgot that the point of the countrie's furnifliing the foot,, in cafe the King raife the four regiments, was carried this day. Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstares. LordTarhaf s Negociations ivith the Clergy ^ to prevent their taking the Oaths of Allegiance and AJfurance. I had your's with my Lord Portland's ; and I have written a full May 1693. anfwer to him, which you'll fee. As to the captain he recom- mends, I can do nothing in it at prefent, the captains of my Lord Carmichael's regiment being not only named, but having laid out money in order to the levies. I fend you a copy of my letters to Mr Stevenfon and you of the I ft inftant, apprehending they have jnifcarried,- i82 S T A T E - P A P E R S mifcarried. I fend you alfo, fince it is chu,rch-bufmefs, a memorial, fent to me by the Laird of Nynwalls, who lives in the Mearns ; you would communicate it to my Lord Portland, for I refer to it in my letter to him. Nynwalls has the original letter from Simpfon to him, which I faw. Simpfon is one of the epifcopal clergy. The dialogue was between him and Mr Bernard M'Kenzie. The Mar- quis of Athol has told me the fame thing in general. My Lord Murray told me the bufmefs of Cravie, before ever I knew it from Nynwalls ; he told the fame to the Duke, from whom Tarbat and others have known it. Remember that I was advertifed of this before ever we entered upon the bufinefs of the comprehenfion-a£t, and that thofe men were fent, and the refolution taken, berofe we knew ourfelves what the comprehenfion-a£t would be ; and therefore their obflinacy in refuling the oaths cannot be imputed to the comprehenfion-aft, as they now foolilhly pretend. I, to try Tarbat's modefty, afkt him, before the chancellor and others, what his friend Mr Bernard M'Kenzie had been doing in the north ? He, like himfelf, anfwered, That he believed he had been perfuading the epifcopal clergy to take the oaths. I faid. No doubt he knew what he had been doing ; he faid, Mr Ber- nard had always been himfelf for taking the oaths, and would take them ; and that thofe of Rofs would do it. The truth is, their refo- lution to keep the clergy from taking the oaths was the efFe£t of an advice from London. They were in doubt themfelves what ad- vice to give. Now they apprehend they are difcovered, and I believe would gladly have them to take the oaths, that they them- felves might deny all. This I know, that they are mightily per- plexed what to do. Tarbat fays, he'll meddle no more with churchmen, hoping thus to cover himfelf. This he faid to fome of the epifcopal clergy too ; and this is the meaning of what Cra- vie fays ; for Tarbat trufts Mr Bernard ; but Cravie went too with his concurrence, though Tarbat after would have difengaged him- felf. I fancy they have, one of thefe laft two pofts, got fome ad- vertifement from London that is difcouraging. Pray remember, that Mr Bridgman, who at LondoB is Tarbat's correfpondent, told pu- AND LETTERS. 183 publickly, that Payn would not be tried, and that the parliament would rife in confufion. His friends indeed fucceeded in the one ; and, if they fucceeded not in the other, it was- not their fault. They hoped reprefentations would make all end in heat, and were fur- prifed with the letter to the King that prevented them. I only add, that the impreffions which the recalling the orders a- bout the new levies give, grow deeper and wdrfe : It were enough at prefent only to fignify, that the King is refolved to raife them. Pray, tell my Lord P. which I forgot in his letter, that my Lord Argyle behaved himfelf very well in parliament, and did good fer- vice, and that I feeing that, keeped him till the end, againft his in- clinations, which were for Flanders. Farewell. If you think there will be room for my doing any good in Flanders, I am willing to come ; if not, let me alone in England. Secretary Johnston to Mr Carstares. Of the Duke of HamiltorC s ConduH ijoith refpeSi to the EarlJmm^ SIR, My letter to Mr Stevenfon is full. The inclofed papers are May 24* copies of what I have fent to the Queen. Show them to my Lord ^ ^'* Portland. I had not hitherto wrote to her, which was complained of. I am told the Advocate hindred the Duke from fiezing on Arran. Both he and the Dutchefs affured the Duke that Arran would not withdraw. The Advocate will, loofe himfelf with all honefl; men. I took Arran to the fands, in my coach, 10 days agoe, and challenged him of every thing. I told him pofitively, that hereafter no man would truft him. He feemed then refolved to aik his pardon for by-gones, and to offer his fervice to the King : But now faith and honour will hardly ever be recovered.. I can afTure you, there is no jugle betwixt him and the Duke : Its rather the difference betwixt them that hindred the Duke from committing; leaft others fhould have faid it had been pique. Farewell. Arran rails at me and the Juflice-clerk; the truth is, the whole rails at us both; and they have reafon. Secretary i84 T A T E ' P A ,P E R S Secretary Johnston toMrCARSTAREs, Of Lord John Hamilton.' Lord Murray. The Perverjlon of Jujiice in the Court ofSeJion, -5ir William Lockhart taken from hothfides. Edmburgh, I thank you for your*s of the i8th. Mr Stevenfon will tell you May 27. • . / , ' what IS dpne. There is no getting the Duke to try thele Lords, My Lord John Hamiltone defires Cardnefs's place; but all honefl; men that I know are for the prefent Lord, Its fit to delay the matter. Forfar too would have it, I have written fully to my Lord Portland about Linlithgow and his ad, I wiih you may fee that letter; I cannot repeat. In a word, I never faw any thing fo grofs; bis own party difowns him. The Chancell ir, who hath hitherto fupported him, has honeftly declared, that he'll own him no more ; and fays pofitively, that, to grant a cefs during life, now that fuch other extraordinary burdens are granted, were to alienate the nation irrecoverably from the government. Pray, fpeak to my Lord Portland for a letter to put my Lord Murray on the council. He is a man who may be trufted, which is a rare thing here. Mr Stevenfon will tell you the inftance of the nation's avcrfion to the feflion. That all parties agree in that ; fome faid openly, that November was too foon for them to meet. Pray, tell my Lord Portland, that aa honeft man knows not what colours to give to the concerne that appears for fuppqrting an eftabUftied pcrvcrfion of jufticc. Tell him, that I ihall .fleep found, were I affured that the King would defeate the French j as its evident that, whoever payes well, fame lawyers do infallibly carry their caufe. Some bafe men will be examples, I have firfl. a letter from ray Lord Frafer, in which he tells how Sir William Lock- hart took 17 guineas from him, He has fince been with me, and told me, that iSir William, for thefe guineas, was ingaged to him to purfue, inRead of him, one of the witneifes againft him ; but that he took I o guineas from that witnefs too ,and fo cheated him. He I'fb told me, that he took money from my Lord Boyn to be- friend his fon. Farewell, Alex. AND LETTERS. 185 Alexander Johnston, the Secretary's Brother, to Mr Car- stares. Invidious Interpretations put upon the Church-aEipaJfed in the Scotti/h Parliament l6g^, Of Sir John McLean's Negociations at St Germains, SIR, Your's of the 3d inftant was the more welcome, that we had loft July ?• the former packet-boat by the French privateers; though, in truth, ' ^^' the contents of your's hath a ftrange relifh at firft tafte, I wifli they prove wholefome. In truth, I have nothing to write to you, only fubmiffion, &c. till God affords better faire. I am juft now fending off a flying packet to my friend, to haften hither with all expedition. I hope he will allay the humours and noife of fome here ;for I parti- cularly know fome are impofed upon by the artifice of others. I will give you one inftance : When the church-a<3: paft the committee of parliament, my neighbour fhowed a copy of it (as he pretended) to a very eminent peer (in every refpe<9:) thus, ' The only church-govern- ment WiXhowt the limitation of this nation, or of this church."* Where- upon that perfon of quality faid to my neighbour. That a£t would not pafs here, but the commiflioner or fecretary would ftop the royal fan£tion. To which it was anfwered, That it had paft the commit- tee already, and would pafs the other houfe, and be touched by the fcepter. The perfon of quality replied. That could not be fo, for it would be rather an a£t of exclufion than of comprehenfion. How- ever, this about exclufion and comprehenfion was writ down to 39 and 6g, as the cenfure of that perfon of quality on the church-a£t. I being advertifed of this, I brought the printed a£t to that perfon of quality. So foon as he read it, he told me all the above paffage; and obferved, of this church., is in the a£t, and that it refers to a former a£t of parliament too. Its obvious -to obferve the vaft dif- ference 'twixt, the only church-government, and the only government vfthis church, as its in the afl:. Its your province to argue upon A a tliis 1 86 STATE-PAPERS this head at prefent. I only inftauce this a£t of difingenuity and artifices of f ome men to impofe on others, if they can. That defe- rence I owe that perfon of quaUty, with the plainnefs and ingenuity he freely told me the ftory, oblige me not to name him, Befides, this perfon, and this paflage, may be of ufe when things are truely looked unto ; fo be pleafed to flop your very conje£tures to any other per- fon. I have no news here. They are juft examining the fecretary of the admiralty. Its thought he will be committed to prifon. I eagerly defire that my friend may be fent to Flanders. On Wed- nefday morning laft, one of my tools aflured me, that Sir John M'Lean by this time is at St Germains with the late King; and that he had bills of exchange for L. looo fterling along with him ; and that he was fent hither by others j fome of whofe names he hath promifed to difcover to me this week or the next. He fays alfo, that two perfons are lately gone from the late King to Scot- land. Mind Glafgow bufmefs ; Jervifwood and Hume ; though I know you need not this item. You fhall always find (by God's ftrength) that I fhall acquiefce in doing my duty ; and, leaving the event to God, from whom we have all our being, moveing, and ►breathing, &c. my care is, the publick, and my brother, whofe un- certain health frightens me, on fuch fuddain concuffions and tutches. My reprinting this, hath convinced the city of N. Payn's guilt, and the plot at home. Both Arran and Captain Mair are here. I anx forry Abercrombie's ofi^er was not embraced: He is the life of all ; I mean the Jefuite. Adieu. Excufe me to Mr Stevenfon j for I have nothing to write; and I am fending off a flying packett. Alex- .♦ AND LETTERS. 187 Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. Of Complaints againjl his Brother's TranfaBions in Scotland. — Of the Epifcopal clergy nvho will not take the Oaths. [In this and the folloiving Letters^ friend is ufedfor his brother the fecretary, and neighbour,^r the Matter of Stairs.] SIR, I am fo ftunned with the unfortunate account of the Turkey fleet that J^'y =f 4. is come to this city this morning, that I can mind no other bufinefs. I ^ ^^" pray God it prove falfe. The particulars I refer to others, for I know them not exactly. Be affured, a great many of our countrymen de- fign hither fpeedily, to prevent fuch a flop was |aft year. There is a talk here, as if the King would, by his prerogative, difcharge the prifoners and oaths. In the beginning of this week, the Matter of Stairs had an audience of the Queen. It is told to me, that it was about the explanation which (as reported) the fynod of Glafgow made when they took the oaths. Thefe laft three potts, fince this report began, I have had many letters,' but not one word of that ex- planation. I have enquired at all my acquaintances, but find no mention of fuch a thing in their letters. Monday's letters brought it hither, and a hideous noife about it here; but it's funk very much; -which makes me believe the audience mutt be on other things ; the grounds of the intended accufation in the inclofed. I wifh for an ac- count what is becdme of Sir John M'Lean and Sir William Lock- hart. I am told Sir David How is printing the indidtment againtt N. Payne, and his defences, &c. Daniel Munroe is faid to be buflie "writing againtt the a£l fop the; oaths,, and the church^aft. Its alfo true, that my Lord Elphifton hath been with the Q^een, com plaining of his not being provided for, fmce he demitted his troop on affurance of another. The thing, in this, is a defign to lay the blame at my friend's door, which he can. eafily anfwer, but cannot prevent clamour without ground in abfenfe. I do hear- tily thank you fortheapprobationof my delivering that long paper, A a 2 . and i88 STATE-PAPERS and afking leave. I am fenfible thefe fteps were made opportuneljr and fuccefsfully. My friend being in the country hinders his wri- ting to you and your partner. He came to Edinburgh on Saturdaj^. night. On Monday he would write by the flying packett, defiring him to haften hither. Be fure to humour and oblige Selkirk as much as you can, and caufe Mr Stevenfon flioulddo the like. Its ab- folutely neceflary for my friend and you to live well with his father. Keep clofs that long paper; a copy whereof I delivered here. Pray, prevail with P. to conceall it too; and Mr Stevenfon too. You'll fee by the inclofed what rods are layed in pifli againft my friend : Pray, be diligent and effe£tuall to pr£vent ill irapreffions, that, at leaft, a,- fair hearing may end things fairly, according to the merit and truth .- of things. Pray, advertife us of all the bad, as well as the good, , you perceive in our affairs. The three batteries mentioned in the. inclofed are a trible greatefuU return for my friend's preferving that family in our parliament ; but 1 never expe£ted other dealling from them. I have fent four large packetts, intercepted from Paris here- to my friend, which I hope will be very ufefuU for their Majefties- fervice. The epifcopal clergy in Scotland will not take the oaths ;, fo confider what is next to be done. I fent your's and Mr Steven- fon's to myfelf forward to my friend yefterday, thea they arrived, here. Excufe my not writing to Mr Stevenlbn this night, for my heart: is oppreffed with the ill news aforefaid. Adieu. Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares.. Bitter againft theMafter of Stairs for granting Pajfes to Papifl's. Has certain Tools employed in his Service for the Difcovery ofDe^ figns againft the Government. SIR, Aug, 4. 1693. By my laft I gave you an account of the blow that was given on^ the church-a<3:j &c. and I am fure the archbilhop confirmed it all to* my AND LETTERS. 189 my Lord P. by the laft poft. Now, I fliall give you a tuch of a deep- er dye, ingrained indeed a pafs or two under my neighbour's hand- feal, are produced this morning to Secretary Trenchard ; whereby ten or twelve men and women, young folks of quality and eftates in Northlimberland, had liberty to go beyond fea ; and the proof is plain and full : The young women to be put into nunneries, and the young gentlemen to be put in the Jefuite colledges, and o- ther popifh fchooUs, to be educated in that fuperftition. By vir- tue of thefe paffes, they are a£tually gone beyond fea, and are placed in thofe very nunneries and colledges they defigned. Its certain thefe paffes, and appears fully to be the only caufe of their getting beyond fea, the law forbidding it ; and that, which is worfe, the a£t of parliament here that prohibits the carrying over any perfons tO' be educate in the popifh religion, or that gives or procures any pafs for fuch to go beyond fea, makes it treafon ; but that which affliCts fome moft is, that the paffes and plain full proof are produced o- penly this morning, not only to the fecretary aforefaid, but alfo to many worthy and honourable members of the two houfes of par- liament ; fo the thing cannot be fmuthered and concealed. The on- ly remedy is a pardon under the great feal, like Broughton and Sir William Purves, which made them both very honeft men again. Be- fides, the old gentleman that went over with thefe young folks,, and, by virtue of thefe paffes, as their governor, proves a great traf- ficker with France againft- this government. What will be the re- fult I know not ; but Secretary Trenchard dealt fairly, and fent the Harwich waiter or furveyor (Mr Mackye) to my neighbour imme- diately, to inform him of the whole affair, and his hazard. This ftruck him almoft dead ; and,, in his eonfternation, fuddainly he fald, " Every thing, I fee, contributes to deftroy me." He preffed to have or fee the paffes ; but was denied this, being his warrant for what he did. My friend medled not with it, he not knowing of it till the mine was fprung ; and now the city and court talk of it. You cannot imagine how deep thefe two wounds ftrick ; I mean the for this in the church-a<3:, and thefe paffes. j they have not only intirely 190 STATE-PAPERS intirely funk all the noife that was raifed againft our parliament's pro- ceedings, but alfo have raifed a full and Ihamefull hew and cry after, and againft them ; which is a clear demonftration, that he who walks uprightly walks furely. While I am writing, I am told that all the blame is laid on Halfyde, with a great deal of bitternefs and refledion. If fo, he will not be the firft fervant that hath fathered his matter's bratt ; but they will not fall out ; or, if they do, indeed the reckon- ing betwixt them would turn to a better account than all the paf- fes aforefaid. I wifh I had the ftating them. I am confirmed that Sir John M'Lean is witlithe late King; where he got a pafs, I am not fure as yet. My woman-traveller is gone thither too ; if fhe proves honeft, it will do good fervice to the governmept; but, if fhe fails, and proves falfe, et operam et olium perdidi. There is an abfolute neceffity of trying and trufting fuch tools. I blefs God I have peace in the integrity of my intention in that affair ; and I have carried it fo clofely, that no living knows their names, nor fhall, till I fee the refult ; for, as fhe confirmed to me by oath her faithfulnefs in this affair, fb I faithfully promifed to conceal her name, and the road fhe intended to take thither and back again to me. I perceive we will have a fleece of our difcontented folks here to make a noife all this winter. My Lord Breadalbine is at the Bath already. My Lord Lowthan came to this town laft night. Some fay Tarbett and Breadalbine will be here fpeedily, and Lith- gow too, and the whole crew. Several letters from feveral places bear, that Admiral Rooke is come fafe to Kingfail. I am waiting for my neighbour's explanations of Glafgow: It's certainly falfe; but I doubt if I'll get a copy of it this night, though it hath been pro- mifed to have it this night ; they are afhamed of it already. I am confident you'll have it next poft ; and I am confident an audience was had here on this fham explanation, as I wrote before. The aforefaid bufinefs of the palTes vexes theni : My neighbour hath been with N, about it. It's faid Halfyde denies it to be done by him ; it is alfo faid, that Halfyde is turned ofi^ upon this account ; and that N. would not fpeak in my neighbour's behalf till this was done; AND LETTERS. 191 done ; and, if my tool tells truth, ihe douks if N. will meddle in it, looking it^fo dirtjr, and that, for this, equally fflaameful. My brother hath wrote fully to you and-MrStevenfon ; — and now I aan fare the affair of the giving paifles is at leaft mi^rlfion of treafon. I find the other fide of this haufe is very confident, that the general af- fembly will meet at the -day and place they affixed, which they hope will ruin them Utterly : fGod prevent it. Excufe this confii- fed long letter ; for I am not able to read it over for aM the world ; but my mite fta'll not be wanting, dioug'h its of Httle value. Cef- nock i« growing mad by the preffure of his creditors ; he abufes you and my brother about lofing his place ; he calls it cheating him out of it : At the reflecting word I grew warm, and tuched him ; he calmed : The truth is, he kept all this while very ill company, of ill principles. Keep this intirely'to yourfelf. He denys pofitively that he confented to Ormifton's fucceeding him. I, am weary. Adieu. My fervice to Mr Stevenfon. My weaknefs, and the length of this letter, will plead my excufe for not writing any more. Twelve at night. John MACKY.to Lord Melvill. Of Pajfes granted by the Mqfter of Stairs. My Lord, Upon perufal of what paiTes have come to this place fince the Auguft 24* war, I have found feverals granted by the Mr of Stairs, that do '^^^ really aftonifh me, particularly, one dated December 15. 1692,10 Captain James Dalyell and Captain William M'Gill, at the time there were warrants out for fecuring of both. Be pleafed to look into fome of the informations I have given your Lordlhip, and you will find the chara All the fix, except Bruce, are in cuftody- Captain Bruce -^ Captain Welfh -) The laft three were officers in the Colonel's - . c. Ml C regiment in Ireland, and were with him in Lieut. Somervaill S ^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^^^ Coronet Chalmers. J ^nd at Lyle, Paris, &c, Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. ProheB of further Difcoveries concerning the AJfqffination Plot.- Accounts of himfelf and his prefent Employment as a Spy in the Service of Government, SIR, Tune 29. This IS only to tell you, that the fix names of men I fent you 1694- before is probably encreafing to twelve j atleaft, this night, or to- morrow, AND LETTERS. '199 morrow, will bring neark, tho' they are grown very cautious; I fay twelve, becaule I have four perfons, that now do fervice, (in cafe of neceffity), will pofitively prove the points of Ireland. Sub!lftance and in arms in Flanders at the feige of Mons, &c. with his being- fent before the invafion, intended to raife the people to meet King James in arms. I judge all thefe points are fafe beyond exception, both as to the number of the witnefles and their quality, being all gentlemen, who can produce in writing their commifions, or other credentials on their fide. The thing now I am endeavouring chiefly is, this laft and moft tender point, the aflaffination-plot. How far I fhall be able to carrie it, I do not know. If once I catch Sharnock andM'Adam, and Major Fountaine, its certain they can clear the point, by proving his appro- bation and curfing the mifs of the blow pt. Coronett Cham- bers (in cuftody) being his valet de chamber, and afterwards his coronet at the Boyn, and thereafter returning to be his fervant in France and Flanders, having dealt very ingenoufly with the grand jury, I have foe ordered things, in an obliging way, that I hope he will be prevailed on to tell the whole truth, by an intire difcovery of men and things; thereafter, Sir George Maxwell and the others fhall be dealt with in the fame manner, each of them feverally ha- ving notice this night, that ingenuity will come too late after others have prevented them by their difcoverys &c. Befides, they were loft to their party, by what they have done already to the grand jury, &c. fuch as infinuations of fettelment and fafety, &c. if they deall plainly. This is the ftate of this affair, concerning which I fhall only add, _ that no other perfon could produce one witnefs in this bufmefs, except what I did;- and two of thefe witnefles were in Scotland, Bruce and Seaton; each of them got twenty guineas, which my Lord Juftice Clerk paid by my orders, fmce repaid by me ; befides the expence here in difcovering and feizing the perfons that could prove the points. The whole expence, fince I followed this way, you know is conflderable, which freed me to make ap- plication here for my repaiment, both before and fince the King lefi 20O S T A T E - P A P E R S left this, tho' without any efFea:. I have never received one fix- pence from the government ; and I believe it will be acknowledged that I have done fome fervices, that at leaft I fhould be repayed what I have laid out in that way, fince I do not fo much as pretend to any reward, nor charge one fixpence for my perfonal expence about thofe fort of buffinefles, &c. Since I gave you an account of fome things I had done after the King's going till you left this^ and, ever fince your arrivall there, have fent you what occurred to be communicated to P. I hope you. will prevent any miftake on that head. You know my circumftances ; my approaching difEcultys make me tremble when I think on them. You know 1 have no eftate to fupport fuch expence I have been at ; befides, by following this way, I have loft and deflroyed the way I could com- fortably lived on by my profeffion and practice of the law and the tallys affairs : But I hope God will find out an expedient, or teach me patience to bear it, without repining, the hurry of public affairs forcing the beft and greateft of men to delay the confidering of pri- vate affairs. I wifh you all hapinefs, and a happy campaigne. We have noe news, only a fleet is returning to the coaft of France, on fome attempt here, which I pray God good fuccefs. We want feveral Dutch packetts. Adieu. My refpeds to Mr Stevenfon. Sir James Stuart, Lord Advocate for Scotland, to Mr Car- stares. Advifes nvith him about calling a General AJfembly. About taking in and turning out the Epifcopal Clergy. The fynod of Lothian is adjourned to February next, as I hinted to you formerly. I defire to know your thoughts, if it be advifeable that they addrefs the King for a new affembly to fit fome time be- fore ^uguft next, and the fooner the better, if it can ftand with the cou- ^AND LETTERS aoi leniency of his Majefty's affairs, it may be it will not be unaccept- able to the King. You can judge of the obvious confequence of it. I know fome who would be glad of it, although it fhould be but a very fhort feflion, if it were no more but to appoint a commiffion for the North, for taking in fome of the beft of the incumbents, in ibme places almoft a whole prefbytery : As, for c::ample, that of Stra- bogie in Morray ; in other places but three or four in a prefbytery, as they can be had; that fo there may be a more full reprefentation of the national church in the next enfuing general affembly. I would fain quote a faying out of St Auguftine, in his book of but it has efcaped my memory ; however, fome who were not very forward for taking in on this fide of Tay, feem to be very willing for taking in on the other fide. If that motion take effeil, one thing has need to be well thought on. What to do with thofe who have been found all along, and flill refractory to the civil govern- ment ? You mufthelp out with an expedient here ; and then, if there be a taking in, there would feem to be fome equity for purging out, efpecially of the But there mufl be time for that, and a thing they call Caufa remo'uens, prohibens., <^'c. And yet fome, of whom you would not exped it, fpeak never a word of purging out. You may, if you think fit, give your thoughts of thefe things. A- dieu. Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. Some farther Particulars concerning the AJJaJft7iation.~ ■ Names cfWitneJfes. SIR, I long to have an account of all affairs with you, which we can- not exped till the wind change. The bringing in 70 Swedifh and •^'''^^■"^^''•• Danifh Ihips, loaden with corn and naval ftores for France, is all I can fend you. You will underftand the names on the other fide of this paper, but fhow it to none but to P. only ; and do not fo much C c as 202 STATE-PAPERS as mention the thing to any other perfon wiiatfoever;. The three: points, viz. Ireland, and in arms in the French army at the fiege of Mons, and other places in Flanders, and having fubfiftence there,, and his being fent a little before the laft invafion to raife the people,. and to join K. J. and commiflions diftributed, &c. will be fully and fatisfyingly proved, beyond all exception. The laft point of the de- ligned aflaffination in Flanders, is the difhculty which I hope too will, in fome meafure, be performed, to the conviction of all honeft loyal people, and to the fhame of their Majefties enemies. There were three perfons in cuftody, Coronet Chambers, Lieutenant-colo- nel Fountaine, and Lieutenant-colonel MacDonald, are believed to he privy to that wicked defigne ; but M'Adam nor Sharnock are not taken. However, all poffible care is taken to feize them ; and there is hopes Chambers will deall ingenioufly, by telling the whole truth ; and both Fountaine and MacDonald are dead men in law ; fo its probable they'll do the like to fave themfelves. God willing, there fhall be nothing omitted that I can doe to clear this laft point, which would be an incurable ftab to the Jacobites, if once it were proved, fully. After perufal, burn this. Do the like to the laft, after P. hath feen it. I took them all myfelf. Keep aU clofs, for I am not fuf- pedted by them. Adieu. Byeres of Coats, Captain Murray, Lieutenant-colonel Murray's . fon, that was in the caftle of Edinburgh, are come now hither from. France. The laird of Meldrum is in Holland, and coming hither.. Have patience till you hear further. Names of the Witnefles^ 1 . Sir George Maxwell 2. Lieutenant-colonel Fountaine 3. Lieutenant-colonel M'Donald 4. Captain Bruce 5. Captain Welfli 6. Captain Innes of Towey 7. Captain Alexander Seaton 8. Cap- AND LETTERS. 203 '18. Captain Riven 9. Captain Hamilton of Raplogh. I o. Captain Peter Hay 1 1. Coronett Chambers, Parker's fecretary in Ireland and Flanders, and France, and here too 12. Cornet Somervill I 3. Enfigne Seaton. Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. Account of the Fleets under Lord Berkley and Admiral Rujfel. Dark Hints of further Difcoveries. SIR, I pray God to fend us good news from you, it being generally Jul^y 20. believed that our King hath fought the Dauphine. God preferve our King, and give him fuccefs. The laft poll brought you the i)urning and entire deftrudion of Diep, which is now confirmed by Colonel Wharton. The exprefs juft now came from my Lord Berk- ley, before Haver de Grace, three parts whereof was burning and deftroyed when the exprefs left this fleet, Wednefday (the i8th in- ftant) at night, before that town. He fays, the next night, and part of Thurfday thereafter, would wholly deflroy it, and then the fleet would return to Spithead for a recruit of all things, efpecially of bombs, their ftock being fpent on Diep, and this town Haver de Grace ; and fo return to the French maritime towns, to do the like on fome more of them. I have no account of Admiral Ruflel, other- wife than that he had joined the fquadron in the Mediterranean fea, and had been before Barcelona three days after the French had left it, and returned to Toulon. Admiral Ruflel, with the fleet in thofe feas, with the flight of the French fleet there, and returning to Tou- lon, and fortifying themfelves there, and the relief of Barcelona, will probably further the war with the Turks, efpecially this burn- C c 2 ing 204 STATE-PAPERS ing the French maritime towns accompanying it. God grant that I may add a victory in Flanders ; which would turn the halance. But we fhall have no joy till we hear of the King's fafety, he fo ex- tremely expofes himfelf in the time of adion. God preferve him.. As to my own particular, its in the way to be done ; and am hearti- ly thankful for your kind and effectual part in it, and P.'s too. But I- ^ am about fomething ; if it hit right, it will give an edge to my^ thanks to P. I hope by the next poll. In the mean time. If you have opportunity, reprefent my mod humble and grateful acknow-: ledgements to P. with that fenfe I ttuely have of them ; the man- ner being fo extraordinary obliging, that I fhall ftill retayne it in my memory, that I may on all occafions exprefs it, that is, in my fin— cerity and diligence, in endeavouring to ferve the King and his Lordfhip. We have nothing from Scotland worth writing. Have patience, take courage, and purfue the altercations of men in our country. Do it vigoroufly ; Providence leads the way. I fee men like trees already ; but both, you and I will fee them like men- without difguife, in their true colours, be they black or white, fhort— ly, here and there too. Depend on this, and fteer your courfe ac- cordingly. Few days or weeks will give you a dawning light, which I hope will fpeedily turn to fair day-light. I dread nothing but the King's hazard in the battle. Good God preferve him ! Seal up yoiir lipps ; but do as I advife. I have ground for what I advife and write. Adieu. Your brother, Keckarich, and the mafter dined with me yef- terday here. Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. A neiv Plot difcovered. Wahnjly apprehended^ &c, SIR, July 31. Your's of the 23d and 26th are before me, and fhall wait for the 1694- event, either in fighting, or not, as the King fees caufe j whom God preferve. AND LETTERS. ^^05 preferve. I doubt not you have a nolfe of feizing feveral perfons of quality on a new difcovery of a plot. I Chall only fay, (at this time), that it's true, and will appear legally to the convi£tion and punifhment of fome of the guilty. I believe one of the chief of them will lodge this night in the Tower ; the reft are coming under guards to this place from the country. Have patience; you will find firmnefs and vigour in the profecuting them. I fee already all application made in their be- half is rejected, which is the only way to go effectually to work to fave the government and difable their enemies. Having this op- portunity, I have not forgot our prefent difadvantageous circum- ftances at home ; and I believe fuch an impreffion is taken that will tend to good efFe£ts, at leaft, it will facilitate your prefent tafk ; and, though things are kept very clofs in this difcovery, yet I have reafon to believe the poyfon hath infeded beyond Tweed, and that the remedies muft be applied there too, if the cure be general, which it muft be, if any at all. It's true, the edge of this difcovery im- mediatly ftrikes againft the proteftant and popifli Jacobites ; but I hope the pretended falfe Williamites will have a fhare of it too in all the three kingdoms, (Ireland being worfe than the other two)'; and, if it were in my power, I would fhow more favour to the pro- fefled Jacobite than to the treacherous Williamite, who lurks in difr- guife to deftroy us.. I write thus plainly to quicken your endea- vours, and that you may lay hold on this opportunity to improve it to the beft advantage of their Majefties fervice. I forbear to tell you names or particulars, for the fame reafons that hindered me from writing laft two pofts to you or any other perfon^ We have no news here. We believe our fleet is haftening out immediately to continue the bombarding the French maritime towns. We be- gin to believe that Admiral Ruffel and the fleet will winter in the Mediterranean, to curb the French fleet, if not attack it, atThowloun, before this feafon is over. The profpe£t of things is very fair and and promifing ; and the indefatigable application the Queen and the minift'ers under her here follow their bufinefs with, wonder- fully 2o6 STATE -PAPERS fuHy raifes the fpirits of honeft people, &c. My nephew James Colhouii, as I believe, is with you ; pray afliil him in his prefer- ment. I fhall write to him next poft. My own bufmefs is ftill doing ; you fhall know when it is done j and I hope you have pre- fented my humble acknowledgements to P. for his favour in it. Since I wrote the above, I was called out, and I find Walmfley is lodged in the Tower ; he is a gentleman of L. 6000 Sterling of an eftate ; he hath been an indefatigable and an irrecconcilable enemy to this government: He hath great relations, who endeavour to bail him out ; but all their application was refufed. Two Colonels, Fountayne and McDonald, are juft now fent to Newgate ; and per- haps the late K. hath not two better officers than they two, accor- ding to the general charafter the town and their own party give them. I hope they'll be taught their duty ; there is enough againfl; thein. Burn this ; for you know I do not write fo fully to any o- thers. My humble fervice to Monf. Vandlow, Herming, aiid Mr Vanderdort. Adieu. My Lord Sidney hath promifed to write to my Lord Portland this night for a Captain's commiffion for my nephew, fo mind it,; "" and give my refpeds to Captain William Baillie and to Mr Steven- fon, to whom I'll write fo foon I have news. Alexander Johnston to Mr CarstaRes. Hyars of Coats apprehended, — -r-^Some particulars of kis Correfpond- ence ivith France.. Holmes^ Club. Colonel. Fountain. SIR, Augnft 7. I fend you inclofed Byars of Coats's packet of letters correfpond- 3 694, "• -^ ing with France, and his defiring to continue it. Its fo plain, there is no fort of colour . of an excufe. I wifti the whole party follow- ed the example, thus to hang themfelves with their own hands. Upon my intercepting this packet, I caufed feize him in my Lord Majrihall's lodgings, in the Pallmall, at dinner ; but the foolifh mef- fengers AND LETTERS. 207 fengers fufFered James Morray (the Prince) and Captain Patrick Murray to efcape by the back-door, and abfcond ever fince ; yet I think I fhall catch them fpeedily. When Byars was examined, he denyed that ever he was in France, or that ever he had any correfpondence with any perfons there ; (thefe are his words): Butj upon producing the inclofed letters, he funk, and confeffed the inclofed packet, particularly the three letters marked A. B. C. to be his hand-writing, and that he had received the letter D. wrote by his friend at Edinburgh : He alfo confeffed, that {Mar/hall) is my Lord Marfliall, and that [the Prince) is James Murray, fon to the late depute governor of the caftle of Edinburgh ; and, that [his friend at Paris) is Captain James Murray of Stanhope, who was concern- ed in Kilfyth's treachery m the Highlands to betray the army.. When he was further interrogated about Holms's club, and the o- ther names fxpreft in the letters, he ftopt, and would fay no more.. I have wrotd to my Lord Juftice-clerk to take care of Finlay, and to explain the names and terms in thefe letters, which lie yet in the dark, viz. Floyd, John Me^eche, Malcolme, and the Dodtor, and the Sprents, &c. I know Holms's club, and h?ive obferved it tliefe three years, and offered P. to have taken them altogether ; but it could not be done to any good purpofe, for want of evidence ; that club being the moft cuaning, induffrious, and malicious fort of bigot papifts in this town. It's out of this club I got Sir iEneas, and the inclofed packet of Byars, and three other things. They are of Mel- fort's faction, called in the letters Earl John. It's evident Meldrum left France with Byers, and that he is gone to his mother, the Coun- tefs of Perth. It feeras alfo that Byers got paffage hither by the packet-boats from Haverfluce. He fays, I made the journey nvtth more eafe than I expe^ed. The truth is, the paffage to and from France is too frequent, and too eafy to thefe fort of folks. I have Been informed from feveral hands, that fome people have power on the Dutch fide to give paffes, which is very much abufed ; they call the man M'Kerk, as they tell me. It is not now Halfyde's paffes liiat prejudifes the government ; but I can prove M'Karchurk (he^ fucceeds. 2o8 STATE-PAPERS fucceeds Halfyde) fent letters from Sir jEneas M'Farfon, (while In prifon here), to M'Lean the writer, and Sir David How in Edin- burgh, the old way my neighbour's packet. Your perufal of this and the other inclofed will make you of "Byers's opinion, that all the Jacobite fools are not at St Germames, fince he wrote, figned, and confeffed the inclofed letters here, at the peril of his life. If it can be fo, after fuch a mad attempt, I wifh it were refolved what way to difpofe of him. It cofts the King ten fhillings every day to the meflenger ; befides, he was adually in arms in the French armies ; and I think he can tell tales, if pinched into an ingenous humour. He is a gentleman, and hath great relations, the Duke of Gordon^ Earl of Perth, Earl of Linlithgow, &c. My Lord Aboyne, his governor, Forbes the prieft and 4ieutenant, have given bail of L. 5000, to appear before the council in Edinburgh within fix weeks. This prieft, Forbes, is alfo called Father Marr ; he is an ingenious man, and of great efteem abroad, and had great poWer with the late King and my Lord Melfort in the late reign. I fufpe£t there is more at the bottom of his going to Scotland at this time than his being governor to my Lord Aboyne. I think you fliould propofe this affair, and get directions how they fhould be difpofed of when they appear before the privy council, otherwife you know what will become of it. Lately, at Secretary Trehchard's defire, I wrote to Scotland, and feized Mrs Simfon,(the notorious Simpfon's fifter); The Lord Juftice-Clerk examined her ; fome letters were intercept- ed, and fome were found about her, fhowing her correfpondence with her brother and Mall Jones, who ; now abfconds for treafon, and carried on Crofby's (in Newgate) intrigues. This alfo appears by my taking Dr Kennedy and his treafonable papers, before you left this place. The prefent difficulty is, to know whether Sim- fon and this his fifter were born in Scotland ; for, if Ihe was born there, they cannot bring her hither, fmce her crime was done ihei-e, — if you can tell me where the Simfons were born. As to the military man's bufinefs, I can only repeat what I told you before, that the three parts are fafe, and will be proved, viz. Ireland, Boyne, AND LETTERS. 209 '■&C. Flanders, French army, fiege of Mons, &c. England, late In- vafion, contributions, fubfifting, and lifting, with giving out com- miffions, &c. The prefent care and labour is the fourth point, the -aflafinating, &c. If Cornet Chambers (who was the clerk or fecre- tary) grow ingenous, and the foreign witnefles appear too, this will be done too. Enfign Arthur Seaton (that I brought from Scotland by poft on this occafion) gains on Chambers every day, they being old fellow-officers in K. J. armies ; fo, at laft, he hath confefled all the points except the laft ; and he feems to be more averfe to tell that fecret than all the reft, though he feems to infinuate, that he is not ignorant altogether ; but juft now, he fays he will never be an evidence ; however, his humours fhall be fufi^ered to evaporate ; and every opportunity Ihall be laid hold on to bring him to tell the whole truth. Fountayne is to be firft tried : I hope three or four witnefles will prove his lifting and fubfifting a great many people j but there is no certainty in thefe things till things are perfefted and done. I am weary of this long letter. Communicate no part of it, only to P.; then burn it. We have no news, only my Lord Berkley parted from Whitehall this morning, to go on board the fleet, \yhom God profper. Adieu. Pray, take care of my nephew Colhoun's preferment. "Mr Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. In queji of WitneJJes againjl Fountayne., and other Frifoners. The mean Arts he makes ufe of to obtain. Evidence.- Takes great Merit .to himjelf for his A^ivity. SIR, Your's of the 6th came juft now to my hand. I have inclofed fo Whitehall, -many papers to you, there feems no occafion for me to write much ^uguftio. -this night. Wednefday laft I was advertifed, that it was refolved ' '^^' to \xj Colonel Fountayne firft, of all the prifoners, next feffion, D d (which 2IO STATE-PAPERS (which begins the 24th of this month) ; the reafon is, that lifting- and fubfifting of men, beforp, at, and after the late intended invafion^ to rife in arms to join the late King and the French, &c. is a great point, and naturally includes k plot and defign kgainft this govern-^ ment to overturn it. Befides, it's apparent, that Fountayne hath been concerned, and privy to all the intrigues levelled againft this government, aind candifcover both men and things, which would be of great advantage to their Majefties fervice ; and, if Fountayne proves i'efradlory, yet the true management of this point of lifting and fubfifting will be a fair leading carte as to others trials : Yet I think Fountayne cannot efcape, there are fo many other things againft him, viz. his rebellion in Ireland, the Highlands, and his- particular lifting a;rid fubfifting, as appears by the information, and two more witneifes, at his trial. The thing now to be minded, is to find out fo many witneffes as poflibly we can get to prove lifting and fubfifting by Fountayne, oi: any other Jacobite ofiicer, for the purpofes aforefaid in this information One Lieutenant William Drummond, in 'my Lord Strathnavfer's regiment, is rhentioned : I doubt whether this Drummond is a lieutenant in tny Lord Strathnaver's prefent regiment, or in his firft regiment. To fecure the point, yefterday I Wrote to my Lord Juftice-Clerk to look af- ter him, if in Scotland, and fend him hither immediately by poft ;; and to fend up three or four that can prove the forefaid point againft any other perfons. Now, if this Drummond be in my Lord Strath- naver's prefent regiment with you, pray be fure mind to have him haftened hither without delay. There is one Crawford and Robi- fon, (whom you know), who were detached out of the guards here;. I believe both of them can prove this point of lifting and fubfift- ing ; (lifting is enough alone.) Crawford told me of a houfe-keeper that offered him money here to fubfift him for the late King. Be pleafed therefore to fearch after Crawford and Robifon; and, if yoa find them material, be pleafed to fend them hither. It's alfo very advifable, that pains fliould be taken to find out fuch perfons that can prove this point. I believe there are fevefal of them amongft the AND LETTERS. 211 the Englifli and Scots forces witK you. There h one Mr Telford, a furgeon to Colonel Cunningham's regiment of dragoons, is very- capable, and I hope willing, to ferve this government. I helped to bring him out of prifon for debt, to do fer vices ; he fucceeded in fome things. I told P. of him. If you engage him, he can ferve you effedJtually : But ypu muft engage fome honell officers in every Britifh regiment, and, if they be fmcere, they'll find out fuch ; and I believe Crawford, Robertfon, and Telford may do much in it ; for they were at London, and converfed with the Jacobites. En- courage Telford (furgeon) ; he can do much ; he hath had a great deal of money here from me : 1 believe he knows many here that can prove this point, and other points too ; fo oblige him. Excufe this hafty letter in fo great a concern. — But I have been called abroad five times about fecret bufinefs fince feven of the clock this even- ing ; and Mr Aeon Smith tells me juft now, that I'll neither let him eat or fleep, &c. Impart what is material in this letter to P. ; but burn the letter itfelf. Always confider that the feffion begins in the Old Baillie 24th of this month ; fo haften things, Confider alfo that two or three material witnefles is a yaft benefit to their Majefties fervice ; and yet I hope here there will be enough ; but the more the better. Adieu. My brother is abroad ; he'll write next poft. Pardon my con- fufion ; fori have tpo great prizes in chafe, if I can hit it this night. Read thefe new intercepted letters; I believe they are both from Sir Ja. Montgomery. I kpep the originals, and hope by the next to interprete moH of them« Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. €oJonel Parker's Efcape. — Fountayne's Trial — In the fame Strain •with the la/I. S I R, Colonel Parker (Sunday laft) made his efcape out of the Tower, Au ift i by fuch grofs corruption, that nothing gives the leaft colour to ex- '^9^' ^^2 cufe 4' 212 STATE-PAPERS cufe it. I doubt not the bottom of this affair will be found out; and the guilty punifhed. In mine, (laft poll), I mentioned the in- formation againft' Fountayne ; but I was forced to delay it, for I got not the original till two of the clock Sunday morning, with the o- ther papers inclofed, from Mr Aeon Smith ; I was forced to copy the information, and fend my fervant to the general poft-office, Lombard-ftreet ; but it was too late. Pray, give them both to P. 'You know I could not fend the original Information, it being part of the evidence. And I affure you, that the whole pinch in Crof- bey's bufinefs feems entirely to lie in the proof of his hand-writing; fo mind it, and pulh it. The feffion being delayed for few days longer, I do renew my requeft, that Drummond, in my Lord Strathnaver's regiment, or any other that knows lifting or fub- fifting, may be haftened hither with all poffible expedition; Tuch are the confiderable confequences of proving this point clear- ly in relation to the new difcovery ; though, in my confcience, if the witnefles her.e prove right and full at Fountayne's trial, there is enough, not only to do Fountayne's bufinefs, but alfo to give a true light into the plot itfelf. Every minute I expert the return of the mefTengers that were fent out on Saturday night late : I am im- patient to know their fuccefs ; for all thefe things are uncertain till they are done. I have no hopes of taking Parker again ; however, I am endeavouring all that in me lies to do it. It's a fhame fuch , a bafe afTaffmate fhould efcape, and ridicule the juftice- of the king- dom. I fend you my Lord Juflice-Clerk's letter. Send them all four back again. We have no news, fave the defperate attempt of a Danifh man of war in the Downs, and Admiral Ruffel's letter to the government ; the particulars whereof you'll get from better hands. Be kind to my nephew; and telLhim that I have paid his bill of exchange from Rotterdam. A proclamation is coming outi witk a reward of money, to retake Parker.. Adieu- Alex- AND LETTERS. 113 Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. Laments Colonel Parker's Efcap'e. Has feized Stone, from ivhom he expeSis great Difcoveries-^ &c. SIR, Laft poft I gave you the names of the perfons I took in a fhlp Auguft 21,. going out of the mouth of this river. Sunday laft I was advertifed, ' ^ ' that Captain M'Adam, and four more, really intended to go on board that fhip, and that they were on the fhore with a little boat to Garry them to this fhip ; but, being frightened by the feizure of the forefaid perfons, they all returned to London ; and one of my tools hath been twice in com.pany with three of them ; but Parker was not with them in the country, nor do they know where he is : How- ever, M'Adam will be a great prize; he was much employed and trufted by the late King, Melfort, Middleton, Sir Ja. Montgomery, and fome of the great folks at home : Befides, he was employed by Earker, Storie, Sharnock, &c. And it was with him Parker left his . horfes, arms, writings, and all he had, when he came to England, before the laft intended inyafion ; and it's to him Parker fpoke a- bout the aflafinating attempt, &c. I, fhall do what I can to take him. Conflder the public noife about Parker's, bufinefs, and the new difcovery, makes thefe people very cautious ; fo it's very diffi- cult to catch them. Sunday laft, in the evening, I was informed • that Parker and Captain Storie were abfconding in one Hay's houfe in Edrinton, twelve miles diftant from this city. ' Immediately I fent for Morice, and imparted the fecret, and gave him the warrant. He chofe his companions, and he kept the fecret till they faw the the houfe : So they furrounded the houfe in the night-time. When . the door opened,, about four o'clock in the morning, fome of them ruftied in ; and, at laft, with the hazard of their lives, they feized Captain Storie and one Hutton ; and brought them hither laft night prifoaers ; for Parker was not then there. As yet I do not 214 S T A T E -P A P E R S not know Hutton's circumfknces ; but Captain Storie came from France with Parker, a little while before the late intended invafion ; and then, on their arrival, both of them were taken together in Kent, by the country militia, and were brought to Southwark, where they made their efcapes by corrupting fome of their guards. This fmall account of Storie will fhow you what fort of kidney he is of. All along I have been informed, by many hands, that Storie is the moft underftanding, contriving, adlive, and boldeft of the late King's fervants, and moft trufted by him and his creatures. When he and Parker left Prance, before the late intended invafion, Par- ker was ordered to follow Storie's diredtions ; and the truth is, Par- kier was efteemed by the party as the hand, and Storie the head and hand too, (as the Jacobites have often expreffed it.) I hope to find evidence againft him : And now I am fending for Macky, to whom he difcovered the late intended invafion. Coronet Chambers, Petar Hay, and Sir George Maxwell (now in cuftody), can do his bufinefs ; Mr Fifh, Barlowe, and two women, can do the like. I have not read the^papers that were taken with them ; Mr Aeon Smith fays they are material : We fliall both perufe them to-morrow morning, or this night, fo foon I have fent out three parties on the hunt. But, to what purpofe are all thefe endeavours to cut oS i\itjummapapa'uera,vfh\\c at the fame breath they let them efcape, by grofs palpable corruption ? I have perufed all the examinations concerning this bafe defigned efcape ; and this day the Lord Chief-Juftice is taking more. I know alfo the expreffions of the warden, (who got notice yefterday to pre- pare for his trial this next feffion the 29th) ; but I fhall only fay, that I believe the right mark is higher they fhould aim at. I know not who is guilty or not ; but there are fuch fymptoms and black marks of guilt, certainly there is ground enough for a ftrick en- quiry. I know a certain perfon hath fent a vindicating letter to P. ; but I believe he will be very flow in his return, till he under- ftaiids the whole affair. There is an embrio ; I know not v,'hat the birth will produce ; I fhall do my endeavour to find the truth, without refped of perfons, only aiming at the King's fer- vice ; AND LETTERS. 215 ■rice ; though there are great endeavours to ftifle it in the womb ; which makes me more jealous, and I hope it will make me more vigorous in my .endeavours to bring it to a full birth, whatever it be ; leaft otherwife the fmall flies be catched in the fpider's web, while the .grea;t ones break through. This bafe abominable efcape of Parker makes me to add, that I am informed Storie was the moft a£tive and prudent inftrument in carrying on and eiFe£ting it; and, how opporturiely had Storie's taking been, if Parker had not efca- ped ? — (Time will try things.) I have grovmd alfo to believe, that Storie is mnch concerned in all the fteps of thefe intrigues the govern- ment is now prOfecuting on the new difcovery. Do not miilake me in what I have faid about evidence againft Storie ; it's certain I know perfons (above mentioned) that can do his bufinefs effedlually; but I am uncertain if they will give fuU evidence againft him. I fliall haften to feize them, leaft they withdraw, as feveral perfons did in Parker's cafe ; - otherwife, Storie, Sharnock, Larick, Bowvy, and M'Adam, had been long ago taken into cuftody. I have fbme little hints, as if the two perfons in the Tower (Stanly and Walmfly) had, for for their own prefervation, delivered Parker by this efcape, leaft he might tell tales, which they were very jealous of. It's evident e- nough, that the meeting of our privy councellors at the Bath, was to prevent an prohibition, and concert meafures. By the next I hope to give you full proof of fubfifting and lifting many people before and at the late intended invafion. Fountayne, M'Donald, and CroC- by, got notice to prepare for their trials on high treafon this next fefljon. Fountayne was confounded with it, and ftxuke, trembling every inch of him. This accident I have put in a way to be im- proved for a difcovery ; for he knows all ; and I find his party is jealous that he will fave himfelf. I have the like ground to believe the warden in the Tower will do the like. I hope the gentleman -goaler of the Tower will be put into Newgate too, and another warden, not lefs guilty than them all ; but by whofe decernment or connivance, &c. I write all thefe things to you at large, that you may 2i6 S T A T E - P A P E R S may lay hold on the firft opportunity to reprefent them in brieff to P. and I do it in the fincerity gf my heart ; and, knowing the clofs- nefs and faithfulnefs, I chufed to write this way, to fave P. troubfe of reading my hafty and undigefted letters, uling our old freedom. The Queen hath difplaced the gentleman goaler of the Tower; Ty- burn feems the fitteft place for him. Is/ij brother is gone to Turn- bridge, then to the Bath. My Lord Berkley and the fleet is re- turned to the Downs fafe after this great ftorm, God be praifed. Haften back to me my Lord Juftice-Clerk's letters I fent you, that you might have a full view of our circumftances at home. I hope you have minded the note I fent you about Crofbye. Sharnock and Bovye are my prefent bufinefs.: If I had them, with thofe I have already, I would hope to clear things more evidently than all thofe in the Tower or in the country will probably do. Do your en- deavour for my nephew's preferment ; and do not let him want mo- ney for fubfiftance ; I fhall anfwer it to you. Adieu. I fend you Mr Ridpath's new book. It's a pity Mr Morrice is not made a meflenger ; he hath done many fervices, and never had one fixpence, only what I gave him. The reft of the meffengers arc generally villains, except very few. Certainly Mr Ridpath fliould be minded and provided for. Alex. Johnstown to Mr Carstares. Sforiet alias. Captain Stoiv's Examination, Sir James- Mont- gomery dangerotifly ill, SIR, Aug. 24. Three Dutch mails dew leaves us In the dark ever fmce I fent ^*' you the copies of Beyers letters. I have plyed you with long letters ; I with they come all fafe to your hands. I wrote very freely laft poft, about the taking Captain Storie, and Par- ker's efcape, &c. Pray give an account of this letter, particular- AND LETTERS. cli-j ly, if it comes fafe to your hands. Yefternight Captain Stow, alias Storie, was fent to Newgate. The meflenger, Hopkins, tells me that a great multitude fuddenly gathered before the door; but a guard of mufketeers prevented any mifchief, and conveyed the pri- foner to his new lodgings. The meflenger alfo tells me, that the prifoner told him in the coach, " I fee now they v>-illhang me; and that is the worft they can do to m.e." When he was taken on Mon- day morning, and till yefterday morning, he owned no name but Brooks ; but then I coming in accidentally to the Duke of Shrewfbury's office, I found him fitting with Mr Vernon; im- mediately we knew one the other. He and I were in the jufticiary court, Gray's inn, for feverall years. This made him drop his difguifed name, and he owned his true name. Captain William Stow. This fudden rencounter pierced me fenfibly. He is a gentleman of excellent fenfe and courage; I am heartily forry he applied themtofuch illufes. Then. I informed the Duke what I knew of him ; and' that Macky is a pofitive evidence ; and that I hoped to get more againfl: him (as in my laft.) When I had gone below, I met the prifoner again. He faid. There is no mortal can prove any thing againji me. I replied, Do not triijl to that ; for you all thought that no evidence £Ould be found againji Colonel Parker; yet there ivas enough to do the bujjinefs., if he had not made his efcape ; and the fame evidence 'ujill reach you, ivho "was his companion in all his criines. Then he afked, who they were ? I replied, Mr Vernon knows beft. Then he faid, / thank God I am ready ; I ivijh they could try me to-day^ and hang me to-morroiv. So he was called up to the Duke to be examined, and, as I bear, to little purpofe; he is ftubborn : And the next ftep is to get evidence. So I fpoke to the Duke to fend for Macky; which accordingly was done yefternight: And I particularly wrote to Macky to bring up all the noats, letters, or papers that any way related to the late intended invafion. Thurf- day laft and yefternight 1 wrote to the J. Clerk, to try what he can a- anongft the people then at St, Germains, Paris, and La Hoge, when Parker and Stow were fent to England. All poffible care fliall be ta- E e ken 2i8 STATE-PAPERS ten to find out fuch as are here. 1 have put all my people tc- v/ork ; I wifh it may fucceed. I doubt not to fitid feveral perfons that can give materiall evidence againft him, but I do not know if they will do it ingenoufly ; this is the hazard. I have a probable view of effecting this affair. Have a little patience ; I hope the beft &c. ; and my opinion is, that if, once he were pinched, he would fqueeck, which would be a great happinefs; for he knows all, &c. Receive the inclofed from the Lord Juftice Clerk to me. Would to God the circumflances of that countrey were mended; its certain iSir J. Montgomery is very dangeroufly fick of a decay ; he hatlt got the flux, the defperate cure which will either kill him or reco- ver him : But I have not time to copy the letter I have this day received about it. I hope the fubfifting and lifting is minded; the^ feffion begins the 29 ; but the comilTion of Oyer and Terminer will laft longer. I am impatient for the witnefTes I wrote for. Drummond. is in my Lord Stranavers regiment with you. Adieu. Alexander Johnston toMR Carstares..~ Particular Detail of his great Diligence in making D'lfcoveriss, and^ carrying on Profecutions. SIR, Sept. 4. Your's of the 2 3d furprifed us all ; but the Duke of Shrew- ^^^^' Ibury writes this night to the Earle of Portland, to haftene Lieu- tenant William Drummond hither. I writt to you fo fully here- tofor about this, that I need not repeat it. You have the copy of Seaton's information againft Fountain. Lifting and fubfifting is the point; fo know of Drummond, if he was one hfted or fubfifted by Fountaine; and what other perfons were liftedj fubfifted, or provided with arms, horfes, &c.; and where fuch perfons are now. The tryals are delayed to the beginning of the next Month. There is time enough now to gather the evidences, if Drummond immediately tell AND LETTERS. 219 tell the truth plahily. There are fuch ftrenous endeavours to corrupt goalers and witneffes, efpecially when any of them are both Jacobits and paplfts too, we muft ufe all poffible caution to prevent the poffibihty of turning the tables againft us. IfDrum- mond be fincere, and material in his evidence, all will be fure and fixed, there being another Englifh proteftant evidence ready to prove the forefaid point at the tryall. Its evident by Parker, Sir James Montgomery, and 5 or 6 others efcapes, that the Jacobits under- mine this government, by giving money; and the other week 300 guineas was offered to the turnkey of Newgate to lett Colonel Fountaine make his efcape. I am juft now credibly informed, that 1000 guineas is to be offered for effeding Captain Stow's efcape. I hope both are prevented ; for I advertifed the chief keeper, who trufts none but his fon. Thefe things make me jealous; and I have fome notice they are playing the fame game with the King's vnt- neffes in Fountaine and other cafes: Therefore haften hither Drum- mond. Mind Telford, Crawford, and R obifon. Sir George Max- well of Orchardflon was taken up as evidence againft Parker; he 'confelfed that he and Parker were both at the feige of M<>ns ; but he pofitively declared to the Duke of Shrewfberry, Mr Vernon, Mr Aeon Smith, and my felf, that he would never come to the court to depone the fame at Parker's then intended tryal. It ap- pears alfo that he had a Lieutenant-colonel's fubfiftance in the French army in Flanders. It appears alfo that he was fent to Scot- land, through England, juft before the late intended invafibn, about the fame time Parker and Stow were fent to England; and -he keept a correfpondence with N. Payne in the King's Bench here, and in the boarders, and in Scotland, till Payne was taken up. My Lord Melvil hath the forefaid papers and informations upon oath againft him, but fays they are in the country; pray write to his Lordftiipimmediatly to fend them up hither. You may remember alfo his behaviour and expreffions, for which he was taken up in Flan- ders, and fent in cuftody hrther; befides, I have ground to believe that he hath been in all the Jacobites intrigues and plots, and can difco- E e 2 ver 220 STATE-PAPERS ver both men and things, if he plcafes. Its true we cannot fend him down to Scotland to be tryed there, he being born in Ireland ; yet its to be confidered what ftiould be done with him ; there is full evidence, and his own confeffion too of high treafon, againft him; he hath great friends here ; inform P. of this. I believe orders for profecuting. him are necefiary from the King. I have gott an authentick attefted coppy of Byer's indidment in Scotland; next council day I defign to get an order to fend him down to Scotland, to be tryed there. I Infift on thefe, becaufe I find the fending down Sir Jineas Macphearfon hath wonderfully terrified our countrymen Jacobite trafeckers. Coats will be the fecond exam- ple, and hope it will have good effedts. The fear of this hath made ibme of them return to France, and others are going. I doubt not P. hath feen the report of the committee of council! about Parker's efcape, the corruption and aegligcncethat attended it, &c. There is one thing that flraitens me exceedingly in thefe matters. The law of England doth not afford any way to force witnefTes to appear, in the court at thefe tryalls for treafon , but only by a fubpena ; which ; if they doe not obey, there is very little penalty.. Now, naturally, the moft materiall witnelfes againft the prifoners are their own accom- plices and confederats in. their crimes, and moft of them both Jacobites.- and Papifts : Soeto fubpena them to appear and give evidence in court at the tryalls, is to give them warning to abfcond and run away. The. only expedient I could find out wa^, to get oaths made of their being participes criminis, and foe defure warrants to take them up. Some wifemen think this way. will difcredit their evidence in court. I acknowledge.it were better not to have them to come out of pri- fon to goe to court to give evidence at thefe tryals ; but how we^ can help this inconvenience I do not fee, except we run a rifqua of their abfconding. I have done my part ;. I have got feyeral; depofitions made ; and I am endeavouring to get warrants, to have them taken up. I defign to be with my Lord Chief-Juftice and my, Lord Keeper to effect this to-morrow. I wifti P. would confider. this difficulty, and diredions were fent about it; for,, it's found by experience*. AND LETTERS. 221. experience, whenever they fufped that they are to be produced as evidence, they abfcond, as M'Adam, Aughenouty, Sharnock, Bovys, Tucker, Lawick, &c. already have done ; fo that we cannot find them. This afternoon I have difcovered the inclofed Ubel againft this government. I have given one to my Lord Keeper, and an- - other to the Duke of Shrewfburry. The authors are Dr Hooks kte Dean of Worcefter, and Mr Charles Lefley. I know theni both ; but they abfcond. I know the printer and the fupervifer, 'or cor- refl:or, of the-prefs. I hope to catch them all, or fome of them, and the moft of the books too, before they be difperfed. You may perufe it, and inform P. of the contents of it. To-morrow I de- fign to give one of thefe libels to the Archbifliop of Canterbury. Thefe private prefles are intolerable ; I hope I am in a way to de- ftroy fome of them. Laft week, Mr M'Kye at Harwich being na- med by me to be fent for hither to make oath againft Captain Stow, laft week he was aflaulted in the Royal Exchange (and narrowly efcaped being killed, before he could draw his fword in his own defence) by one Mr Larrow, whom he had taken with treafonable papers in his pocket as he came out of the packet-boat ; this af- fault was for revenge. Sunday, Larrow was taken into cuftody by the Duke of Shrewfburry 's warrant ; and fome dangerous, papers were found about him ; an exait account of the forces here, their number and their quarters, an exa£t account of our fleet, and in- deed of all the men of war, and the ftations where they are, with the numbers of their guns and men. There is alfo another letter fays, that Mr Oilman (who hath fome office or employment about Deal) is fent to our King's army in Flanders. This Oilman fays, in one of his letters to Larrow, that he will fend a fincere and bold ac- count of all he obferves there for the common eauffe. (By the next poft I fhall fend you a copy of the letter, fince it's neceflary to keep it here for Larrow's trial.) At prefent, I only defire that P. may caufe Mr Oilman to be obfeiVed. He fays, (in his letter), that he will keep company with the heft of the army ; He writes alfo, that he will fend his letters to Francois Lerow, direded to Mr Marfhall (a. 222 STATE-PAPERS (a notorious a£bive Jacobite) at Wayman near Chelensford, or to Mr Wifeman, the letters to be left at Mr Quanmow an apothecary in Suffolk-ftreet ; fo let his letters be obferved too with you, as di- re£tions are given to the poft-office general here. The great num- ber of the Scotch privy councillors at the Bath makes a great noife ; the people there call them the Committee of Safety ; I wifh they prove fo. I think a prohibition, with intimation to return home, may be feafonable, if thought fit, otherwife they intend to be here. My brother is at Salifbury-. I am weary. Adieu, Alexander Johnston to Mt Carstares. Upon the fame Subject. SIR, Septenib. 7. Your's of the 3.0th I received* and thanks you heartily for your kind obliging expreffigns and aftions. The delay of the trials was general, they being all put off. Laft poft I told you that the Duke of Shrewfburry then wrote to P. to haften Lieutenant Drummond hi- ther. I ftill was, and ever will be,of Popifh Jacobite witnefFes very jealous J and now I find a melancholy inftance of the truth of it^ for Captain Seaton abfconds, though he very freely made the affi- david I fent you. He owns all he fays to be true ; but he fays he will not be an evidence in court ; he hath wrote to Mr Aeon Smith to this effect. I am yet uncertain whether he is corrupted by the other fide, or that he expeds money from Mr Smith before he gives his evidence ; if it be the laft, he (hall never receive one far- thing ; and I am endeavouring to catch him, and force him to tell the truth. Yefterday I defired and obtained an order from the Queen and privy council, to fend Bye^ of Coats to Scotland, to be tried there for high treafon. His owning his letters, and confeffing being lately come from France, is enough, confidenng his relations, (the D. of Gordon, Seaforth, Perth, Lithgow, Tarbat, &c.), his infolent 1694. AND LETTERS. 223 infolent behaviour at his feizure, and at his examination, and his Gonverfe with the worft Jacobites here ; it's probable there is more at bottom than yet we know of his errand hither : In fhort, I be- Heve, he is capable to difcover men and things, if pinched. I fend you the copies of the letters to Larrow, as I promifed in my laft. Pray, immediately caufe obferve and watch Henry Oilman ; there feems to be fome thing extraordinary in it. The libel I fent you by my laft, 1 hope will be the caufe of difabling fome of them con- eerned in it from doing the li]§^ 'again ere long. I am the more flow in this, fince I know two other libels are ready for the prefs, both wrote by Mr Charles Leflye, viz. the Original Contrad. -The fecond is called the Jacobite Epitomized. The Jacobites boaft among themfelves, that thefe two books are mafterpieces, and unanfwerable; which may prove a miftake, if they get it in the Old Baillie. I fhall do my utmoft to efFe that how inconvenient it were for you to be feen in my company ; ' ^^' yet, fmce I am fure you wifh them well, and the King at eafe from their turbulent defigns, it will not difpleafe you to carry to the King what may contribute to both thefe ends, which, I can aflure you, this inclofed will in fome meafure do. I intreat you to reprefent to his Majefty, that I am neither afraid of my adverfars for I am not guilty of a thought prejudicial to him, nor wearied of ferveing him ; but, if he judge it eithei: fit or eafy to pleafe a party, with allowing my addrefs for a private lyfe, I can as wilUngly quit a beneficial office to ferve him, as they can trouble him untill they get it. Though I am afraid this will not cure the diftemper, yet its all that I can contribute to it. But, when their heat cannot bear with the E. Melville's family, and with you, to whom they owe, under the King, all the power they have, I can little wonder of their fretting at me ; but, I hope their folly will not frighten the King from fo faithful fervants, nor you from giving him counfell for their fakes, whofe fire will hurry to felf-prejudice, if not ftopt by prudence. i"3<5 STATE -PAPERS prudence. I hope my fidelity in endcayouring to enlarge the bot- tom of his Majefty's government ; and efpecially, by bringing in of fuch of the northern clergy as would qualify themfelves for ecclefiaftic office, according to the prefent law, will not al- ways be confidered as undutifulnefs in me ; I wiih the hold- ing of fo many out be not : But"! ftiall be beft pleafed, if my fears for the effects of thefe heats be difappointed. I vsill adventure to intreat the favour of you»to fecond my defire to the King, in giving me a Ikft and eafy retreat, and to favour me. with' 'a letter, whereby thofe in the government may know,- that my perfon, my little eftate, and the penfion' which his Majefty hath given me du- ring my life, and not depending on my being in or out of employ- ment, may be fecure by his Majefly's protection : And, if you .pleafe to give him my faithful aflurance of being as zealous for his perfon and intereft, when in a private, as if I were in the higheft flation, , I will make good your promife, and likewife affure you, ihat, by doing this, you will very much oblige me, and ingage me ,to be, SIR, Your faithful friend, and fervant, T A R B A T. Right trufty SIR, We having allowed our right well beloved and right trufty cou- fin and councellor, G. V. of T. to lay down the office of clerk of our councels, regifters, and rolls, and his old age rendering him lefs able to attend frequently at our councell, it is our pleafure that he be not called to attendance, but when he voluntarly comes, or on our ex- prefs call. And we likewife require the Lords of our treafury, now in place, and any who Ihall fucceed them, to make the penfion of L. 400 yearly, granted by us, under our privy feal, to thefaid G. V. of T. during his lyfe, to be efFedually paid to him in man- ner AND LETTERS. 231 ner as is contained in our letter of gift and penfion granted to him by us, in all points. For our right tni/ly.t &c. The Lord Chancellor, and remanent Lords of our Treafuryi &c. Lord Tarbat to Mr Carstares. Urges his obtaining a general remijfion for him from the King. — Wifhes Lord Melml again rejlored to the management of Aff'airs,———PrQ- tejls that he is innocent. SI R, This is to trouble you with a new defire to profecute my former June lu propofition; for, had I never wearied till now, I fee now too much to make me wearie : But I regrate the King, kingdomes, and inter- eft of the church, more than what concerns myfelf ; for I pretend not to bigotry, yet I wifh a fettled church ; and I am far miftaken if the prefent and promifed heats doe not prejudge all thefe. How- ever, I thirik it both his Majefty's and the churche's intereft to have a firm and yet moderate prefbyterian, who will be above fufpicion with the church, and yet be one to flop violent fury. And I wifh to have a return from my mafter as foon as can be. Another thing is of importance in my judgement, and that is, fince the interefl of the moderate party is much weakened by what was done to the E. of Melvill, which renders him lefs able to do effedtual fervice, it might be ufeful to the King and country, if, by fome demonflration of favour, others may be incouraged to follow his direilions, which would put many in a right road, who goes wrong. If I miflake, I afllire you it is with no ill meaning. Mean while, if you pleafe, I wifh to have a very general remiffion fent me, becaufe I fee faults fifht for in others on no great grouads. If it come, let it contain treafon, perduellion, and a general of all crimes ; though, on all that's facred, I know not myfelf guilty ; nor doe I fear any thing» on this fide, of Irifh witnefTes, or evidence. I am, S I R,. Your faithful fervast, Tarbat. Earl 232 STATE-PAPERS Earl of Argyle toMr Carstares. Of the Proceedings of the Commiffion ofGlenco. Exclaims againfi . the Method of Inquiry ^ &c. SIR, June 21. Since I wriett laft, we have continued ftill in dur heatts, but no 1695. . , particular attackt made, only the committee has been going on in examining that matter in relation to Lord Stairs; which I wifli they did impartiallie ; yet I think nothing can be made of it. They may ftirain it the length of a citation, having the prevalent vote ; but this week paft they have moved nothing in that affair. The commiffion of Glencoe has been fitting clofle, and odd enuf meafures taken ia expifcating matter out of witneffes ; and on Monday the whole procedour is to be laid before the parliament, the commiffioner ha- ving faid he would take it upon him, notwithftan^ing the commif- fion carries a report firft to be made his Majefty ; and the way they explain that, if the account is fent the King to day, and laid before us two days after. I fent you a pretty full account of the fham plott Hefigned to humble me, which its probable you may have be this tyme from others. Their malice goes as far againft me for afting a moderate part, as againft thofe they pretend to have erymes 'againft. In fhort, there is no end of thofe heats, unlefTe the King put ane end to them, or allow us club-law. Sure I am, we are mutch the ftronger. I vow, at this rate they proceed, no mortal can be in fecuritie that does not run the fame madd part they doe ; nay, all the length, to a title ; for, if a man differ in the leaflt in fej^tj- jnent, though in a tryfle, he is prefently faid to be a rogue, ane ene- jnie to the government, and a hater of prefbyterie. They give out the King allows all this, but would not alter, leaft he difoblige the church of England, but is fatisfied they adlthe part ; which I am con^ -vinced is falfe ; yet there is a neceffity the King ihow his difplea- fure to fuch madd proceedings, or elfe we Ihall all run in confufion, non AND LETTERS. 233 mon looking upon himfelf to be fafe. 'Sure I am they muft own I am and muft be fincere to the government ; yet it is; all one, fince I am not one of them. You are, upon all occafions, loaded by them, and cited ; and therefore is the i^ore obliged to endeavour a cure. I fhall not trouble E. Portland ; but be fo juft to me, ftill,to tell him my curriadge ; fhall I defyre to take meafures from him ? and I hope fhall not put them in execution to the difadvantage. You will hear from others we have a^ laft ftruggled the King into fix months celTe ; but they muft make bargaine before they goe further. If they be allowed their fwing, but one word from court would make us all verie good, I do affure you ; and I defyre you may fay as mutch in my name. I have fought fome half a fcore a battles fince I fee you; and I hope it will be found I have done the King fome fervice, in flopping thofe extravagancies they otherwife had run into without controul. I am your'a. Adieu. I forgot to acquaint Secretarie Stairs E. Lauderdale is dead ; which will occafion a vacancie in the felTion, his brother Hatton fuc- ceeding him. I wifh it be endeavoured others do not fupply, the place top fuddenly ; but my hope is, it is not the King's temper to he loo haflie. Lord Tare AT to Mr Carstares. Jlgainjl the Mqfter of Stairs^ and in fa'vours ofMehiland his Fami- ly- Propofes one tofucceedhim in the Office of Regijier. SIR, The methods of fome men, and their heats, you (though you June 25. know us well) cannot conceive, nor can the fad confequences be '^^^" fafely expreft. I know you have account of the matters of faft; my troubling of you fhall be of another fubjedt. Its certain, if the pref- byterian party would moderate their defigns, and were they mana- ged by wife men, they are fure to the King, and againft his ene- G g mies : 234 STATE-PAPERS mies; but, as the Mr of Stairs may repent his fuccefle againft the ■ E. of Melvill, fo may others ; for he had the beft founded intereft ■ with that party; and, if he had not been loaded with marks of dif- grace, he had led that party to the King's mind : But, being put ' from the fecretar's office, and without an exoneration, either in that* office, or in commiffioners ; which was never refufed to any. The" preferring his juniors in prefiding in councel and parliament ; the taking his fonne's regiment from him ; he and his fonne left out of' the commiffion for auditing of- accompts ; forcing a deputy on his^ fonne in the caftle; and all who come down from court making it' their work to leffen him. But, I do not fee a probable way for the': King to manage the true prefbyterian party but by his family; andr"- if they were countenanced by the King, they could doe more by ■ their finger than others can doe with both-their hands. Yea, altho' he be thus leflened, the body of the prefbyterians have more kind- nefs for him than for all the other officers of flate. The hot party whoattackthim rudely enough atfirft, and fpoke loudly of it, found the refpe£t of the prefbyterians fo ftrong for him,, that now they court him; whilft others fee that hemoderats many; in fpyte of the heats, they all defire union with him. But he would be lefs. iifeful were he plunged in a party. In fhort, if this confufion and . wrong fteps be retrievable, I fee not fo fixt a bafe to draw up on as him and his family; for L. Keith is' certainly one of the fharpeft,. moft judicious, diligenteft, in the nation. What paft as to the Mr of Stairs yefterday, you will know by this poft ; and none xx>uld per- fwade the leaft delay until his Majefty were acquainted. A fhort ob- ferve, drawn by a friend of his, I have inclofed. I wifh earneflly that the King may put E. Melvill and his children under fuch marks of: his favour, as may ftrengthen thentto fett right what is wrong; and he is too long a filling of mj poll ; for that would allay fome, and put others from their foolifh expectations ; for they roar and gape in hopes of it. I wifh a fober, faithful, and able man may get it • and he whom I recommended is fuch. But they have twifl him into a mifprifon of Glenco affair; and will, no doubt, cafldirt on him ; though I am fure he had no more hand in it than you had* But AND LETTERS. 235 'But they will put a beaft's fkin on every one that is not of their clubb, and then hound at him. - And my relation to him will not -move me to urge the leaft inconvenience in the King's affairs ; ther- for take that poft in the eafieft acceffe ; whether it be to one or two, .1 leave to E. Melvill and you to advife in that. So you fee my own intereft weighs little with me. But, I hope the King will fend me a letter, fuch as will let all fee I am in his protection, though not in publick fervice. And perhaps I will be as ufeful to him in recefs, though not fo profitably for myfelf, as when in publick. So go about, Sir ; confider our nation, and where the ftrength of it lies, and then confider our prefent ftate ; and what comes next ; and judge if wit and difcretion be not neceffar. Then view our truftee governors ; and take or offer what meafure you judge fit, I wifh the L. Keeper Sum- mars and E. Melvill did correfpond, and that the King and E. P. would write kindly to him, for he got difcouraging blows ; and you know his referved temper, and unwillingnefs to medle ; but he is . ane ill man if he refufe when he is fo neceffar. D. Queenfberry, E. Argyle, E. Keith, and he, are very well ; and, by this inclofed fcheme, you may guefs how to pack them right. I will retire fo foon as the parliament adjourns, (if I be not clapt up with E. Brod.) My fault, as is faid, is, that I endeavoured to bring the epifcopal clergy to addreffe, as was prefcribed to me, and to' take the oaths ; which indeed I endeavoured diligently. But its two years fince I quitt meddling in it, feeing it to little purpofe ; for thefe two parties will never coalefce. What you writ to me, diredi by E. MelvilJ, and it will come fafe to the hand of your faithful fervant. -to Mr Carstares. Troceedings againjl Breadalbine.-^Blames Mr Carjlaresfor a threat- ning Letter in his favour . SIR, I had the favour of youjr's of the 27th, and am glad of your fafe July 5 arrival at the camp. All the proceedings of the parliament againft Gg 2 my 1695I 236 ,S T A T E - P A P E R ' S my Lord Broadalbine have beenfocool and flow, thatthere was nottbe- leaft fhadow for that ruggeftibn of a fudden execution. Its true, at !aft, he hath received his indidtment, and was appointed to be tried Monday laft ; but I am certain, on his Lordfhip's application for longer time to the parUament, it would be granted eafily. How- ever, I am afraid the warm and violent expreffions, thrcatning fe- vere reprimands from you, was not the eafieft way to carry that, or any other favour on his Lordfliip's behalf. I fend you a gazette, which hath moft of Scotch news. I have defired Mr Pringle to fhew you the reft of the printed papers, and how Livingfton is vin-- dicated. There are feme adls made, i/?, Againft profanenefs- ndly^ Againft blafphamye. Z^ly-, Againft illegal baptifmes and mar- riages. J^thly-f Againft markets on Saturday and Monday, to pre- vent travelling on Sunday. I am jealous left the difperfing here Mr Hugh Dalrymple's information for his brother (for which he got a fevere reprimand, and begged the court and parliament's par- don,) will irritate. I doubt not fome of thefe informations are af you ere this comes to your hands. I wifh they had never come out,-, &c. I have given their Majefties letter for you to Mr Pringle, to deliver it. I doubt not you have heard of the packet-boat.' We have no news here ; only fome fhips come in fay, Ihat Monday laft they heard great Ihooting of bombs, &c. as near St Maloes. I wifh good fuccefs ; and I pi:ay God Almighty to preferve the King, and. blefs his arms by fea and land. My fervice to my Lord Portland,, fecretaries, and Monf. Vanderdort. Adieu. REPORT of the Commifliori giv^n by his Majefly for inqui- ring into the Slaughter or the Men of Glenco, fubfcribed at Halyrudhoufe the 20th day of June 1 693. John Marquis of Tweedale, Lord High Chancellor of Scotland, William Earl of Annadale, John Lord Murray, Sir James Stewart his Majefty's advocate, Adam Cockburn of Ormiftone, Lord Juf- tice Clerk, Sir Archibald Hope of Rankeiller, and Sir William Hamilton AND L E:T T E- R S. 237 Hamilton of Whitlaw, two of the fenators of the College of Juftice, Sir James Oglivie his' Majefty's folicitor, and Adam Drummond of Meggins, commiflioners appointed by his Majefty, by- his com- miffion under the great feal, of the date the 29th of April laft paft, to make inquiry, and to take trial and precognition about the flaughter of feveral perfons of the firname ot MacDonald, and o- others, in Glenco, in the year 1692, by whom, and in whatmanner,- and by what pretended authority the fame was committed, with power to call for all warrants and directions given in that matter ; as alfo, to examine all perfons who had a hand therein, with what witneffes they fhould find neceffary, either upon oath or declaration ; and to report to his Majefty the true ftate of the faid matter, with the evidence and teftimonies to be adduced before them, as the faid commiflion more amply bears; having mett, and qualified them- felves by taking the oath of allegiance and affurance, conform to the a£t of parliament, with the oath dejidelit as ufe is in fuch cafes, did, according to the power given to them, chufe Mr Alexander- Monro of Biercroft to be their clerk ; and he having alfo quaUfi:ed himfelf as above, they proceeded into the faid inquiry, to call for all warrants and directions, with all fuch perfons as witneffes that might give light in the faid matter : And having, confidered the forefaid warrants and dire<3:ions produced before them, and taken the oaths and depofitions of the witneffes under named, they, with all fubtniffion, lay the report of the whole difcovery made by them before his Majefty, in the order following. And, i/?, of fome things ■ that proceeded the faid flaughter. 2dly, Of the matters of fadt,' with the' proofs and evidence taken, when, and in what manner, the fame was committed, g^/y, Of the warrants and directions that either really were, or were pretended for the committing it. And, Iqftlyt The commiflioners humble opinion of the true ftate- and account of that whole bufinefs. The things to be remarked- preceeding the faid flaughter were. That its certain that the lairds of Glenco and Auchintraitten, and their followers, were in the in- farre<9ion and rebellion made by fome of the Highland clanns, un- der 238 STATE-PAPERS der the command, firft, of the Vifcount of Dundee, and then of Major General Buchan, in the year 1689 and 1690. This is acknow- legedbyall: But, when the Earl of Broadalbin called the heads of the clanns, and mett with them in Auchallader, in July 1691, in order to a ceflation, the deceafed Alexander M'Donald of Glen- co was there' with Glengarry, Sir John Maclene, and others, and agreed to the ceffatione ; as it is alfo acknowleged : But the deceafed Glenco's two fons, who were at that time with their father in the town of Auchallader, depone. That they heard that the Earl of Broadalbine did at that time quarrel with the deceafed Glenco, a- bout fome cows that the Earl alledged wereftqlen from his men by Glenco's men ; and that, though they were not prefent to hear the words, yet their father told them of the challenge ; and the two fons, with ■Ronald MacDonald indweller In Glenco, and Ronald M'Donald In Innerriggin in Glenco, do all depone, That they heard the de- ceaft Glenco fay, That the Earl of Broadalbine, at the meeting of Auchallader, threatned to do him a mifchief ; and that he fear'd a mlfchief from no man fo much as from the Farl of Broadalbine, as their depofitions at the letter A in the margin bear. And Alexan- der MacDonald, fecond fon to the deceaft Glenco, doth further de- pone. That he hath often heard from his father and others, that there had been in former times blood betwixt Broadal- Ijine's family and their clan, as his depofition, at . the fame mark, tears. And here the commiffioners cannot but take nottice of what liath occurred to them, in two letters from Secretary Stair to Lieu- tenant Colonel Hamilton, one deftroy them by fire and fword; (which is the adtual flyle of our . commiflTions againft' intercommuned rebels;) but with this exprefs • mitigation in the fourth article, viz. That the' rebels may not think themfelves defperate, we allow you to give terms and quarters, but in this manner only. That cheftians and heritors, or leaders, be pri- foners of war, their lives only fafe, and all other things in mercy ; they taking the oaths of allegiance, and rendering their arms, and fubmitting to the government, are to have quarters and indemnity $or their lives and fortunes, and to be protected from the foldiers j as. the principal paper of inftruflions, produced by Sir Thomas Li- vingfton^- 24$ S "T A T. E - P A P E R S vingfton, bears. After thefe inftru£tions, there were additional ones given by his Majefty to Sir Thomas Livingfton, upon the i6th of the faid month of January, fuperfigned and counterfigned by his Majefty, and the date marked by Secretary Stair's hand; which bear orders for giving of paffes, and for receiving the fubmiffion of certain of the rebels : Wherein all to be noticed to the prefent pur- pofe is, That therein his Majefty doth judge it much better that thefe who took not the benefit of the indemnity in due time fhould be obliged to render upon mercy, they ftill taking the oaths of alle- giance ; and then its added. If Mackean of jGlenco, and that tribe, - can be well feparated from the reft, it will be a proper vindication of the public juftice to extirpate that fe£l: of thieves. And of thefe additional inftrudions a principal duplicate was fent to Sir Thomas i,ivingfton, and another .toCoJonGl Hill, and were both produced. And thefe were all the inftru£tions given by the King in this matter. But Secretary Stair, who fent down thefe inftru£tions, as his letters produced, written with his hand, to Sir Thomas, of the fame date with them, teftify, by a previous letter of the date of the 7th of the faid morith of January, written and fubfcribed by -him to Sir Thomas, fays. You know in general, that thefe troops pofted at Invernefs and Innerlochy will be ordered to take in the -houfe of Invergarie, and to deftroy entirely the country of Lochabar, Locheall's lands, Kep- poch's, Glengary's, and Glenco ; and then adds, I aifure you your power fhall be full enough ; and I hope the foldiers will not trouble the government with prifoners. And, by another letter of the oth of the faid month of January, which is likewife before the inftruc- tions, and written to Sir Thomas, as the former, he hath this expref- fion, That thefe who remain of the rebels are not able to oppofe, and their cheftians being all papifts, it is well the vengeance falls there: For my part, I could have wiihed the MacPonalds had not divided; and I am forry that Keppoch and Mackean of Glenco are fafe. And then afterwards we have an account, that Locheall, Mac- iia"ughton, Appin, and Glenco, took the benefit of the indemnity at inverary, and Keppoch and others at Invernefs. But this letter -of the AND LETTERS. 249 the mil of January, fent with the firft inftrudions to Sir Thomas, liath this expreffion : ' I have no great klndnefs to Keppoch nor Glenco ; and Its well that people are in mercy.' And then, ' Juft now my Lord Argyle tells me, that Glenco hath not taken the oath : At which I rejoice. It is a great work of charity to be ex- ad in rooting out that damnable fed ; the worft of the Highlands.' But in his letter of the i6th of January, of the fame date with the additional inftrudions, though he writes in the firft part of the let- ter, 'The King does not at all incline to receive any after the diet, but on mercy ;' yet he thereafter adds, ' But, for a juft example of vengeance, I intreat the thieving tribe of Glenco may be rooted out to purpofe.' And to confirm this', by his letter of the fame date, fent with the other principal duplicate, and additional inftrudions to Co- lonell Hill, after having written, that fuch as render on mercy may be faved, he adds : 'I fhall entreat you, that, for a juft vengeance, and public example, the tribe of Glenco may be rooted out to purpofe : The Earls of Argyle and Broadalbine have promifed that they fhall have no retreat in their bounds ; the paffes to Ranach would be fe- cured ; and the hazard certified to the laird of Weems to refett them: In that cafe, Argyle's detatchment, with a party that may be pofted in Ifland Stalker, muft cut them off; and the people of Appin are none of the beft.' This laft letter, with the inftrudions for Colonel Hill, was received by Major Forbes, in his name, at Edin- burgh ; and the Major depones, That, by the allowance he had from the Colonell, he did unfeal the packet, and found therein the letter and inftrudions, as above, which he fent forward to Colonel Hill. And that, in the beginning of February 1692, being in his way to Fort William, he met fome companies of Argyle^s regiment at BelUfliiells, and was furprifed to underftand that they were going to quarter In Glenco ; but faid nothing till he came. to Fort-William, where Co- lonell Hill told him, that Lieutenant-colonel IJamilton had got or- ders about the affair of Glenco ; and that therefore the Colonell had left it to Lieutenant-colonell Hamilton's management, who, he ap- prehends, had concerted the matter with Major Duncanfon. And li . Co- zso STATE-PAPERS Colonel Hill depones, That he underftood thatLieutenant-colonelHa-- milton and Major Duncanfon got the orders about the Glento men. which were fent to Lieutenant-colonel Hamilton : That, for him- felf, he liked not the bufmefs, but was very grieved at it : That the- King's inftrudions of the i6th of January 1692, with the Mailer of Stair's letter of the fame date, were brought to him by Major Forbes, who had received them, and unfealed the packet at Edin- burgh ; as thefe two depofitions do bear. Yet the execution and flaughter of the Glenco men did not immediately take efFe£t ; and thereafter, on the 30th of the faid month of January, the Mailer of Stair doth again write two letters, one to Sir Thomas Livingfton,, . which bears, ' I am glad that Glenco did not come in within the time prefixed : I hope what is done there may be in earneft, fince the reft are not in a condition to draw together to help : I think to harry (that is, to drive) their cattle, and burn their houfes, is but to render them defperate lawlefs men to -rob their neighbours ; but I be- i lieve you will be fatisfiedit were a great advantage to the nation that I thieving tribe were rooted out, and cut off: It muft he quietly done, otherwife they will make fhift for both their men and their cattle : Argyle's detatchment lies in Letrickwell, to affift the garrifon to do all of a fudden :' And the other to Colonel Hill, which bears :. ' Prav, when the thing concerning Glenco is refolved, let it be fecret and. fudden, otherwife the men will fhift you ; and better not meddle with them than not to do it to purpofe, to cut off that neft of rob- bers who have fallen in the mercy of the law, now when there is . force and opportunity, whereby the King's juftice will be as confpi- cuous and ufeful as his clemency to others. I apprehend the ftorm is fo great, that, forfome time, you can do little; but, fo foon as pof- fible,! know you will be at work; for tljefe falfe people will do no- thing but as they fee you in a condition to do with them.' Sir Thomas Livingfton having got the King's inftrudions with Secretary Stair's- letter of the 1 6th of January, and kno;ying, by a letter he had from the Mafter of Stair, of the date the yth of January* 1692, that Lieu- tenant-coloael Hamilton was to be the man employed in the execu- tion AND LETTERS. 251 tion of the Glenco men, inpurfuance of the fecretary's letter, he writes to Lieutenant-colonel Hamilton, upon the 23d of the faid month of January, telling him, * That it was judged good news that Glenco had not taken the oath of allegiance within the time prefix- ed, and that Secretary Stair, in his lafl: letter, had made mention of him ;' and then adds, ' For, Sir, here is a fair occafion for you to fhow that your garrifon ferves for fome ufe ; and, feeing that the orders are fo pofitive from court to me, not to fpare any of them that have not timely come in, as you may fee by the orders I fend to your co- lonel, I defire you will begin with Glenco, and fpare nothing vs^hich belongs to him ; but do not trouble the government with prifoners ; as this letter produced by Lieutenant-colonel Hamilton bears.' And Sir Thomas being heard upon this letter, declared. That at that time he was immediately returned from his journey to London, and that he knew nothing of any foldiers being quartered in Glenco, and only meant that he fliould be profecuted as a rebel (landing out, by fair hoftility ; and in this fenfe he made ufe of the fame words and orders written to him by Secretary Stair. Thereafter, Colonel Hill gives his orders, to be direded to Lieutenant-colonel Hamilton, in thefe terms: 'Sir, you are, with 400 of my regiment, and the 400 of my Lord Argyle's regiment, under the command of Major Duncan- fon, to march ftraight to Glenco, and there put in due execution the orders you have received from the commander in chief. Given under my hand, at Fort-William, the 12th day of February 1692.' And ihis order is alfo produced by Lieutenant-colonel Hamilton. Then, the fame day. Lieutenant-colonel Hamilton wrote to Major Duncan- fon in thefe terms : ' Sir, purfuant to the commander in chief and my colonel's orders to me, for putting in execution the fervice againfl the rebels of Glenco, wherein you, with a party of Argyle's regiment, now under your command, are to be concerned j you are therefore to order your affairs fo, that you be at the feveral pofts affigned you, by feven of the clock to^iftotrow morning being Saturday, and fall in a£tion with them ; at which time I will endeavour to be with the party from this place at the poft appointed therti. It will be 1 i 2 nece.fary 252 STATE-PAPERS neceflary that the avenues minded by Lieutenant Campbell Oit the fouth fide be fecured, that the old fox, nor none of his cubs, get away. The orders are, that none be fpared, nor the govern- ment troubled with prifoners.' And the copy of this laft order is produced under Lieutenant-Colonel Hamilton's own hand. And> accordingly the Daughter of Glenco and his poor people did enfue the next morning, being the 13th of February 1692, in the man-; ner narrated. And, upon the whole matter, it is the opinion of the commiffioner, jirjl^ That it was a great wrong that Glenco's cafe, and diligence as to his taking the oath of allegiance, with Ardkinlafs's certificate of his taking the oath of alkgiance on the 6th of January 1692, and Colonel Hill's letter to Ardkin- lafs, and Ardkinlafs's letter to Colin Campbell fherifF-clerk, . for clearing Glenco's diligence and innocence, were not prefented to the Lords of his Majefty's privy council, when they were fent in to Edinburgh in the faid month of January ; and that thofe who' advifed the not prefenting thereof were in the wrong, and feem to; have had a malitious defign againft Glenco : And that it was a fur-* ther wrong, that the certificate as to Glenco's taking the oath of allegiance was delete and obliterate after it came to Edinburgh j and that being fo obliterate, it fhould neither have been prefented- to, or taken in by the clerk of the council, without an exprefs war- rand from the council. Secondly^ That it appears to have been known at London, and particularly to the Mafter of Stair, in the month of January 1692, that Glenco had taken the oath of alle- x giance, though after the day perfixed ; for he faith, in his letter of the 30th of January to Sir Thomas Livingfton, as above remarked*. • I am glad that Glenco'^came not in within the time prefcrib'd.^ Thirdly^ That there was nothing in the King's inftrudions to war- rand the committing of the forefaid flaughter, even as to the thing itfelf, and far lefs as to the manner of it j feeing all his inftrudions do^ plainly import, that the moft obftinate of the rebels might be received into mercy, upon taking the oath of allegiance, though the day was long before elapfed ; andthat he ordered nothing concerning Glen- co AND LETTERS. 253 «3 and his tribe; but that, if they could be well feparated from the reft, it would be a proper vindication of "the public juftice to extir- pate that fet of thieves; which plainly intimates, that it was his Majefty's mind, that they could not be feparated from the reft of thefe rebels, unlefs they ftill refufed his mercy, by continuing in arms and refufing the allegiance ; and that, even in that cafe, they were only to be proceeded againft in the way of public juftice, and no other way. Fotirthly, That Secretary Stair's letters, efpecially that of the nth of January 16(^2, in which he rejoices to hear that Glenco had not taken the oath, and that of the i6th of ^January, of the fame date with the King's additional inftrudions, and that of the 30th of the fame month, were no ways warranted by, but. quite exceeded the King's forefaid inftrudions. Since the faid let- ters, without any infmuation of any method to be taken that might : well feparate the Glenco men from the reft, did, in place of prefcri- bing a vindication of public juftice, order them to be cut off^, and rooted out in earneft, and to purpofe, and that fuddenly, and fecretly, and quietly, and all on a fudden ; which are the ex- prefs terms of the faid letters ; and, comparing them and the other; letters with what enfued, appear to have been the only warrant and caufe of their flaughter ; which in eff^edl was a barbarous murder, perpetrated by the perfons deponed againft. And this is yet far- ther confirmed by two more of his letters^ written to Colonel Hill after the flaughter committed, viz. on the 5th March 1692, where- in, after having faid that there was much talk at London, that the Glenco men were murdered, in their beds after they had taken the allegiance,, he continues, * For the laft I know nothing of it. I am fure neither you, nor any body im powered to treat or give in- demnity, did give Glenco the oath ; and, to take it from any body elfe, after the diet elapfed, did import nothing at all : All. that I re- gret is, that any of the fort got away; and there is. a neceffity to profecute them to the utmofl:.' And another from the Hague, the laft of April 1692, wherein he fays, ' For the people of Glenco, when you do your duty in a thing fo neceflary to ridd the country of thieving, , 254 STATE-PAPERS thieving, you need not trouble yourfelf to take the pains to vindicate yourfelf, by (hewing all your orders, which are now put in the Pari* Gazette : When you do right, you need fear nobody; AH that can be faid is, that, in the execution, it was neither fo full nor fo fair ag might have been.' And this, their humble opinion, the commiffioners, with all fubmiffion, return and lay before his Majefty, in difcharge of the forefaid commiffipn- Sicfubfcribiturt Xweedle; Annandale, now Marquis of Annandale, and Prefident of the Privy Council ; Murray, ' • now Duke of Athol, and Lord Privy Seal ; Ja. Stewart, her Majefty's Advocate ; Adam Cock- burn, late Lord Treafurer -depute ; W. Hamil- -■; ton ; Lord Whitelaw, one of the Lords of Sei- fion ; Ja. Ogilvie, now E. of Seafield, and Lord High Chancellor ; A. Drummond. Mr David Blair to Mr CARSTAREa. Of Church-affairs. Dr S I R, July 18. I wrote to you formerly under Mr Alexander Stevenfon's covers but know not if it has come to hand. I have delayed writing for fome time, becaufe things were long in dependence. The adjourn- ing of the general affembly but the very day before it fhould have fat, was very grievous to our minifters, who weire come in from all quarters ; and it was no eafy matter to get them quieted. Many of the more forward of them were for a prefent addrefs to his Ma- jefty ; but the more prudent prevailed with the reft to lay it afide • and, in liew thereof, to content them felves with giving fome me- moirs to the fecretary, who, I believe, has promired his utmoft en- deavours, that the day to which it is adjourned in November next may be punctually kept. They were alfo earneft with him, that there 1695, AND LETTERS. 255 , there may be annual affemblies according- to law ; which I hope now will not be fo uneafy to be obtained, after the adt that pafled on July 1 2th concerning the church, wherein there lies no obliga- tion upon the eftablifhed church to take in to minifterial communion with them, any of the late prelatical incumbents ; but only civil pro- teftion to fuch of them as fhall qualify themfelves civilly, &c. So that one great advantage gained by that aft, is the pulling out the thorn out of the minlfters foot, and out of forae bodies elfe too, if I am not much miftaken. The a£t pafled the very day after the aflembly fhould have fat : Had it paflTed fooner in the beginning of the par- lament, the aflembly might have fat, iti my poor judgement, with- out detriment to any interefl: : And I believe in mine own mind, that the uncertainty we were all in, how that a£t was to be framed- and contrived, might have been one of the reafons why none pref- fed me to write to you, for ufing your utmofl: endeavour towards the premptory fitting of the aflTembly, (as in fome cafes forntierly they had been accufl;omed to do) ; at leafl:, this is my conjecture. . AH were wifhing, and fome were hoping that it would fit ; but, as I have faid, none were inftant and prefling. It was pity to fee the mi- nifl:ers flocking in from all parts ; and, in the mean time, their ad- verfaries flouting at them for having lofl; their labour ; and yet more pity to hear the poor minifters faying, they durfl: not go home to their congregations, efpecially in the fouth-wefl; parts, where Mf Hepburn wifl triumph over them for what he will call their unfaith- fulnefs, and will be in a ready way to draw away people from hearing them : But I hope there will be no fuch-occafion hereafter. On the other hand, it was fome piece of fatisfadion to fee pragmatical Crevie, the ringleader of the protefters of the north, deprived by the authority of parliament, and confined to this fide of Forth. As to civil aff"airs, I have nothing to fay, fave that I am glad that things went not in a higher ftrain than they did ; and that in heaving at fome perfons, there was not a mere defire preferred without ren- dering areafoa; for, as you know, I came to underftand, fome while ago,. 256 S T A T E - P A P E U S ago, that, if crimes were laid to the charge of any, and could be made out before the judge competent, that would give offence to no body, God make all well, as Sir John Scot faid to the King. Adieu. tHoCKBURN of Ormifton, Lord Juftice-clerk, toMrCARSTARES. ■ Of fome hot Words betivixt Argyle and himfelf upon the yUbjeSl of Glenco. Other quarrels among the Statefmen. Public Tranj- ■adiions. S I R, 'Edinburglj, I have your's of the i ith ; but that of the former poft you men- Jiiy 23- tion muft be in the hands of thofe have taken a flying packet co- ming for the fecretary from London. I'm glad of one thing, they will fee you ftill own yourfelf to be my friend ; and all the lying Hories they are able to fend abroad have not hindered that far our correfpondence. There is nothing I love worfe then to chafe clafh- es. You had account of what I met with from Kilmarnock; and when I tell you that Argyle, publickly in parliament, challenged me to alk fatisfadlion which way I pleafed, when he refledted on the whole commiffion of Glenco ; for the reft, he faid, he would not refle£t on them ; but for that gentleman (meaning me) who thought himfelf refleded on, he. fliould have fatisfadion which way he pleafed. This, and other flafhes, I have borne ; but do not think •me fee ; only my moderation hath at this time appeared ; though I hear it's all one whether it had or not ; but foitis not with myfelf • for I have peace. This day Anftruthar tells me, he has been very- angry with Mr H. Dalrymple, who told him, he had a return from his brother to that he wrote, of fome heated words paft be- tween Anftruther and the fecretary in parliament ; and that the King and my L. Portland knew of it, as they did of other fuch things ; and they would do a great deal of good : So Anftruther is upon the writing over, that Secretary Johnfton and. he were never f© AND LETTERS. 257 ■fo well, the fecretary having acknowledged he had fpoke too warm- ly ; and I know they have been dining at others lodgings. Now, if a heated word do a man's bufinefs, true or f alfe, why not mine for the fecond time ? Your Friends the Melvills and Anftruthers are like to break the bond of alliance ; only Anftruther feems to be caften off with ■ his new gift of Fyfe, having which Caffengray had. Raith told him brilkly, he fliould not get it through neither treafury nor exchequer; and Linlithgow told him, he would not get a quorum of the treafury to fign it ; for they behosred to keep to Melvill, for he has keept to them. The church-a£t, the levy-a£t, the continuing the fupplies, the moderation of theaddrefs,and the forbear- ing the Vifc. of Stairs, are the greateft inftances of refpe£t to his Ma- jefty has been fhown of a long time; and I'm fure more than was ex- pected ; and may well allow the few days fitting after the firft allow- ance. It might a beenexpeded the parliament ftiould a written a let- ter to the K. at their riling : It was fpoke of among fome members ; but there appeared fuch a difpofition to explain their former letter, that it coft fome folks pains to get it diverted at this time. Had I been revengeful, I had fair opportunities when my Lady Argyle's pe- tition came twice in. I'm going to the country, and fhall there ex- peft that fentence is faid to be prepared for my friend and myfelf. ,1Say what they will, neither of us are Jacobites. Farewell. jSir James Ogilvy, afterwards Earl of Seafield, to Mr Car- stares. proceedings in Parliament iviih refpeSi to Glenco 'vindicated. ' The Part he a£ied. The Strength of the Party nvith ivhicb he is engaged. '*' Dear Sir, I have your's of the 27th of June; we long for good news from Edinburgh, your camp; and particularly, we are apprehenfive of our countrey- ^3^ July' men, that they will have their fhare of the prefent danger. Our '^^^' parliament is now almoil over. I know endeavours will be ufed to K. k mlfre- 258 STATE-PAPERS mifreprefent our proceedings ; but, when duly cojifidercd, I am hope- ful the King will be fatisfied. As to the Earl of Breadalbine, we will not proceed agalnft him ; it will be left to the King to order about him what he pleafes. The Mr of Stair is indeed loaded to purpofe; but thereby the King is moft juftly relieved of all the a- fperfiohs railed in that affair of Glenco ; and I doubt not the Mr, letters, and our votes, both in the commiffion and parliament, when compared, will juftify us, that we have proceeded impartially. And here I cannot but fay, that our carrying fo great a plurality in par- liament againft an fecretary of ftate, an Lord of the treafury, and an prefident of the feffibn, may convince any body,.both of the ftrength. of our party,, and that there was ground for what is done. I moft tell you,' that all will bear me witnefs I have adled an moderate part in all this ; and, when its over, and reprefcnted to his Majefty, I will be ordered by his Majefty as to the method of ferving him, as is my duty. I wifh he may get good advice ; and I am fure he will have it from you. I wi£h moderate methods be taken ; and that mode- rate men meet with due encouragement. Our party, if weal with the court, is able to ferve the King to his fatisfaflion'. Neither can it be propofed, that all the other party be run down : All the alte- ration neceffary may foon be found out; but I am afraid the King: may be mifinformed. It is now a proper time for you to do good to your country. Honeft men expe£ts your affiftance ; and miftake will foon go over. You know the King has been much troubled iboiit our church-matters ; but now we have prolonged the time to the minifters for taking the oaths ; and thofe take them are declared to be under his Majefty 's full protedion within their churches. The fubfidies are near finifhed. We will make the time of conti- nuance as long as poflible we can. I wifti God preferve the King to us ; it is the lefs matter whom he employ. Give my humble duty to my Lord Portland : I am entirely his Lordfliip's fervant. I wriet to you in great confidence, and I doubt not your friendfliipj and, were I capable, to ferve you, I would think it my happinefs; for I am moft fincerely your's. Dear Sir, Adieu. ' Alex- A N D L E T T E R S. 255 Alexander Johnston to Mr Carstares. Of a falfe Alarm concerning the King^s Death. SIR, Lately I had nothing worth writing, which I defired Mr Pringle Auguft 16. to tell you, as the caufeof my filence; but, when the laft three Dutch ' ^^' maills came together on Wednefday laft, nothing could he more feafonable and acceptable. It was thus, upon Saturday laft, in the morning, I received feven or eight advertifements, that the Jacobites were exceedingly uppifti, and boafted among themfelves, that God Almighty had deftroyed their enemies, and reftored the righteous King, (King James, as they called him) ; and that he would be here immediately without oppofition. This quickened me; whereupon I acquainted fome minifters at the helm therewith, that they might ufe their endeavours, as I would ufe mine, to find out the bottom of it. Upon Sunday laft, I had reports from nine inftruments (not one knowing of the other) I had put on the fcent the night be- fore : They feemed to be all agreed in fubftance, (though they dif- fered in many circumftances), that, not only the bulk of the Jaco- bites, but alfo, the moft cautious and moft prudent of them, that our gracious King was killed in a battle, and his army deftroyed, by the French in Flanders. You may judge my thoughts and fears then. Three Dutch maills being then due, I communicated this too, and it was verified on all hands here. Then I fet my folks to find" out the root from which all this fprung; particularly, to know whether -any exprefs or intelligence was come from France bearing it particu- larly. I employed three perfons fitt and capable to reach the fecret tranfaaions of that party, being trufted by them. Monday night I was pretty well affured that no fuch exprefs or intelligence was come from France, my people having been in fix or feven meetings of the moft adlive Jacobites, and npt one of them knowino- the fe- cret, though they all pretended it to be true; and fome of them ^ ^ 2 curled 26o STATE-PAPERS curfed the concealers, as thereby loofing the beft opportunity to rife in arms, and fhow themfelves in the field. The moft cool and wife among them advifed patience, and not to attempt any thing rafhly. Upon Tuefday laft all was as it were in a flame ; that whok party (and many more) were confident of the truth of thefe reports ; which was confirmed by the not coming of the three Dutch maills, nor one of them. I never faw fuch an univerfal confternation and con- luiion of the honeft loyal party; and, on the contrary, nothing but mfolence and impudence was to be feen in the words and a£lions of- the Jacobite party. I hope never to fee the like again. That night,' , (Tuefday laft,) I gave a little hint of this to Mr Pringle, and then I flayed abroad all night, ftitl receiving the accounts my people brought in to me; which aflured me, that a day or two would pro- duce fome extraordinary and defperate attempt made by that party ; but, God be praifed, next morning brought in the three Dutch ftiaills, (the laft is of the ^t) which reftored us to life, and funk the other party into defpair. When 1 had perufed my letters^ three of which were from you, I returned to my folks, and defired them ta obferve the countenances, words, and actions of that party, as nar- rowly as they poffibly couM, and to let me know what they learnt at night; when accordingly we met, arid L found that party mad at their own folly, in being fo credulous and eafily impofed on. I found alfo, that many of them had wrote to ali their friends in this king- dom, to be in readinefs, and aflbring them of the truth of thefe re- ■ ports. And, particularly, I learnt that many letters to this purpofe were fent to Scotland the laft Tuefday 's poft. I communicate this toa to the government ; and that I thought it very fit to fend off a fly- ing packet to my brother, with an account what had happened' here, and with the news and letters of the three Dutch maills; which would contradidt thefe falfeftories ; artd alfo, on a further de- fign, if poffible, to catch all the Tuefday's letters when they came to Edinburgh. This flying packet, being fpeedier than the ordinary poft, would be 40 hours at leaft before the Tuefday'is ordinary poft would come to Edinburgh; by which means the fpreading infe concerted an aflbciatipn, and were very forward in having it pafs^ without fo much as acquainting me, though it was known I was. to 25, Secretary Johnfton. Mr Wood, Sir J3. Ogilvjr. AND LETTERS. 285 to return very foon to this place. The bringing it in after the ap- prehenfions of the invafion feems to be over, is not fo proper as at firft ; but the making any leagues or bonds, without the King's ex- prefs warrant and allowance firft obtained, is treafon by our law, and is declared to be the King's undoubted right, and. his alone; which does fufficiently anfwer all reafons can be given to enter in- to it before his Majefty was acquainted ; which I muft own I main- tained in council, being particularly obliged in the poft I am, that fuch preparatives be not made ; in which I have differed with fomc, and in other things wherein I judge they are too forward : But per- haps I may be blamed by them for not being fo ; but I doubt not; to have you to take my part, fince your's was the fame. I am Your afFe£tionate friend to ferve you, (Signed) J. Murray., Argyle to Mr Carstares. Vindicates his private CharaSler from fame Afperfions. — His Reajons- for taking his t-wo Daughters from their Mother. — Of the Draught for fin AJfociation. I received your's dated the 24th inftant. I need fay little in. re- Edinburjrh, turn to the firft part of your letter ; feveral matters having inter- March 30. veenedj of which you have had daily accounts, acquainting you what lengths we had gone as to the claffing of people ; but I believe it were neceifary the King's mind were known as to the executing thofe rules ftrickly or not. As to what you fay in relation to my- felf, and my own particular behaviour, I take it very kindly of you. I know it is the effed of your friendfhip and concern in my per- fon, befides my family. I do affure you, my carriage fhall be fuch as I fhall give no juft caufe of fcandal or offence ; though I know fome makes it their bufinefs fomuch to render me criminal, and at kail cenfurable, even where is the leaft ground, that, whilft I am burdened 286 S T A T E - P A P E R S ^burdened with the error of the firft concoiaion, I need fcarce hope to be free of cenfure ; fliould I lock myfelf up in a cage, daily they will be hatching fomething. There is one thing I know will be clamoured againft, that I have fent my two daughters home to Rof- neath, de%ning to take the charge of them myfelf. My reafons for fo doing are, fince they are mine, and that I am bound to pro- vide for them, none can blame. I wifh a:nd endeavour that they be bred up with all duty and love to me, as their father ; which I can- not expe£l in the circumftances they have been^in hitherto, living with a mother in thofe terms with nie, and who never in her life Ihowed them either the example of good nature, or diity to their parent ; and who always carries -herfelf to her children to an ex- tream on fide or t'other, by too much fondnefs, or too much fe- verity. They are coming up to an age in which its prefumable ;they will receive impreflions ; and I have not forgot the Latin, * Quo feniel eft imbuta,' &c. But, above all, my chief reafon is, 'She having had lately the charge of her lifter Douns's daughter, fome years older than any of mine, fhe did encourage her in things I would not for all the world be guilty of, wher a parent efpeci*- ally, which was, to encourage her to wriet little billett-dues and let- ters to Carnwath, Sir George Lockhart's foft and heir ; and by the -company fhe kept by her example, as the Countefs of Forfar, Nan- ny Murray, &c. fhe had like to a been quite ruined; and came to that length of impudence, that, dancing with Carnwath in the dancing- fchool, fhe fqueezed his band. All which the youth told ; and the girl was fent for home. As you are my undoubted friend, I give you the trouble of all this, though I hope the envious world them- felves muft acknowlege a father can difpofe of his children. This is defigned to go by a flying packet, with a draught of an aflbciation, wherein the Advocate, D. Queenfberry, and myfelf, are conferted by L. Murray ; fo you may think there is a difference be- twixt market-days. This is offered in cafe the word ajfociation goes any length in his Majefly's inclinations ; and fince, without a parlia- ment, no fuch matter can be forced, the eafier it be, the better ; that generally AND LETTERS. 287 generally it may be complied with, if any fuch thing be refolved upon. I hear the turn our oppofites gives it is, ' That becaufe the pretended Prince of Wales was named, others diflented ;' but fure I am its falfe. I am told Lockhart demits, and will not go to Flanders, though he will make a fliow of it, to baulk my brother Charles's pretences, who was, by his Majefty's gracious promife to me, was to have his troop on his quitting it. Pray, mind Sir James of this ; with my fervice to him. I am your's. Adieu. OrMISTON to MrCARSTARES.. Of a Bond drawn up by the Wejlern Shires. They "would make an Army of 40,000 Men^ and therefore not to be flighted. State of Parties.— — Epifcopal Meetings Nejls of DifaffeHion. . SIR, I have none of your's fmce my laft. I gave an account by the Edinburgh^ exprefs yefternight, how that the people of the weftern fhires were March 31, inclined to aflbciate, and had drawn up a bond, with an addrefs to his Majefty, expreffing all affedlion and zeal for his peribn and go- vernment ; but, in their great concern for the prefent church-efta- blifhment, they had likewife mentioned that in their bond and ad- drefs ; but, becaufe it was a needlefs diftindion, at this time, to di- vide them from many others, who, I hope, are equally concerned in this common caufe of our King and countrey's prefervation, I expunged thefe words ; and withal defired that they might forbear to proceed haftily in this matter, untill the King's mind were known, fmce the council had thought fit to flop the bond that they intended, and reprefent firft to his Majefty. But this confirms me ftill the more, that our bond of aflbciation had better not been men- tioned, than ftop, when fo far proceeded ; and yet it is mofl: certain, that it had notftopt, if it had not been^ out of tendernefs to his Ma- jefty's i88 STATE-PAPERS jefty's prerqgative. Some men may fay, that even an aflbciatlon of this nature may be dangerous, and of bad example, and might give this excefs in the weftern bond for an inftance; but, fi nee they keept Within compafs of law, though not of prudence, this argument ■fliould be of no weight at this time ; cfpecially when they are fo tradable, and we have fo much need of animating things ; for they tell me, that they could make about forty thoufand men. I wrote al- foabout money far arms; and that arms might be provided. And all I fay ta^^ou is, let not the Weft be jealoufed, but by ail means encouraged. As for your private affairs ; Mr Dawfon is in an intimate under- flanding with 21, which I hope fhall do well. Mr Chambers is ve- ry fober ; only this day Mr Harris and Mr Cameron were like to he a little warm, but it foon paft over. 93 Is gone out of town, but has promifed to mind Carfe his defire. I forgot to tell you, that thefe that were moft forward for the aiTociation have got up a mark of a blew ribbond ; but, though I impute it to their zeal, yet, in fo good and general a caufe, I like not any diftindion, but wifh all may be for it ; which is the befl mark. The difTenting miniflers that preach in Edinburgh are moft of them taken up hy the coun- cil's order. The field-meetings formerly -were called • the rende- vous of rebellion ;' and I affure you, the conventicles now in Edin- burgh are * the nefts of difaffedion.' And therefore, as far as law -will go, I wifh them all banifhed out of town. Remember my ^rmer defires to you for my two friends. Adieu. Lord Daivjbn, Ormifton. 21, Lord Murray. Mr Chambers, the council. Mr Harris, chancellor. Mr Camfrcn, E. Leven. 93, Sir James Maxwell. Carfs, Mr Carftairs. AND LETTERS. aSg Lord Argyle to Mr Carstares. imputes the Wejlern Bond, &c. to the noble Drunken Patriots., An- nandale, Tejier., and Sir Thomas Livingjon, when met at a Drun- ken Club. — Againd renewing the Covenant ^ though a good Pref- byterian. * Since I wrlet the inclofed, the fecretary having alked the advo- March 31, at cate's opinion as to the fending up fuch a draught ofan aflbciation as I mention in my letter, he was pofitively of the opinion that it was not proper to offer any, but leave all before his, Majefty. We underftand furthei-, that this affociation propofed by them was a concerted thing ; for, in the countrey, they have already met, and figned a paper, by which, upon the matter, they renew the cove- nant. And, as a further mark of diftindion, thofe noble drunken patriots, E. Annandale, L. Yefter, and Sir Thomas Livingftone, at a drunken club, refolved the wearing a blew knot of ribbons in the- c >:k of their hatt; and owns that it will difoblige, if people follow n ;*. thti,- ciample. I confefs, I cannot think the King will approve of thofe narks ol dIflin(3:ion, it being a means to make divifions, and not heai t'uem. And, as to thofe aifociations in the country, I think, fuppofe one here for renewing the covenant, it is moft improper at this t)-me. I acknowledge I incline not the length, though I am prefbyterian. What I fay is wriet in the Duke of Queenfberry's ^prefence, fo may ferve for his Grace's writing. Pray,' remember my brother Charles,; for Lockhart has depitted. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Of his Brother Charles. — Sir Thomas Livingjlon intends to, reprefent him as a 'Jacobite. I muft earneftly defire 'you will acquaint E. Portland of my pre*- Edinburgli, ^enfions for my brother Charles ; for I am certainly informed, not- ''^■^P"'- O o withftanding 290 STATE-PAPERS withftanding Captain Lockhart has demitted, Sir Thomas intends ta mifreprefent my brother, as being a Jacobite, and' what not ; all which is moft falfe. I think his being ray father's fon, my brothee and I engaging for him, it is fecurity enuf. I am much concerned in this matter ; and pray be earneft init. This night, E. Melvin, E, Breadalbine, Vifcount Tarbat, are all arrived. I am your's. A- dieu. Pleafe to read the inclofed, and feal it. Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Againjl a Militia^ as hiirthenfome^ and of little Ufe. — -Hints at his being negleSiedin the Management of Affairs.- — State of Parties.. SIR, Edinburgh I have little to add to what I have written. We have been thefe ^P"' ^' two days upon a fcheme of drawing out the half of thefoot-militiai which makes ten thoufand; but, when a committee had prepared it, the council could not this day comply with it; for the countrey hath fo often found the burden .of this militia, and are fo little fatisfied with the advantage of it, that very few have any liking to it. . The propofal moft likely is, that the fenfible men of the Weft fhould be armed and trained : That the well afFe£ted chiftaines and leaders of the Highlands Ihould be ordered to arm and train their men, and have them in readinefs : And that, if there be any militia, it be on- ly of foot, on the fouth fide of Tay. L told the Secretarie laft poft, that I was welt fatisfied with the diligence had been ufed in impri- foning but that no difcoveries were to be expect- ed from me, fincelwas neither acquainted with the.caufe, nor call- ed to the examination of any imprifoned ; which, though it be odd as to my ftation, yet I miftake it not, fince I believe it is better done. As to your own bufinefs ; Mr Hamilton does very well; but he cannot enter' in par tnery with, 27 0137, fi"ce Mr Dawfbn inclines AND LETTERS. 291 Inclines it not, but likes to trade by himfelf, afluming only Mr Erfkine, without fo much as owning Mr Hume in thefe matters ; and Mr Mofman plainly declines even civilities with Mr Hamilton ; but 32 'promifes to do all he can to keep them well together. I af- fure you 58 behaves well, honeftly, and impartially ; and I heartily wifh that fomething could be done for both Mr Black and Mr Steu- ■art, for I think it would be to good purpofe. 32 is very well with 27 ; but the difpleafure for Mr Wood's affairs ^ftranges hitherto more then fhould be. The council will be to-morrow on the mili- tia; but I think it will not conclude. I wifh Mr Whyte may fettle Chambers and his concerns, for. it depends too long. My Lord Belhaven remembers you kindly, and deferves to be remembered. I am your's,' Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Sends a Paper ivith a Vieiv of the late Proceedings. Complains loudly of Annandale and his Party. Solicits for his Father's PJace as Extraordinary Lord ofSeffion, Lays great firefs up- on Mr Carfiares's Friend/hip in it. SIR, I would write more frequently to you, if, both I had not been fo Edinburgh, very ill for fome time paft of a cholic in my ftomach that I could ^/"^ '+ write none at all, and that I knew any thing I had to fay was fup- plied by my Lord Argyle's writing. I know that, long before this comes to your hands, you have got full accounts of our proceedings here, yet I have fent you inclofed a paper, which will give you a more particular view of them than I can write ; which at your lei- fure you may read, and make what ufe you think proper of it. I am very forry to fee fome who are trufted by the King ferve him with fuch fier and faction, that, I confefs, except his Majefty be jAeafed to fhoe diftinguifliing marks of his difpleafure againft them, it will be impoflibje for men of honour aad quality to ferve the King O O 2 V.uh 292 STATE-PAPERS with that equal temper they incline to. Among thofe fiery people^ my Lord Annandale is now arrived to that height, that its impof- fible to be in any judicature or fociety with him. He is abfolutely given up to fadion and divifion ; and I believe, by his hot humour, he miift think to attone for his other faults. I have already dif- courfed with you fo fully upoh my defire of having rhy father's place in the feiTion, that now I think it rieedlefs to ufe any argu- ments to induce you to mind it ; but I write to none elfe of it ; and am confident it will not be forgot by you at this time, which feems to be the moft proper. I fliall be glad to hear from you, for I have a great regard for your advices, and hopes you will as frequently as you think fit afi'ord them to, SIR, Your real friend, and fervant, (Signed) Queensberry,, Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Inveighs bitterly againfl the Oppofition. Renews his Sollicitations- for his Father'' s Place. SIR, Edinburgh, j wrote a lettet to you fome time ago.e, which Ihould have come to 1696. your hands on Monday was feven-night, and having heard nothing from you of it, I am jealous it may be mifcarried ; which I fhould be forry for, having at that time writ freely Jto you of feveral per- fons and thinges ; and I know that trickes about letters are now pra£tifed : So I defire yow to fatisfye me whether you haver got it or not; and, if not, that you would endeavour to dif- cover what way it has mifcarried. • I wifh, before the King goes over, fiich meafiires may be taken as would prevent the confufion that muft neceffarily fall out in his fervice here, if perfones be continued AND LETTERS. ^93 (x>ntlnued that preferre ther own piques, and ferving their animo- fities, to his Majefties intereil and the good of the countrey : The remedie is eafie; and the confequence wold be, that buffineffe wold be done without ftryfFe and contention; which is very de- firable. I rnoft intreat you to mind my pretenfipn to my father's place in the feffion, before the King's parting : I need not tell you any arguments for it; thefe you know fufficiently already: All I aim at in the thing is, to have an occafion of improving myfelf to be more able to ferve his Majefty. And, if it be denyed me, people may juftly think the King has no great inclinations to have Lis fervice done by me; which I {hall be far from thinking, having very good ground to relye upon his Majefty's favour and goodnefs to me. I doe not think it worth giving my Lord Portland the trouble of writeing to him, at a time when I am fure he has fo much bufmefs to doe; but, if yow will let it fall to him, I hope he will notrefufe me hisconcurrance; and aflure him, from me, (with my moft humble fervice,) that I- would rather owe the obligation to him than any other perfon. My Lord Argyll is now in the Highlands, and I believe will not be here the firft councill-day; but, if any thing fall out worth noticing, you fhall know it from.. me. So this is all at prefent, but that I am fincerely, SIR, Your real friend and fervant, (Signed) Queensberrie,. Lord Murray to Mr Carstares.- OJmy Lord Portland's Arrvval. Of Injlru6lions to him as Com-- mi/fioner; which be defires Mr Carjiares to get figned^ and fent after him.— Expe£is Mr Carjiares tvill reprefent things fairly to the King, SIR, I have your's of the 20th, and this morning of the 23d. Indeed, July 28*' my Lord .Portland's coming was a furprife, and made enemies conjecture ©94- STATE-PAPERS •conjeflure much news ; which are already evanifliing. I believe his chief bufinefs is to provide money, for the King, in which I hope he will havefuccefs. HisLordfhip could not have received my letter ; but having fent all the papers to Mr Pringle, they might be filled up; in which I doubt not. your affiftance. If they are not done already, I defire they may as foon as can be, and fent after me. I take jour- ney, if pleafe God, to-morrow. I have fpoke to-day concerning the inftrudtions to my Lord Portland, which I had inclofed in my laft; he writes to night about them to the King : So I hope they will follow foon._ I fhall write what further will be defired, after I am in Scot, where you fhall be welcome, if you thiiik fit to come; or, if you fl;ay, I know you will reprefent things that is done fairly ; for I know we will have all the mifreprefentations invented that's pof- iible; which I know you will prevent; for I expe 120, 2b5, b59, ajt; otherways it is needlefs. The Advocate to Mr Carstares.. Of Injuftice done him by Lord Tiillibardine. — Of Lord Teviot's- Patent. SIR, Edinburgh, I have your's from the Hague very acceptable. I fee you have- May II. |g£^ friends at London very well. I am infinitely obliged to your friend ; and, though I know not particulars, yet am forry that other mens injuftice fliould occafion him any trouble on my behalf; but the King is a wife and good mafter, and him I do and will ferve> and give as little occafion or offence to others as pofllble. I hear that the E. of Tullibardine Was to part from London to Scotland laft week, and that Secretary Ogilvie was to part yeflrerday or this day. I hope we fhall meet all well in June ; and I heartily wifli we may- have both peace abroad and quiet at home. I think Vifcount Teviot's. aff'airs about the patent will quickly evanifti ; for I am toW that he hath writ as much under his hand as that he was content the title of Peebles were changed. I only wifh it may be as foon for- got. Your friend Mr Nell is well in the country, an honeft, modeft, firm man. When any thing occurs, you may exped ft) hear from your's moft fincerely. Earl AND LETTERS. t99 Earl of Marchmont, Lord Chancellor, to Mr Car- stares. Mis Son haves his Bride^ that he might join the Army before ASlion. — Begs he may befent back. S I R, You will perhaps be furprifed to fee my fon there again an unmar- Poiwartii- •1 TT- r^jT , rr-rrv , ^oufe. May ried man. He. is contracted ; but there was a neceluty or lendmg the 22. 1697. contrads into Ireland, to get the hands to them of thefe friends who, by her father's will, muft confent for eftablifhing her portion. Juft as they were fent, the news came of the befieging of Aeth, and the motion of the army's tending to a£tion ; which took fo much upon my fon, that there was no difTwading him from coming prefently over to his poft. I confefs I think it harder to leave a bride one is fo much in love of, than a new-married wife. But I perceive the point of honour is very weighty. I have written to my noble friend the E. of Portland to tell the King of this matter, and to requeft his Majefty for me, that, fo foon as his convenience and fervice can admit it, he will allow my fon to come back and marry his bride. I know you can confider the young maid's cafe, , who likes her choice ; and I doubt not youT will put my Lord Port- land in remembrance to obtain my fuit, as has been your kind cu- • Horn to, SIR, Your obliged friend, and humble fervant, (Signed) Marchmont. Earl 3=^2 STATE-FAPERS Earl of SEAFiELDto Mr Carstares. X)/ Lord William Douglas'' s Patent Annandale at the bottom of its being Jlopped Tullibardine's dijfatisfa^ton ivith Seafield .and Mr Carjiares. SIR, ^dlnburgh, \ have received your's of the 20th of this month; and ,1 am i6g^. very much troubled to hear that my Lord Portland has been ille : Non Vifhes his recovery and hapinefs more then I doe; and intreat you may give him my moft humble fervice, I have endeavoured, as much as is in my power, to keep the Duke of Queenfberry fure and moderate in that affair of his brothers; but he and all his friends doe, with impatience, exped, that' the King will order the paifing of Lord William's patent. I judge it needlefs, now, to give you any furder -information conc'erning it ; for before now I think it is at an end. Mr Pringle does write, that, by the next packet, I may expe£t the letter difpatched which 1 fent over: And now I underftand more fully that my Lord Anandale has been at the bottom of this matter. He is juft now at Dumfreis, where his new commiflioners of affeflment are to be received. This is an affair will certainly occafion us trouble; however, I fhall doe what I can to prevent it. I believe 20 writes more fully of this to you this night. I underftand that 106 is intirely diffatisfyed with 47 and ' 119, becalife of Bailie Brand's affairs; for he thought them the principall caufe of profecuting of it ; and it feems he had a greater concern in it then he defyred fhould be known. He fpoke mofl malicioufly of them both to 20 ; but efpecially of 47. So I hope 33 will take care to let his defignes be underftood, leaft what he informs may doe prejudice. 133 is gone to the countrey; and ther can be nothing done as yet in the King's affairs ; for neither the chancellour nor the Lords of Theafurie are in town : And our firfl to6, Tullibardine. 47, Mr Carftares. 119, Seafield. 20, Advocate. 33, Mr Carftares. 133, Tullibardine. AND- LETTERS. 303 firft councill-day will be upon the eight of the next Month. I have no time to write much this night, but fliall endeavour to write more fully by the next poft. I am your moft humble fervant. Sir Robert Murray to Mr Carstares.. Of the African Company.. — Secretaries blamed, Both Nations en-*- raged. — L. 4000 the Bribe. SIR, X All our expectations are from your fide ; there is little or nothing May'ig^ here worth your knowlege. There is much talk of the Scots Eaft- ' India-company's affairs with the Hamburgers; by fomethefecreta-- ries are much blamed ; the Englifh talk angrily one way, and the Scots as angrily the other. You know whence the origo mali was ; but four thoufand pound is a good reward for putting two nations by the ears. The preliminaries will never make fatisfa£tion for the bad confequences this is like to have. I am forry to hear that the Earl of Portland is ill; when you write to. me, let me know how he does. I am now going for Scotland ; I fhall part this next week. You will do me a gjreat favour to let me hear from you when I am there ; dire£t y.our letters for, me, to be. left with Baillie Murray at Edinburgh : If there be any thing of moment I fhall give you the trouble of a line. I have the great fatisfadion to have Mrs Carftairs here with me. My little chife and his governor are here likeways, whofe company would have been more acceptable at another time, left we (through his trouble) pay not thofe refpeds to Mrs Carftares we would. The Earl of Arran is your true friend ; of which you fhall know more after. We long to know what progrefs the peace makes ; and what we may exped this fummer. If there be any thing that I can ferve you in when in Scotland, do me: the favour to lay 30a S T' A T E - P A P E R S lay your command's on me; and none fhall ferve you more fincerelf than, S I 11, . ^ ^ Your mod humble fervant, (Signed) Robert Murray. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Duke of ^eensberry fatisfied 'with ivhat the King has done in his Brother's Affair. — Portland has a great many Friends in Scotland. SIR, Eabburgh, ' The Duke of Queenfberry is very fenfible of the juftice done hira ,^697. ' in his brother's affair, and to whom he owes it. He did very fully exprefs himfelf to me on this occafion ; and he fubmits to his Ma- jefty to do what further he pleafesfor the difcouraging of heats and fadion. We are all in great peace here at prefent, none of the ju^ dicatories having met fince I came, except the feffion, which did meet this day ; and all that was done was, to admit James Hamil- ton one of their clerks. The council does not meet till the eight ; and then I believe we fhall be fully conveened. I hope there will be no more debeat concerning Lord William's affair. We fhall go on with diligence to bring our threafury affairs to fome order ; and I hope there will not be great difHculty in the doing of it. I have much need to be in the country ; but, feeing it will be of ill ex- ample to others, if I fhould prefer my own affairs to the King's, I am refolving to attend ; and therefore has fent for my wife and fa- mily. My Lord Fountainhall is chofen prefident for the firft fort- night. I will not write of any particular bufinefs this night, for I have had but little time ; only, you will deliver the inclofed to my Lord Portland. He has many true fervants in this place. A- dieu. Pray AND LETTER S. 30^ Pray continue to write every poft ; it is great fatisfadion to us, were it but to hear that the King is well ; for, fo long as it is fo, we will not be difcouraged. My Lord D. of Qj^ would think himfelf fully repaired, if his brother were made a privy-councellour. You will foon know if this is the fit time to move in it or not. A- dieu. Earl ofTuLLiBARDiNE to Mr Carstares. Of an Office Mr Car [lares ivas folliciting for one nvhom he had recom- mended. — My Lord Portland has retired to Brujfels. Kind SIR, ^ Laft night I came home from tlie Bath, &c. where have been for Londoa, three weeks or more; and, being facrament-day next Lord's-day, i^g^^,'^' have not been in the city this day to fee Mr Howe. Your two letters to me (very welcome to both) my wife conveyed to him, and fcnt me an account of them to theBath. I hope he wrote you his thanks, as Inow do mine, for your friendly care and diligence in that affair. Mr Hook is an honeft man ; and I wifh no worfe may have it ; but the place is fo confiderable, that, if I had thought my Lord Chancellor would not oppofe it, I would have urged for a nearer friend of mine, whofe name you mention in your's, and I have of- ten to you. I ftill doubt my Lord C 's recommendation of him, though you have done your part faithfully, and in a manner very obliging; and I could not refufe to join with Mr H. when earneft- ly requefted. Pray, affure my Lord of my humble duty, if you have a fair opportunity. I fhall now write you, in a poft or two, more fully. I was forry to hear, by the public prints, of my Lord P.'s retiring to Bruflells, on the account of his bodily indifpofition. I pray God give a happy event to the great things depending upon Qjl what So6 STATE-PAPERS what is done in Flanders this fummer. I pray God watch over f he- King's life, and fucceed him, &c. keep you in his love, and en- able me to ferve and pleafe him. I am, with refpedt and afFedion,^ your's. Sir James Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Aithjiill Jlands out. Lord Portland preferred. SIR, Edmburgh, I have received your's of the 27th of the laft month. It is very June 5. good Aeth ftands out fo long; for, before the French can make any further attempt, I hope the A h and Germans will have joined- his Majefty's army. And then I hope there will be no more dan- ger. We have no news here. The council is to meet on Tuefday^ next ; and then the letter in favours of Lord William Douglas will be prefented ; and I believe there will be no oppofition to it. I could write you forae accounts that would be fatisfying ; but I will make ufe of my cyphers by my next, and at prefent only defire yoUi to continue to write to, SIR, 1 Your moft humble fervant, (Signed) J a. Ogilvie.. I give my moft humble fervice to the Earl of Portland, and am, heartily glad of his preferment. Sir AND LETTERS. 307 Sir James Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Lord Mar, FCelburn, and Sir Patrick Murraj, admitted Privy-coun- cellars. — Militia,-~~Begs Mr CarJIares to fupport him againji Tul~ libardine. SIR, , ^ This afternoon the council did meet; which is the firft time fi nee Edinburgh, I came to this place. The Earl of Marr, Keilburne, and' Sir Patrick ^^^^^ ^' 1097. Murray, were admitted counfellors. The Earl of Annandale and the Juftice-Clerk were not there; but the reft of the councellours were well conveened. The King's letter concerning the militia w^as pre- fented by Secretary Ogilvie; and he did give an account, that it was - the King's pleafure that fomething fhould be done effedtuallie in that matter ; whereupon an committee was appointed for preparing fome overtures concerning it. Thereafter, the letter in favours of Lord William Douglas was prefented ; and, immediately upon the » reading of it, the patent was ordained to be paft, vvithout any con- tradidion ; and, it being in readinefs, it was prefented in council, and read, and thereafter delivered to my Lord Morton, who re- ceived it for my Lord William in the ufual form. I do believe that 106 will be diflzttisfied with 120, and will no doubt do him all the prejudice in his power; but 120 does not doubt but 33 will do him the.juftice to inform 90 that 133 and he did agree in the infor- mation they gave ; and 1 20 is refolved to eftablilh himfelf upon no faftion and party, but upon ferving of his mafter faithfully. He is well enough received in this place ; and he has good hopes, with the afTiftance of fome now in town, who feem to be very willing, to -bring the affairs of the treafury to good order. He has drawn up ^ fcheme of them already ; and I fpoke of it with 20 and 47. They ■are entirely well fatisfied with it. I am hopeful that, fome time^ Qjl 2 the 106, Tullibardine. 120 Sir James Ogilvy. 33, Mr Carftares. 90, Earl -of Portland, or the King. 3o8 S T A T E - P A P E R S the next week, we (hall be able to give a fatisfying account of what is paft to the King. If an exa£t plan were not laid down, and if it be not exadly followed, there would be great difficulty in getting the founds to laft fo long as is abfolutely needful. Some of 33 friends and 120 have been confidering what will be the eafieft me- thod to doe fomething efFeftually for 33 ; but, fince they have not as yet come to a full conclufion, I will wriett nothing of it this night. I underftand 33 has a letter this night from the Juftice-Clerk ; I fhall be glad there be good correfpondence there. 70 has good hopes of it. I have had feveral particular conferences with him, and he is e- nough my friend. I hope we ihall all agree, and take joint mea- fures in the King's fervice ; and, if three or four will pretend to create fadlion or oppofition, it will evanifli and come to nothings. 133 will not have many of the 8y93 for him. Of this I will fully convince you at meeting. And if 75 give but the leaft counte* nance, there will not be the leaft difficulty in managing a 65 e2my- 2c56f when it fhall be found needfull. It is a great fatisfaction^ to us all that 90 is preferred. I am fure he deferves well his Ma- jefty's favour; but fome, whom you know, began to fay, when 155 was preferred, that 90 was to give over bufinefs ; but their hopes w^ere foon blafted. I faw a letter to this purpofe from one that is an entire confident to i2;itwasfrom K2n92. It is now late, and I can give you no furder account, fave that this night an Orkney minifter, who was unqualified, was deprived ; and, for words declared againft him by one witnefs, which he faid can be proved by feveral others, there was an order given to the Advocate to infift againft him for high treafon. It is fit to give difcouragement to the difaffedlion that has appeared fo much in that countrey. So adieu.. I did not receive the letter from 90 that you mentioned in your laft ; nor have I had any from him fince I came from London^ I long to hear of his being perfedily recovered. Sir 8y93, cl«b. 75, the King. c2my2CS(5f, parnament.^ AND LETTERS. 309 Sir James Ogilvy to Mr Carstares., He depends ivholly on Lord Portland. Fountainhall chofen Pre- fident pro tempore. A Riot at Dumfries^ &c. Complains of Redpath thtPublifher of the Neivs Letter... SIR, I' meet fo frequently upon treafury-afFairs, that I have not time to Edinburgh, write fo fully as I incline. I am very much concerned to hear that 90 jg^^. * . 95m 355bnd 2yy, 120 repofes all the fatisfadion of his management upon 90 his affiftance. What 33 writes concerning him is.indeed very fatisfying. 133 has not yet been in 3 1; but this 1 can affure you, that fome of his friends are endeavouring fd gb 2f f95, (8yg3 j but all thefe : endeavours won't do ; and even thefe that are upon it carry very fair with 1 20. I 27 is at prefent em5824-5bf : It was defigned that he fliould have continued f 95), k9dy n5nn2db. 30 did plainly pro- pofe it ; but it did not carry : However, they are ftrong there ; for, in 31, or in any other of f95, 2g4, 282, fdm, 25n, they fignify nothing. But 120 fliaU look to nothing but the true intereft of 77, and fhall fhun all faction. The treafury are doing very well ; they ■have audited Bailie Menzies's accompts, laft poft-mafter ; and now they are upon Barntoun's accompts ; and I am fure neither they nor I fhall take much reft till we go through all, and reduce the King's bufinefs into clearnefs. There has happened an affair at Pumfries, which we are to enquire into immediately. It is faid that James Muirhead, who is an apothecary in this place, being ac- cidentally at Dumfries, and having X)ccalion to vifit fome friends in that country, fome of the Jacobites there being at an ale-houfe,. did force him to drink with them ; and, after the drinking of fome private healths, did begin King James's, and confufion to all his enemies; and he having refufed to do it, fome of the company did faU 127, Fountainhall. 77, the King.- 31* S T A T E - ;P A P E R S 'fall upon him and beat him : If this be true, and if it be not fe»" verely punlfhed, we deferve not to be trufted by our mafter : This fliall be pufhed to the full. The Chancellor and I have examined Mr Muirhead ; but he does not tell the truth fully. We muft bring thofe who were prefent at that time prifoners to this place. Of this I fhall write more fully by my next. Mr Bernard M'Kehzie is alfo come to town, and informs me, that one Conn, who was a prieft, and did turn proteftant, was feized by fome of my Lord Sea- forth's people fome years ago, and is detained prifoner in the ifland of Heres, and is entertained with bread and water, and is lodged in ,a houfe where he is expofed to the rains and cold : The Ch ncllor. Advocate, and I, are to meet upon this to-morrow ; and we will take effeftual methods to have this redreffed, and with which you fhall be acquainted. If we do not fhow vigour upon fome fuch occa- fions as thefe are, it will encourage our enemies too much. Con- itinue to write to me fully j for I do believe nothing but what is con- tained in your's. I find the Jacobites fomewhat infolent ; and there is a report in town that the Prince of Conti is King of Poll ; and Baf- felona is befieged by a numerous army ; and that the confederates are cafting up lines for covering Bruffels, Reidpath, who writes the flying poft, is too-rafh, and gives too much occafion for dlfcourfes ■of this kind ; and I am fure they are intirely falfe, fince I hear no- thing of all this from you. I have written to him to be careful of what he writes for the future ; for I find that his letter is ufed al- moft by all of both fides. Give my moft humble fervice to the Earl of Portland. Let him know as much of this as you think fit^ and I am your real friend. Adieu. Sir AND LETTERS. 311 Sir James Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Of the Militia. The Advocate and he are to follow Mr Carjlares^s- Advice, and arejenftble of my Lord Portland's and his Frien^ip; and, ivhilji this is the Cafe, do not value Tullibardine. Annan- dale not yet reconciled to Tullibardine. Diligence infeizingftc- fpefted Perfons. S 1 R, I received your's, and has little to write this night. My Lord Edmburgh, Tullibardine is as yet in the country ; and the Lords of the Trea- 1697- . fury continue to audite the old accompts. There does happen no difference amongft us. The affair of the militia is ftill before a committee of the council ; and there is difficulty to get it right ad- jufted. Your laft to 20 and 1 1 9 were very full and fatisfying : They will follow 'your advice, and are very fenfible dy fg5 '7m5zb4ngze they receive from 8g and. 33 ; and, fo long as it is fo, they do not value all that 106 can do. I can fay nothing of 133 ; for ' it is uncertain what he will do ; for though 30 does not meet with 119,. yet he is not as yet m58o68zy54 fd 133. You fhall have full accounts of what paffes ; and, if any of our proceedings here be mifreprefented, I know you will acquaint me ; and I hope we fhall be able to give fatisfying anfwers ; for I am fure we defign to ferve our mafter honeftly. Sir Thomas Kennedy's caufe with the King, for an abatement of his tack-duty, is to be called to-morrow ; and we have taken all the diligence we can to prepare the Lords for it ; and yet I know not what fuccefs it may have : It has already proceeded too far. We have caufed fearch for letters of bad cor- refpondence ; and we did feize a packet, the covert of which was direded for MrsReid; but we could find no fuch perfon; and therefore we caufed write upon the table of the poft-office, that there was - 20, Advocate. 119, Sir James Ogilvy. 89,' Portland. 33j Mr Carftares. 106, Tullibardine. 133, Tullibardine. 30, Annandale, - SI2 S T A T E - P A P E R S was a letter for one of that name ; and gave order to feize the per- fon that fliould call for it ; and he that did call was a papift, and is in prifon : We have examined him, but he is not ingenuous ; and yet confefles enough to convince us, that he has carried on a bad courfe of correfpondence.. The letter? we have intercepted does certainly contain nothing of great confequence ; and yet it is fit to -difcourage fuch pradlices. This is all at prefent. Adieu. DUKEof QUEENSBERRY tO Mr CaRSTARES. (Of the African -Company^ s Intention to addrefs the King about the Hamhuirgh Memorial. Their Application to the Privy Council refufed. He is refolved to folloiv the Mea/ures nioji pleafing to the King, though deeply interejled in the Company. Lord Tut- libardine nvill probably claim the Merit of diffkading the Council from yielding to the Company. Accifes ^eensberry of cabal- ling, SIR, 'fiainburgi, I thought to have writt to you by laft poft, but vpas a little in- June 29. difpofed. Sir Jam^s Ogilvy and I were together, who I believe gave my Lord Portland and you account of the intentions of our African company, who were refolved to addrefs the King about what was dene againft them at Hamburgh ; and, at the fame time, to make application to the council to fecond their addrefs. It was impoffible to hinder their addrefs to the King, which I believe will be fent by this poft ; but, for the defigned application to the coun- . cil, we thought it would be difpleafmg to the King, and might have bad confequences ; for which reafon Secretary Ogilvy and I did all we could to prevail with them to forbear it ; which they have done till fome time in Auguft. The matter is of univerfal concern ; and I wifh that fomething may be done to quiet the people, who make great noife about it, and other prejudices they think are impofed on them by Eng- land. AND LETTERS. 313 land. I am as deeply ingaged in this company as any in the kingdom ; yet I am refoved to follow the meafures that I think will be bell pleaiing to the King ; and, that I may know them, I intreat that yoji would prevaill with my Lord Portland to be 10 good as to give me his commands, either by himfelf or by you, which I fhall endeavour to obey. My Lord Tullibardine came to town two or three days agoe ; and its like will take to himfelf the difwading from the councel- application : But I do affure you it was agreed to before he came to town. They were at firft very hot ; and ther does not want fome amongft us v£ry induftrious to blow the fire, and to brand others of milder temper with the reproach of ill country-men. To- morrow I goe to the country, to order fome things about my works at Drumlangrig, where I have been long abfent ; and the bufinefs .1 have to doe cannot well admit of delay : But if I keep my health, I will be back again before council-time, this day feven-night. My Lord Tullibardine accufed me to-day of caballing ; I know not his meaning, if he intends not poflibly to make Secretary Oglivie and my frequent being together, when he was abfent, aground of breach, to excufe his joining with others : I am fure he has not the leaft reafon on our part, except this be it, that the fecretary and I dined and fupped often with one another, and minded you ^nd other abfent friends. I wifh you a fuccefsful campaign; fo, ■without ceremony, adieu. I thought needlefs to trouble E. P. with a letter, fince I know you -will comunicate what you think fit of this to him, with my moft iaithfuU Service. I^f Sir 3t4 STATE-PAPERS SrR James Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Of the African Company^ and the Memorial given in by Sir Paul' Ricault to the Senate of Hamburgh. — He confented to tranfmit the Company'' s Addrefs as Secretary of State., to prevent their infifiing that the Privy-council Jhould do it. Anxious that the King Jhould underfland he has no Interejl in the Company. The Oppofi^ tion given to, it by the Englijh is the Reafon ivhy the Company ivas not diffblved before this timet SIR, Ediaburgh, p^\\ your's have come fafe to my hands, and aje very fatisfy- 1607. ing- As yet there is ho difference amongft us ; we all a- gree : And, though fome procefles did occur, wherein party and faction might have appeared, yet we have fhunned it on both fides ; only 30 does not viiit me, nor I him ; but at all occafions we converfe civilly. There has nothing occurred has given us trouble, but that of the Eaft-India company. I wrote to you for- merly concerning the memorial given in by Sir Paul Rycoalt to the Senate of Hamburgh : Thofe of the company did always fhow re- fentment ; and my Lord Tullibardine told me, he found more of it in the country than here. But, when their commiflioners returned, and that their general council met, and got the account of the pre- judice they fuftained by the memoriaj, they paft a vote, nemine con- tradicente, that they would prefently addrefs the King, and petitioiv. the Lords of privy-council for their concurrence. My Lord Tulli- bardine was all this time in the countrey ; but how fbon I was ac- quainted with what paft, I met with the Chancellor, the D. of Q. E. of Ar. the Ad. and fome others ; and we all refolved to do our beft to hinder the petitioning of the council. After this, my L. Tul. came and concurred : So we, all ading jointly, prevailed this farr, that they delayed to petition the privy-couneil, and did not fend any of their number to the King with their addrefs, but gave it to my colleague and me to tranfmit. It ought to have been by way of petition, and in more fubmiffive terms ; but they are in fo great fervor,. AND LETTERS. 315 fervor, that we thought it much when we carried thofe two points, that they ftnt none with it, and made no addrefs to the council. I wifh the King may give them as fatisfying an anfwer as mdy con- fift with his true intereft ; and the fooner the better ; for their coun- cil meets again the 2d of Auguft. Pray let it be underftood, that I have no intereft in this company ; neither are any of my family concerned in it : And, if it had not been to tranlmit this in the quiet- eft and moft fubmiffive manner, I would not have concerned my- lelf in the leaft. I have fent a copy to the E. of Portland of their addrefs, and of my letter to the King. Let me have your thoughts fully of this matter. I can afllire you, this company had been end- ed before now, had it not been for the oppofition made by the Eng- lifh, which picks them on point of honour. Let Mr Pringle know what I have written on this fubjedt ; it was needlefs to write to you both. Your laft news were very acceptable ; the King is much commended for his regular and fpeedy march to Bruflells. Adieu. Lord Tullibardine to Mr Carst^^res. Of the African Company. That the Privy-CQunciVs refuftng to traifmit their Addrefs ivas oiving to his coming to Toivn, Ur- ges a fpeedy Arfwerfrom the King. SIR, Being very wearied with writing and other bufmefs, I am not Edinburgh able to fay any thing to you, but acknowledge your's of the J"ly !• i thank you for the particular account you give me. We have been ' ^^^" in no fmall anxiety here concerning the council-general of the Eaft- India com^pany, who would not fatisfy themfelves only to addrefs ihe King, but apply to the council to concur with them in it. And this is not only what was refolved on, but voted two days before I came to town ; but I made ufe of my intereft to get it delayed to the fecond of Auguft next ; againft which time I hope we fhall have the King's anfwer. The Chancellor and Sir James Ogilvy did concur in this matter ; and I affure you it was no fmall difficulty, Rr 2 and 3i6 S T A T E - P A P E R S and by a majority only of four votes, that it was carried. I believe- it will not be difowned, that, if I had not come to town, it had not been flopped. Its moft neceffary that the King give a fatisfadtory anfwer, and that it be difpatcht as foon as poflible. Being very weary with writing, I refer you to Mr Pringle's letter : So fhall only addi that what you acquaint me Hugh Cunynghame did write that I, told him concerning you, was true. I have fpoke to the fame pur- pofe with my Lord Halcraig ; who is truely an honeft man. I am your affectionate friend and fervant, (Signed) Tullibardi ne. I long very much to hear good news from you, fince the armies are fo near. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares.- Friendfhip betivixt Tidlibardinc and Annandale. TuU'ibar diners Jealoufy of ^eensberry^ Philiphaugh^ &c. becaufe they took a Glqfs together. Vindicates himfelf and them. —Blames Vif— count Ti'vioCs Condu5i as Commander in Chief. — SoUicits for the Clerkjhip of the Treafury to Duncan Ronald. — Anxious lefi TiiUi- hardine Jhould apply for fome of his Friends.,, SIR, Edinburgh, J ^vriett forae days aga at length, (which I hope is come fafe to» ■1697, " hand,) in relation to our African company ; and I muft. acquaint' you they are very impatient of a return, to their addrefs lent at that time. The news of this place is the friendfhip contraded betwixt Earl TuUibardine and Earl Annandale. It is the more taken no- tice of, the former grudges were betwixt them -^ and that none othei- has given the leaft caufe of offence to caufe him, (I meanE. T.)fly for fhelter ; but, however, one advantage we know of the man's na- ture. Lord Chancellor, by what I can perceive,, will, embarkue with them. Their other confederates I need not name ; you'll ea- sily judge. At E. Tul. firft coming down, he owned fome jealoufy to D. Queenfberry, to L. Philiphaugh, to L. Halcraige, and fome o-- thers : AND LETTERS. 317 tiiers : Told he heard their was caballing, what not, without ac- quainting him. He faid nothing to itie of the fubjea. Indeed there was not theleaft caufe for his jealbufy, unlefs he took it amifs, that, without writing to him for leave, fome of us took a glafs of wine one evening at L. Philiphaugh^s lodgings ; another time ut Secrera- ry Ogilvy's ; where, upon my word, we mentioned not his name : Yet it is certain, upon this prefumption, he builds his politicks ; and being blown to it by E. Annandale, whofe nature it is to breed dif- cord, we may eafily fee what the event wilt be, though all of us en- deavour peace, proceeding calmly and equally in his Majefty's fer- vice. And we may the more eafily be believed, fince it is not our ihtereft, befides not our ihclination, to make divifion ; we are all fa- tisfied with the pofts we are in ; we inveye nobody. I love not to make complaints ; Iwilh there were no reafon for it: We dare appeal to the kingdom if we purfue or refent what is paft;. but, on the con- trary, can give feveral inftances. I thought it necelTary to give you this advertifement. Certainly you will have the fame account from others ; perhaps more full, though not plainer ; for I conceal no - name. Now, in Vifcount Tiviott's abfence, it falls rne to command the forces. It is true, it is by chance j and therefore I meddle the lefs. The King is-pkafed to give him fuch entire truft, in relation, to our Scots army, that, unlefs I were called to it, I fhall not fay much; only this I muft tell you, that the difpofing of places upon . gratuities will in a little time-makeouparmy of little ufe-for-hia, Majefty*s fervice. I defign to review all the regiments^ and 'fhall ' take what information- is proper. I fhall know the flrength of each troop and company, and how'they have paid their quarters in time paft ; fo that upon occafidn it may be of ufe. In fhort, I can tell you already, the army is in a mean condition, even as to the num- ber. I fhall not trouble you farther with this, but fhall be perfe£t in it, in cafe need be. Its probable that you may hear from others, that Sir Thomas Mo;acrief clerk to the treafury is fitk, and in all probability will not recover. No doubt many will be compeating for his employment ; and E. TuU. certainly will have his eye upon it 31 8 STATE-PAPER,S it for fome of his friends. I have never yet had the intereft to get a- . ny man in upon my recommendation. The only thing I afkt vras to have Lord Abruchel on the council and exchequer ; which was at laft waved, upon confiderations, at that time. If it v/ere poflible to get, upon Sir Thomas's death, that employment to Duncan Ro- nald writer to the fignet, I ftiould be mightily pleafed : He is an . honeft man, a mettled man, and one would be ufeful to us all: And it will be a means to ftrengthen us, and a favour to me. Pray endeavour it ; for there is much in taking the firft word. That which I am afraid of, unlefs timeoufly cautioned, we fliall fplitt a- mongft ourfelves ; every one having a particular friend. This man I am fure of, and none is more capable, few fo fit. for it. I need fay no more, fince I have owned my concern to you, . More I could fay, were it not at this diftance. I have wriett to Mr Cunynghame ito lay afide any thoughts he. had for fome time yet of leaving my ;fon. I. am your's .adieu. : Sir James' OGiLVY'to Mr Carstares. Jedloufies and nvhifpers among them, — >■ — A Duel fought in St Aiine's Tards.<^—The Commijfary of , Peebles killed by CommiffaryWifharf s Son. SIR, Edinburgh, We havc got our letters from London ; but there are due from Ya^ '7- abroad four maills. I can give you little account of bufmefs here : MyLordTreafurer-Deputt, and Sir John Maxwell, are ftill in the icountrey ; and Sir Thomas Moncrief continues ill. There are ftill jealoufies and whifpers amongft us ; but in all the judicatories we have behaved with calmnefs. The Commiflary of Peebles was killed yefterday's morning in St Anne's yards, by Commiflary Wiftiart's fon, in a duel. It is faid that Wifhart is fince taken at Lauder ; but we are not certain of this as yet. Let Mr Pringle know that I have nothing to write to him ; and, when any thing occurs that is neceffary for his Majefty's fervice, you fhall both he Acquainted. Adieu. Sir AND LETTERS. 319 Sir James Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. A Letter of Apology. S I R, I received three from you laid night, and was refolved to Edinburgi, have anfwered them very fully ; but we fat late at council ; and 1697. fmce 47 and 11 have been with me. - 122 is not in town : 1 19 is in friendfhip enough with him. • This is only for an apology ; and, becaufe I have not written to-night, you fhall not complain of my writing fully by my next. I hope Mr Pringle fhall have his mo- ney paid him very foon : I have not time to write to him ; but has ordered my fervant to do it. This is all from, S. your H. S. Adieu. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares Cautions Mr Carftares againft Tullibardine., ivho profejfes Friend/hip '■■■ for him. Hittts that it ivill be more for Mr Carjlares's Interejl to keep by him and his old Friends, ivho ivill folloiv his Advice.. - Tullibardine and he concur in public Biifinefs. French Prifoners. Tullibardine has bought L. 500 Share in the Afri- can Company. S 1 R, This laft week I have been very much taken up in attending the Edinburgh, committees of council and treafury : This has^ pccafioned me not to ,69^*'^' write fo fully as I ufed to do : All your's hitherto have come fafe to my hands ; Your laft was in anfwer to that I wrote by the flying packet, with the addrefs of the Eaft-India Company : You was very much in the right to defire that the anfwer to it might be fent as foon as poffible, for their general council meets again the firft week or 320 STATE-PAPERS -of Auguft. 132 does pretend friendfliip for 33 ; but 33 I believe tnows hitn well enough. He was once in greater enmity with, 30 ; but now 30 is his only confident. If 33 will concur for 127, and to put 32 in the fame ftation he was in the laft year, and leave off to be in friendfliip with 11, 47, and 119, there is no doubt the friendfliip will be furely eftabliflied : But otherwife, I believe 33 will do beftto truft to his old friends, who will take his advice as much as he can defire, and are willing to make all their accefs to 76 by 89. I can aflure you i ig would foon give over, if it were not for the protedlion he has there, and, while he lives, will be faithful to him. 106 is moft ungrate to 89 ; but I am fure 33 was advertifed of it before .he went from London. 1 57 does well to keep his ground with 106 : It fliail make 119 more his friend than ever; but I fl^all not take notice of what you write «f this to any per- fonelfe, fince you forbid me to fpeak of it. 133 is a very avowed enemy .to 20, and has, cupon feveral occafions, neda zbndy5b fyt fd 9ZC; but :20 has refo'lved to fufFer no -more -that way: He will /write fully this night himfelf, and will give you an account of what pafl; laft council-day. There has two or three council-procefTes come in, wherein there has been difference in all of them. 119 was on his guard, and 33 his friends did 2ee52m firm ; but I think it needlefs to trouble you with an account of them till meeting ; only I muft tell you, that 132 did call atydm4 mg6y5b and 1 19 to iiis lodgings, where he told 119 that zf, 4Z4, bdf, 358gc5 him to make oppofition in any thing ; neither was it espe£ted of him : 1 1 9 anfwered zb Z946zb6, he would do |what he thought right, and would ftand in awe of none. I do not love to write ftorries ; but, if any be written by others, if 1 1 9 be but acquainted, he can give full fatisfadion ; he is blamed for fiaffering too much. The Earl of Tullibardine and Secretary Ogilvy do concur in all public matters toge- J32, Tullibardine. 33, Mr Carftares. 30, Annandale 127, Tountainhall. 11, Queenfberry. 47> Argyle. ii9» Secretary Ogilvy. 76, the King. 8p, Portland. 106, Tullibardine. 20, Advocate AND LETTERS. 321 "together : They have been moft of this afternoon endeavouring to ■cxpifcate and difcover the projefts of the three French prifoners : We have good ground to think that they have not given a true account of themfelves. Mr Rodoway did endeavour to fpeak out of the wia- dow of the prifon to one Mrs Hamiltoun, and did throw fome bil- lets over the window to her, which fhe caufed her {ervant take up. Three of them are now in our hands ; but in one of them he men- tions a fourth, in which he fays he gave a full account of what he was ; and he was in great trouble about it ; for he writes,, if it fall in the hands of any in the government, it will make him be -more feverely treated. We are again to examine this matter more fully on Monday : She does pretend to be very innocent. If any- thing ftiall happen to be difcovered worthy of the narrating, you Ihall hear of it. The Earl of Tullihardine is now acquainted by Principal Dunlop of the projedt for procuring you 1000 1. He toM him that he had fpoke of it to me ; but that I had given him no pofitive anfwer. He told the principal that he would write con- cerning it to the King ; but was not pofitive whether he thought it would be obtained or not ; and made fome difficulty : Therefore I wifh that whatever 89 does in that matter, may be done quickly. The Earl of Tullihardine has bought a fhare of the Eaft-India Company, from Sir Thomas Burnet of Lies, for 500 1. Sterling, a.nd was this day received one of the company. I believe it is that he may be in a condition to know their proceedings more diftindly, and that he may be more in favour with thofe of the company. I refolve to go from this, about the middle of the next mouth, for London; for the judicatories will then adjourn; and Lean fignify no more here. Ldo not refolve *o go to the north, for my wife has been here with me ever fince I came to this place. Adieu, -^ ^ LoRi>~ 11% S T A T E - P A P E R S-' Lord Tullibardine to Mr Carstares.. Longs for the King' s Return to the Company* s Addrefs. ITasJuh^ Jcrihed L. 500, to give him Influence in preventing iDefigns that'< may he uneajy to his Majejiy.- Is going to Hamilton^. S I R, Edmburgh, j j^^^^g your*!5 of tlie 12th in anfwer to mine,. I long extremelr^ July 34. - ■' I ~ 1697. for the King's return to the African Company's ^ddrefs, which I hope I fhall have next poft. I have fubfcrived for L. 300 ; by which means I fhall have the more influence toliihder any defigns that may prove uneafy to his Majefty. Things are kept yet quiet, in expe£tation of the King's anfwer : After it comes, I intend to gO to . Hamilton, where my wife is, and received the facrament there ; which good occafion I was very forry to have miffed. Mr Dunlop will acquaint you, that he has fpoke to me of your concerns, o& which there can be nothing done till meeting ; fo that I fhall not infift on it heVe, who am Your afFedionate friend and fervant, (Signed) Tullibardine.. 1697, to Mr Garstares. Mojily in Cyphers; to zvhich no Key has been found.. S I R, July 26. I have your's of the loth inftant, and I have not wrote fince that^ of the 29th, which I fee you have received. I had wrote fooner, but I know Mr Hay writes frequently ; and I was waiting till Mr Erfkine fhould come to town, that I might give you a better ac- count of your bufinefs. Hume tells me that 21 is not yet come, and AND LETTERS. 323 mnd that 35 hath all credit with Chalmers, which it may be makes 2 1 more indifferent. When 3 received Mr Whyte's letter about Mr Moafman's bufinefs with Mr Lie, Mr Thomfon and Mr Daw- fon were abfent,; and Mr Whyte's letter was clofs enough. 37, as Carfe fays, is of late unaccountable; and 32 thinks he can fear ce purpofe to return, fince he hath carried fo towards 10 and ^^, and is fo ill liked by 94 ; but 33 knows how kind Mr Fall was to him, tho' it be now faid that he hath the kindnefs of another. 1 3 and 27 have faid little to Mr Chalmers of late ; and they and 4 have little or no dealing with 35 ; but 32 tells me, that upon occafion their refent- ments appear warmer. It is alfo faid that fome of Mr Erfkine's friends or partners would take in Mr Fofter; but for what fhare is not known, nor doth the thing much appear. MrNeill and your friend 32j 37> 3 1) 40j 22, 25, 29 do, and are well ; and it is not here -doubted but that 9 may do by 35 what he thinks fit with 5, 3, or any of their partners ; and, if he would have his bufmefs done more quietly, it is wholly in his power ; for Stewart, Thomfon, Dawfon, or any other, fignify no more than Mr Whyte pleafes : But it is ftill fit that Mr Murray be better fettled, as 35 is very fen- fible; and, to difpofe of him and Mr Campbell well, would be a.n acceptable afTurance to all Whyte^s friends, and likewife have the greateft influence on Mr Fouler. Mr Hay underftands Mr Wat- fon's bufinefs fo well, that I need give you no account of it. 31 will not miftake lo's heat in the matter of 37 and 13; for he was ' much provoked, and it is not his temper ; nor is any man fairer in all 9 concerns. Mr Scot doth not wait on 26, which offends fome- but 32 wifhes 9 well and fafe ; and, when Mr Hay fliall meet with Mr Whyte, he knows he will give a fatlsfylng account : ' And 35 hath faid to 32, that he would have him prefent, that good advice may be taken in order to Mr Murray firft, and then in order to Mr . Fouler : But there is time enough for that bufinefs. It is faid that Mr Mill Is not in good cafe ; and, it may be, a particular order to ihreeorfour -of Mr Whyte's heft friends, might do well to confider Sf2 i. 324 S T A T E - P A P E R S it, fpecially in this interval. Severale with 41 are thought noe uti— friends to 19; but this you know : And if Mill do littk good* he can do as little hurt, as matters now ftand. Adieu. Hume thinks, with you, that Erfkine hath done Mm no hurt ;-. but, if 32 had the opportunity, he would fairly clear himfelf with 9 ; and, in the mean time, he knows, that 21 credit as to him will go but a little way for hereafter. I intreat you forget not Carle's own bufinefs. Hume had almoft wrote to Mr Fall about if when the letters were fent ; but he would do nothing without 3 3 advice ; and he knows that Mr Hay has recommended it. Lord Tullibardine to Mr Carstarks.. Js to prepare the Company for .giving- a proper Reception to the King^s- Letter., ivbich Mr Carjtares had feiit doivn. Peace near con- cluded.^ SIR, Edinburgh, I received your^s of the 1 5th, which came with the King's letter, . July 31. j^ anfwer to the African Company's addrefs, which I hope will prove fatisfying ; and I am doing what I can to prepare them to receive it fo. They meet on Monday next : It is very acceptable that it has come before that time. I am glad of the good news you fendr of the peace being fo far advanced. I hope we fhalt hear foon that, it is concluded : I doitbt not but the terma are adjufted : I hope it fhall prove much to the advantage of thefe kingdoms. All here continues quiet ; and, whatever inclinations may be for fadions». they are kept from breaking out. I Ihall endeavour to write again; to you by the next poft, who am,. S I R, Your affedionate friend and fervant,. (Signed] Tullibardine. To- AND LETTERS. 325 To Mr Carstares. State of Parties., all hi Cyphers. SIR, Yow will underftand from Mr Home how Mr Murray hath J^'^ 3'- Behaved of late ; his motives I think were kindnefs to 24, 33, 25. 23, 34, 28, 30, 41, 24. 32, 3729, 2937, 38, 20. and fome pre- judice alfo againft 32; for. 13, was very very forward, tho' he be a friend of Mr Watfon's, and ihould be for 9.: But the matter is palpablie 22 25 28 29 35, and the thing muft and will be help- ed, tho* with fome delay. Mr Erfkin and Mr Thomfon are fo well, that 13 cannot be enuff concerned in any thing 21 appears for. If Mr Chalmers had medled ia that bufinefs betwixt Mr Blackwood and his elder brother, he had done right, without ftope: But Mr Erfkine being of another mind, it was not fit that 21 Ihould have it to fay, that he only had preferved 77 for 9 intereft, by taking part with Mr Blackwood : 2 1 is alfo difpleafed with 37, 38, 33, 29., 40, 22, 25, 35, 34; and faid plainly to his princi- pall manager, that he was. fo. It is ane advantage, that tho' 3723,, , 24323329 coaceals hia methods, by all the difguifes he can ; yet. he cannot conceal his principal purpofe. 32 hath advifed Carfe how it ftands with him ; and if Mr White help it not, Mr Home tell's me plainly he had rather be where he was ; for you know non can ftand againft 37, 29, 22, 20 : And therefore he de- fires to fee 33, and to clear with 9 ; for if White doe not fettle Mr Murray, and order Mr Fouler aright, with another faftorie, and at leaft ballance Thomfon's, Stewaart's., and Erlkine's accounts, 32 does not care for trading any more 'with them : And this is foe eafie to be done, when you have Mr Hay, with 10 and ss-> and fome others, that can doe your bufinefs to a hair, that I fhall be forrie you mifs the opportunity. What 35 did communicate, by your order, to 33, concerning 4, I fay 24, 3325, 2741, 23: 3422 go 3 7, is a meer fable : Btit if Carfe, or any other, liftea to fuch, he may 326 S T A T E - F A P "E R S may have ten times more of that kind ; for fome (a man might think) did willinglie fee Mr White wronged, that 34223037 might be blamed for it; but 32 tells me he is at a point, and fhall be care- full of 9 concerns, and be advifed by 33 and 31, as they think fitt, -Adieu. •to "Mr Carstares. Correjpondence begun betzvixi Armjlrong and him. SIR, "Edinburgh, In my laft I wrote to you freely and plainly, as youdefired; and July laft, J g^jy^ longing for your return. The inclofed is, I underftand, much to the fame purpofe ; which gives me more "hopes you will give a good anfwer : And I fhall urge no more on thai head untill I hear from you. The feflion being at an end, we have brought your af- fair anent Kinnewhar a good "length ; for Mr Melvill, who is in poffeirion of an part of his eftate, is to compt and reckon ; and we "have reafon to think he is near payed. And my Lord Rankiler, who has a great guiding of him, and JohnCarftares, who is married on his near friend, we hope, will advife both to end with you. If you pleafe you may caufe Mr Pringle write to my Lord, being liis uncle; which I think will do you good. I was in company with the L. J. C. and hisLordfhip, who writes the inclofed, with your bro- ther the principal; and we minded you very kindly. And it is ho- ped that the old friendftiip is well begun. I am to get payment of the L. 300 fterling next week ; and I will take eare to temit the re- jnainder to your Lady. Adieu moll heartily. Xarl A. N D LETTERS. i^f Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares: About his Son. — TuUibardine^ s haughty Carriage to Secretary Ogihy. — Lays a Snare for the Advocate. — Style of follicitihg nonv. — AJks a Majority for his Brother James. . SIR, . I am two in your debt. I thant you for giving me an account of ^^'f^^^^* my fon. I have heard from himfelf fince, but not of his being with E. Portland ; which I long for an account of from himfelf. Matters continue amongft our flatefmen as formerly; only E. Tull. has appeared mighty high upon fome occafions to his partner in office. I advife the latter n6t to diminifh his character ; for big words fliall not fright us all. I doubt not but you have particular accounts of thofe tranfadions, and how E. Tull. was laying a fnare for the Advocate. The ordinary ftile in folKciting now is, ' What, will you oppofe the family of Hamilton ?' This is truth, upon my word. I have wriett by this poll to Mr Pringle: If you fee his let- ter, a part of it, in relation to V. Teviott, will divert you. Sir Tho- mas Moncrief is recovered,' who deferves his place very well while &e lives. -AH care is, and wilf be, taken poffible, as to the pacify- ing the Eaft-India company. The Lord Carmichael's Major is dead. Its probable he will recommend the Laird of Poge Major to Tul— Irbardine. I have employed Secretary Ogilvy to fpeak to him for my brother James, who is the oldeft captain amongft all our dra- goons. He bought his commiflion, which deferves confideration : : But I fhall ,only reprefent, not prefs, in this cafe. I am your's. A- dieu.. Major S2S STATE- P AT E R S Major James Wood to Mr Carst-ares. 'SoUtcits his Inter ejl tojucceed Lieutenant-Colonel Youngs in the E- -njcnt of his being broken by the Court-Martidl then fitting. SIR, Bruxells, At laft, the affair depending between my Lord Strathnaver and =1697. Lieutenant-Colonel Young has been heard ; and this day the court- martial has ended, and come to a fentence ; which, by oath taken by the members, is not to be known till the King or generals is ac- quainted therewith: And therefore, nopofitive account can be given by me of the ilfue ; but I have very good ground to believe that my Lord Strathnaver is entirely vindicat of -what he was accufed; and Lieutenant Colonel Young having failed to prove what he alledged, cannot fail to be very feverely reprimanded, if not broken. It is but very reafonable for me to expedt to fucceed, having ferved as captain in Scotland, England, and Ireland, and Elanders, for five years ; and in Elandetrs for four years more, as major : Yet the un- juft reprefeutations of me by fome, becaufe I would not concur with them in falfe things, makes me fear to meet with more trouble than otherways I would, and makes me even afhamed to beg your fa- vour in my cafe. But, after confidering your honour, as well as juftice, I take the liberty to entreat your affiftance in my juft caufe • which, if you give me, will put me above the pretenfion of my ri- •:vals, and oblige meto-hefor ever, SIR, ' Your moft obedient humble fervant, (Signed) Ja. Wood, I aflure myfelf of Mr Pringle's friendfhip, though I give him no trouble of a letter. Major AND L E T T E R- S. 329 Major Bruce to Mr Carstares. Upon the fame SubjeSl ivith the former. SIR, The affurance I have of your kindnefs to me makes me trouble Bruflells, you with this line. I am informed that Lieutenant-colonel Dou- ^^^n^. ^°' glas his commiffion to be lieutenant-colOnel to Colonel Murray is flopped, and that Lieutenant-colonel Leith is to go to the guards, and Douglas is to come in his place.' If it was not thought reafon- able that he fhould be put over Major Cunynghame, it will be as unreafonable, if not more, to put him over me: Wherefore I entreat you, if there be any fuch thing, to ufe your endeavours to hinder it. There are more Lieutenant-colonels in the army, with whom Douglas may be changed. But, if it cannot be hindered, I have an- other thing to propofe to you, which is this: Lieutenant-colonel Young, of Strathnaver's regiment, is broke by a council of for which I am very forry ; and wifties from my heart that he may be reponed : But, if all means which are ufed fliould prove inef- fectual, I entreat you to ufe your utmoft endeavours to get that place for me ; for, although it be a new regiment, yet I will take my ha- zard : I have been long enough a major already. I i3iall fay no more, fmce I know you will be ready to endeavour the good and advan- tage of, 5IR, Your moft humble and moft obliged fervant, (Signed) Ro. Bruce. :Pray let me Slave an anfwer. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. About tofet out for London. — Parts in good Terms ijoith the fufiice- Clcrk. SIR, I have this night written to the Earl of Portland, which you will Edinburgh, ht pleafed to prefent to him, I am now refolving to return to J^'^^^ '°' T t ' London, 330 S T A T E - P A P E R S London, and refolve to part from this privately. I go the firft night to the Juftice-Clerk's houfe. He and I parts in very good friendlhip. I hope to give you a fatisfying account of treafury- afrairs at meeting. The Lords of Treafury have written to the King ; but their letter refers to extra£ts and memorials given to my Lord Tullibardine and me. I had difficulty to procure this; but it will be of great advantage, as I fhall convince you when we meet. There is a letter from the admiralty to the King went off the laft poft, with which I was not acquainted ; but now I have got a double of it. The Advocate.^writes of this matter to-night ; but I will write no more of it till Saturday's night. It is now late ; and therefore I only add, that I am, Sir, your mofl humble fcrvant. A- dieu. I have none either from you or Mr Pringle the two lafl: pofts. Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Complains bitterly of Tullibardine^ s falfe Accufations of him. Vin~ dicates himf elf from the Afperfions throivn upon him for taking un- duly ; for accuftng the Hamburgh Memorial ; , and Lenity in pro- fecuting the difaffe£ied: This laft agreeable to the King. — Of Ships fitted out by the Admiralty. S I R, Edmburgh, In my letters of late, I have given you accompt of feveral things. 169^7! '° How I have been attacked, and openly maltreated, I leave to your- felf. But none of thefe things will be ftrange to you, -who knows what paft at London. He muttered that I was guilty of takings. But, is it not a vexing thing that a man fhould be thus accufed in general, without any condefcendence, fpecially when I know my in- nocency, and that my mein eftate, not the half of what its fuppofed to be, can teftify for me. And you may atfo be my witnefs, how I have faid. That I wifh, either that I were in a ftation where all ta- kings were forbid, or that, eveii in this ftation, taking, fhould be forbid AND LETTERS. 331 forbid in any cafe: For I proteft, in the private ftation of an advo- cate, I lived better, and with more profit, than ever I had fince. But you fee I have been attacked, as if I had licenfed the Hamburgh memorial, and the printer's boy's declaration taken figned againft me; albeit there be nothing more falfe : And that nothing can prove licenfing, fave the licenfer's hand : And that, if a man be al- lowed to excufe himfelf by throwing the blame on another, no man can be fafe. But my relief is, , to be attacked where all fee my in- nocence ; fof I have no dealing with our African company, and many of them reckon me an unfriend. And you know how warm I was in condemning the printing of this paper. But again, I tell you in fincerity, that I knew nothing of it untill I fee it in print. He alfo faid of me in council, that I ftiould have purfued all come from France as traitors : And fo I have done. But, if men com- pear not, and, after, be admitted to baill, what can I help it ? Cap- _ tain Dalyell is come from France, and was taken lately, and com- mitted for the Dumfries drinking, (which yet proves nothing, as I told you.) But, though' the council was told that ill letters were found upon him, and both the fecretaries were for his continuing in prifon, and I craved warrant to purfue him, yet the council, by a clear plurality, voted him out on baill, becaufe he Was on baill be- fore. And the truth is, that the wifeft part, where there are fo ma- ny delinquents, and all willing to live quietly, is, to connive and watch. And I know it is the King's own mind, to make his go- vernment eafy to all, except where juftice and example require feve- rity. But my friend fays the King's' bufinefs is negleded by me. This I cannot anfwer, unlefs I knew particulars. But, too much on this fubjea. When Secretary Ogilvy fees you, he will give you. the beft account : Only I muft fay, fome men are very uneafy to live with. All this to yourfelf. The Commiffioners of the Admi- ralty ordered fhips to be built at London. They proved exceffiveljr dear, above L. 17000 ; and, before we could relieve them, the Lord Chancellour and Lord Rankeillour, Sir Francis Scot, George Clerk, B32 StATE-PAPERS and I, werd neceflitate to oblige our credit for L^ l8ooo rcerllhg. And, becaufe the foiind of the pole did not anfwer, we applied to- the treafuf y for their help ; but, firft, they had no money ; and,, next, they faid they had no warrant. We told, the excife was given for the fhips, as well as for the forces ; and at length prevail- ed for a precept of L. 4000 fterling on the excife, payable March 1699, ^^^ clearing what is owing, and keeping the fhips, if poffible, at fea a fmall time. But you may judge how this remote fund can anfwer. But, upon the whole, we have wriett to his Majefty a let- ter, whereof the copy here inclofed ; and pray get us a favourable anfwer : For we muft not only have his Majefty's allowance for what the treafury hath done, and his warrant for what is yet to be done, but alfo, the admiralty muft have his allowance to borrow money by advance, for fuch rates as we can obtain it. Thir things may be faflieus to you ; but I know Secretary Ogilvy v/ill write fully. And I aflure you, our fhips, if keept out at fea, would be more profitable and pleafmg to th^ nation, than any regiment we have. Secretary Ogilvy halh been at great pains to have our fonds - and the publick charge ftated, and to have publick accompts clofed : And I am fure he hath done fervice in this matter, that his Majefty will judge very good and acceptable. And, next, I fhall fend you the ftate of our fonds. D. Queenfberry's fifter is to be married to the L. Elcho. The Dutchefs needed fome things from London, and Secretary Ogilvy fenl an exprefs ; but wrote none with it. This E. Tullibardine offended at, becaufe not acquainted ; but it was a pure omiffion, wherein I believe his Lordfhip was fatisfied. I am, your's. Duke- AND LETTERS. 333 DUKEof QUEENSBERRY tO Mr CaRSTARES. Of a Letter received from Portland, — Treafury-huftnefs .—Adnjifes that the King Jhoiild not be hafty in follonving certain Schemes., hut keep by his old Friends . SIR, I have received feveral kind and obliging letters from yoii fmce Ediaburgh, r wrote any to you, which I hope you will excufe ; for I was for ^^"S^^ *'" fome time troubled with a rbeum in my eyes, fo that I could hard- ly look on paper ; and have been fmce taken up with marrying my fifter. I am very fenfible of my Lord P.'s kindnefs to me ; and fhall, upon all occafions, doe my utmoft to deferve it. I have not troubled his Lordlhip with a letter, not knowing where it may find him ; for we have a report here, that he is immediately expected in England, I know fome of our friends have wrote you an account of what paffed here ; and how far we have proceeded in the King's affairs. I fhall not trouble you with repetition, but will alTure you, that we have been this feffion as bufy in the treafury as we could ; and I believe have done more than has been done for fome years paft. Secretary Ogilvy (who parted from hence on Tuefday lafl:) has carried up the account of it, to be laid before the King. I hear there are great projeds and fchemes to be laid before his Majefty, upon the conclufion of the peace ; but I hope he will think it his intereft not to be hafty in following them ; but rather look about him, and make ufe of his old fervants, at leail for fome time : But thefe things are not fo fit to be writt as difcourfed of: So I leave it till I fee you, which I hope fhall be ere long; for I intend to carry my wife, who is now big, to be hrought to bed at London. And, fince there is no body difcharged to come up, I hope the King v;ill allow me to come along with her ; and, if his Majefty's fervice does require my being here, I can very foon return. I defire you may acquaint my Lord Portland with my refolution in this, and give my moft humble fervice to him ; and believe me to be fincerely your's..- A 334 STATE-PAPERS Cloterel Upton to Mr Carstares. Intreating his Inter eft to he made one of the CommiJJioners of the Re- venue in Ireland. Reverend SIR, " . London, Your's of July 1 2th going firft to Ireland, and I being at Tun- 1697. ' bridge when it came back, I received not till now. As to our old affair, it ftands juft as it did, my Lord Galloway not being wil- ling, as I apprehend, to meddle with g. thing of that nature on his firft entrance on the government : His coldnefs in it, and delays, at laft makes me believe he never fpoke to the King about it ; or, if he did, that his Majefty was of opinion with his Lordfhip ; but was unwilling to give a denial to fo confiderable a body of his faithful friends ; therefore we are put off with courtiers promifes ; and, in the mean time, we lie under the lafti of fevere laws : However, I hope by next feffions of our parliament, for nothing can be done this, that we may have better fuccefs. As to the bi- flioprick of Derry, his prefent Lordfhip is very well recovered of his illnefs, which was once believed would have eafed that corner of his tyranny. I wilh with all my heart I could in the leaft have been inftrumental in the exchange you propofe ; which, from the charadter you give him, muft have been to thofe people in parti- cular, and to all of our perfuafion in general, as a new delivery from flavery : But, when any occafion offers, you may be affured of my readinefs to ferve you, and that worthy perfon, to the ut- moft of my power. Now, Sir, I muft defire leave to beg your fa- vour in what relates to myfelf and family, a favourable opportuni- ty now offering: How I and my family has endeavoured to ferve his Majefty, with eminent hazard, great charge, and the great de- ftrudion of our eftate, to the vaft damage, nay, almoft deftrudion, of our family ; and this not from private intereft, continuing ftill the fame, though lio regard has hitherto been had of us, but from a principal. AND LETTERS. 335 principal, and zeal to his Majefty's fervice ; And how confiderable our intereft is in the country, I fliall not trouble you with ; but de- fire that you may fo ufe your intereft with my Lord Portland, that I may be made one of the c'ommiffioners of the revenue of Ireland, in the place of Mr Lowther, now dead. Did I not know I was ca- pable of performing it, I could not be fo impudent as to defire it ; and I think myfelf as juftly intitled to fome part of his Majefty's as many others. The management I wholly leave to you, not doubt- ing of fuccefs, , if my Lord heartily efpoufes my intereft. Being here, I cannot fo well make ufe of my Lord Galloway's intereft, who I fear is engaged already ; but I wrote to his Lordftiip of it. I know I ftiall have courtiers promifes at leaft, which I little mind till I find the effed ; but what I have from you I may more intirely re- ly upon. I defire your anfwer as foon as may be, that I may know what to truft to. Diredt for me at the Blue Ball in St Albane's ftreet. Our government in Ireland pleafes all forts of people ex- tremely ; and I doubt not but my Lord Galloway's wifdom and pru- dence will continue it. I remain. Reverend SIR, Your faithful humble fervant, (Signed) Clot. Upton. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. ReBtfies fome Miftakes ivith refpeSi to -what he and the Advocate had •written ofTulUbardine Profejfes great Friendjhip^ to Mr Car- Jiares and Lord Portland. Account of ivhat paffed betiveett him and the Jtiftice-Clerk and Chancellor, on his Way to London. SIR, I came to this place this morning, where I found three of your's, Whitehall, which were very acceptable. Before the packet came, we did ex- ^e^^ ^'• pea to have had an account by it of the conclufion of the peace j 336 S T* A T IE - P A P E R S • ». however, I hope we fliall have it before the King returns ; and, if not, it is a great encouragement that the money does circulate fo well as I find it does ; for every body here informs me, that all the •difiiculties in that matter are now over. 119 did never doubt of 33 friendfhip ; and what he or 20 wrote concerning the difcourfes of 13'3> was only for information, and not at all by way of challenge. 119 will always j:ake his meafures from 89, and is very fenfible of the obligations he owes him,. and fhall never be -ungrait. If 89 -do not give hif friendly aififtance as foi'merly, it will be a great mif- fortune to Scotland ; for I am fenfible he has done more for it than all that ferves 76. He -fhall know fully 119 his thoughts at meeting. I wrote to you upon the road, that I was at the Chancel- lor's arid at the Juftice-Clerk's. It is needlefs to inform you of what pail there until we meet, only this much in the general : (I think I need not make ufe of the cypher, fmce there is no hazard of the :mifcarxying of our letters.) The Juftice-CIerk did tell me, that Tullibardine's friends were fpeaking to him to think of coming up to London this winter ; and, at meeting, you fhall know upon what defign. I told him that I fhould be' very well fatisfied he did, and that he Ihould be very welcome to me : But it would be proper for him, in the firft pjace, to afk leave of the King ; and I Ihould be as ready to do that for him as any. He faid, what he had told me was in confidence ; and he intreated that I might hinder his coming ; and, if he did come at all, it would be in obedience to the King's commands, which he thought might be eafily hindered. 1 told him I would do in -that matter whatever he defired me, and that he might be afiured that I would join in doing for him any thing that is iii: my power. A great deal did pafs betwixt us, which is not fit to be communicate now ; but you fhall know it in due time. It is not fit that you mention any thing of this to any body, not to the Lord Juftice-Clerk himfelf. I found the Chancellor very free ; I thought he was more fo in fome particulars than I could well de- fire ; and therefore I wa^ the more upon the referve with hijn. I know Whitelaw's bufinefs will be preflfed when the King returns : He AND LETTERS. 337 He is our mafter, and may do in that or any thing elfe as he plea- fes : When my opinion is afked in that, or in any thing elfe, it fhall be given very faithfully. The Duke of Queenfberry is to be up within tvro or three weeks. The Dutchefs is big with child, and is to lie in here. Argyle is now at his houfe near Newcaftle, and is likewife coming up for his health. As for 20, he would willingly come, but thinks that he cannot well leave his poft without liberty from 76. He does not queftlon but 133 will pufh at him this winter. As for 85 and his family^ they are in entire friendfliip with me, and are, after their old manner, complaining of injuries, x have a full account to give of treafury- affairs, and I hope it will be fatisfying ; I am fure I fpared no pains in that matter : I did not flier from Edinburgh all the time I was in Scotland. If you think- it neceflary, I can fend to 89 or to 33 a copy of the treafury's letter to the King, and of the memorial containing the ftate of trea- fury-bufmefs ; but I think you wilf underftand them beft when we meet. Though I have written a part of this letter without cypher to you, becaufe there is no hazard, yet I muft intreat that you continue to write as formerly, becaufe 132 will be here within three weeks. The admiralty is much concerned in that mat- ter, of which they have wrote to the King. They have got a pre- cept from the treafury for L. 4000 Sterling, to be paid out of the laft quarter's tack-duty of the fecond year's excife. No body would accept of this without a conliderable allowance, both upon the ac- count of the hazard that they run, and of the lying out of their mo- ney. They defire that the King will impower them to tranfad: and manage that precept to the beft advantage. I have written of this likeways to Mr Pringle. If this be not done before the King returns, it will occafion a great diflappointment to the faftors and merchants, who did advance the price of the (hips, and what was due for the provlfions. I know the Advocate has wrote to you of it very fuUy; fo I need add no more. Excufe the informality of this letter- Uu . I 8s, Earl Melvill. 338 STATE-PAPERS I have obferved no form in it, but did write of every thing as it oc- curred. Adieu. Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. A curious Intervienv betivixt him and Earl of Tullibardine. A ■particular Vindication of his conduH both in private and public af- fairs. Tullibardine irritated on account of his being dif appoint- ed in getting Whitelanv made Prejident of the SeJ/ion, 'SIR, Edinburgh, I told you in my laft, that Secretary Ogilvie parted from 1697. London, fo as he might be here about the laft of Auguft. E. Tul- libardine came to this place the 27th Auguft ; but a fitt of the gout hindred me that I did not fee him till the 31ft. We came over fome things had paft, fuch as what he faid to me in councill, that I would have fpoken fooner, if I had got money; and my angry anfwer. I told him, for my anger, it was a furprize; for I expected not fuch a challenge. He faid, that others had faid more to me in that manner. I faid, never any fpoke fo to me in councill, fave another; to whome I gave a feverer anfwer : But I faid, it was ftrange I fhould be fo much reproached for taking, when I had fo often, and did ftill defie all men as to particulars ; and prayed him to condefcend upon one. He faid, thatit was not his work to enquire ; but even my friends faid I took from both hands. I told him, if any man would con- defcend where I had taken durtiely or unjuftly, either from one or both, I ftiould take with it : So we fpo ke of a caufe betwixt Sal- ton and Boine that was agitate this fummer; and I told him^ • that was none of the King's caufes ; and all in it was this : Salton, three years agoe, confulted me on fome queries, and ouned me no; more; whereupon Boin engaged me a year thereafter; but in a different qlieftion : But, when the caufe came to be debated this fummer, Saltone^ who had Commiifarie Dairy mple for him, and had only engaged me by a querie, to keep me from being for Boine, came and AND LETTERS. 339 and {hewed me my anfwer to his querie. I told him, his dealing was not fair; for that querie was, three years agoe, upon a different queftion ; and fince that time he had not employed me : But fince he had Commiff. Dalrymple, I prayed him to for the L. Boin: But he refufing, I toW him, then I would be for neither; and fent back. the L. Boin's confultation, and refufed his. Sol told my Lord TuUibardine, that for this I fhould rather be commend- ed ; for the tuth is, the Lord Salton had only put a trick upon me. This 1 was full in, becaufe I knew his Lordfliip had fpoke of this on feveral occafions, how juftly you may judge. Then I fpoke to the E. of the taking of the printer's man's declaration about the Hambugh memorial. He faid E. Portland defired him to en- quire how it came to be printed. I told him, why not : But, fince the man had declared falfly againft me, I fhould have been ac- quainted, and he not been admitted to fign his declaration, which was both falfe, and could neither charge me nor excufe himfelf. My Lord faid, he believed that, if I had looked into the paper, I had not licenfed it. I told him, I had not licenfed it ; for that muft be by write ; nor had I ever feen or heard of it, untill it was crie- ing on the flreets , and was the firft and only perfon that challenged it : So that I was here attacqued where I was muft innocent. Then his Lordfliip was pleafed to tell me, that he loved to be friendly where he met with friendfliip ; but I did oppofe him in the matter of the L. Whitlaw, wherein his honour was concerned, fince he brought down his commiffion; and it was ftopt, tho' Sir Tames Ogilvie was once for it ; and he knew none had greater in- fluence on Sir James then I had. I thanked his Lordfliip for his freedom ; told him how willing I was to have ferved him in the parliament ; and was not confcious wherein I had difobliged him. As for L. Whitlaw, I told him my efteem of his abilities ; and that, ^hen at London, I had faid freely to his Lordfliip^ that I de- fired not the chair ; and that Sir James could witnefs for me, that I had not iblicit him againft Whitlaw: But his Lordfliip knew well ,cnough where that m.atter ftuck ; and that I was not to be charged U u 2 v/ir.li 340 STATE-PAPERS with it: And all I had^aid as to the feffion was, and would fay it ftill, that the feiTion needed a ballance; and that tho' the L. Whitlaw were in the loweft feat of the bench, he was too flrong. So he afked me how I would ballance it? I faid, I was not to advife in it; but thought Commiff. Dalrymple a verie able man ; and he alfo commended him. But, fays I, my L. Whitlaw has himfelf moft to blame; and, for me, I have endeavoured to ferve the King faith- fully; and would do fo, while he allows me : And, as to all others,, I was for living, and let live ; and wifh't that great men would live in peace. He faid, he hoped he had ferved the King well ; and that the King underftood it fo; and that he was no farther folici- tous. I offered him my fervice, and to correfpond with his Lordfhip, if he pleafed : This laft he accepted : And fo we parted. Thia is the fubfcance of what paft, tho' I may fail in words ; and I only report it, to prevent miftakes. We fpoke of other things, as about the perfons come from France. I told him he was alfo at me there; but they ftood moft of them demured in the criminal court ; and on pccafions they had been called in, and fearcht : For, as appears by proclamations, that, when any of them came in hands, I told the counfeli the King's pleafure, to have them ient back. So that I had done all, fave to profecute the remitt of parliament* which, I faid, was a meafure of government wherein I vs^as not to move, without exprefs order : But I added, that his Lordfhip faw how low and tame that partie now was ; and that, to keep them in awe and quiet, I believed would be judged the beft courfe. He afk't, how I came to raife a criminal purfuit now, upon the remitt of parliament ? I faid, I had the council's order for it, he prefent in councell, and, as was underftood, by his motion ; but I was to be ruled in it as I fhoiild be advifed : (But the truth is, tho' I faid it not to his Lordfhip, if God give us peace, I fhould think a well qualified generall indemnity the wifer courfe.) He afked me> who was going to London? I faid he knew better; for I heard of none, fave of D. Queenfberryj and that E. Argyle was minded to AND LETTERS. 341 to the Bath. His Lordfhip parted from Edinburgh Thurfday morning, Breackfaft at Ormiftoun, and came to Yefter to the Mar- quis Twuedaill's buriall (where I alfo was;) and went with my Lord Chancellour to Bellhaven's houfe all night. I am not pleafed that it fliould be faid in Edinburgh, that my L. Chancellor did not not come down hisownftairs with Secretary Oglivie; but parted with him in his hall : This I believe not ; but denies it. I have nothing elfe ; and it is too much, were it not clofs vacance. I am your's. My Lord Tullibardine fpoke to the Lord Hallcraig about your letter of gift, and that you had wrote to him about it ; but, becaufe L. Hallcraig could not tell him who had the letters, I told the E. that Secret. Ogilvy had left them with me, with orders to tell his Lordfhip fo much. He alkt if I had doubles? I faid, not. He afkt if I knew the contents ? I told him what I fuppofed. He afkt if the tack would give the univerfity right to entries of vaffals and tackfmen ? I faid 1 thought not ; but the treafury would order that in drawing of the tack, and that it might not interfere with Mr Johnfton's letter and gift. L. Hallcraig told me, that, in the wcfl, I was alfo charged for an obftruder of Whitelaw's affairs. I am again your's. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Glad to hear from Mr Carjlares that Earl Portland has fo great a Hand in the frefent Treaty. Earl of Tullibardine ■arrived at London— — Suggejis that he is againjl the King^s Gift to Mr Car- fares. OfaProje£i to tranjlate the Univerfity of St Andreiv^s to Perth. S I R, I received your's of the 6th from Loo; but I had none from you Whitehall, by the laft packet ; neither did I write any to you, becaufe, when jg^'* ^°' the packet went, I was at Ipfum, and from thence I could acquaint you of nothing worth your noticing. It is an great fatisfaftion to me, 342 STATE-PAPERS me, that the Earl of Portland is fo much concerned in the making of this trea^ty, which we here think to be as good as concluded : And all own that he has been very diligent and aiSive in this mat- ter. The Earl of TuUibardine is come from Edinburgh ; he did breakfaft at the Juftice-Clerk's, and went from thence to the Mar- quis of Tweddell's burial, and was that night at my Lord Balha- ven's houfe. 120 received a letter this day from 20, wherein he gives him an account, that the fpeaker had cleared accompts with 133, but is not particular as to the balance : But it is like you may have fatisfadlion in this ; for I underftand he has written to you himfelf. He is blam.ed for hindering the fettlementof 128 ; but he did clear himfelf of that. 133, at parting with 129 told him, that, he would ufe his intereft to make him of f95, f9m5n9m25. 129 ■writes of this to 119, who will fhow 33 the letter at meeting. Both he and 20 writes, that 133 is diflatisfied with what is done by 76 in favour of 33 ; buti hope you will not write to either of them that you hear this, unlefs they give the arife for it. 133, if he meet with encouragement, will improve his trade this winter. The great objedion I hear is made againft 33 bufinefs is, that it interferes with the project of 119. It is thought by thefe who underftand, that 76, if he defign any advantage for 33, can do nothing more eafy. The Advocate writes to Secretary Ogilvy, that the members of the univerfity of St Andrew's are refolving to tranflate their col- lege to the toWn of Perth ; they advifed with him in the matter. I think nothing Ihould be done in this rafhly; for our hiftory gives no inft.ance of any thing of this kind ; and they being fettled by virtue of charters, and by ratifications of parliament, my firft thoughts of this is, that there can be no tranflation without the confent of parliament; efpecially feeing the adjacent country and fhire of Fyfe are concerned. You will hear of this no doubt from others. This is all at prefent. Adieu. Lord 128, Whitelaw, or Prefident. AND L E T T E R S. • 343 Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Of the Admiralty ; begs Mr Carjiares^s Friend/hip in getting the Af- fair difpatched. His A'uerfionto carry on certain Profecutions appointed by the Treafury. Offers to return to the Bar, if it could bring about a peaceable Settlement of Affairs at Home. SIR, I acquainted you with the cafe of our admiralty, and how five Edlnburgli, of us commiflaries were neceffitat to engage our credit to get home igg^, our fhips ; and that at length we have got a precept from the trea- fury for L. 4000, payable April 1699. We have fent the draught of a letter to be figned by his Majefty, approving this precept, and allowing us to raife money upon it. Pray befriend us in the dif- patch of it, for it would make our precept more valuable, and the raifmg of money upon It more more eafy. I alfo acquainted you how I was ordered to profecute the procefs of treafon remitted by the parliament 1695 to the juftice-court, which was not my incli- nation at this time : But now that I move in It, It much alarms the Lady Sfcelmourly for her hufband's memory ; for ihe fays it will waken his creditors : and I truly think, though the thing were ad- vifable, the King would not order dead mens memories, as E. Laud, and Skelmourly, to be meddled with. The Countefs ot Argyle is alfo much troubled for her fon Balcarras ; fhe fays It will waken his creditors, and mar his daughters marriages. I told her, that her * fon, if he pleafed, might now apply to the King at the 'Hague. I think this order might have been forborn in the prefent jun(3:ure; for even the like remit made of perfons in the year 1690 was never after meddled in ; thefe remits being Indeed made more to keep men In awe than for any thing elfe : But I told you where the mo- tion pointed, and what was anfwered. I very much wi£h the fef- fion were fettled again November. To do this well, and balance all right, would be very fatisfying, and may be end a ftrife that has growa 344 STATE-PAPERS grown too long. You know all my concern in this matter is for Juftice and peace ; and I aflure you, if my returning to the bar might procure it, it would make the change very eafy : But you have my mind fully, which would make us more quiet and happy than ever I think to fee. I heartily wifli the King fafely and quick- ly back, with a good peace, and then a fmall corre£tion might fet us here in a good cafe. I am fure the Jacobites are at prefent more quiet and tame than if they had been profecute with the utmoft ri- gour : And our church-differences make very little noife. I fhould be forry to find a peace produce worfe. Adieu. . • Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. - , Of the Manner in •which the Peace ivas intimated to him. His private Thoughts of the Treaty. Tullibardine's Schemes about fettling the Offices in Scotland. SIR, Whitehall, J wrote to you in my laft that we had got no account of the 1697. - conclufion of the peace either from Mr Pringle or yourfelf ; and the wind being crofs, we have had no letters fince. The Lords Tuftices did fend Mr Ward for me upon Friday's morning, and, when I came, did treat me very civilly. After they had caufed me fit down in a chair, fet at a little diftance from their table, my Lord Chancellor made a kind of apology to me that they had not fooner intimated the peace to me, and defired that I might acquaint thofe in the government of Scotland with it. I told them I had done fo by an exprefs, immediately after I received the certain account of the peace ; but would do it again, if their Excellencies had any thing in particular to inform. They laid they had nothing but what was contained in the articles, which they had ordered to be tranfcri- bed for me : And accordingly I received them. My Lord Sunder- land faid, he believed that the peace would be very acceptable news in Scotland. 1 told hiai there was no doubt of it, for the peace was very AND LETTERS. 34^ very honourable for the King, and advantageous for all his dominions. I have now confidered all the particular articles ; it's true Scotland is included ; but fome obferve that it is not fo much as mentioned in any of the articles, except in general as a part of Britain. The Scots privileges in France before the treaty of Nimeguen, and af- ter,, were greater than that of the Englifh : However, this is but the critical obferves of fome. But I heartily blefs God that we have the treaty as it is ; and Scotland may be more particularly minded when the commiffioners meets for regulating trade. You need men- tion nothing of this ; for, the treaty being now paft, it is out of time to infift upon It : And what I have written is only for information ; for I am fure none fpeaks with greater fatisfadion, or more honour- ably of the treaty than I do to every perfon. 133, when he parted with 102, did fpeak to feverals what I think neceflary you fhould be informed with. You know already what was faid to 129; and 20 writes to 120, that 133 had a long conference with 139; he afked him if he would be 162, meaYiing if 162 were made 20 : His anfwer was, that he would not be partner with him ; but could have > been fo moft willingly with 120 or 20; and faid a great deal more upon this purpofe, which you may guefs. Them 33 afked him, IfHe was not willing to be 20, 2b4 dy f95, n5nn2db? He anfwered, not with 127, If his defign fucceeded ; but If 20 k5m c524,em58245bf, then he would accept ; but would do nothing to his prejudice : So that you fee, without fpeaking to 76, 133 makes gin n852cn. 120 will fhew you 20 letter at meeting ; for he Is moft pofitlve of the truth of this, and of a great deal more. . It was faid likeways to 139, that 1 20 was bd7m25b4 to 1 33, and gave this reafon, becaufe he was fo to 47, and defigned that 76 fhould make him 8dc2nn2db5m ; and that 47 had faid, that he would undertake to procure to 76 a pen^^ fion during life. This 47 fwears he never fpoke to ariy body ; and I can affure you 120 had not fo muqh as any thought of that mat- ter; for he hopes that 76 will be In 102 himfelf before he will need a penfion. I thought it neceifary you fhould know of this ; be- caufe now, after the peace, it is probable meafures will be taken. I X X write 346 STATE-PAPERS- write nothing to you of the circumftances of the treafury, nor of any thing elfe that is neceflary to be propofed to the King concern- ing the keeping up or difbanding the forces in Scotland ; for I hope his Majefty will be foon over, and I fhall have occafion to fpeak of all this to himfelf. I would willingly write to the Earl of Portland, but I am afFraid to trouble him ; and you can inform him of what I have written to you. You may call for Mr Pringle's letter, be- caufe I have written to him of what concerns the admiralty : I wifh you may be affifting in it. I will not trouble you with what 133 fays of what is done in favours of 33 ; you know a little of this for- eierly. This is all at prefent. Adieu. Lord Tullibardine to Mr Carstares. Of a Gift to Mr Carfares from the King. SIR, Kenfington, I received a letter of your's a little before I left Scotland, ac- Sept.2i. quainting: me of a gift that the King had beftowed on you. I am very well fatisfied with what bounty the King gives to you, or any of his fervants that ferves him well. I have not feen the gift, fo I do not well know the nature of it. Sir James tells me he has not feen it neither : The Advocate gave me the moft particular account of it ; but faid that the copies were not fent with the letters. I do not hear whether they were prefented to the treafury when "they laft met, which was fmce I came away. I had writ to you fooner, but expeded to have met you here ; 'for I was told the King was to be over about this time. I came here on Saturday laft, and was in great joy to hear the happy news of the peace. My Lord Halcraig was at Edinburgh juft before I left it, of whofe probity I am fully fatisfied ; but I fhall not infift as to what paft betwixt us till meet- ing, who am, S I R, Your afFe£tionatc humble and fervant, (Signed) Tullibardine. Secre- AND LETTERS. 347 Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Of the Tnthnat'ion of the Peace to the Privy-council in Scotland.- Of the Tack of the Cujloms. — ^-Of one Ogilvy apprehended upon Sufpicion of correfponding ivith France. SIR, 1 1 9 is extremely obliged to you for the kindnefs you are pleafed whlteial!, .to exprefs for him ; and 33 fhall not find that his friendfhip is raif- ^^^^' ^^' placed. I was refolved to have written fully, but ij did make me a vifit, and did fit long with me ; it being the firft time I have feen him fmce I came to town. He looks very well, and has a fplen- did equipage. 47 will be in town very foon. 133 and 119 have as yet had no occafion of difference. They vifit one another ; and the laft will take care to give him no juft caufe of complaint. Se- cretary Ogilvy, as foon as he got the King's letter, dire£ted to the privy-council, did acquaint Tullibardine with it ; and told him, that it fhould be fent with a flying packet. And we did agree upon what was to be written ; particularly, that there fhould be no pro- clamation upon it until we heard of the ratification ; which we very foon expe£t. We likeways wriett, that their fhould be no day of thankfgiving till they fhould hear again from us. The public fo- lemnities have been ufed of firing the guns of the caflle, ringing bells, and bone-fires ; but this is all has been done there ; and the like was done here ; for the guns of the Tower and Weflminflier were fired, and there were illuminations. I hope you will take care that the council be again acquainted when the peace is ratified. I am forry to find by your's, that the King is not like to return foon • for it is neceffary that he knew the ftate of his treafury-affairs ; and particularly, that a new commiffion of auditors be appointed. The tack of the cuftoms does alio now fall, by reafon of the peace. They may certainly be now fett to much greater advantage. I have letters to this purpofe already. But the prefent tackfmen will pre- Xx 2 tend 343 STATE-P-APERS tend that they are lofers if they do not get one other year of it j but this firft year of the peace will be very confiderable, taking in, November and December, which are the months when our wines re- turns. The Juftice-Clerk writes to me of this, and fo do others that would be fatisfied to be concerned. The regiments were providing their clothing ; and they will certainly be the more remifs, fmce they do not know whether they are to ftand or to be broke. And yet I could heartily wifh that nothing were done in this matter until I have the honour to waite of the King. Thefe ,are but a few of the many things that are neceflary ; but I fhall forbear to write of them to-night. There is one of my name, who is a merchant ia Edinburg : He is a remote relation of my Lord Boyn's, who came over from Holland to this place at the fame time we had an account of the peace. Some days after, he came here, to afk if I had any commands for Scotland; and by his difcourfe I began to fufped: he had been in France ; fo I put him to it : And, though at firft he de- nied, yet at laft he confeft ; but thought he was in no hazard, fince the peace was now concluded. And, befides, many merchants has gone there fince the a£t of parliament. I told him he was in a mif- take; and that he was under the reach of the law; and defiredhim ingenioufly to give an account of what he had been doing there. I did not truft him that he had told me ali the truth, though I was at pains enough with him ; fometimes threatening him, and at other times giving him encouragement to expe£t fayour. So I put hini under fecurity, to appear at my Lord Tullibardine's lodgings at Ken- fington the next morning; and we did for two hours examine him very clofely. He did give us an account why he went to France ; but we ftill fufpefting that he might have carried intelligence thi- ther, or that he was carrying back intelligence, did put him to his oath, and did fwear him deeply ; and I here fend you a copy of his depofition, which both my Lord Tullibardine and I figns. He did pofitively fwear, that he did not meddle with any thing that con- cerned the publick. And you will find by his depofition that he "was very particularly interrogate. And, after all, we took a bond of him, AND tETTERS. 349 him, to prcfent himfelf at Edinburgh to the Chancellour or Advo- cate, under the penalty of L. 200 ; which I beheve is as nauch as he is worth. This is the true account of what paft in that matter, I heheve there is no proof againft him except his own confeffion. Neither do 1 think that I could have difcovered his being in France, if he had not thought that the peace made him fure ; which made him take the lefs notice to what he difcourfed. I am fure I have done all that was proper for me in the matter. I thought it proper to in- form you fully of this, leaft you may not hear of it from others. And I think you have not wanted information of every thing has paft fmce we parted. This is all at prefeht. Adieu. If we do not obtain a commiflion to be Ma- jor to my Lord Carmichael, he will take it ill ; and think neither you nor I have been fo diligent as we might have been. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Of the Troop oj Guards upon Englijh Pay. Private Confulta- tions about difpofing of Places in Scotland. Dejires that Mr Carjiares ivould order Matters fo, as to meet ivitb him before he fees any of the other Scottifh Miniflers. Wifhes Mr Carjiares ivould come oi'er before the King. Of the Mr of Forbes^ s Regi- ment. S I R, The Earl of Argyle and I have been together a confiderable time Whiteiiall this day ; and, amongft other things, I find he is in great concern '^ftot'er i. for the providing of the troop of guards : Our commiiTaries will provide them nothing. You know they are on the Englifh efta- bliftiment ; and the treafury here will not order payment of fubfift- ence to them, as they do to the other regiments : So my Lord has been neceflitate to advance already L. 400 of his own money, or elfe they had been entirely in diforder. We muft keep theih as long on Englilh 350 STATE-PAPERS EngUfli eftablifliment as poffibly we can. And I believe, if the King would order any perfon about him to write to Mr Montague, money would be ordered. There is no fond provided them in Scot- land ; and if, after his Majefty comes over, he refolve to put them on the Scots eftablifliment, there muft fome of the regiments we have there be difbanded. I have written to Mr Pringle, that there be another letter to the council obtained when the peace is ratified. I have fent to him a copy of the proclamation was iffued out upon the conclufion of the treaty of Nimeguen. I am refolving to write of this to my Lord Portland. I would have done it this night, but there is a report here that my Lord is coming over ; but the next packet will give us the certainty of this. 1 2 was with 1 1 this day ; . and, after paifing of a great many civilities and compliments, 12 did offer to be in ftrick frlendftiip with 1 1 ; but 1 1 told him plain- ly, that, though he had all the honour poffible for himfelf, yet it was impoffible to go alongs in every meafure. He owned himfelf to be in frieiidfliip with 47; and he faw no reafon why 1 2 might not be fo too. But, when they defcended more clofely to particulars, all recurrs to the eftablifliment of 128. And i2faid, that, if that were but once done, there could be ijo more oceafion for diff^erence. 1 1 did not fully tell me what he faid in this matter, but I know he is pofitive againft that projeft, and is for making him 129 : And at meeting I fliall give you an account what he projeds for him. You may be fure I will never condefcend to any thing to his prejudice, for, for what I know, we are in very good friendfliip. But I am fure it will never be the intereft of 76 to make 128 independent. He is a good fervant ; but, when he is a mafter, he is furious ; and, in that cafe, either 1 39 or 20 might be fettled. It will qot be amif^- that 33 and 119 meet before he fpeak with 47, 1 1 , or 1 33 ; which may be eafily contrived, by meeting in fome tavern. I would write mote fully, but I think it unneceflary, becaufe I am ftill in the hopes that you will be here foon : And I think it were, not improper that yoii fame a little fooner than the reft But you will be heft judge , what AND LETTERS. sjr what is to be done in this matter ; and I have not fpoke of this to any body elfe. I am pofitive of the opinion, that, if you had but an op- portunity at leifure, and thereafter came here, your abfence might be well fupplied by your writing ; and Pringle would fupply thofe things which go of courfe. I fend you this night my Lord Forbes's letter, which I got from him by the day's packet. I intreat you will take care of him, if there be thoughts of difbanding any of our re- giments. I give my moft humble fervice to the Earl of Portland. I thought to have concluded, but, before I do, I muft tell you, that I have confidered the letter in favours of the univerfity of Glafgow ; and it is exa£tly right, and is noways prejudicial to the gift in favours- of the perfon you know of; for it is only the rents are tobefetj and there is no power granted to fet tacks ; fo that runs in its ordi- nary courfe. Therefore, there will be no difficulty in this matter, if 89 ftand his ground. This is all at prefent. Adieu. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Of the Duke of ^eensherry' s Arrival. — The African Company's Sur~ prife that the King had never given any Orders [ivith refpeB to their Affairs to his Refident at Hamburgh. — A Scheme for fettling Scotti/h Affair sfent over to Mr Carftares in great Secrecy. SIR, I do with all my heart wifli that this cmbafly of my Lord Port- Whitehall, land's may be for his advantage. It is certainly a mark of great °^°''^'' 5- truft; and perhaps it may be profitable enough. All I diflike in it is," that he will be fo long abfent ; and I am fure the affairs of the Scots nation may come to fuffer by it. I had always full time al- lowed by him for giving him information ; and I found his opi- nion very juft in every thing I propofed to him. I refolve to fpeak to him fully of every thing that I think may come under confidera- tion this winter. I have received a letter for the Eaft-India compa- ny 35^' STATE-PAPERS ny of Scotland ; wherein they give an account, that, fince they have received the anfwer to his Majefty's addrefs, they did intimate the fubftance of it to the King's refident at Hamburgh, who declared, he was ready to obey what, orders he received from his Majefty ; but that as yet he had got none in that matter ; which they feem to be furprifed with. I thought it neceffary to give you this intima- tion ; but as yet I have not met with my colleague fince 1 received the letter. But, by my nextj I fhall fend you a copy of it, and £hall write more fully. The Duke of Queenfberry and his Duchefs are arrived this night. He has been very ill of a pluraflie, but I hope is recovering. Her Grace is big with child, being within a month of "■ her time. He would not have been here, had it not been that his children have all died in Scotland ; and that he is in hopes this air may do better. You may underftand from the incloled, which I re- . ceived from his Grace on the road, what probably will be the fub- je£h of our difcourfe with the Earl of Portland. Pray, let no body know that you have feen it ; but, after you haVe read it, you may return it again to me. You fee I have no referve with you ; and I am very fenfible of the friendfhip you have done me with the King and the Earl of Portland in my abfence. There will be no difficulty in your own affair. We are longing to hear that the ra- tifications are exchanged, and that the Emperor has figned ; but I don't doubt but both will be in due time. Do not take nottice, e- ven fo much as to the Duke of Q^himfelf, that you have feen his letter. No more at prefent. Adieu. • Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Anxious to have a Return from the King to the Letter of the African Company^ and that he "will give the Orders to his Rejtdent ivhicb he had fromifed. SIR, Whitehall, The wind is fo unfavourable that we hear from one another very 1697.^"^ ' feldom. You complain, in your laft, that there were three maills wanting : AND LETTERS. 353 wanting: I doubt not but they are come fafe to your hands before now. I have, by this day's packet, an account from Scotland, that tbe exprefs with the King's letter, intimating the peace, was arrived. They will follow the advice I have given, in ufingno folemnity un- .til the ratification ; which we h^ar is paft, though it be not yet come here. The Lord Chancellour and the Juftice-Clerk do defirejne to procure for them copies of the treaties of peace with Spain and Holland, and that offered to the Empire. I defire you will fend me them with your convenience. I have fent to Mr Pringle this night the letter I received from the directors of the African company ; which being read to the King, I am hopeful that hl-s IVIajefty v."ill give the orders to his Resident at Hamburgh he promlfed to give in the anfwer to the company's addrefs. They will with im- patience exped fome anfwer from my Lord TuUibardjne and me, for their general meeting is to be in the beginning of Novem- ber next. I would gladly know how foon the King will come o- ver ; for, if he be here before November, we muft do the beft we can to put off affairs till then ; but, if he flays longer, we muft write for orders concerning the cuflomsi I find my Lord Tullibar- dine does Incline to delay it till he hear again from the Chancellor, who is mightily concerned for the prefent taxmen. My Lord Ad- vdcate's brother. Sir Robert, is likeways concerned. I do believe the taxmen will be loofers unlefs they continue for another year : But the King is not in law obliged to them for this, and may certainly have a far greater tack-duty. You may delay to reprefent this yet for fome time ; and, when Its nece'ffary, I fliall fend a true memo- rial of the cafe, that the King may thereafter ideterjtnine as he thinks fit. We are expecting the Earl of Portland with impatience ; and I am fure I am in very great concern concerning him ; for the 1 aft two or three days we have had extraordinary gr^at wl'nds. This is all this night. , Adieu, Y y The 354 STATE-PAPERS The Advocate toMa Carstares. His Plan for fettling Scottifh Affairs ; in Cyphers. S I R, Oftobrro,' ^ ^^^^ your's with your kind remembrance. I do underftand 1697. that Mr Fall may fee Mr Hay fhortly ; and 35 is defirous that Mr Hamilton, Mr Lee, and Mr Carfe, may meet, that they may clear accounts ; and, now that we have peace, take meafures for trade, in time coming. You know 55 and 52 have an old comeradfliip, and Mr Haftie defires its continuance. 52 thinks, that, if 4 were 29, it would remove all ground of difference ; and 55 thought he had reafon, feeing then Mr Haftie and Mr Thomfon, and others, would, have all they pretend to.. Mr Hume thinks that Mr Camp- bel makes now the great, if not the only debate ; and that the join- ing of him to Mr Stewart would not be the fettling of Mr Murray *s company. So much as plain, 22, 33, 39, 23, 28, 25, 20, 50, 56, to Mr Erfkine, and 38, 37, 36, 41, 33, 23, to Mr Hay and their friends. 32 bids me aflure you that he knows Mr Hume's agree- ment with Mr Campbell impofTible, for the fame reafon. But^ as to White's intereft, and that of 33, 22, 24, 23, 33, 39, 37, which is greater, he wifhes that either '51 maybe 29, or that at kaft 29 may be divided; for, after what Carfe knows of 4 and the 42, 39, 28, 29, 23, 37, 24, 23, 44, hath been; and that Stewart is fo entirely with 52, who hath now eight of Mr EUei's in his very 36, 41, - 50, 30, 33, 31, 20, can it be thought that Mr Campbell, that fh.ould be equal to all, ftiould be Mr Haftie's 52, 36, 41, 39, 59, 23, 28, 25? But Mr Forrefter ftands fair, and 32 hath no concern but for 9 intereft. He was lately with Mr Neill; and thefe are a part of 93 thoughts. If Hay were i, it might do mightily ; but that I meddle not with; only, Home is pofitive that Hay ftiould be of fa//, Portland. Mr^a>r, Seafield. AND LETTERS. 355 of 94's company, and have a fhare in It equal to 21. But this, as all things elfe to the benefit of 35, you muft manage, without Mr Hay ; who, though he be White's beft friend, yet is fo much the lefs friend to 35. And this I hope 31 underftands. But I wifh heartily that 33 were with 35. Adieu, Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Lord Tullibardine jealous of their Correfpondence. — Of disbanding the Scottifh Regiments. — Wifhes Mr Carfares nvere onjer along ivith Lord Portland., other wife they ivill come to no Conclufion. SIR, I received your's of the 14th; before I had time to read it, 133 Whitehall, came in, and read his own letters. He afked Secretary Ogilvie, if 169°^. he had any letters ? who anfwered, that he had ; but that they con- tained nothing of confequence. He infinuate that he inclined to fee them; but this was waved. Within a little he faid 33km52fn to 119 35 8ze95m — 119 feemed not to hear; but it was faid again, and then it was anfwered, kgaf Z7zfk5m nd; and' it was faid no- thing ; and fo this paft. From whence this came, 119 does not know; but it is no matter. 119 does long extreamly for 89. Se- cretary Ogilvy does hear that fome of our regiments' in Scotland will be difbanded. This matter would be well confidered ; for, firft, they are very good troops, at leaft moft of them are ; and, then, -the colonells are men that have intereft in the countr/y. Tulli- bardine's regiment is very full, and will be very well'cloathed. For Lindfay, he hath a very good regiment ; and4t is all that that noble family has to fubfift by. Lieutenant-colonel Forbes is with you, who will fpeak enough of the merits of Hill's regiment. As for M'Gill's and Douglas's I have not much to fay ; yet M'Gili is a Y y 2 good 133., Lord Tullibardine. 33km52fn, writes to Secretary Ogilvy by cyphers. k<>2f Z7z£k5m nd, what if it were fo. 89, Lord Portland. 356 STATE-PAPERS good officer. If 76 were here^ a plan of what forces can be maln-^ tained in Scotland might be offered. 119 and 89 fhall fpeak of it. 1 1 9 has no concerne in the matter but his Majefty's true intereft and fervice. Some do report here, that teti of the Enghfh regiments are to be broke. This does alarme us that are concerned in S-ot- land the more. If 76 doe nz6b and 8dg6f 5mnz6b his dm45mn in thofe matters, it is the better. 47 and 1 1 are to write to you this night. 119 has not feen them fince he got your letter. They do think that it were very proper that 33 were here when 89 comes; for it is not probable that we can come to a final conclufion without him. But J i 9 leaves that entirely to himfelf, to do in it as he pleafes ; and he wrote his mind in this matter formerly. I fhall make your excufe to 20 either this night or on Thurlday. I had none from him by the lafl. packet. This is all this night. A- dieu. SecretaryOgilvy to Mr Carstares. Anxious to fee Mr Carflares before any of their other Friends meet ivith him. — Of appointing a Preftdent of the Seffion. — Regiments that are broken ; particularly Tullibardine* s ; ivho takes it patiently^ hut hopes to knoiv to ivhom he oives it. — Of the Cuftoms in Scot- land. SIR, Whitehall, I have received two from you fince I wrote laft. I am very fen- 160 '*' fible of the kindnefs you exprefs for me in them. Friendfhip fhall not faill betwixt us firft on my fide. I am very glad that you give us the hopes of feeing you here fo foon ; and I hope you will be as good as your prortiife in meeting with me before you fee any other of our friends. I owe any thing that I have to the King's favour, and 76, the Kiag. nz6b, fign and counterfign his orders. AND LETTERS. 357 and I fhall reckon m^felf very unfortunate if I do or propofe any thing that may be uneafy to him ; and, when he returns, I fhall, as is my duty, give his Majefty, with all humility, my thoughts of what concerns his fervlce. We have wanted a prelident long, and I wifh that place may be well difpofed as foon as his Majefty comes over. 120, as I underftand, has written fully concerning that mat- ter ; but, however, 119 has. a great deal to fay on that fubjedt, which he will forbear to write. 47 and 1121115 ey52n54 with the late accounts, 5l5ef eddm yzbn2t. This I wrote formerly ; but there is no help for it : Friends muft do for him. Secretary Ogil- vy tells, that he has received a letter from Mr Pringle, whereby the King allows him to affure the Lord Forbes, that he will do for him with the firft opportunity. He tells me he has done this already ; and he fays he knows who procured it ; and is very fenfible ot it. He thought fit likevvrife to write a letter to Lindefay. I will forbear to write anything of bufm&fs more this night. The peace has been this day proclaimed with the ufual folemnilies ; and the people did fhew a great deale of fatisfa£tion upon this occafion. The King's entry will be with a great deal of fplendour. I am fure he returns to a contented people. He has done more for us than we could have expected. But I think it is needlefs for me to fay any more to you of this : I fhall rather choife to exprefs my thoughts where they m:ay do him fervice. The Earl of Portland is arrived in England, but is not yet come this length ; but fome of his fervants are at his lodgings. I will be fure to wait on him as foon as he will allow of it • and I am fure he will fee none that wifheth him better. I can- not conclude this till I tell you what 47 faid concerning 133 : That he was fure that 76 muft pay for what he has done to him, for he muft either make him 8dcznnzdb5m, or Colonel of the guards. The Earl of TuUibardine does take the lofs of^his regiment patiently e- nough ; but he fays he hopes to know to whom he owes it. The ratification of the peace, and the other letters, were fent down by an exprefs 120, the Advocate. up, Secretary Ogilvy. 8dcznnzdb5m, Commiflioner. 358 S T A T E -P A P E R S €xprefs yefternight, and are all direded for the chancellour, that the accounts of the breaking of the regiments ' may befirft known in council. I believe it will be faid that TuUibardine did quitt volun- tarily. I am fure Forbes and Lindfay did not fo. Secretary Ogil- vy returns you thanks for the treaty of peace with Spain. It is now almoft fully contained in all our public papers. Adieu. I promifed in my laft to write you an account of the matter of the cuftoms ; and I then told you, that the Duke of Queenfberry, the Earls of TuUibardine and Argyle, were to meet at my lodg- ings, to refolve what was fit to be done. We have the tackfmens re- prefention to confider, on the one hand, with the Chancellour and Advocate's letters in their favours ; and, on the other, a far greater tack-duty than is now payable. L. 40,000 is offered for on year ; but, for three years fack-duties, I believe SJdOoo pound njay be of- fered to be paid yearly. There was reafoning for fome time on both fides ; of which I fhall give you an account at meeting. But, at laft, it was thought by all to be reafonable, that the matter fhould be kept entire untill his Majefty's return, that he might determine what he thought moft for his fervice ; and, in order to this, we did all write to the Chancellor and Lords of the Treafury, and Advo- cate, that it was abfolutely neceflary that the prefent tack fhould be declared null and void ; but that there might be a provifion in fa- vours of th^ tackfmen, That, notwithftanding thereof, it fhould ftand and fubfift, if his Majefty fhould think fit fo to appoint, after the cafe is reprefented to him at his return. To Mr Carstares. Dejtring a Letter of Recommendation to Lord Portland to be one of his Retinue upon his EmbaJJy to France. SIR., oa^f^'o S ^ ^^® ^^^^ ^*^® Carftares this afternoon, who had forgot to bring 1697, ^° town the letter flie had writ for you ; and had not received your laft, AND LETTERS. 359 laft, having miflaid them by her coming here. I fuppofe my Lord Portland will be come off before yoii receive this; fo fhall defire a favour of you, if convenient, and not otherwife, that you w^ould let me have a letter to fome about him that may be proper to prefent me to his Lordfhip, as one that has bufmefs at Paris, and is defirous to have the honour to make up one in his retinue. I need not tell you, that this is not defigned to fave expences, but, on the contrair, will, I believe, put me to fome more than otherwife I needed ; on- ly I muft tell you why I go ; and it's at the defire of my wife's friends, who have her eftate in their hands, and are defirous to tranf- a£t with me before they die : Their age obliges me to haften, for their children may not perhaps be of the fame mind. This reafon would have made me go fo foon as the paffages are open, whether any embaify went or not ; and it's only fince I heard the E. Portland * was to go, that I have thought of going in that manner; for, if any other had, I fhould not have dreamed of it : And, as it is, I rather open this to you, to have your advice, than pofitively to afk any re- commendation ; for I do not defire any other than a general one, as a perfon you know, and is defirous of the honour to be of his Lordfliip's retinue; which is all fubmitted, &c. I give you my thanks for your anfwer to mine about my brother.. I was more alarmed than need was. Sir Andrew Kennedy to Mr Carstarbs. Of Lord Bale arras, ivho deftres to return to Scotland. Defires to be put upon the Commiffion for treating of Commerce. Reverend SIR, This day I received the inclofed for you ; and this afternoon I Rotterdam, had a vifit from the Earl of Balcarras, who is come from Switzer- 1697. land, where he has been of a good while; and you know whence he came thither. I have no acquaintance of him ; however, he told me, his defign was to go home, and live quietly and peaceably j and 36o STATE-PAPERS and was willing to give the government all the fecurity could be demanded : His circumftances you know perhaps better than I ; however, I - thought it my duty to acquaint you hereof, that the King may know he is here, where he refolves to ftay till the King come to the Hague. My Lord Polwart parted from this for the - packet-boat yefterday. Sir, I could be content you dropt a line to Secretary Ogilvy of the fitnefs fome in behalf of Scotland fhould be commiffionate to be on the bulinefs of commerce with France, whether it be here or at London ; and, if here, I am on the place ; if at London, I could be content to be on the commiffion : You know for what profpe£t. My wife, your brother, I, and my fon, are well ; we give you our moft afFe£tionate fervice. I am, Reverend SIR, Your moft faithful, and moft humble fervant, (Signed) Andrew Kennedy. Alexander Cunningham to Mr Carstares. Of my LordLorrCs Concern left his Regiment he broken. Private Affairs.) and a Literary Projeff. Reverend SIR, Bruges, 1 had the honour of your's before I parted from Bruflcls, and I Oft. 20. r* 1 ■ ' r- 1697. find by it, that, upon all occafions, you are ready to oblige your friends. I do not yet know whether I ftiall go to Paris or not before I return to London. My Lord Argylehas not yet written any thing concerning his fon ; he was gone from this place to his regiment before I came here, which I was glad of; for I know his L. Colonel will take care of him : He is mightily concerned for his regiment ; every body tells him it will be broken. I have aflured him, that you will do your utmoft for him. I muft prefume to give you the trou- ble to carry over a few books of mine, which I have ordered to be fent to your brother's. You will be pleafed to pafs them as your own, elfe the cuftom would amount to the fourth part they are worth ; AND LETTERS. 361 worth ; but am confident that what books any of the Khig's cha- plains takes over will be free ; becaufe it may be faid that they are the books he carried abroad with himfelf for his own ufe. I muft likewife defire you not to forget a bundle of papers fealed, which I left with your brother, and for which I have his note : I defire you would put them up carefully, for there are in the bundle accompts, and fome other papers of confequence. I fhall reftore your bro- ther's note to you when we fhall meet again. As for the projed, I know you will not only ufe all your credit with Secretary Ogilvy, but will alfo recommend the thing to all the Scots nobility and gentry you Ihall meet with at London. I have bought in this country a confiderable number of books, in order to the carrying of it on ; and, fo foon as I am free of my L. Lome, I refolve to fet fe- rioufly about it. I moft humbly beg your pardon for all the trou- ble I give you. This prefumption in me is a plain proof that you willingly condefcend to ferve your meaneft friends ; and am, with all refped:, Reverend SIR, Your moft obliged, and moft obedient fervant, (Signed) Alex. Cunningham. Secretary Ogilvy to Mr Carstares. Of the frequent Intervie'ws nvh'ich he and Mr Carfares' s other Friends had "with my Lord Portland. Of the Ahifes committed hy Cap- tain Frafer and his Clan, ivhich makes it necejfary to delay dif- banding the Regiments, SIR, I have had the honour and fatisfadlion to be with the E. of Port- Wiltehai], land frequently, and fo has thofe you would have defired ; he is 1697.'^^''*^* faithful to his mafter, and a true and real friend : He is now fully informed, and, if his Majefty were come over, may foon do all is jieceffary. The Frafers do commit great abufes ; and Captain Fra— Z z fej. 362 STATE-PAPERS fer has now arrived to that pitch of infolence as to detain my La- dy Lovet, and to pretend he is married to her ; in the mean time, fhe neither will eat nor drink till flie is at liberty, and is already very weak. Now all orders that are proper are out agai'nfl: him. This trouble, and fome other difficulties that have occurred, does keep our regiments as yet from being difbanded : The reafons are fully contained in the council's letter to the King, which my Lord TuUibardine has in his hands : We would have fent it, 'but we ex- pe£t his Majefty with the firft fair wind. I thought it ncceflary ta give this fhort advertilement. I never, with fo much impatience and anxiety defired his Majefty here ; for his orders are neceffary in ma- ny things. This is all at prefent from your M. H, S. I have fubjeCt for a- very long letter ; but I am afraid it may mif- carry. A. Murray to Mr Carstares. JBe/eeches him to take care of my Lord Carmie^esei, that his regiment be not diihmded upon thif Qccafiqrk. SIR, Edmburgh, Your kind remembrance of me by my noble and good friend my i6c,:^. ■ Lord Carmichael, obliges me to render you my moft hearty thanks. We are now come under a happy peace, \ pray God it he a lafting one. It appears that the face of affiajr ^ will take a new turn, even here ; and I doubt not but you will fo far modle aa to lay yourfelf out to fee your old friends get fair play. We fee his Majefty has ordered the difbanding of fome of his forces ; and there is a talk of difbanding more. I hope my Lord Carmichael's regiment is in jio hazard: You know his modefty, and how little he has befturred himfelf for any thing; and I am perfuaded no Scotfman is in great-^ er favour with his Majefty ; and you know my Lord Portland ha& a particular efteem for him ; and I pray you mind his Lordihip to fecure my Lord's regiment before he goes. I fay nothing for my- felf. AND LETTERS. 363 felf, but ftill refts upon your care of me ; and ftill wifhes a tho- Tough underftanding betwixt you and your old friend, which I ftill hope is nearer and nearer. If there be to be any cohfiderable chan- ges amongft us, that worthy gentleman's advice is more neceffary than any other whatfomever. So wilhing and praying for God's dire£tion to you in all things, I ever am, Dear SIR, Your moft affedionate, and obliged humble fervant, (Signed) A. Murray. to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers. SIR, I acquainted you by my laft how your bufmefs went here ; and Edinburgh, lierewith you have the fcroll of the letter I promifed you, which jg ^^ ^ '^' you will take your own Way to have difpatched. Mr Dewar hath not done in your other bufmefs what I expeded ; buf, to pleafe Thomfon in another particular, he hath complied with him ; but, at the bottom, it is to pleafe Mr Erfkine ; and that 1 3 may be eafy to him in the bufinefs of Mr Blackwood, which yet cannot fucceed. This is the report I hear. Mr Hay no doubt acquaints you with what relates to Mr Campbell ; and I am glad that it is thought he fhould be a friend to Mr Lawfon as well as to Mr White : But my ftrait is, that Mr Fofter, whom I think fitteft for 29, is not g1-acioas to 44, which I fay not to fepom'mend 32 ; for I know 9 will hardly do a thing fo crofs to Erfkine, though 21 be hot therein juft : And befides, if Hume were looking after profitj 51, becoming 29, would double 32 advantages : But, in that matter, you have Hume's thoughts very fmgly ; and I tfuty wifh 4 may be confidered accord- ' ing to his beft deferving ; only, I was perfuaded that Campbell and ^e would never agree. Pray mind Mr Matt, and do him all the Z z 2 poffible 364 STATE-PAPERS poffible kindnefs you can. I again recommend to you your own affair ; and am your's. Mr David Blair to Mr Carstares. Upon Church-Buftnefs. Dr Br. Edinburgh, This day your's came to hand of 9th inftant, of that fame date 1607"^'' '^ of nay laft to you by that poft which carried up the commiflion's- addrefs to the King. That addrefs you would fee was fueciniSt, and of a plain ftile. As for that other you mention, it might ferve to divert his Maj. if he fhould pleafe to caft his eye upon it, after fome long audience about a weighty affair : But, if Geo. Ridpath fhould chance to get copiesr of both, he would readily print them in his Flying Poft. We have nothing going here of moment. By the yoimgejl minifter, whom I mentioned in my laft, I mean the youngeft for years, not the laft who came. Several perfons alk me the queftion about the fitting of the affembly, and if it will hold at the time appointed ? My an- fwer is, (and I can give no other), that I know nothing to the con- trary. Some few of the younger fort do fometimes exprefs their wilhes, that, in the next affembly, an adl may pafs affertory of the intrinfic power of the church : But I hear no fuch thing fpoke of by the wifer fort. I once fpoke to you of a book, which I could never yet fee ; (I fought for it eight year's ago at the famedeft book- fellers in Little Britain, but was told, that the laft two copies^ which remained had been bought up, by church of England-men) v. The author is Samuel Petit, De Jure Principum ediBis Ecclejiae quaefito. I would give a great deal for it, did I but know where ta have it. My refpeds to Mrs Carftares. Adieu. JUSTICJE. AND LETTERS. 365 Justice-Clerk to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers. SIR, 78 is glad that 22 hopes 82 tmbg 8tq 6823q taken ofF 22's Ormlfton, mrrmuy even in decr\ but let not 9's affair fufFer by it. You fpeak 1697. of 75 's anchoring-ground ; it's paft fathoming by any I know, i o may prove a fecurity for 75. 22 refolves not 82 nq r27 83 ; but fays not whether 22 will nq r27 77. Excufe 78 r27 tu6 3xmzq6, azqd 54 and 10 firft quzu68q7 268m8q, then joyful days for 25 and 68. 78 does not think 73 will be adive to get 10 made 75 j •for 73 loves to be depended on, not to be a follower. I came here Saturday laft, and refolves to fpend the reft of this year with my wife, where I meet with no contradidion, and fpends my time with fatisfadion, and faves my money. I cannot think but you will pay Scotland a vifit when the affembly meets ; fo hoping to meet fliortly, I continue your true friend. Farewell. I cannot but tell you, that the old laird efpoufes what is faid to be your intereft againft all men, and is through thick and thin for youi i think 'tis juftice both to you and him that you know this ; no man was truer in the affair of Aberdeen ; pray give him your thanks. Mr David Blair to Mr Carstares. Atks his Anfwer to a ^ery, Which is the beji Way of averting the intrinfic. Poiver of the Church ? Dr Br. I have no news to give you ; but 'would fain, have the folutlon of Edinburgh, a queftion; and that is, What you take to be the beft way of af- le";!" "*^" ferting th.e intrinfic power of the church? Whether to prove it in the S66. STATE-PAPERS the pulpit, by the ftrongeft and beft arguments the fcripture can af- ford to that purpofe ; or to advance it by a flout affertory a£t of a G. Affembly ? Or, what would you think, if a man fliould go up to the pulpit, and tell the people) in the clofe of his fermon, That the government of the church, and its intrinfic power, fhould not reft upon fo flippery a foundation as the inclinations of the people ; and therefore it were good that it were declared and aflerted in the next alfembly ? For the old men are going off the ftage, and young meii ^ill faint for want of courage. What think you of thefe two laft itiethods ? For my part, I would rather be for the firft. You tell me nothing bf news about the houfe of commons. But pray let md hear from you, and anfwer my queftions ; and, if you would alib fa- vour me with a double of Mr Seaton's addrefs, or elfe let Mr Rid- path do it. Adieu. My brdther John prefents his fervice to you ; and my wife has her beft refpeds to you and to Mrs Carftares. Lord Justice-Clerk to Mr Carstares. Cyphers. A Story that Sir James Ogilvy ivas to be Prejldent, and the Karl of Lenjen Secretary^ S I IR, Edmburgh, I wifli you many good new years. 73 did write 20 76, which 1698!^' 78 d2gxp Z28 mmpbu6qp ; but 76 has Z28 pqoxuzqp. I'm not of the mind Mr Dunlop either has or can offer the higheft rent of the five years, fay he was to give no graffum, and to pay each five years : What the five years under coUedion amounted to, is all can be in reafon demanded ; and this he offers, and might a been accepted dq7q 58 and 84 m6 68298 r27 8tq7q r7uqzp m6 Stqa 29518 82nq. 74 has writ to 78 about 78's nquzs 2z 8dq 8tq- 6m97uq, and defires 82 wz2d ur 78 will allow 74 8i y2bq uz u8, 22 wz2d678, 78 lm6 ympq Z2 mzbdq7; ^^^^ ^ 74 minds 82 897zq 78 298 2r 8tq 3xmoqtq tm6, and put tuy uz 8tq 8tq6md, it will be AND 1 E T T E R S. 367 be no kindnefs, 22 tm6 78'8 yu2p ymzmpsq u8 ; but let not it be known that 78 has 6mup in d27p 2ru8. You have flories with you. We have another from your parts which you write nothing of, viz. That Sir Ja. Ogilvy is to be prefident, and the E. of Leven fecretary. 74 qzu2uzq6 6qo7q6uq 82 78, dtuot 78 p2q6 82 22. Lord Justice-Clerk to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers. SIR, Seeing 22 cannot he For 77, let 22 be as little for 7 or 83, and January 6„ 78 fhall be indifferent. Now I expe£t to hear 95's affair is going "^ ^ ' right ; let us know what this is has been fallen 97 ; they fay 56 mxum6 dtus6 will fuffer by it; yet 78 fays he hopes otherwife fee- ing 97 and 55 tmbq Z28 nqqz 62 dqqx this while bygone. 78 qc63qo86 82 tqm7 to-morrow what pqoqynq7 tm6 372 pgoqp. 22 has certainly heard how 3tq6p2 p7mzw 22's tqmxSt mb 8tq ymz ympq 6qo7q8m7uq6 this he did in 73's 02y3mzuq; make 72 73 and 78 72 and 6qzp 73 82 62yq 3z68 uz 65 72 would not keep it year and day, and then 78 might live. Pray ye, exprefs with as much modefly as you pleafe, what has moved Sunderland to lay down ; only let us know it. 78 is of 101, and will write exadt accounts to 22 - - - I was a ftranger to all the flying packets "you had laft week till I went to Edinburgh ; and there is one of them, I know not the oecafion of it yet, if it was not 75's return for the buzpuomSuzzs were fent him by 22 and others. Fare- well. Mr 36S STATE-PAPERS Mr Pringle to Mr Carstares. Edinburgh, Feb. I. 1698, S I R, I came here this day, having ftaid fome with my brother atStichill. I find nothing as yet of moment to communicate. I doubt not but you will be informed from better hands of what paiTed this night in council in reference to the fubmiffion made by Sir Robert Dlck- fon. I fend you -here a memorial concerning Colonel Erfkine^ for whom I know you will be concerned, becaufe all honeft men I find to be fo. I have neither more time nor fubje£t, except for the laft I fhould take your abilities and favours, of which, without further x;ompliment, I am moft fenfible. So far as I yet understand, 128 has carried ^imfelf in the concerns of the E. Ind. Company, with a juft and due regard to his Majefty's fervice. He is in the country. Adieu. Mr pRi NGLE to Mr Carstares. Of the State of Parties in Scotland. — The African Company difpleafed •with the Anpwer to their late Addreffes. Edinburgij Feb. 10. 1698. S I R, .Two pofts ago I received your's of the firft ; but I find the cu- ftom of this place neceflarily draws a ftrahger to a tavern, when he ihould write his letters, which makes me at this time prevent the ap- proach of night. 156 returns hearty thanks to 33 for the aflurances of his friendfhip, on which he relies more than upon that of any other. It is very agreeable to hear that things go well with 1 1 9 and 33 156, Mr Pringle. 33, Mr Carftares. 119, Secretary OgilVy, AND LETTERS. 369 53- It has been proposed to 122 that he fhould keep himfelf free from all concerts until he fpeak with 76 ; which I find he de- figns within a few weeks. He profeffes efteem and refped; for 33, and allows i 56 to fignify fo much ; yet I dare not fay but he is in fuch terms with 152, as makes 156 believe he would prefer his friendfhip, tho', at the -fame time, he declares himfelf at liberty, for what may be agreeable to 76. It is not -yet known how that 222 defigns to fee 38 ; and I do not think it fitt it fhould be publick. I find no good underflanding betwixt the fucceflbr of 112 and 30 ; the laft oft takes too much upon him, where the other's authority and honour is concerned ; which -will contribute to a better under- fta'nding betwixt 122 and I ig. I doubt not but 33 has been fuf- ficiently informed of what pafled Friday lafl about his concerne, and cfpecially what related to 30, who interpofed many difficulties ; and, when over-ruled, he removed. The affair feems now to be at a clofe; but 1 56 having had occafion fince that time to difcourfe with i24of 33, and particularly Mr Dunlop, 156 thinks there may be yet occafion for 33 declaring pofitively his mind as to the difpofal of a- ny money may be due to him; and, as to the manner of remitting, fome pains may' be taken here. It were needlefs to trouble you with the clafhes of this place. 89 and 76 are feparated ; and the journey is only the pretext, being never to meet again. 75 is m o- ther circumftances : Nothing done but by his advice. But, whether fuch ftories are only accidental rumours, or induftrioufly fpread, I cannot judge. Many here are ftill perfuaded of the advancement of 127 ; how 82 has carried to him all this winter' you know well e- nough. Many thinks it has difcovered the weaknefs of 82, and will do 127 no fervice. There is much talk of 88 being fbon in this country: How he will be difpofed is uncertain; for the moffc part he inclines to trade. But I am informed, that great pains are taken by 100, that, when 88 arrives, he fhall be with him. And 124 is folliciting, that, by a public declaration, 88 maybe allowed A aa to 122, Advocate. 76, the King. i52,"TulIibardine. 30, Annandale. 89, Portland. , 7 J, Albemarle. 127, Tullibardiae. 88, a pariitunent. jOQ, African company. 124, Privy-council. 370 STATE-PAPERS m to be fo. Whether he will be able to carry his point, or how far 76 may be concerned', let others confider. 156 has been with 128^ in the countrey, but only for a few hours, and upon generals ; beings refolved to be more particular when 128 comes to this place ; who is expeded every day. As to what may be expedted of 1 56, in refer- ence to what i« trufted to him, little can be faid. You cannot ima- gine what difficulty there will be to fatisfy, in any of the pointSr 122 ; to whom only 156 has fpoke freely on the head ; knows no- thing. 1 02 is concerned about his trade ; and yet his friends are afraid he will turn bankrupt by his own mifmanagement. And, fo it may be the better for 76 the lefs he have to do with him, left he bear the blame. You would hear that the anfwer given to the late addrefles of our African company was not received as an anfwer, becaufe, being di— reeled to Sir Francis Scott, from the fecretaries, it did not bear to be communicate to the council of the company. However, I hear no- thing of any further defign of application to court. They are bu— fied in preparing to fet fail, which is expelled with three large fhips, and two lefler ones, within 5 or 6 weeks. 15618 refolved The Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Jn Anpwer to a Letter of Advice Mr Carjlares had left for him ivhen he fet out from London for Edinburgh. Angry that thePresby-- terians fhauld fet up Earl of Tullibardine in Oppofttion to him. ► His oivn and his Family^s Merits "with that Party.- Mr Car-^ Jlares gone da-ivn to promote a Scheme for making Jufiice-Clerk. Chancellor, &c. SIR, London, J am forry I was not at home when you called two feveral times 1698. before you went for Scotland. I received the letter you left me. I da 128, Lord Juftice-Cletk. AND LETTERS. 371 <3o aflure you I take your advice very kindly, for none alive can ea- fier convince me, efpecially in matters of that kind. 1 am heartily forry to hear that any of the prefbyterians of the church of Scot- land can be prevailed upon (by a runegado church of England-man, and a prefbyterian but of two years Handing), to follow any mea- fure fo far contrary to their true intereft, as I am told, Mr Wylie of Hamilton moved them too. I do not pretend to be perfe£t ; I have my faults ; and every body fees the worft of me : And, though I won't be whipt into obedience, as if Mr William Cummine's go- vernment were yet remaining over me, yet I am fenfible your ad- vice is fo good, coming from a fincere heart, void of intereft, mo- deftly told me, anfwerable to your fundion, I do aflure you it fhall be my ftudy to avoid all fcandle ; and in my profeflion I fhall ne- ver a£t the hypocrite. What family in Scotland can claim fo much of the church of Scotland, as now eftablifhed, then I ? I loft a grand- father, and a father, and my eftate, in the quarrel ;" and was any more forward than I, upon the revolution, to eftablifh it as it now is ? I never a£ted another part, nor never will ; but I muft own I am concerned, when I fee your brethren a£t contraire to their inte- reft in relation to civil government. I defire not to be mifunder- ftood; for I think it may be very confonant with all the rules of our religion, and the government of church, as now eftablifhed, to ad: poUtickly ; to take thofe to afllft them, who has it in their blood, as well as inclination, to ferve them and fupport them. And I think it a very bad meafure to fet up a pretended prefbyterian, who waits but an opportunity to return to the myre, when once he has efta- blifht himfelf. And, left by my friendfhip with fome, I mean the Duke of Queenfberry in particular, it may bethought I muft go a- nother way, his family having been reputed epifcopal, I dare anfwer for him, he will be ready to embark heartily with the prefbyterians, if they will cordially accept them ; and, when I am guarantee, I think you have better feeurity for his Grace than any is yet got of our two-year-old prefbyterian, the Marquis of Athol's fon, the Earl of Tullibardine. I wifh you may prevail with your bretheren in e- Aaa :z very 372 S T A T E - P A P E R S very thing which will eftablifh them. As for news, I have none» but that Earl Tullibardine told Duke of Queenlberry to-day, you was gone to Scotland to adjuft matters with the Juftice-Clerk, who. Secretary Ogilvy, the Advocate, and you, had coricerted fhould be Chancellor. A deal of more fluff of that kind v\ras faid, not worth the repeating. I am your affedionate friend to ferve you, (Signed) Argyll. E. Tullibardine has got a lift of our Scotts parliament fent him up, and, having confidered the names, he ftand& not to undertake at ccijrt, that, let the King chufe either prefbyterian or epifcopal par- ty in the parliament to ferve him, he will carry his Majefty's bufi- nefs by either of them ; which I think is a bold undertaking. But we all know his Majefty fo fixt to the government of the church, as now eftablifhed, that Earl Tullibardine will not make his court much that way. Pray, tell Earl Melvine from me, and his two fons, that I am fure it is the prefident of the council's place which that party has in pro— je£t for E. Arran, though we hope that is not the reward which the King will give E. Melvine for all his fervices. I have this account: from a very fure hand. Monsieur Van Leven* to Mr Carstares.. Regrets PortlantTs Jiay at Paris^ lejihts Ahfence from the King niigM be prejudicial, Part land's Magnificence. The King ofSfaim recQ'vered. Defigns againfi King William^ Dear S I R, PaHs, This afternoon I received by a meffenger both your letters of the fe^os!^^' I ft and 6th inftant, with the inclofed tor his Excellency, which was ^ delivered immediately. I am heartily glad of your fafe arrival in London, and give you many thanks for the kindnefs which you fhow * Mt Van Leven, fecretary to the Earl of Portland, then ambaflador in Francfe. AND LETTERS. 373 fliow me in your letters, in communicating to me fo freely your thoughts and difpofition of affairs with you. I have not yet re- ported the contents of your letters, by want of opportunity. And I believe my Lord had not yet the time to read that which you fent him, being taken up in vifiting Monheur Pompoune and Monfieur- Toreij ; and, coming from thence, muft write this night to the King ; fo that you fhall have no anfwer but with the next exprefs. I cannot tell if his Excellency received this day his Majetty's plea- fure for coming back ; but I have reafon to believe it, and fome private letters intimate it to me. Our flaying here much longer will coft dear ; for, being fo long, abfent from the King, may in fome meafure be prejudicial : And the expences of this embaffy run fo very high, that it is hardly to be imagined what money it comes to. We live with great magnificence ; and all the French muft confefs, they never faw fuch fplendour in equipage, table, and liveries. They do all the honour and civility to his Excellency that can be defired ; but in affairs they are difficult and flow. The croffes which were erected in- the city and principaute of Orange are pulled down, and a pafs is granted for 50 Switzers to come thither in garrifon. Letters from Spain of the 9th fay, that the King of Spain is quite well a- gain, and that the French ambaffador there had a private audience, wherein he complemented his ]y[ajefty on the peace and his recove- ry. They give out here, that the Queen's credit is much leflened, and that Ihe does not more affift in the council, being often pre- vented to enter in the King's chamber, upon pretence that it alters his health, by difcourfing continually of the affairs of the monarchy, to which fhe is fet on by the Imperial minifters. They are now in hopes that the King will live fome years longer. That we may all wifh for. Monfieur Feemflxerck the Dutch ambaffador is come to this city,. but keeps himfelf as yet incognito. Monfieur Odick is expedted in a little time, and will be here Sunday next. I believe it will be three weeks longer before his Excellency can take his audience of leavcj and he muft ftay at leaft a fortnight more before he can part 334 STATE-PAPERS from hence ; fo that it will be long before I ihall have the fatisfac- tion to fee you. In the mean time, continue me your friend(hip» and be fully perfuaded that 1 really be, SIR, Your moft obe<3ient fervant, (Signed) V. Levene, After having finifhed this letter, I conceive my Lord is not re- x;alled as yet ; fo our returning, as to the time thereof, is very un- certain. I am afraid there are fome dangerous defigns in hand a- gainft our King, that will make much noife. Paris, 29. do. His Excellency having not difpatched the meflenger till this day, ordered me pofitively to let you know the fatisfadiion he has of your fafe return, and that you found things fo well to your mind and the King's intereft in Scotland, defiring you will continue the fame in- formation as you have given hitherto ; which, I aflfure you, that are . very acceptable, and will be acknowleged in due time. His Excel- lency has no time to anfwer you himfelf ; but, if any thing occurs you want his opinion in, acquaint me with it, and I will endeavour fatisfy you as fpeedy as poffible can be done. Monfieur Odick will be here next Sunday. My humble fervice to your wife. Adieu. Mr Alexander Stevenson to Mr Carstaree. Of Sir John M' Lean's Dejire to have an Audience of the Ambajfa- dor; -which is refufed Portland's Behaviour. Defirous that fxmething could be done for the French Erotejiants. This not in Portland's Injlru^ions, DrSIR, Paris, June 1 was, at my firft coming here, importuned by Sir John Maclean, 6. 1698 ^njj fojne oxhtr?, of that fort, to get them ane audience of the ambaffadour. Out of pity to Sir John, I did i^eak to Mr Van Leven AND LETTERS. 375: Leven, and told him, that Sir John, being refolved to apply to the court in England for liberty to come home, would willingly have had firft the honour to have fpoke with his Excellency, to juftifie his laft proceedings in coming away foe unaccountably; which he fald he was forced to doe. This Mr Van Leven told me once he ftiould have; but afterwards, upon fecond thoughts, told me could not be done. Whether it was upon my Lord Argyll's ac- count, becaufe of the old plea betwixt thefe families ; or, becaufe I told Mr Van Leven, that Sir John threw the whole blame on Mr Johnftone's way and manner of treating him, I know not: But I never infifted after that ; nor would I, after the firft time I fpoke, had he given me no ground. Sir John, after having left the court at St. Germains for 3 or 4 weeks, upon this refufall, returned : Soe 1 never heard of him fince; and was, to fay the truth, by this means ridd of a great many importunities, which I fhould have had, if this fuit had been granted. I never had time, fince you came from Scotland laft, or I had given you account of this paflage fooner.. I fuppofe Mr Van Leven had told Mr Handcock ; for he took once^ occafion to tell me, that he doubted not but Mr Johnftone had very good reafon to treat Sir John M'Lean as he did : To which I re- plyed, I knew not the particulars ; foe could fay nothing to it. Ther's noe news. As for the ambafladour, he ends as he did be- ginn, with a great deal of honour to himfelf, and fatisfadion, fo far as appears, to all thefe - he has had to doe with. The poor proteftants expedted he fhould have done fome thing for them ; but in that they are difappointed ; which the more reafonable party amongft them doe not blame him for, as I think he could not medle in, feeing not in his inftruftions : But ther's none of them but thinks, if he had, confidering the houmer of the court of France at prefent, that he could have done them fervice. I fhall not fay they have ground ; but I find them generally fcandilifed and difcojuraged at the nice meafures was obferved in any thing re- lating to them or their affairs. The Dean of Winchefter knows fomething of this to be true. They are fo perfuaded that their deliverance- 37^ STATE-PAPERS deliverance fliould come from England, that, upon the news lately from the Rochell, Rouven, and Sedan, where the perfecution fince the peace has been worfe then before, that, by the King's orders, the proteftants there have been told, that, if they will make noe affemblies, but content themfelves with their devotiones at home privately, they fliall not be troubled any more ; they are, I fay, foe perfuaded, that noe good canne happen to them, but by the mediatione of England, that they begin to fay, the ambaffadour, now at his going away, is forry he did nothing for them, and has fpoke to fome of the French minifters of ftate. I trouble you with this, to let you know the fituation of thefe poor people. My wife gives you her humble fervice,and to your good lady; flie and I defire the fame favour of you to Mr Kekworth and his lady. Pray tell him, if he has bufinefs here, I expedl he will not apply to any other. Mr James Fowles will fend me any letters or cominiflions, if he has occafione. Ther's none will ferve him with better will then I would, or any you are concerned in. I am, fincerely, SIR, Your moft faithful humble fervant, Alex. Stevenson. P. S. I here you are lodged at Mr Cambel's the goldfmith; pray give him my humble fervice ; I will write to him foe foon as I can give account of what he wrote to me about, which will be in a little. Sir John Maxwell to Mr Carstares. Mr Carftares may noiv ivait upon the King^s Commijioner -without Sufpicion of Intrigues. Begs his AJJiJlance in making Mr Kin- taid a Lord of Seffion. Dear SIR, Edinburgh, This is the firft poft fince I came to town : and this ferves to p\v^ June 9. , ^yj ••"give J1698. you my humble fervice, that we do not wear out of acquaintance by too AND LETTERS. 377 too long filence. I cannot think but the King's chaplain will wait upon his commiffioner now in time of parliament, without any ground of fufpicion of intrigues ; for I doubt not his Majefty, by the advice of fo many worthy perfons there, will demand nothing of his parliament but what is juft and reafonable ; and I firmly be- lieve the plurality of the parliament hath that atFe£tion for him and his government, that it fhall not be denied, though there may be fome buffel ; yet it fhall hz,poJl nub'ila Pkoehus. You get fo much the word here of a man of bufinefsj that you'll forgive me if I afk your help to make a Lord of the Seffion, and that is a friend of mine, Mr John Kincaid of Corfbaffet. He is a lawyer, being now beyond 30 years experience in the houfe ; and, for his honefty and courage in the adminiftration of juftice, I dare undertake for him, that he fhall be biaffed with no man. I do not think he will be a man given to parties. I have written to Secretary Ogilvy in this bufmefs, and will give you no further trouble ; but if ye pleafe to mind him of it; and what kindnefs ye fhall be pleafed to do that gentleman, I will ever reckon it as a particular obligation upon, S I R, Your moft faithful and humble fervant, (Signed) Jo. Maxwell. Lord Blantyre to Mr Carstares. About the Payment of his Penfion. -• SIR, I hope you will not impute my not writing to want of kindnefs ; June 10 but realie as it is, to an unwillingnefs to trouble you, unlefs Ihadfome- ^^S^- thing worth your while. You will, I hope, remember,, that I was fpeaking to you about my penfion, that now it would turn ineffec- tual, by reafon of the great number of penfions that" were upon the fond at this Whitfunday. There are two terms owing ; and, had B b b not 378 STATE-PAPERS not Hugh Cunningham been tackfman, the whole would have beerr owing. I cannot prefs my own bufmefs ; you know my circum- ftances : So I wholly depend upon the fecretary and you for to get me payment for bygones, and fecured in time coming; and what you do fhall be thankfully acknowledged, fince that is all I can do. If your conveniency can allow you, I fhall take it kindly to hear from you : You can both airt me, and help me when airted*^ I am, unfeignedly. Your truly obliged fervant, (Signed) Blantyre- Ormiston to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers about the Prefidetifs Office. Broomhall and his: Son. S I R, june^iT.^^' ^ '^°P^ ^^*® ^^'^ ^^^ y°" returned. I wrote to you to deftroy my 1698, former, and hopes the inclofed will ferve and pleafe. 78 fays. He; does not offer farther in 74's nquzs 37q6upqz8, 6quzs 43 tm6- p2Zq u8, n98 78's 2nuqo8u2z, 7qymuz6. 'Tis talked here, that 75 is under fome difcouragement ; 73 duxxnq tq7q 8tu6 dqqw- m2p 8tqz dqduxx nq y27q mnxq 82 ugpsq ar 8tuzs6, for Broom- hall and his fon, -I am not rafh in judging any body ; but this much I may take leave to fay, it would a appeared as fuitable to a man in ^ the fon's ftation to a been here as at London ; and, if the infor- mations hold are offered, was he my fon, I would not defend him nor fpeak in his favours. My Lord Leven is with you by this time, a29 2myq a297 37q6upqz86 dtqz 3qz3xq m7q zq8tq dmaq 02y- quzs b3. A new adjournment will not look well ; befides, the par- liament's being to fit, people bring little or no bufinefs in before the feffion. Farewell. Secre- AND LETTERS. 379 Secretary Ogilty to Mr Carstares. After an Audience -with the King upon Scottijh affairs. Reafons for putting off the Meeting of Parliament. SIR, Your Lady aflures me that this will come fafe to your hands ; Whitehall, and therefore I adventure to let you know a little ot what palies. ,5^8. Mr Lawfon has been twice with Mr Hay ; the firll time, Mr Wilfon was with him, and the laft time, he was alone : I did communicate the laft part of Mr Reid's note, and he is pofitive that there never -were any fuch orders ; and gave 3 1 very full fatisfa£tion in this matter : But I told him that it was both Mr Lawfon and Mr Reid's duty to let him know what was faid ; and he feemed very well fatis- fifid. Mr Wood's meeting is put off for eight days longer, for two reafons.: The firft is, That Mr Erfkine and Mr Dewar's com- pany may have time to fpeak together. The next is, Mr Hamil- ton is to meet at Aberdeen upon the 5th of July, and moft be there for five or fix days ; and fo could not return in time to meet with Mr Wood upon the 12th. Mr Wilfon and Mr Lawfon think of parting from this upon Tuefday come feven-night, and fo will Mr Lamb and Mr Flint about that time. Mr Lawfon hopes that Mr, Reid will let Mr Erlklne know how much he depends upon him ; and he has left all his own concerns undetermined, until he arrive, and ihall be in every thing diipofed , of by him. Secretary Ogilvy has obtained feveral private papers, of which Mr Reid fhall know at meeting. The Earl of Leven is arrived : I know (for fo it is written to me) he expeds to have Mr Campbell upon Mr Gray ; and you know all his other pretenfions. All can be faid is, B b b 2 that Mr Laiufon, S. Ogilvy. Mr Wilfon, Marchmont. Mr Hay, the King. Mr Reid, Mr Czv&.zrts. 31, S. Ogilvy. Mr /f^rt^, Parliament. Mr Erjkine, Portland. Mr Hamilton, Royal Boroughs of Scotland. Mr Lamb, iQueeofberry. Mr Flint, Argyle. 38o STATE-PAPERS that Mr Hay feems not to be Inclined to fettle his affairs at prefent t But Mr Kirk is to be with Mr lawfon to-morrow at dinner ; and you fhall afterwards be acquainted with what pafles. I wifli the E. of Portland a happy journey. I fhall be glad to know certain- ly of his dyet ; and, if it might be acceptable, I would certainly wait on him. I am, with all fmcerity, Y. M. H. S. Presidenx Dalrymple to Secretary Ogilvy. Of the Meeting of the Royal Boroughs^ ivhich he is to attend.- More Caballing than have been of late. Report of a Mifunder^ Jianding betwixt Argyle and the Chancellor. My Lord, Edmburgb, j j^^yg ^^ honour of your's of the lAth and of the i6th inftantr June 21. ' 1698. Since your Lordfhip has thought proper I fhould be added to the- commiflion, I fhall prefent my letter, though I be little fond of that court. I called for Commiffary Smolkt, and fhow him what con- fidence your Lordfhip repofed in him ; he makes a very gratefiil return, and frankly undertakes to be at the convention in Aber- deen. If Provofl Muir of Ayr be there, the commiffary will guide him ; fo that your Lordfhip fliall not need to write to him ; and^ if ye have writ already, I have taken the liberty to defire John Ari- derfon to advertife me before it be delivered. Your Lordfhip is in the right to write to as few as can be. Your Lordfhip will fee by the federunt, that the council was pretty well conveened this day ;, the chief occafion was the Lady Rentoun's complaint, that Sir Pat.^ had intruded himfelf in the half of the houfe of Rentomi, fhe re- taining the other half. My brother David drew an infbrmatioa and anfwers to Sir Pat. both very fnell', and abun- dantly clofs ; and, where he relates the difpofition obtained from Sir Alexander, in place of fraud and circumvention, the paper termed the thing a dowixright cheat. Sir Pat. craved reparation of that in- jwy. AND LETTERS. 381 jury, and, at the fame time, entered upon the caufe. The Earl of Tullibardine broke in before the lawyers publicly, and urged and prevailed that the lawyers fhould be removed, and that point con- fidered. Firft, the motion was fupported by E. Annandale and Ruthglen ; and, at laft, it terminate into advertifement to the law- yers to be more modeft and cautious in their expreffions, without inquiring who was the author ; and the complaint remitted to be fummarly difcuffed by the feffion. If Sir Pat.'s friends had count- ed nofes, they had as good have pufhed wliere they had it at the council. Seeing the dyet of the parliament is fixed, the fooner your Lordfhip be here the better. I cannot fay there is any formed de- fign to obftruft ; but it is vifible that there is more caballing thaa was of late. E. Tullibardine intends to go north, and to return to the parliament ; but after all, I doubt they will adventure to appear. It is this day talked, there fhould be forae miftake betwixt the Chan- cellor and the Earl of Argyle. I believe nothing of it ; and cer- tainly nothing could encourage enemies fo much as the leaft hope of divifion amongft yourfelves. I need not trouble D. Q^and the E. of Argyle with the fame things I writ to your Lordfhip. I am, moft fmcerely, Y. L. M. H. S. ' MtJRRAY of Philiphaugh to Mr Carstares. At Duke of^ueensherry^s dejire,gifues him a particular Detail of ivhal pajed in Parliament about Supplies. The Oppofttion headed by Tullibardine. CharaSiers of the Dukes of ^eensberry and Ar- gyle, and of Earl of Se afield, noiv Prefident of the Parliament. SIR, Our Parliament fat pretty late laft night ; fo that the D. of Queenf- Edmburgh, berry not having leifure to write to you, and I being to write ■'g'^f ' to you however, he does by me defire you will excufe him, and accept from me fuch lame accounts of things that paft as I can give S^2. STATE-PAPERS -give you ; which, however, I hope you may have more fully from o- thers. This day was paft the adt for the fixteen months cefs, which, joined with the annexed excife, amounts to an adequat and fufEcient fund for entertaining the army for two years, commencing Novem- ber next. You will no doubt be furprifed when I tell you, that, though this a£t contained nothing material but what had paft the houfe in previous votes, of which, indeed, it was but the confe- quence ; yet it met with an unexpected oppofition. The leading men of the parliament tenacioufly oppofed it to the laft, and voted againft it root and branch, though the houfe had been predetermi- ned in it, after mature deliberation and contentious debates, and -that there was not the leaft change or deviation propofed in the a it is not that Tullibardine or his friends fignify any thing : It pro- ceeds only from this, that there is almoft a famine in the countrey> and that there is appearance of an extraordinary bad cropt. And, therefore, a great many fay, that they are not able to give fubfidies* though AND LETTERS. 387 tl\ough that they have more inclination to do it tinder our manage- ment, than if Tulljbardine and his friends had prevailed. Yet v?e ilill reckon to have a plurality : And I muft tell you of the con- queft^ I have made. The Juftice-Clerk is as friendly as I could de- fire, and is ufing his utmoft endeavours. My Lord Carmichael does promife pofitively to'-^oncur in every thing ; though, at the fame time, he is much ftraiteried with the difficulties of the poverty of the countrey. My Lord Annandale has made me the firfl; vifit ; and the Juftice-Clerk has fome hopes that he will go along with what is propofed for the King, though he will not be a manager. My Lord Teviot will alfo concur. My Lord TuUibardine does now appear a- bove board, and is pofitive againft all cefs; and muft fay that my Lord Ruglen is of the fame mind. Ruglen has been to vifit me ; and I am refolved to let him know that the King does expe£b that his fervants ftiould ferve him upon this occafidn. Sir Thomas Burnet and Enftruther are entirely againft fubndies. Argyle is doing what he can with Aberuchill ; and I am doing what I can with my Lord White- hill. My Lord Rofs has expede his remiffion ; and, it is faid, will be moft violent. I do not hear that the Chancellour has prevailed " upon many as yet ; but he is in hopes to carry Commiflary Mon- roe, and Colloden, and Torwoodlie. My Lord Salton, I find, fol- lows my Lord Tullibardine's methods. We have not as yet con- certed ouV committees, becaufe the' burrows are all at Aberdeen. If tjie letter you> mention concerning the Earl of TulHbardine come, I Ihall proceed upon clear grounds in the making ufe of it. The Earl of Melvill and his family are all in the countrey ; and therefore as yet I have no affiftance from them. The Vifcount of Tarbat pro- mifes to concur. The arguments I ufe is, that there are a multitude of Jacobites in this kingdom, ready to lay hold of any opportunity to make dlfturbance : That, though the countrey is poor, yet no- thing that is to be given is to be exported out of the kingdom ; and fo the giving of fubfidies will only occafion a circulation. I need not trouble you with the other arguments I ufe ; but I aflure you I fay as much as ever I can, and I fpair no pains ; for I have not been C c c 2 in 388 STATE-PAPERS in bed after five in the morning fince I eame to this place. The Juftice-Clerk thinks, that, if the Marquis of Tweeddel were on the the exchequer, he would be right. enough. My Lord Stairs has a- greed to ftay out till the public bufinefs is over. I find this ad paft in England concerning the Scots linning-cloath does prejudice; and ibme do pretend that they will put an impofition upon Englifh clqath. This is the fum of what I can give you account of this night ; and I will not fail likewife to write by the next packet. I had almoft forgot to tell you, that the Earl of Lauderdale promifes to concur in every thing, and to influence four or five of the mem- bers. I have written to Mr Pringle of what furder is neeeffary^ This is a journal of what has occurred. Adieu.: You may read this to the Earl of Portland ; to whom I give my moft humble fervice. We are plainly refolved not to make ufe of the letter of adjournment, beeaufe it is not fafe for us to appeau frighted, though I wilh our friends had been fboner here- Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Arguments agdlnjl the Supplies. — Tullihardine pretends that he rejigr^ ed his Office beeaufe he could not concur ivith the Court. — Wha§ the King fold to him at parting. — Wi/hes Lord Arbuchel ivereput again upon the Council.— -Wijhes that Seafield ivere asjiiff as Mr Carjlares. SIR, Edinburgli, I have been in town thefe two days. I underftand there has^ jg -g"' been a deal of pains taken to influence the members of parliament to be againfl: giving the King even the neceflary fupply ; That of the poverty of the country, and the example of Tngknd's being a- verfe to a ftanding army, are the arguments ufed that yet appears. Tullihardine gives it out, that the reafon of his demitting was, be- eaufe he could not go along with the defires of the court, and there- fore AND LETTERS. 389 fore chufed rather to retire himfelf than to opprefs his country. People are not wiUing to be evidences ; but this and a deal more is expreft by him. He fays further, the King made an offer of the place to him after he had demitted ; and that the King had made him a compliment when he took his leave ; told him that he vpas fenfible he had ferved him faithfully ; that he expected the fame of him ftill ; and tha.t, if fo, he fliould not want encouragement from him. This is not the firfl lie he has made to gain his point ; tho' I hope this fhall tend as little to his advantage as the former. I find L. Abruchell thinks himfelf flighted, feverals being put on the council, and he not repofleft to the council nor exchequer ; in both which he was before : I wifh it were done. I am perfuaded there will be heats and brifk doings ; you fhall have a particular account of all. I faw your laft to the Secretary, which I am well pleafed with : I wilh he were as flifF. I am your's. Adieu. Pray, give my mofi; humble fervice to E. Portland. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. The Secretary Jheived him the King's Letter difmijjing Earl Tulli- hardine from his Service. Blames the Chancellor for trim- ming., and Seafieldfor yielding.' ■ He has to do ivith Men ivho are afraid of their Shadoivs. This morning the Secretary came to my lodgings, and fhowed Edmburgb, me the double of the King's letter anent E. TuU. You may think ^^'^L '"'■• 16985 I was not ill pleafed to fee the King ha;d entered into fo good a mea- fure. He was next to go and acquaint the Chancellor. I warned him, the Chancellor would endeavour to trim in it, as indeed it pro- ved fo ; for he fent for Tullibardine to his houfe, where he was two hours ; and, in the afternoon, when he came to council, got the Se- cretary to delay offering the letter. Indeed E. T. abfented ; but I find the Chancellor would fain capitulate the matter : But I'll go to him ^Q S T A T E - f A P E R S him to-morrow morning, and ufe plain language. The report of the letter quickly went abroad ; and I perceived feveral people's countenances to alter. I'll tell the Chancellor, if the King's bufi- nefs mifcarry, it is he is to blame : And I vow it is. We have made many profelytes fince we came hither ; and I find it is the Chancel- lor's fquade will be hardeft to work on. You fhall hear frequently from me. I wifh I had you one hour upon this occafion ; for I have to do with people are afraid of their own fhadows. Adieu. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. ■ He makes daily Profelytes from the Oppofition.'—— Has not produced the King's Letter, — r—The Chancellor has made feiv Coni-erts. Numbers of broken Officers.-^->-^-The Eq/i-India Fleet to Sail foon, SIR, ' Edinburgh, Though I had none from you by the laft fwicket, yet I muft give 1698, you an account, that I daily gain upon the other party ; and I do tdl, upon my reputation, that, if we do not carry the King's affairs, none elfe would.' There are abundance of people running up and down for us : All the heads of the oppofite party are broke, except the Earl of TuUibardine ; and I believe his wings are clip'd. I have not prefented the letter againft him this day in council ; but I will prefent it the next day. I have gained the commiflioner for the town of Brechen under my Lord Panmuir's nofe. I have written a great many letters to the country, for thofe are my friends ; and, if they be ' well conveened, we fhall pufh our bufmefs at the very firfl: ; but, if not, we mofl take time to it. I have good advice, and a firm party: No m^n'deferts me ; and I hope God Almighty will give me fuccefs. And I moft fay, as yet I canhot name the Chan- cellor's' profelytes, though I am fure ' he will do what he can. I have multitudes of' broken officers lying about my "doors, and I know AND L E T T E, R S. 3'9r Ifenow not what to fay to them : Many wifh that the King would by a letter fay^ that he would advance them to the vacant ports that are in the Dutch regiments, or thefe that are here. The Vifcount of Teviot has taken out his fecond patent from me ; and he promifes fair to do his beft for the Ring's fervice : The event will try what he is doing. Our Eaft-India fleet will fail the beginning of the next week ; and, of fea-men and land-men, there are above 1 200 men, and not one woman amongft them'at all. I'll not trouble you with no more at prefent. They threaten us with a flood of Jaco- bites coming in to take the oaths. I am Y. M. H. S. Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. Ms Intewieiv ivith the Earl of Tullibardine nvhen he produced the King's Letter. The Politics of the Oppojttion. African Fleet. SIR, I find my Lord Tullibardine is pofitively refolved to oppofe; and, Edmburgh, for that end, has brought over the Marquis of Athol and my Lord 11%!^' Nairn. I have been to acquaint him with the King's letter, and told him, that he had no body to blame for it but himfelf. He faid plainly, he could not in confcience burden the country with fo much-^ money as the expences of the eftablifhment would require ; but that he would do as much for the King now as if he were in his fervice.. I anfwered him, that the country was as poor when he was com-- mifFoner ; for that year there was vaflquantities of vi£tual imported both from England and Ireland, and above L. 100,000 exported in fpecie ; whereas, there had been litde or no vidual imported this laft year. He faid, then it was time of war ; and I told him, then he was commiifioner, and now he was not. I told him alfo, that we had more need of forces now for our fecurity than we had in the time of. 3g2 STATE-PAPERS of war ; for then, in the cafe of neceffity, the King could have fent his regiments to our affiftance. And, after a while's rpafoning, we parted. The letter is no more a fecret. I would have forborn fpeaking of it, if I had been reftri£ted, till he had mifbehaved in parliament ; but my Lord Chancellor was acquainted that there was fuch a letter, and had a copy ; But, however, he certainly defigns to oppofe, and has talked to that purpofe openly. The parliament is like to be very full; and I am hopeful we fhall carry it by a good plurality : But they arc refolving to throw in popular afts, and to endeavour to prefs the paffing of them, before the a£ts for the fubfidies be in readinefs. My father and my wife being come to town only this night, I can write no more. 1 muft tell you be- fore I conclude, that our Weft-India fleet is fallen down the length of Kirkaldie-road, and are to fet fail to-morrow or Monday ; they confift of I 200 men, whereof 300 are gentlemen, 1 his is all I can let you know. Adieu. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Marquis of Athol and Lord Nairne cotne onjer to oppofe,— ——What Face Tullibardine puts upon his being turned out. Edmburgh, Since I writt laft poft, I am ftill in better hopes that his Majefty's July 16. affairs ftrall so well. 1 am told Marquis of Athol and L. Nairne 1698. - . . comes over to oppofe, feveral other peers comes m; but I think we fhall not lofe by that. You will know by the fe'cretary, that TuUibar* dine do^s not deny he is not inclinable to fefle. He told in the fhire of Angus, when he was over there, that he might have kept his place and been in favour, would he have gone in to the meafures of the court • but his confcience and his love to his country would not allow him : He fald the fame to the fheriff of Bute, and to feveral others. It is apparent, if he and his party oppofe not, it is becaufe they find it will be in vain. The Secretary is refolved, next council-day, the letter AND LETTERS. 393 Setter fhall be prefented ; aild I have convinced him, it was a bad meafure in the Chancellor to delay it. I (hall fay no further now; but next I Ihall have a deal. Adieu. 'Eaxl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. TheTarliajnent has met. Tullibardine cabals avoivedly. Cul- loderCs Politics damnsd in conftquence of his ASlivity. ■ He has gained Karl Marjhal. This day the parliament met, where all the ufual formalities paft Edinbmgii, ■without any difpute. The letter was read yefterday turning out pur 1698. friend Tullibardine : He cabals avowedly ; has fent to feverals, and ipoke to others, who tells me. I am very hopeful we fliall carry the King's bufinefs ; all of us takes our feveral men : I think I am hap- py in being fuccefsful with thofe I undertook. But Colloden, one of the commiflioner's fquade, unknown to the Secretary or me, went to their club, and made a propofition, out of the fuperfluity of his brain, for a compofition of difbanding a part. They run in- to it prefently ; and he fancied he had obtained a vidtory, which is <|uite contrary to the King's mind, and indeed would ruin the whole undertaking, if yielded to. I came to und^rftand what paft ; i alarmed all our friends, and told them, I would go into no fuch meafure, nor could be anfwerable ; that was but our laft recourfe, if beat, when the King allowed it. So Colloden's politics are damned, and we begin a frefh. I wifh it do not hurt, though we are now bufy concerting our committees. Perhaps fome of our oppofers may be chofen in barrens and boroughs ; for feverals that will go along in the main, will not refufe chufmg an old brother club-man to be «n a committee. I have gained E, Marfhall, with all his friends. I find your friend Hallcraig very frank, and feverals who you'll be furprifed at ; but, before I venture to name their names, I'll have feme proof of their refolution in the firft fkirmifli that pafles. If E> 4 d Abrucehill ;S94 STATE-PAPERS Abrucehill were reponed to his place In council and exchequer, it would do good, and| be a fatigfaSlion tx> me. Sure I am I fhall be iharer to a large degree in their refentment, if they be able, and am partaker of the toil. It will be hard if I be not gratified in what is for the fervlce, as well as vindicating of my friend, and confe- quently me. I am your's. Boyle of Kelburn, afterwards Earl of Glafgow, to MrCARSTAREs* Of his Motion for the continuation of the Subfldies three Years.- This nvQuldfave the Expence of a Parliament ^ ivhich cofis the Na- tion five months Cefs. Dear SIR, I received your obliging kind letter, and fhall never be wanting, ©n all occafions, to teftify my gratitude for your repeated favours, I did propofe the continuation of the fubfidies, for three years at' leaft ; but. In the commiffioner's chamber, was over-ruled ; But I muft tell you, that it would have carried by a hundred to fifty ; and it had been much the intereft of the country ; for our frequent par- liaments are as Idle and as heavy a cefs as we bear : Every fefiion of parliament cofts this nation five months cefs ; and three rriore would have continued the fubfidlcs for the third year. Sir, No doubt you have large accounts of my Lord TuUibardine and White- lav/^'s behaviour, profeffing their tender concern for the poor coun- try, that fliould be cefled at this juncture ; but every man that hath eyes In his head, evidently fees that it's their own humour they purfue, and neither the King nor country*s intereft r For my part, I think no honeft man can diftlngulfh betwixt the King and coun- try's Intereft,. being Infeparable In my view ; and the moft part of the ftanding force we have at prefent will be found abfolutely necef- ^ry, in my humble opiaion,even in the moft fereae and fettled peace* AND LETTERS. 595 « t prefume to give my moft obedient, faithful, humble duty to the E. of Portland ; and am. Dear SIR, Your moll fmcerely affe(^ionate, • and obliged faithful humble fervant, (Signed) Boyle of Kelburn. i*. 51 Sir, All our weft-country commiffioners have a6ted as ong man for the King's intereft. Adieu, Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. A Detail of three Bays Proceedings in Parliament >• — The Weaknef of the Oppofition^ andnvho nvere the Oppofers. SIR, I have juft now done with denner, and ame verie werled with the fatigue I have hade this day in parliament ; and fo cannot wreat all the particular circumftances of what has occurred : But we have ufed our endeavours faithfully for the King ; and, I bleft God, with good fuccefs. We have mett in parliament but three dayes. The firft day we made our publick fpeeches ; . the fecond day we gained all our committies ; and now, this day, we have gained all that we propofed. The committies mett yefterday, and paft a vote, nemine contradicente^ (except my Lord Whitlaw, who voted no,) That the number of forces upon the prefent eftablilh- ment are neceflary for the fafety and prefervatlon of the kingdome, arid that therefore they ought to be continued. This day we re- folved we would bring it into the houfe, and the Earl of Tulllbar- dine muftered all his forces. > The firft poynt that was under confideration was propofed by the laird of Livingftone, that fuch of the members as had not figned the affociation, within the time prelcryved be the a(3: of parliament, ftiould not now be allowed to D d d 2 liga ■fg6 S- T A T E - P' A P E R S fign the fame, bot fliould be expelled the houfe. After a fii^ reafoning of this matter, of which 1 fliall give you a particular ac- count, we carried it againft them by loo and odd votes to 32 j and immediately thereafter Major Buntine, Forbes of Craigeware» Forbes of Fovran, Bofwall of Kirkaldie, and a great many others^ were admitted, and figned the aflbciaition : Bot of this fully after- wards. However, this incouragement did fo damp the other partie, that they were notable to make any confiderable defence againft the vote for maintaining the troops. And, to give you a fhort account, inftead of a long, this night, we carried the vote of the committee, in the houfe, by no to 38. We had alfo a great difpute this day, about the petition of the Africane companie ; which my Lord Tweedell brought in, and fett it in oppofition to the report of the coihmittie : Bot we carried it, and kept the petition of the AfFrican companie from being red this day; but it will be read upon Wed- denfday next. This is all I ame able to write You may communi- cate this to the Earl of Portland ; bot the flying packet will be ther as foon as this, which fliall. be full as to the way and manned how every thing was done; and what difficulties we had, and what- dxffieulties doe yet occur. This is all this night, I am, SIR, Your moft humble fervant, (Signed) Se afield. I moft only let ;;^ou know the oppofers; There was the Eart of Tullibardine, the Earl of Ruglen, the Lord Balheaven, Grant, my Lord Enftruther, my Lord Fountonhall, Sir Thomas Burnet» and Sir Francis Scott- Lord- AND LETTERS. ^97 Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. S- further "Detail of the Proceedings in Parliament ; and tht Con- duct of particular Members^ S I R, This day the parliament mett again. Nothing of confequence Edmburgh, occurred in it, fave that, with the greateft pains, toyle, and fatigue 160^,^*' in the world, we have carried the committees ;. fo as neither amongft the noblemen, barrones, nor burrows, is ther on elleded hot thofe that were in our concerted hfts, whereof there is a copie inclofed. Naither the Earl of Tullibardine, Ruglen, nor Belhaven, nor Marquis of Twedell, were able to get themfelves elected ; for tve had, that did vote in every particular with us, thirtie eight noblemen to eleven ; and we carried the lift of the Barrens by i z > >^ Totes ; and we had almoft the burrows intirely. My Lord Lo- ihian for the nobility. Sir John Maxwell for the Barrens, and ^e Prefident of the feifion for the burrows, are the committie appoynted for drawing the anfwer to the King's letter. This will at leaft convince you, and all that underftands any thing of our bufmefs, that the Earl of Tullibardine and his followers are not capable to make us any oppofition ; and any body might have feen them dejeded enough upon this occafiori. And I will fay, all the meafures that have been taken this winter are acceptable to the nation. Bot the greateft difficulty we have is, that the coun- try is exceffively poor, and there is appearance of a very bad cropt- yet, with theaffiftance of God Almighty, I am hopefull we iliaU Carrie on our bufmefs. There was verie great difficulty to gee my Lord Annandale brought upon the committie : However, the Duke of Queenfberry and my Lord Argyll yielded, upon his pro- ihife to concurr in what concerns the King ; and they p'erfuaded Morton to yield in his favours. And fo, by capitulation, we got on both him and Carmichall. I could have wifhed lykewife that the Earl of Lauderdale had been named ou the committie ; hot, tho' 39^ STATE-PAPERS tho' he takes the difappoytxtment a little ill, yet we durft not ad- venture to make any furder incroachment on our confert, leaft wc fliould have difobliged our friends ; and Lauderdale may be pleafed another way. ■ This farr we have been fuccefsful. 'And, fmce mat- ters are as I have told you, we are refolved to put matters to the pufh, with all poffible heaft; and, for this end, th- committee for the fecurity is to meet to-morrow; and all of us that are concerned in the inanagement will attend. Colloden and Com- miffarie Monro failled us this day ; for non of them was ther- at the time of the electing the committee. Sir John Hume and Dal« folly did Goncurr heartily, and Sir William Denholm of Pitliven, ' and Sir Archibald Murray of Blacbaronie,. Sir John Maxwelj, Kail-* burne, and Mr Francis Montgomerie, and many more, have all anfwered our expe^ation. Bot they that have done us the beft fervice of any are, the Provofl of Edinburgh and Commiflary Smollet. I will wreat again upon Saturdaye's night. Give my moft, humble fervice to the Earl of Portland. If we be fuccefsfull be- twixt and Tuefday, I will prefume to write to him ; and, till then,, i doubt not bot you will let his Lordfhip know what has paft ; attd you may let him know, in our names, that all of us wha are the King's fervants are doing, and have done our beft. The Marques of Atholl is here ; bot he finds that his fon's partie is de-r creffing; andfo I think he will not come in. My Lord TuUibar- dine, and thofe of his company at the Ship-tavern,, were for brake- ing three of the King's regiments ; and fo they would have left him, his troop of gairds, my Lord Teviot's regiment of dragoons,: his regiment of foot-gaird, and that at Fort Williarn. The proje<3: now on foot, is to prefent an addrefs from the Eaft India company to the parliament, a habeas corpus law, and fome other popular a£ts ; however, we fliall doe our beft as to all thefe. This is ail from Y. M. H. S. Eajr^ •• ■ ^ N B 1 E T T E R S. 299 EARLof MELVIL to MrCARSTARESi Of the Proceedings in the Committee of Security and Parliament. — ^ Of Church-Affairs.— ^Wbitelaiju diffented, — Annandale a Profe- lyte. SIR, I am fure the news this poft brings will be very welcome, feeing Edmburghj it carries an account of an entire defeat of thefe, whofe humour or 1698, interefi engaged them to oppofe his Majefty's bufinefs. The clofs and continued cabals of a malecontent party gave us fome appre- henfions of a warm campaign ; but, bleffed be God, the ftorm is almoft over, and nothing left to thofe grumultonians but the re- mprfe in being of a party fo much contraire both to their duty and true intereft. Yefterday the committee for fecurity of the nation took his Majefty's moft gracious letter into confideration, and pat- fed a vote, that the maintainance of the fame number of forces on the prefent eftablifhment was neceffary for the fafety and fecurity of the kingdom. This day the report was agreed to in parliament, and carried by a plurality of votes. There is a remit to the com- mittee, to confider how long the faid forces are to be keept up, and what ways and means are to be fallen on for making the funds moft eafy and equal to the lieges, and moft effectual to the King. The confideration of which requiring fome time to prepare and di- geft the feveral fchemes and overtures to be given in on that fub- jedt, his Grace thought fit to adjourn the parliament till Wednefday next at ten o'clock. Mr Seaton and another of his brethren are here, on pretence that the late commiffion from the general aflembly was difpleafed with their meetings ; and that they defigned^to have it ex- plained, whether the judging of icandalous and erroneous minifters belonged to them or the privy council. If the parliament deter- mine in favours of the firft, the other party will not mifs to make a noife of it v So that, for peace of church and itate, I wilh things may S T A T E - P A P E R S may be continued in the ftate they are in, till a morefeafonable op- portunity offer for redreiling what may be thought amifs in ei" ther. My Lord Whitlaw alfo dilTented in the committee, but fpoke none. The Earl of Annandale is a, profelyte, and fpoke with a great deal of zeal, as all new converts ufe to do. ' • I write to you with the franknefs of one, who relies on your friendihip ; and you may believe me entirely your's. Adieu. Duke of Queensberry to Mr Garstares. Of the Schemes of the Oppqfttion. The hfobkmen engaged in it.' Lauderdale and Annandale deferted, upon hearing that the King ivas to alloiv no Man in the Oppojttiaii to enjoy Place or Pen/ion. Necejfary >o enforce this upon the King, otherwife they "will be contemptible. Teviofs hifolence. " ' SI R, Edinburgh, ' Though my fon's condition obliged me to ftay at London fome 1698, days longer than I defigned, yet I made it up by riding poft, and arrived here at the fame time I promifed the King. There never was fuch caballing as we found here ; and the engagements of fome perfons were no lefs than under oath to appear againft the affair ; which, however, we found a way to make fome of them break. They defigned at firft to give the King no fupply, nor allow of any itanding army, except the guards : But, finding that would not do, my Lord Tullibardine propofed the reftridiing of the army to a fmaller number ".'However, after much debate, we brought it to the queftion, and carried, that the army fhouldftand as it is. There were engaged againft us at firft, the Marq. of Tweedale, E. Suther- Jand, E. Lauderdale, E. Annandale, E. Tullibardine, E. Ruglen, my Lord Duplin, Lord Belhaven, Lord Bargainie, Lord Ruthven, and* Lord Burly. We found there cabal fo throng, that we were obliged And letters. 401 "Obliged to let it be known, that the King was refolved that no man that oppofed him Ihould enjoy either place or penfion of him ; up- on which, the Earls of Lauderdale and Annandale came over to us ; -and, to fhow how little pickifti we were, though we had fixed upon the lift of our great committee, yet, upon my Lord Annandale's 'coming over, I perfuaded Morton to give his place to him. Of the gentrie, there appeared Lord AnftrutheV, (who has a penfion, and never deferved it.) CuUoden came and offered his fervice, but was falfe to us ; for, befides that he abfented upon the day of battle, he went to their cabals, and told, that he had a warrant from the commiffioner to yield to the difbanding of fome of the forces ; which was like to have taken many of our fide from us, feverals helng inclined to that way of accommodation. It coft us a great deal of work to cure this : But he was made appear to be a liar; and we have not feen his face fince. Moft of thofe that the commif- fioner engaged for turned their back, fuch as Sir Alexander Monro, Torwoodlie, and others. My Lord Rofs was not with us, nor had the courage to be with them. Nothing contributed more to our fuccefs than th« laying afide Earl Tullibardine from the council : And, though I never advifed the King to hard things, yet, if he does not make good what we were obliged to fay, and take from all thefe who oppofed him the favours they have from him, we fhall be looked upon as liars, and made contemptible; whereas, if he go firmly on, he may make his bufincls eafy both to himfelf and his fervants, and, in all reafonable things, do what he will hereafter. E. Ruglen and the reft ftiould immediately lofe their places and penfions ; and the King may keep them void as long as he pleafes. It is to be obferved, that all the oppxjfers are either of the family of Hamilton by relation, or other ties. By this, the King may judge their ftrength. And I will tell you further, that, if we had had but fome days longer to have influenced people, they would not have had ten to have followed them ; as it was, themfelves and all were but 38. If the King fhould not think fit to do what I now advife, we Ihall never be capable to ferve him afterwards ; and what I fay, E e e upon 4^3 S T A T E - P A P E R>S^ upon my honour, is from the fincerity of my heart, and proceea|> from no pick : The reafon of the thing may make it a demon-" ftration, and is more manifeft to us that are upon the pkce, where* things have a view that cannot be exprefled by writing. I will noir bragg ; but, if it had not been the influence we had upon our friendsy- and the fright we put our oppofers into, by the method I have al- ready loldr you-, the matter had not been fo eafily carried. E. An-i- nandale never came over till the ni^ht we were to chufe our com-- mittees, that he faw his party could not carry it: He is now very forward ; how long he will continue fo, no- body knows. We are- to-morrow to go upon the funds, aad the continuance of them, in> which I hope we fhall prevail for two years at leaft : And, if the King will be pleafed to follow advice,, his bufmefs after this may- go fmoothly on here during his life. The great Lord Teviot car- ries as high as ever, and fhows ftill more and more negk£t of the nobility, and particularfly, he defpifes my Lord Argyle and me.- He now difputes a point with my Lord Argyle, which he never did formerly ; neither with me, when I commanded the guards, nor with my Lord Argyle till now ; and that is the giving of the word- to the guards of horfe, which he never hitherto pretended to; nor was it ever pretended to by any commander in chief in this king-' dom ; for, wherever the King or his Commiffioner is, the guards had always/the word immediately from them : But " he thinks he toay do what iie will, and braggs of the King's favours beyond alk other men ; but I hope the King will in time rid u& of him. I am very fare it would be a great eafe and fatisfa£tion to his Majefty's- faithful fervants here, to be delivered from- fuch an unneceflary bur- then, and would encourage us to proceed more vigoroufly than is poffible for us to do while he is amongft us. Give my humble fervice to my Lord Portland, who I thought needlefs to trouble with any account of affairs, not doubting but you will impart to him what you think neceffary. My Lord Seafield has been at a great deal of pains, and was very ufeful upon this occafion. There was never a more frequent meeting of the nobility ; and they were aU # AND 1 E T T E R S. 403 sill as one man for us, except thofe few that I have already named. X have now troubled you with a very long confufed letter, and :which I believe you will hardly read, I being obliged to write it .in great hafte ; but I hope you'll take it well, for I do it both becaufe I value your friendlhip, and perfuade myfelf I have it ; and I hope you will believe that lam moflfincerely your's, &c. So, without ce- iTemony, adieu. My wife has been ill upon the road ; I exped her this night at Haddington, where I am juft now going to meet her. "Lord Seafield toMr Carstares. 'Happy in getting over the Supplies before the Eaft-Tndia Affairs and the Habeas Corpus. He is to endeavour to prevent nvhat is in- : Jendedfor both. The Oppofers mujl meet ivith Difcouragement. S I K, I have-no time to write "to you fully ; neither is it necefTarv ; for f '^'iit«''ghj _i> ' J * Tilly 2 Ca Xhave fent the'Earl of Portland an memorial, which contains an 1698. full account of all our proceedings. We have loft no time in do- ing the King's bufmefs ,; and it is of very great advantage ; for now they are ufmg their endeavours to get fomething done in fa- vours of the Eaft-India company by the parliament ; and they will alfo endeavour to have^a vote for a habeas corpus law. I fliall do what I can to prevent all thefe ; but what fuccefs I may have in it I l:now not ; but I am fure my Lord TuUibardinc's power, nor Whitelaw's, do fignrfy nothing. The Earl of Annandale has hear- tily concurred, and feems to be broke with Tullibardine. The Earl of Lauderdale and Carmichael do alfo concur ; and none of my friends hav.e as yet failed me. I know you have more full letters from the Earl of Argyle, the Juftice-Clerk, and the Advocate ; and you may call, and 1 doubt my Lord Portland will let you fee the^- Eee 2 memorial 404 S T A T E - P A P E R S memorial I have fent to him. it is thought by all, that the oppo- fers ought to meet with difcom-agement, efpecially thofe of thera that are in the King's fervice. I have directed my letter for the King under the Earl of Portland's covert. I am Y. M. H. S. Earl of Marchmont to Mr Carstares, With a Copy of Propafals^ and the Vote of Parliament. S I R, Edmburgh, You may eafily imagine I cannot get much time to write. The- le/s.^^ committees have been chofen to our fatisfadion. You have here the minutes of the two firft days, all yet publifhed ; as for the third day, you have the copy of a propofal, and the vote of parliament on the end of it, by which you will fee, that the greateft difficulty- is overcome. I have fent you the copy of my fpeech, and the Lord Prefident's. I have written pretty fully to the King, and have fent a copy to the Earl of Portland of the letter. I am very hopeful all fhall go well ; for our friends take true pains, which pleafes me. much. I am, SIR, Your very obliged friend and humble fervant, (Signed) Marchmont.- Proposals of the number of Forces to be keeped up the Time of Peace within this Kingdom, and for maintaining of the Dif- banded Officers. Prefented by the Earl of Tullibardine. i.^lntpr. The troops of guards confifting of fix fcore. 2. The regiment of foot-guards confifting of fixteen com" panies, being two batallions. 3. A regiment at Fort-William, confifting of thirteen com- panies. 4? AND LETTERS. 40^ 4. A regiment of dragoons, confifting of eight troops. 5. The garrifons in Edinburgh caftle, Stirling and Dum- barton caftles, according to the prefent eftablifhment. 6. That the field-officers of the difbanded regiments, who have not fufficient eftates of their own, be put upon half pay. 7,. That the troops of guards, being in number fix fcore, do confift of the captains, lieutenants, and enfigns of the difbanded regiments, at 4 fh. Sterling per diem. Edinburgh 23. July 1698. Refolved in plain parliament, that it is neceffary, for the fupport ©f the government, and fafety of the kingdom, that the number of lie forces upon the prefent eftablifhment be continued. {Sic fubfcribitur\ S E A F 1 E L d, J. P., D. P.. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Of his Succefs in obtaining Supplies, for keeping up the prefent Efta- blifhment tnvo Years. The Provoji of Edinburgh of great life by entertaining the Boroughs. All owing to his Majejly^s Servants^ in nvhom the Nation have Confidence. Eafl-India Company.; Afraid they nvillprefs the Parliament to addrefs a- gainjl Sir Paul Rycault. SIR, We are proceeding in the King's affairs with all the diligence EdlnbnrgSv. and expedition we can ufe ; for, fince my laft, we have carried, both I'f^^'^' in the committee and in the parliament, that fupplies fhall be gi- ven for maintaining the forces upon the prefent eftablifhment, for two years, commencing from Martinmafs 1698, and ending at Martinmafs 1700. There was great difficulty in this, though at laft we carried it by two to one. We fpoke to all our friends of three 4^6 S T A T E -P A P E R S tiree y€ars*at leaft ; but we found it was impoflible ; for, in the time of war, they had never given above two years at once : And the great argument that convinced them to continue the forces was, that the peace was not yet fo fully eftablifhed, as that we could fay our dangers were over. But they faid, that, if it were not fettled in two years, it would never come to a fettlernent. However, we tried in the <;ommittee, by inlinuations, a longer time than two years, and my Lord Commiffioner did at laft fpe,ak of two years and a half at leaft ; but that would not do : So we brought it a vote for two years, or a fhorfer time ; and it. carried in the committee for two years. But there was eight votes againft us, my Lord Car- juichael was one ; but both my Lord Lauderdale and Cafmichael voted for two years in the parliament. The provoft of Edinburgh did us fpecial feryice in this matter ; for, the night before, he called the boroughs together, and entertained them, and brought them to a confent ; and fo we carried this matter. And I hope his Majefty will be fatisfied that we have done him good fervice; for as yet there has not been a hot word p^ft in parliament. Thefe that have fet themfelves up for oppofition have failed in their defigns ; and what is got, has been obtained" by the influence of his own fervant'S. We are apprehenfive of no danger now, except from the petition of the.Eaft-India Company. The nation does generally incline to give them all encouragement ; for they are but immediately failed, and they have 1200 inen on board, with more than a year's provi- fions ; and it is faid in the general, that their projedt is fo well found- ed, and fo agreeable to their ad, that it cannot mifcarry : However, I believe, and fo does moft people here, that it will not fucceed fo well as is expeded ; but yet no man that defires to be well efteem- ed of in his own country will be perfuaded to oppofe what is fot the intereft of the company. I told my Lord Portland, in my me- morial to him, how I waved the reading of the petition the firft day ; but there was netefllty for reading it yefterday ; yet I ftopt it till we got the vote pafled for the maintaining the forces for two years, and then it was read ; but the confideratioa of it was put off till AND LETTERS, 4oyi till the next week. In the mean time, we are preparing our funds, and are doing what we can to have them adjufted before the petition be confidered. I am afraid that they prefs to addrefs the King a- gainft Sir Paul Ricot ; but I fhall ufe my utmoft endeavours in this matter for his Majefty^'s fervice. Thi^ is all the account can be gi- ven you this night, by Y. M. H. S. Earl of Marchmont to Mr Carstares. With the Rejolve of Parliament. Anxious to knoiv hoiv the Kin^ is pleqfed ivith ivhat is done. Praifes D. of ^eensberrjfy. E. of Argyky and Lord Seafeldy the frefent Managers. SIR, I have not time to fay much. The lafl ftep of our parliament Edinburgh, you have as follows :. id/s.^ ' Edinburgh f 27th July 1698. . Refolved in plain parliament, that funds be given for maintain- ance of the number of the forces upon the prefent eftablifhment for two years, viz. from November 1698 till, November 1700. [Sic fubfcribitur) Seafield, I. P, D.P. I know not how this will pleafe the King ; but I am fure when he comes to know all that I do, of what I have met with here, his Majefty will think that this affair is brought to a good pafs. I pray you fail not to let me know how his Majefty efteems what we have done. I am, SIR, Your very obliged humble fervant, (Signed) Marchmont. Boyle 4o8 S T A T E - P A P E R S Boyle of Kelburn to Mr Carstares. Noiv evident that it ivas the King alone tvho fupported the oppoftte Party. Dear SIR, Edinbtirgh, I queftion not but you have got feveral accounts of the proceed- 1698. ^ iiigfi of this feflion of parliament, how that my Lord Tullibardine, a.nd Ruglen, and Whitelaw, with all the followers they could make, barefacedly oppofed the King's bufinefs in every thing hitherto • but the King's affairs have gone on as well as could be wifhed ; for we continued tlje forces upon the prefent eftablifhment for two years, by a hundred and ten votes to thirty-eight : So that now that club-fa£tion that fet themfelves up as a negative upon the King's bufmefs is out of doors, and many of their followers fall off daily, and frankly vote in the funds for fupplying the forces • fa that there were not above eight perfons that went alongft with them againft the fefs. I hope that which I have confidently aflerted to the Earl of Portland is now evident, that it was the King alone that fupported that party : And now all honeft men have reafon to thank God that the King's bufmefs goes on fo chearfully, fo fmooth- ly, and fo free of the leaft ^leat and animofity. And I can afTure you. Sir, that the Duke of Queenfberry, my Lord Argyle, and my Lord Seafield have no fmall fhare in this great unanimity. The con- dition of our country is very calamitous ; and, if it had not been for the great value and regard that many members of parliament had for the prefent managers of the King's bufinefs in this parliament fuch chearfulnefs could not have been expefted. So begging par- don for this trouble, I ever am, Dear S I R, Your mofl: obliged, faithful, humble fervant, (Signed) Boyle of Kelburn. Earl AND L E ,T T E R S. 400 Earl of'MARCHMONT to Mr Carstares. The Aii for Supplies touched with the Sceptre. rA motion of Te~ viotdale*s and another of Tullibardine^ s rejefied. SIR, I fend y6u the minutes of the 27th and 2Qth days federunts. Edinburgh, . . . ' July 30. This day the a6t was read again, and reafoned upon ; and, after fome 1698. debate, was approven, having very few votes againft it : Then be- ing ftgned by the Lord Prefideiit of parliament, I called for it to the throne, and I gave the royal affent by the touch of his Majefty's fceptre. The Marquis of Tweedle prefented an overture in writing, that neither the troop nor regiment of guards fhall hereafter be called to ferve out of this kingdom, except they take their rank and poft that is due to them as the guards of the King of Scotland. This . occafioned fome reafoning ; but the Lord Prefident had a very, pertinent difcourfe; whereupon the overture was let fall. Then the E. of Tyllibardine moved, that ane appropriating claufe fliould be a'dded in the adl; but, after fome reafoning, the houfe Ihewirig no inclination to it, the motion was let fall, . I think meafures have been difcreetly taken in this feffion ; and I am perfuaded that his Majefty will be of the fame opinion when he has an account of all particulars* I am, S I R, Your very afFe£tionate humble fervant, (Signed) Marchmont. Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. Enlarges upon^ the Particulars in the foregoing Letter. Deft- rouSi ifpoffibky to keep off from addreffmg in behalf of the Afri- can Company ; but lucky that the King^s Btiftnefs is almojl over. SIR, I have written very fully to the Earl of Portland this night. Edmbur h His Majefties affairs doe not as yet go on very well. His forces J"iy 30, O firr ^698. Eff are 410 STATE-PAPERS #■ are now fuppUed for two years after the firft of November. The E. of TuUibardine, Marques of Tweedell, Ruglen, my Lord Whit- law, Sir Francis Scot, and Lord Enftruther, did continue to oppofe to the laft; and, when all would not doe, they firft endeavoured to gett appropriating claufes adjedted, t^at it might appear that the parliament had no truft in the King ; but they failed in this pro- je£t : And then it was propofed by the Marques of Twedell, and furder enlarged upon by the Earl of TuUibardine, that ther fliould be an exprefs claufe in the a£t for the fubfidies, difcharging the troop of guards, and foot-g^aards, to be Imployed in his Majefty's fervice abroad, untlU they were reftored to their rank as guards for the King of Scotland, I told them, that what information they had given in this matter, was undeutie to the King, and falfe in matter of fad ; and, tho' the regiment of foot-guards did , take place immediately after the Dutch guards, yet that was by reafon that they wer eftablifhed a regiment. of Englifh guards : And the propofall meeting with little fatisfa£tion in the houfe, they were forced to let it fall. They had feveral other extravagant pro- pofals to have made ; but, the firft not fucceeding, they did forbear. If it pleafe God that I have the honour to fee the King, I fhall let him know fully all that paft ; and I hope his Majefty will be con- vinced that we have lerved him faithfully and afFedually, and that it is his intereft that the oppofers be difcouraged. The parliament is adjourned till Wednefday, that we may have time to work off the African addrefs if poflible, at leaft to make it very fmooth ; but we defire the firft : But of this I fhall write more fully afterwards. It is good that the King's affairs is almoft over; it will make the oppofers more calm then otherways they would have been. I am your M. H. S. I have an untollerable fatigue. I did preceed this day in the above feven hours, and did thereafter give a publick dinner. So you will excufe me if my accounts be not fo full. Earl AND LETTERS. 411 Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. A lively Recapitulation of the Conduct of the different Parties in Parliament. — Hoiv feveral of the Individuals -on both Sides be- haved.— Anxious about the African Company'' s Affairs', but glad the Supplies are over before they come in. — Subjiance of his fpeech. In my laft I acquainted you how well his Majefly's affairs pro- Edinburgh, fpered in the hands of thofehe is pleafed torepofe truft in; and, to j^S."^' inform you of true matter of fa£t, not one of thofe who depend on D. Queenfberry, V, Seafield, or myfelf, have failed in one vote ; nor have our profilites, who are not our immediate dependers, which number are not a few, and when the roles of parliament are produced, they fhall be particularly known. Sir Archibald Muir has a£ted a good part ; and the tack to the borroughs has been of good ufe upon this occafion. Mr Francis Montgomrie (I may call him one of V. Seafield's fquade) has been forward, and has induced feverals, to my knowledge, to his Majefty's intereft ; and, of thofe which have their eye on the D. Queenfberry, Kel- burn has been very aiSive ; and feverals, who never voted for feffe formerly, has been forward in it now. As for myfliare, I fhall leave it to others to acquaint you; only one thing I afn a little vain of : I caried two Hamiltons of the family Barns Hamilton, and Hamilton for the town of Lanarick, who love not to part with their money. A great many fuch pafTages has been wrought, which, in proper time and place, will not be a mifs to be told. Juflice Qerk has indeed behaved himfelf very well and forwardly in the whole. L. Carmichaell, who you know both of us has a kindnefs for, made fome flips ; he was for a year and a half in place of two years. E. Anandale, who we likewife brought into the committee, at the commiffioner's defire, has gone franckly on. How long he will continue his 'countenaunce,. I canqot determine ; but, at this time, by the undefervld' compliment wc put upon him, Fff2 he 4'3 STATE-PAPERS he has been pretty forward ; by which you fee I fend you true matter of fad. E. of Sutherland, though dofed, and void of both fenfe and words, voted ftrongly againfl: the King in all the votes, as did L. Enfter, L. Salton, L. Rivan, L. Bargenie. As for L. Rofs, I gained him to vote but nonliquid, and thereafter voted along with us ; but fpoke Kttle or non. As for the M. erf Tweedalfe, he has ad:ed a foolifh part; for they have made him give in all the foolifh propofals. E. Tulibardine apppars malicious even to the King's perfon, as you will know by his pro- pofals from V. Seafield. M. of AthoU is all this time in town, but comes not to parliament. E. Ruglen voted boiftroufly againfl: the continuing the forces, and againfl: the fupplys. L. Fountinhali has oppofed. Now, leafli-you chance to fay too mutch in fome of our friends behalfs, and I would not any way have you at a lofe, you moft know our friend Melvine has not opened his mouth fcarce all this feffion, nor E. Leven but once, that I remember, anent the members who had not qualified in th^r favours : They have both voted right in all their votes'; but the little thing, the brother, has voted wrong in almofl: all the votes; as hashkewife L. Burlie and Rydie, who are near all their dependers I fee them have at prefent. I fhall put no conftruilion ; but I think it a niif- fortune Sir Alexander Monro has abfented. Colloden fometimes abfented; when he was prefent, voted againft the King. Torwod- lie voted againfl: the King ; the Laird of Grant furious againfl; the King's bufinefs; and the Laird of Livingfton, with Brodie of Haflilk- ; the Laird of Prefl:on ha« adted the fame part. Whitlaw was furious at firfl:, as one that had been robbed of poflTeflion, as well as expectation ; but, in the end, he proves a little pacified, but fl:ill wrong* The other day, ther was a. petition prefcnted by Dalyell of craving warrand to cite Mure of Callwall,. pretending he was notoMidgfid to repeat: I heard it calmly at firft; but, in the end, when I found it was like to meet with favour, I at- tacked it fo v^oroufly, that he withdrew it; and next day Lp^eft a vote in the matter: So that.by a vote it was refufed. L thought it AND LETTERS. 413 it was not good, upon any fpecious pretence, to open that door, now his Majefly's foirces are fecured ther mairitainance for two' years : Tvlore was not poffible to obtain ; had we alked more, I am politive we -^ad been run to one year ; for our ftrongeft argument for cefs bein^- neceffity, and the prefent uncertainty of the peace, the King of Spain's condition, indthe King's not having fettled thofe alliances he was now about to make ; for you moll think dl\ of us pretended to be very knowing, as you fhall fee by the inclofed paper, which is, as near as I can remember, all I faid upon the occafion, when the nilmber of years came to be debated in the houfe. You cannot imagine what fatigue V. Seafifeld- has under- gone ; and, to cqrifider what a turri four days niade to the better, after our arrival, it looks like a dream. They had made fuch' curfed liesi to obftriid the King's bufmefs, that all of a fudden they loft their, reputation, when the truth was told. The partia- ment is adjourned to the 3d, in which day the African com- pany's addrefs' is to be confidered ; which, I muft confefs, is the only thing I ever feared. One comfort I have, the King's bu- fmefs is now done ; and much will remain in the commiffioner's hand, not to let them go tb any hight, if any of our friends fliould grow houmef-fdme upoti this fubjedf; tho' I anf not out of hopes to have the better in tMs affair, by fmoOthing them a little. Ther other" pro- jeflis you will have frOm the fecrietary; belides what's offered, you. fliall have from me. I am your's. Adieu. My moft humble fervice to the Earl of Portland. The parliament, in my humble opinion, by their continuing the forces upon the prefent eftablilhment, have fhewed their gratitude to his Majefty, for the many great things he has done for us ; and they have alfo fhewed their confidence in his Majefty, and their value of his opinion, fince he has been pleafed to declare the prefent army neceffary, that they have done the. fame. We now underftand, by his Majefty 's commifEoner, that two years is the leaft his Majeftie thinks can be condefcended on for your fecurity ; 414 STATE-PAPl^^RS fecurity : Should you diminifh of that time, it would derogate from your former vote, wher you fhow that deference to his Majefty's opinion. His Majefty is now going in abroad, in order to make thofe alliances which may fecure the peace of Europe: And, fince the Englifh parliament has not done all their bufinefs as yet, its probable ther next feflion may be long; and, though his Majefty intends to be amongft us, it cannot be prefumed, upon thofe confiderations, he can be here before this time two years. Why then fliould we take the opportunity from his Majefty of doing in perfon, what all of you fays would be acceptable, of leflening your charge, if the circumflances of aff^airs will allow, which we cannot in juftice doubt of, he having always fhowed fo much tendernefs to his people. I move, therefore, that the two year for maintaining the army be voted j and what we doe we may doe frankly. LordSeafield to Mr Carstares. A minute and exa6l Detail of the Proceedings_ in Parliament re- lative to the African Company. Defence of the King and Secretaries in the Affair of the Hamburgh Memorial. Endea- njours to ivave the Prorogation of the Immunities of the Campany^ and afferting its Privileges ; ivho for and againft this Moti- on. SIR, Edinburgh, In my laft, I acquainted you that that the fubfidies were paft, ■^^s- I- ^udj for making the funds certain, ther is a roup of the excife appointed next week ; and we are hopeful, if ther be any diff^e- rence, to make it up, by turning the excife of brandy upon the importers, and taking it off the retailers ; which will make L. 5000 .and has hitherto amounted to little or nothing. I did alfo in- form ♦and letters. 415 form you, that I had prevented the efFeCt of that propofal of the Marquifs of Tweedel, and feconded by the E. of Tullibardine, of hindring the regiment of guards to be employed abroad, untill they were reftored to their rank. I am juft now informed, that they defire to propofe, that none but Scotfmen fliall he employed in the army. This is fo ridiculous, that I have no apprehenfion of danger from it : But what troubles me moft is, the petition and demands of the African company. I fhall now endeavour to give you a full and plain account of what has paft in that matter. Yefterday was appointed for taking that matter under confideration ; and, therefore, without fhowing any apprehenfions of danger, after reading of the minutes, I ordered the clerk to read the petition : Some prefled the reading of the memorial ; but I waved that. There was at firft a long filence ; and I believe they expected that I ihould have fpoke: But I faid nothing. At laft, Sir Francis Scott faid, that, by the filence, he thought it was the opinion of the houfe, that the defire of the petition fhould be granted. I anfwered him, that as yet I heard none of that opinion but him^- felf; whithall, I told him, that what was under confideration was of confequence; and that I did not doubt it would be fully fpoke to.. Then the M. of Tweedle, E. of Tullibardine, L. Whitlaw, and Sir John Houfton, made their refpedive fpeeches, upon the great con- cern that all the nation had to fupport the Eaft India Company ; that a great fume of money had been advanced abroad upon that projed ; that their fhips were failed with a good' number of men and officers, and with a confiderable cargo ; and that, notwithftand- ing of this, if the company did not meet with encouragement from the parliament, by afferting of their privileges, and by giving them a prorogation of their immunities, it would, infallibly go to ruin. I waited a confiderable time; but none of the King's fer- vants fpeaking any thing, I thought it needful! to fpeak my mind freely ; and yet T did it fo, as that my enemies could catch no advantage of what I faid. I did, in t-he firft place, acknowledge, that it was of very great concern that the company fhould profper, andi 4i6 STATE-PAPER S* and that I thought the .only difpute among us would be, concern- ing the way and manner of giving fupport and affiftance to it ; and I told plainly, that the demanding of a prorogation of the immunities was neither needfull, nor proper to be propofed at . this time ; my reafons were, that there were yet 1 9 years to run of the years granted them by the a£t of parliament ; that in that tinie there would be feveral parliaments, and they would have more fit opportunitys of propofmg this prorogation. And, in the next place, it would be more eafily obtained after their colony is fettled than now ; for as yet it is uncertain if it would be of any ufe to them or not. But, in the third place, I told, that-ihe-company could' not expe£l that this could be granted ; becaufe neither my L. Commiffioner nor I, who were employed for a long time in the preparing of the inftrufliions, had the leaft" infinuarion that any fuch thing would be propofed ; and, fmce there was no ne- ceflSty of having this either granted or refufed, now I hoped no body woirfd have the confidence to infift further in that matter. And whereas it had been faid, that it was of fmall confequence to the King, and that it was of great import to the company, be- caufe it would convince them that they were under the King and parliament's prote(fJion, I told them,' that there might be many propofals made af greater advantage to the company thari this, which was of fo fmall import ; and it would be crofs and contrary to the intereft of the company to prefs a vote, when they were fure they could not have the commiffioner's affent ; for that was rather -to make all believe that they could not have that encouragement which they pretended is fo neceffary at prefent ; and ther could be no bad confequence in delaying the preffing of it till a more fit opportunity. And, after this point was fully reafoned upon, I then fpoke to the other parts of the petition ; and, in particular, as to what concerned the memorial given in to the fenate of Hamburgh ; And I told them, that, as to that particular, I was able to give them full latisfadioij ; and I would fay nothing in that matter but what I fhould find vouchers for in the houfe. I told them that, im- mediately AND LITTERS. 417. mediately after giving in that ttiemorial, the King went abroad to Holland ; that my L. Tullibardine and I came ihortly thereafter to Scotland; that the company made applicatioA to us ; that they told us they defigned to addrefs the lords of privy-councill ; that yve diverted them from it, and perfuaded them to fend their petition by us to the King, which they did ; that we both interpofed, with all the earneftnefs pofible? for a' good anfwer ; and that his Majefty did, upon this, very gratioufly promife, by his letter to us, that he would give orders to his reflident at Hamburgh to make no further oppofition in his name ; that, we did read this letter to the general councill of the company ; ' that we gave them an exad copy of it, figned by us both ; upon this they returned us their thanks. The company did immediately difpatch this anfwer to their cprrefpon- dent at Hamburgh ; and there they did endeavour to underftand if the King had given orders to his refident in the terms thereof, which his Majefty had delayed untill he returned, and untill he fhould have the opportunity of fpeakingwith liisfervants concerning that mutter ; and then hrs Majefty did give thefe orders ; and the company, hot knowing that they were given, did again prepare to addrefs the privy-council, but thereafter altered their re- folutions, and fent an addrefs to the King, to be delivered by us both, and which we did ; and his Majefty gave us a very good an-- fwer, and told us, that he had given his orders to his refident, not , tooppofethe company in what they ftiould propofein the terms of the aSt of parliament and letters patent. This anfwer we fent to Sir Francis Scott, who was prefident of the council, which I did not doubt was fatisfying; and thereafter we heard no more from the com- pany : And fo I thought, fmce the King had done fo much for them in this matter, that they would notofFer to give him any farther trouble concerning it. My L. Tullibardine could not deny the truth of what Ifaid; and I found the houfe very well fatisfied with this account of the matter of fad ; but he and the other oppofers ftill infifted to have a vote parfTed for prorogating the immunities granted to the company ; and then both my L. Annandale and my Lord Juftice- Ggg . Clerk 4i8 STATE-PAPERS Clerk fpoke very well againft this demand, as likewlfe did my L. Prefident of the feffion and Sir John Hume. The Prefi- dent, in the end of his fpeech, made a propofal, that it fhould be remitted to a committee to confider what encouragement fhould be given to the company. Upon this occafion, my L. Whitelaw infift- ed to have that fingle point difcufled in the houfe without any com- mittee, and faid, that he did not think that that was a good argu- ment for the houfe to forbear proceeding, that his Majefty had not given an inftruftion. I told him, that I thought it was upon this occa- fion, feeing what the company was demanding was the King's annex- ed property, his cuftoms ; but, after a great deal of difpute,for this lafted above three hours, that I did not fo much as fit down, it came to be a- greed to by all, except three or four, that this affair fhould be commit- ted; and then the difpute arofe, if there fhould be a new committee e- ledled, or if it fhould be committed to the committee of fecurity ; and we carried it by a great majority, that it fhould be remitted to the commit- tee of fecurity ; and this day we have met, and has had this matter un- der our confi deration ; and the directors of the company have prefent- ed to us feveral new propofals : The firft is, that there be an addrefs- to the King, that he give it under his hand that he will protect the company in all their privileadges. The fecohd is, the prorogation of the years. The third is. That there be a new a£t ratifying the priviledges of the company. And the fourth demand, that the two irnalL frigates may be given for their ufe. I confefs I was angry when thefe were propofed; but I hope it fhall turn to our advantage; for this does plainly make appear, that the dire£tors of that com- pany proceed by way of humour, and have no regard either to the honour of the King, or the fatisfadion of his fervants, or the true interefl; of the company ; and nothing does flraiten us in all this matter, but that the mofl honefl and well-inclined men to the King's government, are. both concerned in the company, and do not defire to oppofe any thing that is propofed for it ; and the whole minifters of the nation are praying for the fuccefs of that company; and many people have their friends and relations that have gon^ volunteers in the A#N b LETTERS. 419 the fhips. God knows what a trouble this matter is to me, and what anxiety is upon my fpirit to get fairly out of it, which I am hopeful I fhall. We do treat and carrefs the members, and have our friends at work doing all they can with them. I hope, after to- morrow, to give you an account of the iflue, which is of great con- fequence. We all think that we come well off, if we can get a fmooth and eafy addrefs pafled to the King, for protecting the company in their privileges. This will be no afb of the King or his commiffion- ers ; and it is not to be imagined but that fomething of this kind would be done. I could write to you of feveral other particulars which I forfee; but this account is already too tedious. Give my moft humble fervice to the E. of Portland, and let him have this memorial, which I think may be read to the King. I am your M. H. S. Adieu. Earl of Marchmont to Mr Carstares. With Minutes of Parliament. De/tres to kno-w hoiv the King re- lijhes the Parliament's Addrefs in favour of the Company. S I R, I fend you here the minutes of parliament of the 30th July Edinburgh, and the 3d of Auguft. The matter of the African Company, which je^g^s. was the great handle the oppofers reckoned upon whereby to cre- ate us trouble, is now over, by an addrefs from the parliamesnt to his Majefty, in fuch terms as I hope fhall pleafe him. I have fent a copy of it to the E. of Portland. I am much concerned to know how his Majefty likes it. I am fure it coft us great pains to bring that matter to this pafs. I am, S I R, Your very afFedionate humble fervant, Marchmont. .G g g 2 Duke 420 STATE-PAPERS Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Dejtres that the King may gratifj Mr Prlmrofe of Dalmeny in his Preienfions to be a Vifcount^ His being CommiJJioner for the Shire of Mid* Lothian. His great EJiate, and his Services in this Parliament, entitle him to that Honour. S I R, Edinburgh, , y^^ have now got through mofl: of our bufinefs ; and with no 1698. fmall pains, and fome dexterity too, we have got the blow put by •which was defigned by the addrefs of the African Company ; and I hope what is refolved in that matter will be acceptable to the King ; and indeed lefs could not be done where the intereft was fo univer- fal. I know you will have a more particular account of this and other things from others; fo I fhall only now fay one thing to you. You already know how we have been obliged to ply people for their af- fiftance and concurrence, and, among others, Mr Primrofe of Dalme- nie has been very ufeful ; he ferves for this fliire, and by that means is called with the firft in the rolls of commiffioners for fliires ; he is a man of a great eftate,and very good fenfe: Thefe things made his voteexamplary ; and he was alfo a very diligent folicitor with his acquaintances. I believe you are not ignorant of his pretenfions to be a Vifcount ; he has now deferved it before he gets it, while o- thers forgot the obligations lately put upon them by titles of that fame nature. I hope this will be done ; and, to tell you the truth, my L. Seafield and I are a little engaged in it. As I told you be- fore, if the K. continue firm, and be pleafed to follow the advice that will be given him, he may have Scotland in his hand ; but, as he muft encourage his friends by little marks of favour, fo he muft difcourage his enemies ; at leaft, make them, in fo far as their inte- reft or influence depends on himfelf, incapable to do him hurt: And the more frankly thefe things be done, they will have the better ef- fed. AND LETTERS. 421 * fed. Give my fervice to E. Portland ; and believe me fincerely your's, &C. Adieu. Earl of Argyle to Mr CarstaRes. Upon the Addrefs of the Parlicmemt. — Pains taken to prevent it ; — and^ nvhen that ivould not do, to clip it. The King may noiv ejlahlijh his Servants^ by putting Marks of Difpleafure upon the Oppofers. — He mufi heivare of Trimming. — A curious Pajfage le- ttvixt Lord Montgomery and Lord Anftruther. Since I writ laft, our time in parliament has been moftly took up Edinburgh, with that affair of the African company's addrefs, the double 1698, whereof I conclude will be tranfmittedby the fecretary : It was fign- ed by L. Bafil Hamilton as prefidentto a fcrimp committee. You'll fee it is an angry one. All pains were took to divert the parlia- ment's addrefling at all, a propofition being made by us, that the fecretary fhould reprefent to the King the inclinations of his par- liament in relation to that company : But, in ftiort, what betwixt the few angry people, and a deal of well-meaning men, who have not all the reach requifite, fo ftrong was the humour for addrefling, that our laft refolve was to go into it with them, which is drawn as eafy as was poflible ; the narrative of it is the harfheft part : And you will fee, by the wording of the parliament's addrefs, that the ftlng is took out of the expreffions in it as much as argument could prevail;- as for example, (tending toleffen); for the others would have had it a pofitive rough aflertion ; and, when you perufe the dou- ble fent by the fecretary, you'll fee it all through clipped as much as poffible of what might choak ; and, in the terms it is, its pafled unanimoufly ; which, in my opinion, is much the beft, confidering the general concern the generality has in the company. I know the Advocate and others will be full in their accounts as to this matter. I {hall fay nothing farther in it. It is now in the King's power to eftablifli 422 S T A T E - P A P E R S eftablifh his fervants, who have been always faithful to him, and particularly upon this occafion, what is done being of no fmall con- fequence, confidering the prefent circumftances. I mean, his Ma- jefty may fo fettle the government, that it cannot be hereafter in the power of an angry Tullibardine, or' of any one family in Scot- land, to caufe him to doubt fuccefs in what concerns his Majefty. In what accounts I have from time to time given you, I have ftudied true matter of fadl : And one thing I fhall fay, though it may look a little vain, though, very evident to thofe upon the place, that no- thing has facilitate the King's bufmefs at this time more than the love and regard the people has to thofe who managed ; for, confi- dering the prefent poverty of the country, and the name of peace, our arguments would have little prevailed, had we not pleaded kindnefs. One thing I will fay, that, if his Majefty can be on the place to honour us with his prefence at the end of the two years, and that mean time he be pleafed to follow the meafure he faid he would before we had finifhed, nay, begun this hard work ; if fo, I doubt not but he may obtain any thing of this parliament which I know he will afk : But, if we turn again to a trim, and not fhow marks of difpleafure efFedually to the oppofers, we fliall be thought liars, and rendered lefs capable to ferve him upon a pinch. I fhall tell you one exprelTion L. Enfter had to L. Montgomery the other day. Says L. Montgomery, I admire moft of you all that are op- pofers of the King's affairs, how E. Ruglen ventures,, fince I know the love he has for his money ; his place is advantageous. L. En- fter replied in pafhon. What ! Do you think the others have interefl to turn him out ? No, fays he, they dare not propofe it. And, to prove him a liar, pray do me the favour to offer it in my name to E. Portland, that it is his for his Majefty's fervice particularly E. Ruglen meet with fuch treatment as he gave the King when we afked the fupply : And, when he is kick'd out, can any body fay but it is juft he refufes the King money, and the King will let him have no more of his money. This is but modefl to jM-opofe ; it is ftating his Majefty and E. Ruglen but upon an equal foot, as to the refent- A N 1> L 'E T T E R S. 423 refenting part. Some think the King will not venture to frown on the houfe of Hamilton; but I am not of that mind; an example that v/ay is worth two. The leaft his Majefty's fervants can expedt after what is part is his countenance, and difcountenance to the oppofers. And when all the fteps of our procedure is reviewed, it will be feen we took no advantage, but with moderation, making the King's inte- reft our ftandard, Hill having a regard to our country, with whom we have gained intereft, in fpite of the King's enemies and oppo- fers. Nothing has advanced affairs more than the happy choice of our Prefident to the parliament. I confefs I once thought Leven might a performed that part, but I find the old man fometimes does prevail with him, which would not have fuited with our moderation. The fecretary has promifed by this exprefs, to recomihend Captain • to be ft^re-keeper in the caftle of Edinburgh, in the place, of Tames Row, who is decrepit, and keeps his bed, and is ufelefs. This Menzies is married to my uncle Neil's daughter, and fo my coufin-german ; which I flatter myfelf will induce you to be affifl- ing in procuring him the place. You will have account from every body how affifting all of us has been to the commifTioner, gaining him all the refped imaginable upon this occafion ; for, if his Grace of Queenfberry, the Secretary, and a very few others of us, had not been good feconds to him, it had been unfortunate; for, alas ! Com- nvffar Monro, CuUoden, and Torwoodlie, and Jarvifwood, either oppofed, deferted, or fell fick ; which I fay not out of any reafbn, but pity the unluckinefs of fo many fundry accidents falling out to one fquade. M^ moft humble fervice to E. Portland. I am. your's. Adieu. to 424 STATE-PAPER S to Mr Carstares. The Commiffloner fpins out the Parliament for his own ddvantage. Seafield tired of a Scheme to bring my Lord Stairs into Par" liament. SIR, Edinburgh, Your challenge in your laft .engages me to write to you oftener i6ol/^" "^"^ y°^ will think worth your while; but, fince you defire it, you fhall have my fcribble, ^though little worth. Our 88 goes on fo llowly, that fome honeft men begin to defert and go home; 122 fpinning it ofF for his own advantage; 119 feems to be weary of it. You will be furpfifed, when you underftand there is fo good an un- derftanding, beyond expe£tation, by 47 treating r 1, 30, 128, with- in thefe two days, vvhere was 119; and there is nothing but cove- " « nants entered into. 145 was there, and that morning vifi ted 128 . ^. anent 100 his coming in; and the firft vifit being thus made, it was expeded 128 fhould have been foftened by it ; but I have no rea- ' fon to think fo. Next week we will fee it, 100 being expedled to conve into 88. 30, whom you call my friend, outruns moft in 76 affairs ; but I cannot fay it is much trufted. I hear he has writ to you, though nothing fignified to me. I wifh you good friends. Mind 8, who expeds your friendfhip : And this day 1 1 9 dined with him in the country. 123 has not been well, and .is in the country this eight days. 47 is gone to the country for three days ; And, fince you were pleafed to, offer to recommend me to your friends, you will be pleafed to do it, (though I am no new tackfman of the bifhops rents), and particularly to 119. Adieu mofl heartily. 148 gives his fervice to you, who has been very adive for 76 his bufmefs with 88. Lord 88, Parliament. 122, Marchmont. J 19, Seafield. loo, Earl of Stairs. 'AND LETTERS. 425 Lord SEAFiELDto Mr Carstares. Difficulty in raifing a Fund for broken Officers, and disbanded Sea- men. The amount of the Excife, &c. SIR, Since my laft, we have been endeavouring in the committees to Edinburgh, procure fome relief to the broken officers and to the difbanded fea- ^^^^ '5- men ^ and we have hopes to carrie an a£t for poll-money ; but it is to be fo regulate as that it will noj: reach the poor : And I muft again tell you, that this nation was neyqr in fo low a condition, for they have neither money nor bread, which has made all our bufinefs the more difficult to us. However, I blefs God we have ferved his Ma- iefty efFe£tually ; and he may govern this nation for two years with- eutany trouble, for the funds are good and certain. We have roup- ed the excife this clay for 40,000 pounds, free of all dedu£tioiis or abatements ; fo that, ia the haill, there is four fcore eight thoufand pounds yearly for maintaining the forces, which is near four thoufand pounds more than the eftablifhment : And, if funds be gi- ven that can clear a part of the arrears of the army, I do not fee where the King can meet with any trouble ; but, on the contrary, he has it in his hands to bring matters to fuch a fettlement, as that it will be far eafier to continue his army, than it has been now to preferve it entire. And I find all his Majefty's fervants in England do take particular notice of: what we have done ; and I hope it may prove to be of good influence even there. We will draw this par- fiament to a conclufion as foon as poffibly we can. I fhall be capa- ble to write fully to the E. of Portland by my next ; and, in the mean time, this will make my excufe, and will ferve to let you know what is a doing. I am, in all fincerity, Y. M. H. S. Hh h Earl % 426 STATE-PAPERS * Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Of the Earl of ArrarCs being made Duke of Hamilton. Tullibar- dine's Propofal to bring in the Earl of Stairs. Difappointed by a Viftt ivhich ^eensberry, Argyle, Philiphaugh, and Seafield paid him at Neivlifton. The Terms upon "which he agreed not to- claim his Seat. SIR, Edinburgh, J have received your's this night, giving account of the Earl of Aug. 20. . . . - 1698. Arran's being made Duke of Hamilton. This railes the expedlations of fome people who are here ; and it is faid that his' Grace is co- ming down very foon. We have done little here fmce my laftj but that we have read a great many private laws the firft time; and therefore Lam in hopes, that, in the end of the next week, or in the beginning of the week thereafter, we fhall bring this fellion of par- liament to a clofe. We are endeavouring to get a fund for the dif- banded officers ; but we have difficulty in it ; for the country can fcarcely bear, greater fubfidies than are laid on already. We have been in fome difficulty concerning my L. Stairs. He has had an invitation from my L. TuUibardine and the club-party to come in and take his place in parliament ; and he had great inclinations to do it ; but my Lord Juftice-clerk has declared, that, unlefs my L. Commiffioner would give him pofitive commands in that matter, he v>?ould oppofe his coming in, as being derogative from the vote of parliament in the matter of Glenco ; and there were others of the club-party who were waiting for this opportunity. The prefident of the feffion was for fome time very forward in this matter ; but the commiffioner is now become pofitive, that, fince he has no in- ftrudions concerning my L. Stairs, he will not fuffer him to come in. Whereupon the D. of Queenfberry, E. of Argyle, L. Philip- haugh, and I, have been at Newlifton this day, and we have perfuaded him not to come in againft the commiffioner's inclina- tions, AND LETTERS. 427 tions, providing the comtniffioner write him a letter, defiring him not to come, and promifing to reprefent him favourably to his Ma- jefty upon that account. The Duke of Queenfberry and I are to negotiate this matter with the commiffioner to-morrow. I am Y. ' M. H. S. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. A more minute Detail of the TranfaSlions 'with Lord Stairs. — 7m/- libardine andWhitelaiv^s Vieivs in bringing him into Parliament. S I R, I have prefumed this night to write fullv to the E. of Portland Edinburgh, of what has paft fmce the addrefs of the African company. I hope 1658. his Majefty is fatisfied, that, in all that concerns him, we have done our beft ; arid I Ihall neither doubt of his encouraging us who have ferved him faithfully, nor of fhewing his dilpleafure with thofe who have boldly oppofed him. You have had full accounts from time to time of any thing that has occurred that has been worthy of no- ticing ; but, at meeting, I fhall be able to give you more full fatis- fadion. We are juft now endeavouring to procure fome found for the arrears of the cafhiered officers. 1 am hopeful we fhall obtain it : But, whether we fucceed in this or not, yet we cannot be blamed, the poverty of the country is fo great; and feveral of the members who were very friendly to us have gone to the country, to look after their harveft. It was like to have occafioned us very great difficulty, that my L. Stairs has made a very clofa attempt to take his place as a nobleman in parliament. He naet with great encouragement to come in from the E. of- TuUibardine, Grant, and Whitelaw ; and, in a word, by all thofe who have oppofed. But the Juftice-Clerk was pofitive, that, if my L. Stairs did offer to fit in parliament, that he would call for the votes and addrefs paffed in the 95 con- cerning the matter of Glenco; and if, after this, if the vote had H h h 2 carried. 428 STATE-PAPERS carried, ' allow my L. Stairs to fit,' when the commiffioner had not written inftru£tions, we might have been_ blamed for it. I told the commifTioner plainly, that there was nothing to be done but one of two; that is, all -of us who are the King's fervants to concur together in bringing my L. Stairs into the houfe ; or that all of us (hould affift his Grace in keeping of him out. And the Commiffioner being ve- ry pofitive that he would not allow him to fit, the D, of Queenfber- ry, the E. of Argyle, my L. Leven, thf Prefident of the fcffion, Philiphaugh, and I went to Newlifton to my L. Stair, where, after a long reafoning, wc brought it to this, That, if the Commiffioner would interpofe his authority with him by a letter, and defire him not to come in, he would give obedience to it ; and accordingly the Commiffioner did write a letter, which the Prefident did carry to him laft night j but I have not had time to fpeak with him fince he returned : So now this matter is over without any heat or noife. It is true, that at firft the Prefident was very anxious to have his bro- ther admitted ; but, when he found the Commiffioner pofitive, he did comply, and did give us very great affiftance in perfuading my Lord Stair to forbear ; in fo much, that he was very angry at him, and blamed him in fome meafure that he was not allowed to take his place in parliament. I do believe, for fo it was faid amongft them- felves, that my L. Tullibardine and Whitelaw gave the greater en- couragement to my L. Stairs, that they thought that his coming in would both have divided us, and might have occafioned fome re- fledion upon our proceedings ; but we are all convinced that this matter muft be adjufted fome way or other before the next feffion of parliament. I fhall endeavour, before I part from this country, to bring with me a clear ftate of his Majefty' affairs ; for the cu- ftoms, the excife, the bifhop's revenues, and ail that concerns his Majefty's revenue, are now fet, and under tack. We have paft feveral private laws, as you will fee by the minutes ; but feveral dif- ficult points may yet occur before all is ended ; and I hope the ad- journment fhall be betwixt and Saturday come eight days ; and, with- in ten days thereafter, I ffiall be going from this. This is all at pre- fent from Y. M. H. S. 429 , 2. AND LE^TTERS Earl of MarciJmont to Mr Carstares. The Conclufton of the Sejfion of Parliament. S I R, I got your letter of the 23d Auguft from Loo, which was very Edinburgh, comfortable to me. I had received before all you had written to my f^^g' ^ fon ; for all which I owe and return hearty thanks. I cannot get much written now, being in haft to write to his Majefty an account of the calm conclufion of this feffion of parliament, which I ad- journed yefterday till the 1 5th of November. The letter which I have written to the King, whereof I have fent a copy to the E. of Portland, which no doubt you will fee, together with the prints here inclofed, will give you a pretty clear account in fo far as you have not had, it before. So I ftiall add no more now, but that I am heartily, SIR, Your very obleidged and affeaionate humble fervant, Marchmont, Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. State of the Revenues. His great Fatigue this Sefjion. Hap- py that the King is pleafed. ^eensherry furprifed at ArrarC s Promotion Hoiv Melvil^ Leven, and their Folloivers behaved in this Seffion. ^ SIR, The parliament is now adjourned; andl hope his Majefty will be fatisfied with what has been done in it. The oppofers do ftill Sep^. "."^ *' endeavour to bring in ane a£t, difcharging all broad-cloath, fing- '^^^'v rums, ferges, and ftockings to be imported*; and ane drther ad:, for difcharging all filk ftuffs tobe imported^ or worn, except what is 450 STATE-PAPERS is manufa£tored within the kingdome. They did alfo prefs for ane habeas corpus law, and a law difcharging all trade with France, except the French did allow our herrings, falmond, and what is the product of this country, to be imported there ; and they did think themfelves fecure to bring moft of thefe to a vote, and at leafl: to lay them at the negative : But we have been fo fuccefsfull as that there is no vote paft in either of thefe ; and there is no ads voted but what have received the royall aflent ; and all the fub- fidies that we coilld propofe in the terms of our inftrudtions are granted : We have the tunnag-e for keeping off our fhips, which runs for five years ; we have poll-money impofed for two years, for payment of the arrears ; and we have the excife upon brandy altered, fo as that, after the expiring of the prefent tack, it will im- prove his Majefty's revenue L. looo fter. per year; and we have parted without any heat. I have not fo full acquainted, either his Majefty, or the E. of Portland, with thefe propofals that were pre- pared and defigned againft us ; but you may take your own way to acquaint them with it ; for, from the time of the fitting down of the parliament, till now, I have nothing but toill and an- xiety. It is my great comfort in all this, that we have had fuccefs, and that the King is pleafed with what has been done in his fer- vice. I think it is needlefs for me to tell you of the fenfe I have of my L, Portland's friendfhip ; but he has no body that wifhes his intereft better than I do; and I fhall be faithfull to him, to the utmoft of my power. The D. of Queenfberry was a little furprifed with the Earl of Arran's being made D. of Hamilton. The D. of Queenfberry does truly deferve encouragement, and fo does the Earl of Argyle. Melvill and my L. Leven were almoft for all the propofals I have mentioned, tho' they did not appear very much in them above board ; and Bailie James Ruthven, Reid, Strouie, and all Melvll's followers, except himfelf and Leven, were againft us in every thing. However, I flball never be able to give you a full account of our bufinefs, till it pleafe God we meet, and then you Ihall know all, and how and in what manner every thing has been managed. This is all from Y. M. H. S. AND LETTERS. 431 Earl of ARGYLEto Mr Carstares. The Re a/on of the Marquis ofTiveedale's giving no Difturbance to the Parliament. Of Captain Frazer^s Tryal. Of nvhatpajfed bet'wixt Tullihardine and Balnegoivan. His Claim of an ad- ditional Honour to his Family.-^— Wi/hes for a Pardon to Captain Frazer. If Tullihardine go on^ he "will make all the High- landers fy to Arms. The parliament is now come to a conclufion in calmer and better Edinburgh,, Sept. 3,. terms than could have been expected. There are two years poll 1698. granted for payment of arrears ; and the parliamejit have paft a vote, that they will mate up to the King what falls fhort of Balheaven's tack. It fell out fortunately an a£t was prefented with profped to the Lady Dalkeith's jointer, which fome thought might encroach upon entails ; and Marquis of Tweedale thought it might touch him,, which occalioned fome debate betwixt the oppofers and us : At length, when it was coming to a vote. Marquis Tweedale defired to be heard by his lawyer, which was like to be . denied him. I confefs I love not to hurry matters ; nor do I like to introduce a bad precedent, not knowing where it may hitt one time or other ; upon which I gave way to Tweedal's defire, and all yielded : The a£t was prefented no more ; but we keept it as a whipe over his head : So that, during the continuance of the parliament, none of that gang durft offer any of ther impertinent ads, which they had flattered themfelves to niake us uneafy by; for they knew we could carry that of entails. You will certainly have a particular account from the fecretary, what fell out as to Tullihardine laft week ; and it will not be amifs to introduce the ftory. The Laird of Ballengowan, who is Roffe to his name, has nigh upon as good a command as Athol has; nay, he and theFrafers together are much better. He is married to my aunt ; and came. - over to Edinburgh upon the occafion that Captain Frafer was to be tryed in abfence before the juftice court, for convocation of the Hedges : 432 S* T A T E - P A P E R S Hedges : For it is to be obferved, that they dare not purfiie him for a rape, or forcing the lady ; for, in that cafe, I do aflure you he is content to fift himfelf at the bar, and take his fate ; and, which is more, he will adduce no witneffes, but refer all to the Lady Lovat's own oath, if fhe did not voluntarly marry, fent for the minifter her- felf, and, which is more, if what paft betwixt them, in confequence of the marriage, was not as much her inclination as his : All which he will fubmit to her oath. It feems E. Tullibardine underftood .that Ballengowan was to prefeut a petition to the parliament, cra- ving to be heard by his lawyer, as creditor to Captain Frazer, fince he was abfent ; and that if in cafe, as certainly in abfence, judge- ment muft go againfl; him, then Ballengowan would lofe his debt ■ fmce all the vifible eftate Captain Frazer has is the lady's jointure. Tullibardine, upon this, went at night with two of his brothers, L. Edward and L. James, and a third perfon, to Ballengowan's lod- gings ; afk'd fo'r 'him. He was anfwered, he was not at home • however he went in ; fearched all the rooms, and fome other people's chambers about, and particularly a clofet which was Ihut ; called for the key ; went into it ; and, laft of all, pretended he was looking for lodgings, which was too plain a fham, he ha- ving the lodgings in the Abbay which I ought to have, and an- other in town, which was Bannockburn's. Thereafter,1Ballengowari, at the twilight, was ftanding at the crofs, when there came a gentleman to call him to fpeak to one ; and fo the ftory goes on as you will fee by the ligned declaration by Ballengowan. The firftpart, of his going to his lodgings, is not in the declaration; for he knev,r it not till his lanladj told him of it fince : But it can be proved, and is a circumflance to make any indifferent perfon believe the reft. You have heard likewife what the commiffioner did upon Ballengowan's figned complaint ; how Tullibardine and all the reft were let out upon bail; how Tullibardine made a heavy complaint of the commiffioner felzing him in time of parliament, which the com- miffioner took up brifkly, as did the prefident of the parliament : And Tullibardine fell as fimply from his attack as he made it. A demon- AND LETTERS. 433 ftration to inforce the juft opinion the world has now of him ; and fince you took notice how oblidging he is to me in all his adlions, it feems he has a -particular regard for the church; for he is refol- ved you fhall make your obferve good to the end. We might have eafily fent him to the caftle, for founding a complaint againft one who reprefented the King ; but I faid not a word, thinking calm methods pleafes our mafter beft. The habeas corpus a£t, and that of difcharglng Englifh cloath, were both foregot by Tweedal's fear of the intail-aft. Now, what my part and fhare in doing the King's bufinefs at this time hasbeen, I (hall not reprefent myfelf, but leaves it to the whole kingdom, who I dare apeal to. I have but one thing to afk, which is, the honour to the family I repre- fent ; which I hope the E. of Portland will not flip this oppor- tunity to obtain for me. Pleafe to read the iriclofed, and feal, I have faid nothing of my particular to him ; becaqfe I am fo vain to think I deferve to be minded. I am ever your's. Adieu. I had almoft forgot to fay my opinion in relation to Captain Erzi,- fer. Since he, by his offer of referring all to the lady's oath, and filling himfelf to anfwer all which can be alledged of barbarity, rudenefs, or call it what they pleafe, towards the ladie, and fince this was what gave countenance hitherto to the feverities ufed to him and thofe of the name, I think the goverment ihould not pufh that of the convocation too far; and that often highlanders are ufed to gather together upon flight grounds; and that he had no defign againft the goverment. The King cannot do a more ac- ceptable thing to the generality than fend him his jpardon for the convocation : As to what elfe, he will ftand his tryall. If Tul- libardine be allowed to go on, and that if he be not ftppt as I pro- pofe, I protefl: I believe it may occafion a deal of bloodfhed ; for, if one begin, all the Highlands will in ten days fly together in arms: And if my advice be took, I fliall undertake there ihall not be the leaft difturbance. This I defire you may fay to E, Portland, that I may be exhonered in giving my advife, fince I am moft particularly concerned in highland affairs. It is to be confidered, that if con- I i i vocation 434 STATE-PAPERS vocation is an immediate crime againft the King, none can complain if the King forgive a crime committed againft himfelf. Adieu. Lovat's Letter to the Earl of Argtle. Theprefent melancholy Situation of his Family. Claims ArgyW s Prote£lion. My Lord, The entire friendfhip which the family of Lovat had with, and dependence upon that of Argyle, grounded upon an antient propinquity of blood, and zealoufly maintained by both,.through a tra£t and feries of many ages, has imboldned me, with feveral of my friends, to addrefs unto your Lordfhip by thefe, giving account of our circumftances, and craving your Lordfhip's advice and affi- ftance in the prefent jun£ture. We have gained a confiderable advantage by my eldeft fon's being married to the Dowager of Lo- vat ; and, if it pleafe God they live fome years together, our cir- cumftances "will be very good. Our enemies are fo galled at it, that there is nothing that malice or cruelty can invent but they de- lign and pradice againft us : So that we are forced to betake us to the hills, and keep fpies at all arts ; by which, among many other difficulties, this is one of the greateft, that my daughter-in-law, be- ing a tender creature, fatigue and fear of bloodftied may put an end to her ; which would make our condition worfe than ever. They'll have us impeached for a convocation, and making prifoners of the Lord Salton, Lord Muhgb Murray, with a half dozen more gentlemen; for which we were charged by the flieriff, compeared before him, were fined, obtained a difcharge of our fines, and fe- cured the peace. Alfo they'll have my fon and his complices guil- ty of a rape, though his wife was married to him by a minifter, and they AND LETTERS. 435 they have lived always fince as man and wife. My Lord, if all our e- nemies had defcended totheblackeft cell in hell, and there had ftudied the moft wicked and cruell revenges their malice or that place could invent againft us, it needed not furprife any, confidering that their tlefign of appropriating the eftate and following of Lovat to them- felves is made Hable to more difRculties by that match. We have many advertifements that Athol is coming here in perfon, with all the armed men he is able to make, to reduce us to duty ; and that without any order from the King, or his councill : If he come fo, we are refolved to defend ourfelves ; the laws of God and na- ture, and the laws, of all nations^ not only allowing, but oblidging all men vim "vi repellere: And I fhould wiftifrom my heart, if it were confiftent with divine and human laws, that the eftates of Athol and Lovat were laid as a prize, depending upon the refult of a fair day betwixt him and me. But thefe times being gone, and the King and his laws coming in their place, (a far better way of preferving the body politick;) we expe£t that your Lordfhip will employ kll your interefts with his Majefly to ob- tain us and all our complices a remiffion and difcharge of all crimes, riots, delids, and all diligences raifed, or to be raifed lipon them, againft us, with an order to fet the pretended heirefs in a neutral perfon's cuftody, until the rights and evidents of the eftate be produced, and the pretence of both parties debated before the fef- fion. If this be not done immediately, the pretended heirefs will be married to the E. of TuUibardine's eldeft fon, which will certain- ly occafion much difturbance and bloodfhed in this end of the world, (for we will not be commanded and opprefled by any ftran- ger) ; by which the King will lofe fubjeds that might ferve him for better ufe; and your Lordftiip will lofe good friends whofe place our enemies will never fupply. Its our misfortune, that the King did not refide within his dominions, and more, that our enemies had his ear : But we are confident that his Majefty being fully informed of ' the affair, fuch a wife prince will rather prevent the miferies and calamities of his fubjeds, than punifh tjne inftrumehts that would I i i 2 occafion 436 STATE-PAPERS occafioa them ; efpedally, your Lordfhip not only giving a true and candid account of the Kife, but alfo obviating all calumnious repre- fentations, which, beyond all peradventure, Will be obtruded. If your Lordfhip do not own and defend us now, we are ruined : And really, though we have deep refentments of the friendihip and kind- nefs (hewed us, and will have perpetually of that and what fhall be done us hereafter ; yet, that we ufe not many profufe apologies. For this trouble, we hope your Lordfhip will excufe us ; for, if we be razed and extinguifhed, as the defign is, Who will be more bla- med than the Earl of Argyle, for letting his old relations, faithful friends, and dependents, and fword-vaffals periifti, while the reach- ing out of his hand might (under God) deliver them ? Let me be free to tell, that your Lordfhip is obliged, by the bonds of na* ture, of friendship, of fuperiority, and fealty, in confcience, and in honour, to own us as a part of ydurfelf. My weaknefs, by age, anxiety, iand fatigue, will, I fear, deprive me of the honour to kifs your Lordfhip's hand ; but, when my fon has the freedom to go whither he pleafes, there be feveral material points which he will communicate to your Lordfhip, by which yon will be convinced of a fair, method for our flandiffg, and particularly^ of a way by which our old friendfhip may be fortifi&d and perpetuated, and v/e become more your Lordfhip's than -ever, if more can be. Thus refting and repofmg ourfelves iti a. feoure confidence and hope, that God will blefs air our laWfiil and honefl endeavours, and preferve and pro- sper all thofe who will concern themfelves for us,, particularly your Lbfdfhip, we do, with all fincfetify, refped, and becoming deference* continue and remain ever, My Lord, Your Lordfhip's moft afFfc<3:ionate, faithful, and humble friends, valTals, and fervants. Will. E RAZE R of Foyer, Lovat, W. Frazer of Erchiett, Thomas Frazer of Strug, Alex. Frazer of Calduthell, Will. Frazer of Kilbockie, Jo. Frazer of Littlegi^h, Tho. Frazer of Gortuleg. Earl AND LETTERS. 437 Earl of SeafiSild to Mr Carstares. Flagued ivith Solicitations far Places. Lord Rofs has written to Mr Carfares, defiring to be made a Secretary along npith Seafald ; — does not dejcrve it. Has fent him Dalmenie and K€lburn''s Patents. His oivn Expences at this Time. — ■ — Sends a Memo- rial to Mr Car flares upon that Subje£l. SIR, I beli-eve I fhall never be able to write fully to you of our affairs Edinburgh, fo long as I am in Scotland ; for I am now as much taken up with 1698. vifits as I was formerly with bufinefs. Every body here thinks rfie King is well ferved, and therefore they expe£t that we fhall have influence ; and fo I cannot get them pleafed with a fair anfwer, as I ufed to do formerly. However, I fhall engage myfplf as little as poffible to any body, and fhall plainly offer my opinion with fub- miffion to his Majefly and the E. of Portland, when it pleafes God they return. The Earl of Tullibardine has been this week em- ployed in profecuting of the Frazers. There are twenty of them for- faulted in abfe-nce. I cannot indeed juflify Captain Frazer in his proceedings ; but yet the rendering of fo many men deJ^erate, is not at all the interefl of the governmenit. The ground of the for- faulture is, that they were feen in arms after they were required to lay them down by the herald ; for, as for all other things, they would not have proceeded againft them in abfence. I find my L. Rofs has written to you, that he may be recommended to the Earl of Portland, and that he may be made my colleague. All the affiliance we got from my Lord vyas, that, in the firfl vote for continuing the forces, - ■ he was non liquet ■i and, in the refl of the votes, he did concur ; but he cannot pretend that he did great fervice by fpeaking ; nor did he influence any body : However, the King is mafler of us all, and ^ may difpofe of his places as he pleafes; but I am very hopeful that his Majefty will allow me to fee him before he make any fettlement of this 438 S T A T E - P A P. E R S this kind. You will receive herewith inclofed the Laird of Dalme- ny and Kelburn's patents. They have both very confiderable e- ftates, and are both men of merit ; and they have ferved the King chearfully and efFe£tually in parliament ; and I am fure the King cannot do better than to givethem this mark of his favour ; and it will engage them both clofely to his intereft. If you pleafe, you may. difpatch them again to me, that I may write to them. You may let his Majefty know, that I part from this about Monday or Tuef- day night, and that I do part in very good terms with thofe mem- bers of parliament that were affifting to us ; and I fhall give you an account of the particulars at meeting ; and I may fay, and upon good grounds, that his Majefty has it in his hands, if he pleafes, to govern this nation to his fatisfadtion. I have had an expenfive time of it ; for my father, my wife, and my fon has been here, and I have had above 30 in family, and about 1 5 or 1 6 horfes : And I hope none will fay but that I have lived as honourably, and with as much credit as any has had the honour to ferve in thofe ftations I have been emplpyed in. This is only to yourfelf ; and withal, I ftill tell you, that I ne- ver had one fixpence but what I have from the King himfelf, and the dues of my office. Will you be pleafed to read and confider the inclofed memorial, and fpeak of it to the E. of Portland. If any thing could be made of it, my Lord Lyon would willingly give me a fhare of it, and would be thankful to any that would ferve liim in it. I fhall give you no further trouble at prefent. I am Y. M. H.S. Hugh Cunningham to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers, Dear SIR, Edinburgh, \ had your mofl kind letter by the ordinary packet ; but, before 1698. ' it came, I underflood (as you wrote) that the fecretary had got^ your's ^ AND LETTERS. 439 ♦ your's on the fame account. J cannot but reckon myfelf much o- bliged to you, 119, 128, 148 having all told me of it. The laft, as I wrote to you formerly, is as much your fervant as' the other two, (which you know is enough.) I wifh, either in part, or when you are pleafed to write to me, that you would fignify fome fenfe of his favour to you. 119 has promifed to do what he can for me ; and 1^8, 1 find, has fpoke fo earneftly upon my account, that he has defired me to prepare a form of a letter in my favours, to be given to 1 1 9 before he go : A copy of it I will trouble you with. I know you have many accounts of our proceedings, and therefore will not trouble you. As to my own familliar, recommending patience, I fhall obferve it. I fhall only give you an account of a paflage happened yefterday, which you will willingly hear of. 106 has thought fit to appoint a dyet, and nominate 1 1 to be prefes in a court-marfhal, and that he may attend ; 1 1 has refufed, upon this reafon which he* gave me, that he was in thefe public pofts, and at prefent fo taken up, that he might expe£t to be excufed ; and not only fo, but that he would not be in any judicatory where 106 had a negative, but where the King or his reprefentative figned it, there will [be made ufe of his refufal and not obeying. It makes fome noife here, that 106 fhould have ufed 1 1 fo ; and you will think it ftrange that 106 fhould have employed me to carry the meflage, which is amongfl: the reft. I did defire 1 1 not to take it ill, which he was pleafed to fay kindly, he did not take it fo as to me ; and was pleafed to fmile this day when I faw him. 149 has not much appeared ; but 12 being advanced, gives great alarm that he will be at all. I fhall take care to get the money, though no appearance of getting any thing from CafTils. My wife gives her befl fervices to you; and fhe bids me tell you, fhe has more patience than I. Sir Robert Murray was gone from this a fortnight before I got your^s, and I have fent it to London. You were pleafed before to offer to write in my be- half, as I fhould have occafion to afk the favour of the D. of Queenf* berry, and ii, and, if you pleafe, to the Chancellor, Lord i 44® S T A T E - P A P E R S Lord of Montgomery to Mr Carstares. AJks his Interejifor the Vacancy in the Treafury^ in -which Cafe he has no doubt ofSuccefs. SIR, Edinbuigh, 'j'j^g many proofs of good will and friendfhip which, upon all 1698. occafions, you have been pleafed to fhow me, makes me give you this trouble, that, in the croud of pretenders to our vacant places, I may not be forgot. I queftion not but the King, in the difpofal of them, will have regard to my Lord Seafield's recommendation ; for his Lordfhip's fervice in the late parliament meriteth more than or- dinary marks of favour, both as an reward, and that in time co- ming it may put him in condition of doing more and greater fer- vice (if that can be) ; for his Lordfhip's very enemies will not de- ny that the King's affairs were carried fo fmoothly, is owing to his addrefs and good management. I believe, my L. Seafield will do me the juftice to tell, I give my fmall affiftance with all the zeat I could ; therefore, his Lordfhip will name me to the vacancy in treafary, which I have reafon to think will not be oppofed by our great men. So, Sir, if you will be pleafed to give your concurrence I have no ^oubt of fuccefs. If this favour you obtain for me, it's what Lhope you fhall not be afhamed to own; for, by my fidelity to his Majefly^s intereft, and diligence in his fervice, I fhall endea- vour to make up my other defeats : And I am fure I fhall never fail of all the acknowledgem:ents to yourfelf that is in the power of, S I R, Your faithful fervant, 'MONTGOMERIE. -hr:,* Lord AND L «E T T E R S. 44^ Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. Of a Reprefentation to his Mc^efly^propofed hy ^eensherry and Argyle, concerning thofe ivho oppofed in Parliament. They are jealous of Arratis Promotion. Declares his Subtnifjion to ivhalever Portland fhall determine. Of the Frazers and Balnagoivan, — < — This letter gives us the true Pidure of a Politician, SIR, I have been importuned thefe four or five days by .the D. of Edmburgli> Queenfberry and E. of Afgyle to make a joint reprefentation 1698. to his Majefty concerning thofe who have oppofed him in parUa:- ment; and it is true, that it is for hisMajefty's intereftto makefome examples ; and I hope I can give him a fatisfying account of all things that has occurred : But I being his Majefly's immediate fer- vant, am unwilling to enter into any concert witTiout his diredion ; though I muft confefs I do not condemn their opinion, in thinking, that it is fit now to do fomething in that matter, becaufe that party feems to be encouraged by the D. of Hamilton's promotion ; though I know it was what his Majefty could not refufe. I am to meet again ' with the Chancellor and them, and you fhall have what we conclude upon tranfmitted by a flying packet ; and, whatever they may perfuade me to do, yet you may be perfuaded that I am entirely fubmifEve to what my Lord Portland fhall determine. I hope I cannot be bla- med to expe though t fe , Kkk^ :S „ he 444 s~T a;t e - p a p e r s he went, as to the cefs alongft, yet, in the polls, he oppofed us. He is light in the focehead, full of notion, always talking, and moftun- eafy to be in bufmefs with ; — ' remeniber I told youj — I warned you of it.' The Chancellor propofed the thing; but, by our reafon, feem- ed to be convinced. Thofe that are turned put of council and ex- chequer, certainly their penfions ought to he took away at the fame time. We likewife offer it as our humble opinion, that E. Lauder- dale be put in E. Ruglen's place of the mint. If E. Ruglen be not made an example of, all that, can be dope will fignify nothing. I, think we have given fome proof we can ferve the King in fpiteof oppofitron. The more his Majefty is pleafed tp countenance the fame perfons, and ftrengthen our hands, the more efFednally can we ferve his Majefty ; and it is certain, his Majefty cannot employ any of his fubjedts more acceptable to the kingdom in general, nor none that will ferve him with more fubmiflion to his pleafure. As for other vacancies being filled up, we do not prefs till his Majefty's^ return, unlefs it be advifed from you ; in which cafe, we fhall offer our humble opinion to his Majefty : Only, as to the vacancy of the extraordinary Lord of feffion, I muft defire of you to affift E. Lou- don Campbell to it. The Secretary is pofitive for him ; and indeed, .with fubmiflion, our friend Melvill is not fo capable to difcharge it:. The one is daily improving ; the other, I am afraid, declining. I fay this in freedom with you ; for I am very well with all that fa- mily, except the little brother, who voted fpitefuUy againftall the King's concerns. My moft humble fervice to E. Portland. I am your's. Adieu. Lord Justice Clerk to MrCARSTAREs. In Cyphers. SIR, Sept. 17. ^Sdefiresyouwilltell 22 that his of the29thand 6th came fafe to *^^'' hand. Tuefiiay's night, my Lord fecretary Seafield was at the Juftice m Clerk's, AND LETTERS. 445 Qerk's, fo far on his way to England. 74 6maq6 tq u6 Z28 qzsmps qp rzy ruxxuzs mza 2r 8tq bmomzouq6 78 tqm76 22 u6r27 84 82 6gooqqp 73 78 acquainted 74 with what 22 wrote about 8 tq yu z8 but 74 and 78 m7q n 28t 32,6 u8ubq r27 4878 tm6m S7qm8 refpe£t for the memory of thexmu8 x2*7p om7p726n98 tu6 62Z u6 Z2q draaq6 ru88 r27 8tm8 3xmoq Z27 r27 mza 8tuzs q<¥>q38 m 3qz6u2z. 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To 446^' STATE -PAPERS -To Mr Carstares. Of private Affairs. Mr' Baird dif appointed in not being made Keeper to the Signet. A Struggle about the EleStion of Magi- Jirates in Edinburgh, SIR, Edinburgh, Before my Lord Seafield went from this, I waited of him feveral 169S. times ; and I cannot but fay he was very kind : And when he went to Ormefton, I was there all night ; and next day I went with him to Hadington, and would have gone farder, if he had not ftopt at Dunglafs, where no lodging was to be had. 128 went that length with him ; and I underftand they- parted extremely well. I have been much in the country fince. I had another moft oblid- ging letter from 33, while at that place, and came moft feafonably; for rig did repeat again, that nothing 33 would afk of him fliould be denied; and in the mean time defired ane letter anent my poft, to-fecure me in it, fhould be fent up to him ; but 128 would not allow me to do it, but to give it him, and he would do it, as he had fpoke to 1 19 about it : And I underftand he has fent it, and oblidged me to give him another to you, which he would fend to you, and write thereanent. I need not tell you the obligations I owe to iz8, who is fo- friendly : And I am afraid my affair is un- eafy to you from your great defire to do me kindnefs. What I writefre(jaentlytoyou does neither deferve, nor do I expert you fliould trouble yourfelf Writing to me : But I write once a week, which- f wifli come to your hand, fearing they may be intercepted; for. I find' Mr Baird is much difappointed^ that he is not made keep* er of the fignet; and I underftand that 1 19 is not well pleafed with him. I hear that Lord Kennedy is to-be here in a few days, to fettle his father's bufinefs, when I ftiall be fure to wait of him. We are much noifed with a marriage betwixt 108 his eldeft fon and 30 his eldeft daughter. You cannot imagine what agreatnefs is of 128, Ormifton. 119, Seafield. 33, MrCarftares. AND LETTERS. 447 , of late betwixt 47 and 30. There is like to be a great ftruggle a- bout our ele£lion of the magiftrates in this place : You fhall have account how it goes ; for our great folks intereft themfelves much in it. r 1 9, after I parted with him, has fent a commiffion to Com- miflary Elphingfton and Mr James Montgomery, for to officiate in redifying thgabufes of the calling and admitting writers to the fignet, and diftributing charity t6 thefe of the calling who needs it, untill he nominate a keeper. And from this fome think it is a good ftep as to me ; for Commiffary Elphingfton aimes at no lefs as being Lord of the Seffion. My wife gives her beft fervices to you and your lady. The inclofeds are from the E. of L. and his lady, who are much your fervants. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Of quartering Colonel Hamilton's Regiment in Scotland, — Violently a- gavnjl it. Butt if the King be pofitive^ fropofes a neiv Model of the Regiments already there. Since I wrltt the inclofed, we are in this country alarmed with the Edlnburgli news of Colonel Hamilton his regiment being ordered to Scotland ^^Pi^- 27- to be entertained ; which, if it be, I fhall be forry for : And, whoever has prevailed on the King to it, did they know the pofture of affairs liere, and had been witnefs to the vote pafTed in parliament, ' Con- tinue or reftri£t the prefent eftablifhment,' I am fo charitable to believe they would alter their advice and fentiment. Sure I am, if the adding another regiment to the prefent eftablifhment had been motioned in parliament, in what drefs or model foever, it had inevitably diifappointed the whole. How then will it now found to the country ? It will ht thought thofe \yho had the intereft to pre- ^ vail for what is granted has advifed this, by which we fhall lofe our intereft ; befides, there is not wherewithal!, without reducing thofe that are. But I ftill fay, the name of a regiment added will *448 § T AT £ - P A P E R' S win not be acceptable to the country; and it will be too good a han- dle for the oppofers to make ufe of hereafter, and, at prefent, to difpofe the country and their yeprefentatives to grow jealous and diflatisfied. But, after all, if the King be refolved, after I have gi- ven my opinion honeftly, it is my partj in the next place, as the King's fervant, and entrufted by his Majefty, to find out the moft proper expedient ; which is this : I do not. pfopofe any retrenchment in the guards or garrifonS, even in Inverlochy garrifon, (which is^ fo abfolutely neceffary.) It may be thought in tlois I am partial as to guards ; perhaps I am a little, but my reafon prevails. Suppofe there were no other forces, yet ftill all, even the worft amongft us, would allow both horfe and foot-guards : And fince the parliament have treated them at a pitch above even royal regiments, fo called, and have diftinguifhed them, I niay fay, within five or fix of being unanimous, it is -hoped his Majefty will . ever diftinguifh his own guards, who, I hope, Ihall, upon all occafions, deferve it. For the maintaining a third regiment of foot, I.propofe it to be done thus : *By the reducing the two regiments of dragoons, and the other two regiments of foot now ftanding in Scotland. The two regiments of dragoons confift of fourteen troops. Reduce ten men a troop, a quarter-mafter, a drum, a ftrjeant, and a corporal. Reduce out of the two regiments of foot, confifting in all of twenty-fix companies, their two drum- majors, for none are allowed, as I am told, in the Englifh eftablifhment ; reduce ten men a company, a drym, a fer- jeant, and a corporal. This reduction will amount to yearly in Englifh money L. 9400 Sterling ;' which will more than maintain a regiment of the fame ftrength with the other two. And where is the great hurt ? for, in a week's time, if need be, they may be made twenty a company ftronger ; and it is eafy in Scotland to get drar- goon horfes at any time. Indeed, were we to reduce cavalry, we inuft fend in to Northampton-lhire for horfes of fize» as I have done two days ago for twelve horfes; for the Yorkfhire horfes are flender and weak limmed ; not fuch horfes as I know the King would like to be in his guards. This new model will difpleafe none but L. Te- vidt, A 'N D L E*T T E R S. 44^ viot, becaufe of the quarter-mafters ; but he has no reafon, fince I propofe not to leflen the number of his troops. If my information be good, and this matter be on the field, and not too late for my o- pinion to be offered humbly, I fhall be glad it be reprefented to his' Majefty by E. Portland in the words I propofe it. I am ever your's." My moft entire humble fervice to Earl Portland. Earl of ARCYLE.to Mr Carstares. A curious Figure of Highland Opprejfion. Earlof Ruglen miifi be turned out. — Earl MeJ'uiW s Pretenfions miift not make Mr Carjtares Jlack in obtaining the Vacancy in the Sejfion to Karl of Loudon. SIR, I received laft poft your's dated the 15th from Loo. I am fatisfied Edinburgh^ you will flip no opportunity to do me right ; and, as I have ferved 1698. his Majefty faithfully to good purpofe, I fhall not doubt but his Ma- jefty will countenance me for fo doing. I do depend on E. Port- land ; and you can do me the juftice, I ever did the fame.. Upon in- quiry, it is found it was E. Tullibardine's brother L. Edward, who fearched Balnagowan's lodgings, with three other gentlemen with him. The fame Lord Edward was in the fcuffle afterwards, when Balnagowiin was fo rudely clofeted. ThefecondTuefday of November that matter comes again before the council, the council being adjourn- ed till that day. As to Beaufort, he could hot appear, fo is forfeited, with feveral others, by the juftice-court j which, if not remedied, may render confufion. It is for the convocation they are all for- feited, arid nothing elfe libelled ; yet they brought a woman to fwear violence done to the lady, who faw her not for five days after : But there was no pleading ; nor could there any objection be made, fince the party concerned could not appear, becaufe of the coiivo- cation : But he is ftill ready to fift himfelf upon the fame terms, as Lll I 45» STATE -PAPERS I reprefented in my kft : If he do noi:, I plead no favour to him ; but, ia eithear^afes, it. is hard fo much feverity ihould be ufed to o- ther geHtleHaea of the name : For, had they plotted the overturning of the government, as Mairquis of Athol has done fiiice the revolm- tion, more feverity could not be ufed. If juftice had its juft courfe, I believe there will be a pi^ooefe intent againil Marquis of Athol, for convocating his men, before the order of council came, marching them ; and one of E. Tullibardine's companies of his regiment, then (landing, marched, without order from the council, or the com- mander in chief, with one Lieutenant Lamont upon their head, who had been an old inftrument of opprefEon in Argylefhire, formerly under the M. of Athol's command. It can be proved farther, that feveral of the Frazers, who- were feized by4he council's order, to be brought before the council, were intercepted by M. Athol, carried to Dunkeld, put into a dungeon by Athol, and kept unt'd th^ey grant- ed him fuch bonds as he required, and difmilTed at his pleafure, withpul regard to his Maje'fty's privy council, who had feized them. One of his prifoners died a few( hours after he took him out of the prifon ; fo it's more than prefumable, it haftened at Icaft, if not oc- cafioned his death. He feizes all people's fervants who come through his country with letters from the north parts ; notices no pafs, fup- pofe ft be from the flierifF of the fhire from whence they come ; o- pens the letters, and difpofes of them as he thinks fit. Mean peo- ple are afraid to complain, they threaten fo hard, and bites fo fore, withoutheing controuled; and E. Arran's being D. of Hamilton, frights the better fort, as if his Ma^efly thought him and his fa- Imily abfolutely necelTary to fupport his government. I ipeak not this as my fentiment ; but It is the general notion people has through the kingdom ; and they will, I can alTure you, be fo much confirmed in it, that it will be hard to retrieve, unlefs his Majeffy be pleafedto talce our humble opinion as to a new commiflion of coun- cil and exchequer very foon, which we fent a few pofts ago. I writ to you at the fame time ; and that nothing would conduce more to his Majefty's fervice, and fuit more with the refolutions taken by his AND LETTERS. 451 his Majefty, when we undertook this tafk in parliament, which, I thank God, has fucceeded, than the turning out E. Ruglen out of his place, if his Majefty incline not to fill it prefently : That I look not on to be fo very eflential ; but that he be remo\red foon as a mark of difpleafure. I do offer it as my opinion, nor would I be rafh in advifing ; but I dare anfwer for it, his Majefty will, in a fmall time, be convinced, the true way to be well ferved, is to pu- nifh heartily, and reward in the fame humour : And his Majefty may do it the fafer, and the more juftly, that he expefts no fervice of his fubjeffcs and fervants, but in things: that are for the country's good, as well as his fervice ; and demands but the fame, which the oppofers were for two years ago, when in good humour. Pray, let not E. Melvill's unreafonaibie pretending to the vacant gpwn make you flack as to E. Loudon, who, though a younger man, k an old- er, and a more noted prefbyterian than he. Loudon has it in his blood ; and it is a mettled young fellow, that thofe who recommend him will gain honour by him : He has a deal of natural parts and jQiarpnefs, a good ftock of clergy, and, by being in bufmefs, he will daily improve. I am afraid you have forgot what I recommended to you in favours of Captain Menzies, (married to my coufin-ger- man, my uncle Neil's daughter), to be ftore-keeper in the caftle of Edinburgh, becaufe you take no notice of it. I know the Secretary writt to the fame purpofe. I am refolved to ftay laft in town, till all bufinefs be over, which will be to-morrow. The Chancellor left t6wn on Saturday the 24th. There is D. Queenfberry, E. Annan- dale-, and myfelf only in town. Sir John Maxwell went to the coun- try a fortnight ago ; and, two days after him, the Juftice-Clerk went. I am your's. Adieu. L 1 1 2 Duke 452 S T A T E - P A P E R S Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Wijhes that the prejent Jtiftice-Ckrk may be nidde Tredfurer-depute ; InMvhich cafe, earnejily dejires that Phifiphaugh be made ■' Jufiice-€Jerk. His Obligations to him. —Recommends Ma- jor Douglas to MrCarJiareL V 'X" ■ : I S I R, r"oa'^' ^ ^^^ your letter from Loo, and am glad that matters in general 1698. will not be concerted till the Secretary has feen the King. But I aril ftill of opinion, as I wrote to you laft, that my L. Ruglen's em- ployriient fhould immediately be difpofed of: Other employments, , fees, and penfions, fall under the general methods already propo- fed ; but this does not, and ought to be diftinguifhed, if it were no more but for example. When hisMajefty fhall think fit to difpofe of the other places- now vacant, as I wifh that the Juftice-Clerk may be advanced to that of treafurer-depute, fo I muft make it my car- neft defire that my L. Philiphaugh may fucceed him in his present employnient : He is a man every way qualified for it, both as to his capacity and zeal for the government, and is a perfon to whom I owe fuch obligations as I can in no other ways requite, but by en- deavourifig to make ufe of what intereft I may have with his Ma- jefty and friends about -him for his advancement, and by afTuring any that {hall affift me in it, that they lay me under a perpetual obligation. There is another friend of mine that I take the liberty to recommend to you. Major John Douglas of Colonel Hamilton*s regiment ; he is a brave fellow, and a good officer, but withall fo modeft, that if he were to ftarve, he could not afk any thing for himfelf ; this makes me the more earneft in his behalf : Now that I hear that regiment is to be brqken, any favour done to him fhall be refented as if it were done to myfelf. I beg of you, if poffible, to in- terelTe my Lord Portland for him, and give his Lordfhip my moft humble and faithful fervice. This trouble you have from my houfe* in AND LETTERS. 453 in the o»untry, where my private affairs will detain me for fome weeks ; and, though I think not much of other bufinefs here, yet I have a grateful remembrance of the obligations I owe to my friends, and, in no fmall meafure, to my Earl of Portland ; and fhall al#ays be fenlible'that I am bound to be your's, &c. So, without ceremo- ny, adieu. Hugh Cunningham to Mr Carstares. About the Clerk/hip to the Court-Martial. — EleBiom in Edinburgh. Dear SIR, I had your's yefterday by the flying packet, with one to the Coun- ^f to Mr Carstares. , uf . Dif appointed in not fucceeding Ritgkn.-'—Begs Mr Car/lores to pro- cure him the Arrears of his Pen/ion, SIR, Carinne, ^ ^^^ your's of the 9th, and am forry to find your kind endea- Fcb. 19. vours for me have proved fo unfuccefsful. I confefs I never doubted ^^55" but, if I miffed the taint, I ftiould at leaft get fomething more than I have at prefent ; but, though I have met with a difappointment, I neither AND LETTERS. 461 neithef trouble ffiyfelf, nor do at all repine at it ; and I have the fa- tisfaaion to find moft people regret my ill fortune, which I hope in God will not be always fo bad. However, Sir, I think niyfelf as much obliged to return you my hearty thanks for your concern in me upon this occafion, as if I had obtained my defires ; and I am en- tirely convinced of the fmcerity and kindnefs of your intentions to- wards me, which I hope I fhall always acknowledge as becomes me. Sir, I am afraid this preference you fay is given me for my penfion will not make it effe^ual to me. I know certainly that there is a confiderable fum muft be paid to the treafury before any of us can get a farthing ; for the Lords of the Treafury, having been fo kind to feverals as had penfions out of the bifhop's rents, as ta caufe pay them out of the treafury, have ordered the receivers of the bi- fhops rents to repay to the treafury what was advanced that way, and none other Ihould be paid till that were done, which I believe will not be this twelve month ; and, if the preference now grant- ed me fecure me not from that inconvenience, my penfion will be the fame as formerly. I muft alfo tell you. Sir, that there is near L. goo fterling of my bygone penfion due me ; and I was hopeful you would have obtained me an order for paying at leaft a part there- of, which, if you would be pleafed to do, you'd do me a very great kindnefs. And certainly I have the misfortune to be moft unkind- ly ufed, if, while others that have much of the King already, are ei- ther getting additional employments, or confiderable penfions added to their former offices, I can not fo much as get the juft bygones of a poor inccnfiderable penfion paid me : And I am confident, if his Majefty had been but fufficiently informed, by fuch as were the pro- moters of the late changes here, how much was heaped upon a few, while many others, as firm to his intereft, could not get the juft ar- rears of his own free gifts to them, certainly his goodnefs and ju- ftice would have mduced him to take at leaft fome other ineafares : But) finc« my own experience upon this occafion convinces me, that other advice than your's has been followed, I fhall not ftick to fay, that nothing that is done furprifes me. Sir, I have troubled you with 462 STATE-PAPERS with too long a letter, which I hope you will excufe to one that can hardly forbear telling a part of his mind to a friend he can truft ; and as there is none I could ufe more freedom with than yourfelf, fo I beleech you to believe me to be moft fincerely, , SIR, Your moft obliged, faithful, humble fervant, ® BUCHAN. I have written to the Secretary by this poft about my penfion and arrears ; but, though I am not much obliged to him, I have written with all refpeflt imaginable, and have exprefled none of my fmall refentments. Lord Cardross to Mr Carstares. Upon the fame SubjeB. S I R, Edinburgh, My fon writ to you fome pofts ago, and to my Lord Seafield ; it JPcb. 'Z'X 1699. was anent his bygone penfion ; and I have given his Lordfhip the trouble of one from me on the fame head. It would be a great fa- vour to my fon, though but little to the public : And^ Sir, becaufe what you was pleafed fo kindly to propofe for me would not, it is like, be obtained, and this both ; therefore I fhould rather be fatif- fied it was paffed from, if the other was more confiderable. I have a great load, and no eafe, by my fon's m.arriage, but a confi- derable addition ; and my other children, fome of them who are come to be men, are at a great lofs in their breeding. I remember, Sir, Ivvras once fpeaking to you about my fecond fon, if it was pof- fible to get a company in fome regiment for him ; he is about 20 years, and promifmg enough for his time, and good inclinations, which is a fatisfadion to me : If any favour of that kind could be got, it were well ; but I am afhamed we fhould ftill put you to fo much AND LETTERS. 463 ■* much trouble in thefe things, and none to affift you in what con- cerns us. People in our circumftances have few friends-; but you are not of that humour. It is not thought that my fon's penfion can be effedtuate on that fund as the treafury hath ordered it ; and feveral great men hath out of it, who, by intereft, will be prefera- ble. I beg your pardon, Sir, for my fo frequent troubling you, which is uneafy to me to do, though I know your gbodnefs will excufe it from, SIR, Your much obliged friend and humble fervant, K. Cardross.. Give my fervice to Mrs Carftares, whom I long to fee. Hugh Cunningham to Mr Carstares. Of his oivn Affairs. Marriage betivixt Hopeton and AnnandaWs Daughter. Lord Rofs, baulked of the Secretary'' s Office., ex~ peBs to be conjldered for coming t-wice down from England ta Jerve the King in Parliament. S I R, I made your excule to the great folks you named, for not writing EdinburgHj, to them ; and all of them took it very kindly. I have got Mr Mur- ^^^^^ ^" ray's precept forth of the treafury, and my Lord Chancellor has promifed it fhall be very foon paid; and. I doubt not but I will, get it to anfwer. His bill you mention is drawn, on me, though it is not ' yet prefented to me. Col. Wifhart writes me, that you will fee me minded in the eftablilhment. I wrote to you fully ab@ut it ; and I hope you will think it more reafonable I fhould be continued in the eftablifhment, with the additional trull as clerk and fecretary, than Mr Aitken, though I am fatisfied he (hall fhare. of it ; and, if my Lord Teyiot defigns otherwife,. I never, deferved it at his hands ; but. 464 ST.ATE-l^APERS but I will not think it. My Lord Treafurer-^deputie is ill of a trou- ble in his throat, and has kfept the houfe fince yefterday at twelve o'clock : They took blood of him this day : I know not if he will be able to write this night. -There is a marriage on foot betwixt Hope- ton and the E. of Anhandale'g daughter, which I hope will make a better underftanding betwixt them. The ftruggle there is about the commiflary-office makes a great talking. My wife gives you and Mrs Carftares her hearty thanks for your kind remembrance of her; fhe would be glad to have a new occafion to fignify her obligations to you. My Lord Rofe tells me he writ to you, that, feeing he is baulked at this time of what he expe£ted, that the King will con- fider him for coming twice down from England to (erye him in the parliament, and that he may have allowance for it. I muft again mind you about Dalmenie ; and that David Calendar's fon-in-law be not wronged by Mr Ram fay. The papers concerning your bro- ther Mr M'Kie I gave to Mr M'Farlane his doer, which he knew not of till the inclofed was written ; but he has account of them laft week. Duke of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Competition in the Affair of the Commiffars. Leagues his own Pre- tenfions to he pujhed by Mr Carjiares. Edmbutgh, ^y ^his the flying packet goes a letter from the treafury to the March 5. Secretary. In obedience to his Majefly's commands, relating to Cbm- miffars, wehavefent the bell offer by much; others jnade offer, but nothing fo advantageous. It is thought by the treafury, that no bet- ter bargain^ can be made at this time ; and fhould any under-hand dealing be, by making offers at London, as indeed I advertifed the Secretary fome time agoe,that it was^jealopfied, would be the refu'lt which, in a great meafure, did hinder frank offering upon the place : I fay, if any fuch thing be admitted theire, when we of the treafury AND LETTERS. 465 treafury have done our outmoft hefe, whofe proper fphere it is to aft' in tliofe matters, it would, to be plain, anger us not a little, and rea- fonably too. I have not fpoke fo plain to the fecretary ; but I leave you to make what ufe of it you think fitt. I am certainly inform- ed, L. Collonel Wifhart has writt letters to thofe who we incline to preferr to be admitted in the number which they have refufed ; fo you may judge he will not be wanting to grumble at the matter ; and he wants not intereft with L. Carmicheal and V- Tiviot. There is Livingftone and Woodfide have a fmall concern, on purpofe to make all eafy. They were amongft the laft Commiflars, the other fett that made offer, but fell fhorte, were headed by Provoft Hume ; which put the chancellor out of humor that he fell in a paflion before I came to it this morning, whilft none were there but Annatidale and Mr Francis Montgomery, and faid, he liked not thefe peoples names nor faces. But indeed no fuch thing paft whileft I was there. I muft tell you, the D. of Queenfberry, An- nandale, Mr Franciffe, and myfelf, were of a mind; fo the Chancellor figned the letter. lam refolvedto write no more to the fecretary of my particular pretenfibns, but recommend them to you to pulh him as is proper, and a£t for me yourfelf as you fee conve- nient. If I afked an unreafonable thing, I were to blame ; but, fince I can vindicate my pretenfions to the world, I am in amaze at the ftand, and muft fancy I know not what. . I am, Dr Sir, your's. The treafurer depute is ill of a fquinnance and keeps the houfe. Earl of Aroyle to Mr Carstares. In very bad Humour. Seqp^ld's negleSi of him in various inftan- (.gs- Several Perfons ivho have Pen/ims, and do not deferve fligjn His Brothers muft ivant. I had your's by this day's poft, and againft next poft fhall write Edinburgh, to E. P. and follow the exaft method you advife me. I fend ybu ^fll '^* inciofed a letter I have wreit to Vifcount Seafield, to read, feal, and deliver ; for I am refolved to wreit no more repining" ktters to him, . ' . • N n n ' but 466 STATE-PAPERS o but Ihall take the moft gentle way to prevail on him to do me right. By my letter, and the account he will give you, it is eafy to underftand all I hint at ; and I leave to you to judge if they fhould have fufFered the matter of mafter-gunner to be decided, un- til 1 he had informed himfelf of me what grounds I- went on : Nay, without hearing further from me, he ought to place fo much truft to my management, as to be perfuaded I would not have imbark- ed in difpute with V. Teviot, unlefs I had gone upon fure ground. If he fancies me one that ventures upon flight grounds, or that he do not yet vindicate my reputation in this matter, and to the King,^ not with an overly word, but to demonflration ; I fay, if this be not done, indeed my letters fliall not hereafter be troubelfome. I am forry to find my Lord fo eafy .when his friend's reputation i& at the flake. That which I am afraid of is, he has yeilded to Teviot in this matter before the King ; and he will think it a difparage- ment to himfelf that he was not better informed ; But he may blame himfelf. Pray, Sir, do me right in this matter, or indeed I muft give over bufinefs, if a fecretary that is my friend fuffer me tamely to be baffeled, when I am fo much in the right ; and you may fee, by the biginning of my letter, where he has fuffered Teviot to worfl: me when I have much the better reafon on my fide. I have had 3 or 4 letters, one after another, promifing me he was to fee the King fuch a day, and fuch a day, and that he would mind fome little particulars I recommended to him, as my two brothers,, who bought their commiflions, and enjoyed their places but a fmall time; one of which poiTeft not his place a full year : This is a fort- night a go, and never fince does he make the leaft mention to me. I have fuggefled to him, but not regarded, that thofe who are turn- ed out of the government for flying in the King's face keep their pcnfions, and, except myfelf, who will not fign them their pre- cepts, others have; for indeed I perfume -they are forgote. There is that rogue Forbes, fifeteen (hillings fterling a day net. There is Major Burnet has eight {hillings a-day; there is one Dunbar, a cowardly rogue, has eight fhillings a-day; there is the Laird of Glengary has L. 200 flerling a year of penfion, a papift, and in Lord < A N D ' L E T T E U S. 467 Lord James Murray's name; and mean time my brothers muft want, and I not gratifyed in a triffle fince I came from London. All this I have over and over again reprefented to V. Seafield ; but to no purpofe. I am at a deal of drudgery in writting long letters to him ; but all is loft : And, if you cannot caufe him doe me right, I fliall give over my correfpondence ; and I muft tell you, who I conceal nothing from, I cannot eafily digeft it. He fances me the eafy fool — ^but it is not L Sir, pray excufe this from one is your's. Adieu. to Mr Carstares. A fpirited Letter. SIR, Thefe feveral pofts we have had nothing worth troubling the S^cre- Edinburgh, tary with. This day being the day the parliament was adjourned j^^^^, to, the councill was called extroardinar, to declare the parliament current. I'm forry it has been two often forgot. We hear of a new eftablifliment coming downj I hope your friend B. Maitland will fufFer nothing by it. — ^There is one Ramfay was a fervant of my Lord Rath's ; he was in a chamberlaynfhip under the treafury ; he flighted it ; and a very ufefull fervant about the treafury was pre- ferred to it : I gave my Lord Seafield information of it a good while ago ; and his Lordftiip was very oblidging in his return ; my Lord Carmichael was fo likewife at parting. So, if that valet-de- chambre come to pifs on the Lords of treafury, it can only be thro' your moyen; and, ere a commiflion pafs'in his favours, the King ftiali determine the matter between him and me. This may feem a little brifk to write thus to Mr Carftares; but, while Ifervcj I will maintain the poft and the credit of it ; and when ever his Majefty pleafes to difmifs me, there is no man in the government will pro- pofe more eafe to his mind and body both than I can doe. Pray make my excufe to bath fecretaries ; for I have nothing worth the N n n 2 while 468 S T A T E - P A P E R a* while to write ; and allow this to give them my moft humble fer^ vice. Farewell. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Heavy Complaints againft Teviot^ ivbo in a letter treats him like a, little Enfign His Son is to be "with Mr Carftares foon. SIR, Edinburgh, I have wreit.at length this day by my ion, who is gone iot Lon- 169", don, as to that affair betwixt Teviot and me. I have proved to a de- mpnftration, by exadt documents, that the King has been in ufe, and has aftually. granted commiffionfor thofe in that poft, difputed fince the revolution ; and I have fent doubles, and the original com- miffion. I have likewife proved, by authentic papers, which I have fent up, which proves themfelves not to be controverted, that it was by virtue of his power of granting a£ts over all in the army, that he gave an ad to Capt. Sletcher*s fon, who died lately in that poft. I have fent up a letter or two of his to Capt. Sletcher ; in one of which he treats me like a little enfign, which I will not bear, whatever be the event. When you fee the papers, pray afl: as you fee juft. I fend inclofed E. P.*s letter open, with the inclofed decla- ration, which you'll pleafe to look upon, and convey it to E. P, as you fee fit. I gave no caufefor this difpute j but Am moft innocently attacked. I fhall fay little ; but I am ^gfolved. I am your's. Adieu. I judge my fon may be with you the day after this, if not foon- er. Pray, give L. Carmichael an account of this matter beTwixt Teviot and me. I have touched it but in general to him, he having been upon the road when it begun ; and I have referred him to you for particulars. Once more, adieu. Earl AND LETTERS, 469 Earl of Argyle toMrCARSTAREs. In a violent Paffion. —Refers Portland to bis Son, ivho can tell his , Tale pretty ivell. S I R, I writt you by laft poft a pretty full letter, and fent the Secre- Edinburgfi,, tary's letter inclofed to you to read, feal, and deliver, with a fmall jg^o, " meffage to him. I am by this day's poft, by a letter from him, now fully confirmed in what I feared ; he has yielded all to Teviot'a ftub- born, pofitive, refentive humour. (You remember TuUibardine faid he was irreconcilable to me.) The guards are to be burthened be- yond the dragoons. I yahie the foil in it more than the burthen ; and, mean time, Teviot fends down a letter to Captain Sletcher, full of infolence, the double whereof I fend inclofed. My fon has the principal, which I took from Sletcher in prefence of the Juftice- Clerk. The Secretary, in this day's letter, advifes me to live welt with Teviot when he comes down. 1 had better not live at all, if the King redrefs me not, or allow me, with his favour, to redrefs myfelf. I have writ to the E. of Portland in generdl^ and refers him to my fon, who can tell his tale pretty well. I muft defire the favour of you to get E. Portland to acquaint the King, that I have bufinefs which requires my prefence at London. I am refolved to- v^rrite no more ^ for my temper has left me, being affronted by myr mortal enemies, flighted and expofed to my enemy by my friend : I'll rather cTiufe to be out of employment than not to fpeak once to the King, who, I flatter myfelf, will do me right, when matters are rightly reprefented. If either I omit what I fhduld fay, or fay too much, exicufe me. I am fo ill ufed,. I caii bear no longer. I am; your's. Adieu. I fend you inclofed a double of the King's commiffion granted to> George Calcleugh, immediate predeceffor to Captain Sletcher's fon- who died laftr iawhofe place Teviot now has placed one. My fon has the 470 STATE-PAPERS the principal commiffion to fhow. If this gives me not advantage enough, nothing can ; and it is time for me to follow fomething elfe. I alk but common juftice, and I will be heard, whatever the event be. You fee how fome people can alfert, and how others can be tamely led away to the deftru£tion of their friend. I fhall pafs no further commentary, but leaves it to you to improve all to do me but right. Adieu. I caufed Mr Aiken, fecretary of war, Teviot's own creature, to give me a double out of his books of Teviot's a£t to Sletcher's fon, and a double of an a.Ct to an enfign ; both are exadlly the fame ftile, has the fame narrative, nay, all along the fame but the names; by which, you fee, comparing them, that he grants the fame a£t to Sletcher's fon to be mafter-gunner, by virtue of the power he had to grant ads in general, it running in the fame ftile with the en- fign*s: And there can be no fhadow,by the inclofed double, that he granted it by any particular inftrudion. My fon has the doubles writ by Mr Aiken's own hand. • Copy V. Teviot's Letter to C. Sletcher. S IR, I thought you underftood your duty better as to difobey or- London, , \. r , ^ i-i-- ii Marck ders from fuch as command you, which, in time and place conve- ^699- nient, we fhall talk of ; and now only once more command you inftantly to place that Crecutt, who formerly was Lieutenant in Sir .William Douglas's regiment, to be gentleman of the cannon in the artillery company. It feems the Earl of Argyle will continue to meddle in bufmefs he is not concerned in, which you may tell him, he was not in this. You did very well. Know that a gentleman of the cannon never had the King's commiflion ; and, if it had been fo, it was not the Earl of Argyle's to meddle with. I am, S I R, Your fervant, {ficfubcr.) Teviot. , , Lord AND LETTERS. 471 Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. , Of Earl of Argyle and Teviot. Dalmeny. S I R, I have your's, and likewife my L. Seafield's, and fliall write to Edinburgh, the E. of Portland as I am defired ; but this night having been kept March 16. out unavoidably till after nine, and being to write not only as a- bove, but to both the fecretaries, and to yourfelf, at fome length, I muft defer till the next poft. ■ My L. Argyle hath told me what farther is done about Captain Stevenfon and Richardfon their de- clarations : That young man is very unhappy to talk fb unadvifed- ly and madly of fo worthy a perfon. I am alfo furprifed at what is fallen out betwixt E. Argyle and V. Teviot ; things of that nature may go to great extremes, which I wifh may be prevented ; but the E. gives the true and full account of the whole matter, and I wifh the Vifcount may confider it. Pray, excufe my not writing. The next poft fhall fupply all. My moft humbfe fervice to my Lords the Secretaries, I am your^s moft fmcerely. Dalmeny is very fenfible of your kinc^s to write to you ; wekbe 1699. ca-n I now do it fo fully as I diefi*d, and intend to do afterWatd< My fon Alexander tells me, that he has written to you about a con cerft of his the feme paft that he wrote to ibe V. of Seafield and th L. Carmichaei, I defire that you will fpeafc to them both, and affii trim as you think reaibnable in this affair. I "Wifti it -may be don ■without a*iy noife. When I matched Mm with Sir Oeopge Camp bell's daughter, who 4s indeed bofe avery goOd womatt, and a ver good wife, I paid in a confiderable portiOfl^ confidering my fortuto 1attd circumftances, to Sir George, for fecurifig his affairs ; and 1: •did infeft them for it ; and the portion he gave his daughter i lands out of which they fhouid have the annualrent. Alexande fiftce, finds, that the lands in which they are infeft hold ward, an that ihar fecurity for their ftock will be very loofe, unlefs h get the gift lie defiree. I did flot indeed e!xamiajfe how the lane beld, but treated bona fide, reckoning it Sir George's intereft, 1 much as mine, to fecure their ftock to them. YoH know Sir George humour, and I believe have fome guefs of his way of managing And I will affure you, that what is done for my fon fhall be ma< no further ufe of, than to fecure to them the money which S George is obliged to pay them, and the annualrent in the mez time, till the term of payment, which is long delayed, moft part ( it not to be called for while Sir George lives ; fo that his heirs 1 fucceflors to him in his eftate are to be the, payers. I need add 1 more upon this fubjed. I have written to both Secretaries wh AND LETTERS. 4^$^ inforiflation I have about the way our colony took pofFeffion upoa the Ifthmus bf the Darien, which you may fee from them. The Lord; Prefident of the feffioa and Advocate were with me this af-^, ternoon, and will be quickly there. All here are poflefled of an opinio©, that they are called up to maintain in law the juftice and- agreeablenefe to law of the colony's procedure and practice. This notion is BKceeding pleafing, and renders them very favourable to the people here, who are exceedingly bent upon the profecution of that undertaking. ; and 1 believe will ftick at nothing in their power to do for that purpofe. It h an unaccountable thing, to find fo great a difpofition in people to go thither as there is ; God knowS' what Ihall come of it. I am going to the country to-morrow, my health very much requiring it. I, have not time to tell you what I have written to both Secretaries about the Chancellor's houfe in the Abbay, where! intend to dwell, when in town, finding my livings where I did very prejudicial to my health. Give my fervice to the E. of Portland, and make my excufe that I have ma^e no return of the letters I had by Major Paton, whofe bufinefs is done, not withouli fome difficulty ; but, finding my hoti. concerned in hiuii I did indeed all I could for him, as he will tell you. My own hand ferves me feldom to write ; but, in the couotry, I will have more leizure, and, I hope, better health ; then I fliall write to my Lord. I am, S IR, Your humble fervant, and true friend. Eakl otf'ARGYLE to Mr Carstare-s. -.J In his onvn Viitdicdtion.—The Generality of the lang^s Council 'woutct rather have no Army, than Teviotfor Commander. S-I R, I have- received yoTar's dated March 2-3d. I am fiilly perfiiaded" April 3. you: are my fincere friend. I dobdieveyou to be a man of honour' '^ ^^' O o o 2 as 476 S T A T- E - P A P E R S as well as confcience ; and I confide in you as fuch. How I have been ufed by others is too apparent, and the iflue will demonftrate. 1 am now determined to make no London journey without encou- ragement. I fought no quarrel ; and, being %$tacked, 1 think, as you fay, I have made myfelf very clearly to have been adingwarrantably. If others be countenanced in telling the King falfehoods, and infult- ing me to the boot, I have no reafon to think myfelf well ufed. I have, as directed, offered my mite to ferve E. Portland : I cannot think but-he will pleafe to have fome regard for me. It vpould ap- pear, by Teviot's offering that exchange with Ramfay, that he looks not upon a forfeiture in thefe days as a good and firm fecuri- ty ; for the one is certainly more valuable than the other. I ftiall fay no farther as to that peer ; but I believe the generality of the King's great council in Scotland would rather have no army than him for commander : So, what the confequencc may be, time will ftiow. I am, dear Sir, ever your's. Co c K B u R N of Ormifton, now Treafurer-depute, to Mr Ca R s t a R E s. Of the Preftdent and Advocate's Journey to London upon the Darieit Affair. S I R, t'^«^^^&^. You have here inclofed a few words of hearty tbanks for the let- 1699. ter of recommendation. You know I'm not good at compliments • but this will fay for them, fuch as they are, they are fincere. I thought this day to agone to the country; but' found myfelf a- boundantly wearied with my vifites in the morning; as our great men are called to court, it was the firft of" my going down flairs thefe ten or twelve days; fo I put off my journey till Thurfday. We have nothing among as here, but that thefe great men are cal- led up about our African Company. Some fpeakes with fear that they will do hurt ; and thefe ftand not to exprefs what their refent- mcnt AND LETTERS. 477 ment will be upon their return. But all that has fpoke to them a- gree i^ their defires, that they would ftand up boldly for the main- tenance of that new plantation, on which the intereft and well-be- ing of the nation fo much depends^ The prefident was this day a long time prefent at a pretty frequent meeting of the diredors, where, after the compliments of recommendation of the company's concerns, he had a full information given him of their procedure. He expreft himfelf with a great deal of afFedtion, and with many good wifhes for the profpefity of the company ; and, if it were in his power to do fervice to its intereft, he wOuld think it his hap- pinefs. The diredtores named fome of their number to carry their defires to my Lord Advocate, and to compliment him on his jour- ney. — Exitus aSia prabat^. When 7 8mw6 8tq 1298 then 78 duxx WZ2d April 4. 1699- Ormiston's cyphers explained. • When the 7 (Advocate) takes the gout, then 78 (Drmifton) knows all is not right. Ormifton hopes, that feeing 24 would not keep the Dutch guards,, it will not fare the worfe with 65 (Scotland's) company. I'm fure this is ftrong, fenfe. I know- not how it will found with 22 (Mr Carftares); but, if Ormifton hear that Carftares bids the Advocate ftand firm, then all is well ; but, whatever come, let Carftares keep- 76 (Carmichael) from being brought upon locks now in his firft waiting. The Advocate has not,, by this journeyi a. 41 or 6<) to bim out. "Will Carftares endeavour that 43, (the King) make offer . to 83 (the. Prefident) of a remiflion to 64 (Lord Stairs) for Glehco ? This will be a recom- pence for the Prefident^s journey. Now, after reading this, will Carftares have hopes that Ormifton will not die at this time ? One poft gives us Teviot to be- coming down to command ; next poft gives us Ramfay ; and every one fpeaks as heaffeftq; and Ormifton holds his peace;. 76 (Carmichael) and Carftares; cannot with more fincere affeftion mind Ormifton than he. minds them.. Ormiston's ALPHABET. m a u L 7 r n b w k 6 s G X 1 8 t P , d y m 9 u q e. z n b. V r f 2 d w s g 3 P a y t k S q c X: 47^^ STATE- P^,f \P E R & wz2d; nxx u6 zaS justSi 78. ta3q6 8tm8; 6quzs 24 dsgxp 228 wq q3 &tq pn^Sot I9m7p6, u8 duxx Z2;8, riBU7 8tq d276 duSt 6s,,o2j$- mza I'sm fUre this is ftrong feaace ; I know aot how it will found with 22 ; kut if 78 tqni7 SSiaS 22 iiup6 7 6)8mzp ru.77' Stqa mxjc ub dqxx; but whatever ozyq ^qi8. 22 wqqg 76 fcom nquzs n729st8 h32z x2 ow6 Z2duz tu6ru768 dmuSuza. 7 tBa6.z28 aa 8t-u6 uz97za m 41 and 6.9 82 8-9'72 298 duxx 22 endeavoiw that 43 ymuq 2,irq7 B2 8-3 2r m. 7qyu6bu2Z 82 64 r27 sxqzoa 8t.u!6 uz 7 and it was your recoaaESSodic^ of one to be a quauteroiafter- in ipy regiaient, it being a thing I know^ when you rteeivethis, yourfelf will'befatisfied of the impoffibility of it ; an.dUt isi we have fix q.uiirtei:maftejrs in the regiment, aod the ofdej: bears but five of theoi to he broke; and Leutenant Kerr the a^utaati who yourfelf knoweth, is. broke lik-ewife. And, to be per- fectly free with you, from whome there is none of my concerns I will keep up, having payed the regiment all this while, and with it done all my particular bufinefs, the leaft I could do in gratitude was to give it him ; and to get it done, to hinder my own particular lofs, if parted with him, I was forced to fatisfy him, who had the right to be quart^rmafter ano^er way. So, Sir, I humbiy beg you will be pleafed to let me know from- yourfelf that you are not an- A N D L E T T E H S. 4fg gry for my riot complying with your tiefire In the affair : Fbr, if I be an hOjiefk man, Mr Kferr is fo, and ha«ii been fo&cviceable tso tne all atong) that, if >at court any had got that commiffion which I be- lieve would have been foon-, if flOt for yourfelf, upon my aCcOunt, I behovied to have bad your afllftanGe with my XiOrd Portland to have ,got it altered. But^ not to ft-oubk you any further, upon the word of a gentleman, bqfbrei I had bfeeii forced to have rtiade an exciife to your only defire to me, I had rsither loft almoft the regiment ; but I know you believe ftie unworthy to be, t^ithdut afFedation, dear Sir, your moft afFedionate and moft oblidged humble fervant, Jedburgh. Earl of Leven to Mr Carstares. Refufes to comply nuith an Order of the Couneil to give two Brafs Guns out of the Cajile to the Karl of Ar gyle, SIR, There was a letter read in council from the King, ordering them June zj. to give out two brafs guns out of the caftle to the Earl of Argyle. ^^^^' This made me take occafion to acquaint the council, that my commiffion- (as all others that were before me) was to obey only the King; and • that, therefore, although I was far from difpitting the councirs power, yet, in a matter that was fo efl^ntial to the be- ing of agarrifon, as was the difraounting the greateft guns thereof, I thought not myfelf fufficiently authbrifed to do fo, without his Ma- jefty's warrant to myfelf; and, therefore, I have prevailed with his Grace to write to the Secretary, that I may have fuch a warrant, which I iBtreat you to affift me in. Pray, confider what ihall become of me, if this his Majefty's letter fliould fall by, or be taken away in a mob, or mifcarry any other way.. If I were challenged after- ward, why I gave thefe guns, fmoe I was, obliged to obey none but the king, what could I fay to vindieaite myfelf? for, all I can have is. a warrand of council ; which, if Iha^ aa ill fitting iheriff, I doubt would 48o S T A T E - P A P E R S would hot be a fufEcient excufe. If I am obliged to obey the coun- cil to give two guns, by the fame rule, if they fhould order me to difmount all the reft, and fend them away, or do other things, which I need not name, I were obliged to obey ;" and, therefore, it has been always reckoned the intereft of the crown to have the caftle to depend folely on the King : And, therefore, my nicenefs in this will not be mifconftrufted, but approven, fmce I have no de- fign therein but his Majefty's fervice. I will expe and fo can write no more at prefent. I am, S I R, Your moft humble fervant, Seafield. to Mr Carstares. Upon a Report of Lord Portland'' s ahjlra6ling him/elf from Court. S I R, I have forborn of a long time to give you this trouble. Your ^^„ , . diftance from this might at prefent excufe me ; but that I cannot '^99- longer forbear to regret the noife of your noble patron*s abftrading from court more than he had wont to do ; but the fecretary has fet- tled my mind a little, in perfuading me, e*re long, that affairs will run in their former channel. Sure I am, if it fhould fall out other- wife, it would be a coup de del to both church and ftate in this poor country, whofe intereft he has ever efpoufed, and moft affe<3flonately protected. We hear that he is as much in his Ma- = - jefty's 4^6 STATE-PAPERS jefty's favour as ever, who obliges him ftill to meddle in all bufi- nefs as he ufed to do. If he ftate himfelf in a downright oppofi- tion to any rifmg favourites, it is too great favour done to them : They will vaunt of it, and' be proud to cope with fo great a man. Let him remember, that flies are not the eagle's prey. But, if he be refplved to retire, either from choice, or by advice of his friends, I remember the anfwer the late Marquis of Tweedle gave to his friends when they advifed him to retire from following after all public bufmefs, as more advantageous, he faid, " It was very hard for an adive fpirit to tather itfelf to a melancholy fedentary retreat." He had met with many great difappointmehts, and a feries for many years of court-difcouragements, whefeof none was of his own procu- ring ; fo that he had the more to fay for himfelf. Sir, You may remember, that, when the great advocates of the feffion had procu- red their own banifhment, at bottom upon a ftate-intrigue and per- fonal picks, as if the feffion could not have been ferved without them, and fo to have baffled the bench, as that hisMajeftyfhould be forced to part with them they levelled' at ; and when they found it did not anfwer the end they propofed, the ill blood fell from their heart • and, by humble addreffing, they were allowed to return, and even truckle under thofe they thought to have foiled. This defign was laid by our greateft ftatefmen. I hope. Sir, this noble, generous gentleman will be far from any thought of retreat jfor his Majefty's fake, for the fake of all honeft men, and for his own fake, who all alongft has fhown fuch prudent and wonderful management a- mongft the confederates, befides his great metal in difcharglng fo ticklifh an embafly with the French King, upon which the peace of Europe depended ; as likewife his undaunted courage when he was wounded in his Majefty's view at many bloody battles ; when milk- foaps did not appear, and are now creeping up and down courte, when th^re is no fear of war or danger. And fhall all this great foul's a£lions, either by himfelf, or any other way, be extinguifh- ed like the fnufF of a candle ? God forbid. It will make a very bad exite to future generations in hiftory. Sir, I beg pardon for dip- ping AND LETTERS. 487 ping fo deep in fo myfterlous an afFair. I would fain hope and believe, that all matters, againft his Majefty his return, will be ad- jufted to the heart's defire of all good men : And I am perfuaded you will contribute with all your pith to have it fo. Sir, I am tempted by the fecretaries, but moft efpecially by my L. Seafield, to make a winter-campaign at London : Really my health is growing uncertain ; it is like I would not be the worfe of a journey, except as to the expence, which I am unwilling to, unlefs they can find fome way to bear my charges. I have fpent fo often fo much at London already of my own, that I am unwilling to do fo any more. My Lord Seafield promifes Tery fair to find fometHng for me. I know not indeed what can make him fo earneft. I confefs, Sir, to fee you once more at London, is my greateft temptation j for I have .many politics to difcharge upon you. I hope, that either to myfelf, or by fome other hand, you will let me know you have received this letter, wherein you will ftill oblige, in the wonted manner, the old gentleman, your moft faithful fervant, A. M, Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares. Upon the fame Subje^ ; and offering to rejign^ SIR, Tho' I had little to wreit, yet I would not have been fo filent if Auguft 7-.- you had been at Loo. I came to Edinburgh fome days before the ' ^'' Vifcount Seafield went north, and attended till the judicatories were up. There was little part, fave what I give account of to Mr Pringle before I parted from that place. I do much long to have a return of my laft letters, to hear of my noble friend's refo- lution ; for you know, by what I faid, both to his Lordfhip and to you, how deeply I am bound, and.fuUy determined, if his Lordfhip be not to meddle in affairs; — ^but having fpoke freely at, parting, I need fay thelefs now. I hope, againft this comes to your hands, you. may 488 S 'T A T E --- PA P E R S may let me know when the Ring defigns to be in England, My Lord Seafield intends to be at the council the 1 2th of September, and in a week or two to take journey for London. So, Sir, I only wait your advice ho^y todifpofe of myfelf ; for, if I were to ftay at London, I would byilo means leave my family behind me; and, if ■ otherways, youknbwingmy circutnftances, and being a matter of the greateft confequence to me, I again intreat you (who I acknowledge has always been the moft concerned friend to me I ever had) may be pleafed to write your advice freely and fully, when you have the happinefs to be with thai noble peirfon. I beg you may give his Lordfhip my moft humble-fervice. I am. Sir, unalterably yours. — My Lord Seafield and I, when in town, lives together as you de- fire.-— My felrvice to Mr Pringle. I have ordered Watfon to fend you fome verfes on Darien j thofe I got are torn, dfe I would have fent them. to Mr Carstares. The African Company hufy in Jending out Men and Vejfels to Caledo- nia. — The ivhole Country concerned about the King's Proclamations by the Governor's of Jamaica and Neiv. England. SIR, Edinturgh, I have not had a line from you of this long time ; and I am fej! ' glade to hear, by a line Mr Cunnigham told me he had from you, to hear that ye are in health. I am going to the country to-morrow but I defign to be here at the counciU-day in September; for Sea- field defigns then to part from this for England. We have no news here, only our African Company are bufied in feuding men and veffels to Caledonia. The whole dirediqrs are at Glafgow upon that account. You cannot believe how great an edge is upon per- fons of all degrees and ranks here for that plantation : How it may thrive I know not- but they and all this country are very con- cerned;' for two proclamations, one by the governor of Jamaica, and AND LETTERS 489 and the other by L. Bellmount governer of new England, whereby all the country are difcharged to give any aid, affiftance, or keep any correfpondence with the Scots at Darien ; and the proclamation bears further, that its by warrand from the King. This doth allarm many ; and the King's unfriends endeavour to make great advantage of it. Its faid here, that Albemarle hath got the Dutch guards from Portland, which makes all here think that Portland will not re- turn to "court. I bid you heartly adieu. Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares. Determined, by Letters from Mr Carfares, to continue to a£l as Secreta- ry. — An affair of the Confervator'' s recommended to Mr Carfares. S I R, I thought very much long to hear from you, which you will per- Auguft 12. ceive by a long letter I writ a few days before I received your two ' ^^' lad letters. They do fully anfwer what I demanded ; for what my noble friend hath faid, and you advife, determines me ; fo that I am refolved, God willing, to carry my wife and family to Lon- don, I intreat you may let me know when you think the King will be over ; for, till you aflure me of his time, I will not part fronl Scotland, becaufe I defire not to be long there before his Majefty comes. Sir, the Confervator, who you know is my very good friend and neareft neighbour, and his lady my near relation, has a bufi- nefs intrufted to his care by the royall burrows, with one Vyox in Camphire ; it being the poofs money, he is much concerned (as he ought to be) to get it rightly managed. I muft intreat you may be pleafed to give my humble fervice to Monfieur de Longi, for whom I have a very great efteem. I earneftly defire he may give the Confervator his friendftiip and affiftance in this matter : I fpoke to him about it at London, and he was pleafed, at niy defire, to de- lay the getting the King's anfwer to a letter from Camphire, till the Confervator fhould know what he. had writ. I fhall trouble you no further at prefent, " but I am moft fincerely your's. My wife gives her hearty fervice to you. Qjl q . Lord 490 S T AT E-PA P E R S Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Of the, African Company.- The Nation bent one Way ; the King another. parrel betnvixt Argyle and Cranvford. — ■ ' Cyphers. SIR, Edinburgh, Since my laft to you the 4th inftant, I was taken with a great in- 1699. difpofition ; but I blefs God it is now over, and I am gone to the Gutters, all our courts being up, and all gone to the country. The principal' perfons of our African Company are at Glafgow and Greenock, to fend away the Rifing Sun, and fome other (hips, with 1200 men to Caledonia. This country is mighty intent on this bufmefs, and our minifters pray as heartily for its fuccefs : But we meet with great difcouragements ; for, firft, the copies of proclama- tions, emitted by the governors of Jamaica and New England in April laft, are come here ; wherein, in obedience to his Majefty's orders fent to them by Secretary Vernon, they fay the Scots have fettled in Da- rien without his Majefty's knowledge, and contrary to the treaties with his allies; and therefore forbid all to affift or correfpond with them in any fort. And, next, we have hews that two of the prin- cipal managers of the colony, one Jolly a broken merchant, and another, Montgomery, have been endeavouring to betray it to the Spaniards, arid are fled for it. I am truly grieved at this matter ; the nation is bent one way, and the King is of another perfuafion ; and whether it fucceed or not, it is like to have ill confequences ; for, if it prqfper, it is but a ftate of war, which we cannot maintain with the Spaniard, but muft foon be exhaufted; and if not, yet much is laid upon it ; and we will be ready enough to blame whom we fhould not blame. But, be it as it will, this affair muft take fome o- ther turn before the meeting of parliament, or otherwife things will go very crofs here, which L heartily wifti may be a good turi^ for us : In the mean time, I can advife nothing. I wrote to you of fome paflages AND LETTERS. '491 paflages had fallen out this fummer. about the reprive of the two Frazers, the abatements, the conflict of jurisdidions betwixt the fef- fion and exchequer, and Thorn. Bruce the mufter-mafter. Our fe- cretaries, behave well ; but Secret. Seafield was a while indifpofed, and is now in the north ; and my L. Carmichael was alfo much in the country. E. Argyle, after the feffion, went to the race at Ca- verton-edge, with fbmeof our young noblemen, his companions. I hear E. Crawford and he quarrelled, for fome words Argyle gave him in his paflion, when he loft the race ; but, when Crawford fent the challenge, Argyle took it away wifely, by confefling his excefs. I believe he is gone from that to Newcaftle. D. Queenfberry is in a dangerous ftate of health. E. Annandale is in town : His daugh- ter is to be married to Hopeton. All others are in the country, and the council adjourned till the 1 2th of September. But, leaving thofe things, I fhall write of our friends and private concerns : Mr Hamilton's deportment in that concern of Mr Erfkine's was into- lerable ; for it was an affront to Mr Chalmers to caufe him grant what had been fo infolently demanded ; and Chalmers's reputation fliould not be proftitute for private picques. 5$ neither does, nor will do good, which 32, is forry for. Mr Campbell,- after Mr Hay was gone north, was very earneft for a flop of what was done Au- guft 24 25 23 34 30 32 37 29 37 38 20 and had almoft ob- tained it; but all are for 32 33 29, and the conteft betwixt 37 21 39 34 37 32 37 25 and. Mr Murray's court muft be helped. 29 was too keen in it, and Stewart blew the bellows. Hume thinks 9's intereft fo far concerned, that he fhould notice it ; and, if Hay and his neighbour were here, 32 would advife a letter of advice to be given for fettling that matter before the winter ; for it is like to be very prejudicial to White's affairs ; but his con:cerns are fmall ; and it is happy neither he nor we have more to. do. Our harveft is begun, and promifes well ; but we have had broken weather thefe ten days. Secretary Seafield will be in the north till September ; and, till then, we will be very quiet in this place. Were I with .Qjl q 2 you, 1699- 492 STATE-PAPERS youj I h^ve m^ny^ings to fay;- but) while the itiain is well and fafe, I am eafily fatisfiedi I am your's. Adieu. LordSeafield taMr Carstares. His TranJaEiions ijuith the Members of Partiameni to prepare them for next Sejfton. '-CulladerCs Penfion muji be continued. — Bracco has agreed for L, 200 per annum. Of the Clergy in that Diocefe. The Importance of Fort-William. SIR, Cnlien-houfe, I fliall Hcvcr loofc courage fo long as you keep it ; and I am fure i^an ^'^' neither of us needs be afraid to be at court, fo long as the influ- ence of the E. of Portland continues. I am glad that his Majefty has gratified Major-general Rarhfay in granting that warrant in fa- vours of the battalion of guards that are at Edinburgh. I am do- ing all the good I can towards the pt-eparing the members of par- liament foi: the next feflion. I find many of them very well ifi- cliited. CuUodenhas been with me; and I think, if his penfion be continued to him, we ;will have his afliftance. I think alfo that Bracco will be affifting : I have agrefed with him for L. 200 a-year, and to-morrow he is to fign the difpofition ; but I think you muft hetp me to pay a part of the price. Mr Thomas Thomfon, the moderator of thiiS diocefe^ haS been with me, and Ihope to hinder their proceedings againft the pfdt^ed minifters here ; but CuUoden tells me, thefe in Rbfs are very violent ; and it is vefy hard to turn out miniftefs who have the Ififli language in thefe countries, when they are qualified. I had a letter laft night from Br. Maitland : His gafrifon is in very good ord^r, and well provided ; and he writes, that, before Martinmas next, the third part of that fortifica- tion will be built of ftone-work. I do think, that, before the next year, it will be advifeable, that it be compleated with ftone; for the earth does not continue, but crumbles down to nothing. The Papifts and AND LETTERS. 49,3 and Jacobites in this country exped an invafion before the next par- liament ; but I do not believe it, fince the King hears nothing of it. I had almoft forgot to have informed you, that Brigadier Maitland did, upon the receipt of the Chancellor's letter and mine, write for Sir Donald M'Donald to come into him, and accordingly he did furren- der himfelf to the garrifon. ; which, to fhew the great' ufe of that fort for preferving the peace of the Highlands. This is all at prefent from, SIR, Your moft humble fervant, Seafield. Earl of Seafied to Mr Carstares. His Diligence nvith the Members of Parliament. SIR, I am much obliged to you for the good advice you gave me in Cullen-houfe, your laft. It is my duty to be thankful to God for the providences I ^^f'}^' have met with. Ifind likewife^that you think the King will not ftay long after the Duke of Zell returns ; fo I refolve to go from this on Monday, and to make what hafte I can to Edinburgh; and fhall wait the firft advertifement, which I hope you will give me timeoufly, as you promife to do ; and I doubt not but my journey to this country will be ufeful to his Majefty ; for I have had all the parlia- ment-men of the three neighbouring fhires here, and I can aflure you we have loft no ground amongft them. This is all at prefent from, S I R, Your moft faithful and humble fervant, Seafield, ' Earl 494 STATE-PAPERS Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. In great Anger irnth both Secretaries. His CharaBer of Se afield, Lord Bafil Hamilton droivned, a mighty Shock to the Griim- bletonians in Scotland. — The Minijiry in England unpopular. London, \ am feveral letters in your debt. I do not in the leaft doubt your 1699. friendfhip to me, nor can I blame you to be cautious of breaking meafures with either, or both of the fecretaries ; though, at the fame time, I mufk tell you, V. Seafield has broke his word, his honour to me, as I can inftrudt by letters under his hand, the one materi- ally contradiftipg the other ; and he led honeft Carmichael in to be the a£lor of his treachery, which I will not forget, though he thiriks it an eafy tafk to pleafe me. D. Q^is gone to the Bath ; and, be- fore he went, underftood Seafield's fcurvy treating of me, fo endea- voured, to foften me ; but, if I fliould ftand alone, I continue of the fame opinion I gave his Majefty, and fhkll ferve him faithfully ; though I can inftrudt, none can be fafe to a£t in conjundtion with Seafield, in whom there is neither honour, honefty, friendfliip, or courage. ' If I thought it were not leflening of my felf to fay it to a man dares not refent it, I'd fend him as much figned. In thofe circumftances I am, and, were it not my gratitude to the King, I fhould rejoice to fee them fplit. Seafield appeared to Whitelaw to be very forward for him ; nor did Whitelaw fpare to give him all encouragement fo to do ; but, in a day's time, a fright takes him, and he writes to me, if D. Q:_ be pofitive, all will go to ruin ; and fo importing as much as it were the p^opereft method to yield to him, fince he believes I defign only the King's fervice, wherein he guefles right,, and therefore muft be firm to my opinion, whatever difcouragement I may meet withal. Carmichael has not fpoke one word to Whitelaw. You have heard Lord Bafil Hamilton is drowned, and Lord Selkrigg looking on, It is a mighty fhoke to that family, and weakens the grummeltonian party in Scotland. As to my fon, he has AND LETTERS. 495 has been a confiderable time in Lorn ; but, as yet, the lady has not been in a condition to be feen fince her having the fmall-pox. But, on the I5th"inftant, we are to have a review, and I propofe to make all difpatch. As far as I can underftand the humour in England, generally all over, grows againft the prefent miniftry, and the flow proceedings (at leaft) of the late houfe of commons. Papers to that purpofe are daily printed; fome whereof Lord Strathnaver will Ihow you, who I hope you will affifl, and it will encourage him to ferve the King : He is of prefh^sterian breed, which makes me the more concerned. I am your's. Adieu. Your laft news was very welcome. Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Of the Depqfition of tivo protested Clergy in the North by the Pref- hytery of Rofs. — Wifhes the Epif copals nvere not fo rnuch encou- raged to make their Complaints to the Court ; — and that Church- matters ivere left to the Privy Council. — The African Company.. SIR, I have your lafl return the 9th Auguft. I think I wrote to you, Edinburgh, that the prefbytery of Rofs and Invernefs had fallen upon two prO- ^^P'" '*' te£ted minifters, the one Forbes, and the other Rofs, and had fum- moned them for immoralities, errors, and fupine negligence ; and, for their non-compearance and contumacy, had depofed them. The two protected men came hither, and brought letters from the Lord Tarbet, and others, that the whole prote£ted clergy took the alarm, and were to complain to the King, I was troubled at what had fallen out, and took advice, and then wrote to the prefbytery, That, though it were not provided in the a£t of parliament, that the pro- tected men fhould be exempted ; yet the parliament, on the other hand, did exprefsly wave the making them fubjed: to prefbyteries, and other church-judicatories; but provided, that, upon their appli- cation, 496 STATE-PAPERS cation, the church might aflume them or not: And, therefore, it was by my advice that the prefbytery fliould look upon them as per- fons without, and pafs from the judgement and cenfure they had pronounced, by letting it fall to the ground. But this propofal and expedient, though offered by the approbation of perfons mofl: pro- per in this place, hath had but ill confequence on both hands ; for the prefbytery complain, that their jurifdidtion fliould be queftion- ed, and fay, that, if it be not countenanced, their authority in thefe parts will be contemned. On the other hand, the proteded perfons infult, as if the proceedings of the prefbytery had been condemned. And it is gone that height, that fome that had formerly fubmitted to the committee of the fynod of Aberdeen have fince declined ; and Mr George Seaton, of the pr6te<3:ed minifters, hath had the con- fidence, or rather infolence, to write the inclofed letter to the faid committee ; and, therewith, I do hereby fend you a copy likewife of Mr James Ofburne's letter, by which you will underftand this matter more perfedly. The brethren of the faid prefbytery of Rofs fent two of their number here to attend the quarterly com- miflion of the affembly; and the commiflioa appointed a com- mittee to meet with them ; but thought it not fitt to bring in the bufmefs to the full commiffion. I wifti the prefbytery had not med- dled with their brethren ; but things maybe forbornthat cannot be fo well retrieved. All I can do, is to make Mr Seaton underftand, how far he miftakes himfelf. But I heartily wii.h,for his Majefty's quiet as to thefe complaints, that they might be wholly left to his ' Majefty's council here, and that thefe protected men may have no encouragement to make their complaints at court ; for yoa know that they have many in 'England, who underftand not the circum- ftances of our affairs, to take their part too readily ; but, if all their complaints were barred by this one anfwer. That they belonged to the council of Scotland, it would free the King of much trouble, and keep the protected men within meafures ; and I durft under- take that they fliall get no wrong ; becaufe I think the council would really ftudy peace and edification ; and, when his Majefly ( comes AND LETTERS. 497 Comes back, that our fecretaries fhall be with him, L hope this matter fhall be better underftood : And I think a letter might be drawn that would keep both fides within their juft bounds: But this may be thought on at leifure. This day Mr James Garden, a perfon who \vas not an a£tual minifter under the biftiops, and hath not the benefit of the protedion 1695, was conveened before the council : That, though depofed by the church, yet he prefumed to fet up a meeting-houfe at Montrofe, and fiafFer- cd deprived and unqualified men to preach there, and was a great fomenter of the difafFedtion of that country : But the qouncil very juftly ordained him to remove from that parifti, and that that meet- ing-houfe fhould be fhut up. The man has had the confidence to inform, that he was purfued for giving the communion to his hear- ers ; but he was truly purfued upon the laws againft intruders, and ordaining depofed minifters to be removed; and the giving of the communion was only libelled as an aggravation of his intrufion and prefumption, that he, being a depofed minifter,' fhould not only ' offer to preach, but to give the communion in another minifter's parifh; efpecially» when it is well known, that it was truly intended to conveen all the Jacobites in the coun- try : But my Lord Seafield, who was perfectly acquainted with the diforder this man hath occafioned in Montrofe, will give the befl accompt of this matter. I have feen what was writt by Mr Prin^ gle about the French complaint of our folks in Darien : I was very glade that his Majefty did fo far notice the company ; and the company will give a very clear vindication of that matter ; for the French Captain is but 3ifrappey and loft the fhip by evil condud:, and was obliged very much to our colony : But now .it feems he is put on to make complaint of it, to give the French an occafion they have long defired, of attempting thefe parts : But the company's narrative will fully fatisfy all men. I, long much to hear of my fon's fafe arrival, and recommends him again to your kindnefs. My nephew, James Cultnefs's fon, is got in to be conjun^ clerk ■with the Provoft's fon, to the town of Edinburgh ; and both Rr r of 498 STATE-PAPERS of them pay well for it. I fliall be always glad to hear of your own, and Mr White's, and Mr Fall's health and profperity. A- dieu. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. The King much longed for. — Of Keppoch. — The Highlanders in ge- neral dijaffe6led to the Governments — Darien Colony. S I R, ■Whitehall, J received two or three of your's when I came to this place, and 1699. am very glad to find that you have hopes to be fo foon over. I find, by all I irreet with, that his Majefty is longed for with impa- tience J but I tell them, that he has certainly fomething of import- ance to do, otherwife he would be here. The commanding the Spaniih ambaflador from this place makes fome noife amongft the merchants upon the Exchange, who have their efFeds in Spain, they being afraid of a rupture betwixt his Majefty and that crown ; but all do acknowledge, that the memorial was fo impudent and impertinent, that the King could not bear it. I fhall write into Scotland this- night, concerning the reducing of Keppoch to obedi- ence, and the taking notice of thofe come from France. Our for- ces, and the garrifon at Fort-William, does make the Highlanders peaceable ; but I am convinced of their bad inclinations to this go- vernment ; and, therefore, we who are entrufted by his Majefty ought to be very careful. As for Keppoch, I find he has been ma- king fome propofitions to Brigadier Maitland, of which the Briga- dier writes to me in general ; and I expe£b very foon to have the particulars from him : But I do not think it honourable to treat with fuch a one as hp is ; but he meets with very many friends, and has been recfcpt through all the Highlands ; and, if they did their duty, he had been taken before now. A party of the forces had near taken him in the Laird of M'Farlane's lands ; but he efcaped by AND LETTERS. 499 by the help of the boat : He had about that time with him above 80 men. Mr Secretary Verngn was with me yefterday morning, and read another letter he received by the Weymouth galley, which confirmed the jiews he had formerly received from Sir William Befton concerning our colony in Darien : But, after all, I ftill think it needs confirmation ; for, in Scotland, they have had no intima- tion ol- this kind from the colony, but, on the contrary, that they were very healthy, and that they doubted not but to oppofe the Spaniards. I will not now trouble you with an account of what may be the confequences of this, if it holds ; but, at meeting, you fhall know every thing that paft upon the fubjed when I was in Scotland. Duke Hamilton had a moft fplendid entry ; and there has been a great deal of pains taken to reprefent it here truly great- er than it was. It is likewife faid, that at Berwick he was recei- ved by a double difcharge of all the cannon, and that the dirum^ mers beat a march as he paft ; and our gazetteer gives an account that at fuch a day he was to fet out for his palace at Hamilton. This . is only to yourfelf ; and, if you pleafe, Mr Aird may know it; but I fhall inform you more fully at meeting. This is all at prefent from. Sir, your M. H. S. I am glad to find my Lord Portland's winter-provifion is laid in, which gives me hopes of his being here with the King. Treasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares. ' ' A particular Detail of the Proceedings of the Darien Company upon hearing of the Defertion of their Cklony. Prompted by the D. of Hamilton. S I R, You cannot imagine what a general concern this nation is in up- Oftoberai. on the news of our peoples deferting their plantation at Darien. ^^^^' The direftors did what was poflible for them upon this emergency; ^ but there was a neceflity of the general council of the company R r r 2 their 500 STATE-PAPERS their meetting ; fo Wednefday laft was appointed. At the laft meeting of the fynodof Glafgow, a motiqji is made that they appoint fome of their number to wait of the Duke and Dutchefs of Hamil- ton, and welcome their Graces to Scotland : Accordingly, Principal Dunlop, Mr John Dickfon, and Mr Thomas Linnen are fent, who eame to Hamilton Thurfday the 12th, the fame day the prefbytery was appointed to meet for regulating the maintenance of the poor. So they went all together to pay the compliment ; which the Duke took very well, and returned them thanks; then immediatly dif- courfed them vipon the fad news of our colony's defertion; that the nation never fufFered a greater lofs ; and that it was caufe of mburn- ing and failing; and the church might confider if a day ought not to be fet apart for that end. The minifters leave his Grace, go and keep prefbytery, and the fynode's deputys with them, when the Duke's propofal is confidered, and a letter agreed on and fent to the moderator of the commiffion, to call the commiflion, that they mightfearch into the caufes of the defertion, and get a day of fafting and prayer appointed. The moderator, Tuefday laft, produces this letter to his brethren of the prefbytery of Edinburgh, at their meeting upon the admiffion of a minifter in the Weft Kirk; where they unanimoufly agree, that he ftiall return them for anfwer, that they had gone too far to write in thefe terms; and, in fhort, put them off with a t dilator 1098 yy yaoaqyS daxxuqu6m8 ByqnaSB 27 of both the 728U22 uz 6a22pthe rm68 and the xqSSqy 82 8tq y2pq7m 827.' — To return to the meeting of the councill-generall (which was feared would be very unfrequent, by reafon of the fhort advertifement, and it being vacation-time.) I have not of a long time feen fo frequent a meeting*, f 10 omyq 82 70 8tq night before, and its faidtu6 i7moqtmp d728q ou709xm7xq88q76expoftulating with * Dilator ; but Mr Robert "Wylie is at the bottom of both the motions in fynod, the faft, and the letter to the moderator. t 10 (Duke Hamilton) came to 70 (Edinburgh) the night before ; and it is faid his Grace has wrote circular letters expoftulating with members. AND LETTERS. 501 With the yqynq76 82 n88qzp, and every one fhew a great zeal for the recovery of the colony ; no man would fpare his purfe and en- tered their credit for borrowing money, till it (hould come in of courfe: All were atone in this. But when it was told, that our advan- cing of money would not retrieve the bufinefs, it was at that low ebb, that nothing but King and parliament could do it; fo there be- hoved to beariaddrefs to his Majefty, that the parliament might meet the day appointed in November. This motion had many difficul- ties in it ; therefor it was urged, by the Earls of Leven, Aianandale, Northeik, Lord Ruthven, prefident of the feffion, and their deputes, that it might be delayed and people might have time to think of it. No J that could not be granted: Severall things were reafoned upon that might be the work of the parliament ; but, when they were ftraitned in thefe, then they return to the general, to call the parlia- ment, and leave it to their wifdom to fall upon remedies. So, af- ter a long debate, the vote was, " Delay, or proceed to addrefs ? " It carried for the latter; for, except thCjabove named, and one or two more, there was none for delay. ~ While the debate was managing, the proclamations of Jamaica and Bofton were mentioned, and thein ordered to be read. You may be fure all would agree in one re- flexion upon thefe. A committee is named to draw th'e addrefs, viz. Marquis of Tweedale, Lord Yefter, Lord Bafil Hamilton, Lord Balhaven, Gletieagles ; and, for decorum, they named the prefident of the feffion, and fome would needs add the treafurer-depute ; hut indeed the firft five had flood up champions for the addrefe ; yea, no man fo keen as Belhaven, who (tho'' a dire£tor) has not attended fo much thefe twelve months as he has done this week; *n98 tqu6m xq88 nyvmz. After the commitee was named, another motion is made, that fome be appointed to fpeak with the moderator of the com- miffionjto call the commiffion, that they may appoint a faft upon this exigence; — no Hoping of this current; fo they named 3 or 4. By this time it was upon the ringing of ten at night; fo we parted till next day at four and the committee to meet in the morning. ^You mofi know mxx * but he is a letter-man. + You muft know, all this had been thought of at Hamilton, and agreed to here before the meeting. 5P2 STATE-PAPERS mxx Stu6 tmp nqqz 8129518 2r m8 tmyuxSaz and msyqqp 82 tqyq nqozyg 8tq yqqSuzs. Next moriling, all the feven of the com- mitee met, where they reafoned a longtime about this addrefs; the two laft of the nomination agreeing that they addrefs upon the pro- clamations', and ufe their endeavours to have the force aud effedts of them removed. But, for the calling the parliament, they could not but know the circumftances of the King's affairs could not al- low of it ; and it was highly inconvenient to addrefs his Majefty for that, which, .at the fame time, they knew he could not grant. This was too far at fuch a jundure, and when fuch a humour was raging in the nation, to lay the fole remedy of our difeafe at his Majefty's door. Well, this cannot be hedrd ; and the draught of an addrefs is prefented, the petitory part whereof is only craving a parliament. The two above mentioned ftill urge, that the petito-i ry part may only relate to the proclamations; for it is again faid, the inconvenience was infuperable, and the method had not many precedents, if any. They yielded to take in'the remede of the proclapaations ; but that of a parliament they would by no means part with. After two hours moft earneft.reafoning, the committee parts ; my Lord Belhaven taking up the addrefs, faid, he would take upon him to adjuft it again afternoon, upon what had been faid. So they appoint three of the clock to meet * Stquy puzqp m8 726- 6q6 10, 69, 73 mzp 6qbq7mx 28tq76 dtq7q 14 xmup p2gz nqr- 27q 8tqy the mp7q6 mzp 8u6 myqzpqp m6 6mupu6n98 68ux 8tq main thingwqq388 uz, 82 omxx 8tq 54, only the words added where it runs, — to meet the day appointed in November, or as foon as pofTibly his Majefly can allow it. The committee meets; but Bel- Haven is fome time after the reft, and the Prefident forhe time after him ; fo my Lord reads it with his amendments ; and the treafu- rer-deputes afked how he liked it. He faid, he was ftill of his opi- nion * To meet at their dinner atRofs's. Duke Hamilton, 69, 73, and feveral others, where 14 laid down before them the addrefs ; and it's amended, as faid is; but ftill the main thing keeped in, to call 54 (the parliament.) AND LETTERS. 50J nion as to the laft paragraph. No more faid ; but Belhaven caufe write it out in mundo. While he was doing this, the Prefident came in *dt27 8tqa tmp 67228typ r27 uz 8tq r27Z22z 83 dm6 wqqz qzq- 9ft ngS dtqz 14 7g897zqp with it mxx dm6 6mup b28q u8 82 nq 87mz6yu 88qp 82 8tq 02gzoqx sqzq7mx aqm 27 Z2qv 83 bz8qp Z2Z XU59UP only 78 b28qp Z2 j and fo they went in to the coun- cil-general, where the debate* was managed by thefe mentioned of the night before, and Principal Dunlop ; but they made few or no converts. Some warm words now and then pafled among the no- bles. At laft it was moved for a vote, ' Whether to coall oflFthat laft article or no ?' That could not be obtained. Then it was moved, to vote the firft part of the addrefs, wherein we feemed to be more at one. That could not be obtained either. Here I muft make mention of Sir John Hume, who pled much for the laft part, viz, the calling the parliament ; and faid, it was only proper to addrefs for that, at leaft more proper for us to demand than the firft part. Then the vote was, ' Whether to vote the addrefs in whole, or in parts ?' It carried, * la whole ;'and then it was approven. J need not name them over again who were againft it ; you have them named already. My Lord Bel- ■ haven was, by his party, thought worthy of the chair; and I believe none elfe envied him of it. He was defired to tranfmit the addrefs in a letter frotn himfelf tothe Secretaries. Then came out* 8tq 7q- , 68 2r8tq o2zoq78 a motion to addrefs the privy-council, O ! favs. another one, let us firft have an anfwer from thofe were appointed to fpeak with the moderator of the commiifion. They had not yet: waited of him ; fo they were again ordered to do it next morning. Then to the motion of addrefling the council, 'twas told, that the opinion fix of the privy-council had delivered there, might very- well a difcouraged any fu.ch motion ; for 'twas not to be thought that * The Prefident came in, whom they had fmoothed ; for, in the forenoon, he was keen enough ; but, when 14 returned with it, all was faid was; ' Vote it to be ' tranfmitted to the councel-general, yea or not V The Prefident voted mn liquet ,-. only Ormifton voted, not. t The reft of the concert. 504 STATE- PAPERS that board would go along with that addrefs. " O ! but we'll addrefs." Here my Lord Annandale faid, he would then treat that addrefs as it deferved.. My Lord TuUibardine faid, thefe words were not to be endured. Here was heat enough for a while. I thought they fliould have thrown the candlefticks at other ; but all ended in a vote, *' Addrefs the council, yea, or no?" It carried in the affirmative ; and a committee appointed to draw it; then adjourned till next day in the afternoon. Next day, many members went out of town; and,amongft the reft, the treazurer-depute, *62q dtmS 3m68 aq68- qypm mrSqyzaszyS omz22 8 fubq zsmzq mooB; only I heard they had been w^aiting of the moderator, and he had told them there was a committee of the commiflion to meet Tuefday next, and fhould advife with them, t22 y968 wz2d 8tm8 8tq y72r 68mu7 dm6 37- q6qz8 8tq sqzqzmx o29zoqx mxx 8tq paq86 372y38uzs 8tq 7qy- nq76 (mSuzs Z28 b6dmx r27 mza 82 nq 37q6qz8 ngS yqynq76) Wz2d xawdma6 that Tuefday as is omyq 82 70 tq6t29xp mpuzqp d864 ngS 6q28 tu6 qco96qm2p 64 omyquz22 dqppq.z6pma mzp puzqp d8 10 dtqz 8tqa dq7q mx2zs 8uyq ox.26q 82sutq7 and that night 67 umyq6 pmx7uy3xq dm6 wqqz r27 mp7q 66uzs, 22 duxx uy3m78 8tu6 82 76 n98 nq 63m7uzs 2r 7410 tm6 82xp. tu6 r7uq2p6 tqjg 87m8 78 d728 82 74 b32z 8tq pu6 026q7uq 2r 8tq 3x28 82 m 66uzm8 43 8tm8 10 6129 xp nq 87aqp r27 tu6 xurq and pup 6tqd tuy ymza 2r78sxq88q76 how- ever, there was a motion not very favourable in the council-general concerning 74; he is, indeed, thought not favourable to the com- pany, and people take a liberty of fpeaking even of 43 himfelf, 22duxx 7qmp 8tu6 m88 xqz8t 8255 with 78y268 tgynxq 6q7b- uoq. I will make no apology for the length of this. Farewell. Lord • So what paft ycfterday's afternoon, Ormiflon cannot give Carftaresany account. -}• Carftares muft know, that the Mr of Stair was prcfent in the general coun- cel all the dyets, prompting the members, (a thing not ufual for any to be prefent, but members.) Know likewife that Tuefday, as D. Hamilton came to Edinburgh, hfi (hould a dined with Stair, but fent his excufe ; and Stair came in on Wednef- day and dined with him ; where they were a long time alone together ; and that night AND LETTERS. 505 Lord Portland's Secretary to Mr CarStares. Of Duke Hamilton* s pfoving a zealous Presbyterian. Dear SIR, I received yefterday your letter, with the inclofed for my Lord, Wmdfor which I delivered immediately. I give you my hearty thanks for the oa.31. news, and hope that the King's good fubjefls In Scotland will pre- }^'^^' vent that the great ferment there may not beofillefFefls. Indeed it is a perplexing affair, and fuch petitions of dangerous confequences. I don't queftion but it muft be furprizing to you, and all others, that Duke Hamilton proves to be a zealous prefbyterian, and that fome- thing of great importance muft lye at the bottom of his turning that way. I'll alk my Lord if he has nothing to acquaint you with, and if he will not write himfelf to you this day or to-morrow ? The King came yefterday before noon to Windfor, and went diredtlyintoSt George great chappel, dined by their Royal Highneffes, and will hunt this day in the park. My Lord was yefterday at court till two o'clock, and fpoke long with the King. You will know whatpaffes to-day. If any thing of moment occurs, his Majefly will dine to-morrow at Hamp- ton-court, and be at night back at Kenfington. Laft night came here in the Lodge my Lady Effex and Mrs Howard, from Cafliio- bury. They are to ftay fome days with us. Though the weather is bad, we are all in good health except Mrs Van Dorp, who is a little lame. Believe me your true friend and humble fervant, W. L, to the Earl of Portland. My Lord, This day I came here with my family from the country, which Edinburgh, ] fays I have not much to trouble your Lordfhip with. Only I hear 169*9. Sff that, night Sir James D airy mple was keen fcr|addreffing. Carftares will impart this to 76 (Carmichael,) but be fparing of 74 (Seafield.) D. Hamilton has told his friends here that ©rmifton wrote to (74) upon the difcovery of the plot to aflaf- Cnate the King ; that D. Hamilton ftiould be tryedfor his life ; and 74 did fliew him many of Ormifton's letters of the King himfelf. ^Carftares will read this at length to 55, with Ormifton's moft humble fervice. 5o6 STATE-PAPERS that, if the council had met this day, according to appointment, (but the chancellor not being come, 'tis adjourned), we had got the addrefs about Darien, as alfo an addrefs about the committee of the commiffion for a thankfgiving, to which they add fome caufes of humiliation, viz. the great ficknefs and death in all the corners of the land, the fufFerjngs of the proteftants abroad : And here, they take in among the reft the 'fad account we have of our colony in America, and the difappointment of planting the people there. I have not feen the paper, but am informed it is well enough worded. The minifters did not pleafe thofe were commiflioned from the council- general, that they did not either of themfelves propofe a faft only upon that head, or about -m 508. STATE-PAPERS about the reft. * The feffibn is not throng yet ; 78 is fmelling fome things 2r 62yq r2xw6 Z2 dagxp Z28 q63qo8 u§ 2r smySuogxmy- xuq 7. tqu6 qc37q66uzs tuy6qxr msmuz68 m 68mzpuzs m7ya 78 ,rqm76 10 tmb 62yq uzrxgqzoq 098 z28tuzs 2r 8ta6 8ux 22 tqm7 r978tq7. Farewell. Lord Blantyre to Mr Carstares. Pegging his Affl/lance for the more regular Payment of his Pen/ion. S I R, Edinburgh, I fliall be glad to hear of your health from your own hand. I 1699. * adventure fo far upon your kindnefs and goodnefs, to give you the trouble of this line, to acquaint you, I have not had any of my pen- fion this two years. I am fure I have done nothing to deferve my being negleded, nor have I been very troublefome about it : Now there is L. 400 owing me, which would be a very great help to my family at this juncture. The King was pieafed to fay to myfel^ that he would take care of my family ; therefore, I hope you will take fuch meafures as your prudence and kindnefs will fuggeft. I am fure your getting me helped at this time will be both a gene- rous and kind adion. I fhall not prefs you any further upon this account, only expects you will let me hear from you what you think can be done ; for, out of the biihops rents it's not poffible to be got. If his Majefty will be pieafed to order me payment of my bygones out of the civil fund, it may be done ; and I am fure his Majefty fhall not have reafon to think his favour mifplaced, nor you your labour. I am, SIR, Your's a£Fe£tionateIy to ferve you, Blantyre. * The'feffion is not throng yet. Ormifton is fmelling fome things of fome folks Carllares would not cxpe£t it of ; particularly, he is expreiTmg himfelf againft a ftanding army. Ormifton fears D. Hamilton has fome influence ; but no- thing of this till Carilares hear farther. AND LETTERS. ^09 Treasurer Depute to Mr Carstares. Cyphers. S I R, Why was you not fo kind as to fend me the King's fpeech ? 78 Edinburgh, thanks 22 for his freedom uz 7qxm8u2z 82 pmyuqz 22 y968 1699. qoo96q 78 r727 fubwzs mza mzbdq7 uz d7u88uzs 78 omzz28 02- zpqyz 74 nor 76. 78 tu6 sdz uzoxuzm8u2z6 are for a Sqqoq 2r y2zqa 7m8ty7 m6 m 8u8xq, m6 82 77 let the 37qoq38 nqm7 8tq uzox26qp zm7 7m8ubq, and 78 has ground to ^believe it will be dutifully received ; and I hope it may do fervice ; let u8 nqm7 m 37q6qz8 3mayqz8. 43 tm8t qxqbmSqp 8 with tu6 X2psuzs6 n98 u8 6 6mup 10 tm6 r97zu897q uz 8tqy and 43 duxx fq8 m xq88q7. 75 tm6 thefe two days been very mzs7a du3t 85, becaufe 2>^ d29xp Z28 busz extravagant moo86 2r 91° x27p duxx az9 p2q 228tuzs du8t 91, m y268 uz6uszuruomz8 ymz. 8 p7ub6 75 m8 37q6q28 bq7a tm7p 8tqa m7q n28t tust 632Z u8 m8 37q6q28. 75 822W u8 uxx 78 pup not acquaint him ere tq om96- qp ms-f- 37qtqzp 02XX s7mtmy and 8 this night dtqz 78 mo59muz8qp 20 and mywqp 8tqu7 approbation fmbqtuy m 39rxuow pu6pmuzr9x uanq, but let 43 xma tub ozymzp6 2z fome other 78 u6 z28 02b- q82g6 2t u8 22 yma w22d u8 3986 22 y2zauz 78 32owq8. I have given- a touch of 77's affair both to 74 and 76. The queries I fent you laft poft are handing abbut here. I doubt not they will be printed with you. Adieu. Trea- Sio STATE-PAPERS Treasurer Depute to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers. — Secretary Vernon has brought much Mifchief on Scot- landy and King William's Interejl. SIR, Edinburgh, * yg has on obferve, that the y27q rmb2976 43 o2zrq76 or 8, 1699, 8 8s72d6 the more gz6g33278mnxq r27 ru88uz6 moo8 tq zq6q7 dmb m8 2zq t2976 3muz6 aq8 tq is the comon advocate r27 m- nm8q7qz86, and juft aq68q7zust8 tq tqo827qp 8tqqcotq59q7 62q that they were neceffitate to pqxma m n966uzq6 'tis true mzp7qd ya7829z dm6 o2zoq7zqp, fo is om38 du6tm78 dt2 u6 Z2d with you. There is a defign on foot of m zqd mpp7q6 r72yq 8tq 02- 73mza 82 43; 64 is mS Stq n2882y 2r u8 this week 78 was m8 m ym7umsq with 83 dtq7q 83 822iWoccafion to fpeak of it to 78, and told that tq 632wq bq7a r7qq xmzsgmsq 82 55 ; 78 6mup tq wzqd 228tuzs 8tqu o29xpmdd7q6 r27 n98 82 fq 88 8tq7q ygz 7qxqq6qp dqqq 37u62zq76 dii8t Stq 63mzum7p6, Z2, 6ma6 83 pray God help ye xq8 Z28 3q23xq X226 a intereft in their coun- try 82 3xqm6 m 02978. tq7q dqq dq7q omxxqp 82 dinner. 83 faid he behoved to fpeak with 78 msmuz, 22 y968 W22d 8t96 u6 Stq language 2r 7 200, though 7 knows better than to fpeak fo very plain. Juft now I have news of our fhip the Caledonia being re- turned. I have wrote to the Secretary, fo can fay no more. Your man Mr Vernon has brought much mifchief on Scotland, and K. W.'s intereft in it; Farewell. Earl * Ormifton has one obferve, that the more favours the King confers on 8, 8 grows the more unfufFcrable ; for fitting accompts, he never v?as at one hour's pains, yet he is the common advocate for abatements ; and juft yefternight he hectored the exchequer, fo that they were neceffitate to delay bufinefs. 'Tis true, Andrew Myrtoun was concerned, and Capt. Wifbart, who is now with you. There is a defign on foot of a new addrefs from the company to the King. Stair is at the bottom of it. This week Ormifton was at a meeting with the Prefident, where the Prefident took occafion to fpeak of it to Ormifton, and told, AND LETTERS. 511 » Earl of Mabchmont to Mr Carstares. Of the Concern of the ivhole Nation about the Succefs of the Darien Empedition. S I R, I have not had time till now to write to you in return to your's Edinbur^, of the i6th. It is indeed a regretable thing, that many honeft peo- 1699. pie fhould be fo much impofed upon as they are by fome who make a very bad ufe of what has happened to the colony in. America : But thefe perfons difcerning how much many are bent to fupport that projedl, and what a reckoning they make of it, as that where- in the honour of the nation, and a great intereft of it too, is deep- ly concerned, lay hold upon the occafion, I am perfuaded, with very bad intentions. The humour is abated of late ; for there has been much pains taken to do it ; yet I find plainly that the hope and fancy of the Scots, their being already repoffefled, and that we will quickly have an account of it, is what more than any thing elfe makes the mind of men, and, confequently, their motions, more quiet and eafy. The ftock and expence is indeed confiderable; and they are many who are concerned as interefted in the project : Yet that is but a fmall thing in refpe£t of the concern which ap- pears of perfons of all ranks, and even of the meaner people, who are not particularly interefted, and have no fliares in the ftock for fapporting and profecuting that undertaking. It is a thing fcarce- ly to be imagined. I will affure you, any that would pretend h§re to perfuade any body, that the following out that defign may prove told, that he fpoke very free language to 55. Ormifton faid, he knew nothing they could addrefs for, but to get their men relieved who were prifoijers with the Spaniards. " No, fays the Prefident, pray God help ye. Let not people lofe an intereft in their country to pleafe a court." Here we were called to dinner. The Prefident faid, he behoved to fpeak with Ormifton again. Carftares muft know this is the language of 7 too $12 STATE-PAPERS a prejudice to this nation, would prevail nothing, but lofe himfelf, and carry the ill-will and difefteem almoft of every one. "What the matter will turn to, the Lord knows : But, from the firft, till now, and ftill on fo, there is fuch an earneftnefs and difpofition towards that matter, without any fparing, either of their perfons or purfes, that every obferver mufl think it wonderful. I aflure you, Sir, I am in difficulty enough to carry fo as is neceffary for his Majefty's fervice ; and, if it were not the reflection which I hear people make upon what my circumftances have been in the world, thefe in sthis kingdom who force a bad conftrudion upon every thing, might prevail to make others jealous of me as to what I am fure I am in- nocent of. I pray you let me hear how matters go with Mr Don, and give my hearty fervice to him ; likewife, if Mr Williams fuc- ceeds to any of his fadtories. Let me know likewife what is Mr Man's part, and whether he ftays or comes. I hope you will fol- low the old way with me, and acquaint me with what paflages oc- cur that come not in the public. I ihall add no more now, but that I am, S I R, Your humble fervant and very aflfedionate friepd, Marchmont. Treasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares, Of one Kennedy apprehended.— -—^Lord Baftl Hamilton fent up with the Darien Company* s Addrefs to the King about Pinkerton] and other Prifoners in Spain. SIR, Edinburgh, This being our thankfgiving-day, the fecretaries will excufe me lellT ' ^ I do not write j only you will acquaint them, that I did apprehend Mr Kennedy, Collean's fon, and did immediately acquaint the jChancellor, who called him before feveral councellors, and defired I might AND LETTERS. 513 might acquaint the lords with the grounds upon which I gave or- ders to feize him. There were prefent the Prefident of council, Es. of Loudon and Annandale, Mr Francis Montgomery, and Sir Robert Sinclair. I was afked by the Chancellor 8t2d 78tmp dmu- 8yp 22d May, in the morning; and 82xp tuy dtm8 i729zpi There was 82 6963qo8 tuy before thefe lords, particularly whence my information came. I told I had it from the fecretaries ; but having made inquiry in the fouth country about one Scot, whom they named, I believed their information miftook the man's name ; for 1 had information from the fouth, that this Kennedy might be the man. He was called in, and examined ; refufed all manner of intelligence, or carrying of letters : There was found upon him a letter from Patrick Graham at St Germain's, which lets fee he was in a correfpondence with him. This letter mentions one from -Kennedy, with inclofeds, which Graham promifes to deliver. Mr Kennedy is put under bail for L. 200. *78 P2986 Z28 n98 8tq xmpa xm7S2 wzqd mxx r72y 6'" 72nq78 ngr27q Sinner. 78 is indifferent for tq ub 7q62xbqp 82 yqpxq Z2 y27q uz 8tq6 mat- ters u8 3722bg6 no 6q7buoq 82 the I2bq7yqz8 and 78 nqsq86 8tq uxxduxx 2r 8tq6q uz 8tq I26q7yq z8, as well as of the Jaco- bites. I fhall fay nothing of thepu6Q29r7msyqz86 78 7qq86 with- in the 3268 22, &c. forces him into. You will have Lord Bafil Hamilton quickly with you. The general council of our Indian Company met laft night, and voted, that his Majefty might be ad- dreffed in behalf of our countrymen were taken with Pinkerton, and are detained prifoners at Carthagena : No body could be againft this. Next, it was urged, that one (hould be fent from the com- pany with this addrefs. The friends of fome young gentlemen, T 1 1 who * Ormifton doubts not but Lady Largo knew all froni Sir Robert Sinclair before dinner. Ormifton is indifferent, for he is refolved to meddle no more in thefe matters. It proves no fervice to the government, and Ormifton begets the iU-wiir of thefe in the government as well as of the Jacobites. . I fliall fay nothing of the difcouragement he meets with in the poft Carftares forced him into". 514 STATE-PAPERS who are of" the number of thefe prifoners, were very earneft for this : Well, the defire was yielded. Next, who IhouW be the per- fon ? Here the allowance was to be firft fpoke of: A hundred pounds is agreed to. Then my Lord Belhaven moved, that tlie perfon might be inflxu£bed to endeavour, that, according to our laft addrefs, ^ the reftraints laid on by the proclamations might be taken off. Here fome reafoning began. This brought the new proclamations to be mentioned, inftrudtions not only in that parliament, but a- botit the three men of war muft be. t («ixx tmp nqqz oazoqySqp.) Next came the perfon to be named ; and Gleneagles names Lord Bafil. His Lordfhip was not prefent, which wayed with fome of us, not to lay fuch a burden upon him, without he was previ- oufly acquainted. However, his three fifters hufbands were all for his being the man. J 22 may remember 78 djaS 82 a29 2r a new mp7q6. I fay no more this night. Farewell. [The Blank in the Correfpondence from the 3©th of November 1699 to the 4th of June 1700, is owing to Mr Carftares being fent down to Scotland during that period,] Earl of Melvil to Mr Carstares. The various Schemes of the Friends to the Darien Expedition, par^ ticulqrly upon the Suppofitwn of the Kind's coming doivn to Scot- land, as "was propofed. Hzs Thoughts of maintaining a Stand- ing Army. ^— "—Hints at his being megleBed, and his Services ill reivarded, T)ear SIR, Edinburgh, You conjured me to write to you ; and I am refolved to do it im- '^"'^°°' partially and faithfully, to the end that, knowing matters of fad truly, you may be the more qualified to fuggeft good meafures, which, at this time, is at beft not eaJy to be done. The addreffers, to make oftentation (which by the bye is needlefs, for it is fufficicntly, without their f (All had been concerted.) X Carftares may remember Ormifton wrote to him of a new addrefs. AND LETTERS. 515 their care, known) of the great concurrence they have, have a fecond draught of the fame addrefs, word for word, going about to get the hands of fuch members of parliament, as either were out of town, or, by fome accident and the fhortnefs of the time, were prevented of figning that which is fent. The vacant places in parliament are filled up entirely (as I hear) with men to their mind, fuch as Glen- nef is, for Dumbarton, and the like. They have had under their con- fideration, how they ihould behave, if the King himfelf fhould hap-, pen to come down. They confidered, that probably men would ftand more in awe to make oppofition in his prefence, than now when he is only reprefented. They have therefore judged it ne- ceffary to fecure and tie the members the more firmly ; in order to this, there are addreffes to be fent from all or moft of the fhires and towns to the parliament, of the fame tenor that thefe are that are already prefented againft a ftanding army, and in behalf of Ca- ledonia ; and with thefe, and fome, who perhaps fend no addref- fes, there are to be fent pofitive orders to thefe members that they concur againft a ftanding army, and ftand (a« their expreffions are) by the intereft of their country, and particularly of Caledo- nia ; -or otherwife, that they need not think of returning home. I fear we may find this ; and, however out of rule this practice iS, and however, (if not violent), at leaft over fervent ; yet the circumftan- ces, and prefent humour, will not permit it fo. much as to be bla- med. This makes the thing more confiderable than it is in itfelf. They do alfo talk bigly of the freedom they will a^St and fpeak with, if the King fhould come here. An eminent man amongft them, who is either really inclined, or, to pkafe me, owned himfelf mightily difpofed to a tendernefs and regard to the D. of QueenC- berry, faid to me, that the King would find them, if he were here himfelf, lefs difpofed to comply with him, or to recede from their pretenfions than they now appear to be : That the D. of Queenf- berry had never injured nor ofi^ended any man in his adminiftration; and therefore they fhowed at leaft (faid he) a greater caimnefs in their oppofition now, than they would do otherwife. Thefe things fhew a fad and lamentable temper and frame of fpirit ; and yet I fear we T 1 1 2 would 5i(> S T A T E - P A P E R S would find it true. As to the Handing army, I have ferioufly in- fpefted into the ftate of that matter. I did think, (and fo you may remember by what paft before your parting betwixt you and me), that the King might Jkeep the guards, and as many forces more as the annexed excife would maintain ; and that he was warranted fo to do by the adts of parlslment which gave the excife, 'viz. the 13th and 14th a£ls firft parhament of K.Charles II.: And, there- fore, I thought that, unlefs they were now, by a pofterior par- liament, difbanded, the King might, of himfelf, I fay, keep up as many. But, comparing the article of the claim of right tolerating that matter, with the act of parliament for keeping them up, and giving the neceflary fupply, pafled in E. March- raont's parliament, I find, that the army cannot (though there were money to maintain them) be kept up after the firft of November next. The words of the claim of right are, *That keeping a ftand- ' ing army in time of peace, without cpnfent of parliament, is a- ' gainft law.' The Earl of Marchmont's a£t is exadtly fitted to this as hand and glove, and framed juft to fuit it. It fays, • That ' finding it necefTary to keep them up till November 1700, they do ' therefore confent to it.' From this it evidently follows, that the confent of parliament is withdrawn from their being kept up any longer. Another thing is going about here; and the cafe is put. What if the King confent to let it be voted in parliament, that the acquiring that plantation is legal, and the right good ; and allow what addreflTes can be made to him for that purpofe ; only that, for good reafons, he will not confent to an aft, feeing that were to engage him in quarrels that he defires to evite, or for other good reafons moving him ? It is anfwered, We can expe£t no anfwer, but, that it will fare with thefe as with former addreffes, viz. That no re- gard has been had to them. Next, that, if his confent cannot be ' had to an a£t, what can be expected he either will or can do upon an addrefs ? Thirdly, fay they, his reafons do either concern Scot- land, or are exotic as to Scotland. If the firft, let us know them; we will be very ready to comply with his greater wifdom. If they AND LETTERS. 517 they do not concern Scotland, then, fay they, this gives ground for sin unanfwerable argument, that the crowns of England and Scot- land are incompatible, feeing it is not to be fuppofed, that, where the intereft of England and Scotland do irreconcileably interfere, the King muft &&. in favoup of England : And the more import- ant the difference is, and the more ftrength the reafons have which move the King, and the more valuable they are, they indeed ex- cufe the King ; but they fortify this argument, by making the re- medy the more impoffible, and putting it further out of the King^s power to help it. God help us ! it is an unlucky bufmefs, and we are in a bad ftate. I ever dreaded bad refults from this affair, as you may remember by what I told you I had faid to M. of Tweedale when the matter was a-hatching. Mr Carflares, I have no part in the government that gives me place for giving my advice, or fug- gefting matter for it; and, give me leave to tell you, my loffes have been fuch, and my fervices fuch, and have been fo little regarded, as there lies no obligation on me to go out of my road in behalf of it : But I do (what I now do) for your fake ; and I cannot lay afide my good will to the King's fervice, of whom I have ever found, that he was very ready to be jufl and kind to me; but you cannot deny, I have been prevented and deprived of the good efFedis of it. After all, I forfee yet greater matter of heat and conteflation fhall fall out upon the conftitution of parliament, and worfe to be cured, and fuch as I fear the torrent of the populace may carry too far: What I mean, arifes from the adjournments of ufe to be made, (not only now, bCit alfo formerly), upon the propounding of any caufe or queftlon that occurs, by which, fay they, the freedom of debate is moft effectually debarred, the claim of right invaded, and a private power ufurped over the parliament ; which, (fay they, and they fay right), is more than a negative, feeing by it the right and delign of parliaments, viz. to give advice, is utterly prevented and over- turned. I have alfo confidered this matter thoroughly, and turned over all the cafes that I could find relating to it. But I am nobody; fo 5i8 STATE-PAPERS fo I have nothing to fay; it is out of my road. I wifli you all hap- pinefs. I pray God may dired you ; fo, without ceremony, farewell. Murray of Fhiliphaugh to Mr Carstares. The CommiJJioner* s and his own Opinion^ "whether the King ought to yield to the flefol've about Caledonia, or not, &c. S I R, Edinburgh, \ f^all be glad to hear of your fafe arrival, and if the guide I fent 1 700 ^ vii'Cci you took care to have you condudied to Carlyle as he promifed. I was refolved to have written to you my own little obfervations and thoughts ; but the commiffioner hath ordered me to write and ac- quaint you with his fentiments. His Grace has acquainted the King's fervants of his defign to difpatch a flying packet, and deflred them to write their beft advice ; he hath heard fome dif- courfe their opinion, and feen what fome have wrote ; and, how- ever he may differ in his own judgement from fome things propo- fed by others, yet he is content all be laid before the King. You know the great queftion now is, Whether the King will yield to the refolve propofed about Caledonia, or not ? and, whether his Majefty Ihould come here himfelf, or not ? His Grace, I obferve, is very defirous the Kingfliould come; ajad has good hopes, if his Majefty were here, he might, by yielding that point, cut off all other unneceifary queftions that fome projeft to obftrudt bufmefs, and eftablifh his government here ; but, if his Majefty 's other affairs cannot allow him to do this nation that ho- nour, his Grace thinks, that, upon yielding to that refolve about Ca- ledonia, the King's fervants fhould all be ordered to go on vigo- roufly and unanimoufly to do his Majefty's bufmefs, though there may be difficulty and ftruggle, becaufe of the popular handle fome have had ; yet, if all in the King's fervice go forward hand in hand, there may be fome hopes of fuccefs : And he frankly fays, that if thefe \ A N D ^ L E T T E R S. 519 thefe now in the King's fervice are not able to ferve him to pur- pofe upon the juft and honourable terms propofed, he thinks, in honour and juftice, they ought to quit, and defire the King to em- ploy fuch as can do him more efFeCtual fervice, and he will fhew the reft an example himfelf. And, if the King yield that point, he thinks it moft advifable the parliament fhould lit without further delay. But, if his Majefty will not yield to thatrefolve, there is no hopes of doing any thing at this time in the parliament ; and he dares not fay that the King's own prefence would influence the members to pafs from it ; yet, perhaps they might compound the matter for a vote or addrefs aflerting the right to our colony, and not infift for an a£t requiring the royal aflent : For many have been politive for an a£t, upon perfuafion, that the King would comply ; and proba- bly fuch, if they faw the King truly ftraitened, might be more eafy and tractable on that matter. For what I fee, his Grace does riot re- lifh the conference and treaty propofed by fome ; he feems to think it can be of little ufe to the King's fervice, and that it will not be very honourable or fafe for the King's fervants ; and I doubt not, yoil will eafily perceive the inconveniencies fuch a meafure might bring upon yourfelf and your beft friends. If the King fhall think fit (as fome propofe) to break all his troops here, except the guards and garrifons, it is very probable this might adjuft all difficulties; for feveral of the principal abettors of the refolve have owned they were willing to lay it afide un- til cefs was demanded for maintaining the forces. If the parliament fhall be adjourned before the 20th of this month, the commiffion falls and evaniflieth ; and it will be fit to confider well if it will be fafe or advifeable to leave the government fo naked after fuch a ftep : But, if the parliament meets, and is adjourned by the Commiirioner, his commiffion continues during the time at firft appointed ; and, though the King fhould think fit to call his commiffioner, and o- ^thers, ;as fome propofe, to , wait upon him, yet I humbly think it advifeable, that he fhould continue here feme days after the adjourn- ment, in that character, until the members were retired home. As alfo, 520 STATE-PAPERS alfo, I think it decent that the Commiflioner fhould firft be with the King, before others were called for. Now, Sir, I have freely told you of what I know of his Grace's fentiments, with fotne of my own weak thoughts, and perfuade my- felf you will make difcreet ufe of both. I fhall add no more but tell you that I am fully perfuaded his Grace has perfect confidence in you, 'and is your firm fincere friend ; and you may be fully aflurfid of my moft faithful fervice, to my power. Dear Sir, adieu. P. S. I forgot to tell you, that I am credibly informed that thofe who are gone up with the laft addrefs have inftruftipns, and gave their parole, not to fpeak with the King a-part, though defired ;• and that all the addreflers gave the fame promife and parole : Soitfeems, though the King fhould call one or two, they could not go without a difpenfation from their neighbours. " *' [The following, and feveral other letters in the fame hand, are from, one who figns himfelf J. Stevi^art. He feems to have been employed by Mr Carftares, as a fpy upon all the different parties, in Scotland. He gives his. own fentiments with great freedom; and his letters give us a lively pidure of the ftate of^the country at that time.] The various Reqfonings of Coffee-houfe Politicians about the Ejfe6is of the King's holding the next Sef/ion of Parliament in Perfon He is againft the King's comings hut clear for Portland's being fent doivn Commander in Chief and Chancellor for the Time. This ■ the only Remedy to the prefent Difeafes of the Country. Worthy SIR, Edinburgh, It is believed by many here that the King will come down, and June . 1 700. peoplereafon varioufly aboqt it. They fay, that, if he be not refolved to aflert the legality of the colony's fettlement in Darien, he will return AND LETTERS. 521 return (re infeBa) ; which is not for his honour. And, if he be refolved to pafs that ad, he needs not come ; for there will be no great difficulty as to any other bufinefs ; in that point only the par- ty is fuperior. Others fay, that, if he fhall come down, and lay be- fore his parliament the difficulties he is under, and danger of that adt, the granting a fubfidy for the fupporting the company in gene- ral, without mentioning Caledonia or Darien, may perhaps difcon- ccrt them, or, at leaft, divide and weaken them ; which is the fame. This, indeed, had been eafy work for King Charles ; and 1 hope our King may do it ; but there is a great danger, if it happens other- wife. All the hope I have of this is in my Lord Portland, who, no doubt, will come along with the King. It's true, he will have no intereft with the ill-defigning fadion of this party, (they are not to be contented but with the ruin of the government) ; but I am very hopeful that he will carry off moft of the prefbyterians from them, when they fee the prefent fettlement, both of church and ftate, may be endangered by the meafures they are fallen into, and that it is not poffible for the King to comply with them. Thefe are the rea- fonings of our coffee-houfe ftatefmen. For my part, I am ftill a- gainft the King's coming down ; for, if all this could be got done, yet there is a neceffity of breaking fome part of the army, (if they difpenfe with that ad, one way or other, ye muft gratify them ;) and it is inconfiftent with the honour of the King, when he is here in perfon, to Jsreak any. And I am afraid it is fcarcely poffible to carry Caledonia and the army both j and to yield either is diffionourable. Now, fuppofing the King grant them their Caledonia, fome think it will encourage them to be high on their other demands. The topic is, ' Charge him home, and he will yield.' If it fall out thus, it is well worth the King's while to come down, and he is fure to return with honour ; for, if he affert the right of their colony by his Com- Hiiffioner, this will infallibly divide them, if they infift on other things ; and, if the King. cOme down^ he will carry the prefbyterians to one man. So that I make little doubt but they may give him a Uferent-cefs for his army ; for they will fee the neceifity of it, there U u u being $21 S t A T fe - P A P E H « being d. piity who defigns to quarrel with the King at any rate ; and 1 know no other thing can do it, but ftippofing the King is fo ftated that fie cinnot confent to that aiS of Caledonia. So the queftion is. What is to be done ? The parliament muft be adjourned, my Lord Portlathd muft come down General of the army, (and, I think, Gban- cellof of Scotland for fome time). There muft be ten men added to every company of the army. This is a bold ftcp, and will enrage the party ; but, at the fame time^ it will let the preftjyterian^ fee^ that are joined with them, that they have brought the King to extremity ; and that he is refolved to ftand the worft. Your chief biifinefs is with the prefbyterians ; lop them ofl^ from the party, and it is gone. The arniy can yet ftand by law near fix months. Multa cizdutit inter cdticem ftiprimaijUB lahra. (If my Lord Portland were here), they will think twicej before they refolve upon a rebellion. Thefe of tbat party who wifh well to the government will have time to confider together, whether they will chufe New or Old Caledo- nia. My Lord Portland is the only man can do the work ; he may make itate upon the prefljyterians, and all the friends of the govern- ment. He will fecure the army to the King againft corruption. In fliort, its he alone can retrieve this nation to the King. Before this be done, it is the cafe of abfoliite extremity. The King muft write to his parliament his ftraits as to Caledonia, and flieW them what length he can go in that and other .bufinefs ; and if they, after all, infift, then the laft remedy I have fpoke of muft be applied. . Thus, now, I think I have diverted you with my politics, (and I think I fee you laugh heartily), as I would have done Mr NeWton, had I fent him a problem of geometry. I am, with all refpeS, Worthy Sir, Your faithful and obliged fervant,' J. Stewart. The news has been here, thefe five or fix days, that my Lord S. broke open Duke Hamilton's letters upon tlje road — foreign weeds ; Thai, A ^ D L JS T T E 5^ S. p3 Th^.U m f^* 4iy«J^ of ^ S^njijfi moi?archy, the States qf Holfeed hi»ye got C^iba «s»^ IJvfpapiola. This makes a,.ro^hty noife. Lord Napier to Mr Carstares. Recommends his Son to him/or a Pen/ion or Place^ SIR, I was not a Uttle furprlfecj and tro.ubled, at my return to this place, EdinbTirgV to find the divifions and confufions fo great, that 1 loft almoft hopes ^"q^/'" of being in any tranquility in my own country, my humour dif- fering extremely from thofe people that thinks to fifh in troubled waters; and not ,pxetending to reap any advantage by my journey to London, becsufe of the un^afy eircumftances 1 fbiiiid the ^Cing and his friends in when. I was there, Ihoped to have help and favour liere at my return, from your kindnefe and fenfe of siy -condition and patience: But, Sir,.fmce it was fleceffaryforyeu to return wMi the reft, I fubm'it to God's will, who is pleated to sMxQc me in moft things. "Yet, as it is noways forbid us to ufe lawful endeavpurs for our relief in neceffities and ftraits, fo I irefblved to iritreiat your mind- ing of me in what way yon think moftfeafible to fucceed. My fcMi- hath dedicate himfelf to the >Kwig'*s fervice, but entirely upon my own charge. As my inclinations are loyal, (fo» while I'llive, I ffiti keep him clofe to his duty; and, when I am gone, I hope he ■vyilLhe more capable to fhow the principles I have infpired him Vrith. He ia to be a peer. of this land ; and therefore I beg, that he may have fome mark of the King's favour, as others have, who deferves no better than he. I mentioned a penfion for him, becaufe I had L. 200 a year, and now has only the name of 100 ; but, if that be not fo eafily procured, there is a place here vacant, Mafter of Works, ^hich will be difpofed of to one or other ; ajid I doubt not but it may be procured him ; for he is now a man, and a very fenfible one. Young people of quality fliould be encouraged. I beg» Sir, that you U u u a wUl 524 STATE-PAPERS will propofe it to the Secretary, who promifed me great favours, and do your own endeavours to make it fucceed ; which will put an e- ternal obligation upon, SIR, Your very faithful friend and fervant, Napier. Lord CARMiCHAELto Mr Carstares. Wijhes the King could be brought to yield a little in the Affair of Caledonia. SIR, Edinburgh ^ ^^^^ ^^^"^ °^^ °^ ioyia. this four days. I ftill long to hear of June II. your fafe arrival at London. I know Mr Pringle will give you an account of what I have wrote. If any thing of confequence had occurred, I had not failed to acquaint you fooner. The tem- per here is much as you left it; and, as I can never believe the high- flown party cares not for a good return to their addrefs, if his Ma- jefty could yield any thing, it miglit undeceive fome honeft men that are gone in that way. I have been lately with the Commiffioner, who is a fincere friend of your's, and the worthieft man ever I knew. My fincere fervice to your Lady, and my duty to my noble friend. I am, SIR, Your mod affectionate and real fervant, Carmichael. The 170<8. AND LETTERS. 525 The Treasurer-Depute toMr Car stares. Of a new National Addrefs in the Affair of Caledonia. — '--Of a falfe Story fpread of his having f aid fomething to Argyle^sDif advantage. SIR, I was glad to hear, of your fafe arrival. We long for news from Edinburgh, you. mzpdu6tq6 8tqa yma nq S22p *. This place affords little J'^'^^'S- worth writing. You will hear of one Paterfon and one Watfon their being taken up for difperfing and printing pamphlets. The Advocate is ordered to profecutethem. 1 1198 dtmS duxx o2yq 2r uSjB pmzz28 6ma r27 Stqyq m33qm76 Z2 bus297 I26qq72yq28 m8 37z6q28. No tackfman of any of the publick funds will at prefent pay a far- thing, pretending all of them to legal deductions ; and this puts a ftop to, all payments. I doubt my letters would find my L. Seafield at London, is the reafon I do not v^rite. Farewell. Though you fent down if axq88q7oxm7uzs29S02yyu66upqz82 68 mzpyetleeing you thought a xq88q7 zqoq66m7uq 83 and 3tuxxu3t m9st * And wifh they may be good; -j- but what will come of it, Oj-mifton cannot fay-; for there appears no vigour in our government at prefent. \ Tho' you fent down a letter declaring 9 (Queensberry's) commifEon to ftand ; yet, feeing you thought a letter neceflary, the Prefident and Philiphaugh think a new commiffion neceflary : Therefore you have a frefh draught. Ormifton ap- prehends it will not be needed. Seafield's friends are much concerned he be not to draw the letter containing the King's reafons why he cannot comply with the par- liament in his -declaration, in cafe of adjournment. 85.fays to 76 (Carmichael) the declining to do it here was putting the thorn in Seafield's foot. Carftares knows 76 (Carmichael) would not take that well; yet, at the fame time, 85 faid he durftnot advife it to be done here, not for all he is worth. 8j and Seafield's friends are in great fear. This day after dinner, I was in the Abbey, when "the Frefiddnt introduced Mr Robert Wyllie. I left him with Queenfberry;they-hadbeen a good time together. B's letters to his lady gave account of all Queenfberry's letters bore. Befides, Seafield's men write to their correfpon dents, all that Seafield writes to Queensberry, about the King's defign to have his mind known either by letter or declaration; and they are making ready, to meet either. What is on the other paper, you may (hew to the King, if you think fit. 526 S T A T E - P A P E R S mgst 8tazw6 azqd 02qyu66u2z zqoq66m7ug therefore you h^ve a frefh draught 78 m 3 37qtqzp6 u8 dux Z28 nq zqqpqp. 74s r7uqzp6 mjg ygot O2zoq7zqp tq nq 398 82 pymd 8tq xq88q7 containing 43s 7qin6226 dta tq omzz^S azyjxa wt 54, a/q tuO pqoxm8u2z in cafe of adjoamment na 20, 8^6mtif> 82 7^ Btq pqoxuzuzs 82 p2q u8 tqyq dm6 398UZS 8tq 8t27z uz 746 r228, 22 wz2d6 76 would not take 8tm8 dqxx, yet at the fame time 85 faid tq P9768 Z28 mpbu6qu8 82 nq p2zq tq7q not for all 85 u6 d278t, 85 and 74s r7uqzp6, (78 8qx6 22 msmuz) m7q hz S7qm8 rqmy. This day after dinner 78 dm6 uz8tq mnnmadtqz83 uz872p9oqp- y7 72nq78 daxxuq, 78 xqr8 tuy du8t 29 8tqa tmpnqqz a good time -&2su8tq7. Yefternight there was a meetting at JSteel's at the crofs-kees ; they are forward upon a new national addrefe. Some w^ere for delaying it till the fourth of July. They are meeting again this night. 8s xq88q76 82 tu6 xmpa sbmq mooS 2r mxx 29s xq- 88q76 n2m7, nq6up6 74s 2qz d7u86 82 8tqu7 0277g632z;pz86 mxx that 74 d7u86 82 29 m6298 43s pq6usz 82 tmbq tub yuzp wzzdz qu8tq7 na xq88q7 27q .pqoxm7m8u2z, mzp 8tqa in7qym- wuzs 7qmpa 82 yqqS qu8tq7. What is on the other paper you may fhew to 43, if you think fit. There is a falfe ftory, they fay, writ to the E. of Argyle laft night of me ; the E. of Crawford was faid to have been the author, and fhould liave (aid he heard me fay the ly: But my Lord Crawford has this day pub.Uekly vindicate me, declaring he never Keard me have any fuch words; nor did he ever give any body the leafl: reafon to fay I did. I purfue the thing no futther; but wiflies people may not induftrioufly fpread ftories of me to my L. Argyle. I defign and defire to live well with his Lordfhij), and defires you will give him my humble fervice, as likewife to the E. ofAnnandale. This flying packet fhould have come offyefter- day; but the draught of a new commiflion to his Grace his been the ffop. Cox, 6- AND LETTERS. 527 Colonel Ferguson to Mr Carstares. The whole Country in Flame^ ondFeuel both from France and Eng- land to feed it. Sends a Copy of afalyrical Poem^ written by Dr FitcairUi upon King William. Dr. SIR, Since yotv went from this, things are grown rather worfe than Edinburgh, better; the ferment ftill continues, and new addreffes are daily 1^0/^* conaing in from all parts of the country, to be prefented to the parliament, when they fit. God help us, we are ripening for deftru£Hon. It looks very like Forty-one. Yefterday there came an addrefs from the town of Glafgow to Powhill their reprefentative : Its much of the fame nature with the reft; for redrefling of grievances, a legal fettlement of our com- pany in Darien, and to be eafed of all fubfidies and taxes. There are likewife fome officers who have been defiring the army to addrefs for their arrears. You fee. Sir, what kind of people we are, and how the King our mafter is ferved by us. But God be thanked, there are more honeft men amongft us than knaves : So I hope there will be no addrefs from the army at this time. Mon- day laft was a great day amongft. the Jacobites here,' being the birth day of the pretended Prince of Wales; and it was folemnized by a great many this year, who never did it before. I fend a poem up- on it, made by Dr Pitcairn. Its an allufion to that fable in iEfop of the frogs defiring a King from Jupiter, who gave them a flx>rk.- There are a great many fatyrical and obfcene reflexions upon the King in it. You fee. Sir, that they are now above board with us j for treafon is become fo common, that no body takes any notice of it. They talk publickly that, unlefs the King will grant them the legal fettlement of Caledonia, that they will addrefs him again with forty thoufand hands at it, and call a convention of ftates. We are all inflame; and I am fiirethe feuel. comes both from France and Eng- land, to keep it up. The Lord prefer ve our mafter and counfell from ought ; and let all his enemies be confounded from Dan to PieerJOic- ba. 52S STATE-PAPERS ba. I think, Sir, you are very happy and fafe wTiere you are ; but, upon my word, I am not where I am, nor no honeft man. If our matter be neceffitateto break fome regiments, I hope he will have a re- gard to his old fervants ; for there are four or five younger than that which I have the honour to command, viz. Portmore's, Strath- naver's, Hamilton's, Maitland's and Jedburgh's dragoons; for we were upon the Scots eftablifliment before any of them : Befides, Sir, we have our good fervice to plead for us ; and that we have been honeft and loyal from the beginning, and will continue fo to the end. Pray give my moft humble duty and fervice to our noble friend and patron. I have writ to him fince you went from this. I hope he will continue his protedion and favour to us ; for we never will, nor ever did depend upon any but him, whom I pray God may long preferve Adieu. Fab. 2. Lib. i. Phaedri Metaphrafis. Ranarum proceres, paludis hujus Et prati indigenie, palude cin£ti ! Nonne audrftis, avos patrefque veftros Secures potuifle ftagna circum Exultare fua, et venufta prata ? Rex Ilignus iis- da^at beatam Vitam, atque otia non periculofa. Tunc quae me puerum puella Rana Caftis, Jupiter ' ofculata llabris, Quot dein rettulit olculationes, Etcura vacuas metuque trifti ! Quot nunc millia vidimus profefta Ad ripae ulterioris inquilinos ! Quos illic veteres novofque hifus Unalufimus.advenae hofpitefque, A Sole exoriente ad occidentem ! SedRanaefuimus; fuit paludis Ingens gloria, laufque clara prati. Ah ! Sors nulla diu poteft placere Ventofo populo ! Sed ipfa tandem Libertas gravis, et graves penates, Ut Saturnia difpliceret Ilex, Quae prati indigents palude cin£ti Ranis otia fecerat beata. Irato Jove, coelitumque coetu, Optatur novus inquiefque re£tor, Reftorque eligitur Ciconiarum, (^arum exercitus ales haec pererrat, Haec impune pererrat atque vexat Ranarum patria ac avita ftagna; Nee DOS vifere nunc licet cohortes Ranarum per amoeniora fufas Pratorum aequora, et invidenda regna. Obfcoenae volucres, malaequte pfeftes Stagni ! nonne fat eft vorafle gentem Nobis fanguine moribufque junftam, Nullae ut jam fuperent in Infula ilia Ranae legibus atque rege jundlae ? At vos, O proceres, ducefque noftri, Clari militiae, domique clari ! Si ftirpem veterem, incolamque ptati, Servatam cupitis palude cin£ti, Haec gratis animis labrifque caftis, Mecum ter memorate verba laeti ; Et nulla audeat hie natare Rana,* Quae non haec memoret ter ipfa verba : Ilicis facrae geniale Numen ! Quippe te prifcaecoluere Ranae, Juniis, fi nos vetus Arbor audis, Annue votis. Quae tuas ales percgrina Ranas Certat infefto violare roftro, Sedibus noftris abigatur omnis Trans mare inagnum. Nos,tua nobis ope reftitutae, Ilicis circum faliemus aram, Piincipis. laudes celebrare gratae Fraticolarum. AND LETTERS. 529 Murray of Philiphaugh, now Lord Justice-Clerk, to Mr Carstares. The CommtJJtdner Duke of ^mensberty' s Senfe of Mr Carjiares^s Kiudmfs in procuring himfuch encouraging Letters from the King. Anxious that Seafield, Argyk, and Annandale^ be fint doivn; -particularly the fivfl^ of •whom the King's Servants arejea^ Ions. His oivn thoughts of the Meafures proper in the enfuing Sejfton. SIR, I had your's by the flying-packet. I did not expe<9; fo miuch Edmburgh,. compliment from you; I am forry I was never fo happy as to de- ,^00'^" »,. ferve it ; but you may be aflured I Ihall be very ready to ferve you, to the utmoft of my power. I fhewed your's to my Lord Commif- Goner, who was much fatisfied therewith ; and his Grace is fenfible that you have not only done him juftice, but great kindnefs, in your accounts to the King of bufmefs here ; and that you have contri- bute not a little to the procuring fuch encouraging letters from hi$ Majefty. His Grace bids me make his excufe for not writing him- felf ; he has fo many to fpeak with, and fo much to write, before the flying-packet or expsrefs go off, that he cannot poffibly have time to write ; but, he bids me tell you, that it is indifpenfably neceffary that Argyle and Annandale come here quickly ; for, not only may their prefence, being men of great quality and fenfe, add life and vi- gour to the gova-nment, but feveral of the King's fervants here are jealous of their being at court; and the Chancellor, Prefident of the Council, Carmichael, and Treafurer-depute, have complained to his Grace, this very day, of their abfence ; and plainly told, that, ifthey do not come quickly, and concur and join .hand in hand, they will be very cautious, and leave it upon them to take meafures a- X X X bove, 530 S T A T E - P A P E R S, bove, and anfwer for them; And this his Grace wifhes may be fig- nified to the King. I fhall tell you alfo, as my own thought, that I fufped, if Seafield ftays at court, he needs esped little advice from this about the framing of any papers ; and you'll perhaps fee an unexpefted infiahce of this by the very packet that carries thefe : So, if he have a mind to take all upon him, he may flay ; but, if he defires only to take a fhare with the reft jaf the King's fervants, he muft be prefent with them. I fhall not trouble you with any thing about the return to his Majefty's letter; I know you'll have full ac- counts of that from others. You were pleafed, in your's, to defire my thoughts about the Commiffioner's going up, and about what al- lowance might be proper for the King to give his Grace, in cafe he thought fit to continue him commifiioner for fome months. I do find his Grace perfedlly devoted to his Majefty''s fervice, and chear- fully content to ftay here, or go where his Majefty thinks moft proper for his fervice ; and truly, I humbly conceive, its almofl ne- cefTarythat he fliould continue here as commifiioner for fome time after the King fhall publifh the letter or proclamation now proppfed, for reafons which you can conjedlure better than I can write. But I fhall freely tell you, I perceive the Commifiioner is defirous, if his Majefty think it fit, to wait upon his Majefty, if it was but eight or ten days ; and, if the King goes not -to Holland, this might be, as I humbly think, beft in the beginning of Auguft : But this I truft you'll make ufe of or not, as you fee caufe. There's no hopes of diverting the parliament from infifting on the refolve, by all the reafons the King can give for his not complying ; and fome think thefe reafons may engage more to be for it ; fo there's no doubt, if put to the vote, it will carry by a confiderable plurality, rather almoft an u- nanimity. You'll find its not thought legal, nor fafe, if the parlia- ment meets, to interpofe the negative, fo as to prevent the debate and vote about that refolve. On the other hand, frequent adjourn- ments, and concluding a feflion without an a£t, is cryed out upon by fome as a novelty, and againft our law and claim of right ; and, per- haps, it will not found well with our neighbours : So the only mids occurs AND LETTERS. - 531 occurs to me is, if the parliament fliould be allowed to fit and vote the refolve, and if it fhould be effayed to bring them to other bufl- nefs ; but there are fo many obvious inconveniencies in this, as well as the other methods, that I dare not propofe or recommend it ; I only fuggeft it ; for, certainly, the parliament muft either meet be- fore November, or the army muft bedifbanded: And I fee little rea- fon to expe£t that frequent adjournments will alter their minds. And if the army is difbanded without payment of their arrears, which are confiderable, and for which there's no fund, its to be fearqd fome of their thoughts may alter, and that the government may not only want their fupport, but may find fome more defperate men difafFe£led. I can fay nothing as to the allowance at this time, but you may expe Your humble fervants In alfrefpeQs, (Signed) Robert PiNCARtoN. John Malloch. James Grahame. Ben. Spenfery alias Penfo. David Wii/bn. Right Hon. Lords and Gentfehita, Pubi.papers) The fcntettce of deatfe is pafTedagainft us all, ^the boy excepted); Sin irons, and we are in iwins. this is lh6 thifd letter we have wrote to your June 19-31. jLordftiips fnace ^hfe uftjuft fentence is pafifed againft us, (and we efcpea to be feparate tt^arf hour.) We have had only one letter itXAd. yo\ir hands firtCte our ttatofportflieiAt tG this country, in which yt #as pifeaffed \- fent meafures : However, fuch advices as they are, I do fend them to mv L.Seafield ; but, whether they will pleafe or not, is a queftion. Y y y However, 538 S T A T E - P A P E R S However, it is all I could get. If the declaration of the King's plea- fure, with relation to Caledonea, be fent by way of a letter to the parliamqnt, I fee, by the humour of his own fervants, that there are few of them that will oflFer to vindicate his reafons in it ; fo that his Majefty can expedt no fuccefs by that method. If he intends to do it by his eouncil, there muft be two different papers. The declara- tion muft be by itfelf, and contain an order to print and publifh it ; and the adjournment of the parliament muft be by a warrant apart. In both thefe cafes, they will obey ; but not, if it narrates that it.is done by the advice and confent of his privy council ; which, if the King's mind be made known by proclamation, muft be inferted in courfe ; and, if it were oflFered at fo, I do not believe that a quorum would be got that would confent to the publication of it. So you may eafily jud^ what a condition I am in, when thefe perfons who I did expedt help from in the difiiculteft points of his Majefty's fer- vice, do, out of fome reafon or other, abandon his Majefty and me in his fervice. If there be a confiderable adjournment, and that his Majefty can ftay fome time in England, matters muft be other wife .concerted than now is either fit or poflible to be done ; and, in that cafe, it will be proper for me, in fome time after the adjournment, to be called to court ; but this I leave entirely to his Majefty's pi ea- fure, who is heft judge of his own meafures. Pray, give my moft humble fervice to my L. Portland, and tell him from me, that, as I am proud to believe he has friendftiip for me, fo he fhall always have proofs, where! can fhow them, of my gratitude to him. I do aot trouble him with letters, becaufe I know that you will give him ac- count of what I and others can write. I have, by my L.' Annandale's earneft defire, laid his claim to be a Marquis before his Majefty. I could not refufe to do it j but the King may do in it as he thinks moft convenient for his fervice. In my opinion, fair words, till bufinefs here be fome way over, is beft, otherwife he muft refolve to gratify the Eirls of Argvle and Lothian as to their pretentions, or lofe them, which is not fit at this * . time*. AND LETTERS. 539 time. I expefl: to hear fully and frequently from you ; and am, with much kindnefs, your's. Murray of Philiphaugh to Mr Carstares. A particular Account of the Rabble at Edinburgh upon the 10th of June 1 700. SIR, I wrote to yoti on the 1 9th, and gave my letter to Mr Stewart Edinburgh, to be put up in the commiffioner's packet ; but I underftand this ,70a day it was not difpatched by miftake ; however, I have fent it for- ward under this cover. We had, laft night, one of the moft numerous and moft infolent rabbles that has been here of a long time ; the pretended occafion was, that news were come, of the Spaniards making a defcent and an attack upon our colony of Darien, and that our people had rooted and defeated them. Upon this, it was refolved by the meet- ing at the Crofs Keys, (as I hear), that all true Caledoneans (as they call them) Ihould have illuminations in their windows ; and this re- folution was handed about ; and, without ever taking notice of com- miffioner, privy council, or magiftrate, there were in the evening lights put up in many windows, and feme bonefires fet on. The mob gathered to liudge crouds from all corners, and fell to breaking the windows that were not illuminated, without diftindion of the in- dwellers quality or character ; or, if they made any, diftin(£4ion, it was to do moft mifchief and infolence to thofe in the government ; fuch as the Prefident of the council, Carmichael, Treafurer-depute, though you know he is not in the fore-ftreet, (where illuminations . - ufe only to be required.) And, in fhort, they made havock of all the windows wherein there was no illuminations, but efpecially of fuch as belonged to any that are of the government. And I am told they deftroyed above five thoufand pounds Sterling worth of glafs. ' Y y y 2 They S40 STATE-PAPERS They attempted twice thrife to get iiito my Lord Carmichaers lodgings, and they broke in upon the Advocate, and procured a warrant from him to liberate Paterfon and Watfon ; but others of them had not patience to wait for the warrant, but, by fire, ando- ther means, broke up the tolbooth-door, and let all the prifoner^, out : And, when fome of the magiftrates and town-guard went to fave the prifon, they were beat off by a great many in jgentlemens habits, who came brilkly up to them with drawn fwords. I hear they made particular inquiry after Mr David Blair, and gave him many ill names, as rogwe and villain, that did not pray for Caledo- nia, and broke down his wiitdows. I jMn afraid they frightened Lady Seafield too much ; for they were fo rude and barbarous as to throw ftones, long and furioufly, at her windows. I fhall not trouble you further with particulars ; for I think liie Advocate is to fend up an account of them, which you will fee : Only, they took the key of the Netherbow^port, for fear the guards fliould be (brought upoa them. But the Commiffioner was gone to bed before an account of the tumult got to the Abbey, and knew tiothing of it till this morning ; and then he went up to ihe o0uiicH-iiou&, § , or men ; and, whatever men be put into it, they would be picked-out men, and hand-wealed. A few guineas will go far. upon people that .are ftarved upon a groat a day, if their governor were not kind to them. You may confider the dearnefs of the place. Much might "^ have heen iaid, if peoples opinions had beeji timeoufly afked.; arid much might he, if folk were prefeot, that cannot be WTOce, If me- thods could be fallen on to allay the prefent ferment, iit wquld be a happy tJiLng : And, though I dare not take upon me tP advife thje fitting of the parliament at this time, yet, I .think, if it do fit ib long as the King is in Britain, there feems lefs danger from the fit- ting thajifrora the adjourning ; Ibecaufe all ratidnal things m^ri^ ,Ln ^ Zzz . :y propofed -M- 546 S T A T E - P A P E R S, ^ropofed for the good of the country which the King can do, and, wherein he may be ftraitened to comply with what fome defires, the reafons might be freely told ; which might contribute to the ta- king off of fome. engaged, and take off that afperfion of fome men, * That it is only humour, wilfulnefs, and favour to the Dutch, that makes him confider fo little the defires and interefts of his people.' Amongft the reft of the infolencies committed at the rabble, the bells were ordered to play, and the firft tune was that called Willful Willy., •wilt thou be ivillful Jiill. Since this was writ, we have the unplea- fant account of the affair at Darien ; what effects it will produce, we know not, as likewife of the time of the King's going for Holland ; which leaves no place for what was faid. I wifh you may be more deli- berate and compofed than we feem to be here at prefent; I pray God dired you and us both. Though a thoufand things might be faid, yet, confidering my former freedom hath met with fo little fuitable returns, you may think me very imprudent and unadvifed in ufing fo much, which I am fenfible of myfelf. Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares. Of Changes in the Engli/h Court. ^ The Colony has quitted Darien ; this makes no Change of their Meafures. Sujpicious that they are encouraged by fome., even at Court. SIR, -Edinburgh, It bejing ten o'clock at night before the packet came here, I recet- Jnne 39. ygj your's, and likewife one that gives me no good' news, that the Earl of Romney is now in my noble friend's port, which goes near to my heart 5 and Jerfey's being chamberlain will give great encou- ragement to thofe here who are allied to him. I have not had a let- ter this feveral pofts from the Vifcount of Seafield ; and this is the fecond from you fince parting, which I indeed do excufe, confider- ing how mighty matters you have in hand ; and, by what I can learn, fince th6 bad news of our colony's quitting Darien ; yet they- . who 1700. A;^N t) \L E T T E R S. 547 who were for ratifying their former a£t, will ftill infiil, by which you may perjceive their defign. I wilh they may have no encourage- ment from fome, even at court, (for this change there, will riiake them magnify upon the intereft they now have). 1 have not time almoft to read what I have writt. Earl of Kintore and Forglen are with me, who give their fervice to you. 'My humble fervice to the Vifcount of Seafield ; Kintore drinks his Lordfhip's health and your's. A flying packet is impatiently expedted. My fervice to Mr Prjngle. You will hardly read this. I am fmcerely your's. Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. In Anfwer to a Letter from Mr Carfares recommending Vigor. — Wijhei he -would fend doivn a Doze of it., for it ivas not to be found. — Of the Commiffioner' s Alloivance. SIR, I have your's. I ftill heartily wifh the King were not to go ; but, Edinburgh, fmce he is to go, no man thinks the parliament can meet in his ab- ,700.^°* fence ; and therefore, neither I nor others can advife its meeting in Auguft. You apprehend that the defeat of Darien and the mob may change tempers ; but, at prefent, they change neither meafurcs nor tempers ; and his Majefty's going away helps well to keep them up. I write plainly, but, I-am lure, fmcerely and faithfully. I re- member I wrote in April, that the parliament might be delayed till Auguft, hoping time and events might help us ; and, though I was far ffom wifhing what hath happened, yet, you fee, I am not mifta- ken; but now the matter is not entire. You do well to recommend vigor, but I wifh alfo you would fend us a good dofe of it, for I pro- teft it is not here to be found. The CommifEoner's Grace preiTes very earneftly, and the Treafurer-depute and Advocate do what they gan ; other tools we have not ; however nothing fhall be omitted that can be done, as I have wrote to my Lord Seafield. The Com- Z z z 2 miffioner's 548 S T A T E - P A P E R S ftiiffioner's ^eftablifhment cannot be changed without his lofs j otherg . keep tables and entertainments, and now is the time of the feffio»j what can he then abate? till the tenth of Auguft it ought to ftand, afid thereafter what fhall be thought fit ; but pray conceive that we are not in an ordinary recefs, and his authority and treating of perfons is as much neceffary as in parliarnent ; aftid he declares plainly, he is only upon the faving, and has no thoughts of gain- ing, as he is ready to inftrud, and I verily believe.' Dear Sir, be- lieve me, I am no more feared than any man at Hampton-court, but I am fure you apprehend not our condition as I fee it ; and 1. mull again tell you, that I fee not where it will end, till perfons be fent for, and matters adjufted here foon or fyne ; and I am fure you know I fhall be none of that number ; for all left to me, old and in- firm as I am, is, to wifh well, and do my beft at home. The Lord dire£t all. Adieu. Mr Wi LL 1 AM Stewart, Secretary to the Duke of Queenfberry, to Mr Carstares. .Apology for the Duke of ^eensherry. Rev. SIR, fidlnbur h ^7 ^'^^ 'Qvks. defires to be excufed for not writing a return to June 30. 12 your's by this flying packet. His Grace has now only written to nigh? ^' my Lord Seafield, which his Loxdfhip will fhew you : So his Grace <* thinks it needlefs to repeat the fame things to both. His Grace orders me to tell you, that he finds the King is not well pleafed with him for not fending forces to fupprefs the rabble. I do affure you, it was none of his Grace's fault, for he knew no- thing of the matter till next morning, that I told him. It happen- ed to be that night that a flying packet was difpatched; and, jufl; as I was fealing up the packet, the fervant that waits on the keepers of the fignet, and carries the packet to the poft-houfe, told me what the AND LETTERS. tlie rabble were doing, wtiich I then gave my Lord Seafield a confu- fed account of-; and, by the date of my letter, his Lordfhip might know his Grace would be a-bed. My Lord Duke has ever fmce been very angry with me for not waking of him ; which, tho' pof- fibly if I had done it, might have proved of fatal confequence. The ring-leaders of the rabble are like to meet with their deferved re- ward, which may prove more terrifying than to have fupprefled them in their fury. My Lord Duke defires that you will take an opportunity of informing his Majefty of the true occafion of his not fending the forces to fupprefs the rabble, as I have now told you it ; and I am heartily forry that my Lord Seafield did not underftand, by the confufed letter I wrote to him> that his Grace was then a-fleep» and that I wrote without his knowledge. It fhall learn me aleffon hereafter, not to write any thing with- out my maftcr's knowledge ; fince, it feems, it is underftood inhere his Grace knew thie fame things I then wrote. I am, Reverend SIR, Your moil humble fervant, William Stewart. « Earl of Melvil to Mr Carstares. J[ repining Letter. — That the Fever increqfes and threatens the Life of the Patient. — Great want of Vigor in profecuting the Rabblers. j[s if they had all dropped from the Clouds^ and ivere carried up again. S IR, I have your's of the 26th of June. I wrote twice to you lately ; I J"'y 2. 1700- ■wifh they may have come to your hand ; I can add little more in v^riting, though much more might be faid. You will hear the fen- timents of others. Its but mtelancholy enough to think to what pafs our affairs are brought. In fome refped it is but folly to reflea up- on what is paft; though you cannot but remember infinuations and remedies were, and would have been timeoufly given, if they could have 5S0 ' STATE-PAPERS have been liftened to. I am neither to reflefl: nor cenfure what has been the management, for yefternight cannot be brought back ; l)ut it were good things were fo remembered, as ferioufly to confider where wrong fteps have been made, in order to future management. Tho' much or moft of ourprefent unfettlement might have been pre- vented, and that I think eafily, yet all we are to do now is, to look forward. The humour at prefent, for what I can learn as yet, feems to increafe; when this fever wilt cool, I know not ; if it do not fpee- dily, it feems much to threaten the condition and ftate of the pa- tient. It is a folly for one to give their opinion when things are paft ; but, had I been a ftatefman, and my opinion timeoufly alked, I would have been for the fitting of the parliament timeoufly, and when the King was in Biritain ; for there was lefs hazard in that than from the adjournment. The parliament 1690, in every whit, had as bad an afpedl as this, confidering all things, which I flialinot enumerate; but now things are much changed, difcontented " people having much time to practice and know their own ftrength. What will become of th'e bufinefs of the rabble, 1 know not. It feems a little ftrange, a bufinefs fo public, and where there feemed to be fuch a multitude concerned, there fhould be like to be fo little made out, as if they had all come out of the clouds, and were carried up there again. The not profecuting former tumults as they ought, gives always occafion for new ones. You were long fince told, that a fuf- ficient providing of the caftle was the beft and moft probable way of fupprefling thofe, and certainly were fo for the future, for we have no certainty of being free of them ; but this may be mifcon- ftrued ; fo I fay no more of it. If time, or other emergents, bring not people to a calmer temper, and to more of their reafon, I know not what is like to become of our country, which grows every day poorer, which occafions more difcontents, and makes people more fufceptible of changes. But I know not what thofe, who pretend to be fo great countrymen, can anfwer, that they refufed to do for the good of the poor finking country what might have been done, be- caufc all could not be done that they would have had.- There feems little AND LETTERS. 55 J little queftion but that there are different defigns amongft thefe who call thernfelves patriots. If thefe could be difcovered, which cannot be done, unleis by accident, without a great deal both of money money and application, it would ferve much to difappoint bad de- figns. Your old friend fpared nothing of this kind, and it pleafed God to make him fuccefsful -in it ; and fomewhat of it fticks to him to this day. It were to be wifhed, that the King's return to Britain might be as foori as his affairs can permit, that folid meafures may be laid down for the future. It were much to be wilhed, that any could be fo happy, as to be inftrumental in making a good under- ilanding between the King's true friends, and thofe who are really concerned for the proteftant religion in both kingdoms, and to re- move miftakes ; for, without this, I cannot probably fee a good iffue, but that things fhortly muft come to a crifis. The King's maga- zines here are empty, money wanting, and the difpofition of many of the forces not good, and thofe who are difcontented undervaluing the government; few in it but they have their cenfures of them. It were good things were timeoufly adverted to. I can fay no more. 78 wrote to 76, and inclofed to the Secretary. He wrote alfo to 33» the laft poft fave one, to which he will expedt a pofitive anfwer. The Treasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares. Anxious for the King^s fpeedy Return. — ITis Majejly*s Prefence in Scotland abfolutely neceffary. — Would •willingly beg of the Kingy upon his Knees, to give his Office to fame one of the Oppofition, if it break the Party. S I R, The accounts we have of his Majefty's fixed refolutian to go be- Edlnburgli^ yond feas gives but fmall, or no hopes, that the bad ftate his affairs 1 700.^' are in here (vvhereof he is acquainted by feveral of his fervants) will make him alter his refolutions. I hope his Majefly will have thoughts 552 STATE-PAPERS thoughts oS returning to Britain, yea to Scotland, before October next ; things caJl loud for it. I pray God they call not yet louder, it feems tlie opinion fent to his Majcfty by the laft memorial does not pleafe. The commiffioner, on Monday laft, called fcv^rals to- gether, and afkbd what they xwdjuM advife the King as to the meet- ing of the parliament the 13th of Auguft. They have unanimoufly agreed, that his M^fty's prefence is moft neceffary, and the moft profeable remedy onr idiftemper can get at prefent to fettle them. You will no dosabt fee the mefnorial ; there is no other remedy propofed feom that meeting ; but I know it has been fuggefted to the com- miffioner, that, in cafe his Majefty cannot come in perfon, he may fend for fome of ^rfther party, viz. 29, 76, 78, 83; for the other 10 and 69. I agree to the propofal ; and it will have this efFe£t, as it will create jealoufies among them of the one fide, fo will it of the other too. I muft fey further, that there feems to be an abfolute neceflity of his Majefty^s fpeaking with the leading men of the o- ther party. Much might "be faid againft this method ; but fo are mattiers and things cireiHnftantiate at prefent, that I cannot but go akmgft with the propofat : Yea, and if the office I bear could take off any of them, and break the courfe of that party, I would beg it on my knees that his Majefty would fo difpofe of it. Monday's night, they concluded a new addrefs, which is deligned ftiould be as national as poffible ; it's much fmoother than once I heard it was like to have been ; many of the heads of it are in the memorial fent up, fo ftiall not repeat them ; they began to fign it laft night ; and, by the accounts we have of the many addrefles were coming in, had the parliament fat to-morrow, it's not to be doubted they will get a great number of fubfcriptbns. They are as keen as ever in afferting the right fo Caledonia; the fad news has rather encreafed their earneftnefs in this matter ; and the bufi- nefs of the rabble has not taken one man from the meeting at Steel's.- By the expence the troop of guards are at while they attend the Commiffioner, and the allowance the commiflaries have, by a letter from his Majefty I read in t'he treafury within thefe few days, to retain AND LETTERS. sS% retain in their hands the clothing-money due to the 8th troop, will fo diminifh the funds, that there will hardly be fubfiftence for Oc- tober. * By 8's xmpa 'tis underftood here, that 8 is Z28 3xqm6qp xzy 6tq 02y3xmuz6 2r 22 and 74. What 8 fays of 78's being uzSuyqxa uz du8t is p2q6 8729nxq 78, 78 wz2dq6 8 fo well that he will neither fpeak nor write of him. Farewell. LokD Advocate to Mr CarsTares. In the fame Strain "with the foregoing.-'— NeceJJity of the King^s ac- commodating Matters. S I R, Our difficulties are like to grow inftekd of abating. We have Edinburgh, agreed to a very plain and honeft memorial; but there appears a ne- •'"^^" '''° ' ceffity for an accommodation one way or other ; that is, either by his Majefly's prefence here, or his calling for fome to meet him there ; and, if yielding or fidlng be judged expedient, I know more than one that would very willingly quit both place and penfion £ot refettUng his prefent diforders. I heartily wifh that the thoughts of accommodation come not too late. All the vigour we can ufe here is well enough known ; but, plainly, matters are gone fo far, *a that all the vigour f offible will not retrieve them without a juft ma- nagement elfewhete : But I have writ fo fully, that I am weary to repeat ; only, I write the more freely, becaufe I know my own fin- cerity, and that I have neither defire nor defign but to do his Ma- jefty all the fervice that I can, while he thinks fit to require it of me; but reft £tnd quiet was never more defireable. I am your's. 4 A .Tft:EA- * By 8's lady 'tis underftood here, that 8 is not pleafed ; for {be camplains of Carftares and Seafield. What 8 fays, pf Ojmifton heing entirely in with Duke Haftiilton does not trouble me. I know S ft) tvell, that I will neither f][)eak'nor ■write of him. . . 554 STATE-PAPERS TRKASURER-DEPUTEtO Mr CaRST A RES. Of the Letter from Pinkerton and his Fellozv-prifoners, ivhich hloiv-s the Coal. i- S I R, Edinburgh, By a letter laft poft from Capt. Pinkerton and his fellow-prifon- ers, dated at Seville in Spain the 27th May, we underftand they are in very bad circumftances, the procefs going on againft them, and the court ready to fentence them to death as pirates. This they found upon the Jamaica proclamation, and fomething the King ihould have faid to the SpaniiGn ambaflador ; a copy of the letter is fent to his Majefty. You may be aflured this does not a little blow the coal here. I confefs the ufage is hard. You will have heard of a ftiip, in which our company had a fhare, lately come from Gui- nea with fome gold-duft to the value of L. 5000 Sterling : They are feeking to have it coined here, and that the company fliould have a mark upon it, as the guineas in England have the elephant under the King's head. I fhall be forry this be refufed. We have nothing more of moment; they are going on with their addrefs, get- ting fubfcriptions to it. They are putting themfelves under a refo- lution to drink no French wine, nor to wear any thing but what's manufadured in Scotland. God fend his Majefty fafe and foon back to us again. Farewell. Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Entreats him Jo have Perfons called up to London from both Parties. A n Accommodation more and more necejfary. SIR, Edmburgh, "^qxxx letters by the flying and ordinary packet came right to hand. 1700, The King's miniftcrs have again given their opinion and advice as plain AND LETTERS. S55 plain as they can, which, in few words, you may undcrftand that we have only fubfiftehce for the forces to the firft of December ; that, after December, even for guards and garrifons, we have but the excife, not exceeding per annum L. 26000 Sterling ; that there is a great fum of arrears due ; that the diflatisfied people grow in their demands and practices ; and that a parliament we muft have, or go to confufion. Men advife all that is decent ; but, in fuch cafes, more muft be underftood. I heartily pity the Commiffioner, who has neither fatisfadlion nor concurrence; and, it is notftrange concurrence fhould be fo backward, when no body can fee what fhall be the iffue. Some fay, there is no fear of a rebellion ; and I am fure there is not ; but rabbles there may be ; and, if not, yet things may turn fo as the government fhall be infignificant. And, therefore, I entreat with all earneftnefs, let not only the parliament, but perfons, be pleafed, fo far as the fecurity of the government will allow ; and remember, that neceffity and prudence does often faperfede the points of honour and pleafure. He is certainly an unhappy man that is not in any cafe for an accommodation; and nothing fo wife, juft, or good, as firft to fave and refettle, and then take meafures. I fuggefted from the beginning perfons fhould be called for, and tO"that it muft coriie, if his Majefty come not a- mongft us. I have no place either to fear or to feek ; but, had I the beft in the government, it fhould not ftand in the way^ Confufions are alfo contagious, and they will not be bounded, either in or to Scotland. I again, therefore, obteft, that things may be juftly con- lidered without delay ; and God dire£l all. Adieu. Sir'jtho' the memorial doth only fay, that his Majefty 's prefence is a probable mean of adjufting; yet it is the opinion of others, as well ■ as mine, that his prefence would be more than a probable mean for adjufting and compofing either one way or another ; and, if perfons ■ muft be noticed, and an accommodation made, his Majefty may incline rather to take that courfe here than to fend for perfons ; for, whatever way things be fettled here, if not by downright yielding, (which, it's hoped, in this cafe, will not be the ftrait), it will always 4 A 2 be SS^ S T A T E - P A P E R S be kisMajefty*s honour and advantage } and therefore his coming is very much defired. Sir, pardon all this freedom ; for fuch is my lincerity, that, if I were permitted, I think I would fay the fame- in his Majefty's own hearing, and, at leaft, obtain his pardon. Thom- fon's good treatment offended very much ; 1 3 hath neither the merit nor the weight. Ca'rfe and Hay are blamed for this ; but I think 33 gives him a hint to the contrary; and 32 wiflbed firft all well, and then it's time to reward ; for his part, he oft thinks it would be a g<3od reward to be at reft and free of this fatigue ; but 9^ is juft and good. . Murray of Philiphaugh» to Mr Car&tares. The Parliament mujl meet, or the Army he disbanded. — The King's . own Prefence in Scotland the only Remedy to the prefent Dijlr ac- tions in thai Country. The Malecontents keep a Correfpondence tvithfome Members of the Engli/h Parliament. SIR, Edinburgh, I received your's of the 4th of this, and defigned upon Tuef- lyo^"" day to have written by the poft ; but I expeaed a flying packet was to go off laft night or this morning ; and I know the Commif- fioner defigned it ; for he is very anxious to have a plain ftate of the King's affairs laid before him, with a plain and clear advice from his fervants, what meafures are moft proper forhisMajefty in this jundure ; and, for this end, his Grace has had conference fre- quently with them ; and I believe, with the packet thefe goes with, his Majefty will receive a memorial containing the refult of all thefe conferences. AH I can tell you is, that it feems indifpenfibly neceffary that there be a good correfpondence preferved betwixt the King and his parlia- ment ; Themfon, Annandale. 13, Queenfberry. Carfe^ Mr Carftares. Hayy Scafield. 32> Advocate. AND LETTERS. ^s7 ment; for, without that, the meeting of parliament might be of moft dangerous confequence ; and, without a meeting of parliament, the government cannot be legally fupported for any time, efpecially after fo many addrefles for its meetingand fitting. After the ftri£teft account, it is found, that there is but fubfiftence for the prefent forces till December ; andj^ without a parliament give new funds, and confent to their continuance, it is doiibtful if by law more forces can be kept up in peace than the inland excife can maintain, which, as I am informed, amounts now but to L. 26,000 Sterling. The rea- fbn of the doubt in this cgife is, that though there be no exprefs adt difcharging the keeping up an army ; yet, it is one of the rea- fons of the forfeiting Ring James, and it is one of the grievances re- prefented to the King by our meeting of eftates at the offer of the crown. And the a£t of parliament 1698, laying on funds for two years for paying the army, bears exprefsly the parliament's confent for. their continuance for chat time ; fo it is not to be doubted, but cautious wary men will be fliy to concur any way in the owning or paying of fuch an army after that time, when they have fo much reafon to apprehend the parliament, when it meets, may take them to tafk for it. The only way that the King's fervants can yet think of it to bring us to a defired temper here is, the King's prefence a- mongfi us : And, though they will not perhaps take upon them to anfwer pofitiVely for his Majefty's fuccefs, yet I hope he will no- tice their repeated advice in this matter ; for, if he does not, I am afFraid he will have occafidn, ere long, to come another errand ; for, truly, with fubmiffion to others, I fufped neither his prefent eommifhoner, nor any his Majefty can employ, will be able to fer ve his Majefty in parliament any way to his falisfa£lion. Our fond- nefs for af&rting our right to Caledonia do,es rather inereafe as abate ; and it is now talked confidently, that there are alTurances from chief men of both houfes of parliament in England,, that, if we Itand firm to that point, they will, at their meeting, ftand by us, and join with us in it. What ground there is for this I know- not, but it does take ; and it is believed there is a correfpondence with J58 S T A T E - P A P E R S with fome people in England. I can affure you, our addrefles gain profelytes daily, and are fenfible of iit, and encouraged by it; and, to be fure, the fenfe of this will difcburage others ; for, generally, people are loath to incur the odium of their country, or to ftand up againft any thing thai feems univerfally acceptable : And I myfelf have obferved feveral. members of parliament who appeared firm, when they have been in the country fome time, and heard the fen- timents of their neighbours, they feem to waver ; fo you may be af- fured we are in very ill condition, and have the comfortlefs profpedl of growing daily worfe, unlefs the King come and fettle us himfelf. I pray God dire£i; and prefer ve him. What L wrote about the Commiffioner's allowance,, was not without his Grace's confent ; and you need not apprehend any mif- take from him in the matter. Some gave other advice afterward; and, -truly, when he gets the utmoft,itislik;eto be too dear bought; for he is!fo fretful and uneafy, becaufe he cannot ferve the King as he would, that it bereaves him of his very fleep ; and I am afraid it do foon impair his health. Dear Sir, adieu. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Entreats that Mr Carjiares ivill interceed ivith the King in behalf of Captain Pinker ton and his Creiv., ivho ivere fentenced to Death by the Spaniards. SIR, Whitehall, I hope this will find you fafe arrived, for we have had the wind J^Jy '*• fair ever fince you went. The letters from Scotland bring no further accounts; and I would not have written to his Majefty this night, but. that the ac- . counts from Spain do bear, that Captain Pinkerton, and thofe of his crew, are fentenced to die ; and, if they fufFer death, it will certainly much increafe the ferment in Scotland, as you wfell know j and I plainly think it will be an aft of injuftice and crtjelty in the King 1700. AND LETTERS. 559 King of Spain, and contrary both to the law of nations and his treaties with his Majefty ; for the true ftate of that affair is, that their fhip fprung a leak, and they ran into Carthagena, which was the neareft fhore for their fafety. And, when you fpeak of this matter to the King, do it with great concern, and I am hopeful his letters may yet come in time: For, though it were true that they are fentenced, as I am very apprehenlive it is, yet they fay, it is ftill competent for them to appeal to the court of Madrid. This is all at prefent from, Sir, Y. M. H. S. Lord President to Mr Carstares. Againjl calling up particular Perfons, and ivhy. — ^—The King's per-- fonal Prefence the only Cure ; and the hopes of it the only Re-- Jpite to the prefent Dijirefs of the Country. SIR, ' I know ye are fully informed of our circumffances and opinions Edinburgh^ here, both by memorials and private letters, to which I agree. In 170L"* ' Ihort, the moft probable mean to extricate us, and the King's af- fairs, out of the growing difficulties, were his own royal prefence amongft us. The Advocate , hath, long thought it neceffary to take off fome of thofe who are diffatisfied, which were no difficult bufi- nefs, if his Majefty were here ; then there would be opportunity to know the fentiments of all ; and, if either heads or tail be fatisfied, the reft muft follow ; and the apprehenfion of the influence of the- King's perfon .would make them doubt one aijother, and divide the knot ; whereas, if particular perfons -vyere called for, thefe would o- vervalue themfelves, and go up with engagements and Inflrudlions. Therefore I entreat you.ufe all your endeavours to perfuade the King to come in perfon. Vigour, is defired andexpeded from the King's fervants and, government here ; but it is hard for you, at a diftance, to underftand every thing that falls in the way. With- out 56o S T A T E - P A P E R -S out a good underftandbg betttrixtKiog and parlianieat, there is finall profped of prote£tion or outgate. This makes oppofers bold, and fome in the government faint : So thefe that would be more forward mufl-, in reafon, confider by whom they can aft ; and ten times bet- ter not enterprize, as fail in the exrecution. If a right underftanding were eftablifhed, all would go well again : The only cure will be, to bring the parliament to a temper. Confider how difficult that muft be, without the King's perfon ; certainly greater conceffions will be lefs acceptable from another. The Commiffioner is con- cerned, and careful to the laft degree ; and I am fure no body could do more, nor any fubje£t be more acceptable than he ; but the bun- dles of our company's difcouragements, and the flaming memoricff, raifed a ferment, and united all that were "angry on any account ; fo it requires conceffions, authority, and prudence to fet bufmefs right again. If our bad humours had no fiarther confequence than our own value, they might be better born 5 biit we can do more mif- chief than good ; and therefore it is of great importance to fet our bufmefs on a right foot .again. We have hitherto grbwn Wbrfe by delays ; an aflurance that tlie King would come in perfon would be the beft allay in the mean time. The thoughts of thefe things are very grievous here as well as with you ; but it's necefTary they ' fhould be known, that meafures may be taken accordingly. I only add, that I am fnoft fmcerely your hlimble fervant. ','JO: • ' . ■ Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares." A' Proclamation againji the Refolve in Steefs. ■ — Aii Addrefsjent through the Kingdom by the Oppqfition. SIR, Ediaburgh, I received both your letters, and did deliver your's to the Advo- J"^y '*• cate that was diredted^ to tne. What is the opinito df the King's fervants here, the Comrriiffioncr fends with the flying packet that goes 1700. AND LETTERS. 561 goes ofF this night, which ■ you will have a full account of. The council being informed that there was a refolve paft in Pet. Steel's, that they (hould engage not to wear any foreign cloth or fluffs, rior to drink nor bring home any French wines nor brandy, there was this day a proclamationemitted, which I havefent with this, and like- wife the addrefs that is to be fent through the kingdom, at the Com- miflioaer, E.-of Argyle, Treafiirer-depute, and Mr Francis Mont- gomery's defires. I writt with yefternight's pofl to Mr Pringle, that the King may difcharge or recal Prieflmiljie's commiflion for uplifting the vacant flipends ; for people who gets charity that way are mightily abufed by him, nor can the Lords get a fair account from him ; and though, a good time ago, the Lords difcharged him to a£t, yet he did ftill intromit ; and now they have fufpended him ; but they think it raofl neceffary that his comniiffion be recalled. We long to bear of the King's fafe arrival ; and I hope this fhall find you fafe at Loo. I am, SIR, Your moil affetSionate and fmcere lervant, ;. Carmichael. %[ There is a committee of council appointed to enquire after thofe who are engaged in that refolve. DUKE.of CiUJ;ENSBERRY tO Mr CaRSTARES. A third Defertion of Caledonia, has raifed the Ferment to a great- er Height i—as has the King's Reception of Sir Paul RycauJt. — The Cqfile viewed. — Li^ of Oncers not to be triified. — Bad ef- feSis (f Annandale* s additional Penfion. — -No Ties can bind fuch a Man- SIR, I received your letter by the flying ,p?icket, wherein I find the Hoiyrood- confidence you have in me by your freedom in writing, which I ^^°^^^' J"^^ 4 B fhall '^' ''°°* 562 S T A T E -PAPERS fhall every way endeavour to make fuitable returns to. The news which our company has gotten of a third deferfion of Caledonia, is fo far from cooling people, that it has raifed the ferment much be- yond what you faw it ; and nothing inflames more than the advices from Seville, of the ufage which Captain Pinkerton, and the other prifoners there, have had in their-trial ; for, by the inclofed, you may fee, that they have been treated as pirates, and the proclama- tions in the Weft-Indies adduced to declare them fo. There is an- other piece of news, which people here read in thepublic prints, that does not a little gall, which is, that Sir Paul Rycault was well . received by the King : This the diffatisfied people do fay, is a de- monftration of his having done acceptable fervice in the memorial of Hamburgh, which this nation refents more than all the injuries they fancy they have met with. Thefe unlucky accidents makes it almoft impoffible to ferve the King here with any fuccefs. Under fuch unhappy circumftances, you may eafily judge, that I cannot be very eafy, who am anxious in every thing that concerns his Ma- jefty's intereft ; however, nothing fliall difcourage me in the profe- cution of this bufmefs. I had a letter from my'L. Seafield, by his Majefty's command, ordering me to intim.ate to his fervants, that he expeded, in this jundture of affairs, that they would concur vigo- roufly with me in his bufinefs here during his neceflary abfence. I have acquainted them with his Majefty's pleafure ; but they do ftill continue mighty fhy and cautious, not only in their public actings, but in private advices. I ftiall not fay but they are true to the King j but, as things now ftand, what out of regard to national arguments, and what out of fear, and profpofi of little fupport hereafter, are become fo apprehenfive of the refentments of the people j that they are uncapable of carrying on any vigorous undertaking. In a fliort time I fhall be better able to give my judgement about them. The promoters of the new national addrefs have agreed upon a parole erf" honour to one another, not to buy or drink any French wine or brandy after a certain time, nor to wear any thing that is not ma- nufactured in this kingdom. Thefe refolutions of theirs, at the time when AND LETTERS. 563 when they know that they may have the fame things granted them in a legal way, are very infolent, and are noways authorifed by law; and, though the lawyers do fay that they cannot legally found any proclamation againft addreffing, becaufe of the claim of right ; yet, againft fuch proceedings as tend to diminifh the revenue, without the lea.H colour either from law or the claim of right, they think we are fulEciently founded to put a flop to them by proclamation, . and to punifh fuch as fhall aflbciate with them after fuch intima- tion; and, accordingly, a proclamation was this morning iffued out ; what effed: it will have, will- be known in few days. The King's advocate tells me, that he has as much in law againft the men that are to be tried on Monday for their actings in the late tu- mult, as many juftly take their lives. But we are fomewhat appre- henfive of the judges, However, it will give us an opportunity to know them ; and, as they Ihall ad:, we fhall take further meafures towards the profecution of that affair. The caftle of Edinburgh has been viewed, according to the King's pleafure, by my L. Car- michael and the Major-General,-with my L. Leven. They have re- ported the conditio^ of it ; and orders are given for all neceffaries to it that either our time or money can allow. I have advifed, as I was direded, and with all fecrecy, about the truft that may be re- pofed in the officers of the army. We have had the lift .of the whole before us: A great many of the gentlemen in the inclofed account are unknown to me ; but all of them are pitched on by fuch as are well acquainted with their qualifications and principles ; and I be- lieve the report is made with all integrity and due regard to his Majefty's fervice. I was fhy in meddling with my L. Teviot's regi- ment, left the King might think it yvas the effed of former grudges betwixt us ; but I am fure I have no thoughts of that nature; and, if his Majefty pleafes, he may caufe inquire at my L. Teviot, if he will be anfwerable for his regiment, and every one of his officers, if any thing fhould happen here ; and let him give his own charac- ters of them : But I am credibly iijformed, that moft of them will not anfwer thi? truft that is repofed in them. By the inclofed ftate 4 B 2 of ^^4 S T A' T E - P A P E R. S of the fiihds of the army, his Majefty will fee, that we are In a lit- tle better condition towards fiibfifting the army than we formerly r'eprefented. We did then think ourfelves to be more indebted to the ciiftomers than we found ourfelves to be upon a narrow exami- hation. of their accompts; fo the whole eftablifhment, if the King pleafes, may be fubfifted till the ift of December. The King has al- ready the opinion of his fervants about the meeting of the parliament; for which reafon I have made ufe of the letter to the privy coun- cil, that makes no mention of the parliament. As to what yoli write to me about my L. Annandale, it was no furprife to me when I heard of his behaviour ; but I wondered much at the King's to- wards him ; for, after the anger which he pubhcly exprefled at London, and the boafts, that I know from the perfons themfelves he made there, of his affe£tion to the intereft of Caledonia, for no other end but to gain a handle by it to refent his not being grati- fied in his unreafohable pretenfions ; I fay, after this, to reward him with an additional penfion, ferves only to encourage treachery and infolence : And I {who knows him better than all the wdrld does) can aflure you, that his additional penfioh, were it ten times more than it is, does not make the King one bit furer of him than he was without it; for no ties can bind him : And he would have been as honeft to the King's intereft. with what he had, as ever he can te with all the honours and penfions that the King is able to give him. And I do affure you, that not only his Majefty's fervants here, firorn the Chancellor to the loweft of them, are mightily diflktisfied and difcouraged by it, but it brings all thofe who had any preten- "fions to be gratified according to their behaviour in parliament up- ^n my top, who do not ftick to fay, that, fince his Majefty has be- igun to gratify fuch as were already fuffieiently provided by him, he fliould not delay his favours to fuch as have a more real need of them, and ferve with as much zeal, and more truft from the nation, in this, or any other jun<9:ure. Though I have no orders from his Majefty to afk any further advice from his fervants in relation to what their opiriion has been already traafmitted about, yet I have ^ire- AND 1 E T T E R S. 565 frequent conferences with T^hem about his affairs ; and I fend you here inclofed their futther thoughts in thefe matters ; for I judge it neceffary that the King fhould have every thing laid before him. You fee their advice is in two branches ; the firft of which is cer- tainly the beft. But, if his Majefty can comply with neither, I am affraid that -they will advife no further in that cafe. „vlf you can think of any thing that can be done otherwife, let tne have the King's commands, and I fhall, to the beft of my power, put them in execution. By the inclofed ftate of the funds of the army, you will only fee how long they can be fubfifted ; and, as to the arrears that will be due to therci the ift of December, Sir Thomas Mon- crieff could not get it exaftly drawn now ; but you fhall have it by next poft. As to your kind offer of endeavouring with the King to get my allowance continued, I own my obligation to you for it ; but aiji unwilling that his Majefty fliould be preffed in it, left he fhould think me too much interefted, and might be then apt to judge that I feek myfelf, more than him, in his fervice. If his Majefty ■fhall be pleafed to order it, I fhall look upon it as a favour ; but fhall be noways difgufted if he does not. I can very well, and with much patience, truft his royal bounty with any recompence that he may defign hereafter for my fervices or expenees. After fo long and tedious a letter, I can only have time to fay", that you fhall al- ways find -fmctrely your's, &c. I ferid you inclofed the Advocate and other lawyers qpinion a- bout the King's power in keeping up the army, which is fit to be laid before his Majefty when you have an opportunity. Earl of Argyle to Mr-CARSTARES. A very full mid plain Account ofPerfmsand Things. Anxious to fee bow the Judges ivill behave in the Trial of the Rablers. S I R, In obedience to his Majefty's commands, I came. hither with all Edinburgh, cdnvenient fpeed; and, though- 1 arrived after the iay the parlia- ^^^l^}' ment .5^66 S T A T E - P A P E R S ment had been laft adjourned to, yet there was no loft, fince no- thing occurred that required niy preferice. By what I can under- iland, the ferment is nothing abated, but people madly infifting Hill to have a ratification of Caledonia, (though not in being); yet I am <)f opinion, if the charge of the government could for fome time be fupported without them, our affairs and humours would generally return tb their former fta:te and confiftency. I find 'his Grace the "Commiflioner mightily concerned in affairs, and the fuccefs of them, and moft affiduous : And I am the better pleafed I halted down, fi nee I fee the backwardnefsof moft'in the government, indiffe- rence and cowardice they fhow atthis juft(3:ure. I am glad 1 dare affure you, that the Prefident of the feUion and Philiphaugh are the mofl; forward ; and, did the Advocate's courage fuflain him, he would do well, and I hope he improves.' I have fpoke very plain- ly my opinion of their Carriage at this time; I was told 1 retained ftill the court-air, which I faid fhould remain with me, were I left alone. What difcourages mofl the bed inclined, is the danger hereafter of not being protedbed, (not that theydiftruft his Majefty 's firmnefs); for, fay they, the funds for maintaining the army are al-^ mpfl exhaufled. Wc faw lately what treatment is to be expeded from a rabble, when we want a face to defend us. There is no ex- pe£tation of a frefh fupply at prefent from a parliament. That of the claim of right, in relation to a {landing army, does not fo much flraiten them, if fo that the army could be maintained ; for all agree, that taking free quarter is a breach of the claim of riglit. The Commiffioner is to fend an exa£t ftate of the funds, and a lift of the army, how they fland affected, which his Grace has concerted with the Major-General, and others of us who wifh his Majefty beft. The enemies of the government I find harve been very bufy amongft the forces, and particularly in the core I command. If a fpeedy courfe be not took, it may prove dangerous ; yet, if his Majefty a- gree to the alterations propofed, we dare anfwer for them hereaf- ter. Perhaps, the propofal to difband Teviot's regiment may ap- pear to his Majefty as out of pick to Teviot ; but, I do pfoteft, had I AND- LETTERS. 567 I the command of it myfelf, or any well afFeded to his Majeftj had it, they would defire the difbanding of it, and levy it a-new. They are difagreeable to the country, having been the chief inftru- ments in the former reigns. The ftock of thefe men remains ; and, what betwixt Jacobites and Caledonians, (which I believe will prove the fame to our King), there are not above four officers in the re- giment to be preferved. The moft confiderable of the rabblers are fled, the others feized ; fome of them are to be tried Monday next. We wait with mighty impatience to fee the behaviour of the judges in this cafe. There is a proclamation defigned to be iffued out, of a reward to any difcoverers ; but firft we wait the event on Monday. You may have heard that Pet. SteePs parliament had entered inta a refolve about French wines and brandy, &c. exprefsly contrary to law, upon which we have iffued out a proclamation, a copy whereof I fhall endeavour to fend you. In this very ftroke, a deal of baek- wardhefs was fhowed, which did .oblige me to.fhow a little court- 'air, as they call it. His Grace is refolved to pufh this, and all o- ther handles for his Majefty's fervice, wherein I fhall a£t my part faithfully and fervently ; and, whatever the event may be, I fhall* adtas in duty bound to his Majefly, who reflored me to all I have. I received your's by my fervant, dated the 6th inflant, from Lon- don. As to E. Annandale's additional penfion, it was a furprize to all, and even to me, who had fo lately parted with the Secretary. 1 am far from envying him ; for, I take God to witnefs, could I have obtained L. 1000 Sterling of penfion for the afking at this time, I had not done it, nor been guilty of it ; and I wifh. Seaficld had not humoured him in it ; for I told you both, there was no fear of lofing him when he could not better himfelf., .It will do hurt as to others who have received promifes, and one excufe -was. made to all ; fo that the rule being broke^ what can we fay ? His lady proclaims the additional penfion i nor can we anfwer for the. King's affairs, if any Secretg,ry will take upon him, in fo rnaterial points, to alter meafures, which I wifli- you may excMier us all in, by acquainting his Majefly. I liave already had it caft up to me ;: and 568 STATE-PAPERS and I have no way to apologize, but to exclaini too ; and I am mif- taken if my L. Seafield has not raifed a new ftorm againft himfelf by it. He has not .writt one fylablc to me ; and I believe dare not. He has given E. Errol out his penfion for L. 300 Sterling : It is paft in the exchequer, and ough^to, have been forbore for fome time, I fhall be in as good terms with E. Annandale as poffible ; nor fhall I ftick at any thing for his Majefty's fervice. E. Melvin is over the water, and I am told is going for the Bath. It is ftrange he ihould adt fb lukewarm a part at this time, when he has the caftle fo near him to retreat to : Sure I am, he owes the King a great deal. Now, I muft conclude with recommending to you the Fra- zers bufinefs, fince Seafield had not the courage to counterfign it in England* (though, for fear, he has made a bolder ftep finc.e^ : I am fure by it I can gain the King 600 men upon all events. I am your's.' Adieu. It is all our opinions, that it will conduce to his Majefty's fervice^ that, at this jundure. Lord Glenorchy he put upon the council. I fend not a double of their late addrefs, having given the Coininif- fioner a double to tranfmit. Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares. Jfthe Account of the Divifion of the Spanijh Territories prove true., it luill ruin all ; becaufe it 'will give the King's Enemies in this Country fuch a handle againft him. SIR, Edinburgh, I have frequently writt to you, and have received your's ; but, ^700.'^* fof Mr Pringle, he gives me not one for three. I expeded, at leaft, one of the King's fafe arrival, for I fuppofe he went along with his Majefty. I fent him a copy of a letter that came from Pinker- ton and the prifoners that are at Seville, about five weeks ago, to give to the Vifcount of Seafield, and had no account of it till laft poft from 1700. AND. L E T T E R' S. 569 from my L. Seafield, which is an anfwer to another melancholy let- ter that I fent up a fortnight before this ; and now I fend you* the Edinburgh gazette, which will let you know what the council has done for thofe prifoners relief. I muft tell you, there is an printed account come laft ppft of the divifion of the Spanifli territories ; if it be true, is moft furprifing here to all the King's faithful fervants, and certainly will be much more to thofe ,in England ; for it can- not be but it will ruin all ; nor will I believe that it is a true pa- per till I hear from you, which I plead you may let me know as foon as this comes to your hand ; for it is of great concern to his Majefty's affairs, becaufe his enemies has fo great a handle to make an ill ufe of it. Though it be late, I could not forbear but to write of this to you. My L. Lauderdale and my lady give their lincere fervice to you ; and be pleafed to give my moft humble duty to my noble friend, whofe faithful fervant I am ever obliged to be : Be pleafed to let me know how his Lordfhip is. I remain fmcerely your's. to Mr Carstares. Of an AffaJfinationPlot. Reverend SIR, A matter of dangerous confequence is writt privately from Scot- London, land, and comes to my knowledge by a miracle. Without inqui- J"*^ '*• ring further, you know your duty. An old man in the Highlands of Scotland, who is faid to have the fecond fight, has prophefied to one of them who remains of the family of Glenco, that he fhall de- liver three nations. This is pernicioufly underftood ; and it*s faid that he has gone with mifchievous complices for Holland. The De- vil is bufy. God prevent the public danger. This is enough at prefent from a well wifher, and who is, in trembling, S I R, Your faithful humble fervant. 4C - J. 4t 570 STATE-PAPERS J. Stewart to Mr Carstares, The Oppojition talk of a Meeting of EJiates at Per thy if the King •will not gi'ue them a Parliament. But this, all Stuff, if things go ivell in England. Endeavours to corrupt the Officers. Worthy SIR, Edinburgh, j have fent you the inclofed, becaufe many were curious to know July 18. , ' . ' 1700. the particulars of this accompt. We are keen for a war with Spain, though I find money come but flowly in to pay their debts, and they are loath to ufe diligence for making the countrey their enemies. The addrefs is making its tour, and is conveyed by fome of the party through the feveral provinces ; they brag that there will be fo many thoufand hands to it, that the King cannot refufe them a par- liament ; and yet one would think it were calculate, rather for the Englifh parliament, than to procure one of our own. If the King do not let them meet, they talk, by way of argument, that Perth is the fitteft place for their convention of eftates; they have Athol,and a part of the Highlands, at their backs ; the town itfelf, and the fe- veral ihires about, their friends, and fear nothing from the army ; for they fay they believe them honefter men than to inflave their native country to arbitrary power and oppreffion. But this is all ftufF ; if things go right in England, there is nothing here can hurt us ; all is qiuet, and will continue while England firft take fire. The Qeneral laft week called for a lift. of all the officers of the army. This has alarmed us like an inquifition; and there being fome horieft men delated, makes me think that this may.be a politic of the other par- ty, to give out, they make ftate upon them, on defign to throw them under the fufpicion and jealoufy of the court; and there is nothing vexes an honefl man more than to fufpe£l him. I doubt not but the General will manage this matter warily. The truth is, he has good reafon to have a watchful eye upon us and the foldiers both. A fol- dier that hath but three-penee-halfpenny ia-day may be eafily de- bauched ; AND LETTERS. 571 bauched ; and I know there are endeavours ufed to corrupt the offi- cers. They propofe to provide for us in their militia, better than a- ny thing our pay now amounts to. They tell us, we may defpair of our arrears ; the parliament owes us nothing, and the exchequer is fuper-expended. They tell us, they know that there is never a captaiii has had fixty, nor a lieutenant thirty, nor an enfign twenty-four pounds a year, fince we came to Scotland. This is too true; (and, the' I have not a fhilling to ware), I wifh it were poffible that fome ar- rears were paid. My Lord Commiffioner goes upon Saturday to the country. They fay the Earl of Annandale is coming down not well pleafed. I am fincerely. Dear SIR, Your faithful and obliged fervant, J. STEWART. Duke of QuEiNSBERRY to Mr Carstares. Urges the King's Prefence.' Wants much Support in carrying on Meafures ^th Vigor. The Trial of the Rioters put off by a real or pretended Sicknefs of the Advocate. SIR, Since I wrote laft to you I have had no letters from you; fo I have Holyrood- but little to trouble you with at this time, only, to let you know that 19." 1^700.^' moft of our angry people are^one to the country to get fubfcriptions to their new addrefs, which is in fo high terms that, I am told, many are afraid to fign it ; which gives fome hopes of a divifion a- mong themfelves about it. I have had meffages from fome, by which they fay, that they will never pufh things to extremities with the King, which I fhall take care to improve, fo far as I can. Yet, after a;ll, I cannot depend upon fuch general aflurances, fo as either to take or give meafures by them ; aud his Majefly's fervants do continue in the opinion already offered, that nothing is fo certain 4 C 2 for • 572 STATE-PAPERS for his Majefty's interefthere, as his own prefence among us. I dare not, indeed, pofitively aflure his Majefty, that every thing will go to his mind ; but, in my own niind, I think he would infallibly bring things to a happy iflue ; for his prefence would give life to his fervants, and lay a reftraint on the infolencies of his enemies; be- fides, he will have oceafion to difcourfe with all ranks of people here ; and, I believe, he may foon be able to divide the party ; for, by taking off a few, the reft would become fo jealous and diffident of one another, that they would foon moulder to nothing. Where- as, if he fhould call any of them to London, he would call but a few ; and, without doubt, the calling of them would raife their ex- pectations and demands ; and, to be fure, their party would put them under ftridt engagements, not to comply but on their terms ; and, in cafe they fhould be brought to yield any thing, without the par- ty's confent, I do not believe it would be in their power to bring the party to yield to their meafures : And, though Duke Hamilton has helped a little to knit the party, yet I know he is noways maf- ter of it. In this matter of calling of perfons, I do not prefume to offer my opinion to his Majefty ; fo I ftiall only tell it to you, that I do not fee any advantage to his fervice by it, but rather a lofs, both of honour and intereft, if it fhould be done without any infinuation from them of waiting upon him. Since the proclamation that I gave you account of in my laft, I do not yet hear of any farther progrefs in the m-atter of the refolve; and, if I do, it fhall not be my fault if the perfons that fhall proceed in it be not punifhed, as far as the law can allow it. The trials of thofe who are accufed on ac- count of the rabble, was put ofi^ from laft Monday till the next, ei- ther by a real or a pretended ficknefs of our friend the Advocate, who was in perfed health the next morning. Such accidents do great hurt, and make people fay that we dare not try them. The diffi- culties that I meet with in thefe matters, by not having the fupport of others in the duties of their offices, lies heavier upon me than you can imagine ; however, I will do my part, with all the zeal and faithfulnefs that I am capable of. I am obliged, by neceffities of my private AND LETTERS. 573 private bufinefs, and fomewhat on account of my buildings, to go to-morrow morning to my houfe in the country, where I Ihall not ftay above two days ; and I have taken care that my little abfence fhall not flop any public concerns. It is a great fatisfadtion to me to hear from you ; wherefore, pray let it be as often as you can» which will extremely oblige me, who am your's fincerely, &c. My Lord Annandale is expeded here on Tuefday ; I fhall carry towards him with all the civility that's poffible for me, though, in my heart, I cannot but refent his unworthy behaviour at this time. Earl of Marchmont, Lord Chancellor, to Mr Carstares. A Defence, of his oivn Condu5l at this JunSiurCt againfl an Accufation of him to the King, as too foft and gentle in his Meqfures. SIR, I am unalterably perfuaded of your good and true friepdfliip for Holytood- me, though I had not got frefli accounts of it from good hands. It 19. 1700. is talked by many here, that fome have fpoke of me to the King, as if my way were too foft and gentle for fuch occafions, and fuch a time as we now have in Scotland. But, if ever Lbe fo happy as to fee the King, I will convince him of the difcretion of my part, and that I have adted prudently for his fervice, as I am able to convince all o- thers, unlefs it be fuch as are difpofed to find me faulty ; and I will fay, that their charging me with that as an error, in this time, is a greater proof of their want of underftanding, than of any thing elfe; and I doubt not but a fliort time will make it evident, that the King's fervice is at no lofs by the carriage which I chufe. The party here is carrying on an addrefs, and with It a refolve upon parole, which is clearly a league or combination contrary to law, for which they are punifhable by the council, as his Majefty's fervice may re- quire it. I fend you here the proclamation againft the refolve. I have 574 STATE-PAPERS have not time to write now fo fully as I would, but fliall do it by the next. I am, SIR, Your humble iervant, and true friend, MARCHMONT. Lord Advogate to Mr Carstares. les Ms Excufefor not attending the Trial of the Rabblers. Propqfe fome. AlUrat'tons in the M.miftryv~~^Wifhes to retire. SIR, Tuiy 23 ^ heard from my Lord Seafield of your parting, and I hope this *7oo« fhaiU find you fafe and well on the other fide. My laft, under Lord SealSeld's cover, was plain and full ; at prefent, many are gone to the country, and the addrefs is carried on there; but in Edinburgh we are more quiet, but no reafon to change any advice hath been gi- ven. The rabblers fliould have been tried Monday laft ; but the Advocate fell fo fuddenly ill that morning of a fit of the gravel, that he was forced to go to bed ; but, though he -fent for the Juftice- Clerk, and prayed the court might only adjourn till the Tuefilay, that he might not be called a trowan, yet the Lords adjourned till Monday the 22d, and then the trial goes on. The African compa- ny licenfed a ftiip to go to Guinea, with their pafs, for five percent. The liiip is returned to Leith with about feventy pound weight of gold, which the company hath bought, and petitioned ^he council to have coined with their mark, the rifing fun, like the pig guineas, that have the elephant under the face. This was foon perceived to be a defign of popularity ; but they being purpof(^d, either to have their mark allowed, or to fend out the gold uncoined, which would make more clamour, the Advocate, and others, thought it beft to grant the thing as a fmall ceremony ; and old 27 and 57 were of the fame minds; but $$ being croCs, the matter ftuck : And, when it was faid, 27, Marchmont. 57, Carmichael. 55, Argyle. AND LETTERS. 575 faid, that this was fought only to inflame 32 and ttie reft, though convinced the refufal' would be more inconvenient, yet were filen't, becaufe it is eafy to turn andi apply events ; but, after fome more difcourfe, the thing was granted. I muft ftill tell you that matters muft be accommodate ; for, if either the parliament meet, or the forces go down, and other things be not done through its not meet- ing, matters will go to confufion j but it is more and more thought* that, if his Majefty could come amongft us before the parliament, his prefence would compofe matters, for the generality are yet true to the King ; and even the chief of them had rather ferve under him as another : So that, as diflFerences ftand, it is thought both the coun- try and perfons may be pleafed with a little accommodation. I thought, at firft, this might have' been done by calling up perfons ; but now his Majefty's prefence would do better ; and things are gone too far to be treated elfewhere than here ; and a fortnight in October would, in my opinion, do the bufmefs. It is true, fome change muft be ; and I know fome that, with their heart, would change themfelves out, for a re-fettlement, to his Majefty's fatisfa£tion; fuch as Hume, Neall, and two of Watfon's friends. The adminiftrar- tion alfo requires amends, as you have feen ; but a hint is enough in fuch matters : Public matters then a>-part. Coltnefs' penfion on the bilhops rents is not worth a groat ; that fund is quite wafted. A fmall relief for that family, for all its fufferings,is what I have been begging thefe ten years. I had once his Majefty's favour for L. I ©00 fterling, and it faikd not on his Majefty's ^art ; but you know how it failed ; and therefore, I muft ftill intreat, and hope for his Majefty's kindnefs, either to tranfport this penfion to the civil lift, or for the L. 1 000 was promjfed. I fay nothing for my own fa- tigue, fpecially this fummer; but I hope my growing years will bring {bme relief, if not a bill of eafe. My dear friend, think on thefe things, and tell me what I may hope for, for I am weary of writing. I envy no man, but muft obfervc what favours are done to others, and cannot but judge.it a folly to have the name of nothing. As for your friend White, Iwifli himwell. 52 it is thought may be 2; and if 57^ S T A T E - P A P E R S if 10 would be i, Wat might be Ker, and Wy lie is. well enough, having ftill 75; or, if, 55 could leaye Watfbn, there is room; but « Harris is mainly wanting; and 40 muft be cared for. If Mr Ellis were I, or could be fatisfied, fufficient men might be found for Harris; and I wifh Dawfon were here, fori pleafe him well; but, if it muft be one of 94, then 10, 35, or ^j ; but they will not, and o- tliers will not, have 13, and for old Erlkin or Hill, or any of that kind, I think it is not come to that. Some would make Hume an old pope; but it -is a fcorn; he had rather Campbell would change; but he is wifer. Adieu. : « Treasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares. Matters do not mend. — The African Cortipany* s Coinage. SIR, Edinburgh, Many of the company have been in this place are gone into the 1 700. * ' country, few expe£ting the parliament will meet the 1 3th of Auguft. The treafurer-depute was prefent when the Commiffioner advifed with the officers what the flying packet brought, of the I'lth in- ftant, and drew out the ftate of the funds ; but could not write, being obliged to go ftraight from the G)mmifEoner to the tide, to bring his lady from Leflie. What the flying packet of yefterday's date brings, I know not, nor was I acqu'ainted with it's going off. There is little to write from this, but to tell you, we are not like to mend. Our treafury is exhaufted. I can fay it, Scotland never had a poor- er treafury ; nor was there ever a time draughts came fo throng un- der a King's hand as I have feen of late. You will hear of an ap- plication to the council from the African company about the coin- ing fome gold -they have got from Guinea. They defired a mark, fuch as the company's creft, upon the coin. The council granted this. I am fure, to have refufed it, would have inflamed the rec- koning, as the accounts from Captain Pinkerton and his company does. AND LETTERS. 577 does. The CoMmiffionef re ^one tifits day W Dmmlanrig^, and re- taras the middle of thie week. Parewel. The tf ial of tfee rabWeits was put off Mottday laft till Monday liext, by teafon the Advocate was taken ill of a colic. I believe his har6Mp has little confide^nce that tht Lords of jufticiafy will find flie crime eapital 8116228 aq8 myyubqp t(i tm6 nqqz du8t 66. Lord Seat i eld to Mr Carstares. The FBrment rtither abated fmce the Arrival of Campbell of Fanak — His Accmints of the 'Co'ltmy. All the Jacobites concur in the Addrefs.- And thdfe tit St ^erMains found their Hopes upon it. SIR, You will receive a letter from my LordCopvmiflioaer by this pac- Whitehall, ket, which was fent open to me that I might read it ; and by it you \^J^^' will perceive, that our ferment does rather abate than increafe fmce the arrival of Captain Campbell. He does blame the mifmanagement both of the dire£tors, and of thofe of the colony, for the misfortune that has happened ; and I have feen fome letters from the planta- tions that confirm this report ; but, at the fame time, his Majefty*s fervants coftti-nue in their opinion, that the parliament fhould not meet during his abfence from Britain ; and they do alfo think it needful, that, if it be poflible, that his Majelly hold the next feflion in perfon, for there are a great many other things to be adjufted be- fides that of Caledonia. I forgot, in my laft, to write to the King concerning the refolve -which a great many have agreed to, that they would drink no French wine after the ift of January next, and that they fhould wear no cloth or filk fhifts but wllat is manufadu- i-ed within the kingdom, after fuch a certain time. But the Lords to S7^ S T 'A T E - P A P E R S to have a great meeting of the dife^ors, which will certainly be the arife to fome new projeft or other. It is faid, that the prefbyterian minifters continue very firm in their duty to the King on this occa- fion, and that fome of the trading towns do abftain from the ad- idrefs. I am more afraid of the fuccefs of it in the northern coun- tries, there being a more general inclination there towards Jacobi- tifm ; for it is certain that the whole Jacobites concur in it with all their vigor ; and I have feen feveral letters from France, which bear, that, at St Germains, they lay all their expedtations upon the event of the diforders that are in Scotland. Your laft letter to me was from Amfterdam, and you infinuate in it, that you believe I may be called over to Loo ; if his Majefty intends to do it, give me timely advertifement ; and, feeing it is impoflible I can bring any equipage with me, you muft endeavour, fome way or other, to fecure me in lodgings, and I fliall be fatisfied you take the beft, coft what it will, if I be not allowed fome conveniency at the court. This is all at pre- fent from, Sir, your M. H. S. Earl of MfiLviLto Mr Carstares. ^ite difconfolate under the djfiraBed State of the Country. ^-^A Din." ner at Duke Hamilton's Lodgings ; and ithat pajfed betiveen him and Lord Leven. Rev. S I R, Edinburgh, What with a great cold I have contradled, and grief of mind to 1700,* ^^^ *^'® P^^'^ nation grow ftill madder and madder, I have wrong- ed my health fo much, that I have not been able either to write or do any thing thefe feven weeks by gone ; and, at laft, I am advifed by my phyficiana to go to the Bath for my recovery ; and, in a few days, I defign to begin my journey, if I be able. Sir, I doubt not but you have heard from others with what infolency the King's e- nemies have a^ed againft his government and minifters here of late. I do AND LETTERS. 579 I do not think that ever the like was done before in any place of the world, where there ,was but the leaft face of a government ; and yet we have not the courage nor the honefty to call thefe rebels to an account for it ; which gives fuch encouragement to others, that, in a little time, I believe the whole nation will throw off their allegi- ance and duty to his Majefty ; for his enemies do daily increafe ; and, for my part, I fee few or none take any pains to hinder it. If I durft write names and perfons to paper, you would be allonifhed to fee with what lukewarranefs our mafter is ferved by a great ma- ny of thefe who call themfelves his minifters, and are in the govern- ment : They adl as if they expeded another mafter in a fhort time ; and this I will make appear to you at meeting. I will entertain you, Sir, for no longer with this melancholy fubjedl, only give you an account of a paffage which happened fome days ago, which is this : D. Hamilton, upon his lady's birth-day, invited the Commiffioner, Argyle, and Leven, with fome others, to dinner, where they eat and drunk plentifully ; and the mafter of the feaft being fooner overta- ken than the reft, began to open , his mind very freely to my Lord Leven, by telling of him that he loved him, and would do him all the fervicc he could, if he would but come into his intereft ; yea, he went fo far as to tell him, that he would obtain a pardon for him. With this my Lord Leven was furprifed, and told him very brilkly, That he did not know what his Grace meant, for he blefled Go4j that he never a£ted any thing againft King William to deferve a pardon ; and, as for King James, he would never have one from him, with fome other words to this purpofe ; with which the Duke was a little confounded, and endeavoured to put another fenfe upon it ; and fo, fome company joining.of them, the difcourfe was let fall: But, a little after, he called my Lord aiide again, and told him, he would to God he would fave his coufin Queenfberry, for he belie- ved him to be a man of integrity and honour. This is, Sir, all truth, and I can prove it. It is true, the Duke was very drunk; but poji vinum Veritas. I firmly believe that thefe two noblemen, whom his Grace thought to debauch from their duty, are two of the beft 4 D 2 and 5^e3ad upon this. My L. Annandale came here the night before I came to town ; he makes great profeffions of friendftiip to me ; but I find that he has his own grudges againft ifty L. Seafield and yon, though he is fparing to Ihew them before me. His additional pension has not made him mu'ch firmer to the fervice than he would have been withottt It ; and, if his Majeft^ confiders the time of afking it, and the method of doing it, he can never think him a man that ferves out of honour and principle. I muft intreat of you to i^cak to the King in favour of my Lord Bal- lantyne; he has continued very firm to hisMajefty's intereft, tho' there has been great pains taken to ftiafce him otherwtife : He has a numerous family, and not much to fupport it ; and, becairfc I know he was a little ftraitened, I have 'given him L. 100, for which I defire a warrant payable tome : And, if his Majefty would beplea- fcd, in the fame paper, and ifl the fame way, to give affcfwante for a gratuity to Mr Pat-erfon, of arny fum not exceeding L. 100, 1 think it may be of ufe. He has been with me feverai times of lafe; and, as he was the firft man that brought people here into the projedr of Caledonia, fo I look upon him as the propereft perfon to twing them off from the extravagancy of profecuting it. I find him. very reafonable upon the head ; and he fays, that he is now writing fiich things (which he has promiTed to fhew me before they ap- pear to any perfon) as I do hope may create fome temper amongft them : And I doubt not but in time to be able to make a right ufe of him ; and' the more, becaufe I know be is well affedted to the prefent government : So a little gratuity will not be amifs j and the rather, becaufe he has not been well vded by the company with relation to his own private bufinefs; While I was in the coimtry, I received a letter from the Chancellor, of which I fend you a copy inclofed. I cannot yet learn -whether the perfon mentioned in it is gone AND LETTERS. 585 gone to Holland or not. The treafury fcrupled to give ' the Chan- cellor L. 100 for the man's ufe, becaufe they were neither acquaint- ed with his name nor his bufmefs. I have not feen the man ; but I have made the Chancellor write for him, if he is ftill in the king- dom. The Chancellor fays, that he knows him perfectly well, and gives a good charadier of him ; fo, if the man comes hither, I think, upon the Chancellor's engagement, I will rather venture the L. 100, than that any thing that may be of ufe for the King's fervice fhould be kept from his knowledge. I luuft tell you one thing, which you muft keep very fecret ; I had yefterday a private meffage from my coufin my Lady Marfhall, by which fhe tells me, that fhe does not doubt of bringing her Lord intirely under my diredion, pro- viding that fhe may have leave to promife him a penfion of L. 300 as E. Marfhall. I have allowed her to do it ; and, if I had the gift in my cuftody, I doubt not of breaking him off from that party ; and lara fure he fhould never receive it till I had certain proofs of his fmcerity ; for the knowledge of its being in my power would go ten times further than all the proniifes I can make : And, though his intrinfic value is not very confiderable, yet, at this time, he has great intereft with the north-country members, and can do as much towards breaking off that party as any man in the kingdom. I have alfo, from a friend of Sir Fran. Scott's, good ground given me to think, that he might now be taken off by the matter of works' place ; fo I defire that you would alfo fpeak to his Majefly, that a patent may be immediately fent to me, either blank, or in Sir Francis's" name, which fhall not be delivered but according to his behaviour. In fhort, if money could be had, I would not doubt of fuccefs in the King's bufmefs here ; but the low condition of oiir treafury keeps many things out of my power, which otherwife I could eafily compafs. The King's Advocate has promifed to give you the particulars of the trial of the perfons who were guilty of break- ing open the prifon ; however, I muft let you freely know, that it's impolTible to procure juftice through fuch a chahnel as we have at prefent ; and I am certainly informed, that the Advocate faid lately 4E to $^6 S T A T E - P A P E R S to a Jacobite, thatwas foliciring him in favours of tliofe fdlowsi, !hat they were all Uvi»g that he had flahi. My L. Argyle and An- nandale have proniifed you account of odier matters, becaufe I have not atprefent time to fay more to you ; fo ihall only add, that I am fincerely your's, &c. Adieu. The Advocate to Lord Seafield. The feveral Particulars ivhich occurred in the Trial of the Rabblers. My Lord, Edinburgh, I have your's of the 27th paft, and am glad that his Majefty f ^o •'' concerns hlmfelf fo much for the liberation of Pinkerton and the reft; for they write home they are condemned, and have only a re- fpite of four fcore days. They write likewife a droll pafTage, that the council of the Weft-Indies wills the King of Spain to demand of the King of Britain, that D. Hamilton, the Marquis of Tweedale, the E. of Panmuir, and others, fhould be liable for their damages. I faw the copy of the, letter in the hands of one of their directors. The Advocate conveenedthe rabblers before the Lords of Juftlciary, and, by the information inclofcd, your Lordfhip will know what he libelled, and what he anfwered to their defences ; but, on Mon- day laft, they met, and ^dvifed the debate, and gave the interlocutor, whereof a copy is alfo inclofed. Whea it was read, the Advocate was furprifed, and faid, that he purfued that affair by fpecial order of the privy council, as a matter greatly concerning the govern- ment ; b\it the interlocutor was fuch, as he muft take it to ad- vifement; and therefore defired them to continue the court till Wed- nefday. They a(kt, what difpleafed him in the interlocutor? he faid, the whole of it ; and added, that he thought, Jn a matter fo concerning to the government, before conclufipns were taken, he flionld be acquiait^ted, fpe^ially when they advife the matter not in full court i and they qould not but know but that fuch had been the AND LETTERS. 5^7 the pradice of that court. They anfwered, to what purpofe ? he faid, to the effedl that, if the conclufions did not go the full lengt^ he might at Icaft defift, and that no fuch interlocutor might be read, which did more encourage than difcourage rabbles. This, your Lordfhip may imagine, did not pafs without fome heat ; but the Advocate having acquainted the Commiflioner and others, and find- ing it not a fcafon to make any greater noife, although he told the Gommiffioners, while he fpoke to them a-part, that he knew nothing that hindered why the council might not appoint them affeflbrs, and revife their interlocutor, according to the antient cuftom, which was not altered by the regulation 1672 ; yet he proceeded on Wed- nefday to lead his witneffes ; and, tho' two of his principal witneffes mifgave him, and did not depone as they declared in the precogni- tion, yet he proved fufficiently, that Weir and Henderfon entered the tolbooth immediately after breaking up of the gates, the firft with a drawn bayonet, and the feeond with a naked fabre, and that Eaf- toun entered it with a great ruiig, and that' Atchifon was in the prifon, and at the door where the Frazers were kept, with a fword. But all this proof coming fhort of the interlocutor, the Advocate, when h€ fpeeched the afEze, took no notice of the interlocutor; but told them, that he knew their cuftom was to find proven or not, and therefore defired them to return their Terdid diftmdiy'as to what was proven, and what not proven ; which one of the Lords percei- ving, faid, that he faw his defign was to bring it back to them ; to which he anfwered, that it was fo ; for, if he were either for the paw^ nels, or upon the affize, he would return the verdid, not one point of the interlocutor proven ; and yet, feeing there was enough pro- ven to infer the pains of law, they could not but be convinced that the interlocutor was defedive. But, as the Advocate had direded, fo the aifize returned their verdid, finding proven as above: Where- upon the Lords fentenced Weir to be fcourged, and baniihed the realm, and the other three to be taken to the Tron with Weir, and there pillored, and baniftied the liberties of the burgjh. The common remark on this fentence is, that the affize have been feverer upon , 4E2 the it 588 STATE-PAPERS the . rabblers than the Lords were, and that the Lords fentence Is more fevere than their interlocutdr. But here your Lordfliip has the true account; and it is very uneafy to the Advocate, that, when things fail after this fafhion, ^without any fault on his part, yet it may give occafion to fome to think, that the fault is on his fide j but your Lordfliip knows both the court of jufticiary and the me- thods of it, that I need add nothing. Mitiores poenae are good in time and place ; but it hath been always my opinion, that the pains of law belong to them, and the mitigations to the government. I have fent a juft double of this to my friend. I am your's. By the interlocutor, affifting with a drawn fword or bayonet in this horible rabble is not found relevant to infer an arbitrary pu- niftiment, unlefs ading be alfo proven ; fo that albeit a man was the raifer of a rabble, and were one of hundreds with drawn fwords, and the greateft mifchiefs a£ted, yet, if acting be not proven, as well as the affifting with drawn fwords, it does hot fo much as infer an arbitrary punifliment. Then, if a rabble arife with rungs or bat- tons only, and burn or break up the tolbooth, and knock down the guards, yet, to be affifting there with a rung only, infers only an ar- bitrary punilhment ; but, in found and in true law, a man's affifting with a drawn fword, or being clothed with a weapon in fuch an ex- traordinary rabble and convention, makes him art and part of the whole, and guilty of death, unlefs he be able duly to exculpate. And this is the true method, in juftice, to reprefs rabbles for the future. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. OfCarmichaeVs neiv Title. — Whitelaw and the Treafy,rer-Depute. — Lord Tillicoultry-^ Commijfary Elphingfton^ &c. London, I have writt one fince you went for Holland. Since I have heard ^^/* from Scotland, though not one word from the Secretaries. I have ac- AND LETTERS. 589 account, , that L. Whitelaw waited on E. Seafield, and has frank- ly confirmed what I faid in his name. It feems Carmichael, who I can't tell yet if he has affumed his new title, ftaid two days at the Treafurer-depute's in the country. When Whitelaw waited on him, he took no notice of any thing concerned Whitelaw, but feemed referved. I know Carmichael is honeft and firm ; but I know the Depute fo well, he has obliged him to be paffive, which ftiows the Depute not to be a man of fo difmterefted principles as he would have the world believe, when he profecutes his own particular that length, in oppofition to the King's intereft ; for, I dare ftill boldly fay, he cannot command one vote in the parlia- ' ment to his Majefty but his own. In time, all this will appear. The new Lord of the feffion is admitted, takes the title of Tillycoultry, an eftate he has purchafed joining to my lands of Caftle-Campbell in Stirling-fhirc. I can fay little as to the circumftances of other affairs in that kingdom ; befides, I delay expecting to hear from E. Seafield or Carmichael, leaft I fliould differ, fince I would not wil- lingly except, where it concerned his Majefly's fervice, which I will prefer to every thing. I underfland Commiffar Elphinfton has ac- cepted of the half of the Receiver's place, though far fhort of his pretenfions. It was my a'dvice to him, to fubmit to his Majefly's pleafure, and to endeavour to deferve better things when occafion offered, by his hearty fervice in time coming. One thing I find he is ambitious of, and what cannot be out of his Majefly's way, to have the title of Knight Baronet ; and I wilh his Majefly may be pleafed to grant it him. This place of the Receiver's being filled, their remains the Deputy-receiver's place, which, though it has not been always in ufe for the King to difpofe of it, yet, by making it go that way, it begets a new place at the King's difpofal, and adds no expence ; nor do I propofe any fallary but what the former De- puty had ; fo may be left blank. I do defire, as I have not been troublefome, that you'll move his Majefly, that Alexander Campbell merchant in Edinburgh may have his Majefly's gift of it, and he fhall give all fecurity can be demanded beyond exception. In this, I do acknow- Whitehall, 590 S T A T E - P,iA P E R S a0knowle4ge, I am particwlar, and may be forgiren, fince I do ob- ftrud nqthing by it, and adds no expencc to his Majeftj. If it can- not be done without writing to Scotland, and without afking Secre- tary's confent, every one has their little creatures to advance, fo I need not think of it ; nor will I make quarrels, with any in compe- tition, becaufe that may be occafion, of doing injury to the King's concerns : But I have laid it fairly ; and,- if I can prevail, I ihall be very well pleafed ; and I flatter myfelf the King will grant it, if you'll be fo kind to lay it before his Majefty in my own words. I have been in a deal of concern and trouble fmce you went from hence, for my fon has been ill abroad, and I impatienjt for his hoime coming. Mean time, the young lady, who I propofe to match him with, fell ill of the fmall-pox,, was dangerou^y ill ; but I thank God is recovered, and in all appearance can be little marked, being now got up again. I have fmce received letters from my fon at Paris, who I expe^ at fartheft the 5tb inftant ; and I am in hopes yet to overcome all my difficulties. I know your concern in my family, which makes me give you this particular account. The Marquis ' of Tweedale was expected in this town, had ordered his lodgings to be took for him, and D. Queenfljerry told me he was expe£ted ; fince, I am told, he is gone ftraight to the Bath, where D. Q;_ goes within ten days, or thereabout. D. Hamilton is gone to Lanca- ftiir^ and his lady, above a fortnight ago. The Englifti think the States of Holland's anfwer to the French Ambaflador's memorial too humble. I am your's. Adieu. Lord Seafield to Mr'CARSTAREs. About the Adjournment of Parliament, — and the King's going to Scot" land. SIR, I am very glad that you pafs your time fo pleafantly at Loo ; and ^ugua 2. it is a great encouragement to us all to h6ar that his Majefty con- 3700. tmues AND LETTERS. ^91 tihues to be in fo good health ; I wifh it may difpofe him to mArfy, and that we may have one defcendant of him to govern thefe nations ; vsrithout which we have nothing but a profpedt of confafion and difficulties, I am forry that the adjournment is fo very long j if the parliament had met but eight or ten days fooner, it would have been of very great confequence ; for, you know, the forces are only eftabliflied to the firft of November, which will be fo near after the time of the meeting of the parliament, that it will mightily encou- rage oppofition in this point ; however, if there come any order or letter, as you know I defired by my two former letters, to-morrow or Sunday, it will come in time ; but, if not, the parliament will be adjourned. But to every thing elfe, except this, I hope all will be very well ; for it falU well out, that his Majefty will have time to conlider matters here before the fitting of the parliament, and that the harveft will be over, for there is great appearance of a good crop ; and his Majefty's declaration will certainly fatisfy many, if they defign no more than the good of the country : But there are a great many that defign not to be fatisfied, particularly, fuch as are for King James or the Prince of Wales, or defigning places and em- ployments . So we may lay our account to meet with difficulties. Be- twixt and Tuefday 's night next, I fhall have my thoughts of what feem& to be indifpenfibly needful, in cafe his Majefty intends to go to Scot- land. I have not writt any thing of this to any but my Lord D. of Queenfberry ; and you know he was writt to in the fame way and manner I am. I am forry that I cannot obtain fuch a fettlement of his Majefty's affairs as may give him full fatisfa£tion. I do affiire you I fliall do whatever I can, and none fhall, according to their power, ferve more faithfully than I fhall. In this prefent jundure, none can promife fuccefs ; but I do acknowledge, that thefe conccf- fions which his Majefty does grant ought to obtain fuccefs. Being obliged to write many letters to Scotland this night, I fhall only at prefent give you full afTurance that your friendfhip is not mifpla- ced • and I am moft fenfible of all the ads of kindnefs you do me ; therefore I am moft entirely your's. Adieu. I 592 S T A T E - P *A P E R S I entreat that you may fpeak to Monlieur d'Olonne, and let him know that the convention of burrows have given ftridt orders for the ohfervance of the ftaple-contrafl: ; and that there are feverals ap- pointed to be profecuted for the breaking of it : But of this the Con- fervator's letter will inform you more fully. I wifh thofe private papers may be figged ; becaufe, if I go to Scotland, I ftiall not know how to pleafe the E. of Argyle without them. The D. of Queenf- berry and the E. of Annandale dine at the D. of Hamilton's upon the Dutchefs's birth-day ; fo this gives hopes of a good agree- ment. Theasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares. In Cyphers. SIR, Ormifton, j ^^^g ^^A to know of your fafe arrival in Holland the 1 2th of 1700. the laft month, but heard nothing from you fmce ; neither have I written often (ince, by reafon I could but repeat or tell you, that, in my weak judgement, * 8tuzs6 ijzAS dz']6(\r 2"] 8tu6 I2bq7yqz8 tmStzquStqy xurq Z27 mgStsyuSuq, you will have account of the trial before the juftice-court of thefe concerned in the rabble; •fyS duxx * Things grow worfe; for this government hath neither life nor authority. + Ormifton -will boldly fay it. That, fince 83 was made prefident, and join to it the nomination of 20 and exchequer, that is, now, this government has daily de- clined; for the Lords of SeiSon would either rediice all to the forms ufed before their court, or elfe carry all matters concerning the government to the fefljon, e4en diiFerences between foldier and officer about their cloathing. On the other hand, the money is exhaufted by precepts for journeys, and needlefs penfions. For management in the treafury, I fee none, but to give away money and places to this nobleman and t'other's friend or fervant. If Ormifton oppofe any of them, and, if he preffes to have the laws put in execution againft thofe liable in paying mo- ney to the King, fome of our Lords are fure to put a ftop : So that in all things the A N D L E T T E R S. S9i duxx n2xpx4 6ma u8, that fince 83 dm6 ympq 37q6upqz8, and join to it the zuyuzm8u22 2r ,20, and qcotq59q7 that is, now this labqyyqzS tm6 pmaxa pqomaqp, for 8tq x27p6 2r6q66u2z d29xp either reduce all to the t2yjq6 b6qp nqr27q 8tqu7 02978, or elfe carry all matters ozzoq7ZUZS 8tq 12b q7yqz8 82 8tq 6q66u2z even differences nqSdqqz 629xpuq7 -and 2rruoq7 nin298 8tqu7 ox2naf 8tuzs, on the other hand', 8tq y2za u6 qcni968qp na 37qoq386 r27 U97zqa6 and zqqpxq6 3qz6u2z6, for ymzmsyqzSuz 8tq 8tq6- m97uq, I fee none, n98 82 subq mdma y2za and 3xmoq6 82 8tu6 Z2nxqymz 27q t'other his r79qzp, or 6q7bmz8, if 78 23326q mza of 8tu7 ; and, if he preffes to have the xmd6 398 uz qcqog- 8u2zmsmuz68 thofe liable in 3mauzs y2za 82 43, fome of 297x2- 7p6 m7q 697q 82 398 in 6823q; fo that in all things the 2pu9y- y968 xust8 b32z 78, 22 duxx X22vir632z mxx 8tu6 m6 n98 3qq b\v6t 689rr, t2dqbq7 78 u6 qzoqqpuzs ixmpq 196 372326mx 2r L. 1500 fterling, m6 m 7qdm7p r27 tu6 6q7buoq6 822W z2q qrr- qo8, only 78 8tuzw6 tq omzz28, nqnxmyqp Z28 82 subq that in- defatigable attendance tq 62yq 8uyq smbq22 may tqm7 8tm8 78s qxpq68 62Z u6uz 826q 08 76 qxpq68 pm9St8q7,and 8tq ym- 7umsq u6 37232zqp n98, 78- yqq |86 Z28 d8 qzo297msyqz8 ; what event it may yet have I know not, but a good one is much defired by me and mine ; % yS wifhes 22, without letting 78 nq wz2dz, dm6 m s22p uz6879yqz8 it is like to xz26q yq -n28tm- 62Z and m durq. Farewel. 4 F Duke the odium mufl light upon him. Carftares will look upon all this as but peevifh ftuff; however, Ormifton is exceeding glad that Carllares's propofal of L. 1500 fterling, as a reward for his fervices, took not place ; only, Ormifton thinks he cannot be blamed not to give that indefatigable attendance he fome times gavi. Carftares may hear, that Ormifton's eldeft fon is iri love with Carmichael's daugh- ■ ter ; the marriage ispropofed. :]; Ormifton wifties Carftares, without letting Ormifton be known in it, were a good inftrument; for it is like to lofe him both a fon and a wife. m STATE-PAP Ens Duke of QueenSberrv to Mr Carstares. Vpon the Dtath of the Duke of Ghucefter.' Defires Orders from the King about his and his Domejlics Mournings.'^ — ^Hasffty Sertiants to clothe^ if public Mourning is neceffary. SIR, Holyrood- I had yefterday a moft furpriziilg letter from my Lord Seafield, 4. 1700. acquainting me with the death of the Duke of Glouceftcr, when I had not heard of his ficknefs. I dp, from my heart, regret the lofs of that poor young prince, and the more, becaufe it will be of great confequence to the world, and will undoubtedly make the party here more infolent. I fhall fay no more on this melancholy fubje£t at prefent, nor trouble you with aliy other bufinefs, but to beg that you would receive the King's orders for me in relation to the manner of my mourning. If I fhall Only put .myfelf and my wife in black, it is a matter of no expence ; but, if it be thought fit that I put my fervants and equipage in mourning, the charge will be confiderable to the King ; for I have at leaft fifty fervants that I m»ft clothe, befides my coaches, which I muft have from London, it being impoffible to get them here. 1 have privately made an eftimatepf the prices of things, and do find, that, to have all thefe things as they ought to be, fifteen hundred pounds will be the low- eft it can be brought to ; wherefore, as foon as polTible, let me have his Majefty's pleafure in this matter. I am daily in expediation of his Miajeifty's commands about his affairs in this kingdom. What orders he fhall be pleafed to give me fhall be obeyed v^rith all faith and zeal. I am faneerely your's, &c. Adieu. Lord AND LETTERS. 595 Lord Seafield toMrCARSTAREs. That the CommiJJioner is noiv upon a right Plan. — He knoivs fever al ivho may be dealt ivith in that ivay. — Braced' s tijoo hundred Pounds muji he advanced. — Archhijliop of Glafgow- — Cenfures of the Treaty ivith France. SIE, Since my laft I have received one -from you, which contained no- Whitehall,, thing of eonfequence, his Majcfty being at Dierpn when you wrote ^^%^^^- it ; however, it is always a fatisfacfiion to me when I hear fronfi you, though it were no more but to know that his Majefty is in good health. The Duke of Queenfberry did fend me your letter o- pen tjiat I might read it. I do underftand, from feveral hands, that many of the parliament-men are beginning to think what they arc doing ; and the Comroiffioner is upon the right way in not t>egi»- ning. at the head ; and, if he prevail with thofe he names, I kjiow others may be dealt with. I have very great hopes ; howev^, it is not good to be too confident. Many have figned the addrefs ; but I hear from Forglen, that my Lord Whjtelaw has not figned it yet ; what he may do, I know not. I have ground to think that the Laird of Brodie will go no more to their meetings ; and Mr William Brodie has refufed to fign the addrefs. I have alfo ground to think that Bracco may be gained by doing a little favour for him ; of which I fl^all write to you afterwards. I doubt not but you will be careful that there be a precept fent to the Commiffioner for the two hundred pound, for you fee that is as good as advanced ; and the blank commiflipn and blank penfion ought alfo to be fent. You will fee that he writes likewife of a certain Earl, which is no furprize to me, and I believe it is none to you ; however, we muft overlook all thefe things ; and I blefs God I have learned fo much patience as to ktnow a igreat many things and not take notice of them, providing I can get thofe who does me an injury to go on in his Majefty's fer- 4F 2 vice; 596 STATp-PAPERS vice ; and I hope he will a£t his part on this occafion ; but I am fure he is not to be relied upon. I have a letter from the Earl of Marr, wherein he tells me, that the Archbifhop of Glafgow threatens to , purfue me before the parliament, becaufe that he is continued un- der confinement, contrary to the right of the fubjed. It is true, I did counterfign the letter which put him under confinement ; but yet I have enough to fay for it ; for, you know, he was under banifli- ment; and it was at his own defire that he was confined, in place of his fentence of banifliment : However, I fhould be glad that I were allowed to acquaint the council, that his Majefty leaves it to them to do in it what they think juft; but I cannot atprefent defire a letter to council taking off^ his confinement diredtly. I have not time this night to inform you concerning what is faid of that trea- ty made with France about the fucceflion to the Spanifh monarchy ; but, in general, I believe, fome do incline to quarrel it, if they can find a party to concur ; yet, after all, I doubt not but that they will let alone meddling with it till the King of Spain's death : But you need fpeak nothing of this to our friend till I fend you a full letter of what I know of that matter. I long to knovy what are his Majefty's commands concerning me, as I told you before it were neceffary for my health that I went to the Bath ; but, if his Majefty think, that his affairs require my being in Scotland, I ihall be rea- dy to go upon the firft advertifement. This is all at prefent from. Sir, Y. M. H. S. I doubt not but that you have heard from others, that there is an acquaintance of the Chancellor's defigns to go to the King, and de- fires to have his charges borne ; and he has been defiring L. i oo for that end. The Chancellor writes this in general to me, and he did the like to the Commiflioner when he was in the country. I find he has writ to Mr Pringle this night ; and, if he mentions the man's name who is a coming, I think I could guefs his bufinefs. Hodges AND LETTERS. 597 Hodges to Mr Carstares. AJking his Mediation -with the King Jor obtaining three hundred Pounds per annum, far -writing in Defence of the Government in ■ the Affair of Darien. SIR, ' Since your parting^ from this, I have had occafion to fliow to my ^°°^g°^ Lord Seafield feveral papers' befides thofe which you did fee ; and 1700. have had davers conferences w^ith him about the fervices which I offer to the government and nation, wherein his Lordfliip did take particular confideration of my notions and contrivances relating to national interefl: m the prefent juncture ; and, after having given me opportunity to anfwer abundance of objedtions, he was pleafed to declare to me, that he was fully fatisfied that I merited the encou- ragement of the government ; and that he would fignify fo much to the King ; and that, particularly, he would this day write both to you and to Mr Pringle for that end. I have, therefore, with his allowance, prefumed to give you the trouble of thefe lines, to let you know my fatisfa£tion that any favour I am to receive fhall come through your hands and mediation, and that I am to owe a large fhare of my obligations to one whom I fo fincerely love and efteem. My Lord was pleafed to aflure me, that the King would allow me fome prefent encouragement; but did not determine what; neither is it fit for me to queftion the extent of his Majefty'sfavourj only, I think it proper, on this occafion, to put you in mind, that a. too narrow encouragement will neither contribute fo to my reputa- tion, nor allow me to live at that rate, or in a creditable way, to keep fuch converfe as will be necefTary for capacitating me to advance thefe defigns of public good which I have conceived for the mutual interefl: of the government and nation. According to my ferious rec- koning, I think I fhall, be pinched in fupporting my refolutions by any allowance under L. 300 a ye^r ; and, if the King fhall be plea- fed ■ * 59^ STATE-PAPERS fed to allow his favour to that extent, I will do the beft I can to merit it, and to beftow it in his fervice ; and, as my brother did ferve him with his fword, I will endeavour to fupply his room with my ftudies and pen. I beg the fayour that you may be pleafed to Ihow Mr Pringle, that I had once refolved to write to him ; but, after I had confidered that it did not become me to think that he fliould need any follicitations to do me a kindnefs, efpecially when propo- fed to him by my L. Seafield, I thought it better to reft wholly and fjlently on the aflura^ces I have had from himfelf of his fincere friendflnp ; and whereof I am as confident as I can be of that of a- ny perfon of worth and honour, fuch as I know him to be. I am, SIR, Your aioft humble faithful fervant, HOBGES. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Pun'i/hment ef the Rahhler s fmaller thmi his Tyrant Governor infiiSi- ed upon him for going t'o play ijoithfiut leave.- E. Melvil luke- tvarm. —Others trim.-^ — His Model is to buyfome^ purchafe o- thers, and fiiake jhme Places vacant. ' Edinburgh, I have received two from you, inaafwer to my two letters I had A"g- Si writt by the flying packet laft week, but by miftake I mifled the op- portunity. It will be neediefs now, folate, to give "you account what flruggle it coft in council to have the proclamation anent feizing the principal rabblers worded as it is, fmce certainly before, now you have it from others. The defign was, to make the Frazers being fet at liberty the chief crime, and, by the narative of it, to make ap- pear that defign chiefly occafioned the fabble. The Advocate brought it in, without fhewing it to any but the Treafurer-depute, who, it feems, liked it, notwithftanding it carried that in the f'-ontifpiece which I complain of, not mentioning Paterfon, the difperfer of the A N. D LETTERS. 599 the libels againft the goverilirtent, &c. but I muft fay, it was very confequential to the Advocate's difcourfe the Monday before in the juftice-court ; and fo came of the trial ; as no doubt but you have heard a puniftiment inflidled, fmaller than my tyrant governor has, while at fchool, infli£ted on me for going to play without leave. The parliament is now adjourned, and the King's declaration iffued out according to order. We cannot yet fay what efFed; it may have, fince the ill-minded mifconftrudt any thing ; yet ftill I muft fay, I believe it will make fome profelytes. I remember the King ftill in- clined to do it fooner ; and plainly too I am convinced it had done good ; but I hope it fhall ftill, if rightly improved. Its a fad thing how little people, that eats, I may fay, the King's bread, does^ concern themfelves upon this occafton. I love not to make com- plaints ; but it is too apparent : There is our friend the E. of Mel- vin, tho' Prefident of the council, has been in Fyfe ever fince my return from London, came and ftaid two days in town, and now is. gone to the Bath. Thofe that ftay here are lukewarm, and play the trim, whilft a very few in number expofes" themfelves. When I come to fpeak, even with thofe I am beft with, of making a mo- del to carry the. King's bufinefs, by buying fome, purchafing others^ and making fome places void for others, tho' thofe be but of the fmailer fort, nor is it yet advifablej any other I meet with, this tutor has this friend to proted, the other has ariother, which does con- found aff^airs ; and I grieve when 1 fee matters mifcarry, where I have all the ffiendifliip in the world. However, though I care not if it be burnt after you read it, I will fend you, for your .fatisfadion and mine, a fchedule, by which I'd carry thirty members of par- liament off, and fo carry the affair : But you can never bring all to one in this meafure ; and fo I. fear will be the event* I do intend to go to Glafgow ; and am upon a projed to begin a party there to counterad other defigns : How far I may carry it, I know not ; however, I iliall continue to acquaint you of what is moft material, from time to time. Adieu. I 6oo STATE-PAPERS I am afraid Seafield, for fear, will fniffle Frazer's affair, by not allowing him to be difcharged of his whole libel, wherein the rape was not included ; and, if his Lprdfhip value not my repeated con- cern fo much as to go over it, I will have no more to do with him, as I have given him fair warning, as an honeft man ought to do. I I fhall never defpair while the King is well. I pray God, long be it fo. Lord Carmichael to Mr Carst'ares. Deftres he ivill vindicate him to the King in Ronald's Affair. SIR, Carmichael, I ^^s obliged to be at home for fome days bypaft, and was once Auguft,8, refolved to gone for Edinburgh this day ; but the Commiffioner thinks my incoming not neceifary for fome time, but defires ra- ther I may come in when all others are gone to the country. I am informed there has been a hot debate in the treafury anent Duncan Ronald and HughCunninghame's commifTion; the Chancellor took it up, and has writt to the King about it, and refufes to give it back until he have his Majefty's anfwer, though, by a vote in trea- fury, it was ordered to be put in the clerk's hands. You will be further informed of this by others ; and, whatever the Chancellor has writt, or however it goes, I know you will vindicate me to his Majefty, which I am very much concerned to have done, and the fooner the better. You may judge how many there are to give the Chancellor fuch impreffions at this time ; but this to yourfelf. This is a long adjournment of the parliament. We are> all much concerned for the fad news of the D. of Gloucefter's death ; and its believed, and huftied, that the King may come fooner over than he intended ; which, I doubt not but would be of great advantage to his affairs in .this nation, and much contentment to his faithful fervants. All pains is taken to make this new addrefs as national as they can. , ' . My AND LETTERS. 60^ My wife gives her afFedlionate fervice to you. I entreat to hear frequently from you, and am fmcerely your's. My mofthumble duty to my noble friend the E. of Portland ; . you know how niuch it would quiet my mind to have the hope of his Lordlhip's return- ing to England. Pray give my moft humble fervice to Monfieur d'Ollone and to honeft The Duke of Glocefter's death is a matter of fo great confequence, that I long to know what thoughts are with you upon it ; for ene- mies will not be idle at this time. Murray of Philiphaugh to Mr CarsTj^res. , Nothing lejs than the King's Prefence ivill do. SIR, ^ I wrote to you the other day by a flying packet, about theCom-'Edbburgi\j^ miffioner's mournings. I have little to add, but to tell you, that, ^^^^^ ' though I think his Majefty's great conceflions ought to fatisfy ful- ly all that love his Majefty or the Proteftant religion, and they may well encourage his fervants to a£t zealoufly and vigoroufly^ia his fervice ; yet I am (with fubmilEon) of opinion, that it is moft fafe ' and advifeable the King fhould come here himfelf ; for there - are fo many people whom .nothing cai;i fatisfy, and fome who are eafily mifled, efpecially -when they have engaged fo far already in a party, that I think it very uncertain, and, to fpeak plain, not pradticable, to recover many without the King's prefence. I am fenfible it would be much for the CommiiTioner's honour, if he could bring things to a happy conclufion himfelf; but, for all the love I have for him, I muft tell my thoughts freely in what con- cerns the eftablifhment of the government. And I think, when a dtf- appointment or defeat is fo dangerous, it is not fafe nor advifeable to adventure things upon uncertain fuccefs, when every body be- lieves the 'King's own prefence for a few weeks might affure him of 4 ^ fettling 601 STATE-PAPERS fettling things here to his contentment ; but this from myfelf only, and Ltruft it to your difcertion. I am juft going to the country, and fliall not have occafion for fome time to trouble you with mock let- ters. So, dear Sir, adieu. Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Of the Concefftons noiv made by the King. What Preparations •will be necejfaryi if becomes to Scotland. His Coronation may be delayed. In the Trial of Rioters^ the Judges had not Cou- ragCi nor the Advocate Integrity. Of L. 1 00 to one ivho of" fers to prove vue have no Right to Caledonia. S I R, Hoiyrood- Since my laft, I have received two letters from you, the one of houfe, Aug. •' ■' ' 9. 1700. the 25th, and the other the 29th of July. I do think myfelf ex- tremely obliged to you for your kindnefs in endeavouring to make my little fervices agreeable to my matter, and for the full accounts which you give me of bufinefs, which I earneftly defu-e that you may continue, they being both ufeful and fatisfadory to me. I re- ceived his Majefty's commands about adjourning the parliament, with his other letter to the privy council, on Tuefday laft, the fame day the council met and adjourned the parliament, and appointed his Majefty's other letter to be publiftied. I know not what influence his Majefty's great condefcendence may have on the minds of men who are united together,, and many of them not to be fatisfied with any thing that can be obtained : But I hope, if I could get the King's fervants to be diligent and vigorous, fuch as are fincerely well af- fe£ted may be brought to be fatisfied : However, his Majefty will have this advantage, that the world will know his inclinations to make us happy. After all, it is not poflible to promife much ; yet fo many of the members are united by cabaling, and fubfcriptions to feveral addrefles, it is to be feared that many may think them- felves m AND LETTERS. 603 felves engaged in honour not to recede from any of their demands ; and, to be fure, fuch as intend not to be fatisfied, will prefs others on their engagements : For myfelf, I am perfedly convinced that the King's offers are fo honourable and profitable for the nation, that all who ferve and love him may, and ought, to ftand up boldly for the mea- fures propofed, by which they will ferve their country as much as the King ; and, if all in the King's fervants would ad their parts with that zeal and diligence might be expeded from them, I fhould not defpair of fuccefs ; but ftill the fureft way to fucceed, were the King's prefence among us. As for what you write of preparations in cafe of his coming, its not thought fit to take advice ; and I muft own, that I am very little Ikillful in thefe things. But what at pre- fent occurs to me is, that his houfe will need feveral reparations to make it any way habitable for him ; and even thefe cannot be done without obfervation, and fome time : Befides, all who have lodgings in the Abbay muft be timeoufly advertifed to remove, and provide for themfelves, becaufe the lodgings conftantly inhabited are fitter for the court's ufe than the others ; and I believe the whole will be neceffary for him and his attendants. D. Hamilton's lodgings are the warmeft and clofeft; and certainly the King muft keep thefe for his private bufinefs, and lying there ; and the rooms which I now have, that are called the King^s apartment,iov his appearing in public. It will alfo be neceffary to fend furniture fit for the King. If what I have here can be ufeful, his Majefty may command it. There muft be two ftates provided, one for the Abbay, and another for the Par- liament-houfe ; there muft alfo be greater conveniencies made for horfes and coaches. As to the coronation, I have had occafion to difcourfe of that formerly, when his fervants were advifing his co- ming; and it was then thought, that his Majefty might advertife the council, that he was only to make a fhort ftay, and that it was more proper to defer his coronation to another feafon, that there might be longer time for fuitable preparations. But, the worftof all is, there is very little public money to make what preparations are neceffary. If any thing further occur to me, I fhall let you know ; and I beg 4 G 2 that 6o4 S T A T E - P A P E R S that you would Informe me of his Majefty's refolutions as foon as poffibly you can, which I fhall communicate no further than I fhall be allowed. If he does come, its abfoiutely neceflary that he be here ten days at leaft before the parliament meet. And, if his affairs does not allow of his coming, it is neceffary, for his fervice, that I attend him in England before his parliameat here meet ; for I have fereral things to fay that I cannot write, and were not proper, if I could ; therefore, I fhould be glad if his Majeil y-wcmld honour me with a call to wait upon him, if it were but of a week ; and it may be fo ordered, as I may be there fome days liefore the King, fo as no time may be loft. You muft have heard, long before this comes to your hands, of the lenity which thofe who were guilty of the tumult has met with from our juftice-court : They lay the blame on the Advo- cate ; for, as he contrived it, they fay nothing criminal was proven. On the other fide, he exclaims againft them ; and I am very free to tell you, that the judges had not courage enough, nor the Advocate inte- grity. I never writ my opinion freely of him to any body but your- felf, and I choice to do as an honeft man only to his friend; and pray take what ways you think moft proper to make him, if poilible, more conftant and firm ; for fuch difappointments is a di/grace to our bufi- nefs, and brings contempt upon our undertakings to do juftice. I am told that, yefterday, on the execution of the flight fentence againft thofe rioters, there were fome little infolencies,notwithftandingof the ftri£t Orders #hich I had given to the provoft, in the prefence of the Lords of the Treafury, about preventing any thing of that nature, and his engaging for all regularity. I do intend to call the mao-i- ftrates before the council, where they fliall not efcape without a fe- vere cenfufe. I wrote to you formerly of a perfon that had been with the Chancellor, offering to make difcovery ; I thought, by the Chancellor's difcourfe, that it might be of pradlices againft the go- vernment; I have fince feen the man, but am under an obligation not to name him. What he has to fay is, that he can give the King undeniable arguments againft our right to Caledonia, and fuch as may be able to fatisfy all the world. I dealt with him to put what he i^ AND LETTERS. 605 he had to fay on that fiibjeft in writing ; but he rgfufes to let his reafons be known to any body but the King himfelf. If the King think this worth the expences of L. 1 00, he fhall be fent over with all expedition: So, pray let me have his Majefty's commands about it. I am juft now told, that there is a vacancy of a company in my Lord Orkney's regiment; which, by the King's orders of preferring the eldefl: broken captain, is due to my Lord Crawford's brother, he being the firft of the four that Were diltandedout of that regiment. The young gentleman has had one or two put over his head alrea- dy, though he is every way qualified for the fervice, and efteemed by every body that knows him. But, I believe, he has juftice denied him upon the account of his brother's zealoxrs appearance at this time for the King's fervice, contrary to a party which his colonel has a byas to.: So, pray let this be laid before the King, and ufe what interdft you can to get juftice done him ; which will be very accep- table to a great many of his Majefty's fervants here. I am very much obliged to you for your concern in my health. I have been very well ever fmce I parted with you ; but have now a fmall inflamma- tion in my foot, which I hope will be of no other confequence than that it will oblige me to ftay a day or two at home. I have trou- bled you with fo long a letter, that I fhall only add, that I am fin- fcerely your's, &c. I cannot yet make any judgement what efFed: the D. of Gloeef^ ter's death may have amongfl us. It gives a nearer view to the Ja- cobites ; which, in reafon, ought to unite thefe who are well affec- ted to the government, and all good prdteftants. I do fend my let- ters from hence by Captain Charles Douglas, who is going to folli- cite his father's bufinefs. If you can find any way to ferve him in the mean while, till our treafury here can be in a condition tadohis father and him juftice, I fhall take it as a very great favour. Lord 6o6 STATE-PAPERS LojRD Marchmont to Mr Carstares. Of his ConduSi in Ronald's Affair. SIR, Holyrood- I have vour obliging and kind letter from Loo, of the 29th July. 10. 1700. ^ ^™» ^^^ ^^ ^^' *° ™7 power, equal to the kindnefs you have for me ; though I have not been hitherto able to give the tokens of it, which I ever did, and do intend. I have been troubled of late about a commiflion to Duncan Ronald, and Hugh Cunningham, for uplifting blanch, few, and ward-duties and cafualties of his Maje- fty's annexed property, with a fourth part profit to themfelves, be- fides their expences. When I got it from Hugh Cunningham, I foon perceived it to be of a confiderable value, and I wrote to the King about it. But, upon further examination, I difcerned it to be difagreeable to feveral adls of parliament, and likewife, to be of far greater profit and emolument to the havers than at firft I imagined; of which I again acquainted the King ; and that, in my opinion, it ftiould not come in public ; for, if it did, I am apprehenfive it would turn to a public grievance, and create heat and trouble iii the parli- ament ; and there needs no occafion to be given for that. The Earl of Argyle owns to have had hand in the procuring of it ; but, I think, if his Lordfhip had confidered the extent and tendency of it, he would not have defired it for any body. I found it my indifpen- fible duty to inform his Majefly ; and I doubt not, but, when you have opportunity, you will lay the bufinefs before him, as I have written to you. I fhall long to hear from you about if. I think the diet of the parliament meeting is well fixed ; for our harveft will be very late, though there be appearance of a plentiful crop ; and it will fatisfy people to fee their harveft got in. I am, SIR, Your afi^edionate true friend, and humble fervant, i Marchmont. Lord *h ♦ AND LETTERS. 607 Lord Advocate to Mr Carstar.es. Complains of the Execution of the Sentence. — Hard that he is blamed •whether Judges^ Witnejfes, or Executioners fail. — His Scheme for a Compromife. SIR, I had your's with the exprefs that brought the King's letters. Ed»nburgE, The fame 'day the parliament was adjourned to the 22d 0£tober, ,700. and the other letters publifhed. What thefe, with the death of the Duke of Gloucefter, will work, time will (how : But I am fure the King's gracious letter over-anfwers the addrefs in all that is reafon- able; which I both aflSrm and perfuade all I can. The execution of the fentence againft the rabble Wednefday laft was fo ridiculoufly performed, through the negleft of the magiftrates, that both friends and foes fay it was a fcorn put on the government ; and the Com.- miffioner is juftly fo incenfed, that the magiftrates are cited to ap- pear before the council Tuefday next, to be either reprimanded or proceffed, as the council fhall fee caufe : But the Advocate'^s part is hard; for, whether judges or witnefles, or executioners fail, he is, by fome, blamed. I heartily wifli his Majefty had a better, for I know he does his beft, but is wearied out of meafure. I am think- ing, if» to remove this pretence, that the right to Darien muft be afferted, or the undertakers judged pirates, it might not be offered them to have the King and parliament's proteftion for all paft, in refpeft of their bona fides. I am fure it is all can be demanded ; for the thing is now at an end. The commifEon of the aflembly to the north have depofed two of the indulged by the a£t 1695 ; and here a new clamour : I wifh they had not done it ; but it was done before heard of here. I do all I can to quiet the men from com- plaining to the council, where, at prefent, they would not mend themfelves : But I am more apprehenfive of their clamours in Eng- * land: 6oi S T A T E - P A P E R S# land : But of this I fhall write you more fully. Harris, the other day, fell in a difcourfe with Hume, of his friendfhip to him ; but that he found both I and 32 were under fbme men's miftakes ; and young men were over ready to cenfure old men : Hume anfwered frankly, He was not concettied ; for he believed that neither flow- nefs nor caution were judged his predominants ; but, if other men were difBculted with 32, he knew he was more diflatisfied with himfelf, and would, with all his heart, cede to any would do better, or might be thought fitter for White's fervice. And, to my certain ktifowledge, Hume is wearied, if he could help it. Sir, our foun- dations are out of courfe, and mnft be refettled. When that fliall be, "we may have a firmer adminiftration, with good fuccefs ; and no fobner. I ftrll ivifli thi"s might be 'done by his Majefty's own pre- fence, though his ftay fhould be fliort, were it for a fortnight on- ly. His good fuccefs here would be a brave ftep in his return to England. 1 fbmetimes wifh Mr Thomfon had got his defire ; 13 would foon have broke the graith, or come to other mens pace. I am your's. Adieu. Treasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares. Heavy Complaints of the loiv Authority of Government, SIR, Ormifton, Wha:t I wrote this day fe'nnight, I would have this week frefli Auguft 10. reafons for repeating it, fhould you think it never fo peevifh. Our public meetings are either put off, upon account of fome horfe or other that is to be fweatt ; or, if kept, it is paft t\yelve ere they meet, though appointed at ten ; as yefterday, it was nigh one of the clock. You will fee by the minutes of the ift inftant, that a pro- tediion Harris, Marchmont. Humcy Advocate. 32, Marchmont. Thorn- /on, Annandale. 13, Annandale. 1700, AND LETTERS. 609 teftion was refufed Kippoch*, 9 dmb Z28 37q6q28 ; for which caufe it was moved yefterday again; f mzp 8t26q 2r 297 Z2nux- u82 dqyq msmuz68 u8 xm68 pma ; for, if Z2d, fo that, in yefter- day's- minutes, you fhall fee a protedion to Kippoch, who went with' a rabble through the Highlands, and is guilty of treafon and murders, and a thoufand ill things ; for which he was juftly except- ed out of all the indeinnities granted either by King Charles or the late King James ; and the magiftrates of Edinburgh ordered to be called to the bar, for the mock execution of the fentence upon thofe men were guilty of the rabble here. I do confefs it was a mock bufinefs : But what fhall I fay ? every day gives us frefh in- ftances of the lownefs of the authority of this government ; ^ 8tq7q m33qm76 z28tuzs n98 37ubm8 pq6uz6 m8 P28827 2r mxx 297 ymzmsyq28 mzp dm6 tq zqbq762q uxxm ymz Ur tq duxx pq3qzp b32z 2zq 27q 28tq7 2r 29r 27q 7m8tq7 22ss7qm8 yqz, dtq 6tm- XX nq 3728qo8qp, 29 tuy6qxr dm286 Z28 tu6 umo2 nu86, viz. y7 8t2ym6pqmzb and 8tq xmu7p 2r xmsq N98 9p2q6 du8t 29 dtmS tq 3xqm6q6, 8tq7g u6 a difference among 8tq7 and 75 about m. o2yyu66u2z dm6 2n8muzqp r27 t9st 09zzastmy and p9zomz 72zmxp, 75 822W u8 up and duxx Z28 372p9oq u8 6mabtq tmb d728 82 43 2r u8, tq u6 d72zs 82 wqq3u8 63 n98 7ust8 82 nq msmuz68 8tq sur8 ; it is of an odd ftrain indeed, and 78 would ne- ver a confented to it. 9 and 8 trribq 8266qp 75 mn298 r27 u8, 4H N98 * 9 was not prefent. f and thofe. of our nobility were againft it laft day, for it now. :j: There appears nothing but private defigns at bottom of all our management ; and, was he never fo ill a man, if he will depend upon one or other of our, or ra- ther Mr Carftares's great men, he (hall be protedled. 29 htmfelf wants not his Jacobites, viz. Mr Thomas Deans, ^nd the Laird of Lag ; but 9 (Queenfberry) does with 29 what he pleafes. There is a difference among them and 75 (March- mont) about a commiflion was obtained for Hugh Cunningham and Duncan Ro- nald. Marchmonctodkit up, and will hot, produce it; fays he has written to. the ICing of it. He is wrong to keep it up, but right to be againft the gift. . It is of an odd ftrain indeed, and Ormifton never would have confented. 9 and 8 have toflbd Marchmont about for it ; but he refufes till he hear! from the King. # 6io S T lA. T E - PA P & R' S N98 tq 7q"r9 6q68uxxtq tq tymj r727 43. 78 is going to the caun- try with a refolution not to be much here ; for, in treafury, there is , nothing 4ozie but granting precepts ; and he fays he fpends many, hours, attending to be at council or exchieqper, and. all is done, he hears, one adjournment till another diet; and that not kept either, after fome have attended hours. I hear 75 has given that 02yyub6 I2Z to 29, and 29 is preffed by 9 to give it up ; yet 29 has heard fo much againft it, that he wifties it had not been put in his head ; and 78 wifhes 22 had no hand in procuring it. Now, 78 fays he would gladly you would bid 22 remember what was faid of the Athol men their takinig the affiftance of Kippoch when they march- ed againft the Frazers : It was made a mountain of againft TuUi- bardine. Is Kippoch any better now than he was ? Go on, and let *9 have the ufe of this I36q7zyqz8 to drive 9S37ubm8pq6usz6 and 3ua9q6 till it ruin; fonfte of us cannot, nor will not follow 9 nor 8 eithet. One of the three Captains mentioned in the proclamation were concerned in the rabble here, is feized ; his name is Urquhart. I may have occafion afterwards to let you know how he comes off. At prefent he is clofe prifcner, by the Treafurer-depUte's order. You have, I know, feen the addrefs ; I doubt not you have likewife feen the refolve at the down-fitting of the parliament in May. 83 had it upon parchment, and was then moft forward for it, which, thefe of Pat- SteeFs club fays, firft encouraged them to enter into it. Farewell. Earl of SEAFiELDto Mr Carstares. // to^t out dire£ily for Scotland. — Has heen to fee the Prlncefsfor thefirji timejince he came to England. SIR, Whitehall, I received your letter, that was due Friday laft> upon Sunday; and ^7*00!^ '^ ^ perceive by it, that, although his Majefty is pleafed to allow my going * Let 9 (QueenJEberry) have the ufe of this government to drive his dcfigns and purpofes. AND LETTERS. 6ii going to the Bath ; yet, that he thinks it would be more for his fer- vicethat I went to Scotland. I fhall always prefer his ferviceto any concern of my own ; and, therefore, I have refolved to take journey to-morrow. The weather is fo hot that I cannot poffibly ride poft ; but I have hired a coach to go to Newcaftle in eight days. I Ihall caufe my owr^ coach meet me a day 's' journey, and I fhall take ppift from Newcaftle till I meet xay coach. The parliameat is now ad- journed, coiiform to his Majefty's letter ; and every body, except the parliament-men, who have engaged themfelves in addrefles, are fatisfied with the conceflions that his Majefty is willing to grant ; and I hope that, in time, others will be prevailed upon : In that cafe, all his Majefty's fervants ought to a£t their parts fairly and candidly. I hope to make a better judgement of his Majefty's af- fairs, if I were in the place ; and I defire that you may continue to write fully to me from time to time. Captain Douglas is arrived exprefs, and has brought a letter to the King from my Lord Com- miflioner ; and there is alfo another for yoiirfelf. But he defires that he may carry them, and intends to part from this Thurfday morn- ing, in order to go with the Friday's packet ; and I fhall then write to his Majefty ; and I fliall alfo write more fully to yourfelf. Make my excufe to Mr Pringle that I have not written to him. I have no rime, being juft now returned from Windfor, where I was taking leave of the Princefs. She is mightily afflided. I have not been "tofeeherHighnefs fincel came to England before; and, therefore^ I thought that this was neceflary. I ftiall only add, that I am, Sir, Y.M. H.S. J. Stewart to Mr Carstares. Of the Candidates for the Vacancy in the Sejfton. A particular Nar- rative oftheTranfaSHons at Darien. And of the Execution of thefentence upon the Rioters. — — Full of Humour. ' DearS I R,. Excufe niy.weakaeff, I am plealed with writing to you, and it coftes you nothing but the pains of reading it ; I fhould have fent 4 H 2 . you 6i2 S T A T E - P A P E R S you this three or four poft ago. ;.but (tho* it be of no importance) I forgot it. " Ye know my Lord Merfingfon^/ is dead ;' and this poft wings us news that: the Pope has departed this life. So' ye may be fure there is nothing now in kgitation but intrigugipg, bargaining, pofting exprefs upon exprefs, for the elevation to the chair and the bench. Who are the .candicktes arid *^their patrons at Rome, I know not ; but 'here my L. Argyle and his clan are for 'Commiffary EI- phiflgfton (with whom Hugh Cunningham your minlfter hath promifed in your name to join your forces.) My Lord Prefident and the aunties are for Commiffary Stewart ; my Lord Advocate, oyt of piety for ah old fufFerer, Sir Gilbert Elliot; Commiflar Smol- let, with a fqiiadron of the borrows, for himfelf. My Lord Sea- field is for all of them till the parliament fits, and then for his coufin Forglan, when its over. There are feveral more candidates. Their way of pleading is this : If for bur fecurity (for they have been nick't with promifes before) ye will depofitate bur comiffions in the hands of our refpeftive patrons, till the parliament be over, we will ferve you with all our following ; and, if not, then, •votrefervi- teur. I have a good mind to put in for the next vacancy my felf. I'll difperife with this; for I amrefdlved to be aLbrd of Seffion this reign, or I'll accept of a bifhoprick the next; and then up goes Goffipry. Adieu. Captain Campbell of Finab, that was fent by the African compa>> ily from London, in November laft, with acommiffipn to be one of their cbuncill of Caledonia, arrived at Greenockthe.i.ath, and came to Greenock the 1 4th inftant. He gives account, that, as he came in to Caledonia, he found the Spanifh fleet, confiftitig of three fhips of force, twelve fraall veflels, fifteen fail in all, cruifing off the Gol- den Ifland; and having eafily'paft their fleet, arrived at the colo- ny the nth of April. He found them in all the diforder men poffibly could be in; their fort unrepaired, not a tree cut down; only a few huts built for putting them under cover ; and, in fhort, una- nimoufly rcfolved to leave the place in March. ' The caiife of this diforder is atributed by our 'people (Captaiif Campbell is very mo- deft Sk. AND LETTERS. ,6ij deft in his acounts) to. the defertionof the firft colony. Some fay the proclamations frightned them out of their wits, (for they did not want provifions;) others fay, that they got (of the French fhips that was loft there) a great deal of money, which made . them weary of the place, and impatient to be gone. Now, this laft con- voy, that went out under the command of Captain Gibfon,, Major Lindfey, Lieutenant Veitch, and one Byers were, upon their ar- rival, to take orders from the council! of Caledonia, the company not hearing that the colony had deferted, tho' there was a report of it. They finding the place abandoned, continue themfelves in the government ; and the firft thing they refolved upon after their land- ing was, to fend 400 of their men to Jamacia, to fave their provi- fions. Captain Campbell gives account, that one Captain. Drum- mond, who had been with the firft convoy that deferted, and had returned from Jamacia in queft of this, for he knew they were to follow, remonftrate againft this refolution, by ftiowing them the ill treatment their men had met with in that place; and propofed to go off with a 1 50, and to ftiift among the Spaniards (who had begun hoftilities upon them in the bufinefs of Pincarton.) This propofal is rejeded, and the men ftiipt. Drummond refufes to obey Lind- fay as a couneellor ;, fb fall to logger heads. Drummond is put in arreft, where he lay while Campbell's arrival, and in this pofture of affairs he found them at his landing. The mean while, they have an account of a body of Spaniards marching over land, from Sandla Maria, under the command of the governor of that place. Captain Campbell, two days after he came to ftiore, marched out with 200 of the colony and 40 Indians againft them. The Indians coa- duflied him, two days march through the woods, to a place called in there language, Tappo Canti, where the Spaniards were intrenched with pallifadoes, or rather flicks fet in the ground, and woven a- bout with twiggs. Campbell could not, for the woods, make any front agaiijft them ; but came up in diforder to the palfifadoes, (the Spaniard fireing on them,) which they eafily threw down, entered fword in hand, and put them to flight. There were nine of the colony ^14 STATE-PAPERS -colony killed, Campbell arid fourteen more were wounded. He cannot give any certain account how many of the Spaniards were killed, for the foldiers fell of plundring their camp, which hin- dred them for puriuing them. Campbell returns back to the fort, and is advertifed by a friend, that Gibfon, Lindfay, and Veitch were fpeaking of capitulating with the Spanilh fleet. Mean while one of the foldiers deferting, gives account of the ficknefs of our peo- ple, fcarcity of provifions, and that the colony was weary of the place, and wanted any tolerable pretext to leave it; whereupon the Spaniards land a body of their people; Campbell cannot know what number, being all under the cover of the wood ; but, when they took poffeflion of the fort, they marched in about 500 men. Captain Campbell was ftill againft capitulating : "He knew the Spaniards durft not attack the fort; he has a mean opinion of their courage ; and propofed to make a firefliip of one of their floops, and to try that as the laft expedient. He propofes this to the boatfwain of the Riling Sun ; promifes him, in the name of the company, L. 500 reward, if he can fet the Spanifli Admiral on fire, and to be paid to his order in Scotland, if he dies in the attempt. He firankly undertakes the thing, goes out in the dark of the night, and came very near the Admiral ; but, his heart failing him, tacked about, and returned without doing any thing. Its true, the fleet took the alarm on his going up, fired from all their ihips, and run to their fmall arms. If there was any fign given them, I know not ; but, when they come, there will be difcoveries made that yet we know nothing of. After this, nothing can flop them from capitulating; they pretend they had then but two months pro- vifions of flour, and wante4 ball ; for they were melting down the leads of their cannon, and what pewter veflels they had. The di- rectors here affirm, that they have it under their hands, that they then had no lefs than fixiE^onths provifions, and, for ball, they had twenty thoufand ftone weight of lead aboard at their home-coming. They'll be all at logerheads together. In fine, they give out, that Camp- AND LETTERS. 615- Campbell's wounds and ficknefs (for he was then diftreft with a flux) had crack'd him, and fo they capitulate without him. Thus, Th£lt the Spaniards fhould have the fort as it then was, ha- ving four great guns, and two or three fmall pieces : That all prifoners fhould be returned on both fides : That, in eleven days, they fhould put themfelves and their efFeds on board, and be gone : That any fhip cpming from Scotland with provifions for fix months thereaf- ter fhould have leave to retyrn. Gibfon and Veitch figned the ca- pitulation ; (Lindfay died two days before); Campbell would not fign, put himfelf aboard his floop, with thirty men, and, on the 1 1 th of April, fet fail for New-York, and from thence, in five weeks,, landed at Greenock the 12th inflant. Adieu. If you are for a touch of our town-news, 'voicy : This week, three or four of the lafl mob were'put upon theTron ; and a cook,, (who truly deferved to have been fricazied), fcourged mofl gently by the hands of the hangman ; the mob huzzaing them all along, and throwing flowers and rofes on theTron for their honour; and wine going about like water. This has given the Provoft and town- council great offence, have put their hangman, in the hole, and fent for his brother of Haddington to fcourge him for not doing his duty. The poor executioner pled ftrongly for himfelf. That the- King's privy council had taken no notice of the Advocate, who be- ing concufled, but by a few of the mob, figned an order for making open the prifon-doors, and that he himfelf was threatened by many hundreds with death, if he laid on but one fore flroke. The ma- giflrates, notwithftanding, repel his defence, and order him to be* fbourged. The hangman of Haddington, feeing a great multitude in the flreets, takes, the epouvante, and inakes his efcape. Thus, af- ter waiting two hours in the windows, we are difappointed of the fhow, and the prifoner returned. The magiflrates of Haddington, (fome fay) find themfelves concerned to prefent their hangman, and are to fend to fome neighbour-town for a day's work of theirs. In Ihort, the common difcourfe is, that all this buftk is like to termi- nate, 6i6 S T A T E - P A P E R S nate, in fine, in a perfecution of the hangman hereabouts, and breaking fpme few officers (whereof I may be one) of the army. Adieu. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. He is for making a Bar gain ivith Lord Bale arras, before he be per- mitted to return to Scotland, that he fhall not join the Duke of : Hamilton. The Commiffionerdifpleafedix,ith the Advocate. Againji a Signature in favour of Roflin. Of one Father Cof- mo's PraSlices. SIR, Whitehall, ^ I thought to have writt to his Majefty this morning ; but I find rToo.'^ it is impoffible I can have time. I know it would have been good for my health that I had gone to the Bath ; but, feeing that il un- derftand by your letter, that his Majefty rather defires I fhould go for Scotland, I fhall make all the hafte to go there that is poffible for mc. I have letters from fonie, particularly Lord Philiphaugh, . and from the Prefident of the feffion, that, could his Majefty go to Scotland, his Majefty's afi^airs would be fettled to his fatisfa£tion. There is another thing which they feem to think, which indeed I am not fully convinced of, that is, that his Majefty's coronation might be put off^ till another time: However, if this Can be, it would fave a great deal of expence to his Majefty and to the fubjefls. My L. Commiflioner does likewife write of the other preparations that feems to be indifpenfibly needful. I only add thefe two, that the council-chamber in the abbay and chapel fhould likewife be re- paired ; and all thefe reparations cannot amount to much. How- ever, if his Majefty cannot come, he will find that my L. Com- miffioner defires to come up about the time of his Majefty's return ; and I know feveral other will defire the like, particularly my L. Chancellor ; and, as for myfelf, I fliall be ready to obey his Ma- jefty's commands, and fhall either come up before the parlia- ment, AND LETTERS. 617 ment, or ftay there, as he :pleafes. I have not yet intimate my order for my lodgings; but I will do it; but, for fome time, I muft lodge in the town as before. If his Majefly has any particular commands for me, I ihall be glade to have them about the time I come to Scotland. As for what you write concerning my L. Balcarres, I know his cir- cumftances are fuch as they are reprefented by my L. Loudon; and' I do indeed believe, that he will rather do good than hurt to his iMajefty's fervice there ; but I would take his promife, in exprefs terms, that he fhquld neither diredly nor indirectly cohcur with the IX;of Haniilton in the oppofition, but, on the contrary, that he fhould be aflifting to us ; and I believe my L. Commiffioner will write to the fame purpofe how foon he receives your letter and Mr Pringle's. I find alfo, that my L. Commiffioner is alfo diffatisfied with my L. Advocate ; but I ihall endeavour to adjuft this the beft way I can, as foon as I come to Edinburgh. My L. Argyle writes moft impatiently for the Frazers remiffion, and my L. Arbrucehall's paper. My L. Comrniffioner does likewife recommend to me a fig- nature in favours of the Laird of Roflin : I fhall not opppfe it ; on- ly this you may know, that its worth, by their own acknowledge- ment, 1 800 pounds Scots, and perhaps more : And the treafury of Scotland was never fo low as it is now ; and what makes it yet wprfe is, that no body knows what the King's revenues may a- liadunt to till after the parliament, becaufe they intend to make fuch regulations in the trade as I believe will quite diforder the cu- 'ftoms for fome years. I received my laft letters from Scotland by Captain Douglas, who does alfo defire to carry them over ; there- fore I have delivered them to him. I believe he is to give the King an account, that one Father, Cofmo, whofe true name is Clerk, has been in Scotland, that he. did diftribute fome money, there, and that he knows where he is now. I do, think it very fit that he be taken up, and his papers feized; perhaps fomething may be difcovered by him. I have fent the King's letter to be delivered by Mr Prin- gle ; artd you may do me the favour to let hi^.Majefty know, that I thought it unneceiTary to trouble him. ^jjl dpjibt not but upon the 4I firft 6i8 S T A T E - P A P E R S firft opportuaity we will hear of a new rabble ; for the featence a- gainft the rabblers has besen moft favourable to them ; and the breakii:^ the windows of all in the gO;verament has not been fo much as confidered either bj the judges or advocates ; and, when the rabblers were ftanding upon the Tron, they had a concert of flutes playing, and the people about were kiffing their hands and encouraging them. . Forgleh writes this to me partieulaiiy. I mind nothing more than is neceflkry for your information at prefent. I know I fhall be much troubled with folicitations for places when I come there, I entreat you to write me frona time to time, which is all at prefent from, Sir, Y. M. H. S. Earl of Mar toMk Ca^istares. Going to the North to keep his Men right. Is in a IPack ■'with Mr Carfidres's Friend ; and therefore expeSis his Interefi for a Place. SIR, Edbburgh, When there's fo many of your friends here who give you better 1700. accounts of bufineis than I can, I know my letters will be of no ufe, but troublefome, elfe this fhould not have been the firft fince yoti left Scotland. Th« council and exchequer are now adjourned, and the Gommiffioner has allowed me to go to the country for fome time. I intend to go north before I i-eturn to this place, both for fome private bufinefe of my own, and alfo to keep thofe in that country, in wh-om I am concerned, right, and not to let them join with afty that are in parties againft us : As yet they have been pret- ty free of it. We have a florry here from pretty good hands, that fome conceffled in, the Highlands has ordered their men to have their arms in readihefe ; fo its time we (hould look to ourfelves, and keep our own men right ; and I'm fure it& good fervice done the Kihg. It will bea coafiderable time ere I be in town «gaiii, and its AND L^ E T T E R S. 619 its likely any places that arc Vaicant will be difpofing of in the mean time ; therefore, now, Sir, I give you this trouble, to put you in mind of my pretentions I told you of when you was laft in Scot- land ; you may remember its Blackbarony's place. There's abun- dance afking it, I doubt not ; and I know it will be faid, that, at this time, it is a fit bait to take off fome one or other that is againft the King's meafores. If that were the only thing, or any way near it, to make the King's affairs go right, I affure you 1 would never o- , pen my mouth of it ; but fince it is no great hiatter, aitid can d6 the King's fervice little good that way, I hope I may fpeak for my felf. 'Tis very reafonable the King fhould take people off that are againfl: him, and make new friends ; but I hope his Majefty is more generous, and it would not be thought his intereft to negleft thofe who have ferved him faithfully. There is nothing I like worfe than for one to overvalue himfelf ; but its known I have ferved his Ma- jefty faithfully according to my power ; and, fince ever I have been acquainted with you, and in a pack with your friends, I am fure there was none more cordial to them, and ftudied more all their in- terefts. All I have of the King is a Captain's pay, which is a very fmall thing» confidering my expences with ftaying for the moft part in Edinburgh about the judicatories. I hope. Sir, my friends defigned to get me foraething more now from the King ; and, if any thing, it could not be lefs than the fallary of that place. 'Tis a poft I the more covet,, becaufe my genius lies that way ; and What the King would be pleafed now to beftow on me by way of pen- fion, or any other way, would take off any body fully as well as the place I a& ; and I would value that poft more than any other by which I could make much more profit ; and, befide, it would make the place more confidered afterward, becaufe never a nobler- man had it before. I have fpokeof it to the Commiffioner, who is very v/ell fatisfied I fbould have it. Sir^. fince ever v|^e were ac- quaint, I have been m^ch oblig^ed to you, for you have given rri6 jnany proofs of your friendfhip and fincerity. I now very much 'depend on you ; and, if this come not in my way now, I need ne- 4 I 2 ver 620 S T A T E - P^A P -E R S ver.expe£t it after'wards ; for your enemies and mine (you, know who I mean) are fo pickt'at me, that, if ever it be in their power, they will not fail of doing all they can to ruin me. I ihall not de- fire this favour I alk to be pufhed fooner than our friends thinks convenient, though the fooner the greater favour it would be : Rut, when thofe things comes to be agitated, I hope I may rely on your friendfhip ; and, wherein I can ferye you, or any of youf concerns, I aflure you there is none more willing, nor will do it with more fincerity; for, lam, SIR, Your moft afFe£tionate humble fervant, M. I hope you know the hand. I have written much to the fame purpofe to my Lord Seafield. Lord Advocate to Mr-CARSTAREs. Matters arc ivorfe than they •were. — The SuhjeSi of the Humour is evanijhed ; hut the Humour continues. — Is for the King^s calling up Ormijion. SIR, Edinburgh, We grow no better. I believe our friend the treafurer-depute is ^S^ ''* ^^ wearied as I am ; but I drudge on,.and greatly wanted him this laft week that he kept the country. I fee no probability of doing any thing to fatisfa£tion, till the King and parliament have a happy meeting ; for diforders increafe, and the weaknefs Of the government is more and more difcovered j but, in fincerity, for my own part, I can do no better ; and I truly pity the Commiffioner, whom I fee grieved and vexed, and yet knows not how to help it. ' Was ever x people more unhappy ? The rife of our differences mere humour j ^ and AND LETTERS. 621 and now, when the very fubje£tis evaniflied, yet the humour conti- nues, and even good men will not fee where it vifibly tends. As to your own affairs, I wifh heartily White would fend for your old friend Mr Dawfon, and that he were with you there ; for I am fure he is able to give you the beft accounts of all our matters. If Mr Fowler return, and matters be not better adjufted, it will be new trouble : But I am truly of opinion, that this is the beft expedient for to determine 9 what to refolve in this juncture ; and Hume pro- tefts, that, if he could either fay or do any thing better, he would do it. He has not fpoke to 27 of this motion ; but he did move it to Mr Lie to fend one, and named the fame perfon ; but 10 is modeft.. Mr Niell is at home, in good health. Adieu. J. Stewart to Mr Carstares. Speculations upon theprefent Situation of Affairs. Worthy SIR, I had writtfooner, but waited to inform myfelf the beft I could what Edmburgfi, Influence the King's letter that was publifhed with the adjournment 1700. of the parliament might have upon fome people here. There is a party that mock it, as they will do any thing elfe that can be offered for the peace and quiet of the government ; and I am heartily glad they do fo, for thus I hope they will difcdver themfelves. Another part of them (thank God, they are now two) are much more moderate ; and yet they fpeak angrily, like peevilh children, that cannot en- dure to be careffed immediately after they have beenwhipt, and-are heartily angry enough : But one can fee there is no malice, wrath, nor defign, in their anger ; a little time and it is over ; and a few good words will make them friends with their father. No doubt, ye have account of all this bufinefs from others ; if they differ from me, Mr Da-wfon. Ormifton. ' Mr Fowler, Mr Carftares. 9, the King. Hume, Aivocite. 27, Carmichael, JLjV, Queeniberry. 10, Ormifton. 622 S T A T E - P A P E R S me? I, know not ; but^ let theiM,!think what they will, I am perfuajded . ttiat this letter of i^he King's will prove thefcourge of thaX party, and a rod of iron to break them to pieces. Were the colony ftill in being, I know not if it could have wrought fo powerfully : But now the profecutioji qf that bufinefs, exceeding far both their ftrengtb' and hope, I am confident, the more moderate think no more inearneft . of it J efpecially, feeing what the violent party does propofe, fmells rank of rage and revenge, and a defign deftru^tive of the good of the country. They openly profefs, that they will never give over, till the King grant them an a£t, afferting, that their colony's fettle- nient was legal. Without it, they fay, that they are not fecure m their reprifal upon the Spaniard, from being treated as pyrates by all the world ; and, for the Spaniard, they neither expe£b, nor will give him quarter. Thus, upon the fecurity of this a£t, they pretend to take into their fervice all the pyrates that fwarm upon the ocean ; their commiffion being a fecurity to them againft all other nations but the Spanifh. Now, I think I may confidently affiire you, that all the moderate party of that fadiion, not only prefbyterians, hut the other friends of the government that were in with then?, mock this refolye as ridiculous. They all call it a noble and honourable expedition, worthy the countenance and protefliion of the King of Cireat Brirain ; and, as for any defigo, by that a<£t, of retaking their Caledonia, they have no hope of any other fuccefs, but throw- ing out th^ir money to no purpofe. And 'it is much to be doubted, if they had that ad:, if the fubfcrib^rs would pay in their money {without the laft extremity of Law) upon that projefl:. The mode- rate are for making another ufe of their afl: eftablifhing the compa- ny, than a war with Spain. I am confidetit to aflure you, that they beiieve the King, upon his letter, that he is^ in earneft with them, and will give them any encouragement for their trade, Darien a- part. Thisj with the habeas corpus aft, which they expedt, from thefe words of the letter^ (and for the fecurity of mens perfon^), does not a little pleafe them : So that I cannot make' the leaft doubt, (let others philofophife as they pleafe), if things keep right in Engjand, but AND LETTERS. 623 but the King fhall have a party in this parliament that will be able to vote any thing out of dows. This fix or feven days we have been hourly made to expedt an exprefs, with an order for breaking fome of the troops. This fets our politics to work. Thefe who are for Caledonia and a war with Spain, avoweth, that the King dare not treak them, not having money to clear them ; and, if helhould, Voila tant gagni pour eux. Others fay, there is no danger in break- ing, if the King give them half-pay till they be cleared. But the two grand points, which are the fubjeft of our politics, are, The treaty for dividing the Spaniih monarchy, and the death of the Duke of Gloucefter. Here is the fucceffion of both Spain and England,., and what they hope the parliament of England will find worthy their confideration : - That is their plight anchor, and all their hopes of mifchief are in It. I fhall not trouble you with the impertinent conjedtures and chimeras they have about it*, but, in general, there is ground to fear, if any differences fhould arife between the Kijig and his parliament of England, fo as to come to any rupture or violence, (which God forbid), that this party here, (even after the prefbyte- rians and other friends" of the government hath left them), they will join themfelves with any party in England that fhall oppofe them- felves to the King. Therefbre, if ye be in eameft for breaking any part of the army, ye muft confider how ye are flated in England. If ye are right there. It matters not for any thing in Scotland, whe- ther ye break fome few of us or not. But, by all means, ye muft give us half-pay, till we are cleared ; and fome way muft be fallen upon for putting the ferjeants and corporals (upon fome fmall allow- ance abtive a foldier's pay), into the ftanding regiments. Thefe fel- lows have ftill influence tipon the foldiers^ and are capable of doing , mifchief. This may be done, by adding four or five men to each company ; or fome other way. By this time, if ye have goile thro* this, ye are weary ; I afk pardon, and am fincerely, dear Sir, your faithful and affeOrionare fervant. LoRid 624 STATE-PAPERS Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares. Lord Se afield under much Obloquy. — The Earl of Barcarras. — Charac- ter of Sir Gilbert Elliot ^ ivhom he ivi/hes to be Lord ofSeJfipn. SIR, Edinburgh; - I have none of your's to anfwer ; nor is there, as yet, any appear- Aug. 22. ^j^j,g q£ alteration in our affairs. I wifhed, in my laft, that- forae I 700* perfon were fent for from this, to inform truly and fully of the ftate of all matters, and named Dawfon, your friend. We now exped my Lord Seafield this week, or the beginning of the next ; and I am glad he is coming, both to fee our matters, and help with his ad- vice. It is true, he is under much obloquy ; but I truly judge it all calumny ; for, I am perfuaded, that, in his ftation, he hath very fmgly intended both the good of his country, and his Majefty's fer- vice. My Lord Carmichael came to town Wednefday. I heard the Earl of Barcarras importunes the King for liberty to come home; and I know the King hath hitherto refufed it. This day it was dif- courfed, whether it were fit, or not ; and, if fit, in what terms. The council, laft week, ordained the Advocate and Sollicitor to bring in lifts of all come from France contrary to law, and feemed to incline they ftiould be all fent back ; which is unfavoujable for the Earl's defire ; but, if his particular circumftjyices and ftraits ftiould prevail, it was thought by fome, the allowance ftiould not be granted, unlefs he qualified himfelf by the allegiance and aflurance : The Advocate faid, he doubted he would ; but, if he ftiould, things are fo turned of late, that he could not judge it a fecurity; for, fince May laft, they have qualified themfelves, which, if evened to it a year before, would have faid as much as, am I a dog ? So that, though allegi- ance and aflurance, when refufed, were indeed difcoveries, but, when taken, were no fecurity ; and therefore he thought caution and con- finement neeeflary ; but I thought it was more inclined, that, at this time, he might have patience. And I indeed would gladly have the AND LETTERS. 625 the parliament firft well over. We have enough of ill-talkers, and ill-talk was at no time more hurtful. On Tuefday laft, the Lord Mer- fington dined well with a friend in the Merfe, and went well to bed; but was found dead before four in the morning, his lady in bed with him, who knew nothing of his dying. A warning ftroke ! He was a good honeft roan, and is much regretted : But the next care is a good fucceflbr, which I earneftly obteft may be an honeft able man, as being the great concern of the nation. Mr Man and Mr Thom- fon did both feparately name to Hume Sir Gilbert Elliot ; and it was Hume's own thought, and he obtefted them, for God's fake, to bide by it ; for the man is true, honeft, alfo juft and J)old, and hath given good proof. I believe the Prefident of the feflion may be for ano- ther, and likewife a very honeft man; but, I believe, the firft will have more to recommend him. My dear friend, you know 32's cafe with his daughter; the thing in the world moft afflidled him. If it were polfible, on this occafion, to get the young man into the coun- cil-clerkfhip, it would be a fingular relief; for he dow net fee his daughter miferable ; and you know the young man, and I could an- fwer for him. Pray mind this, as you would do 32 the moft en- 'dearing kindnefs. I'll fay no more, till I fee Mr Hay. Adieu. The good Countefs of Rothes died Tuefday laft, much regretted by all, and very defervedly. The Treafurer-depute is at Lefly. Duke of Queensberry to Mr Garstares. Not advifeahle to fettle the Succejfor to Merftngton foon\ becaufe the Sejion not Compofed as it ought to be. SIR, Your letter of the fifth from Loo came fafc to my hands ; it re- Holyrood- lates entirely to my Lord Balcarras. The King has done me a great 2°"f ' "^"S' deal of honour in defiring my opinion in that matter. I thought 4 K. Jrayfelf 3a, Advocate. 626 STAT E-P A P E R S myfelf obliged to be cautious in my advice ; and therefore, I fpoke to fuch of the King's fervants as are now in town about it. I found them divided in their opinion ; but it was at laft thought fit to de- lay giving their thoughts finally till my Lord Seafield's arrival, who ■ is expected in a few days. I know my Lord Balcarras's circum- ftances to be very bad, which engaged me formerly to be an inter- ceflbr for him ; they do every day plead more and more for favour ; yet I hope that the delay of two or three months, till our parlia- ment be over, will not be of very great prejudice to him ; but, as foon as my Lord Seafield comes, that affair ftiall be fully advifed, and you informed of the fentiments of people about it. I am juft going to my brother's houfe (which is but 1 5 miles from hence) for two days. I leave my Lord Argyle and Major General Ramfay in town, though there is not the lealt profped: of trouble in it : So, upon ac- count of this hurry, pray excufe the Ihortnefs of my letter, and ex- pe£t the trouble of a longer one foon after my return to this place. I am, with great kindnefs, your's, &c. Two nights ago my Lord Merlington died fuddenly ; there wil! be many pretenders to his p'lace in the feffion ; but it is noways ad-, vifeable to difpofe of it fuddenly ; that bench is not compofed as it ought to be ; and, therefore, we muft be wary in our choice': So time is requifite for a juft recommendation to a place of that importance, both to the King and country. J. Stewart to Mr Carstares. The Oppofttion divided into Jacobites^ Malcontents^ and WiUiamites ; and hoiv each ivill a^ in Parliament. Worthy SIR, Edinburgh, ^ ^"^ ^'^^■"^ ^^^ "^^"^^ perfuaded that the major part of the parlia- Aug. 24. xnent will vote the King a fubfidy for his army. I fhall not here trouble you with the particular reafonings and difcourfes I hear upon the fub- J700. AND LETTERS. 627 fubje£t, but give you, in general, the reafon of my opinion. It is no- torious that there are three different fpts of people in that fadion, (call- ed the Country Party), which oppofe themfelves to the court. There are in it rank Jacobites ; there are malcontents that are not Jacobites ; and there is a third, (that are neither Jacobites nor malcontents,) which I call Williamites ; and thcfe are thofe prefbyterians, and other honeft country-men, in the African intereft, that have nothing before their eyes, but promoting trade, and the good and welfare of their country. Thefe three parties, (though they unanimoufly agree in oppofing themfelves to the court,) yet they had, and ftill have, dif- ferent deligns. The Jacobites bulinefs is, chiefly, to break the army; and more now, fince the death of the Duke of Gloucefter, than be- fore, that, when the King dies, (and neither the Princefs Ann nor he having any children), they may the eafier embroil the nation, and do their own bufinefs. The malcontents that are not Jacobites will not venture fo far ; their bufmefs is, to retard and hinder the King's affairs in parliament, to difficult his fervants to make themfelves neceflary to the King, and force him to change his miniilers to make way for themfelves. The Williamites I fpeak of make the third clafs ; and, I think, they muft be more numerous than both the other two : Their aim folely is, the peace and fecurity of the government, and the good of the country, by ah induftrious purfuit of honourable and profitable trade. If the cafe be really thus, now a propos : The King demands a fubfidy for his army, the Jacobites and malcontents oppofe it ; the firft, in good earnefl, the latter, on- ly to fhow the King, that they are men capable to promote or retard his fervice, as he does confider them. Now, if the King fland his ground, and flick clofe by his fervants, thefe mull give way ; for they will prefently fee themfelves left by the Williamites I fpeak of. And, you know, when this parliament fat down, the King's friends would not have been much out-voted : So that, a little addition would have call the balance on the King's fide. I reckon, now, the whole difpute will be about the number of the; army ; (for, I am confident to affure you, that the wife and honeft men think no more 4 K 2 of 618 S T A T E - P A P E R S of Caledonia); and it is not irapoflible but that they may be prevailed upon to keep all for a year: But nobody can be certain of this. The ordinary way of reafoning (fince the death of the Duke of Gloucef- ter), is much different from what it was : They begin to afk, when the King comes ? To crie, where is our fecurity without an army ? They'll tell you, that they do not know what this treaty, for divi- ding the Spanifh monarchy, may produce, nor what meafures the Englifh may take, either with refpe£t to that treaty, or in relation to their own fucceflion : That it is not fafe to difarm the government, (when it depends but on the breath of two or three princes), to fet all the world in war ; and that, perhaps, not far from their own doors. I reckon, ftill, the Williamites the major part, (and thev were lately angry with the King, and yet it is over), and this is their way of fpeaking and reafoning of late. Now, I know but one thing; , that will much difficult the King's fervants in parliament, and it is this : How will ye pay the arrears of the army ? there is L. 40,000 fterling owing. The parliament did grant a fund for the whole j they will grudge exceedingly to make up this deficiency. I am, Dear SIR, Your faithful and affectionate fervant, J. S. My Lord Merfington died Tuefday morning ; my Lord Seafield. came in yefternight, and has been all this day at Leith. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Some of his Majefly's Servants do little or nothing, — 10 or 12 more •would enable them to carry all. — Argyle and Annandale •will be •very angry if he fend not dozun Jndrenv Morton a Patent for a Knight Baronet — Whitela-w gained. — Archbijhop ofGlq^o'w. SIR, . I know you will excufe me for not writing to you fo often as I u- Auguft 30.' fed to do when I was at London ; for I have been very bufy fince I i7oo< came AND LETTERS. 629) came to this place. I have met frequently with my Lord Commif- fioner, and with his Majefty's other fervants ; and we are preparing a letter to the parliament, and inftru£l:ions ; and we arfe refolved to fpeak, particularly, to every man that we can have the leaft hopes to gain. I find, the minifters in the weft, - and in this town, are now convinced, that, if affairs do not fucceed in parliament, that all will go to ruin. We will have all the reft of the Jacobite Lords into the parliament, and they are as diligent as is poffible. In the mean time, fome of his Majefty's fervants do little or nothing, and others feeiri to difpair. I am certain, would his Majefty come here, all would be well ; for that would unite his fervants, and divide and terrify the oppofers. And, as it is, could we prevail with 10 or 12 more than thofe we are fure of, we could carry all : But what con- nects and unites the oppofing party is that refolve concerning Cale- donia ; and the argument they ufe is, that, if the right of Caledonia be not declared, the dire£tors themfelves are not fafe from being profecote ; for they have got information that the King of Spain will apply to the King, that it may be fo; and they have got let- ters which gives an. account, that Pincarton and his crew were con- demned as pyrates, upon the proclamations in Jamaica. I heartily wlfli that we could fall upon fome expedient, that might both pleafe his Majefty, and fatisfy honeft men. His Majefty ftiall have our thoughts of it by my next letters. Imuft alfo entreat that you may lay before the King, that it does u^ a great deal of hurt here, that it is generally believed that the company's fhip, called the St Andrew, is detained by Sir William Beefton ; and, therefore, I hope his Ma- jefty will give fpeedy orders concerning this, for I can fay nothing • to juftlfy it. 1 expedk that you will fend me fuch an anfwer as I mayftiowto any of the company. I entreat that you may mind fhofe papers that are to be laid before the King; for the Earl of Ar- gyle will turn very angry, and fo will my Lord Annandale, if An-^ drew Morton's patent, as a Knight Baronet, come not down. I fhall add no more this night, fmce I write again on Monday's night, but, that I am, Sir, your M. H. S^ White-^ ^30 STATE-PAPERS Whitelaw and I meet very often ; he promifes to ferve the King, and to be a faithful friend to myfelf. He fays, we could have no difficulty, could an expedient be found as to the point of Caledonia. I am again acquainted by feverals, that the Archbifhop of Glafgow intends to complain to the parliament of his confinement; I there- fore wifh, that, by a letter, it may be left to the privy-council to do therein as they fhall think fit. As I wrote formerly, his confine- ment was at his own defire ; for he was at that time under a fen- tcnce of banifliment. I muft entreat, that you will not engage your- felf to any for the Lord of the Seffion's place until the parHament be over; for I doubt not but you have heard that my Lord Merfmg- ton is dead, and I hope fome will ad in expedations of it. Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Lord Balcarras Jhould he permitted to return., as an Jnjiance of the- folly of Jacobitijhi., and a "warning to others. Has had Lord and Lady Marjhal dining ivith him. Keeps up a Correfpond- ence ivith Paterfon. He luill be very Cautious in laying out the Money luith ivhich he is to be entru/led by the King. S I R, Hoiyrood- Since my laft, I have received three letters from you, dated the houfe, Aug. , 2th, 1 6th, and 20th. I have now fully difcourfed the King's fer- -3i« 1 70O' ^ vants about my L. Balcarras ; they exprefs all of them a compaf- fion towards him, and a trouble for the fufFerings of his family j but are of opinion, that the favour which his Majefty intends him fhould be delayed till after the parliament : For my own part, I fee no danger or inconveniency in letting him come over immediately; he is an inftance of the folly of Jacobitifm ; and, when he comes, that party may fee in him the fate of their own extravagancies ; wherefore, I am fo far from oppofing the King's intended goodnefs to that Lord, that I wifh his Majefty would allow it him in fuch a frank AND LETTERS. 63?^ frank way as that he may be obliged by it. I have had my Lord and Lady Marfhall to dine with me, fince I had the King*s allow- ance to promife him a penfion. I took occafion to fpeak to both of them feparately, but found them yet a little flicking in the af- ferting the right of Caledonia ; for which reafon, I was not fo free with them as I intended to be in a few days, after I have prepared them better by the help of fome of their advifers. As to any other commiffions that ftiall come, I do affure you, that none fliall be gi- ven out till after the feffion of parliament, if the good of his Ma- jefty's fubje£ts do not abfolutely require it, and that I be very well affured of the fufficiency of the perfons for his Majefty's intereft to whom they fhall be given. The death of' the D. of Glocefter has mightily, puffed up the Jacobite party here ; fo that from thence I do ilill expefl: a greater oppofition in bufinefs than ever. I wifli that his Majefty's affairs could allow him to come hither ; however> we have people at work to countermine that party. The African company have appomted a committee of feven of their number to confer with Mr Paterfon, and to concert, and digeft in writing, fuch things as they fhall agree upon as proper to be demanded in par- liament. Mr Paterfon is, in his judgement, againft moving any thing in this feffion about Caledonia ; and tells me, that he thinks he has gained fome confiderable men to his opinion. The poor man ads with great diligence and affedion to the King and coun- try ; and he has no bye-end, and loves this government both in church and ftate. He knows nothing yet of my having obtained any thing for him-; and I am a little embaralfed how to give him what lam allowed for him, left his party in that company fhould conceive any unjuft jealoufy of him, or he himfelf think that I in- tend as a bribe that which is really an ad of charity. I was out of town at my brother's houfe, when my L. Seafield came to this place ; but I returned on Monday before dinner. We have had fe- veral meetings fmce with the reft of his Majefty's fervants : We have come to fome refolutions ; but people are ftill fo flow and timorous, and fo changeable in their opinions, that it is. very hard to 632 S T A T E - P A P E R S to get them to fix a point : However, I do hope, that, in a poft or two, I fhall be able to give you fome account of the meafures which we are now concerting. As to what you write about the money that may be neceflary for the King and country's fervice, I fhall let you know my opinion in my next ; and, in the mean time, you may aflure the King, that, fince he is pleafed to allow me that truft of money, I fhall be as little lavifh of it. as I can, and fhall never bellow it where it fhall not be of ufe, and fhall take all the care that I can, that neither his fervice nor money be thrown away. His Majefty's gracious acceptance of my poor endeavours here muft needs encou- rage me in the profecution of my duty. I fhall do all that's in my power to make returns fuitable to his goodnefs. I have daily more and more a fenfe of the obligations which" I owe you, and fhall e- ver continue your's, &c. Lord Seafield toMrCARSTAREs. Of a Meeting at the Duke of Athole's. The ProjeSis of the Minifiry. S I R, Edmburgh, \ wrote this letter to you from Leith, tho' it be dated from Edin- 1700. burgh. I have been fo crowded with company, that you can only expefl: an imperfeft account from me. The CommifTioner will fend you the draught of a letter, which, if his Majefly pleafes to fign, we think will be acceptable to all honeft men in the parlia- ment ; and vou have alio our thoughts of what inftrudions are ne- ceffary. It is evident, that we have no way of prevailing, but by letting honeft men fee the ftate of our affairs ; and that we muft ne- ceirarilyfall into confufion, if we don*t agree next feffion of parlia- ment ; and I do find a great many convinced of this ; but they be- ing fo clofely engaged by former addrefles, there is great difficulty in prevailing with them to come and affift us ; but fome of them that AND LETTERS. 633 ' < ' that oppofed us are willing to flay away. They are to have a great mjeeting at Dunkeld at the Marquis of Athol's houfe, when Lord John Hay is to be married, with the heirefs of Lovat. We that are concerned in the government are refolved to go to the country, that we may have the opportunity of fpeaking with the parliament- men ; and I am fure I fhall not fail to aft my part with all the care and diligence that is poflible ; and I fhall acquaint you if I have any fuccefs. I Ihall be upon a call, if the King have any fervice for me at London ; but, what we all wifh is, to fee him here ; for his own prefence would certainly give him fuccefs in his affairs ; and, without it, we will no doubt have great difficulty ; though I muft owa I have very good hopes, if every one would a£t their own part fairly. My Lord Carm\chael and I have reafon to be diflatis- fied with what the Chancellor has done as to that commlffion was granted to Hugh Cunningham and Duncan Ronald. The leaft in- fmuation to my Lord or me would have ftopt it. I did never yet fee it ; but, as the thing was reprefented to me, I did give my con- fent • and my Lord and I defign nothing by it but the King's fer- vice. The Commiffioner and the treafury has as much reafon to be diflatisfied with the Chancellor as we. What I have writt to Mr Pringle, concerning my L. Balcarras and Coats, he will acquaint you with it ; which is all I have time, in fuch a hurry, to add, but that I am, Sir, your M. H. S. J. Stewart to Mr Carstares. The Officers of State are to Jet out upon their Miffions to convert Members of Parliament. r-^'^Wagers that the Parliament iviU keep up the Army. ' A neiv ProjeSl on foot forTrade. . Worthy SIR, My L. Seafield this day took his journey to the north. This ten or Edinburgh, ; twelve days that he has been here, the officers of ftate been have for ^700 ^" 4L the 634 S T A T E - P A P E R S the moft together, and (they fay) have divided the members of par- liament of the other party among them ; Each has a clafs of them affigned him, and are to part next week to the country upon their miffion to convert them. If there be any thing of this, my L. Sea- field, I fuppofe, has wrote you. 1 have been feveral times to wait of him ; but could get no time, for a croud of company, to fpeak to him. It is poffible ye have accounts of the humours and incli- nations of the people much different from mine. I know, they brag ftill, that they are a fcore of votes fupernumerary for Caledonia, which they can never part with, that being the cement that unites them together ; for, if they quit that handle, they will break loofe from one another. I know that they prefume much. The mini- ilry is lazy, and ftirs little in the caufe, (but no body can be free from their calumnies), and that they themfelves are adiive, and at pains, both with the members of parliament and the nation, in car- rying on, the addrefs ; fo that there is, in fome parts, never a plough- man but that they have got to fign it by himfelf, or a notar for him. I know, that, fince the laft adjournment, there has been circular let- ters fentthro' the members of parliament of their party to keep them fixed. I know they prefume too, (and it may be true), that two thirds of the nation are either Jacobites, or perverted, by thefe mea- fures, in an ill opinion of the government. Yet ye know, that three parts of the members of parliament, (I mean of the , burrows and burgeffes), are honeft men, and prefbyterians ; and that, although they were angry enough about Caledonia, yet thefe (befides what we may count upon amongft the nobility), will never confent to a change in this government, or (when the cafe is plainly ftated) con- fent to what may firft bring it into contempt, and then to ruin. I have a wadger with you, and it is a bold one ; it is this, let others be as much afFraid as they will : Now, I fay, the African colony is defeat ; the King's letter publifhed, (which, when the parliament fits down, muft be renewed and enlarged, even as to defcend to par- ticular inftrudions); the D, of Glocefter is dead; the fucceffion of Eng- AND LETTERS. 635 England undetermined ; Scotland unanimoufly refolved to ly bye, and not declare -y the hearts of all good countrymen bent upon an union with England : All this confidered, my wager is, If the ma- jor part of this parliament be not for keeping up the greateft part of this army (I think I might fay all) for one year, if I had fifty lievs to lofe, I'll forfeit them all for a {hilling of your money. They have projedors now at work making plans and fcheming trade : I have feen the conftrudlion of fome. The defign is a national trade ; fo that by it all Scotland will become one entire company of merchants. It propofes a fund of credit, by which, in two years time, to raife above three hundred thoufand pound Sterling. With this ftock they are, i^. To trade to both the Indies, and fettle colonies in the terms of the aft eftablifhiog their company. 2J0, To raife manufactories throughout all the kingdom. 3?io, To purfue their fiftiing to greater profit in all the markets of Europe than any other fiftiing company in Chriftendom can do. 4?o, To employ all the poor in the nation ; fo that, in two years time, there fliall not be one beggar feen in all the kingdom, and that without any a£t of flavery. 5/0, To pay back to any of the fubfcribers to the African ftock his money, if demanded ; fo that no body can complain of any lofs that way. The form and a£t of parliament they are to demand for doing this mighty work is too long to write ; but, if I thought ye had ei- ther curiofity or time to read them, I ftiould not fpair my pains. Adieu. 4L 2 Earl 636 S T A T E - P A P E R S Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. A pleqfant Defcription of the Methods nfed U> carry their Point in Parliament by bothSidej.^ — Cammjary Elphinftrnthejitteft Man for a Lord of Sqffion. SIR, Sept. cJ^ ' ^ ^^^ your's with an account of your fuccefs in that affair recom- 1700. tnended fo earneftly to you. I am now mafter of the paper ; it comprehends all it fhould do, and no more. If it were poffible to tie me more than I was already, this one aft of his Majefty's would. Thefe ten days paft, thofe that are forward, of which hut few have been very bufy, every one of us has taken our taiks. V. Sealfield is gone north, I go to-morrow Weft, and the Commiffioner ftays in town ; and we have fcnt ferveral emiffaries among, the burrows in Fife and Angus, and thereabouts. Few of the barons can be brought to rea- fon, though I muft fay, the method now taken has fo good an a- fpt&.., that I'lh in gooid hopes. None is more foreward than Lord Arbrucehill ; nay, he is brifk and ftout beyond his natural temper. Lord Ruthven begins to have his eyes opened, and fome others ; but I Will not give you too good hopes, till I fee a Kttle farther. Borne has miniftersfet upon thiem, fome their wives: Some fhall have drawing plaifters that are fick at heart ; fo that I am hopeful thie fttzt will over one way or another. You cannot imagine how foolfflily they manage their new addrefs ; fcarce any but a Jacobite has the handing thei& about ; they caufe all fort of fluff and rabble fign, or fome body fign for them ; and all get titles, if it were a tay- lor, a cottar, nay, the meaneft creature, fchool-boys, what not. I gave the Commiffioner a particular account of fundries of this fort in •writt, which I prefume he'll tranimit to you. We are all now po- fitive that the King's prefence would blow all clouds away. You know there is a vacancy now in the feffion ; I fhall not fay its pro- per to fill it now; but Commiffary Elphinfton is the fitteft man that we AND LETTERS. ^37 we can he fure •of. I know others are recommended by fome, who I can dcmonftrate their carriage at this time proves they are betray- ing the King. Time will convince it more to every body*s con- vidion ; and I hope to fee the time when his Majefty may treat them as they deferve, which is, as the worft fort of enemies. When any thing- occurs worth the acquainting you, I ftiaill write. I am your's. Adieo. Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. Earl MarfhaVs Penfion. — Lord Balcarras. — Nevil Payne. — Money necejfary Jor Jecret Services-^ hoiv he ivill difpofe ofit.^His O'wn. Opinion of the Meafures necejjary for managing the next Sejfton of Parliament to the King's Mind. — Balcarras muf undertake for Lord Kelly. — The Money lodged in the Bank to be difpofed of by himfelf; — he has not communicated any thing concerning itt cvetL to Seafield. — Has referred the King to Mr Carfares for particu- lars. SIR, I received your letter of the 22d of laft months with E. Mar- Holyrood- Jhall's penfion, and a warrant for two hundred pounds. My Lord q^i^Q^f' Marftiall fceeps ftill upon fair generals, and feems to fttck upon the head of Caledonia ; which has made me keep at a greater diftance from him than I intended to have done. He is now going into the country, where fome of his friends intend to ply him ; for it is need- lefs to attempt it here, where he is constantly kept warm by fuch perfons as are ported about him by Lord H. and others of that par- ty. However, if he anfwer not expedation, what is intended for him fhall not be given him. By my laft letter to you, I gave it as my opinion, that I could fee no danger to the King's aiFairs, by his Majefty's allowing my Lord Balcarras to come home; for he can ne- ver be fo ill a man as to make nfe of fuch a favour to the prejudice of «38 STATE-PA FERS of his Majefty's affairs, when he has already paid fo dearly, for his tampering, and is now laid under fuch an obligation. There is, be- fides his cafe, which is a meer a£l of his Majefty's goodnefs, ano- ther, wherein we are likely to bepuzzled in parliament; I mean that of Nevil Payne -: He has been tortured, and very long iroprifoned ; and he inclined to apply to the privy-council for his liberation, which I have kept off, till I fhould know his Majefty's pleafure a- bout him. He had a recommendation of parliament formerly to the King, and I am afraid that it is not in our power to keep him legally. He will certainly apply to the next feflion of 4)arliarnent, and will undoubtedly be fet at liberty then ; and, probably, with fome reflec- tion upon his long imprifonment. I am therefore perfuaded, that it is his Majefty's intereft, either to fend me a warrant for difcharging him out of prifon, or, that he ftiould referr that matter to his privy- council, who will be fure to let him out : So the frankeft way would be, for the King to do it himfelf ; for it will be impoflible to keep him in till the parliament be over. I know him to be an empty, vain, talking, lyeing fellow ; and is not much worth the while of a- ny government's concern. The vacancy in the fefTion, of which I wrote to you formerly, muft by no means be filled up till after the parliament. There are a great many pretenders, and whoever gets it not will be difobliged ; and we muft have time to fee who deferves it beft, and are fitteft for it. As to the money which feems neceflary for the good of the King and the country's fervice, after reflexion, I am of opinion, that none ought to be remitted here; but that a thou- fand pound fliould be lodged, as foon as can be, in the bank of Eng- land, and their notes taken for it. There is no ufe for any known name in them, for they are payable to the bearer : So that, a ficti- tious, or any fervant's name, is fufficient. Let thefe notes be fent to me hither. I have already laid out L. 500 ; and, I believe, in a fliort time, I ftiall have occafion to difpofe of the reft. I do hope, that his Majefty's bufinefs may be done without putting him to any confiderable expence ; yet more money jhan what I now propofe may poffibly be neceflary; but I ftiall be anfwerabl'e that it fliall not be AND LETTERS. 63^ be fquandered; and I fhall be well affured of fatlsfadory returns, and doing things efFe£tually before I part with any greater fum of his Majefty's cafh, I would fend you a particular account of the dif- pofal of this ; but I do not think it fit, that the matter of fecret fer- vice be the Tubjedof a letter that may fall into wrong hands ; where- fore, I forbear to do it till wee meet, either here or at London. The directors of our Eaft-India company have accounts from Jamaica* that the governor of that place had declared, that, though our fhip^ the St Andrew, were cleared of all the debts that are owing upon her account, yet he could not let her go without orders from Eng- land. This, whether true or falfe, does exafperate the people migh- tily. There are alfo in town fome letters, which private perfoiis pretend to have received from the fame place, which bear, that the governor of Jamaica had fent to that of Carthagena, to congratulate with him upon the defertion of Caledonia, and to aiTure him, that, in cafe his own force had not been able to oblige the Scots to leave the place, that the King of England would have forced them to it. Though this, I believe, is falfe; yet people here are generally incline- able to believe the worft ; and by fuch kind of intelligence, whether real or contrived, their crofs humors are mightily fomented^ and the King's fervants find daily new difficulties to ftriiggle with. If there is no grounds for thefe reports, proper meafures mufh be fallen up- on to difabufe the people here. If there is, it were fit that fome kind of evidence were given, that his Majefty is difpleafed with thefe proceedings ; for, whatever the King's inclinations were, it was cer- tainly imprudent in the governor to, have made either of thefe decla- rations. I did formerly let you know, that I judged it for his Ma- jefty's fervice, that I Ihould have the honour of waiting upon him before the meeting of our parliament. I had nothing in view by that propofal, but to ad in concert with thofe of the King's fervants whom he trufls moft in his bufinefs; and to fay to him, in conjunc- tion with them, fuch things as I believed of importance to his fer- vice, and not fo proper to be written. Befides, in that way, I could make my thoughts more fully underftood, than is poffible for me at STATE-PAPERS a diftance. But I do now appreherifl, that his Majefty's ftay ia HollaiiMi cannot admit of fiich an overture; wherefore, I will take the liberty, by your hands, to lay before him fdme things, which I intended only to have fpoken to> himfelf of. My Lord Seafield is gone, on his progreft to the north. Since his arrival here, I have had aH the King's fervants that were near this place frequently toge- ther ; they have framed fome additional i-nftru£tions, and the draught of fuch a letter as they judge proper to be fent by his Majefty to the parliament at their next meeting. I do not know whether my Lord Seafield may have already fent you copies of them or not; but they require to be yet a little confidered, and fhall be difpatched in a few days : So that no refolutions can be taken on any copies that may be already fent. As I have formerly told you, I ftill find, more ' and more, that few folid or firm refolutions are taken when the King's fervants are called and advifed with upon any exigency : Some are often abferit, upon very fmall pretences, when they think any thing of confequence is to be concluded ; others, though pre- fent, are not to be engaged to plain dealing, dreading the confequen- ces of a pofitive opinion ; and, generally, they fhow little con- cern about the iffue of affairs. This feems to make it neceffary for me to take the more upon myfelf ; and, after advifing with them, and hearing their reafonings, I may take refolutions, both as to the matter and manner of managing ; for I do fee, that they will much more eafily agree to profecute meafures refolved upon, than come to any refolution by themfelves. I am fenfible, if I ad thus, I fhall put fuch a load upon myfelf, that nothing but the King's fervice could perfaade me to think of; for, if matters do not fucceed, thefe very gentlemen may fay, that they did not advife them : Yet, it is certain that they will never come to fixed refolutions in any thing : So there may be fliccefs the one way.; irrthe other, there cannot* and I am afraid that the King's affairs have already fufFered by de- pending too much on joint meafures. My fenfe of this was one'of the chief reafons that moved me to defire to 'fee the King, that I might fatisfy him in this point ; for, if he do not think it fit tor his fer- AND LETTERS. 641 fervice, and tliat he will fupport roe in that way of a£ting for him; whatever the fuccefs may be, I am fure that I can have no reafon to engage me to undertake fo great a burden. Since my Lord Seafield <:ame hither, we had the rolls of parliament under confideration ; and every one of us have undertaken to deal with thefe we can beft hope to prevail upon ; and have each taken out lifts of our particular friends, that our diligence and fuccefs may be reported and known.. It is incredible how the party is linked together; when we do unan- fwerably fhow them it is the intereft of the country to follow our meafures, many of them owns to be convinced, but ftill fays, that they cannot leave their party, and, unlefs all be brought over toge- ther, they cannot defert them. The Jacobites appear much more bold and firm fince the death of the Duke of Gloucefter, which, in reafon, fliould open other people's eyes, who owe their all to this government. There are fome particular perfons, that, in private converfation, give us ground to think that they are fenfible of their error ; but truly, we cannot depend much upon what particular per- fons lay to us of their private fentiments ; for, being once entered into a clnb, that, as we are informed, are tied, either by oath, or word of honour, they do not follow their own, but the fentiments of their party'; and we have been often difappointed by trufting pri- vate fuggeftions. The handle that did at firft unite them, and" pro- cure them the "favour of the nation, was the bufinefs of Caledonia; and, though it is now but a fhadow, yet they do ftill infift to aflert the right of it as much as if it were a real thing, kaowing very- well, that, if the party ftiall break upon that head, they will hard- ly be able, upon any other ground, to ftand. before us ; for, though, there are many other things pointed at in their addrefles, which would diveft the King of his moit valuable prerogatives ; yet, by the conceffions which his Majefty has enipowered me to^ grant,. I doubt not of a good iflue, if the knot about the company were broke : So that, in my opinion, our good or ill fortune depends en- tirely on our fuccefs in endeavouring that point. I have refleded much upon the methods of bringing this about j which is another 4M bufinefs 642 S T A T E - P A P"^ E R S bufinefs which I intended to have digefted with the King, and had his own diredions about it, if I had had the honour to wait upon him ; for I have fome thoughts, as to the management, which. I have not exprefled to any body but now to you, that you may lay them before the King. If reafon could prevail, we needed not doubt of gaining our point ; but, there is fuch a prepofleffion, and fo ma- ny engagements to a party who have got a reputation in the coun- try, that few will fuffer themfelves to bear or confider our argu- meet at firft, in dire£t oppofition to their engagements ; nor can they be made to reflect on .the miferies which they are likely to bring on their country. Therefore, it were of great moment, if we could divide them in the method, you may remember, that, when we fat laft in parliament, it was once agreed, that all adts about reli- gion fhould be firft treated of, and a committee was appointed to prepare them ; yet, before any report was made in thefe matters, the refolve'was brought in, and offered to pafs, even preferably to reli- gion itfelf. It is reafonable to think, that they will follow the fame method again; for they do judge, that, if we fhould fall upon other matters, wherein ^e might agree, that, in cafe the humours of their party might be foftehed, and many of their deluded good men might be inclined to reft fatisfied with the real advantages which they would then fee to have been fincerely intended for them ; and, for thofe reafons of theirs, I do believe, (if we do fee that we can- not other ways break the party), that it is for the intereft of the King's fervice, that thefe inftru£ted by him fhould endeavour to de- lay any thing that may occafion heats and divifions, and immediate- ly fall upon fuch matters as are of folid advantage to the country, and wherein all good men muft agree. If they do abfolutely refufe this, and carry it by a vote, it is a bad indication of tke temper and influence of the oppofers, and a demonftration that they will not part from the thing itfelf. But, however, they will m'^ake it vifible to the world, that they are the obftrudlers of the nation's intereft. If they divide upon it, which is riot improbable, we may reafon- ably hope for greater breaches among them ; and, if they agree, I doubt AND LETTERS. 643 doubt not of the efFed by it which the party was apprehenfive ofj for, if other bufmefs be firft done, it is reafonable to exped that our humours will cool, and that members, who would not at firft hear of letting the point of right fall, will be more tradable in the end, when other good things are done. The King's. letter, already pu- blilhed, makes his Majefty's good intentions known, and that he demands nothing of us but for our own fecurity. But, in the order of time, it muft be confidered, neither fupplies, or the other good laws, fhould be firft moved ; and, as things are, I am afraid that, if money be firft prefled, it may mifcarry ; for Caledonia will un- doubtedly be brought in, which by all means is to be avoided ; befides, the difbanding the forces,, and relieving the nation of cefs> is the point moft popular, and wherein they are moft united, next to Caledonia : So, till other things be done, 1 am afraid of our fuccefs in that ; and it is obfervable, in Scottifti parliaments, that they fel- dom fail out after they have once entered upon bufmefs, which en- courages me to think, that a franknefs in this matter, giving a little at firft, without preflingly afking, is the beft way to bring thofe men, who have nothing but the good of the country in view, to a juft compliance with their duty. It is hard, indeed, that fuch conceC- fions fhould be granted, and no aflurance of a fupply, to teftify our gratitude, by a dutiful return. And it may very well be argued, that it were better no bufmefs fhould be done, than that the King fhould give all, but what is a mere pretence and fhadow, and get nothing at laft. But, it is to be confidered, that this is the worft fide of all our afi^airs, and yet there is a probability of doing bufinefs by it. ■ It is reafonable to forefee all that can happen, to prevent the worft ; and even, in cafe that after concelEons were grant- ed, that no fupply fhould be given in retarn ; yet the King will ftill, in fome meafure, be a gainer by it ; for, the parliament having fat and done other bufinefs, there will remain no pretence for a party againft him on account of the claim of right. The King has ftill his excufe for his guards and garrifons, and needs be under no obligation to call a parliament for a yeiar or two, that people may 4 M 2 grow 644 S T A T E - P A P E R S grow better difpofed ; whereas, if the parliament fhould break up, and nothing done, the government, which is already-in a very lan- guifhing condition, would be, as good as no government at all, and in danger to fall afunder ; for fome of the privy-council are already gained, and others very cold : So the boldnefs and infolence of oppofers would be intolerable, and the arguments they would have on the article of the claim of right, joined with weaknefs and fear, might gain a greater part of us. They will want thefe arguments, and the minds of people may be calmed, if bufinefs be done. How- ever, all diligence fhall be ufed, from the firft to the laft, to fatisfy members of the fincerity of the King's intentions towards the na- tion, of the advantages it may have by a dutiful acceptance of the good which is defigned for them ; and that it will be highly the intereft of the kingdom, not to give ear to fuch as aim at nothing but confufion. If we can fucceed by this, or any other way, we ftiall not be put to our laft fhift, which I have already fo much infifted on. But I do think myfelf bound to lay things before the King in their worft afpe£t, that he may be the better able to give me his directions. Pray communicate what I write to you to his Ma- jefty, and let me know if I have expreffed myfelf in fuch terms as to be perfe£tly underftood, and whether my advices may be accep- table. I can only fay, that the fource of them is from a profound refpe£t to his perfon, and a fmcere love to his intereft. I have now, I am fure, troubled you with a tedious letter ; but I am fo full of concern for the King's fervice, now that the time of our meeting be- gins to approach, that I am glad to load other^friends, fuch as your- fblf , with fome part of the burden of my thoughts ; and it is no fmall eafe to have fuch as you, whom I can with fafety truft, to o- pen my mind to ; and I exped that you will always let me freely know wherein you think me wrong, and give me your advice to direct me better. I am fmcerely your's, &c. The matter of money I have not fpoken off, even to my Lord Seafield j fo, you may eafily judge, to no body elfe ; for it is what muft be kept between you and I. Let my Lord Balcanras, before he AND LETTERS. 645 he comes over, be engaged to ufe his intereft with his fon-in-law, my Lord Kelly, to appear for the King's intereft at this time ; for, though he would have gone along at our laft meeting, yet he has been lb tampered with fince, that, I am lately informed, he cannot be well depended upon. There are alfo two reprefentatives of bo- roughs in Fife that depend entirejy upon him. He fhould alfo be obliged to ufe his intereft with them for the King's fervice, from whom he is receiving fuch a favourable acquittance for former faults. The inclofed, to the King, is very fhort» becaufe I referred him for all bufinefs to what I have faid to you : So take your own way to have it delivered as foon as with conveniency you can. I have alfo writt a {hort letter to Mr Pringle, but mentioned nothing of what is 'contained in your's. J. Stewart to Mr Carstares. OfFaterforCs Scheme of Trade, — too Metaphyfical; — but the effort of a great Genius. — The Contents of a Letter jt^ come do'wnfrom. London. Worthy SIR, I know not what Thorn. Deans's opinion is of the projed I have Edinbureh writt, (I would have gladely been acquainted with him, but fou|id Sept. 14. him high, and fo gave over) ; but I find Mr Francis Grafit has as '''°°' little hope that it will take as I have. Mr Paterfon is very teria- cious and ftifF, (and indeed he has a good genius) ; with' much ado I have broke him as to his opinion of demanding the tenth boll : I find him extremely ftraitened how to do without it; (for that branch of trading in grain and corn is indeed a mighty proje«aj ; and that which he fays he muft demand in place of it, I am afraid will ne- ver he granted ; fo there is little hope of the whole. It is eight months cefs for twenty years, which he pretends to prove to the parliament is no more burden to the country than what they muft bear. 646 S T A T E - P A P E* R S bear. However, (if this projed do not go on), even fuppofe they paid no cefs at all, for this reafon, he v?ill prove, that the mainte- nance of the poor coft this nation yearly four months cefs,, (which being a dead weight), not only lofes itfelf in fpecie, but its value, for want of improvement, which is the double : So this proje£t, en- tertaining and employing all the poor, does exadtly balance the eight months cefs. Thefe notions are very metaphyfical and thin ; and, though I am fool enough to be perfuaded that they are not only true, but practicable ; yet I am afFraid he will find it no eafy matter to perfuade the parliament to give eight months cefs for twenty years ; and, at the fame time, perfuade tbem they pay no more than if they gave no cefs at all. Then, as to his council of trade, I know not how it is fafe for the King to conftitute fuch an ofiice and jurifdiftion. Its true, twelve angels might be well e- nough trufted with powers and privileges that are abfolutely ne- cefTary for them to have, but they are too much for men ; for, while they a£t in concert with the African Company, and its impoflible they can have different interefts, they are too powerful even for the King. They are in a manner a committee of parliament, conftant- ly fitting, and will be able to determine any parliament ever fhall be : They have all the power, ftrength, and treafure of the kingdorn in their hand : In fliort, nothing but time and experience can tell us what the confequences of fuch a conftitution may be ; fo that I have no manner of hope that this project will take; but I think ftill that its fit to encourage the projedtor, who indeed has a prodigious genius, and a vaft extended thought, to go on, — imleat quantum •valere potejl. It is poffible the wifdom of the parliament may call out fome things may be of ufe to the country, and a means to ac- commodate matters betwixt the King and his people. We have juft now got down a new letter from London ; it is from an unknown hand I have not yet feen-: (When I fhall), I fhall tranfmit you a double of it. My friend, an ingenious and learn- ed man, has feen and read it, and gives me an account that it af- fures, imoy AND LETTERS. 647 imo, That my Lord S. [Seafieldj (fo he fays it is writ) is come down with money and bill to be diftribute among ye know whom ; and that he is to return to London before the parliament fit down, to give account of his negotiation. 2fifo, That the parliament of England will canvafs every article of the treaty for dividing the Spanifh monarchy, and oblige the King to carve and cut out that monarchy otherwife than he has done. ' ^tiOf That the parliament of England, before they rife, will fet- tle and determine their own fucceffion, and that in concert with Scotland, if any terms can pleafe us: And, therefore, exhorting the honeft party (fo the letter calls them) to flick together, and ftand their ground againft the bribery and felicitation of the court, as they wifh an everlafting name to themfelves, and the honour and wel- fare of their country for ever. All this does not one bit difcourage me ; if God be not againft us, ye will fee we will do our bufmefs in fpite of men. Earl of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Has met with all the Clans. They ivill Jign no Paper till they fee his Name at it. They ivill not be feduced by D. Hamiltont •who deferted them. Of a Counter-addrefs. A Letter from McNeil ofBarra, offering his Ser'uice. S I R, I am now in the Highlands, where moft of the clans have met inverary, me, befides my own people ; they all fay unanimoufly, that they Sept. 15. will put their hand to no paper where they fee not mine firft ; and '^°°' even thofe who were in the hills, againft the government, fay, fince thev have fwore alledgiance, their dependence fhall be on the court; they confider it their intereft as well as duty; and, if they could be feduced, it fhould not be by D. Hamilton, who received King Tames's commiffion upon his knees to command them, and yet left theiB ^4^ S TAT E - PA P E R S them to do for thcmfekes. The Stewart of Appin ufed this ex~ preffion before others, adding, fays he, I know the two gentlemen who delivered it him. I did often, at Edinburgh, propofe to his Majelly's minifters there, that we might embark into an addrefs of another kind, to counter the mutineers ; but our wife wary men, the Advocate, &c. was againft it; becaufe, they concluded, we could not come up to the other's number, though I offered to begin. I told him, whilft we were ftill upon the defenfive, they attacking, we muft needs be at a lofs. I was for afting ofFenfively ; but could iiot prevail. When I go from hence, I am to vifit two or three, who I hope to make profdytes. I do not propofe to be at Edin- burgh before the 6th of Gftober, which will be time enough before our parliament. I find a general fatisfa£tion at the Frazers getting their pardon ; it will pleafe the generality, I am iure. I received a letter yefterday- from M*Neill of Barra, who lives very far off, fent by a gentleman, in all formality offering his fervice, which had made you laugh to fee his entry : His ftile of his letter runs as if he were of another kingdom.. I have, nothing to entertain you with but Highland news from this place j fo ihail bid you adieu. There are two gentlemen has promifed me tarmagans againft next year for E. Portland ; — they ufethey were in the laft parliament. Brac- co, Sir J^aijies Abercran^y, Sir John, Forbes of Craigevar, Sir Sa- rouel Forbes of Fover^n, Mr James Elphingfton, and the Sheriff of Murray, do all.pr^ipife very fair ; and, this week, my Lord^Salton, my Lord Frazer, and my Lord Pijfligo are to be with me, and I flji,all, plainly leu thew. know the danger and inconveniencies that wiJJ, nece^rily enfue, if things be not adjufted ia the next parlia- naent, I have alfo written to Fowlis Moaro, and to my Lord Rae, apd tQ William Rofs comHiififioner for Dingwall j and I ex;pe(Sl a return from them this week. The^ Laird of Grant, the Laird of Brgdy, and; Afflq^ft are aUp to be with me the end of this week, or AND LETTERS. 651 or beginning of the next ; fo that, whatever the event may be, I am fure I could do no more than I am doing, were my life and for- tune depending on it : And this is the only proper time to fpeak ; for, when the parliament meets, they will be fo much hurried by meeting in clubs and cabals, that there will be no place for reafon- in"-. The great point that they ftick upon, is ftill that matter of Caledonia; and they fay plainly, that, unlefs the King and parlia- ment declare their right of Caledonia, the managers may be profe- cute ; and that therefore their fafety depends on the doing this. I am of opinion, that there ftiould be an inftru£tion for paifmg fome a£t for the fecurity of the managers and dire£tors of the company ; but I cannot particularly cond^fcend upon the words of the inftruC- tion till I return to Edinburgh, and advife with the reft of his Ma- jefty's fervants. It will be a moft unfortunate thing if we- break a- gain upon this point; and, were this over, I am confident things might be brought to an adjuftment ; but, Ihould they carry a vote upon us in this, it is like it might unite them in other particulars. I fhall ftay no longer in this country than I think I can be ufeful to his Majefty ; and I refolve to retuf n by Aberdeen, Montfofe, and Dundee, that I may have the fatisfadion of fpeaking with all the parliament-men in the north ; and I am ftill more and more con- vinced, that there are too few employed in the north country in his Majefty's fervice. I ftiall write to you again more fully before I leave this place ; and you may let his Majefty know what I have written. I pray God may long preferve him to us, and make us dutiful to him. This is all at priefent from, Sir, Y. M. H. S. I have written frequently both to you and Mr Pringle, that thg Biftiop of Glafgow's confinement makes fome noife ; it is therefore fit, that there be a letter to the privy council lodged in my hands, impowering them to take off his confinement, which fhall be pro- duced before, or after the parliament, as is feen liecelTary. 4N 2 Lord ISTATE-PAPERS Lord President to Mr Carstares. His Opinion upon the prefent State^of Affairs^ and the Management of the Parliament. His CharaSler of the Commiffioner. He expeSis, and has a Title, to be confulted in the difpofal of the Va- cancies in the Court of Sejfton. S I R, N.Berwick, I ftill owe the return of,your*s from Loo, which I received as I 1700/^' '^^^ going to Greenock with my daughter after the feflion; but I fail not to give the commiiTioner all the information I can afford from time to time ; and I waited on V. Seafield while he was at Edinburgh ; I know they correfpond more pundually. - You fufE- ciently underftand the prefent difpofitions of this nation ; it is. no wonder that enemies to the government fliould be glad of any thing that may difturb our peace and happy fettlement ; but it is furpri- fing that others fhould contribute, and that, generally, thofe who love that government are fo little alarmed. The commiffioner com- plains, that there is not fuch zeal and concern to be found as might be expedited from the King's fervants. It is long fmce I was fatif- fied joint refolutions-are very flow and unfteady, and that it was ^ neceflfary the Commiffioner Ihould take more on himfelf. This will indeed lay a greater weight on his Grace •, and one cannot an>- fwer for events ; but the higheft truft is in his hands. His thoughts are coptinually employed about the fuccefs of his management ; o- ' - thers are abfent or prefent by turns, and not always intent. I ever thought, that all bufmefs of importance was beft directed by a few. Many will follow who are not fit, or not willing, to advife. I do affure you, no body has more clear and diflindt views than the Commiffioner, as appears in all our reafonings. I had lately oppor- tunity to difcourfe fully with his Grace on the prefent profpe£t of affairs. Ye are better acquainted with his fentiments than I am. ; for 1 know he writes at large, I am fatisfied his thoughts about the AND LETTERS. 653 the way of management are very juft j which few have yet entered into ; and this confirms me ftill, he fhould do more by himfelf. The bufmefs of Caledonia is at prefent a mere Ihadow ; few that are engaged in the addrefs can fay any thing for it, and fome par- ticular perfons feem fenfible of the danger that our diftradions may draw upon us. It is to be our care to draw as many to that con^ vidtion as can be ; a few would break the knot, and bring over the reft by the bulk ; but there has been fo many difappointments on private fuggeftions and infmuations, and even affurances, and there is fuch a union by reiterated addrelTes, and particular fentii- ments are fo fully given up to a party, that there is no ftate to be made upon what is faid in Corners. It will be moft fafe and fecilre to take them in fome point, which hath either not been forefeen, or wherein they are not fo united ; and they being of fo different intc- refts,if they oncedivide, they will not fo eafily unite in any thing. They do not put a juft value upon the King's conceflions, which were freely offered before they were demanded ; and for which we cannot be fuf'- fieiently thankful : Yet they agree with us, that we have an opportuni«- ty to obtain good laws ; and> if we have ariy influence, we will pre'- vail to finifli all that we can agree on firft, before any fubjeft of de- bate be ' brought in the field. AH who can be perfuaded, that a prefent afferting of our right is unfeafonable, will agree in this ; and many who will not hear of receding, may yet be engaged as to the order to prefer what all agree in.: There may alfo be difficulties caft in about thefe laws. ; but I hope thefe may be adjufted. There is but one difEculty in this method, which is indeed, great and obvi*- .ous; that, after great conceflion to the diminution, of the cuftoms, poffibly the parliament may not be moved to make juft returns. . This, indeed, is. the worft event ;, and it is reafbaable to forefee all that can happen : Bat it is. to be confidered, that a Scots parliament generally either breaks in the beginning, without doing bufinefs, or not at all : And,, if we cannot fucceed in this way, we have fmall ground to hope fuccefs in any other ; for, certainly the parliament will more eafily hearken to give fupplies,. and other teftimonies of duty «654 S T A T E - P A P E R S duty and afFedion to the King, after good laws ena£ted, than be- fore; and, certainly, in all events, the laws intended would turn to a good account, and gain the affeftions of the nation, which, at prefent, is ip a bad condition. The greateft handle they have is the laft article of the claim of right, about frequent meeting and fitting of pariiaments, which they ftretch too far, and mention it in the two iaft addrefles, though thefe adjournments were only for an opportunity to advife with his Majefty, which was necef- fary ; but if, after full deliberation, nothing fhould be done, the nation might take an ill play upon it, unlefs the obftrud:ion arofe from themfelves. There is reafon to believe they did defign to pufli the refult offered in parliament till it fhould pafs into an ad, and then endeavour a flop of all other bulinefs till that were touched. It may be, fome defign the fame thing flill ; if any fueh thing fhould be attempted, I hope they would not fucceed ; and, if they fhould, the world would fee the obftrudion lay at the oppofers : For, the royal affent being free to be given, or not, if they would proceed no farther, an adjournment would benecelfary; where- as, if the flop of bufmefs would be -laid at theKingorhisfervants,the government would yet languifh more, and poffibly the King's fer- vants alfo divide. Thefe things do require the King's ferious con- fideration, and particular diredion, before they occur, in my humble judgement ; and, with all fubmiffion, the leafl hazard is, (all things weighed), to begin at good laws, which fhould be made and fra- med to venture the fupplies to the end, when our tempers will be more cool. No body is more fenfible than I am of the great hap- pinefs we enjoy under his Majefly's fhado.w, whom Gk)d long pre- ferve ! ^ -My father^s family were entirely, early, and conflantly, on that bottom ; no variety of favour or difcouragement from the go- vernment did ever make alteration in any of us, and we will con- tinue firm and faithful in our duty. . My Lord Stair went to Gal- loway when the fettling of this parliament was very uncertain, and he did not refolve to return, becaufe both his interefl and inclination leads him to be much there; but, I hope he will return, and I ex- ped AND LETTERS. 655^ pe£t to hear from him fhortly, and reckon it fure he will come. The Commiffioner is fufficiently fatisfied as to his part. I will ufe ail the influence I have any where, and contribute all I can for a happy iffue. I have nothing more to add. Concerning the vacan- cy that's now in the feflion, I know there are many candidates and applicants made to you ; and I would have writt fooner, but I was in the weft when the cafe occurred ; fo others got the ftart ; and I underftood the Commiffioner and V. Seafield both wifh that matter might be entire till the parliament were over ; therefore, I ihall not be very particular, becaufe I would not fay any thing that I had not concerted : But, in general, I do both expe£t, and moft earneftly de- fire, to be more regarded in that particular than any other thing whatfom^ver. I am concerned in it above all things. Ye know m what clrcumftances I entered into the feffion ; I cannot well exprefs- to you with how much labour to myfelf peace is keeped among us ;• which I think is the beft fervice I am capable to do the King or the nation. He was very friendly to me; that's gone. Judge then, if I do not need to be confidered in the choice. I prefume no man has had better: opportunity to know mens capacities that way than I have had ; and I {hall not, on any confideration, recommend any who is not of known integrity and capacity, and afFe£tionate to the government.. Thofe foundations laid down, I hope my requeft will be thought ve- ry juft. I would be loath to be burdenfome to the King or to my fi-iends at any time, much lefs now. By this time, I liave more need to excufe my tedioufnefs than my long filence; I hope you will for- give both, becaufe that ye know that I am fincerely, and without ceremony, your moft faithful and obliged fervant. J. Stewart to Mr Carstares^ Of Paterfon's Proje^s. — Good Hopes of the King^s Affairs,. Worthy SIR, Since my laft, of the 14th, I havefeen Mr Paterfon's proje£fem. Edinburgh, mundis^ which is nothing like whit J wrote to you of in mine of ^^^^ ^'* the 5^6 S T A T E - P A P E R S. the 7th» I know not what alterations he may yet make in it, for I cannot believe the Commiffionerwill let it be publiftied as it now is ; becaufe, to my fmall fkill, it is neither fafe for the King to eftablifh that council of trade; and, tho' he fhould do, I think the parliament will never, grant the funds he demands. I know not what accounts my Lord S. and other& may fend you of their hopes and fears of this enfuing feffion ; but my little i-eafon does ftill perfuade, that the King's bufmefs will be got done. It cannot be fuppofed, that people will continue mad, and drive things to extremities, efpecially at this jiinfture. I have the honour to converfe with fome of the moft eminent lawyers, who know a great deal of the humours and inclinations of thefe members that are againft us, (feveral of them are their clients); and they afTure me, that, if the King frankly pafs the laws are ex- pected he will grant us for the liberty and fecurity of the fubjed:, and encouragement of trade, they will not only difpenfe with Cale- donia, (that is, at this time, not to infift upon it), but give him a fund for the maintenance of all the army he is to demand ; (for e- very body fays he is to break three regiments of foot, and one of dragoons; and, in my opinion, the court was very unwife to drop that.) This, my friends are confident, the parliament will do," both for their own fecurity, and the honour of the King ; and, the rather that/ome of that party bragg, that the Englifh parliament will be hard upon him ; for, though many of the adverfe party be angry with him, yet they love him ; and, it will be feen, if he be ftraiten- ed in England, the parliament in Scotland (except the Jacobites) will be unanimous for his fervice. I know the Jacobites are nume- rous in the kingdom ; but.the authority of the parliament is the na- tion. Now, let us fuppofe the worft, (for who knows what Provi- dence defigns in this extraordinary jundure?) that, through ftub- bornnefs, pernicious counfel, and indifcreet management, the parlia- ment, (after the King has granted all they defire, (Cafedonia apart), for their fecurity, liberty, and trade), they refufe to give a fund for the maintenance of the army, and, not only fo, but infift and offer a refolve, for the breaking of it; fo that the King be forced to ad- journ A N D L E T T E R S. 657 journ them,whichl can never bring myfelf to fuppofe ; the only ex- pedient left is this. He needs no aft of parliament for keeping guards and garrifons. Thus, he, can keep, imoy His foot and horfe- guards. 2.do, A regiment in Fort William and Inverlochy, and its out-pofts. 3/zo, A regiment in the caftle of Stirling, where there muft be caferns built, as in Ireland, for lodging the foldiers. 4?(7, A regiment in Perth ; fome in. the King's houfe there, and the reft in caferns to be built for them. Thus, all the foot he defigns to keejp (and it was a moft unwife thing to let it be known the King would part with any ; all yieldings is dangerous in a King) are difpofed of ; and thefe not being quartered upon the fubje(fJ:, there are eminent lawyers here of opinion, that the keeping and pay- ing them out of his proper revenues (which they fay will do that bufi- finefs) is no ways againft the law. Now, the queftion remains, how the dragoons are to be difpofed of? They fay the King only defigns to keep one regiment -, and, if he fhould make them guards, (like the troop of horfe-grenadiers in England), the lawyers will tell you it is no great ftretch of prerogative. This is by way of fuppofition ; for I am ftill perfuaded, if the King demand no more, (which I muft admire), the parliament will not refufe it. Sir Adam Gordon of DallquhoUy, a member of parliament, died here this morning. I am, unfeignedly. Dear SIR, "Your afTedionate and faithful fervant, J. s. Lord Treasurer-Depute to Mr Carstares. Of the Coromtion; in cafe the King come doivn, "what Lodgings in thp Abbey are bejlfor him. Jfhe is fitting on the Throne, it 'will not be the forivardnefs of a Tullibardine that Men "will take Meqfures from. SIR, I have your's ; and, for the queftion, whether the King's corona- Edinburgh, tion may be put off for this time ? the anfwer is plain : It needs be i^oo.^'** 4O but 658 STATE-PATERS but appoointed at this time, and fome time next fummer may do well; for it wiirtake fome tinie to adjuft the order of it ; and the parliament miift think how the expences will be defrayed, and lay on a found for that end. This can be no . flop to his Maj<3fty's. coming among us ; for what may be otherwife neceflary, I know the Commiffidner will let the houfe ftand furnifhed as it is. It is pro- bable his Majefty would incline to make moft ufe of little rooms, thefe of his own apartments being large, and not fo warm. , There are none fo warm as the little rooms my Lord Annandale has off the gallery, two rooms and a clofet ; and for thefe a little furniture will ferve ; and that, with his Majefty's plate, may come down in a yacht. My Lord Annandale needs not complain ; for lie has a- bundance of other rooms above flairs, which have another entry. Coaches may be fo laid, as his Majefty may be here in ten days, and an adjournment to the 29th, upon that account, would do no hurt. This I write to you, being ftill more and more defirous his Majefty fliould be once here; and now is the time. I am perfuaded nothing elfe can fave us. And, though I will not undertake, yet I have great corifidence, that his Majefty's prefence will dilpell this cloud that is gathered fo thick. 'Tis not from the forwardnefs of a Earl of Tullibardine, or a Sir John Hume, that men will take their meafures, when they fee our King fitting on the throne. If his Ma- jefty will come, you will difpatch a flying packer, that we may be in as good condition as we may be. The Advocate has been ill for fome time ; I do really think, the low condition he fees the govern- ment in, does add not a little to his difeafe. Yea, he is fearing he ihall not be able to ferve this fefTion of parliament. I believe he has his own fears that things will go vvrong ; but, if he thought the King was to be here in perfon, he would ufe his utmoft endeavours for fo much ftrength to attend ; yea, if he fliould die the laft day of the parliament, and, if hefliall not be able to attend 29's cabinet- council, viz. 83, and stuxxustrnQst, (Philiphaugh), will not make up the want of him. We muft of neceflity have two ftates, one for the abbey, and another for the parliament-houfe. How thefe are done AND LETTERS. 659 done up, we muft have from England. Excufe me this poft to Mr Pringle. Farewell. Philiphaugh to Mr Carstares. Repeats his Fears about the Succefs of the Parliament. — States the Difficulties about the Order in -which Public Affairs ought to be introduced into the Parliament. SIR, Since I wrote to you lafl, I have ever been in the country, till the Edinburgh, other day, I had one from you fmce I wrote. I find the Commif- 1700. fioner daily more and more fatisfied with, and engaged to you. He is as fenfible, I am fure, as you could wifli, of your fmcere friend- Ihip arid good fervices to him. I underftand there is a copy of a letter fent with this packet, which, it is defired, the King fhould write to the parliament. All I fhall fay about it is, that, where it mentions * the defire of our fervants,' I humbly think it fliould be, • the defire of our Commiflioner, and other fervants ;' but this was my own thought, and the Commiflioner was very indifferent about it. But furely none can take it ill, confidering his charader, to be particularly mentioned. I {hall not trouble you with repeating what I have faid fo oft about my fears of the fuccefs of this prefent parlia- ment. I am very perfuaded, if his Majefty's affairs could have al- lowed him to have come here, the parliament might have ended to the honour and fatisfadion of his Majefty, and comfort of all his good fubjeds ; and that, if he had but touched here, without any folemn preparation for his reception, and flayed but two or three weeks, his prefence would have put new life and vigour, in allinhiis fervice, and have brought over many flicklers. But, whatever dif- ficulty appear in the way, I fee the Gommiffioner is refolved, as we fay, to fet a ftout heart to a flay brae ; and I am fure he will do his .utmoft for the King's fervice, with all the zeal and faithfulnefs you could wifh. I find his Grace ftraitened in one thing, and that is, 4 O 2 when Uo STATE-PAPERS when the aft'for cefs ftiall be brought into the parliament, fome are far leaving it laft ; and fo you'll fee it laft mentioned in the let- ter ; and the reafons they give are, that, if the parliament proceed to do good things to the nation, fome fticklers may be gained ; and, if the refolve fliould be prefTed before thefe good things, it might be the faireft vote could be devifed, whether to infxft upon the refolve or thefe good a£ts. But, if the cefs be early brought in, before thefe afts, fome might alledge thefe ads were not truly defigned ; and that, after granting cefs, they would be difmifled without them. Others fay, that, if the cefs is not demanded as early as it ufes to be, it will be conftrudted, to follow from fear and weaknefs ; and, if the party fhould refolve to lay afide Caledonia till the cefs were propo- fed, it might happen, that, after getting all the conceflicms the King had granted, the parliament might give nothing for fupport of the government ; and this the Commiflioner thinks would reflect heavi- ly upon him. I wifli it was laid before the King, and that his Majefty gave his own opinion and orders in the matter. Dear Sir» ^dieu. Lord Presi dent to Mr Carstares. Fropojes afmall Alteration to he: made in the draught of the King^s Letter to Parliament., as a mark of refpeSl to the Lord CommiJ/lonr- er. •■ ■ L ord Stair is to return to Parliament. S I R, Edinburgh, I gave vou the trouble of a very tedious letter from North-Ber- 1700. ' wick of the 17th inftant, which I hope came fafe to hand ; I need not repeat, and have very little to add. L. Philiphaugh and I have been two days in town, for the moft part v«raiting on the Commif- lioner : His Grace was pleafed to read over a draught of a letter to the parliament, whereof a double was formerly fent you. He intend- ed to have taken a fecond view of it with my Lord Advocate, and pof.^ AND LETTERS^ 66i poffibly to have altered fome words of it. But, the Advocate having kept the houfe the fourth night, (for which I am very forry), his Grace fends you another double as it was, becaufe he had no thought of any material alteration. It did occur, that, where it mentions the interpofitions of his Majefty's fervants in behalf of the African company, it fhould bear the Commrffioner, and other fervants. There is indeed a mark of diftindion due to his Grace for his zeal for the intereft of that company with the King, when there was hope to do it good. I have letters ' from my Lord Stair fince my laft ; and now I can tell you, with more aflurance, that he will return to the parliament, though it is both againft his intereft and inclinations to be drawn from his retirement. I am, with all fincerity and affeftion, SIR, Your moft humble fervant. . DUKEof QUEENSBERRY to MrCARSTARES. Sends the Draught of the King's Letter.— — Complains that he does not receive njigorous Ajftftance from his Majefty^s Servants. — — Writes of the King's coming to Edinburgh. h anxious for ma- king a Shoiv of Strength at the meeting of Parliament. SIR, I have received two letters from you, one without a date, and Holyrood- the other from Loo of the 12th. I alfo faw a third to mv fervant ^°'ife,Sep. Stewart. In aniwer to them, I fend you the copy of fome new in- ftrudions, and the draught of a letter to the parliament, which I formerly told you the King's fervants had adjufted ; but I then thought there might have been fome alterations in bufinefs before now ; but, finding nothing yet fubftantial that needs a,ny change, and that the King's advocate is ftill fo ill, that, at this time, I cannot advife with him in bufinefs, I fend you them as they were at firft con- 652 s T A T E - P A P E R S concluded on, that we may- not be ftraitened ; and I hope therfe is no time loft. As for what you write concerning the King's fer- vant5, I can fay no more at a diftance than what I have formerly wrote to you : Their ftiynefs and timoroufnefs, which you might have feen when you were here, ftill continues : They are affraid of a popular odium, and feem to difpair, or, at leaft, not to be much concerned to regain to the King the hearts of the nation. But it it is needlefs at prefent to infift on particulars about them ; becaufe I do not judge this a proper feafon for any remedy. But, in gene- ral, I muft fay, (and its vifible to the whole nation), that I have not been fo happy as to have that vigorous affiilance from them which others in my ftation have ufually had. As to the King's coming hither, it is not fit to talk of it, unlefs he were fully refolved to come ; fo that I cannot advife with many people about. But I wrote formerly to you, that his fervants here did think, that he could hold his parliament without being fubjeded to the trouble of a corona- tion, and only appoint fome re'mote time for that ceremony. You tell me, his Majefty defires to know, what is the fhorteft time in which things abfolutely neceflary may be provided for his coming ? I know not truly what may be reckoned abfolutely neceffary ; you know the condition of the houfe, and the apartments of it. No- thing can be done towards the reparation Hll the King be determi- ned; and any confiderable reparation will take more time than^can well be allowed in this jundture ; fo he muft either take it as it is, or, if he will be pleafed to let his time of coming be known, all Ihall be done that's poflible in that time. I can fay no more upon this fubje£t than what I wrote to you in a former letter ; only, I'm ftill of opinion, that, if his Majefty do come, he ftiould lie in that part of the houfe where D. Hamilton now lodges, as not only be- ing the warmeft and clofeft rooms, but having the greateft conve- niency of clofets and offices. There is no further refolution in re- lation to the enfuing feffion of parliament than what the inclofed papers contain ; nor is it poffible for me to give any certain pro- fped of matters till our frierids return from the country, and re- port AND LETTERS. 663 port their faccefs. In the mean while, I have many people at work; and, if the King is pleafed to confider my good intentions for his intereft as acceptable fervice, I have all I wifh for or aim at on my own private account ;. but, on his, I have not the half of what my duty and inclination lead me to. If my Lord Portmore were ordered hither, he might not only undeceive people as to himfelfj but' be ufeful in the King's fervice, for which I know he has both ^fFedlion and zeal. I am told that my L. Mevill is gone from the Bath to London ; I intreat of you that care be taken to fend him down, fo as that he may be here fome days before the meeting of parliament ; for much will depend upon the fhow of ftrength that we fhall make at our firft appearance ; and, if he does not come home in time, we lofe not only his vote, but that of his fon James, who is with him. My L. Blantyre, in his fenfelefs way, oppofes. all reafonable propofals ; he holds a place of the D. of Richmond, as baillie of the regality of Glafgow. If any way could be found to prevail upon my L.'Duke to let him know that he intends to turn him out, in cafe of his obftinacy, and continuing to oppofe the King's fervice, it would not only gain us a vote, but take off one from the party. I have nothing more at prefent to trouble yott with ;. fo, without ceremony, adieu. Lord of Seafield to Mr Carstares.. Hopes that all honeji Men will join the King's Friends. — Advocate- Jpeaks of :demitting. — Double Ele6lion in the Shire of Galloivay. — Every one at ivork as they have Interefi. — -Annandale takes it ill that Mr Carjiares does not ivrite him.. SIR, I have now been returned to this place four or five days ; and Edinburgh>, we were very, impatient till we did receive this morning, by an ex- 1700 prefs, his Majefty's letter to the parliament, with die inftruaions.. I 664 STATE-PAPERS I am ftill hopeful that honeft men will be convinced that his Ma- jl^&j is willing to do all that is in his power for the true intereft of the nation. I have fpo^e to a great many of the parliament- men feparately in the country, and they did give me very great fa- tisfatSlion, for they feem convinced of the danger of running things to extremes. But, all the hazard is when they return to toWn, and meets together in parties and cabals : They are led away with the fpecious pretences and fpeeches that are made to them. The greateft encouragement of all is, that honeft men, that have no bad defigns, begin to fee plainly, that the true intereft of the country confifts in perfeding his Majefty's governnfient ; and that, there- fore, until they fee further into the defigns of the oppofing party, they are defirous that we ftiould proceed to the conceffions that his Majefty is willing to give. But it is an unfpeakable lofs to us, that there are feveral of the fervants, who do not gain fo much as one man for the King's fervice ; and the Advocate, wha was our great- eft fpeaker, and was otherwife very ufeful, is (I am afraid) a die- ing man ; and he did declare to the commiffioner and me, when we were laft with him, that he would gladly be relieved of all bu- finefs, and told us, that he had fent a kind of dimiflion of his place to the King ; and you will not believe what a lofs this will be ; for a King's Advocate, by virtue of his office, can .call any man to ):he bar that fpeaks undutifully of King or government, and his opi- nion will have great authority. I am alfo afraid, that the King fhall want one as treafurer, and myfelf as fecretary upon the com- mittees ; for there are no letters for us as yet come, thbugh my Lord CbmmifEoner and I wrote exprefsly for them ; but we are ftill ex- pecting that they will come in time ; for the parliament is now ad- journed, conform to his Majefty's letter, for eight days. The rea- fons that moved the Commiffioner and I to make ufe of the letter, are, that the Earl of Melvil, and fome in England, are not yet come down ; and that the oppofmg party, by circular letters, are like to be well conveened again ft Tuefday next ; whereas many of our friends would then have b&en abfcnt. Befide, we fhall have time to fpeak AND LETTERS. 665 fpeak tQ.every man that comes to town deliberately ; and it is a great fetisfadiioa to his Majefty's fervants, that he be in Britain when the parliament fits : So I doubt not but his Majefly will ap- prove what we have done in this. I believe you, will be in- formed by others, that there is a double election in the fhire of Galloway. The Earl of Galloway and my Lord Stairs did lead on a faction for Caftle-Stewart, who is uncle to the Earl of Galloway. He has fixteen votes for him, and my Lord Bafil Hamilton has e- leven votes; but he has protcfted, and objeded. againft feveral of the voters for Caftle-Stewart, that they had not right to vote. Ac- cording to the account I have of it, Caftle-Stewart ought to carry it j but, go as it will, my Lord Stair's family and Duke Haniilton are for once fairly feparate^ if they do not fet up again together. I had fcapce time to Write you this letter ; for I have had feveral parlia- ment-men with me fince I begun, and I think I have made one profelyte, that is., Mr Swinton ; for Dyfert and he promifes to bring me in three or four more againft the next week. My Lord Annan- dale fays he has gained Ecclefhields ; and every one is at work as. they have intereft ; and, come of this matter what will, I will have this fatisfaftion, that I have done all that is in my power, and that I could have done no more. I am. Sir, Y. M. H. S. My Lord Annandale told me this night, that you never write to. him ; and, as I underftand, he takes it ill ; fo you may begin a cor- xefpondence with him, for he can write very well. Earl of Argyle toMr Carstares. Ele^ions. Complains of Treafure-depute^ Recommends Com- mijfary Elphinfton. Wi/hes the CommiJJioner' s hands to. be Jirengthened. I have forborn wHting for fome time, by reafon moft company Edinburgh, 5 new occurring^ All has been bu- 4P fy were out of town, and nothing new occurring. All has been bu- f q'^^^' ^66 STATE-PAPERS fy in their feveral diftri£ts ; and, lam hopeful, to good effedl. A little time will fhow ; but, by our calculations, we gain ground. You will hear from others what buftle has been made in Galloway about an eledion in that county. L. Bafil Hamilton did fet up for it, and threatened fome, others he promifed particular marks of favour to. Nay; that party is grown fo infolent, that they are pro- mifing places to fom€, not doubting to force themfelves into fome government or another. In this affair of Galloway, E. Galloway and V. Stair, with the Mafler his fon, and a younger fon, oppo- fed L. Bafil, with all his pretended royalty, and have the plurality for, I think, one Caftle-Stewart. The eledion for Jedburgh is car-^ ried by Lord Jedburgh, for the King's interefl; the' former was a- gainflit. But, what does us mofl hurt, we have rogues amongft us, particularly the Treafurer-depute, who, on all occafions, efpou- fes the oppofers particular intereff, and endeavours tofupport them; .and, in actions for the government,- is luke-warm. This is no fe- cret ; nor do I fpare to fay it, where I have- occafion ; and, I hope, in due time, his Majefly will treat all as they deferve. I do not doubt but you have had feveral letters about the vacancy in the feflion. I dare fay CommifTary Elphinflon is the fltteft ; and I can make it appear to a demonflration, he makes the King fix, votes at this time. The Commiflioner does own to be for him ; and that he is my friend, I flatter myfelf, fhould recommend him a little, fmce its obfervable, none of my friends does forfake the King. I hope to regain my only deferter L. Forrefter ; and L. Kello and L. Rutherfoord I have prevailed on. I have alfo carried Barns Hamilton, that he is almoft for turning Campbell. The Commiflioner of late has been Very bufy ; but there is one thing I am afraid may weaken his hands, and ought to be fpeedily re- medied ; and, tho' he takes no notice of it himfelf, yet thofe that wifhes iiis Majefly's authority to continue, fhould put things in a right channel. I remember, when I was lafl: at London, the King faid he would put feveral powers in the Commiffioner's hands, that he expected he would, if need were, advife with fome of AND LETTERS. 667 of his fervants ; but certainly it was ftill underftood, . that whilft he continued repriefenting his Majefty's perfon, favours were to be difpenfed more immediately by him. It does now appear that, in profecution of this truft, which his Majefty defigned to lodge in him who reprefents his perfon, feveral blank papers were figned, which ftill remain in the Secretary's hands, which ought beyond all dif- pute be lodged with the Commiffioner, which all of us, the King's fervants, ought to defire ; and it does not in the leaft hinder us to a£t in our fphere. Pray take your own way to have this fp.eedily redreifed, leaft it prove of worfe confequence to the fervice than I dare gUefs. As for my part, it fhall be feen I fhall boldly ferve his Majefty; nor ftiall the apprehenfion offome there thrufting themfelves^ into the government fright me from my duty. I know the King is too juft and generous, (whatever the event be), to fuf- fer me to be expofed to thofe irreconcilable enemies of his, I may call them. I do not pretend to trouble his Majefty with my let- ter ; but I fliall reft fatisfied, he be informed of true matter of fad:,, and I have my reward. I am your's. Adieu. Pray give my humr- ble fervice to Earl Portland.. Duke ofQuEENsBERKY to Mr Carstares. Reqfonsfor adjourning the Parliament. — Itivill be very tender of the^ King's Prerogative. Transmits three additional InftruSlionsi. Gronvs in Hopes. — — 'Jacobite Defign at bottom of Oppofitiom to. the King's Government.. ' SIR, I received two letters from you, and two from Mr Pringle, dated the 3d and 7th.; by them I had his Majefty's letter to the parlia- Eoufe, oa. ment, my additional inftrudions, and a blank commiffion for the ^9i7oo- maftcr-of- works' place. I had alfo a letter impowering me to make a further adjournment of parliament, which, after advifing. with 4 P 2, friends,, 65S STATE- PAPERS friends, I ftiade ufe of, and put ofF our meeting till the 29th. I do not find that this gives the leaft jealoufy of the parliament's not fit- ting, the adjournment being fo fhort ; and the reafons why I took this method were, firft, becaufe it was thought very neceflary that his Majefty fhould be in- England before our meeting ; and, then, that the letters for reprefenting the Lord Treafurer and Secretary of State were not come ; and that friends came flowly up. The King's, letter to the parliament was written and framed by my Lord Advocate, and adjufted by the Secretaries. The fecond in- ftrudtion is indeed large ; but the reafon of it was, becaufe it was thought neceffary that his Majefty^s gracious conceflions with re- lation to every thing elfe but that of alTerting the right of Caledo- nia, might be fo fully exprefled, and made known to people here, as to render men that fhould obftruffc bnfinefs unexcufable to the nation ; and it has no further extent. I fhall, however, be very careful and tender of his Majefty's prerogatives; and I do wifh that' they had come to my hand more entire ; they fhould not have been fo eafily parted with, but upon more valuable confiderations ; and many encroachments have been made of late upon thofe that are yet remaining. This, his Majefty may be alfured of, that, fo far as I can comprehend, I fhall keep within the bounds of my reftric- tion ; though I muft, at the fame time, fay, that it will be hard for me to judge what laws may be thought hereafter reftridtions of the prerogative. I have advifed with my Lord Seafield, Prefident, Trea- furer-depute, and Philiphaugh, after full reafoning upon what was moft likely to fall under the confiHeration of the parliament. Three additional inftrudions are framed, and herewith tranfmitted, and a memorial with them, containing the reafons why they were thought neceffary. " I fhall be careful! to let you know, from time to time, what |?appens here, that I may be particularly inftruded before a- ny new thing be concluded ; for it would be a great prejudice to the King's fervice, if the parhament fhould be obliged to flop for further inftrudions ; for I incline to proceed with as much dili- gence as poffible when once we enter on bufinefs. The Advocate is A N D * L E T T E R S. 669 is fo ill, tKat I cannot exped him in parliament, nor any help froni him. The Chancellor is not very vigorous; and fometimes indif- pofed ; if he fhould happen to be ill, my power of naming a prefi- dent of parliament may be called in queftion, though there are pre- cedents for it ; fo, to avoid all ground of difpute, I defire that a blank letter of commiffion may be fent, which fhall only be ufed if there be occafion for it. I have received the note which you men- tion in your letter of the 7th ; and it fhall be made ufe of according to advice. The perfons who I employed in the feveral places of the country are not yet come to town ; fo I cannot yet make any certain ftate, though I grow In hopes, as I hear our adverfaries does in anger. The Marquis of Athol, ray L. Durimore, and L. Nairne came laft night to town, and are to come in to parliament, which makes it apparent that there is a Jacobite defign at bottom, and ought to open the eyes of any who has appeared for his Ma- jefty's intereft. I have a dutiful fenfe of his Majefly's goodnefs towards me, and a juft refentment of your friendfhipi and of the firmnefs and franknefs of your correfpondence with, me; and am, without difllmulation, fincerely your's, &c. Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. ExpeBs a great Struggle. Feiv of the King's Servants in Par- liament to Manage his Affairs. S I R, We are now very impatient to hear that his Majefly is ar- Edinburgh, rived at London, for the news of it would encourage his Ma- 1700,^*^ '^' jefty's fervants here. I cannot but have hopes that his Majefly's affairs will fucceed ; but it will be with a great flruggle ; for ihei'e never was fo bold oppofitioB feen as this is. The heads ol" the par- ty have no defign to be fatisfied with any thing can be propofed ; and, though many be convinced of the dangerous cbnfequencesof ; -.1 ; ': bringing "'' ' ' ^7° S T A T E - P A P E R S bringing things to extremities, yet they pretend, in point of honour, that they cannot leave or defert their party ; and they are ftill po- fitive that they will aflert the right of Caledonia : But I am hope- ful that we may carry it by a majority, to begin with thefe things which his Majefty offers. It is our great misfortune that we have no Advocate ; you know he is a man of great fenfe, and is entirely laid afide by ficknefs. The Chancellor has no great authority, and we have no regifter. The Soliciter gives no afTlftance ; and the Commiffioner will not communicate bufinefs with him. None of the clerks of the council are of the parliament ; and the Prefident of council is not here; however, we fhall do all we can. The Com- miffioner does now fend three or four inftrudions, which feems to us to be neceflary'; and, for his Majefty's information, we have drawn a memorial relative to them. The a& concerning the King's power of impofing taxes on foreign trade is already voted a grie- vance, and the powers contained in it were never exercifed by his Majefly. That concerning the prolonging the privileges of the company is reafonable ; becaufe they have loft fo many years by the misfortunes that have happened to their colony ; and, it being now deferted, fuch an a£t will not in the leaft import the aflerting the right to Caledonia; and that inftrudion againftthe marrying of a Popilh King and Queen is alfo contained in the grievances, and fo cannot well be refufed. I intreat, that, at the fame time, you ob- tain the inftrudions, or fooner, if poffible you may procure the let- ters for the Treafurer and Secretary. I am Y. M. H. S. Annandale to Mr Carstares. Writes of Heat raifed by African Council. Promifes Fidelity and Vigour in his fervice. SIR, I can fay little more now than to thank you for your's of the houfcNoT.4. 24th of October. I am very fully fatisfied of your friendlhip and 1700- kind- *» AND LETTERS. 671 kindiiefs, and you, and all your concerns, fhall ever feel the efFedts of it, as often as it is in my power to give evidences thereof. James Dunlop fhall be affifted by me in all his bufinefs with all .i- maginable concern ; and in every thing you recommend, my fince- rity and gratitude fhall fatisfy you, that I am true to what I have faid. Ufe freedom with me, and try me, and you fhall find me heartily your's. ^ You have all the particulars long ago as they paiTed in the Afri- can council. That affair was carried on by the managers with a great deal of heat and indifcretion, both towards the King and go- vernmejit ; and they have propagate fuch a ferment upon it, that they have brought people to talk with very little regard or refpedl to both. I hope, if it is as it has been, fuch doings will do fome people's bufinefs effedually. I wiih I could be more particular up- on this matter ; but neither this diftance, nor way of converfation, will well allow of it ; otherways, I affure you, I fhould ufe all the freedom imaginable. I fhall not fail in my ftation to fhow all the fidelity and vigour imaginable,in the K-ing's fervice, fet themfelves in oppofition who will ; and I make no doubt bat the King's fer- vants will be able to do his bufinefs in fpite of all pradlices to the contrary. When any thing worth while falls in, I fhall give it you ; and, believe me, without compliment, you have this from your true friend. LordSeafield to Mr Carstares. King's Servants have carried the Committee. — Are perfuaded they have a Plurality. — Oppofition intend to pojlpone Bufinefs. — Tullibar^ dine difpleafed. SIR, My Lord Commiffioner being ill of the cold, and being obliged Holyrood- to take phyfic, could not write before this evening. He is now ^°"^^' ^°^' '-' 7- 1700. bet- k■^^ STATE -PAPERS better, and, I believe, gives a full account of what has as yet pafled. There is nothing material, but that we have carried the committee ; that is, We have carried the nobility and commiflioners for bo- roughs : So that, as to any thing that is committed, we have two to one. On the other hand, they have a great plurality of barons, and they expeS feveral members will yet come up. I am perfua- ded we have a plurality ; but we can have no more than we have already, except the Earl of Kelly and my Lord Boyle, and Provoft Johnfton pf Dumfries. "My Lord Boyle has been hindred hitherto by the death of the Laird of Rowallan. I am unwilling yet to fend you up a lift of the parliament till we engage again in another vote, befides that I formerly gave you an account of; and, if it once ap- pear that we have a fixed and clear plurality, matters will go eafier. What we refolve to prefs in the houfe to-morrow is, that the con- traverted eledion betwixt Lord Bafil Hamilton and Caftle-Stew^rt be remitted to the committee of elections, foj: to examine witnefles j and, if we carry this, it will confirm our intereft very much. -I un- derftand that they intend to poftpone bufinefs as much as ever they can, on purpofe that we may loofe the month of November without doing any thing for the advantage of the country, and that it may appear that we are ftruggling for a majority, in order to get a cefs, and do nothing for the country. But, on the other hand, we re- folve 'to propofe thofe adis that concerns our rehgion, the regu- lating of trade, and \h&-haheas corpus law, that honeft men may fee, that what his Majefty propofes in his letter will be done, and the Commiffioner will give new affurances of it ; and then we will en- deavour to difcufs the aflerting the right of Caledonia, and propofe the giving of fupplxes for fubfifting fuch forces as are neceflary and let them fee that, if fubfidies be given, all the reft fhall be done. And it is impoffible to pleafe the minds of the people, without ma- king effedlual all that is propofed. All I can defire you to fay to his Majefty is, that we have hopes, and nothing fliall be wanting that can be done, for bringing things to a good iflue. They are refol- ved A N D - L E T T E R S. 673 ■ved to propofe a great many projeds and laws, upon which they think we have no inftrudions^ to the end, that they may break from^ us thofe of the country-party whom we have gained ; but we fhall advert, as well as we can, to it. I did formerly acquaint you of my Lord Yefter, Gosford, and Stichell, their bringing up of the addrefs ; and I hope his Majefty will find little difficulty in anfwering, his letter to the parliament is fo full and plain, and his Commiffioner fo fully inftruded in all that his Majefty can do for the fatisfadlion of his people. What fecret inftrudions my Lord Yefter has, I know not; but, I doubt not but that his Majefty will have regard to his fervants, who are venturing all in his fervice. And his Majefty can never, with great advantage, conclude upon the perfons that are fit to be continued and employed in his government till this parliament be over. However, this is with all fubmiffion to what fhall be hisMa- jiefty's pleafure, and nothing ftiall make mefail in my duty to him. We reckon that we have ro8of the parjiament-men for us, and that they have 95; bat if this computation will hold, I cannot be pofitive- we have 18 or ig noblemen more on our fide than they have ; and we have alfo a confiderable plurality among the boroughs. Their ftrength lies among the barons. I find, the Earl of Tulh'bardine and all that family, are mightily difpteafed for the paffing of Cap- tain Fraier^s remiffion. It ia not yet expede at the feafs ; but they- were with me this evening, and they told me that thejrdidun- derftand that there was a warrant for paffing the remiffion at the great feal, per faUtwt, without being produced in exchequer^ and: Tullibardine let me fee Captain Frazer^s two Ifetters, of which you heard formerly, which were writt by him when he was at the uni- verfity; but, after thefe, TulUbardine employed him as an officer in his regiment; and, until this controverfy fell out, they were not heard of. But of this I fhall' write more fully afterwards.- In the mean time, I only add, that I am, Sir, your M. H. S- 4 0^ Earl 674 S T A T E - P A P E R S Earl of Marchmont to Mr Carstares. ■Great Reafoning and Debate in Parliament. — He thinks the pretended Prince of Wales more dangerous than the late King ivasy after he •was declared to have forfeited the Cronvn. SIR, Hdlyrood- You Will gucfs, by my not writing often, that I have very little ^iT^l'^o'^' time to beftow that way. I doubt not but Mr Pringle will acquaint you with any paffages which I take notice of to him as I have lei- iure. The meeting of parliament, and of the committees, do fcarce- ly give us time enough for our concerting meetings in private. No- thing is done in the houfe but upon a great deal of reafoning andi debate ; till all be ready, there is much time fpent, and it is imppf- fible to help it. I fhall be glad to know from you how the adts, al- ready voted here, are liked of by the King's friends there ? and how you think the Duke of Anjou's being King of Spain will be liked of by an Englifli parliament ? and if it is true what is talked here, that he fpoke in fo friendly terms to the pretended Prince of Wales, who, I fear, is more dangerous to us, being the bottom which, I am convinced, our Jacobites now fet up upon, than ever the late King was, fince he was declared to have forfeited the crown ? Write freely to me ; and, fo foon as I can get fuch leifure, I will be fuller upon this fubjedt to you; but I have not time now. lam, SIR, Your afFedionate humble fervant, and true friend, Marchmont. Earl AND LETTERS. 675, Earl of Annandale to Mr Carstares. Thanks him for doing, him juftice. — Great Encouragement to the King's Servants^ that thofe about his Majefty give him true Accounts of •what paffes. SIR, By this poft, I am favoured with yours of the i6th. I have EdmburgBy fcarce any thing from this to give you that is worth while. Our Nov. 21. hot angry people are ftill very alTiduous in improving, as much as they can, to the prejudice of the King and government, the late misfortune of the African bufinefs ; but I hope it fhall not be in their power to make any thing of it, fince the vigilance and dili- " gence of his Majefty's fervants may very eafily defeat all their in- difcreet and unwarrantable practices; and I muft hope it will be the great care of all of us fo to do. ^ I am fenfible I lie under particu- lar obligations to my friends for the juftice they have done me for what I did of this kind ;. and it is great encouragement to thofe who ferve the King, that there are thofe about him who give him faithful and true accounts of what pafles. I know well the engage- ment I am ijnder to you upon this head ; and, as it is never to be forgot, fo I fhall never weary, when it is in my power, in giving you repeated proofs of the fmcereft friendfliip. I have his Maje- fty's letter for my lodging, which I do acknowledge is a fpecial mark of his Majefty's favour, and of my friends concern for me; and as I know well how I have it, fo I cannot fail to make all the fuitable returns I am capable of ; and I am fure I fhall ever, with much gratitude, remember your part of it. Give me leave to give you the trouble of my moft humble and hearty refpedts to the E. of Portland. No man is more fihcerely his. This from your true friend. A . 4 Q^ Declaration «76 S T A T E - P A P E R S Declaration of Captain Pinker ton and James Grahattty 1701. We the fubfcribers, being interrogated by a committee of di- re&joss of the company of Scotland trading to Africa and the In- dies, imOy Upon what alledged crime we were tried for our lives at Seville ? idoy Upon what evidence we were condemned to die, &c. ? 3//0, Whether we were liberated upon produdion of the at- tefted copies of the aft of parliament and letters patent, efbbiifli- ing the -company, and of the commiffion, inftru<9;ions, and failing orders, founcled thereupon, or upon the King's letter ? 4fp, Whe- ther the King, by his letter, required our liberation as a favourj or in purfuance of the treaties between the Kings of Great Britain and Spain ? and, lajily. What T»ras the reafon that we did not procure, and bring along with us, a copy of the procefs ? We do hereby de- clare, upon our confcience, and to the beft of our memories. That, as to the^?!^, we were tried as pirates, and for having invaded the dominions of Spain, in failing beyond the Canaries, without leave from the King of Spain, and as having no commiffion from our King : That, as to the fecond^ The only evidence adduced agalnft us, were his Majefty of Great Britain's proclamation emitted againft us in the Weft Indies, and certain words alledged to have been pro- nounced by his Majefty's own mouth to the Spanifli ambaffador in England, by which his Majefty difowned all the company's pro- ceedings, or that they have any authority from him to go to thefe parts; which -words were (we underftand) tranfmitted in writing to the council of the Indies in Seville, and produced in court againft us : That, upon this evidence only, we were condemned, as pirates and invaders to die, in fuch manner as the judges fhould think fit, our e- ftates, and goods (if we had any) to be efcheated to the King; the fliip Dolphin and cargo likewife efcheated to his Catholic Majefty ; and the governour of Carthagena to be reprimanded for not either exe- cuting all the other perfons taken prifoners with us, or tranfmitting them to Old Spain, in order to have undergone the fame trial as we AND LETTERS. 677- we did: That his Catholic Majefty fliould, by his mcffengers, de-^ mand and require of the King of Gfeat Britain, that the perfons of the D. of Hamilton, Marq. of Tweedale, E. of Panmure, and all others concerned in the company, fhould be feized, and their eftates confifcated, to inake reparation for the damages and expences fu- ftained by his Catholic Majefly, in equipping a fleet for difpoflef- fmg their fettkm^ent at Darien : That, as to the third., The firft thing that gave us hopes of our liberation, was advice that we had from the vice-conful at Cadiz, importing, that by the Flamborough advice-boat, then arrived from England, feveral letters did bear, that the Scots colony in Darien had furrendered that fetttement to the Spaniards, upon certain articles of capitulation, in which he faid he doubted not but we were included : That, very foon there- after, arrived the King's letter to Monfieur Schenenberg, his envoy at Madrid, as alfo the attefted copies above mentioned ; upon which the faid envoy wrote to the council at Seville, acquainting hiih thereof, and that he doubted not but to put a flop to any further proceedings againft us, and to procure our pardon ; but that he re- folved not to expofe the King'^ letter to the criminal council, or to take any legal courfe for our liberation, to avoid charges, but that he would interpofe, with his Catholic Majefly, in a private way : That, foon upon the back of that again, arrived advice from the go- vernor of Carthagena, by which, we fuppofe, they might have a particular account of the capitulation formerly mentioned ; and, tho' the attefted copies above mentioned were, by the council of Seville, tranfmitted to the faid envoy at Madrid, the envoy return- ed word to the council, that he would not produce them, becaufe he would do our bufmefs without them ; and, in near about 20 days thereafter, he procured our pardon from the King of Spain, who at the fame time approved of, and confirmed the feiitence pafled a- gainft us at Seville, and lent orders to the prefident of Council of the contravention-houfe at Seville, to deliver us to the Englifh con- ful, upon his giving bond to fend us prifoners to England, in order to be tried there, for any thing that the King of Great Britain might 6yS STATE- PAPERS might have to fay againft us, for acting without his authority : That, thereupon, the Englifli conful having got us out of prifon, and declared to us, that, we were to be prifoners at large until fuch time as he fhould receive the King of England's further pleafure concerning us, one of us expoftulated very much with him as to the extremities we had been reduced to, and that, if he detained us any longer there, he muft refolve upon defraying our charges, and intreated that he might fend us to the conful at Cadiz, to be by him difpofed of as he fhould think fit ; upon which he did let us go, upon our engagement to prefent ourfelves to the conful at Cadiz : And, when we came to Sir Martin Weftcomb the conful at Cadiz, he told us that he had no order about us, and that we might go what way we pleafed for him. And, by the bye, we cannot, in gra- titude, hut fay, that Sir Martin Weftcomb, the conful at Cadiz, and his vice-conful, Mr James Chalmers, our countryman, were very generous and kind to us in all refpeds, and, by letters, prompted the conful at Seville to appear in our behalf, and engaged to free him of all damages, and clear him of all charges upon our account : So that, upon the whole, we know not whether we were liberate upon the King's letter or not ; for, we are told by the conful of Se- ville, and feveral other perfons in Spain, that the King's letter might probably prolonged to us a miferable life, but that, they be- lieved, it would not have procured their liberation, if certain advice had not been come of our colony's furrender, &g. As to the j^thy We cannot anfwer pofitively, not having feen the King's letter ; but we underftood, in the general, from fuch as we converfed with, that our liberation was defired and obtained as a favour. Then, Iq/ify, As to our not having procured a copy of our procefs, the conful of Seville, when we defired it, told us firft that it would coft,a great deal of money ; but, when we defired him not to ftand upon that, for that, whatever were the charge of it, that fhoiild not be wanting, he told us frankly, that he could not underftand for what end we required it ; and that, in regard it might give jealou- fy, and raife ill blood, he would not appear in it, without a fpecial order AND LETTERS. * 679 order from the King his mafter, or from the Englifh fecretary of ftate. In teftimony of all which, we have hereto fet our hands, at Edinburgh, the 4th of January 1701. (Signed) James Graham. Rob. Pinkertown. Draught of an ASi about Caledonia^ 1701, Our Sovereign Lord taking into his royal confideration, the many obftru£lions, infults, and invafions, which the company of this kingdom, trading to Africa and the Indies, meet with in their juft endeavours for the having fettled a plantation and colony, by the name of Caledonia in Darien, on the continent of Ameri- ca, upon pretence that they had no legal authority for fo doing; therefore, our faid Sovereign Lord, with advice and confetit of the eftates of parliament, for preventing the like encroachments in time coming, doth hereby declare. That the faid company's colony in Darien, on the continent of America, was a legal and rightful fettlement, precifely in the terms of the a£t of parliament and let- ters patent, by which the faid company was eftabllflied, and doth hereby ratify and confirm the fame ; and his Majefty and the e- ftates of parliament will affift and fupport the faid company in the lawful profecution of the rights thereof, and protect them in the full and free enjoyment thereof. Copy Reafonsfor a Diffent, a^c. Forafmuch as the eftates of parliament have, by their votes of the loth and 13th of January inftant, paffed four feveral refolves, nemine contradicente, in relation to the privilege of our African company ; and, in refped that the lawful application of the faid company's undoubted rights and privileges in their fettlement of Caledonia, 68o S T x\ T E - P A P E R S Caledonia, can only be afferted and vindicated by an a£t of his Ma- jefty and parliament^ by whom the faid privileges were ^granted ; and that, without fuch an a£t, aflerting aind vindicating the legali- ty of the faid fettlement, the enemies of our faid company may ftill continue to treat all per-fons concerned in, and employed by the fame, as pirates, and unjuft Invaders of the dominions of another nation, and, as fuch, may profecute them before any judicatoryof this kingdom; and that the fubjeds of this kingdom can, in no time coming, plant a colony in any other part of the world, without the hazard of being treated in the fame manner : Therefore, we de- clare our opinion, that the fubje£ts of this kingdom cannot be fe- cure in their trade, nor the company in the enjoyment of its juft rights and privileges, without fuch an ad j and do diifent from making any addrefs to his Majefty upon that head, until firft there be an aGt pafTed for fecuring the company's rights and privileges, in the aflerting and vindicating of which, the honour of King and parliament is fo much concerned; and, in teftimony of our duty to both, and to the interell of our country and company, we crave that our faid opinion and diflent be marked, with our names a^oin- cd thereunto. Addrefs againft adjauming the Parliament in the Affair of Caledonia^ 1 701. May it pleafe your Majesty, W? Noblemen, Barons, Gentlemen, Burgefles, and other fubfcrl- bers, your Majefty's moft dutiful fubjedls of this your antient king- dom of Scotland, having formerly, from an unfeigned zeal to your Majefly's fervice, and to the good and welfare of our country, pe- titioned your Majefly for a meeting of the efliates in parliament, in order to fupport and afllft our company trading to Africa and the Indies, which the parliament, by their unammous addrefs to your Majefty of the 5th of Auguft 1698, declared to be their own and AND LETTERS. 68i and the whole nation's particular concern ; and youf Majefty ha- ving been gracioufly pleafed to allow the parliament to meet on the 2ift of May laft, whereby all your goodfubjeds could not but conceive fuitable hopes of its happy iffue for the honour and inte- reft of your Majefty and people, do now beg leave to exprefs our deep concern and forrow for the unexpected adjournment thereof, without being permitted to do any thing towards the wifhed-for end of its meeting ; and do, in all humble manner, concur with the dutiful addrefs lately prefented to your Majefty from the plurality of the members of parliament, reprefenting the inconveniencies and prejudices arifing to the prefling concerns of the nation from that adjournment, and to the rights and liberties of parliament from the manner of it ; and its our inexpreflible regret, that your Majefty does feem to have been prevailed upon, by the roifreprefentations of evil counfellors, to haften out proclamations for the adjourning the parliament from time to time, whilft not only the faid company did ftand utterly in need of the continuance, fupport, and protec- tion promifed to it by your Majefty in parliament, and more efpe- cially upon the misfortunes that have of late befallen it by the fuc- cefs of enemies againft- Its colony of Caledonia, but, whilft alfo e- ven the nation itfelf did, and ftill does remain under the prefliire of fuch grievances as can only be redrefled in parliament. And, to the end that your Majefty may have a juft view thereof, we hum- bly beg leave to repreferit to your Majefty, how indifpenfibly ne- ceflary it is. That the proteftant religion be fecured againft the growth - of popery, immorality, and prdfanenefe: That the nation's right and title to Caledonia, as holding- of your Majefty's crjown of Scotland, be afferted and fupported : That the good incUnations of your Majefty, and fucceflbr Kings of Scotland, be preferved from foreign influence, as well as from the mifreprefentatioas- and pernicious counfels of unnatural countrymen : That the frequency and fitting of parHament be fecured and afcertained, purfuant to our claim of right : That dangerous influences upon the freedom of parliament, either by gratuitous penfions, or farms of any branch of the reve- 4 R nue. 682 STATE -PAPERS nue, or annexed property of the crown, other wife than accords to law, for the neceflary fupport of the government, be prevented : That tlie public credit be reftored, and an inquiry made into the application of the fund laid on, and appropriated by parliament, for fupport of the government and payment of the army : That the fecurity and defence of the nation and government be fettled, and . a duly regulated force, inftead of a Handing army, fo burdenfome to the country, and dangerous to its liberty, that the particular manner of applying the fecurity, which we, by your claim of right for the perfonal freedom of the fubjeds againft long and ar- bitrary imprifonment, as well as againft law-fuits upon old and ob- solete laws, -be fpecially declared by parliament : That the trade of this nation be encouraged and advanced, by duly regulating its ex- port and import, by difcharging the prejudicial branches thereof, by paying the value of the current money, by encouraging manu- factories, by employing the poor, and more efpecially your counte- nancing and afEfting our faid company in the profecutionof its law- ful undertakings. And that all fuch articles of grievances prefented to your Majefty by the eftates of this kingdom in the year 1689, as. having not yet been redrefled, together with fuch other grievances as the parliament, at the fitting thereof, find the nation aggravated with, be redrefled in parliament. And your Majefty having, by your royal letter of the 24th of May 1689, been gracioufly plea- fed to declare, and give full aflurance of our reprefentatives in that meeting of eftates which fettled the crown and royal dignity of this realm in your Majefty, that we ftiould always find your Majefty ready to protedt and aflift the eftates in making fuch laws as might fecure our religion, liberties, and property, or redrefs whatfoever might be juftty grievous to us : That your Majefty would ne- ver believe that the true intereft of the people and, the crown would be oppofite ; and that your Majefty would always account it your greateft prerogative to aflent to fuch laws as might pro- mote truth, peace, and wealth in your kingdom. We therefore reckon it our duty, humbly to defire, and afluredly to expedk, that your AND LETTERS. 685, your Majefty would be gracioufly pleafcd to fatisfy the longing de- fires, and earneft expe<5tation of your people, by allowing the par- liament to meet as foon as is poffible, and, when met, to fit while they have fully deliberate upon, and come to folid refolutions in the great and weighty concerns of the nation ; and grant fuch in- ftruftions to your Commiffioner as may enable him to pafs fuch a£ls as the great council of the nation fliall think moft conducive to the true honour of your Majefty and government, the welfare of this;, realm, both as to its religious and civil intereft', and tp the fuUl quieting the minds of all your Majefty*s good people. Hints to the King by Mr Carjlares.. This letter, Sir, which is fent to your Majefty from Scotland be- ing defigned for a public declaration of your mind, it feems necef— fary it be fo exprefled, that nothing may appear to be faid in it,, but what your Majefty is really refolved to do, that the enemies of your government may have nothing like a handle for cavilling, as- they prefume in their addrefs to do, with regard to a letter of your. Majefty 's in 1689 ; and,, therefore, I prefume to fuggeft the follow- ing alterations in this letter :. iy?i Where it is. faid, And ive being moji "willing to grant, ivhap may be judged needful^ &c. the word judged may be left out ; be- caufe, by it, your Majefty feems to oblige yourfelf to every thing, that your parliament ftiall judge needful; and, if any thing they judge to be fo ftiould be denied, they will recur to your Majefty's; promifc in this letter. 2 Some of our friends op- pofed both thefe motions, and unwarily engaged themfelves fo far that they cpuld not retreat. The members fometiraes fpoke about the inferting of names and numbers of voters in the minutes, fome- times AND LETTERS. 691 times about the recording of reafons againft a vote ; but the debate turned moft, for a great while, upon the laft point : At length the Chancellor offered the ftate of a vote to the houfe, viz. Whether the reafons of diffent offered fhould be recorded, yea or no ? Sir John Erfkine of Alva faid this ftate was not full; and he offered this ftate, Whether the reafons of diffent frorn an addrefs, given in by D. Ha- milton and eighty-three more members, ftiould be recorded, yea or no ? It was obje£ted againft this .ftate, that it was captious and ab- furd, fince it contained the very queftion in its bofom, and, though the parliament fhould difcharge the recording of names or numbers of voters, by the inferting that ftate of the queftion in the min.utes, they would be recorded. There were many members who fpoke very ferioully againft fuch a diforderly and difingenious method, but all in vain ; for there were ten or twelve of the barons, who were fupported by D. Hamilton, the Marquis of Tweedale, and E. Ru- therglen, who refolved, as I hear, by all means to obftru£t any vote; and they plead it as a privilege of the members to give in a ftate of a queftion, and demand a vote upon it ; and, if it did ijot pleafe, any other might give another ftate, and vote which fliould be the . queftion ; and, when others demanded, then, a previous queftion, Whether names or numbers fhould be put in any ftate of a queftion, or In the, minutes any manner of way ? The gentlemen fairly told, if a hundred queftions were propofed, they would ftill ad- here, to their privilege of having the ftate offered by them one branch of the queftion. And, whenever the Chancellor attempted to call the rolls upon any other queftion, thefe gentlemen and their fupporters made a mighty iuceffant noife. At length, m)& Lord Commiffioner, at the defire of fcveral of the King's fervants, and o- ther friends, adjourned till this day. Now, Sir, I hope you fee ftill, that, as I faid, the ftate of things here is ftill ticklifti, and that it is not advifeable or fafe to make debates, but where they are important and neceffary. I have a great deal of deference for thofe who op- pofed the inferting of the names in the minutes; but I muft own to you, though it was a novelty, I did not think it worth half the 4 S 2 time's 692 S T A T E - P A P E R S' time's debate ; for there was no diftioriour in fetting down an 108 for the addrefs,and 84 againftit; efpecially, when the 108 are pen- fidered, they will be found to be men of as good account an3' for- tunes in the nation as others ; and if this had 'been- once decided, or yielded, our friends Ihoold not. have fallen into the hofe-net, as I hear D. Hamilton called it, and faid to fome of his friends, We have now got them into a hofe-net, let us hold them faft ther^. I hope, though our frieiids has loft a day, they are not at a lofs up- on the matter; for all the indifferent world, and even many of their firmeft friends, were diflatisfied with Sir John Erfkine's ftate, and others adhering fo tenacioufly to it ; and I myfelf heard fome of them cenfure him as difmgenuous, and condemned the preparative as dangerous. I Ihall trouble you no further, but tell you that my L. Chancellor's modeft and eafy temper, and his great patience, in hearing every member, gives fome occafion to obftrudt and retard bufinefs more than were to be wiflied. -But this to yourfelf, to whom I can truft every thought. Di Sir, adieu. After the adjournment of the parliament, the CommiiFioner gave the parliament a repremand for diforders laft night as unparlia- mentary, and againftithe rules of all fociety, and hoped, he faid, they were fenfible of it, and would not fall in the like again. He moved, that the number of the votes for addrefs and a.&. fhould be ' both infert in the minutes : And this was acquiefced to. Then the barons, and others above mentioned, infifted, that all the vo- t.ers for a£t fhould be named as diflenters ; and this they infifted on, becaufe they knew many of thefe that voted fo would not fubfcribe any proteftation or diflent, which our friends prefled. This de- bate was like to turn things into diforder again ; and his Grace thought it not worth lofing time, and that the preiling to have all voters for ad concluded as diifenters, without their warrant, might difoblige fuch, and perhaps withdraw them from thefe cabals ; when they faw they made one ftep, they were impofed upon to make two. As for the reafons of: the diflent, they were rejeded, not AND LETTERS. 693 not only from being recorded, but even from being fo much as marked given in to the clerk, but only to be mentioned in the mi- nute read'by D. Hamilton in his place. After this, the parliament went on to confider, vphat they would do upon the three former refolves of the houfe : There was little or no debate about it; all feemed to be for an addrefs ; but, when a vote was afked, upon that D. Hamilton and Marq. of Tweedale propofed a doubt, that, though they might be for an addrefs on thefe three refolves, yet, ha,ving diflented from the fourth abpu); the company's right, they could not join as to the reft, \mlefs they were to be in a feparate addrefs ; and fo they, and others, urged a vote firft. Whether a fe- parate addrefs for thefe three or no ? They were told, it behoved firft to be determined, whether the parliament would addrefs upon thefe three or no ? and fo there was a debate like to arife again, which of thefe queftions fhould be firft voted ; but, to fave time, this expedient was fallen upon, that, without a vote, it fhould be marked in the minutes agreed to, that there fhould be addrefs upon thefe three refolves ; and then the vote fhould be put. Separate or no ? Duke Hamilton, and many others of the diffenters, preflcd earneftly the houfe would a,greeto a feparate addre;fs, thatfo it might be unanimous. Our friends reprefented the incongruity of fepa- rate addreffes about the. fame affair, and how the addrefs upon thefe three would want a foundation, unlefs that about the right were joined : The queftion was put, and carried. No feparate ad- drefs, but all in one. So here is .the cannon turned again ; and I wifli our friends would ftudy to have fewer debates, and ' more votes, for we are fafe upon a juft and fair ftated vote, and debates lofes time, and introduces many unneceffary queftions, which ftill give the greateft ftruggle. Dear Sir, adieu. to 694 STATE-PAPERS to the Earl of Argyle, Of his Patent as Duke of Argyle. Of Lothian's and Annandale' s as Marquifes, and Secretary Carmichael as Earl. Montrofe and Lady Wigton. May it pleafe your Lordfhip, Edinburgh, I hope your Lordftiip has before now received the draught of 170^/' y^"'* patent ; I kept the double of it befide me, and, upon a review, I thought Inverary was wrong placed before Lorn, feeing ,Lorn is to be the title of your eldeft fon ; in the tranfcribing, let it be pla- ced before Inverary. The noife runs here, that your patent as Duke, the Earls of Lothian and Annandale as Marquifes, arid Secretary .-; Carmichael as Earl, are already paft the King's hand ; but I knew it was not fo. The Earl of Lothian's patent is only fent with this poft. I opened to your friend Nica,nor, who has a great deal of fenfe of your Lordfhip's clofs and good management in his behalf; and aflures your Lordfhip,. that there is nothing that your Lordfhip will undertake for him for his integrity and fidelity to the King and government, but he will bide by it ; for he thinks no perfon will adventure to flain him upon that head ; and, for his contradi£tor, he is fure he cannot condefcend upon his fault, nor make no relevant objection againfthim. If humour mufl be the rule, it deferves no anfwer ; and he is pofitive he never difobliged him. Whatever difobligements he met with from him which are known, he refers all to your Lordfhip's good conduct, and thinks, if either the King or kingdom's interefls be the rule, your propofal cannot fail ; if it do otherwife, it fmells too much of what is feared that is refolved by his contradi£tor, to put matters upon an other foot, which cannot work the King's interefl. There is another flory fpread here, that your Lordfhip has parted with E. Elphiflon, pro- viding CommilTary Stewart be not the man, which feems to dif- pleafe both; I know it is falfe, and did afTure them it was fo. Your Lord- AND L E -T T E R S. 695 Lordfliip would mind L. Colme Ab. for he fhowed a great deal of difpleafure as to what paft anent the copper-plate, as I wrote in my laft, and treated the aflize very boldly. The Chancellor and An- nandale are to be here upon Monday next. There is no other thing here worth your notice. As for that fad ftory of Montrofe and La- dy Wigton, he is retired, and {he is gone home to her father's ; her hufband conveyed her with her father to Kirkcaldy, and there took leave ; but, ' fince the tryft was difappointed, Montrofe's friends might have managed more wifely. I will not trouble your Lord- fhip with the long ftory of it, becaufe it went through many hands by the laft poft. My only fon is, fome weeks ago, dead, and my wife very indifpoled, which makes, me to be in a little diforder. Lord LovAT toMrCARsTAREs. Complains that nothing is. done for him. -Applies to Mr Carjlares for a little Money to carry him home.,, having no other Door open. Dear SIR, I muft reckon myfelf very unhappy, that my friends here do fo London,, much neglefit me; and I believe my laft journey to England has 1701. done me a vaft prejudice; for, if I had been at home, I would have got fomething done in my Lord Elcho's bulinefs, and would have got money before now, that might ferve me to go a volunteer with the King, or maintain me any where ; but my friends, at home muft have worfe thoughts now of my aff"air than ever, having ftaid fo long here, and got nothing done. However, I now refolve to go to Scotland, not being able to fubfift longer here.. I have fen t the inclofed note, that, according to your kind promife, I may have the little money which will carry me home, and it fhall be precifely paid before two months ; and I muft fay it Is one of the greateft fa- vours ever was done me, not having any other door, open, if you were 696 STATE-PAPERS were not fo generous as to affift mie, which I fhall alwife gratefully remember, and continue with all fincerity, Dear SIR, Your faithful and obliged fervant, LOVAT. Marchmont to Mr Carstares. Stories of Variance, — Promifes to Jl'ick fqft to the Friendjhip ivhich the Kingfet up. SIR, Holyrood- I have had no letters from you fmce that of the i oth of May, and 2°|^Aoi'^°^ I long to hear from you ; for both that, and a former of the firft of May, and the freedom ufed in them, were very acceptable to me. I thank you for your care in delivering the three letters I inclofed to you. Let me know if any thing was faid to you concerning the fourth, which you was to deliver. I am much furprifedwith fome fto- ries talked here, of variance amongft friends, to a higher pitch than I hope it is. I wifh they may take heed, for it too often happens a- mong friends, as among the teeth in the mouth, if one drops out, the reft quickly follow. I will anfwer, for one, that, however I may differ a little about fome things, I will ftick faft to the friend- fhip which the King hinifelf fet up, and, whoever he be that fails, he will certainly repent it. I do believe you have fome confidence in me, as I have in you ; and I defire there be no breach of that. I do not fear to be deceived ; yet I would rather chufe to be fo, than to deceive any who have confidence in me. What you write freely to me fhall not turn to your prejudice, and cannot tend to mine, who am, S I R, Your aff^edionate humble fervant, and true friend, Marchmont. Lord AND LETTERS. 697 Duke of Argyle to Mr Carstares. Of gaining Whitelanv. — In this Cafe their Work is half done. — They deptive the oppofing Party of their Senfe, and get into their Boivels.-^—^eensberry is anjerfe to this. — Philiphaugh isjiill the Burden of bis Song.^—Of a Scheme to gain the Laird of Grant. S I R, I have had nothing from Scotland fince your going for Holland L°°'^°"' worth the writing. I fhall not fail to tranfmit what accounts I {hall 1701. have from time to time, which may be improved to the King's fervice. 1 gave both Secretaries my advice at parting, particularly how to deal with L. Whitelaw, and others of his fquade ; and, the longer I confider on it, the -more I am convinced to a demonftration, that, if once we gain Whitelaw, our work is half done ; for by it we fhall deprive the oppofing party of their fenfe, and get into their bowels ; nor will it be in the power of the greateft of that party to prevent it, and tlieir intereft wilf vanifh. Did the D. of Qjueenf- berry but rightly confider his own particular intereft, as well as his Majefty's, and tlie fafety of all who a(fj:ed upoa ihe r^volutiofl, he would come frankly into the meafure. But, alas ! ftill PixKphaugh is tlie burden of the fong ; and, to fpeak in Joeky terjus, ,he is his dead weight, as I have often told the Duke in a:aiilqry,fortH6ijIf, when he ufed to folicit Hs Maj^fty for Carnwath, Broomhall, and' the reft of his family. I doubt not but you'll mind what was re- commended to you^y' our memorial; and pray take care, if airy more 'be crowded into his Majefty's council, a juft bdance be kept in the adding of them, or it cannot anfwer the xigjit end. I re- member there was one thing recommended to you, which V. Sgf- field was fliy to move, till he underfto_od \xm I Aiould a>pprov^ of it, becaufe of niy.r£lation..,But>ebadnoxeaibia,; for I jCbgll ever 4 T prefer 698 a T A Ti E- P A PER S prefer his Majefty's fervice to any other confideration. He pro- pofed a gift to be procured of the E. of Murray's efcheat, now- fallen in favours of the Laird of Grant, as a means to gain him to the King's intereft, the intent being to fecure a debt owing by the E. of Murray to Grarit; Upon fecond thoughts, I think it may, be yet improved further, which.you'U pleafe to reprefent to. the King as my opinion : There is the member who reprefents the town of Invernefs in parlianient, and two others of the north, who depend entirely on the E. of Murray ; they oppofed laft parliament, and yet endeavours were ufed to foften them. Let the gift of efcheat pafs in my name, the Laird of Grant to be fatisfied out of it; by which I fave my uncle from being oppreiTed by the Laird of Grant, and I ihall, oblige him to caufe thofe members ferve the King, by keeping it Qver his head ; and, befides, it may be a means to c^ufe my bro- ther-in-law, L.. Doun, take the oaths, which he is not averfe to, to jny knowledge, but dares not fhow any inclination, for fear of his father. Befides, if, after all, my uncle do not give way to his de- pehders to ferve the King, I fhall (how a way by which he may be deprived of- towards L. 2O0 Sterling yearly he enjoys of the crown during his lifetime ;- a:nd thefe who will ferve may be rewarded without any expence to his Majefty. The gift fo granted fhould be fent me over, not to be took notice of till I found matters, and ' once next morith I fhalltake a trip to Scotland, and doubt not of doing fome good by my going ; for, to be free, V. Seafield has the misfortune tiot to be trufted by fome, though I prefume they wrong him ; and I flatter myfelf Grant and fome others will give me fome more credit ; befides, he is my relation. . I fhall be ever fond of con- tributing all Lean to advance his Majefty's intereft and fervice; for, ■ indeed, both gratitude and' inclination prompts me to it. We are all overjoyed at the repeated news of the Imperialifts fuccefs, in their firft enterprife'againft the French, under Prince Eugene's com- mand, who, by his mettle, has fhowed the Imperialifts nimbler than the French, a chara'dter not afcribed to them formerly. Lhope it is an omen of other gobd things to follow. We long to hear what are ■§. '# *A N D LETTERS. 699 are his Majefty's refolutions in the prefent jundure. I pray God preferve him, I know your character obliges you to pray for peace, but 1 affure. you more wifhes other ways. If it prove war, you'll be obliged once more to reprefent the Scots church militant; biit be- ware of {kulking in the ditch any more, as you told me. I am, your affedionate friend, to ferve you, Argyle. Lord SeaPield to Mr Carstares. Will not leave his Party ; — but difficult to gratify their Friends in Proportion to their Pretenfions. Mr Robert Steivart made Lord'ofSeJJton. — Annandale diffatisjledivith it, hecauje it ivill give the Prejideni too great Sivay in the SeJJlon. SIR, I came here upon Saturday laft, and, though I dengned to come ^Edmburgh," privately, yet there came out a great company to meet me. I have ^^^^ "' not as yet had time to fpeak with perfons particularly ; however, I find that what occurred. at London is well enough known here. I get vifits from both parties at prefent ; but has fpoke of no bufinefs to eiUier ;. as, ,for inflance, I have feen my. L.. Whitelaw, and my L. Philiphaugh, myL. Tiviot, and Major-general Ramfay;. anti.tl^is,, afternoon the Earl of Rutherglen was with me. But, whatever o- thers may do to me, I ftiall not leave the party,with whom I am en- gaged ; for I think the moft certain way to carry on the King's affairs wHl be by keeping unite amongft ourfelves. I find fonip of our friends puts a great value upon fome of their fervices, and raifes their pretenfions much higher than we can anfwer. Of this you fliall have a particular account afterwards. The great difficulty that we have, in all his Majefty's affairs, is, that the cuftoms are 4 T 2 reduced '« 700 STATE-PAPERS deduced to fo uncertain a fiate, that we know not what can be made of them. It would fccure all, if his Majeftf could get our trade with France eftablifhed ; and, according to what information I have, it may be done with little difficulty ; for Mr Cuningham, my L. Car- michael's fort's governor, has fpoke of it, and Monf. Pouffin and he has writ of ft to France, and does very quickly expe£t an anfwer j and our merchants here do believe that it may be obtained upon de- manding. We have fent this by a flying packet, that there may be time for fendiiig to this place a letter for a further adjournment of the parliament ; and I wifli his Majefty may do it to fuch a time that there be no need for a further adjournment till his Majefty's return. This day's letters brings an account that his Majefty is to refide at Loo; upon which every body concludes that we are to have no war. When you write to me, I fhall be glad you let me know how his Majefty keeps his health fmce he went to Holland ; for I am afraid of nothing, fo long as it pleafes God to preferve him, and, without him, I propofe no fatisfadbion in this kingdom. Mr Ro- bert Stewart has got his letter to be a Lord of Seffion. The Mar- qnis of Annandale feems mightily difpleafed with it; becaufe it will give the Prefident too great intereftin the feffion; and there are many others Jifpleafed ; but it is now over, and we muft make the beft of it. There are particular letters this day from my L. Duke of Queenfberry to feveral perfons; I know not to what purpofe; but he has not written either to my L. Carmichael or me. I fliall trouble you no further at pfefent, but that I am, SIR, Your moft humble fervant, Seafield. Lord AND LETTERS. 70s Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares. E. Mar/haPs Penjton dijfatisfying to many ; not Jure if he ivill accepts Earls of Mar ^ Loudon^ NortheJk,fcruple to take their' s ; but may be prevailed on. S I R, I have not heard from you fince parting, nor from any other, of Edinbur^^ your fafe arrival in Holland, which I long to know. I gave you it^i^^'' account of what I wrote to the D. of Queenfberry, and I have got a very fatisfying anfwer. He gives alTurance of his fixednefs to the prefent church-government, as the beft fupport of that caufe for which he fo early appeared, and ventured bis all, and given me al- lowance to make the fame known. The Earl of Marfhal's penfion is diffati&fying to many here ; and fome are of opinion it will be to no purpofe, that it will not fix him ; and others think he will not accept of it. The Earls of Mar, Lowdon, Northefk, fcruple at ac- cepting their penfions ; but I judge they will be prevailed with.. Thofe of the treafury who are concerned in the feflion are fo much taken up with feffion-bufinefs now, in the clofe thereof, that there are as yet no treafury-afFairs done, albeit my Lord Seafield arid I have attended every 'treafury-day. Lady Shufan Cockburn, it is thought, is juft a-dying, which keeps the Treafurer-depute out of town ; which is a great hindrance to council and treafury-bufinefs.. The African council has given an odd addrefs to the privy-council, and another, which they deliver, defiring it may be tranfmitted to the King : That, if there be any treaty with Spain, none may be concluded till they have reparation of their loIFes ; and more tothis; purpofe. But I have not heard it read, it being delayed till next council-day. I am faithfully your*s. My wife gives you her humble fervice. Earl 702 STATE-PAPERS Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Of the African Company's Addrefs about a Treaty with Spain. — Com- miffary ElpMnfion dejires to be made a Knight-Baronet. SIR, Edhiburgh. This day the African company prefented a petition to the Lords July 29. of privy-council, with an addrefs to his Majefty, defiring their Lordfhips cpncurrence thereto, and that they might tranfmit it to his Majefty. The addrefs is, that his Majefty may conclude no treaty with France or Spain, till Spain acknowledges the company's right to Caledonia, and make up all their lofles. It was only read, and delayed till the next council-day, that, in the mean time, we might concert meafures ; and accordingly we meet to-morrow at the Ab- bey. Commiflary Elphingfton is defirous to be Knight-Baronet ; and accordingly I fend you the inclofed patent, which you may caufe Mr Pringle to prefent it, and tranfmit how foon you can. I am o- bliged to be, with my Lord Kintore and my Lord Cstrmichael at fupper ; for my Lord Kintore is going out of town; and have no time to write any more to-night ; but I fhall do it fully by my next. Show \yhat's above to Mr Pringle; and I am your moft humble fer- vant. to Mr Carstares. Upon Englifh Affairs.— — Whether the King Jhould try ane-w Par- liament? and, if he inclines it, whether the People Jhould de- fire it P Edinburgh, As great difficulties, (Worthy dear Sir,) are in view, as can well Ifju^' ^^ fuppofed ; both, whether it be defireable the King fliould try a new AND LETTERS. 703 new parliament or not; and, whether it fhould be defired of him by the people that he would, yea or no ? As to the former, on the one part, if he do, the choice may be moftly the fame ; and then they return with greater irritation and indifpofition to the King's bufmefs. On the other, if he do not, he is fure of the fame ; and'the ahimofity agaihft the oppofite party can fcarce be greater, and, too probably, fuch as quite to hinder the King's bufiinefs, if, efpecially, the controverfy between the two houfes remain uncompofed. Divers that underftand the nation are of opinion, a new; parliament would be much more for the King's fervice, efpecially, if bethink fit toexprefs a refentmentofdifrefpeds and delays from the former; which is likely to be accompanied with great detriment and prejudice, very fen- fible to the body of the people ; want of trade, price of wool fallen to nothing, &c. If the new trial be not made, the King muft fuf- fer hinifelf to be plucked away from his beft friends, againft whom nothing is to be alledged but their known afFe£tion to his Majefty. All the world, friends, and enemies, account the impeached Lords fuch ; and, that his Majefty was only not ftruck at, as being too high out of reach. Whether it ought to be made the people's re- queft or defire to his Majefty, is a difficulty next to infuperable. Un- to many, full of duty to his Majefty, it will carry the appearance of ' rudenefs, and an unmannerly prefumption, to advife in fo great an aff^alr of ftate ; wherein, if they be not numerous, they fignify no- thing, if they be, the more pjrefumptuous. Befides that, his Majef- ty's pleafure and purpofe being unpreknown, if it fliould prove con- trary to fuch a petition, the petitioners, in next feflion, muft expe£b to be torn iii pieces. If his Majefty make it his own a£t, it would be freely followed with congratulatory addrefles ; which vi'^ould figni- fy much to make it efTedual to its moft defireable end. If this be at all ufeful, you know when, and where, and with what circum- ftances of duty, &c. to ufe it better than, Worthy Sir, your's, as you know. Cock- 704 STATE-PAPERS CocKBURN of Ormifton to Mr Carstares. In favours of Mr David Carmichael for the Commiffariot now vo' cant. Nothing fofhocking as Earl Mar/haPs getting L. 500 of Penpon. The Marquis of Annandale in a continued Fit of ill Humour. SIR, Ormifton, I wrote to you fome time ago in, relation to the commifTariot of July 29. Edinburgh, which might become vacant, one of them being advan- ced to the feffion. To this I had no return ; but, when the Secre- taries came, I underftood fome had been named to it at court, and, amongft the reft, Mr David Carmichael ; and I can learn, nothing flood in his way but his father's fhynefs to do for his own. I find the D. of Argyle is much for Sir Alexander Gumming ; but both the Secretaries are fatisfied it is not for the King's fervice to put in fuch a man ; fo I fent laft poft a new commiffion, which is in fa- vour of Mr David Carmichael, now entered advocate. 'Tis the beft breeding a young man can have ; and I cannot think there needs many words with yoii, where any of my L. CarmichaePs children are concerned. You know I have not troubled the King with many of my fuits ; yet this one I defire you may lay before his Majefty ; and, if he thinks I either have done, or can do him fervice, he will not deny me thts fmall reward. Indeed, I muft fay it, I think my Lord Carmichael has taken a very fmall (hare of the partition ; and he has a colleague is not fhy. It might be expected my Lord fhould have more help ; but you have an opportunity to oblige his friends, and, when its granted, let both Secretaries know the favour is granted at my requeft. There is nothing fo fhocking to thofe appeared laft feffion of parlianient as E. Marfhall's being of the council, and getting L. 500 Sterling penfion. I love not to dive into meafures ; but,fure I am, we are not under thofe meafures. Honeft men, who have appeared both for church and ftate, can think AND LETTERS. 705 think themfelves fecure by them. The Marq. of Annandale has been, fince the Secretaries came, in one continued fit of ill humour, which has' appeared in every public, meeting, to the delaying of all treafury-bufinefs in particular. I fhould a been in town this day; but my wife's health does not allow me ; (he has been ill of a long time, and is not without hazard. Farewell. My fon Charles is at Leyden ; do me the favour to enquire what he is doing, and let him have your beft advice. Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. All believe the War to be the only probable Courfe to preferve our Re- ligion and Liberties. Of the Difficulties in fettling the Cufloms. Of -a neiv Addrefs from the African Company ^ 'which the Privy Council refiife to tranfmit.- SIR, I am very glad to find by your letter from Rotterdam that you are Edmburgh, fafely arrived. We all believe here that the war now is inevitable; ijji.^^' and I fpeak with no body but who, is convinced, that it is the moft probable way to preferve our religion and liberties; and I hope God will preferve his Majefty until the power of France be balanced, fo as not to be a terror to all Europe. I have fpoke with feverals here, particularly with one lately preferred, who agree in fentiments vyith the D. of Argyle ; but, fince nothing of confequence is to be done in our affairs till his Majefty return, I think it needlefs to trouble you with any thing of this kind, efpecially feeing you have fent me no alphabet as you promifed. I endeavour to carry as fairly and fmoothly with every body as I can ; and you may be fure it is difficult enough, feeing I find every one puts a value upon the fervices they have performed ; and they never doubt but that I am capable to procure them any place they defire. The tack of the cmftoms is now Under our confideration : I am afFraidit muft be taken off their hands ; and we know not how to difpofe of it, trade being fo uncertain, and the French trade not being adjufted ; 4U and 7o6^ STATE-PAPERS and there being fo great appearances of war, all projeds of trade are laid afide. The prefent tackfmen will pay nothing to any bo- dy until their abatements are adjufted; and, if they get all their will in thefe, they will have little or 'none to pay. -I have ferit inclofed to Mr Pringle a copy of a new addrefs from the African Comp9.ny to his Majefty, which they prefented to the Lords of the privy coun- cil, with a petition, wherein they defire, that the addrefs may be tranfmitted by the privy council to his Majefty. The laft courlcil- day it was only prefented and read ; but no anfwer was given to it. Tefterday, all of his Majefty's fervants who are of the council met at my L. Chancellor's ; and we did unanimoufly refolve, that it was not fit for the council to do it. This day the petition was read a- gain ; 'and no body having fpoke except ^he Chancellor, who did not fay very much, it was put to the vote, and it was carried una- nimoufly, that it fhould not be tranfmitted by the council. You will eafily conceive the reafon why we were of this mind, when you read" the addrefs; and I having writt of it to Mr Pringle, it is need- , lefs that I fhould repeat it to you. I fhall write again before I go to the country. In the mean time, I am, Sir, your M. H. S. Duke of Queensberry to Mr Carstares. The Necejfity of making good parliamentary Promifes', it makes a Credit ivhtchiJuillbeofgreatUfe. Begs he ivill /peak earnejily ta the King in favour of the Marquis of Annandale* s Brother. SIR, . London, I received your letter of the 28th paft from Loo. The King fw "* l^ci"? Z^^^ ^° Dieren, where he has more important affairs, muft of confequence occafion a delay in ours. Nothing indeed is fo pref- fing in them as the making good parliamentary promifes, which I do beg of the King to do, as foon as his Majefty can. conveniently; for it will hereafter make a credit that may be of great ufe in fu- ture AND LETTERS. 707 ture undertakings : And, particularly, I do recommend to you the difpatch of my L, Ballantyne's bufinefs. He ferved in hopes of that, when his relations, in whofe hands his money is ftbpt, the intereft of it, thinking, by that means, to force him to a compliance with them. I fend you inclofed a letter, which I received open, from Mr Secretary Vernon ; it was .under a cover to Alexander Johiifton, brother to the late Secretary, who being in the country, had it fent to him ; fo it came not into my hands till two or three days ago. I do believe that it comes from my coufm the Marq. of Annandale's brother, who I was kind to while he was a boy, and has, I fancy, more than ordinary truft in me on that account. You no doubt know his ftory : His,^and my uncle Dumbarton, when he was very young, gave him a commiffion in his regiment, where he was converted by his priefts : He was one of the revolting Captains, and has ever fmce ferved in France with reputation. He feems now fenfible of the miftaken courfe of his life, and may be, if right- ly managed, of ufe to the King. If his Majefty fhall have good- neis enough to pardon him at the requeft ; and, in confideration of his relations, my L. Manchefter and Mr Vernon are both of opi- nion, that his fuit fhould be granted, which I hope will have weight with the King : And they think that his Majefty, by doing this a£t of grace, will have application made to him by moft of his fub- jeds now at St Germains, to be fent into the Emperor's fervice. Pray lay this matter, and the inclofed letter, before his Majefty, as foon as is pofllble. I beg that you may fpeak concernedly in it, and let me have his Majefty's anfwer, with leave to write to the gentle- man ; for his circumflances does not allow of any delay, nor can I correfpond with him without the King's allowance. Mind the mo- ney I wrote to you formerly of on account of the fupernumerary troops, for the occafions of the kingdom requires it fpeedily. I am, after the old manner, your's &c. 3 U 2 Earl 7q8 state-papers Earl oFSeafield to MrCARsTAREs. If the Party continues firm, no Difficulty in managing the King^s Af- fairs. — Lord Whitelaiv iviliing to be engaged ; — hutftill Duke of ^eensberry is pofitive. — The proteSied Clergy much afraid of the Violence of the Presbyterians, SIR, C ft m- Though you do not mention the receipt of any letters from me, houfe, Aug. ye(- J have written frequently. I am now taken up with my dome- ^ ' ^' ' ftic affairs, and entertaining my fritnds and neighbours. I havefeen few of the parliament-men here as yet ; only, I find, from all that I meet with, that, if we continue firmto one another, there will be no great difficulty in managing his Majefty's affairs in the next feffion of parliament. I have feen my !L,ord Whitelaw, and he is indeed ve- ry ready to be engaged, in his Majefty's fervice; and, if what my Lord Duke of Argyle propofed were done, he would ufe his utmoft endeavours to promote his Majefl:y's intereft ; but you know the diffi- culty remains. My Lord Duke of Queenfberry continues pofitive, and divifion would be of very fatal confequence to our party. I have had with me commiffioners from the proted;ed clergy ; they are ve- ry much afraid of the violence of the prefbyterian minifters,for they have turned out, lately, two intruders that had taken the oaths ; but I told them, there was no help for that, feeing that they had not a legal right to their churches. I refolve to be at Edinburgh againft the council day in September, and I carry my wife along with me. My fon would likewife very willingly wait upon you ; but I find him fo very much advanced in his learning, that I am refolved to leave him at Aberdeen. Sir Robert Gordon of Gordonfton and Laird of Grant being here, I have no more time but only to add, that I am, SIR, Your moft humble fervant, Seafield. Lord A ' N D LETTERS. 709^ Lord Carmichael to Mr Carstares. Great Pains taken to make next AJfembly uneafy, — ivhich may have Influence on Members of F arliament ; — butfeiv to be trujled. SIR, I was very glad to hear from you, and now I have received three Auguft 18;. of your's. In the laft was the cypher you promifed. It rejoices me much to know that the King is better in his health. Though I have met with trouble and difficulties fince I came to this kingdom,, yet I am convinced it was neceffary to follow your advice as to my coming at this time, for there are great pains taken to make the next aflembly uneafy, and that it may have influence on members- of parliament ;' but I hope endeavours fhall be ufed, as fhall make ill defigns inefFedtual. There are but few to be trufled; and, fo foon as I can give any clearer account how matters goes, you (hall hear from your fmcere and afFe(fiionate fervant. Sir, pardon my fending, this fmgle page ; for, by a miftake, I had writt on the other page of your letter what I was to fend to a perfon in Lothian, Mr Alexander Cuninghame to Mr Carstares. An Interview with the Count de Torcy upon the Scottijh Trade •with France. SIR, I have attended your coinmands concerning our trade ever fince Paris,, Aug» I came hither; have been at Marli and Verfailles fcveral times; but ^^' '^°*" the Count de Torfi was never at liberty to receive me till yefterday. He afked to fee a power from the King of England, and could give no anfwer to the removing their edid till the King of England did give authority to treat. He alTured me of his good intentions to come to a treaty ; the vintage being now at hand, I propofed to him the fufpending of their edid for fome time, till CommilTioners could be yio S T A T E - P A P E R S be "appointed. That, he faid, would-be hardly procured ; but, if the King of England would appoint Commiflioners prefently, that the treaty might be concluded very foon, and the merchants lofe' no time ; and, that the French King would be eafily difpofed to grant to the Scottifh nation their antient privileges, or other new ones, that would be more for the benefit of commerce. Sir, You fee the difpofition of this court towards us ; I cannot queftion their fmcerity at prefent ; and, if we do not lofe time, we may obtain what is de- fired as yet. He was pleafed to add, that he would be glad that the treaty might pafs through my hands ; but I am now a-going to Ita- ly ; if you think I can be ufeful to my country, or worthy to ferve the King in this or any thing elfe, you may difpofe of me, and af- fure yourfelf that, with all fmcerity, I am your moft obedient and humble fervant, Alex. Cuninghame. Mr Alex. Cuninghame to Mr Carstares. His Tranfaiiion nvith the Court of France upon its Trade ivith Scot- land, SIR, Paris, Aug. I wrote to you on Monday laft, that I had been with Monfieur de Torfi, and fpoke with him of our trade, and did move to have the edidt fufpended here prohibiting the importation of our fifh. I told you how I was received, and that they are willing to enter on a trea- ty of commerce with us, provided it be with the confent and autho- rity of our King ; but, that a fufpenfion of the edi£l againfl our fifh cannot be obtained without we give in a memorial, which I had no fufficient power to do. This feems to be a pfoper time to move in it ; and I think myfelf obliged to let you know where it flicks at prefent. I intend to fet out next week for Italy with my charge. If it be thought fit that I fliould do any thing more in this affair, it muftbe by the King's authority ; then I fhall attend it, and receive your AND LETTERS. 711 your commands as- marks of honour, and be direded by them as my only rule. I do not know what way others may take to bring it about ; but, if no progrefs may be made in it, it might have been as well let alone. As I was writing this, your's of July 3 1 ft came to my hand ; for which I return you my hearty thanks. In this, and my former by the laft poft, I gave you advice of what I had done fmce I came over; and nothing did hinder me from making a further progrefs in it but my wanting particular inftrudions, and a power to prefent memorials; by which) perhaps, the edi£t here might have been fufpended till the treaty for trade had been concluded : This was that I propofed to Monfteur Torfi as a preliminary ; but. he put it off till I could prefent a memorial. Sir, You defire my thoughts of it ; and I am of the mind this court is in a good difpo- fxtion to treat with us on trade, and to fettle it on as good terms as. others have it. I hear our nation is much for it ; and, if I had not been employed in it, others would, who now fee' themfelves pre- vented, by the good intentions of the King's minifters, which are known ; but they do not fufpe£t me, or my being with Monfieur de Torfi. I am of the opinion that it go on ; or, at leaft, not to let it reft where it is now, in a mere overture, when they are fo well! difpofed to it here. I am,, SIR, Your raoft obedient and humble ffervant, Alex. Cuni-nghame.. If you can make it bear the charges to me, I ftiall be willing to^ attend it ; and, though I go to Italy, I will return if commanded, feeing the minifters here told me they would be willing I (hould be- mads u-fe of in the treaty.. to Mr C"A R S T A R E 3. Upon the Stat-e of Affairs in England^, Kind S I R, I had your'^s of the 1 9th this evening, which my man broilght Tunbridge- me from London, being juft arrived, which had its ufual welcome, "^o"'' ^"^S- j..e.. 712 S T A T E - P A P E R S i. e. more than ordinary, not only for the contents, but the perfon from whom I hear the news. I came here laft Saturday night, ne- •ceffitated by want of health, (particularly, want of appetite;) thef^ waters ufually raife me, and I hope will, through the Divine blef- fing. I dined with my friend the day before I came out of town, and had fpent four days at his country-houfe with him the week before, with moft dear afFedion, and mutual growing tendernefs. I have been wanting to myfelf and the public, I have not done it foon- er and oftener. I hope well as to him ; but the change of juftices of peace in Middlefex (many of the King's friends turned out) re- fleds on the Lord Keeper, and faddens many. The Lord R-7~-^ Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, is of the like confideration, tho' fome queftion whether he would not do as much mifchief here ; and o- thers, who wifh well to his family, think it is in order to his fall, and a ftep to his being laid afide. His fpeech to the King'of Po- land from Charles IL and other bloody pamphlets, are publifhed j and, on the other fide, pamphlets that mention my friend as to par- ticulars, wherein he had no concern, being then either abfent or fi- lent. The city is, at the ufual rate, full of lies, and miftaken-cha- raders of men, and a falfe notion of things. People who judge" by my Lord S d's friends conclude for a new parliament fpeediJy ; it may have ill confequehces either way. I durft not fo much as give hints. I had a moft obliging kind letter of condolence from the Speaker before I left London. The buftle which the legion- paper made feems to leflen its influence; and, in general, the late feffion Is not fo terribly thought of now as in thefirft heat ; however, to accommodate the difference between the two houfes, is a matter belongs to wifer heads. An hearty efFeflual war againft France (public money well managed by faithful hands, accountable to par- liament), will certainly pleafe the nation, if the prefent miniftry will ftrike in, in cafe the King fee it needful. His perfonal honour and affedion by the people daily encreafeth ; his health and long life is more prayed for than ever. What I wrote of Col. D ^ley and the Governor of N. E. I had hoped to have one word abaut. I have AND LETTERS. 715 have fince difcourfed Mr H. and "we agree to be neuter in that af- fair, and not recommend any, or write againft any candidate ; as thinking ourfelves too little to meddle in any affairs of fuch confe- quence out of our way. I cannot add but that my health is imper- fect, though, I hope, fomewhat better fince I came hither. I am, as you can wifh, Sir, your's. Earl of Marchmont toMr Carstares. Deftrous to fee the King. — Dark Hints of dangerous Deftgns, •which nvould make it ufeful to the King^s Service that he be alloived to •wait upon him. — SIR, I have been in the country fome weeks by-paft looking after my Ho^y^o^^- private affairs, which I had muchnegleded, &nd taking the benefit 8.i7o'i. of my refrefhment in that air. It is long fince I had the honour to fee the King; and, if it can confifl with his fervice here, I fhould be very glad to have an bpportunity of opening my mind to him in difcourfe, fo foon as he returns to England ; and niuch the rather, th;it I plainly difcern a defign a-working, which, if not obviated, is like to have a confequence of the greateft danger to this nation, and yet is fecretly managed under a mafk, very plaufible, and apt to de- ceive. If you pleafe to acquaint the King of this general, and think it fit to do your endeavour to move him that I may be fbme fhort time with him, you fhall find that both his Majefty's lervice, and thefe who are heartily affeded to it, will be at fome advantage by what I have to reprefent. I fhall fay no more, but hoping to heatr from you when you find convenient to write, I remain, SIR, Your affedionate hunible fervant, and true friend, Marchmont. 4 X Earl 7^4 S T A T E - P A P E R S Earl of Marchmont to Mr Carstares. The Perfonvwho have gone up ivith Offers of Service to th^ ^een. — Prays that Mr Carjlares ivill ivrite him fully and freely. SIR, Holyrood- Yefterday and this day the Duke of Hamilton, the Marquis of March 31. Twccdale, and feveral other lords and gentlemen, have taken jour- 1 702. ney to London, and I do believe will endeavour to tempt the Queen, by great offers of fervice, if fhe will grant them their terms, put fome of them in eminent pofts, and diffolve the parliament : I hope God will guide her. I pray you write to me fully and freely, that I may be the more capable to ferve her Majefty, in fupporting the happy revolution, which did coft the moft excetlent King William, .of ever glorious memory, fo vaft care, trouble, and hazard. I would not detain the flying packet, to write any more than what I fent to the Duke of Queenlberry, which no doubt you will fee before this comes to hand, and which gives as full accounts of things as I could gather. I am. Your very affedionate humble fervant, and true friend, • • Marchmont. Phi LiPHAUGH to Mr Carstares. Of an AH for abjuring the Pretender, brought in by Lord Chancellor, and the Reafonings upon both Sides. — The Parliament adjourned. SIR, Philiphaugh, I am ordered by my Lord Commiffioner to give you the trouble July 4- 1702. Qf ti^efe, to inform you of the manner of adjourning our parlia- ment, and what happened about the propofal of an adt for abjuring the. pretended Prince of Wales. His Grace had an inftrudion to give the royal affent to fuch an a£t ; but he found, pretty early, that the members of parliament would differ about it, and that peremp- torily AND LETTERS. 715 torily too ; fome alledging that it was neceflary for the fecurity of our prefent fettlement, and preventing diflafFeded people coming into next parliament : Others "pretending it would be no effectual fecurity, and that it was not proper for this limited parliament to put new limitations upon members of a fubfequent parliament ; but, chiefly, that fuch a ftep would carry us fo far into the meafures of England about the fucceffion, that they would become carelefs and indifferent about the union. His Grace thought fit ta acquaint her Majefty, that he found thefe different opinions among the members, and that both fides had confiderable abettors ; and de- fired to know her Majefty's pleafure about it. He had a return not to bring any fuch a£t, if it was like to occafion divifion in the houfe ; for that was by all means to be fhunned. After this, his Grace called the chief men of both fides before him twice or thrice, and endeavoured to reconcile them, but in vain ; they both flood their ground ftiffly, and fet up to propagate their opinions warmly among other members. Thefe that were for the ad feemed fully perfuaded, that, if once it was brought into parliament, there were few would ftand up openly againft it. However they reafoned in private converfations, his' Grace knew that they were in a miftake, and recommended to them to make a more particular trial amongft the members. And, upon Saturday morning, his Grace called my Lord Chancellor, Prefident of the Council, Lord Privy-feal, Duke of Argyle, Earl of Leveh, the Lord Advocate, and Treafurer-de- pute, and Mr Francis Montgomery, who all had appeared defirous of that ad, and laid the matter before them, and afked their opinion; and all of them, one after another, gave their opinion, That, fince it would make a breach and rent in the houfe, it was not fit to bring it in ; and promifed not to bring it in ; but withal declared, that, if it came in, they would ftand up and fecond it ; only my Lord Chancellor fignified a peremptory refolution to bring it in, unlefs his Grace exprefsly forbid him :. Whereupon his Grace, in her Ma- jefty's name, required him not to bring in any fuch ad. My Lord Chancellor made a bow, and went off in filence. So his Grace 4X2 , reckoned. 7i6 STATE-PAPERS reckoned the matter laid afide, and prepared every thing for an ad- journment. After he came to the houfe, he was advifed to fay fomething before parting ; and, while he was writing a few fen- tences upon the throne, my Lord Chancellor brought in the adt, and defired it to be read. This to be fure was a great furprife to his Grace and many others. You'll know by that day's minutes what pafled: That the houfe fplit upon a preliminary vote, 57 to 53. After this, the parties became eager ; and, on Monday's night, they drew to different cabals, and each fide appeared confident of viiSory. Ne?it day, the abjurers alTured themfelves, that, having gained a preliminary vote, they would have a greater plurality when it came to the queftion^ The non-abjurors feemed as full of affurance; be- caufe, faid they, fome of their friends, who were abfent thefirftday, would be prefent the next. Befides, they could get what reinforce- ment they thought needful, not only of feven or eight members who had never been in the houfe, but even of the withdrawers, fe- verals of whom offered to return to vote againfl that a&. Withal, the non-abjurors had prepared a claufe to be added to the aft, and wherein they affured themfelves of the concun-ence of feveral of the other fide. It was to this purpofe : That, after the death of her Ma- jefty, and failing iflue of her body, no fucceflbr fliould enter to the legal government, until the parliament firfl met and declared their Tight and title. This was new, and wherein his Grace was not in- ftrudled. So his Grace, feeing that, if that adt was further debated, it would inevitably occafion great heats, and an irreparable breach among the members, and the event was at beft uncertain, but the greateft probability was of its carrying againft it, he thought it ne- ceflTary to adjourn : And I can affure you the adjournment was ge- nerally well received by people of all ranks and perfuafions ; for not one fet of people were unanimous for preffmg it. The prefbyterian members of parliament, and the very minifters of this place, were divided upon that queftion. I was very glad, upon this occafion, to have an opportunity of difcourfing his Grace about you, and to find that he continues your firm -AND LETTERS. 717 firm friend, and has a juft value and efteem for you ; and I hope you will ftill make him fuitable returns. This goes by a flying packet, which is juft difpatching ; fo I have no time to tell you my own ftory ; but you may expedt by next long complaints of your friend my Lord Treafurer-depute» who, I think, has not at this time fhewn fo kind regards to me as I have done to him lately upon feveral occafions ; but I fhall fay no more at prefent; fo, after the old manner, dear Sir, adieu. Earl of Portland to Mr Carstares. Is glad to hear that the good Party is countenanced at Court. I received your's of the 1 9th of June, and am very glad bufinefs J'^'y ''*■"' goes well, fo, far, in Scotland, and that the good party is fo far coun- tenanced at court ; but the oppofite party is ftrong. If it were backed by the people, inteftine divifions would be apprehended, which God forbid. The News-letter fays the Queen has received the addrefs; but I do believe it a miftake. I am afraid that 41 37 and 38 underftand one another very well, except you have good reafons to believe the contrary. The wind is fair for the fleet; God grant it fuccefs. One would reafonably expe£t it, if the fummer- feafon were three months longer. I fhall be very glad to hear of the good end of this feffion of parliament, and the continuance of your health. Earl of Leven to Mr Carstares. Of the Oppofitwn made by the Presbyterians to the Settlement of the SucceJJion. Rev. SIR, I have had three from you ; the laft was of the 31ft March. I am very glad the aflerably has carried fo well. I am told that it is «' now 7i8 S T A T E - P A P E R S now attributed by a certain perfon, who was not long ago, with you, to the good management and intereft of the Commiffioner, rather than to any great (hare of a fpirit of meeknefs and moderation in the members. That perfon alfo tells, that the prefbyterian party in Scotland are altogether againft the fettling the fucceflion, and , that they are very angry with the houfe of Lords meddling with our plot, and with theiaddrefs to the Queen. If this be true, I con- clude they are infatuate. Did ever any. nation refufe help to fave themfelves from ruin? or, Can any take it ill that- England wifh Scotland well, and wifh that they may fettle the fame fucceffor ? Whether is it better to continue poor, and enjoy our religion and property, or to flop the fettling of the fucceffion, from the imagi- nary hopes of riches by an union ? If prefbyterians be fo fond of an union, let them not complain if, fome day, they get it with the iofs of their church-government. If it had not been for fome folks concerning themfelves in the matter laft year, the union had gone a greater length ; but there is no regard now a-days to a«y body's opinion ; every man thinks he knows more than his neighbour ; nor is any man relpedted, it feems, though fpending his ftrength and eftate for the public ; biit they will judge of matters at a. di- ftance, which they little underftand, and fo become the occafion of their own riiin ; if fo, their blood will be on their own head. The knife is at our throat, and the queftion is, Whether fliall we take it away or not ? Which queftion, I think, flxould be eafily anfwer=- ed. I am, SIR, Your moft humble fervant, Leven.- P. S. There is nothing yet done in Scots affairs. Mr Harley to Mr Carstares, Of the Duke of ^eensberr/s Pht.—rFrazer of Lovat, &e. Rev. SIR, Friday nighty lo o'clock, I am very glad to find by your's, that your inftru£tions had good effe£t. I think I may venture to fay, They who turn the wheel mean AND LETTERS. 719 mean well ; I pray God give his "bleffing. I muft not conceal from you, that it is very grievous to thofe who wifh well, and are able to a£l well, to find the chief of the Scots nation fo averfe to any difcov€ry of the French correfpondence ; and that, when they would ferve that nation, they concieal the means. Nothing is wanting now biit Lovat, Frazer (I mean), to be found. Cannot the perfon who knows where he is be perfuaded to let him be found ? If you think it worth your time to have me explain myfelf fur- ther, I will not go to bed this night till twelve, R. Harley. The following letter, from the fame hand, was written after Mr Carftares came down to Scotland. Of the Oppofition to the Succejfion in Scotland. Important ^eries upon that SubjeB. Rev. SIR, Aug. 19. 1703. I have had many conflids with my own thoughts, whether I ought to write to you or not. I jhought myfelf obliged, both in friendfhip, and by the receipt of two from you, to give you the beft teftimony of my refpedts a letter can convey ; but then, the thoughts of the anger (without any colour or ground) your parliament, and not the nation, have thought fit to exprefs againft the very name of Englifh, made me defer writing, leaft my letter fhould fall into any hands which might make an ill ufe of fuch a correfpondence to your prejudice, as I find they have been very bufy already in in- tercepting letters. Though thefe thoughts. Sir, have deterred me hitherto; yet I will venture to trouble you with this, under all imaginable caution, not to write one word fhall give offence, let who will get this letter ; and, indeed, to fay the truth, I think it very unfit for any one here to meddle with Scotch affairs, which are fo much out of the way of our comprehending. We have had the fame fpeech printed twice in 720 S.T ATE-PAPERS in the flying poft, fe^fides abftrads af ads of parliament , and clau- fcs J and yet I do not find one perfon who pretends, to underftand the proceedings. To fay the truth, very few fpeak at all about themj and thofe who do, (I do not mean any minifters of ftate), fpeak with too little concern ; lefs than they do of the King of Sweden and the Pole.. I think this is not right j for, though Englishmen may not meddle about their affairs, I cannot but have a zeal for a nation fo full of good and leajrned men, who have» in all ages, given fuch proofs of their learning and courage ; a nation fprung from the fame original, inhabiting the fame ifland, and profeffing the fame religion. Thefe reafons. Sir, make 'me a wellwifher and a fervant to the nation, and fill me with grief to fee a cloud gathering in. the north, though no bigger than a man's hand. I wifh fome of you would do their endeavour to difpel that cloud : That -fome amongft your- felves (for none elfe you will fuffer) would bind up the wound, would fling a garment over the nakednefs of your country. Some papers have made a great noife of the indepjendeacy of that king- dom ; I cannot imagine to what end, becaufe it hath never been thought otherwife* or treated otherwife, fince the days of Queen E- Uzabeth. I muft ftill profefs myfelf full of hearty good wifhes for the honour and profperity of that kingdom ; and fhould be very glad to be able to anfwer feveral queflions which now and then fall in my way to hear ; as. Whether {w^h long fittings of parliament will not have fatal confequences, befides the altering that conftitution, if often pra<3:ifed ? "Whether the whole nation will acquiefce in renouncing the houfe of Hanover, and agree with another perfon ? Whether foreign fubfidies will maintain the expence of a King and a court ? Whether a King of their own will ever procure them any fort of advantage in trade ; and what fhall be given to their neighbours to obtain it ? Whether, under a King of their own, the power of the nobles muft not be increafedjand the Uberty of all the reft of the peo- ple proportionally diminiflied ? Whether the prefent conftitution of their AND LETTERS. 721 their ecclefiaftical regimen can be of long continuance under fuch a government ? and, Whether the hand of Joab is not in all this ? I am unwilling to add an objection which ftrikes me dumb ; which is this : Here is a treaty fet on foot by the public faith of both nations for an union ; fo great a progrefs is made in it, that trade, and other things defired, feemed to be agreed ; and, without any regard to public'faith or decency, &c. all is laid afide, and Eng- land is to be bound by a collateral a£t of another nation. Are men in earnefi? Does any fingleperfon believe this is the way to procure what they feem to delire ? But, Sirj I fear I have faid too much. Pardon the overflowings of my afFe£tion to your country, and the deiire of its profperity. My confidence in your well known can- dour, probity, and great prudence, encouraged this addrefs from, Rev. S I R, &c. Mr Harley to Mr Carstares. Afpirited Letter^ upon the fame Subje^ ivith the former. Rev. S IR, Sept. 16. 1703. This fhall give you very little trouble more than hearty thanks for the favour of the 28 th of Auguft, which came fafe to my hands September 7th. I cannot but bewail the diftra£ted fliate of that kingdom, and wouH not refufe to put my fhoulder to the wheel to help, as well as pray, to get it out of the mire. At this diftance, the heat feem& to be very great, and, as is ufual in fuch cafes, with- out light. How far the arts of defigning men prevail upon the zeal of thofe who love their country and religion honeftly, to go too far out of their depth, you can beft judge, who are upon the place. I fhould be very forry that either artifice or paflion fliould make them miftake their true int^reft. It is a misfortune to which gene- rous fpirits are often liable, to be pertinacious in perfifting in a mif- tafcen courfe, when once begun, even after the errors are apparent. 4Y I 722 STATE-PAPERS , #^ 1 am heartily glad no body here does any thing to exafperate their minds by anfwering thfeir papers. I hope the reafonable party a- mong them will at length reafon themselves into the right, before they feel they are in the, wrong. It is very eafy, by mathematical demonftration, to. fhew they are in the wrong j but that may only irritate the difeafe.. I hope they vf'iW recover themfelves. A nurfe may indeed convince a froward child it cannot go alone, by letting the child make the experiment; but the hazard is too great ; it ;may have a fall which may leave a fear. . I wonder to hear fo much zeal about trade, when it is not in the right place. You have unexhauftable mines of riches at your own doors ready and pradicable ; and you are led aftray to rob orchards of green fruit. I hope ^fop'sfable of the fpaniel and the fhadow will never be verified in you ; and that you may never lofe by art and credulity that which your noble anceftors have fo long prefer- ved againft open force and violence, I mean your religion and li- Talibus-infidiis— Credita res, captique dolis lachrymifque coafti, Quos neque Tydides, nee Lariffaeus i^chilles, Non anni domuere decern, non mille carinae Abfit I There is no perfon is, with more unfeigned zeal, ftudious of the good of Scotland, or with more particular refpe£t than, Rev. SIR, &c. P, S. -It were eafy to propofe remedies, if the patient were capa- ble. ( Not long after the receipt of this letter, Mr Carftares was called up to London, where he ftaid till the beginning of March 1 704.. . As moft of his eorrefpondents- were there at the fame time, there are no letters relative to public affairs amongft his papers during that period, but the two following. ) LORB AND LETTERS. 723 Lord Glasgow to Mr CarstareI For fiominating a Succejfor. Againft great Limitations. Rev. SIR, I fhould be glad to hear from you what news occuri and with ^^'"''"7^^' what profpe£t affairs look in England. I am to write to you upon 1703. a fubje£t I have neither freely fpoke to any here upon, or writt to any above, fave the Earl of Leven, in whpm I have full confidence. It will certainly be great matter of thought with every good man, what will be the fitteft meafure to be followed in the enfuing fef- fion of parliament to quiet the humours and animpfities of our dif- affeified party in Scotland ; I mean the'Jacobites^ who impudently affume to themfelves the name of Cavaliers., and are plain enemies at the bottom to Queen Anne's intereft ; and alfo, what is proper to be done to give fatisfa£tion to our honeft revolution-party. That the Queen and the government are in good earneft refolved to coun- tenance and maintain that party, who are indeed only her Majefly's friends in Scotland. In my humble opinion, after moft ferious deliberation, and con- verfe with perfons of all fides and parties, I do judge it moft ad- vifable that we proceed to the" nomination of the fucceffor, failing iffue of the Queen's body; and that we name the fame fucceflbr England has done, under fuch rational limitations, and well digeft- ed, as may be thought proper and expedient. For my own part, I am not at all fond of limitations to weaken, the monarchy; for it is inevitably our own great lofs and difadvan- tage, if the monarchy fliould be robbed and divefted of its juft pre- rogative, whereby the monarchy fhall be incapacitate to fupport it- felf, and protect us who are fubjeds ; and it is moft proper that there fhould be fuch li/e and vigour in the monarchy as is fit to curb and bridle our irregular heats and ferments. 4 Y 2 Sir, 7^4 STATE-PAPERS Sir, if the proteftant fucceflbr be not declared in our next parlia- ment, then we will require a great deal of logic to convince our re- volution-party of the contrary, but that the government have an eye to St Germains ; and you know how big-fwelled our cava- lier party is, with the hopes that the Queen and her minifters fet up for the Prince of Wales his fucceffion ; and they will be the more confirmed, it our miniftry continue, who have given fbme of them too much ground to their friends for thefe vain hopes. Sir, you'll take this freedom of mine in good part, and believe that I fuggeft this my judgment, in this weighty concern, from a fincere faith- fulnefs t& Queen Anne's interefl: in the fight of God. You may impart this to the Duke of Q;; — y and the Earl of Leven, if you find it convenient. I Give my moft faithful and obedient humble fervice to the Earl of Portland ; and am. Rev. Sir, Your moft affedionate and faithful humble fervant^ Glasgow. Mr Harley to Mr Carstares; Rev. SIR, December lo. 1703. Ifind my LordTijeafurer, &c. have that value for my Lord Leven as is juftly due to his great probity and ability ; if you judge it pro- per, I will wait upon his Lordfhip with you to-morrow, being Sa^ turday, at his own lodgings, or elfe at my brother's chamber. No. 10. in Series- court, in Lineohi's-inn, at feven o'clock. I leave it to you to dired which of thefe his Lordfliip chufes, or any other way. fTht AND LETTERS. 725 [The following ktters are addreffed to Mr Carftares after he came down to Scotland, and was made Principal of the College of E- dinburgh.] Lord Seafield to Mr Carstares. Of Lord Rofs and the General AJfemhly. Rev. S I R, I hope this fhall find you fafe returned to Edinburgh ; and, be- London, fore this comes to your hand, my Lord Rols will likewife be there, ^ _^^_ ^ and he will certainly inform you that I did all in my power to ob- tain the inftrudtions adjufted to your mind ;.fo that I truly think all difficulties are obviated ; and I ftill hope and wifli, that this may be a calm and moderate aflembly ; and, if needlefs queftions be not brought in, I believe that affemblies, for the future, may meet with as great facility as they did in King William's time. I believe I (hall he here longer than I expeCted ; and, therefore, I fhall be very glad to hear from you what occurs, and I fhall be ve- ry ready to reprefent it favourably to the Queen ; for I know you will ufe all your influence that nothing be done or adled in this af- fembly but with moderation. I think that fome pains fhould be ta- ken on Mr Weflie, Mr Lining, and Cameron, who have influence on thofe that are moft zealous. And I truly think, that nothing more fhould be delired in her Majefly's reign than was obtained in:: King William's. But I have written, with this freedom to none but yourfelf. I am, after the old manner, Your's, &c, Seaeield.. Sir David Nairnb, Secretary-Dejpute, to Mr Carstarjes. Upon a Report that the Whigs inScstland were (\§.^m/i the fame Sue- cejfor ivith England.- Rev. S I R, lam two in your debt; but that you will excufe, when lalTupe you. London, 1 had no more to fay than acknowledge the receipt of your's. You f^"!.*"" will 726 STATE-PAPERS will have it from many hands how acceptable the quiet proceedings of this aflembly were to the Queen ; and I cannot but fay it was much to the advantage of the members of aflembly, to have it be- lieved that it was their own inclination to juftice and moderation,- and the good management of thofe among them who are known to be well affeded to the peace of that country, that induced them to the great duty and affeftion they fhowed to the Queen in their calm behaviour and quick difpatch, rather than the polite manage- ment of a certain perfon : But fo it is, that I have met with, from feverals, that all was owing to the Gommiflioner. Sir, I hope you know me fo well'as to believe me fincere ; and you have promlfed to let me be free to tell you the truth. '. Then, fo many Jacobitifh tenets joining with that called high-church, had almoft made me a Whig, but for one principle, I hear that you, the' true Whigs of Scotland, are for ; and yet I will not believe it till I hear more of the matter, viz. that you are highly againft. fettling the fucceflion as it is in England. Now, I think this is fo op- pofiteto yourintereft, and fo concurring with our high-church, that I cannot be for you. I fpeak not without book : This ftory is told, and propagate here ftrenuoufly, fmce the fifing of the affembly, and I am afraid with no.good defign; in fo far that, if it is falfe, I think it moft convenient, and fo do others, that you not only write your- felf, but caufe others do it, to the Duke of Queenfberry and me in fuch a ftrain as it may be fhown here; and you may make the rife of your writing to be, your hearing that fuch a ftory is fpread here; but, in your letters, you need not mention your haying it from ine. Whatever be my private opinion, I am for laying the faddle on the right horfe, and not for having any body made adive inftruments, or rather handles, of doing good or ill againft their will. Verbumfapknti, I am your's. Sir A . N D LETTERS. 727 Sir David Nairne, Secretary-Depute, to Mr Carstares, When the Duke of ^eensberry ivas turned out. Rev. S I R, I had ydur's of the 23d and 25th paft. Any fervices I was ever Whitehall, capable to do to you, or any body elfe, have been fmall, but fincere. -j^^^ ^" However, in all probability, I fhall henceforward have lefs power than ever ; for, the Duke of Queenfberry being now laid afide, it is not to be expected but any who comes in will chufe his own de- pute ; and truly, none ought to be in this poll but whom the Secre- tary can confide iti. I am not yet formally renrioved, but I expe£t it ; and, when I am out, will defy any to accufe me of malverfation in office. I believe what I have faid may ferve as a reafon why the paper you mention concerning the Bifhopric of Argyle came not ta my hands. . I hope no others will obftru£t fo good a gift. Your's to the Duke of Queenfberry and to me came two days too late; for C 's place was difpofed of on Monday, and we had riot your letters till yefterday. _ I am, SIR, Your faithful fervani, David J^airnf, P. S. I hope your fears of lofing your place are groundjefs. I think the old faying, Solamen eji mi/eris, &c. is ill-natured. Mr Harley to Mr Carstares. Ufon fettling the Succejion. Fromifes to fupport him againjt Johnjion. Rev. SIR, I was extremely fatisfied to fee your hand on the out-fide of a London^ Jir- letter ; for I was. afraid I had fome way or other forfeited your good ^ ^°" ' ^""^"^ opinion, which I would not do, becaufe I know you to be fo jufl, you would not change your opinion without good reafon, and fo muck 7^8 S T A T E - P- A! P E R S much a lover of your coufitry, that you would not be averfe to any one, who is To great a well-wiflier to your nation, as myfelF. And this principle, I confefs, gives me much concern about Scotland ; for I can aflure you I have no other motive. It is ftrange, and to be wondered at, that men fhould run into deflrudtron with their eyesopem: That the only thing which can, preferve thenii and u- nite'all of thefevdution-priflciples, is the fuccefiion ;• andyet,sbe- caufe England fuggeffeit, that teafon, which were reafoncnoughi for it without any other, that muft be given againft it. The: world- beyond fea fay the fuccefBon is to be kept open for a lame arm to beg by : Biit, when the Queen offers to repair the Darien lofs, can there be a more general or univerfal advantage pra- pofedj: or is not the defign for afow to make the advantage to them- felvea hereafter ? Gan there be any other point to unite the honeft pegpte of Scotland, but making the partition, who are for St Ger- nxainSr who are for proteftancy ? Shall one or two incomprehen- fible books intoxicate the minds of fome, who could not otherwife be prevailed with to be zealous for what neither thdr authors nor readers underftand ? But is there not one man of a thoufand, is there not one man to be found under whofe hands this ruin may be put ? I hope neither difappointments nor refentments will fo far heat any honeft gentlemen, as to make them forget that they are freemen, proteftants, and true Scotfmen. As to yourfelf. Sir, I can aflure you no ill imprefllons are made here of you ; and I am very forry the great perfon you mention fhould diftinguifh himfelf fo peevilhly and weakly to your preju- dice. I know your wifdom and moderation put you above fuch things; and you may depend upon my vigilancy for your fervice, and all the afliftance and fupport in the power of, Rev. SIR, Your's, R. Harley. P. S, AND LETTERS. 729 P. S. I hope you will pleafe to let me hear from you as often as you have leifure. I never fpoke to the Lord-regifter, formerly- Se- cretary Johnftoii, fince he was in, nor fome time before, but an ac- cidental compliment. Hand melius fperavi * ' CocKBURN of Ormifton to Mr Carstares. Of his IntroduEiion to the ^een. SIR, I gave you account how well the Duke of Q^ ^y and Orm — n London, were ; now, you muff know that Earl of Seafield and Ormifton are '^°^•'^• '704- very well. A friend will be with you fliortly, who can tell you how this came about, and, of feveral other particulars. Mr R. Pr. (Robert Pringle) parts in a few days. - When the Queen came from Windfor, Ormifton went to the Eai-1 .of Roxburgh, and told him* that he Was defirous to have the hohour to kifs the Queen*s hand, and that his Lordfhip would pleafe to prefeht him, which his Lordfhip proff^ered to do when he pleafed. Toother faid, any time his Lordfhip was going to court, if he would caufe a footman call him, he would go along. This paffed on the Tuefday, and he was called on the Saturday. They went together, and, after my I^rd had been fome time with her Majefly, he called Ormifton into the clofet, where he had tht hqnour to kifs her.Ma- jefty 's hand ; but not one word paffed. Ormifton underftands finqe, that my Lord was at no pains to let the Queen know who it was, but faid, a Scots gentleman, Ormifton. Her Majefty fays, fhe was fur- prifed; for, when he came in, fhe knew his face, but did not know him by that name, he being always defigne^ otherwife to her ; and, if fhe had not been under this furprife, fhe would a' given him an- other reception. This is tqo much for him ; but our Secretary has not much experience yet. They long here to have the Chancellor away : but the new council is not yet adjufted ; and Yefter is put- 4 ^ tmg 730 STATE-PAPERS ting in for to be Chancellor of Fife, in place of Rofeberry. My Lord Rofs has got the regality of Glafgow during life ; but he would have it heritably to his family ; fo he is not pleafed. T'other day accidentally one told Ormifton his fon was in the new lift of counfellors, upon which he laughed heartily, and faid, the world muft believe the father to be gone to St Germains, for fure he is a man of more experience than his fon, and was firm to the revolution-intereft. But no more of this at prefent. How our new ftatefmen will do, when they come home, I know not ; but people complain they are not acceffible here. The houfe of convo- cation have divided about their addrefs. The higher would not name Sir George Rook ; the lower would. Nay, the lower were content to do it as overly as could be; but the higher would not yield ; fo they have no addrefs. In the houfe of commons, the Tories tun out in commendation of Sir George, and talk of my L. Marlborough's vidory as a fmall matter. I think they talk more thefe.two days of their heats and divifions than they did, and that the conformity bill will certainly come in : And, if the two houfes come once in heats, God knows what may come in ; but fure the public intereft will fufFer. There is no more fpeaking at prefent of the Speaker. They fay Broomly underftands his high-flyers could not agree upon him j fo he turned againft meddling in that matter. Others fay, it is de- cayed till the houfe be fuller, and Sir Edward Seymour comes, who is expe£ted in a day or two. Your noble friend, the E. of P. was with me the other day, and defired to give his fervice to you. Our new ftatefmen give out here, that Duke H. is gaining ground every day in the weft country, e- fpecially among the minifters, to be againft the fettling of the pro- teftant fucceffion. My fervice to all honeft men. Adieu. The AND LETTERS, 731 The Earl of SeafiEld to Mr Carstares. Upon being made Chancellor. SIR, Your letter was very acceptable to me, and I fhall be very glad to l;oi*'^°"' continue our correfpondence ; for no new acquaintance fhall make me forget my old friends. And I am moft fenfible, that it were very good that all that are in the government would look forward, and would have no emulation, but who fhould ferve beft, and be moft fignificant in fettling our divifions. My being here was no choice of my own, Tknow the difficul- ties of nay poft ; but my main defign fhall be, to ferve the Queen faithfully, and promote the intereft of my country. I do expedl that you will let me know your opinion of any thing that occurs, and, in particular, if I can be of any fervice to the church. I fhall be very ready to ufe my endeavours that way. I am very glad that you are fo well fettled ; but I am afraid it will keep you at home ; and that, therefore, till I come to Edinburgh, I fhall not have the pleafure of feeing youi If you incline that I fhould write particular hiftories tp you, as formerly, you will fend me a cypher, and you fhall be as fafe as e- ver ; and, as you receive this, fo you will have trouble or not From your mofl humble fervant, Seafield. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. His Reconciliation ivith OrmJlon,—-It is recommended to Tiveedaky then Commijfioner^ to unite 'with the Revolviion-party. S I R, I know not how you have heard of my reconciliation with Lord London, Ormifton ; but it is indeed a great fatisfadion to myfelf ; and I do ly^oa/' 4 Z 2 agree 732 STATE-PAPERS agree with you, that the only way to compafs what her Majefty propofes, is to forget our private differences, and to join together in what may be for the good and fettlement of the nation. My Lord Tweedale will now be with you very foon ; and it is re- commended tp him, and to thefe who have gone with him, to u- nite heartily with the revolution- party ; and in time we niay per- haps fee what is neceffary to be done for the further encouragement of that party, and engaging them to join heartily. You promifed to fend me what I wrote for, and, till then, I cannot write fo freely; only the divifion here is like to bring in Scots affairs before the parliament, which I am fure will rather hinder than promote any fettlement in our country. I may perhaps write you more of this afterwards ; and, till then, I forbear to acquaint you of feveral par- ticulars that have already occurred here. 1 am. Sir, Y. M. H. S. Earl of S.eafield to Mr CJarstares. Lord Whitelanv' s Death^ anfi the Parties in Scotland. In Cyphers. Very Reverend, London, qpjjg jj^ath of itriy Lord Whitelaw is truly a very great trouble to Decern. 21. •' . 1704. me ; it is fuch a loft that I know not how it can be made up. I have abundance of refpe£t for Mr Pringle ; and I could not have a better friend than he upon the feffion ; but I doubt if it will do at prefeot, there are fo many pretenders and different interefts to adjuft. Every one that writes, to me from Scotland acknowled- ges, that there is a neceflity for uniting the old and new parties to- gether ; and, in this, no time muft be loft. How Mr Hafty be- haves in his new poft I know not, or how he will do in the par- liament is yet more iancertain, Mr Morfe and Mr Corbet are very well together ; but, fmce Mr Dobliin writes with freedom, I Ihall ufe the like. Do you think that it is Mr Morfe his int'ereft to be at the top ? or, Do you think th^t Mr Hafty, Mr Mafon, and others, would not return in that cafe AND LETTERS. 733 cafe to their old friends? I agree that Mr Hay meet with all encou- ragement, and that SkyswySgr be employed, and that Mr Carew (the parliament) have a favourable commlflioner. I alfo think it is high time for the whole nation to confider, that all piques ought to be laid afide, and that we difappoint the expedations of France. I know not what Mr CareW (the parliament) with you may think ; but here they are entirely as one man for the union. Lam for Mr Morfe getting juftice done him, and for his frieiTds being regarded and noticed, and for giving him aflurances of future employment, if his friends concur. Now, upon thefe matters you will open, and fend, me an exege- iis ; it will put me in. mind of the old converfations at Whitehall after a mnb4 wyn3kw audience, and you fhall be very fafe. I al- moft had concluded before I told you, that Carew, at leaft iome of them, think, that Mr Steyenfon hath too great a hand with Mr Morfe ; Mr Corbet meets frequently with Mr Baaks, &c. All this only to yourfelf ; for truly I know not what power 13 may have to bring about thefe fchemes ; fo that all this is Mr Corbet's private Judgement ; which is all from Y- M. H* S. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Difficulties infettlitig the Scottifh Mimjiry. The General Affemhly. SIR, The reafon I write fo feldora to you Is, that nothing occurs whilft London, -our Scots affairs remain before the Englifh parliament. 1705!^' It is thought that meafures cannot be adjufted. The difference hetwixt the old and' new miniftry doth not diminifh ; and, with- out the affiflance of both, fuccefs is not to be expeded. If we could oblige them both to draw together, is all that we can hope for : I am affraid that Mr Morfe, if he were again employed, would find, that many who are friendly to him, and to his family while he is ^ut of the government, would not be influenced to fupport him in the public meafures j and the new party would return to their old friends 5 734 STATE-PAPERS friends ; and fo it would mifgive in his hands ; and, if Mr Hafty be employed, at leaft all Mr Morfe^s friends will be againft him. Might it not be more probable, if Mr Morfe's friends were princi- pally intrufted, and he otherwife rendered fatisfied,* and that the new and old parties in the government be obliged to co-operate ? In that cafe, Might not many concur in hopes, and others, for fear of lofing what they have ? This is faid by fome to be the moft rea- fonable fcheme. The obje£tion is the word motely, and that the one half would counteradl the other. Corbet's part fhall be only to explain the ad- vantages and difadvantages of all the fchemes offered, and to a<3; his own part faithfully, whether he be employed or not. He that is now Mr Graham will let you know how matters ftand here ; and Mr Corbet expedts to hear from you both how things go there. It is faid 33 is againft an union, and 34 againft both Mr Hope (the fucceffion) and an union ; That, in general, the re- fentments are high againft Mr Roberts ; however, we muft not de- fpair. What is fo neceiTary muft be attempted. The competitors for Mr Mofman's laft poft are 15, 30, 29, and ynkbySgy; but nothing of this will be determined till the general fcheme be at leaft refol- ved on. You name another that I think as fit as any of them. I had a letter lately from him, though not on that fubjedt ; and I wrote to him again as kindly as I could. Thus you fee our dif- ficulties. If you pleafe to write to me freely again, do it foon, be- caufe I believe the parliament here will be up foon ; and no time is to be loft. The aflembly will meet at the time appointed, and they will meet wjth no difficulty from her Majefty : They will have full protedtion ; and it is their intereft to be moderate ; and they have no ground^ for jealoufy, for all their difficulties were removed in the laft affenably ; and nothing fhall be wanting on my part for making them fatisfied. Of this you may afTure any of the mini- fters you converfe with. You have not as yet writt me up an account of the day it fhould meet upon, and we have forgot it here. I am Y. M. H. S. Earl AND LETTERS. 735 , Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Marquis of AnnandaU CommiJJtoner to the Affembly. He is again, to a£i as Chancellor. SIR, Her Majefty did laft night fign a commiflion to the Marquis of London^ IVTcLFCIl I O Annandale to be Commiflioner to the next General Affembly ; and lyoj. I have endeavoured that the letter and inftru£tions are as eafy, and I hope as fatisfying as any have been ; and, if it is otherwife, I am fure it is what I do not intend, I intreat that you may affure Mr Wilkie, Mr Meldrum, and my other friends, of my fincere endea- vours for all that may be for their fatisfadtion and the good of the church. I can tell you nothing of our changes, nor of any thing elfe, be- ing juft going to my coach ; and hope to be with you before the meeting of the affembly. I am again to a£t as Chancellor in the, next parliament, in which I heartily wifh fiiccefs. Give my fer- vice to the Juftice-clerk : I hope he, you, and I fhall meet in the old, manner ; and I affure you I am,- S I R, Your moft humble fervant, Seafield. 1 have procured L. 400 to pay the neceffaries of the affembly.. John Duke of Argyle to Mr Car stares. Mr Johnjlon laid qfide ; Philiphaugh reponed,. SIR, I received your's. I'm fore youll eafily believe me when I tell Londoni, . you nothing could be more pleafmg to me than the affembly's let- ^^""'^ 5- ter; and I can affure you, your being moderator is a fatisfadlion to all honeft men, and particularly to myfelf. In return, I muft tell yotv 736 S T A T E - P A P E R S you one piece of news, that will not be difpleafing to you : Yefter- day the Queen was pleafed to lay afide Mr Johnfton, as a proof of her defiring to make feme other fieps. So foon as I come to Scot- land, Lord Philiphaugh is to have his poft again ; and I am hopeful to perfuade the Queen to allow his commiffion to be fent down to- night. I defire to go from hence this night ; and therefore {hall fay no more but that you fhall always find me Your faithful friend, and humble fervant, Argyle. Mr Willi AM Hunter Minifter of Banff to Mr Car stares. The private Mtflory djLord Banff^s Cmpuerfion from Popery, ivith a Pojifcript from his Lord/hip: , ' Very Rev. S I R, Banff, July My Lord Banff having his feat in this parifh, and, taking the occafion ji. 1705. . of fignifying his refolution to profefs the proteftant religion, delires me, by this, to impart the fame to you, and remits you to the Earl of Stairs for further Information therearienf j to whom thefaid Lord Banff (as his Lordfliip informs) has comihunicated his thoughts in a letter. My Lord Banff, upOn declaring himfelf proteflant, has a mind to go fouth, and take his place in parliament ; and, withal, becaufe his circumflances require it, his Lotdfhip requires your kind influ- ence for his encouragement, that he may undertake his journey. His Lordfhip defires fecrecy hereanent, and that my Lord Stairs only fhould be converfed with about this affair; and your anfwer hereto per firfl. My Lord's cireumflanees are but low ; and I could wifh he might meet with affiflance and encouragement. This, at defire of the faid noble Lord, is humbly fignified by. Very Reverend, Your moft hjimble fervant, and affedlonatc brother, William Hunter. P. S. AND LETTERS. 73.7 P. S. Sir, My Lord refolves to ufe all freedom with yourfelf a- nent his public owning the proteftant religion, and fhuns the doing of it here till he converfe with you ; but, Sir, I could wilh he were more free. SIR, This is fent you, at the defirc, and with the confent of me ; and, if you can ferve me, let me know ; if not, then pleafe return this line again; which is all from, Your humble fervant, Banff. Afecond Pojlfcript by Mr Hunter. SIR, You'll pardon this trouble which my Lord's addrefs and importu- nity obliged me to ; I wifh his defigns and refolutions be fmcere and ftedfaft; and that all poffible means may be taken to reclaim him from his errors. I am your's. Will. Hunter^ Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. The Haufe of Lords have brought in a Bill for repealing the Claitfes in the A61 pajfed loft Seffion. — The Scots may noiv make a good Bar- gain. — The Unian the only Way to take away all Pretenftons from the oppofitionto a Country-Inter eft. Rev. SIR, Your letter was rery acceptable to me, and it was alfo ufeful on LonJoir,, this occafion. We have been very doubtful till now of the effed of J^°J- '^'^ our a£t of treaty and addrefs. We have been at great pains to in- form the leading men of .the Whig party, and her Majefty's Eng- lifh fervahts have been ve'ry affifting ; fo that the Houfe of Lords did yefterday^unanimoufly agree to bring in a bill, repealing all the cl'aufes in their ad paffed laftfeffidns, except that authorifmg a trea- ty. I believe this may have influence upon the Commons, though 5 A it 738 ST AT E - V % P E R S it will meet with difficulty there in all appearance. If we that are Scotfmen do make but the right ufe of this opportunity, I am confi- dent that we may make a very advantageous agre'ement, by adjuft- ing our privileges, and fettling the fucceffor, or by an union. And you are perfedly in the right, that there is no other way of taking from the oppofing party their pretenfions of having a coun- try-intereft, but by having a treaty. As for what concerns yourfelf, you were never better ftated than you are at piefent. I am perfuaded the Scots fecretaries are as much your friends as you could defire ; and, if you fend up the fignature for your filler, I fhall heartily concur with the Secretaries for obtain- ing it. I dined at my Lord Portland'sr the day before I got your letter; I have called at his houfe fince, but have not feen him. How- ever, I fliall not fail to let him know how gratefully you remember his kindnefs to you. Continue to write with freedom to me, for I fhallmake no worfe ufe of your letters than I did in the laft reignj and I aflure you I am, with all fincerity. Rev. Sir, Your moft faithful, and humble fervant, Seafield. Earl of Mar toMr Carstares. Of the Union. London, I ^^"^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ 7^"*" S°°^ friend my Lord Portland fince I tame Dec. 4. jjgfe . to whom I was always obliged, as our country in general have been, and now are, for he's a hearty well-wifher tb us. I was very glad to fe6 your letter to the Chancellor on the great affair of the treaty which is now in agitation. You would hear that the Lords fent down the repealing bill. to the Commons laft week; and, they are to be on it to-day. I have not heard yet what they have done, for they are yet fitting ; but I hope it will meet with the fame fate there it did from the Lords ; and fo there will be no flop to the treaty ; 1705, AND LET T, E R S. 739 treaty; tvhich, I am hopeful, will fet the two nations upon a folid right foot, both ofte way, and remove all ground of complaint. The Engl'ifh franknefs in this affair, by doing more than we our- felves propofed, I think, fhould make people in Scotland in good hu- mour ; though I doubt not there are people who endeavour to lef- fen it ; but I muft fay, their country is little obliged to them. Scots bufmefs is delayed, and at aftanduntil the Dukeof Queenf- berry come up; fo we long mightily for him; and I hope by this time he is come off. Lord Rofs is working all he can to be Commif- fioner to the general affembly, and fays to every body the minifters will be difobliged, if he be not ; and that they prefs him to pufli it. Since my Lord fays this, I fhall not doubt of fome of their writing to him : But, I fancy it is hardly a plurality, or a great number of ye ; and I hope, if he fucceed not in his pretenfions, it will not be a mortal quarrel. However, I write this but to yourfelf. I wifh you could bring it fo about, that it might be known here that there are others would be as acceptable to you. I am fure by this I have no defign.againftthe church; but otherwife. I fhall be glad to hear from you fome times, whether you have bufmefs to write or not ; and I alTure you I fincerely am, SIR, Your real and humble fervant. Mar. The Earl of Loudon, Secretary, of State, to Mr Carstares, Of the Union, and Lord Rofs folliciting to he Commiffioner to the Af- fembly. SIR, December 4. I have your's of the 24th of the laft mbnth, which I read to the Earl of Mar, He was appointed to carry to the Queen yefterday the laft of the papers for his month ; amongft others, he carried the gift in favours of Mrs Dunlop ; which he fends you by this poft. i A 2 Though 740 STATE-PAPERS Though this is an afFair of fmall moment, I hope you'll take it as a token of both our inclinations to ferve you. Our .affairs^ went in tlxe.houfe of Peers as we could have wifhed. The Commons have this day had under their confideration the bill which the Peers fent them, repealing the difagreeable claufes of their _ad: for a treaty. They have given it a firft reading, and ordered that it fhall have a fecond upon Saturday. I Tiope the frank and friend- ly proceedings here will difpofe all honeft men in Scotland to enter cordially into fuch meafures as may be for the good of our country, and bring us at laft to a happy fettlement of the proleftant fuccef- fion. I have the good fortune to wait fome times upon our friend the Earl of Portland, who ftiows a great deal of inclination for the good of our country. My Lord Rofe foUicites very earneftly that he may be Commif- fioner to the next affembly ; which, he fays, he dofires not fo miich on his own account, as on account of the church, who, he fays, have laid it upon him, that he ufe his utmoft endeavours that he may be fent to them with that charaAer. I have told my Lordi that, at prefent, I could not engage to do him any fervice in that afFair. You may be fure we will take care that wJioever is employed in that poft be a man of known good affedion to the church : But, I can- not help believing that there will be feverals as acceptable as his Lordfhip to you. I'll take it as a favour that you entertain a frank correfpondence with me. I am, SIR, Your real friend, and humble fervant, Loudon. Sir David Nairne to Mr Carstares, Upon the fame SubjeSl nvith the foregoing. SIR, Yefterday I had your's of the 29th pafl, with the copy of a gift in favours of—. . By mine wrote to you, you will find, that there ^A N D LETTERS. 741 there was no reafon of giving yourfelf any trouble upon that head. Now, Sir, to prefumeupon the friendfhip 1 hope from you, Imuft beg leave to enter a little upon the politics with you, and which partis indeed properly within your fphere. And what freedom you exprefs yourfelf in fhall never be ufed to your difad vantage. You know the time of the general aflembly now approaches ; and, no doubt, but there will be many pretenders to the honour of reprefenting the Queen in it. One, who at prefeht is very bufy making his intereft, is my Lord Rofs. Perhaps, if I fhould tell you the ways and means he ufes, it might leffen your efteem of hitn ; and that is not to be done, leaft he have fuccefs ; fo fhall only tell you the argument he ufes : As for the profit, he defpifes it, not having faved a groat of L. 700 he had laft time, though the ordinary allowance ufed to be L. 400 ; but, he fays, all the minifters prefs him to it ; and, if he have it not, they will think it is for want of alking ; and that is Ihowing a difregard for them : That moft of the minifters to be in this aflembly are young men, and were his cotemporaries at fchools and colleges : That nobody knows fo well how to manage them as he does : That they told him laft time none but he could have managed them fo well. If all this is true, I think he has avery juft call. But I cannot forget, that, after his coming hither, when he was laft commiflioner, he faid, moft of the preflayterianB in Scotland were againft fettling the fucceflion ; and, as I remember, I wrote of it to yourfelf, for he faid fo to me ; and, upon this, I thought he had loft a great deal of favour with you. If this is otherwife, and that you are now all fo ftated with him, as he fays, I am afFraid people will put a wrong conftrudion on the caufes. If, at your leifure, you will let me know your thoughts upon this fubjeft, it will be a great mean to determine my wifhes. As for my fervices, they are to be commanded ; yet I muft fay, when I am doing a thing that I believe will be a fervice to them I am doing it for, it goes on with a better heart than othferwife it would. 742 S T A T E-P -A P E R S^ would. I hope all things here will go on as we could wifh towards a treaty of union ; and, if we have that, we fhall be better than we deferve. I faw a letter from you to my Lord Chancellor fome time ago 'on that fubje£l, which was very agreeable, and, I dare fay, the fenfe of all who have regard to the peace of the kingdom, and the pre" fervation of the proteftant religion. I beg pardon for being fo te- dious ; a.nd am, S I R, Your moft obliged humble fervant, David Nairne. Earl of Portland to Mr Carstares. Of the Union. Monfr. ■ Whitehall, jg croirois vous faire tort en vous demandant la continuation de 1705-6. votre amitie ; puifque je m'en crois aiTeure, vous connoiflant de trop long tems incapable de changement. D'ailleurs, vous favez combien je I'eftime ; ainfi ,vou§ pouvez juger de la joye que j'aye d'apprendre votre fante et profperite (que le bon Dieu de fa grace continue long tems) par celle que vous m'avez ecrite. Le digne ami. qui me la rendue, m'a fait plaifir a le voir fe porter fi bien. Je croyois, qu'a- prez une union totale, la fucceffion etoit etablie d'ellememe. La manier franche et genereufe dont ce pariiament en a agi envers PEcofle, et ce que j'entend dire au gens, me fait croire, que I'on attend une union totale ; et qu'une union en partie, et les propofi- tions des avantages, dans le commerce fans cette union, aigriront les efprits ici, et les alieneront des bonnes difpofitions ou ils font ; et, en ce cas, comment obtiendroit on aprez une entiere union, quant cette bonne difpofition qu'il y a ici feroit perdu, d*autant plus que peutetre il ne manque pas des gens ici, comme ceux, dont vous parlez en EcolTe, qui ne fouhaitent pas I'union, ni reftabliffement de AND LETTER S. 743 de la fucceffion ? ' Eftant hors des affaires, je vous parle ignoram- ment, et peutetre impropremeht. Ce que je fuis feur, que je ne ferai pas, quant je vous afleureray, que je fuis tres fincerement, comme vous m'aVez connue toujours, Mo,NSIEUR, Votre tres humble ferviteur, Portland. Earl of Mar to Mr Carstares. Upon the fame Subje£l. — ^—The Englijh ivill gpue no Terms., except upon the footing of an entire Union. SIR, I had your kind letter laft poft, for which, I affure you, I think Whitehall, .riiyfelf obliged to you. I believe you did notunderftand me clear- i^^oyS?' ly in my laft concerning the treatyi which might be occafioned by ihy writing in hafte. SinCe ever the Englifli repeated their threat- mng claufes int their a£t, we always told them, that we feared the difficulties of an entire union, and that fome people might make it a pretext to flop fettling the fucceffion ; therefore, we wifhed they would treat of terms as well as an union, that there might be no ■ delay in that matter ; and fo the parliament of Scotland would take which they liked beft ; and, probably, when they faw either of them in their offer, they would fooner make choice of the union, as be- ing a more fecure and folid foundation. But, if an union only was treated of, they .would be the fonder of the other, becaufe denied them ; and angry people would join together upon this pretext, to defeat the defign in our hands, and to poftpone the fucceffion : But this has very little weight with your friends here ; and they tell us plainly, they will give us no terms that are confiderable for going into their fucceffion^ if any, without going into an entire union; and, if we infift upon that, they will never meet with us ; for they think all the notions about foederal unions and forms a mere jeft and 744 S T A T E - P . A P E R S and chimeta. I write this freely to you, though it is not fit this fliould be known in Scotland, for fear of difcouraging people, and making them defpair of the treaty. You fee that what we are to treat of is not in our choice, and that we fee the inconveniencies of treating an incorporating union only. But, when our friends come up, efpecially thofe • who are againft, or not clear for an in- corporating union, they will either, I hope, perfuade their Englifti friends, or them. However, we muft certainly propofe to treat of terms as well as an entire union ; and I wifh the Englifh may treat of them both, and conclude them, that fo we may not come down to the parliament with only one fcheme. This I thought fit to let you know, that you might have a clear view of the affair, and make the beft ufe of it you can. I hope you are pleafed with the people the Queen has made choice of for the treaters. The Chancellor, Lord Loudon, and I, wrote all three to the Juftice-clerk as preffingly as we could,, and told him, that the Queen expected that he certainly would come up. The Duke of Queenfberry and I are to fpeak to any of the Whig Lords, who are his acquaintance, to write to him ; but the Duke thinks none of them are fo well acquainted with him that they will do it. I am afraid my Lord Treafurer will hardly do it j however, I hope he will hardly decline coming, if his friends in Scotland are earn eft with him. It is needlefs to tell you of any of the commif- fions that are fent down by this poft, becaufe you will hear of them as foon as you get this; and I am very weary of writing a great many letters; but I hope you will approve of what we have done. My Lord dafgow's commiflion and inftru£tions will be fent within a few pofts ; I am 'preparing them ; and if tiere are any in- ftru£tions you would have added, you would write in time. I fup- pofe you now know my hand, fo I will not trouble you always with figning my name ; and I defire you may do fo with me. You'll fee by the votes what the houfe of commons have done upon Sir Rowland AND LETTERS. 745 Rowland Gwyn's letter : The houfe of peers have done^ the like, and ordered an addrefs to her Majefty upon it. The parliament will be prorogued next weekj which is all I'll now trouble you with. Adieu. Earl of Seafield to Mr Carstares. Of the Marquis of Annandaky and Marquis of Montrofe, and other Changes. Rev. SIR, I muft challenge you for writing too feldom ; but I acknowledge London, very little has occurred, either here or with you. You certainly ^^^^^ ^' know that the Marquis of Annandale has had, in the moll obliging manner, offers made him of continuing in his poft as Prefident of Council. He had time to confider, until we came to think of no- minating the treaters ; and, before it was difpofed of, feveral of the Whig Lords fpoke to him, and advifed him to accept of it. My Lord Treafurer and my Lord Marlborough did likewife fpeak to him ; and my Lord Loudon Secretary, then in waiting, was fent to him by the Queen, to let him know that flie was willing to era- ploy him in that ftation, if he pleafed; but he ftill refufed; and the Secretaries and I were unwilling to oblige him fo far as give him any of our polls ; but we were very willing to have ferved in con- junction with him. He is gone to the Bath, and lies this night at Mr Johnllon's houfe at Twittenham, where it is like new game may be projedled. The Marquis of Montrofe is made Prefident of Council, and I hope will be found very ufeful to her Majefty in that ftation. I heartily wilh that my Lord Juftice-clerk may come up to the treaty ; for I think it will be much for the Queen's fervice. I have wrote to him, though I have done fo to few of the treaters. The Earl of Leven has his cominiffion as Commander in Chief. My Lord Carmichael has his father's regiment. The Juftice-clerk S 2 was 746 S T A T E - P A P E R S was the firft that fpoke io me of this, and I have heartily fpncurred in it, fince I knew the Earl- of Hyndford deiircd it. -The young Laird of Grant has the Earl of Mar's ; and my Lord Glaigow is to be Commiffionef to the General AfTembly. I am perfuaded he will be acceptable to you, and his inftru£tions will be the fame with Lord Rofs's and Lord Annandale's; fo that I am confident no difficulty will occur. I had a letter from Mr Meldrum, but have not time to write to him this night. This is writt only for your own information, and with the old freedom, and to alTure you that I continue, with all fincerity, Your moll humble fervant, .Seafield. P. S. I forgot to tell you the Earl of Weems is Lord High Ad- miral. The Earl of Mar to Mr Carstares> Of the Dtfpofal of Places.— 'Earl of Buchan. SIR^ Whitehall, I had your's this poft, for which I give you a great many thanks, 1706. ^^ and for your kind concern for niy cqlleague and m€. \ havq writ- ten by this exprefs to my Lord Glafgow, andfent him all the papers relating to the Aflembly, with which I hope you and your brethren will be pleafed. I have not time to write fo fully to you (it is now fo late ;) (o I refer you to my letter to my Lord Glafgow, to whom 1 have written to communicate it to you. My Lord Halcraig's death is really a lofs; we heard it on Thurf- day by an exprefs Forglan had ferit him ; but not by the ordinary poft till this day. As foon as the Qijeen was told of this, which was fome days ago, fhe declared fhe was engaged to give the firft vacant gown to Sir Alexander Ogilvie, We found the Treafurer engaged AND LETTERS. 747 engaged in it too, and that Sir Alexander had letters from him up- on it a long while ago, and before fome of us were in the Queen's immediate fervice. The Queen was pleafed this day to fign Sir Alexander's letter; fo there's an end of that affair. She has alfo been pleafed to make my Lord Galloway a Lord of the Treafury, in place of Sir John Hume. There had been engagements given him, before the Queen's fer- vants left Scotland, for another employment ; but things happened fo that he was difappointed of it, by fome who had given en- couragement for giving thofe engagements turning their thoughts another way, upon an accident which is too long to write j and, to make up this difappointment, we were obliged to go into the meafure, which if tve had not done, we would certainly have loft him, and feveral others of his friends, befides the difobliging of thofe who had made him thofe former engagements. I trouble you with this ftory the more particularly, becaufe of a friend of your's and mine who had a defign upon this place, and had, I believe, fome affiirance given him of it, I mean my Lord Buchan; but his lofs was, thofe from whom he had the affurances, having given over to meddle in our affairs very foon after we came here, his pretenfions could not be thoroughly urged till now, that it was too late. But this is not fit to be told plainly. I have written to him, and begged that he may not be angry at the difappointment, and to have but pati- ence till I come down ; and I am fure I can convince him, that it was not pofTible for us to have ferved him in that affair at this time. And I aiTured him, that it was not the D. of Q;^ y's fault that he was difappointed, though he might eonje£ture fo by a friend of his geting the place. But, if my Lord Galloway had not got it, another had before him, which was really true ; and I can trufl you with it, though I would not defire to fay it to another ; nor did I tell Buchan the man ; but it was Eglinton. I ihould be very forry if Buchan is difobliged at me, or any of the Queen's fervants here, and that we Ihould lofe him, efpecially fince we all defign him fa- 5 B 2 vour. 748 STATE-PAPERS vour. Therefore, Sir, I beg you may be at the pains to fpeak to him of it, and, probably, he will fhew you what I have written -to him. You are very juftly concerned for what my Lord Lothian has done, as you may be fure we are all. He has done himfelf a vaft deal of harm by it ; and Tm afraid the Queen will not eafily pafs it over. It does harm alfo to others of his friends in their affairs. His commiffion is not yet given up to the Queen, though this day we were forced to tell her of it, it became fo public, I fancy the Duke of Airgyle will give it up one of thir days ; for he fees not how Lothian can now retreat : But I'm to fee the Duke of Argyle to-morrow ; and, when any new thing fliall happen concerning it, you fliall hear it. I am afraid Lothian has loft himfelf and his pre- tenfions, which were very good : But I hope he wiH ftill continue of the principles be profefled, and, by good and faithful fervice, re- gain this flep. I'll write to him one of thir days. I have not yet delivered his letter to the Queen, for which he'll probably be angry with me j but I think I did more friendly in keeping it up. However, if the commifBon be given up, I mufl of neceflity give up tlie letter too. My Lord Annandale is now at the Bath, and was feveral days at Mr jQhnflon's, as he went ; which has done him no little hurt with his friends here ] for th^y did not know nor believe that, when he was here, they were together every day. I am really forry he has behaved fo, notwithftanding all the flo- ries he faid of me here. I know my Lord Loudon has written of feveral particulars to you ; fo I will not trouble you with them. I am very glad the Juftice-Qerk is to be here. We long now forour friejjds who are on the road. I wifli you a good, quiet, fhort, af- fembly ; and I hope you'll do me juftice with your brethren in ta- king off the bad impreflGons fome people have been pleafed to giVe them of me ; which is all I'll now fay ; fo, good Sir, adieu. , Earl AND LETTERS. 749 )4i: - - Earl of Portland to Mr Garstares. Of the Succejfion and Union compared. MONSIEUR, April 1 1 .' 1705-6. Je laiflfe touttes proteftations a code ; nous fomraes tout deux au ■deffus de la neceffite d'en fair. Je fuis fache d'entendre qu'il y a tant de roauvaife volonte, et de pouvoir enfemble a craindre autre- fois, il me femhle, que Ton ne vouloit pas de la fucceffion ; parce ■que n' eftant pas eftablie, cela porteroit les Anglois a confentir a I'u- nion. Et a Theur qu'ici Ton y eft porte, Ton ne veut plus de I'u- nion, mais on retourne au premier. Jfay grand peur que I'humeur et la fadion ne rulne le publique. J'ay efte affez long temps eu affaires, pour les plaindre ; mais il y a trop long temps que j'ay quitte, pour les connoitre. Je crois la fucceffion eftablie une chofe tres bonne ; mais je c/ois I'union meilleure, parce qu'elle comprend la fucceffion, qu'elle eft a I'advantage des deux nations, dont elle previent tons les differens a I'advenir; elle coupera pas la racine une bonne partie de vos divifions domeftiques ; et remediera peu a peu au manque d'argent dont PEfcoffe fe plaint. Je vous aye deja dit, que je ne comprends pas Ken le bon effet reciproque des deux royaumes d'un foederal union, ni les moyens d'y parvenir \ et fuis tres de ce que vous avez fujet de craindre les abus, meme des mieux intentions. Je ne puis que fouhaiter ardemment le bien des deux royaumes, «t de la religion ; et vous affiirer que je feray toute ma vie, avec la (TOfime fincerite et candeur, MONSIEUR, Voftre tres humble ferviteur, Portland. The 750 S T A T E - P A P E R S « The Earl of Stairs to Mr Carstares. AJks his Advice as to the Treaty. London, I am glad your aflembly hath ended fo well pleafed with her Ma- 1706. ^ ' j^%'s Commiflioner, and he with you. We arc here coming in ear- ned to bufinefs; and I hope fhall fhortly come to a conclufion. I have by tliis given you an account of fome difcourfes that pafled in a meeting of the Scots commiffioneris amongft themfelves, that you mayconfider what's beft for you toadvife us in time. The refervations being mentioned which we were to alk for North Britain in the cafe of the Union, one faid, ' Thefe were our church-government; laws and judicatures were to be continued for ever with us as they, are now eftablifhed.' Another faid^'Our church-government was fufficiently fecured by the claim of right, and by the hedge about it ; and that our commiffion had reftrained us, that we could not treat of any alteration in the church-govern- ment; therefore it is beft to fay nothing about it.' The other re- plied, 'That, though he was none of thofe who believed any of the forms of government unlawful, yet, it was juft and honourable to fecure the form of our government to ourfelves by an exprefs article in the Union, otherwife it might be altered by the parliament of Britain, whereof the greater part would always be inclined to their own forms ; and, whatfoever the claufe in the inftrument of govern- ment againft epifcopacy and the hedge might import in Scotland, yet, after the Union, every thing would be fubjeded to the pleafure of the parliament of Britain that was not fpecially ftipulated in the Union not to be altered ; and, though both parliaments had that re- gard for their own forms, that they had reftridied their Commiffion- er from confenting to any alterations in their feveral church-govern- ments, fo as they could do nothing to their prejudice, yet that could never reftrain them from fecuring and fixing their feveral govern- ments from all future alterations.' I took the more notice of this difcourfe, that I found afterwards an eminent perfon of the Inglis commiffion very earneft with.me, that AND LETTERS. 751 that nothing might be mentioned in our treaty concerning church- governmenti both being already fecure, becaiife that would give a handle to the Tories, and high-church people, to reflect upon or oppofe the treaty in their parliament. Sir, I muft t-ell you further, the perfon who managed the argu- ment not to mention church-government, was both a man of fenfe and your friend. We know not how long it may be before this matter fliall recur.. If you think it as much your concern as I do, you will not delay to fignify your fentiments where you think it may be ufeful. Your affe<3;ionate and humble fervant, Stair. Earl of Leven to Mr Carstares. Upon the fame Snhjefl. Rev. SIR, April 2j. The treaty goes now on apace upon the foot of an entire union ; we are preparing fuch refervations as we judge neceflary, fuch as our laws and fome of our judicatories ; thefe muft be ftipulate as fundamentals. Now, here is like to arife a great divifion among us ; for fome of us think, that the church-government ihould be here mentioned ; but others are of opinion, that we cannot fo much a& name it ; becaufe, fay they, the adl of parliament appointing the treaty, and alfo the comraiffion for it, do exprefsly difcharge our meddling with the church. The Juftice-clerk is pofitive of this o- pinion ; for my part, I do differ from them. But I will endeavour to convince, or be convinced ; for we muft not differ ; for, if we do, we fhall appear to be a very infignificant party. What occurs to me is this, that the a£t of parliament, and commiffion for the trea- ty, can never be otherwife underftood, than that we had not a power to alter the church-government. But 75a S T A T E - P A P E R S But I can never think that therefore we cannot declare the fame a fundamental ; and, indeed, that I reckon our great fecurity ; for, nothing being upon record in the a£t of treaty, what can we fay for it afterwards ? for, no doubt, every thing, may be altered by the par- liament of Britain, except fuch things as are declared fundamentals. Its true, the church-government may be excepted, and narrated in the &&. of parliament that eftablifhes and ratifies the union ; but, whether that, or being put in as a fundamental, is beft ? is the que- ftion. And I defire you may advife with my Lord Advocate, and whom elfe you pleafe, and let me have your opinionsr You may confider alfo, if it be delayed till the a£l of parliament ratifying the treaty, whether or not that may not be reckoned as an addition by the Englifli, it not being in the treaty ; and fo be the occafion either of a delay or a ref ufal. This is all that occurs on the head. I am, SIR, Your moft humble fervant. , Earl of Mar to Mr Carstares. Of the treaty of Union. Lord Buchan. SIR, J Whitehall, By our meetings on the treaty, and fome other bufinefs, I could 1706.^°' not write to you till now, fmce I had your laft. I am very ghd that your aflembly came to fo good a conclufion. My Lord Loudon and I are obliged to you for the favourable account you gave of us ; and I hope, by our carriage, we fhall be found to anfwer what you faid of us. My Lord Glafgow is not yet come here ; but we ex- ped him to-day. The treaty goes on very well ; and I hope we fhall agree, and come to a conclufion. But we refolved to keep fe- cret what we do until all be concluded ; for, when a part is only known, it may look odd to people who know not all ; and fo peo- ple AND LETTERS. 753 pie might be prepoflefled agamft it. The Engliflr appear very rea- fonable, fb far as we have gone ; and I really believe they are hear- ty in it, as I hope we all are too. It is hard to tell how long we will be of ending ; but I hope the next month may do much to it. I have written the inclofed to the Eai'l of Buchan, which I fend you open, that you may know the better how to fpeak with him. Mahr. Earl of Leven to Mr Carstares. Complaints of fever ah againft the Presbyterian Clergy for the Se- 'verities to the Epifcopals. Of the Scots Reprefentation by the Treaty of Union. Rev. SIR, There has been feveral reprefentations from people of quality, June n particularly from the Duke of Athol, to the Secretary of ftate, com- '''° ' plaining of the feverities of the prefbyterics in feveral (hires againft the epifcopal. clergy, both in churches and meeting-houfes : This the Secretaries were obliged to acquaint the Queen of j but did it ve- ry favourably; and told, they could give no opinion, having heard only one fide ; and that they were perfuaded nothing would be done but in moderation, and conform to law : In which her Majefty is perfe£tly fatisfied. N^Sw, I muft fay, that its a great negledk that there is no information given here to any of your friends when any fuch procefs .is intented, that fo we might know whether they are intruders or not, whether qualified or not: The want of which makes us at a lofs how to anfwer. I believe the Earl of Loudon is to write to the Advocate, that matters may be managed with modera- tion at this time ; but this, I believe, you will be as much for as he or I : But, however, this is no way to hinder that juft profecution that may be necefl*ary, both for the vindicating of the legal efta- bliftiment of the church, and the difcouragement of the infolency of intruders. The Secretaries have obliged me to write to you, 5G which 754 STATE-PAPERS which I willingly yielded to, that I might have an opportunity to acquaint you, that, the treaty of union goes on very well. We are now upon the reprefentation, which is. like to be very fmall; but I hope we {hall not break on that point. I think there will be no- thing fpoken of the church, for your friend is wilful to the laft degree, and its not fit to difagree. I hope to fee you the beginning of next month. I am, S I R, Your moll humble fervant, L. J. Sh. to Mr Carstares. ^ Of thefecond Addrefs of the Commifjion of the General Affembly. The Tumults in the Wejlem Shires at the Time of the Union. The. CommiJfiorC s Letter ftgned by Mr Carfares. The ConduSi of the Chiirch of England ivith refpedi to the Union. Rev. SIR, London, I am very glad to hear, by the letter you honoured me with of «7o6. ' the 7th inftant, that mine to your Lady and to you had not the fate that fome of mine had whilfl: I was in Scotland. I was very well fatisfied, before I had the pleafure of being affured of it from you, that the fecond addrefs of the commiffion wa% perfe£tly againft your inclination; and fo were all your friends. Baron Schutz, amongft others, who defired me, when I wrote to you, to give you his humble feryice, faid, he believed Mr Carftares had not given his vote for that addrefs. I told him that, though he had found me too forward in undertaking for the prudent behaviour of the kirk, yet I would ftake all the little credit I had left with him, that he had pafled a right judgment concerning you. And I am very glad to have it under your own hand, what I had the pleafure' to fee by other letters,, that you oppofed it in the commiffion. You may eafily imagine, Sir, what an unfpeakable concern it has been to me, in common with AND LETTERS. 755 with all honeft men, that the kirk was not to be perfuaded. And, indeed, after I had faid fo publicly, and with fo much aflurance, that I believed no methods, how fpecious foever, would be able to make her alter that prudent conduct I had been a witnefs to ; I was con- cerned upon my own account, as well as their*s. However, you may be affured, Sir, that I have not been wanting to excufe all this, as well as I could, to all my friends, and only friends of the Queen and of the H. of Hanover, that they don't take this condu£t to be any mark of her difafFe£tion to either; though, how fhe can be excufed from the grofleft miftake, and the moft narrow views ima- ginable, her beft friends are not able to tell. But 'tis difficult to make any confiderable difference between thofe,who have been any ways concerned in thefe tumults, and the open enemies of the go- vernment ; and, therefore, we can't but be unfpeakably grieved that the weftern fhires have been the only feditious fhires ; and efpecl- ally that any, whbfe bufinefs is peace, fhould have been fo inftru- mental in making them fo, though fome were without delign ; and, therefore, it has given an univerfal fatisfadtion to find the commif- fion declaring her mind fo fully againft all fuch illegal proceedings. That letter will ferve to hide the former condud: of the church from the eyes of thofe who are not very exa£t, and will convince thofe that are, that, tho' the church did remonftrate againft an effential part-of the union, yet fhe is for flopping there, and that fhe won't accom- pany thofe of her body who go farther. I am very glad that your name is to that letter ; and I hope the kirk will take all further me- thods that can be thought of to prevent thefe diforders, or at leaft to fhew her abhorrence of them. I am very glad to hear that the eyes of many are more open. I think the inftance you are pleafed to give me of it, befides the letter you did me the favour to fend me, a very good fign. If that happy temper fhould increafe, I wifh it were poffible to think of fome expedient by which the kirk might retrieve her charadter, and might yet have the honour of being zea- lous in promoting this union, which I make no queftion but will be the lading felicity of both thefe nations. 5C2 Our ^^6 S t A *r E - P A- -P E' R S" Our clergy here have taken a quite different turn ; and have prayed in their addreJs, that the Queen may long reign over an u- nited peeple, to the furprife both of high and low-church, which has happened by a furprife Upon the high*church in the lower houfe of cori vocation ; where, as fooa as the addreis came from the upper hOufe, it was a,pproved by two high-churchmen, who fpofce -earnefMy for it, in hopes to gdt two vacant preferments 1>y that aneans. The Other high-churchmen in that lioufe were amazed and difconcerted ; and fo it pafled nemine tmfradkente ; for which their enemies laugh at them, their friends are angry with them, and they are ready to hang themfelves, and thofe two treacherous bre- theren. I have nc* feen Mr Taylor fince I had the honour to re- •ceive your's. As foon as I do, I will be fure to deliver your meffagc ^o him. I am, with all imaginable refpeiSb, •Rev. SIR, Your moft faithful and v^ary humble fefvant, J. Sh. All at Hattdn-Garden are very wdl, and are very much your iiumble fervants and Mrs Carftares''s. You may be litre. Sir, • -your kind remembrances of them are very grateful. I have taken care that the letter yon fent n>e fliould be printed in the Poft-boy and Flying-poft. If things of that kind had ever been in the Ga- zette, the E. of S— nd — rl — d vyould have inferted it there, to whom it was highly acceptable. to Mr Carstares. [This Letter, probably from Mr Harley.J IP r effing him to dhtam from the Commiffian of the Church a Declara- tion approving of the Union, in order to prevent the bad EffeSis tf their fecond AddrefsJto Parliament. " Rev. S 1 R, ?London, fhe treaty of union being now very near agreed to by your par- 'i7o65- -liament, we can't but think it highly neceffary for the commiffion of AND L. E T T E R S. 757 ^ the church to take fome method to {hew her approbation of it in ■«Kprefs terms, before the rifmg of the parliament. For it muft certainly be very differviceable to her tobe thought averfe ^r indifferent to a treaty, which is to be the lafting foundation of our government. For a government that flaall entertain that opinion of the church, will be more or lefs jealous of it ; efpecially, confidering, - that, if this averfion or indifference to the union <;ontinue, it will be areniembered, that it arofe from the opinion which the church enter- itained of the thing itfelf, and not from any want of regard fliewn to the church in the management of it ; every thing having been pro- anifed and done for her lervice that could ibe done, confiftently with the union, as things flood at the time of its being agreed to in Scot- land.. Ob the other hand, it muft be of a lafting advantage to the 'ChuTch of Scotland to be known to have wiflied well to the union, and to liave promoted it ; fur that will always procure her the con- iidence and countenance of all governments that fhall uiKJerftand the true intereft of the united ftate. ' * Befides, the firft addrefs from the commiffion to the parliament having contained feveral tacit declarations in fevour of the union* and the commiffion having fince^ by her third addrefs, and her cir- 'Cular letters, been eminently ferviceable in promoting it, it is necef- iary that the church fhould now, in exprefs terms, declare her ap- jjrobation of it, and of what has been done purfuant to her requeft, not only to adt confiftently with her true intereft, but with her for- mer proceeditigs. By this means, it woidd appear, either that the dfecond addrefs was not intended as a declaration againft the union ,by all thofe who voted for it; or that, at leaft, it was carried by the heatof fome againft what the commiffion had done in her firft ad- drefs ; but that they being now gone home, had carried all the ,heat and inconfiftency which appeared too much in that unhappy addrefs along with them, and liad left that calmnefs and prudence to ^govern there, which was fo vifible in her firft addrefs, and now, of Uate, more efpecially in the circular letters. Andj 7J8 STATE-PAPERS And, it is our opinion, that, if fome exprefs declaration was made in the commiffion in favour of the union, that theunhappy condudl of the church, in her fecond addrefs, would be hid from all but a few who are at the pains to make exadt enquiries into public trant- actions. Of fo much fervice to the commiffion has your diftance from hence been, together with the firft and third addrefs, and their circulat letters, which have amufed the generality to that de- gree, as to make them believe the commiffion to be rather for the union than againft it. And, as fuch a declaration would in all pro- bability entirely hide the unhappy conduct of fome of the minifters from all but 'the moft curious and inquifitive, fo it would retrieve the reputation of the commiffion with thofe who know the whole of your proceedings. And we take the liberty. Reverend Sir, to give it as our opinion, that an addrefs from the commiffion to the parlia- ment, juft as it is breaking up, returning them thanks for the great care which they have taken of the civil and religious concerns of Scotland, in the whole courfe of their management of this treaty, and affiaring them that you will endeavour to fatisfy the people, as you have opportunity in your feveral ftations, of their wifdbm and faithfulnefs to their truft in this great affair, or any other way of giving your atteftation to this treaty, which you in your prudence fhall think more proper, would anfwer all thofe good ends which We hope for, and propofe to you, by your expreffingyour good opinion of this weighty affair. And, we cannot but think, that many who were for addrefles of another fort, whilft they had hopes that their remonflrances might have put a flop to the treaty, will not oppofe this, when it fhall be moved by thofe who have all along wifhed well to the union, now that they fee that 'tis what they muft in all probability fubmit to. Your concerns. Reverend Sir, are fo near our heart, both as they are your's, and as in confequence they are ours, that we hope it will excufe this liberty which is taken, with all fubmiffion to your better judgement, entreating you to believe it to proced entirely from our unfeigned defire of the public welfare. I was defired to write thus AND LETTERS. 759 thus much to you by feveral of your friends, to whom I afterwards read it ; a.nd they defired me, after hearing it, to fend it as their fenfe, and in th^ir name, though you will eafily know it to be the fcnfe too of. Reverend Sir, him who is, with all imaginable refpedl, your moft faithful* and moft humble fervant. Our great men have feveral times told me that an addrefs of this nature would be of ua- fpeakeable fervice to you, and us, and the common caufe. to Mr Carstares. Debates in the Committee of the Houfe of Lords about the Union, The Sentiments of the Archbijhop of Canterbury^ and the oth£r Bifhops, upon that SubjeSl. Rev. SIR, I heartily congratulate you upon the finifliing ftroke the union- London, bill received on Thurfday. That bill has been the moft darling bill fj^ly/' the Whigs ever had in their poffeffion, and as mortifying, on the o- ther fide, to the Tories, who have all oppofed it in both houfes, ■ex- cept thofe who are under the awe of the court, or of the Scots na- tion, by reafon of their neighbourhood ; on which account, fome northern Tories in the H. of Commons voted for it. But there has not been one Whig that has voted againft it in any queftion in ei- ther houfe. When the ad for fecuring the true proteftant religion and prefbyterian church-government was debated in the committee in the H. of Lords, feveral Lords, and four Bifhops, fpoke very warmly againft ratifying, approving, and confirming it, though they were not againft giving the Scots a fecurity that it fhould be maintained among them. But the A. of Canterbury faid. He had no fcruple againft ratifying, approving, and confirming it within the bounds of Scotland : That he thought the narrow notions of ail churches had been their ruin ; and that he believed the church of 76o STATE-PAPERS of Scotland to be as true a proteftant church, as the church of Eng- land, though he could not fay it was fo perfed. Several of the Bi- fhops fpoke very much in the fame ftrain ; and all of them divided for ratifying, approving, and confirming the church-aft, except the four that fpoke againft it, and the Bifhop of Durham, who went a- " way before the vote. The other high-church Bifliops were not at ■ the houfe that day. I don't queftbn but the Queen's fpeech has given great fatisfaftion to all friends to the union among you. If we have but the temper her Majefty recommends in that fpeech, the union will be the greateft bleffing that Almighty God ever bro Providence to this ifland. Thurfday night did not end with- out many deraonftrations of joy. Nor would it have ended without more, if care had not been taken to prevent *em, left the expreffion of too great a fatisfa£tion might have been mifconftrued by thofe who don't wifh well to the union in Scotland. For which reafon, the bill hung longer in our parliament than it needed to have done. I hope our having made no alterations in thofe that were made in Scotland, will convince the nation that we defign to make this union as much, and more, for their advantage, than our own. lam, Rev. Sir, firice Thurfiiay, more than ever, upon the only new tie that could have bound me more than I was before. All in Hatton-garden are your moft faithful and very much your hmnble fervants, and your Lady's. You may affure her, too, that there is but one more fo than I am. I had like to have forgot to tell you, that the high-church Lords and Bifhops feemed to be as; much concerned that you had not ratified our church-a£l, as that we were going to ratify, confirm, and approve yours j for they would not allow the general claufe in your ad of ratification, where- by you leave us at liberty to eftablifh the church of England as we pleafe, by any means to amount to a ratification. Sir AND LETTERS. 761 Sir David Nairne to Mr Carstares. Upon the fame Subje^ ivith the former, SIR, I am very glad that the Queen took not fuch meafures as might WVjteliali, have been ufed, for publifhing a thankfgiving, to be kept on the ,^0". '^' firft day of May in Scotland, as is to be in England. Her Majefty confidered the ill impreflions that were made of an union of the two kingdoms, by the enemies of both, upon many people there, and fome of the clergy ; therefore, only commanded me to let her delire (of. having a general thankfgiving through the whole ifland) be known, and left it entirely to her fervants there to cpnfider of the reafonablenefs of declaring it ; and, tho* fh^ ftill wiflies it cpu|d have been ; yet her Majefty is far from propoling, much lefs ordering what may offend. Sir, you will do me juftice if you belieye, that, for fix months paft, I was obliged, every poft-night, to write more letters than I could with any exaftnefg ; yet thefe from whom I had letters took it ill when I did not give them fome anfwer ; and that prevented fome trouble to you, when I itched to tell you of the miC- taken notions of fome of your brethren. But, the union Uping now happily concluded, I think all ill humours pught to be laid a- fide by one, and forgot by the other, I do afTure you, the Queen is very fenfible of your fervices, which fhe had feveral times infor- mation of from me, by the Duke of Queenlberry and Earl of Marr's commands. J was always pleafed to ferve you or yoijir friends, and I fliall always value myfelf, if you will bplieve me to be, as I truly am, SIR, -T Your moft obliged humble fervant, David Nairne, 5 D Earl 762 S T' A T E - P A P E R S Earl of Mark to Mr Carstares. Whitehall, April 29. 1707. Profeffions of Regard to the Church of Scotland. SIR, Your's of the 1 9th was very acceptable to me. I am very glad Ihe aflembly proceeded fo calmly, and is now come to fo good a conclufion, 'Tis not the firft time the church of Scotland has been obliged to your goodcounfel. I hope your brethren will now be in good humour, and preach pejce to their hearers, and endeavour to undeceive them of the wrong impreffious they got of the great affair which is now come to pafs, I'm fure it will be their own fault, if they live not now in more fecurity than ever. The Queen is as well inclined towards them as they can wifh, and I'm perfua- ded will continue fo, if they aft with difcretipn, as I hope they will. I am obliged to you for making my excufe in fo good time to the Moderator, for my not writing to him at that time. Hurry of bufinefs, and anxiety for my poor wife, has given me very .little time, and made me very unfit for writing, ever fince I came here. I have now wrote to him, -which I hope will make up my neglecSbing it before. I hope I need not now tell you, that I'll be very ready to ferve your church, in any thing that lies in my way ; for that, I • believe, you doubt not of. There is not much bufinefs yet done fince we came here. When there is a^reat deal to do, you know it takes time. Bulftrode, Avril 10. 1708. Earl of Portland to Mr Garstahes. Of the Invafipn in 1708. — Lord Lcv^n blamed, the Man he ijoould have leaji fufpeSied. Dans t'apprehenfion ou j'ay efte pour le piiblique, pour noftre Stc religion, liberte, et tout ce qui nous eft cher, vous pouvez eftre afleure. AND LETTERS. 763 afleure, Monfieur, que je fouvent penfe a vous. La bon Dieu foit eternellement loue qui nous a delivre de ces craints. L'on ne peut penfer au confequences des meaux, qui nous menafoit, fans trem- bler. J'efpereque le danger que l'on a efchape par la protedion divine rendra les gens fages pour prevenir un pareil mal pour ad- venir. }*advoue qui'! eft inconceavable que de proteftants auroient favourise un invafion des papiftes et de Francois, de telles gens peu- vent pretendre d'eftre proteftants, mais dans leur coeur ils ne la peu- vent eftre, mais font pires que les papiftes. Les lettres de France difent, que Fourbin, dans fon rapport, c'eft fort plaint des Eeoflbis, et de ce que fon Roy avoit ete trompe, qu'il avqit ete au firth d'Edinbourg un jour devant Sir Geo. Bing ; qu'il avoit fait les fignaux dont on luy avoit dit etre convenu, mais que l'on ne avoit pas repondre ; et qu'il ne avoit pas uni ami qui euft paru pour eux. Peutetre ledit il pour fe juftifier luy-meme. J'ay ete furpris d'entendre blafmer my L. Levin, fa conduitte, et fa bonne intention, dans cette occafion. Je vous pris de me mander ce qui eft ; car c'eft I'homme que je connoifle quej'aye j'amais le moins fufpedle; et s'il y a raifon de douter de fon zele et de fa fmcerite, je ne fcay fi je puis me fier a moy-meme. Je vous prie de croire que je m'intereffe toujours en tout ce que vous touche, puiffeque je fuis a vous de tout mon coeur. Portland. Earl of Glasgow to Mr Carstares. Of the Invafiofiy and Adjournment of the AJfembly. Reverend S I R, I received your moft fatiafylng letter, and am heartily glad that Loadoa, the national faft was got fo well managed. I'm heartily forry for Inarch 15. the prefent diforder you will be all in upon this invafionj but I hope 5 D 2 you 764 STATE-PAPERS ^rou will In a fhijrt titiie deliArer us from our tifoubles IHd fears. Ifs > feared here, thMi upon tlie landing of the French, thierfe Will be fuch a conifurioh In Scbtkhd that the affembly canhot meet ; and. In that 6vent, you will confid'er of tht moft decent way of iah ^djourrinierit for a month or two, as to the Queeh's jya!rt, and of fuch a method as nlay give uriiverfd fatisfa€tioii to the church. I hope yoU'll allbW me your thoughts on this fo footi as j^Qffible ; and 1 ever am, with great refpeft. Reverend SIR, Your moil fiilthful arid moft humble fet^aht, Glasgow. Sir, The QUeen Is perfedly well pleafed with your g&dd coridu<^ arid manag^einent in the commiffion 6f the affembly, and wIJl nevei* be wahting, during her reigti, to give the church her cfburiteftattce, and full and hearty protedio'n. Adieu. The Earl of Se afield to Mr Garstares. t)/ the invafion, and the Behaviour sf the Presbyt6riahs upon thai Occqfion. — The Danger noiv over. • SIR, London, AH the prefbyterians, and you In particular, have been very hap- 170^. ^'^' py of having this opportfctoity to teftify yout zeal and loyalty to her Majefty's perfon and government, and your fixed refolutions to withftand and oppofe the jjopifli pretender. This has rfehdered all the prefbyterians very acceptable to her Majefly, and has alfo fecu- red to them many friends here. My L. Glif^oW is feilt ^own to fee 'cotnmiffiorier "td Vhe enfuing -aflcMlWy, aiid ifhe letter to it and the iriifti-u?^*iris Wffl give fatisfa with great fififeerity, SIR, Your moft humble aad moft faithful fervant, Seafield. r I was exceedingly pleafed with the addrefs from the Univeriity of. Edinburgh. Lord Portland to Mr Carstares. After the Invq/ion, and in Anpwerto ivhat Mr Carjlaret had ivritien concerning my Lord Lcven. Comme jen'ayrien dans ce monde qui ne foit plus agreeable que la Bulftrode^' continuation de fouvenir d'un vieux amie, que j'eftirae plus que dix i^og/^"^ nouveaux, vous pouves croire, Monfieur, que vos leftres me doivent eftre tres agreeable, VoUs aUries plus fouvent de "mienties, fi je pouvois vous mander des nouvelles ; mais je fuis icy comme un homme civilement moft, ou qui fouhaitte feulement fa tranquillite, la feurite de notre fainte religion et de nos loix. Je fuis tres aife de voir la zele que toutte voftre aflemble general a temoinee en cette t)Ccafion? comttie il a paru "pubiiqufement par la belie adreffe qu'elle a prefentee a la Reyne, et que Ton dit qui eft de voftre pltrnie. Vos membres qui ont eftes contre I'union, font voir leur intention, et qu'elle eut eftes abufe. J'efpere que Ton prendra foin de fe pourvoir contre un p'areil dangereux accident pour Tadvenir comme la pru- dence le veut J'ay eu bien de lajoye de voir ce que vous me inandes touchant iny L.Leven, quoyque je ne croyois nuUement ce que Ton vouloit infinuer de luy; tout au contraire, le gens dont cela procedoit me fai'foit croire la fauflete de leurs calomnies ; j'ad- inire feulement leur impudence. L'on mande de Paris, que le Roi de V 766 STATE-PAPERS de France a ete fi mortifid de voir fon grand projet manque, qu'il ne fongera pas aifement a un autre ; mais ce n'eft pas fur quoy il faut s'endormir erifeurete, fi ne que fur I'affiftance divine, quia paru fi manifefte. Le bon Dieu veut que nous ne neligions pas les moi- ennes qu'il nous a mis en mains pour noftre feurete, mais que nous fmplorions fa benedidlion et affiftance fur les caufes fecondes. J'ay croi que ches vous tout eft en mouvement pour fe faire elire mem- bres du prochain parlement, comme on I'eft ici pour I'eftre de la chambre bafle. Je vous fois bien oblige de vos bon fouhaits pour ma famille, qui eft, graces a Dieu, en bonne fantfe. Je fuis d*iin cor- diale fincerite entierement a vous, PaRTLAND. Mon fils eft choifi pour la ville de Southampton, et il efpere de I'eftre pour la province de Hampfhire dont 1' election doit eftre ter- minee cette Temaine pafsee. Je vous prie de faire mes compli- mens a my L. Leven, et autres vieux amis. Bien des honeftes gens in Hollande font de fentiment que la Reine et I'eftate devroit temoigner leur reffentement au pape, d'avoir con- tribufe de I'efpargne de ces predecefleures pour cette invafion. lis croient que 1' Empereur, et d'autres prov. Cath. Romains dans V al- liance I'approuveroit, eftant irrites centre luy a caufe de cela. Earl of Se AFIELD to Mr Carst ARES. Of the Oath of Abjuration. Thelnvajioni and the taking aivajf of the Privy-council. Rev. S I R, London, Your letter, which commemorates our old friendftiip and corre- Feb. 21. fpondence, was very acceptable ; I would have anfwered it fooner, but that I know you will excufe me, fmce I have been taken up with public affairs. The word limitations in the abjuration which you write, occafions fome difficulties and fcruples ; I am fure they were very needlefs ; yet, the a6t of regency, which is now paft, has fully fettled A N D L E T T E R S. 767 fettled that matter as you would have had it; and, after all, the ab- juration is, not as yet required within Scotland, except of the parlia- ment-men. I know not what may be thought fit to be done ; but, whenever it can be required, that word is left out : This I hope will give univerfal fatisfadion to fuch as had that difficulty. I am very gjad that the faft which was appointed was fo well obferved by ail the prefbyterlan minifters ; and I am confident they fincerely wifh fuccefs to hisMajefty^sarms, and thofe of her allies, againft France. We are alarmed with the news of a French invafion; but I liope it will be difeppointed, for we have twenty-five men of war ready in the Downs, and the Dutch will join us with fifteen or twenty more by the firft fair wind ; fo that, I think, they will not venture an invafion when we are in fuch readinefs. Befides, the I- rifh forces are ordered to the north of Ireland ; and, if we be matters of the feas, we can want no affiftance. I was againft taking aWay the privy-councilr in my opinion. In the infancy of the union, and •during the war, we had a confiderable party that joined with us ; but, the whole Tories* and fome of the Whigs joining, we were out- numbered ; fo that the bill is paft, and I heartily wifh it may have no bad confequence. This is all that I fhall trouble you with at pre- sent; but, I'll write to, you again when the affairs of the affembly comes under confideration ; and I am, Rev. SIR, Your moft hutoble fervant. , Seafiel;D^ Lord Advocate to Mr Carstares, at London. Upm the Oath of Abjurationt — \ — and Ju/lices of the Peace. SIR, The commiffion of the kirk are met Tiere this week, and fome of Edinburgh, 4hem have been with me upon the fubjeft of their two grievances; ^Jg'_ 3o- one about the abjuration, and the other, about the jullices of the peace. 768 S T A T E - P A P E R S peace. I reafoned with them about the abjuration, and told them plainly, that X faw no ground pf fcruple ; and the exception againft the as had neither the reduplication nor extenfion that was iniagU ned; but all of us agreed, that, lince the people's icruples could not be removed, apd had manifeft inqonveniences, it might b§ fairly eC- fayed what could be done ; and thus they wrote to you upon that fubjefit, whereof 1 have inclofed to you a copy. Sir, this is truly a lamentable affair ; for the fcruples are not only groundlefs, but I am afraid, when thefe fcruples fhould be removed, others would remain or arife, fo humorous we are become. I know the parliament pf England did at length indulge quakers in the matter of fwearing ; and I affo apprehend, the Britifh a<3: about the abjuration may come to be explained ; for now, it reaches only all officers, civil and mili'- tary, and debates arife with us daily about counfellors, deacons, and ele<3:ors, which are all contained in our Scots a£t 1695, for the allegiance and the affurance : So that it feems neeefTary, either to ex- tend the abjuration to all in public truft, civil or military, church-"* men remaining ftill excepted, or otherways, which I like far better, to reftrain this abjuration, in place of the allegiance and affurance, to officers, or office-bearers only, fo as to leave out counfellors, dea- cons, and ele£tors, and many other branches contained in the Scots a£t. But I wifti there were once an end both of fwearing and per- jury, which I never look to fee ; and my opinion to the brethren was, that they might write to you. But, withal, I feared you would be difcouraged to meddle, the fcruples are fo light, and our people become fo humorous, againft fo fair and juft an ad. However, you may effay the matter in your difcretion. As to what they write a- bout the juftices of the peace, it is more material ; but nothing more difficult than to get a good nomination for both places; and men are unknown; and fo, not only miftakes may happen, but even thefe concerned may be of contrary opinions ; and therefore, I can only wiffi, that the juftices of peace may be better named, and more care taken about it ; for, even this day, I had along complaint from Fife, that a minifter there is malicioufly informed againft to the juftices of the 1». AND LETTERS. 769 the peace, as a flanderer, for words fpoken in his fermbn, and preaching to the people ; which, if it proceed, will furely alarm all the minifters, and revive the old debate in Mr David Black's cafe of the prima inftantia. I have inclofed the doubles of the churchs's let- ters to you, and alfo, a double of the reform which they would have made of the oath, which might have been made more congruous ; but I will not touch it to help it; fori fee not any probability to get the matter mended ; only I know you will again take their letters in good part, and do what can be done, and ^ive them the beft an- iwer. I am, S I R, Your moft humble and affectionate fervitor, Ja. Stewart. Sir David Nai rne to Mr Carstares. Of the Alloivance to the Judges on the Circuits. SIR, Since my laft I have been with the Earl of Seafield and Sir Tho- Whitehall, mas Frankland ; and, to tell you the particulars of what paffcd, 1708. would be tedious, and of no ufe ; fo I fliall only tell you, that the Earl is clear there is no need of any parliamentary authority ; and promifes to fay fo to the proper perfons. Sir Thomas fays, if it is fo, the affair fhall be difpatched next week. They were not toge- ther when I faw them ; but, if they both hold, I doubt not of the difpatch ; and, if either alter, I will try another way. And you may depend upon^it, I will ftick to it till it is done. I cannot tell what will oblige; but I could do no more to evidence my defire of doing fo, than in what I have done for the circulating judges, and thefe concerned in the circuits. My Lord Treafurer has ordered a warrant immediately for every farthing of the account as my Lord Advocate has fent it ; and I have obtained an equal proportion for equipage: to my Lord Juftice-clerk, (who was at no expence that way), with 5E the 77*? S'T A T E - P A P E R S^ •Ke receipt, who laid oat mpney ; and I do think it juftice, for he did the fervice as much as the others. I have writ pretty fully to my Lord Advocate on this fub}e£l; and I would not ti"0uble you on this kead, but that you wifh that whit were done for the judges might be by me, I fuppofe becaufe you think it would recommend me to their favour.. I fhall only- fay, that I believe no Scotfman will fay they have for fome time fpoke of the bufinefs befides myfelf ; and, when I procured the warrant this day, without remitting the account to be revifed by his fecrttary or clerk, he made me the compliment to tell me, that he did it, becaufe he knew I had promifed, in his name, that the money fhould be remitted as foon as the accoun- tants came to know the quantum ; and was pleafed to thank me for the fervice he f^id I had done to the Queen. And bare thanks from thence is all I ever propofed for my labour. I am, with great cfteera, , > SIR, Your moft obliged humble fervant, David Nairne. Earl of Loudon to Mr Carstares. Qf taking aivay the Prh>y''Council., and the Inconveniencies ofit; — ■ hut agrees ivith ..Mr Carflares in thinking it dangerous for the Churcf}-C/?Mrts, tO: meddle ivith it. SIR, ' Whitehall, - I am afhatoed that, by one aecident or other, I have been hinder- i^o^J^ ed till now from acknowledging the favours of your's of the i6th. I am very much of your opinion, that the taking away of the council in Scotland^ efpecially at this tune, will be inconvenient ; and I do not wonder that many of the miriifters feem to think that the re- dreffing of fuch grievances as the church may have will be rendered the more difficult by the waiit of a council in Scotland ; but, at the iiaiue time, I agree perfe^ly with you in thinking, that it is not pro- per AND LETTERS. 771 per for the enfuing commiflion of the affembly, or any ecclefiafticai judicature, to interpofe in thefe matters.. That is a road fo dangferous for the church-judicatures, that any probability that there may be of good confequences from an addrefs in the prefent cafe, is not e- nough to anfwer the hazardous, if not pernicious confequences that the meddUng in things of that kind may in courfe of timehavc. lafn far fromdefigning thistodifcourage any of the minifters of the church of Scotland from writing their fentiments upon this, or any other fubje£t, to their frierids and acquaintances. I think letters from particular men ought to be very well received ; and I can't doubt but they will. To return to what concerns the council, though thfe arguments that are ufed for taking it away are plauiible and popular here, fuch as, that of coming immediately into the Englifh confti- tUtion; yet, I can't but hope, that the manifeft and evident inconve- niences of, at leaft, the precipitating of this matter, will come to have their due weight with the members. You know that, by the flow forms of paffing bills here, there is good time given to mem- bers to confider well of arguments which, at firft appearance, may feem to have more ftrength than after they are well confidered. This gives me hopes that things may be fo managed that the Coun- cil may be continued for one year ; which will leave room for the next parliament to reconfider this matter. I have talked with the D. c^ Queenfberry, Earls of M. and J. and they are of my opinion, both as to the application from the commiffioii of affembly, and that from particular perfons. T believe the E. of G. has already writ to you upon this fubjeft. I have only one word more to fay upon this matter, which is, that there will be greater inconveniences ift any thing that can be fubftltute in place of the council, than if the council were continued ; I mean of thefe kinds of ineonvenienciSs which are objedted to it by thofe ■vrbo are for taking it away. And, if we ccJnfider it upon the other, I don't fee that any thing can be fubftltute in its place, which in the leaft can fupply the iofs of it. In fhort, any thing of that kind will, in the prefent circumftances, ha^te all the bad effects that are abje£led to it, and none of the good. As 5E 2 to 772 STATE-PAPERS to Mr Stirling, the dependance of that afFair concerhing the coUege of Glafgow keept him long here. I doubt not he has acquainted you that we at laft procured allowance from the Queen, that the E. of Mar fiiould write him a letter, by her Majefty's orders, importing a promife from her Majefty in relation to that matter. As to the o- ther affairs you write of, I believe he'll be glad to take a leflbn from you ; ' and I think he is not a bad fcholar, if he can learn but part of what you can teach him. This letter, which is writ in free- dom and hafte, is only for yourfelf ; and I fliall end it without the ceremony of fubfcription, but with the affurances of any fervice or friendfhip that may be in my power to do you. Mr Pringle to Mr Carstares. Of the Cf the nobility and gentry, the bold highlanders, and all the Northern counties : But this is only a fpeech without doors. After all, I muft own, this reprefentation has advanced a great truth in the clofe of it, that the reftoring patrons to their ancient rights will occafion great contefts between the patrons and the prefbyteries : Of this I make no doubt ; no man will willingly part with what he has ; and feeing, as matters ftand, the church has the fole direftion in the choice of a miniltcr, it would give hei: no fmall difquiet to difpoffefs her. It is here the pinch chiefly lies ; but here I appeal to theteftimony of our reprefentatives in this place, if the little, regard the church has (hewn upon all occafions to the nobility and gentry, in the choice of their mi- nifters, and their arbitrary proceedings in thefe matters, has not bred a general difcontent ; and it will give as general a fatisfaflion, to fee the church put under fome reftriftions in the exercife of a power they have fo much abufed. I will not take upon me to oiFer my advice to our prefbyterian brethren; perhaps, after what I have faid, they may fufpefl my fincerity ; but I truely believe it their intereft to come into this bill, which will rcftify and better their conftitution, and make it more palatable to the.nobility and gentry. FINIS.