11 ft 114- Class /r Book_i_ >^-S<5" .M AW TO SIR PETER MURRAY THREIPLAND, OF FINGASK, BARONET, REPRESENTATIVE OF A FAMILY WHICH CAN STILL VIEW WITH GENEROUS REGRET THE CAUSE FOR WHICH FORMER GENERATIONS GLADLY SUFFERED, THIS WORK IS RESPECTFULLY AND AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED. PREFACE TO THE FIFTH EDITION. The present work appeared originally in ' Constable's Miscel- lany' in 1827. The principal sources of information which then existed for a history of the civil war of 1745, were the contem- porary public journals, Mr Home's work (valuable at least for its reports of what the author himself witnessed), the Lockhart and Culloden Papers, the Chevalier Johnstone's Memoirs, and the still fresh traditions of the people. Since from these docu- ments the author constructed the first edition of his narrative, a greater quantity of valuable materials has become accessible than during eighty preceding years. The personal narratives of two distinguished actors, Lord Elcho and Mr Maxwell of Kirkconnel, have been in part or wholly given to the world. In Dr James Browne's ■ History of the Highlands and Highland Clans,' there appeared extensive and very important excerpts from the great collection in the possession of the British sovereign, styled ' The Stuart Papers.' To this valuable set of excerpts, Lord Mahon has made additions in his ■ History of Great Britain between the Peace of Utrecht and that of Aix-la-Chapelle.' I was myself so fortunate, in 1832, as to become possessed of an extensive collec- tion of papers which had been gathered, early in the present century, by the late Sir Henry Steuart of AUanton, with a view to his composing a History of the Efforts in behalf of the House of Stuart from the Revolution downwards. Amongst these was an assemblage of memoirs, notes, letters, and other memora- bilia respecting the insurrection of 1745 and its actors, which had been formed with great labour, during the twenty years ensuing upon the event, by the Rev. Robert Forbes, Episcopal minister at Leith, and ultimately (titular) Bishop of Orkney. From Sir Henry's collection, which eventually became mine, I published a selection in 1834, under the title of Jacobite Memoirs VI PREFACE TO THE FIFTH EDITION. of the Rebellion of 1745-6; but by far the greater part of the more valuable documents still remained in manuscript. In the present edition of my own narrative, advantage has been taken of the abundance of new materials thus placed at command. So ample were these, and so great were the changes consequently required in the fabric of the narrative, that the present might almost be described as a new work. That part, in particular, which records the singular adventures of the Prince after the battle of Culloden, is much more copious, and also more strictly correct, than it was before, chiefly in conse- quence of the special pains which Bishop Forbes took to ascer- tain all the particulars of those adventures from the gentlemen and others who had been concerned in them. The work is now submitted, in its extended and corrected form, not without a hope that it will be found to contain sufficient information to satisfy all reasonable curiosity upon the subject. Edinburgh, February 24, 1840. GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. James, sixth of Scotland and first of England, was the common progenitor of the two families whose contentions for the throne of Great Britain form the subject of this work. He was suc- ceeded, at his death in 1625, by his eldest surviving son Charles. Charles I., after a reign of twenty-three years, the latter por- tion of which had been spent in war with a party of his subjects, perished on the scaffold in 1649. Charles II., eldest son of Charles I., lived in exile for eleven years after the death of his father, during which time the govern- ment was vested first in a Parliament, and afterwards in a Pro- tectorate. He was at length placed upon the throne, May 1660. This event is known in British history by the title of ' the Restoration.' Charles died without legitimate issue in 1685, and was succeeded by his brother James, who had previously been entitled Duke of York. James II. was fifty-three years of age when he mounted the throne. In his youth he had, as Admiral of England, shown some talent for business, and considerable skill in naval affairs ; but during his reign he manifested a want of judgment which would almost indicate premature dotage. Having been converted to the Roman Catholic faith, he entered into the spirit of it with the zeal natural to a weak mind, and ventured upon some steps which impressed his subjects with the conviction that he wished to place this religion on a par with Protestantism, if not to restore it to its ancient supremacy. Thus he alienated the affections of the people, but more especially of the clergy, who were otherwise disposed to have been his most zealous friends. The compliance of bad judges, and some imperfections of the British constitution, left it in his power to take the most arbitrary measures for the accomplishment of his designs ; and he attempted to establish as a maxim, that he could do whatever he pleased by a proclama- Vlll GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. tion of his own, without the consent of Parliament. Finally, his obstinacy and infatuation rendered it necessary for all parties of the state to seek his deposition. A secret coalition of Whigs and Tories resolved to call in the assistance of William Prince of Orange, nephew and son-in-law to the king. William landed upon the south coast of England with an army of sixteen thou- sand men, partly his own native subjects, and partly English refugees, November 5, 1688. As he proceeded to London, James was deserted by his army, his friends, and even his own children ; and in a confusion of mind, the result of fear and offended feel- ings, he retired to France. William, at the head of a powerful force, took possession of London. A Convention-Parliament then declared that James had abdicated the throne, and resolved to offer the crown to William and his consort Mary. In British history, this event is termed * the Eevolution.' William III., son of Mary, eldest daughter of Charles I., and who had married his cousin Mary, eldest daughter of James II., thus assumed the crown, in company with his consort ; while King James remained in exile in France. Mary died in 1695, and King William then became sole monarch. In consequence of a fall from his horse, he died in 1701, leaving no issue. Anne, second daughter of King James II, was then placed upon the throne. James meanwhile died in France, leaving a son, James, born in England June 10, 1688, the heir of his unhappy fortunes. This personage, known in history by the epithet of the Pretender, and less invidiously by his incognito title, the Chevalier St George, continued an exile in France, supported by his cousin Louis XIV., and by the subsidies of his English adherents. Anne, after a reign of thirteen years, dis- tinguished by military and literary glory, died without surviv- ing issue, August 1, 1714. During the life of this sovereign, the crown had been destined, by act of Parliament, to the nearest Protestant heir, Sophia, Electress of Hanover, daughter of Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, the daughter of King James VL Sophia having predeceased Queen Anne, it descended of course to her son George, Elector of Hanover, who accordingly came over to England and assumed the sovereignty, to the exclusion of his cousin the Chevalier. George I. was scarcely seated on the throne, when (1715) an insurrection was raised against him by the friends of his rival, now generally known as the Jacobite party. This rebellion was GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. IX suppressed ; and George I. continued to reign, almost without further disturbance, till his death in 1727. George II. acceded to the crown on the death of his father. Meanwhile the Chevalier St George had married Clementina, granddaughter of John Sobieski, the heroic King of Poland ; by this lady he had two sons — 1st, Charles Edward Lewis Cassimir, born December 31, 1720, and, 2d, Henry Benedict, born 1725, afterwards well known by the name of Cardinal de York. James was himself a man of weak, though mild and virtuous character; but the blood of Sobieski seems to have descended to his eldest son, whose boldness, as displayed in 1745-6, did everything but retrieve the fortunes of his family. CONTENTS. PAGE Chapter i. — prince Charles's voyage and landing, 13 n. — THE HIGHLANDERS, . . .27 TIL — THE GATHERING, . . . 36 IV. — PROCEEDINGS OF GOVERNMENT, . . 44 v. — Charles's descent upon the lowlands, 52 vi. — alarm of edinburgh, . . 63 vii. — Charles's march upon Edinburgh, . 68 vm. capture of edinburgh, . . 74 ix. — prince Charles's entry into Edinburgh, 85 x. — cope's preparations, . . .90 XI. — THE PRINCE'S MARCH TO PRESTON, . 96 Xn. — THE BATTLE OF PRESTON, . . . ] 02 XLU. — PRINCE CHARLES AT HOLYROOD, . 117 XIV. — GATHERING AT EDINBURGH, . .129 XV. — INVASION OF ENGLAND, . . 143 XVI. — RETREAT TO SCOTLAND, . . .163 XVH. — PRELIMINARIES OF THE BATTLE OF FALKIRK, 181 XVIH. — THE BATTLE OF FALKIRK, . . 196 XIX. — ARRIVAL OF THE DUKE OF CUMBERLAND, 210 XX. — MARCH TO THE NORTH, . . .218 XXI. — PROCEEDINGS IN THE NORTH, . . 226 XXII. — PRELIMINARIES OF THE BATTLE OF CULLODEN, 237 XU CONTENTS. PAGE Chapter xxiii. — battle of culloden, . . . 249 xxiv. — transactions immediately after the battle of culloden, . . 257 xxv. — suppression of the insurrection, . 266 xxvi. — Charles's wanderings — the long ISLAND, .... 282 xxvn. — Charles's wanderings — skye, . 296 xxvm. — Charles's wanderings — the mainland, 329 xxix. — trials and executions, . . 375 XXX. — PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE, . 397 XXXI. — MEASURES FOR PREVENTION OF FURTHER DISTURBANCES, . . . 409 XXXH. — SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES, 417 APPENDIX, . . . . . 437 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OE 1745-6. CHAPTEE I. prince Charles's voyage and landing. Guard.— Qui est la ? Puc— Pa'isans, pauvres gens de France. King Henry VI. The idea of an insurrection in favour of the exiled house of Stuart, though, from the Revolution, it had never been for a moment out of the thoughts of the Jacobite party, re- mained, during the long* peace which preceded 1739, in that state of dormancy which usually befalls the most deeply- cherished schemes, when there is no hope of their being immediately carried into execution. When, however, Bri- tain became engaged in war with Spain, and not long after mingled in the general conflict of European powers which took place in consequence of the exclusion of the house of Austria from the imperial dignity, the friends of the Stuarts eagerly embraced the belief that a fitting time had at length arrived for striking a blow in behalf of legiti- macy. They had every reason to believe that France, in particular, if not also Spain, would grant them the assist- ance of an invading armament, under favour of which they might themselves take up arms. What made their pro- spects the more cheerful was, that a new promise had sprung up in the exiled family, in the person of the old chevalier's eldest son, Charles Edward, whose character was understood to comprehend all that was graceful in a 14 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. prince, united with the spirit of one destined to be a mili- tary hero. In this respect they stood in a better position than they had ever done before; for the two preceding generations of the dethroned family had possessed no per- sonal qualities that could afford much aid to the cause. So early, therefore, as 1740, associations had begun to be formed by the Scottish partisans of the Stuarts, engaging to rise in arms, provided that competent assistance should be sent from abroad. 1 At the end of 1743, the French court actually entered into the design of an invasion of Britain in behalf of the Stuarts, and sent to Eome for the young chevalier, that he might be ready to accompany it, the chief command of the troops being designed for the celebrated Marshal Saxe. Charles instantly proceeded to Paris, and in the latter part of February 1744, a fleet was ready to sail, with an army of 15,000 men on board. The British government was thrown into great alarm, for their shores were comparatively unprotected, and the people were in a state of violent discontent. A small fleet was mustered under Sir John Norris, and sent to watch the French at Dunkirk. What this aged admiral could scarcely have done, was done by a storm, which drove the French vessels from their moorings, destroying some, and irretrievably damaging others, This, with the attacks of the British vessels, so far deranged the scheme, that the French minis- try determined on abandoning it. The mortification of Charles was great ; and with his characteristic boldness he actually proposed to his father's veteran partisan, Earl Marischal, to set sail in a herring-boat for Scotland, in order to put himself at the head of his friends — believing, apparently, that his own presence as their leader was alone wanting for success. The earl of course refused to sanction such a scheme ; and Charles, after an ineffectual endeavour to be allowed by his father to serve in the French army, retired to an obscure part of France, to wait for better times. At the end of the year, and in the early part of 1745, he used every exertion, by means of his emissaries, and by personal solicitations, to induce the French court to renew the enterprise ; but without success. It appears that some 1 In the year 1740, seven persons of rank entered into an association of this kind ; namely, the Earl of Traquair ; his hrother , John Stuart ; Lord Lovat ; James Drummond, commonly called Duke of Perth ; Lord John Drum- mond, uncle of James Drummond ; Sir James Camphell of Auchinhreck ; and Cameron, younger of Locheil ; most of these "being persons possessing influence in the Highlands. Many others afterwards entered into similar engagements. I prince Charles's voyage and landing. 15 of the Protestant powers in alliance with Louis had remon- strated against his giving aid to the Catholic party in Bri- tain : every effort, they said, ought to be concentrated on the seat of war in Flanders. 1 Charles, therefore, found himself coldly treated in Paris. It is remarkable that he was not even introduced to the king — nor had he ever this honour until after his return from Scotland. Yet, for the sake of an object to which he had devoted his whole affections, he patiently endured this contumely, and all the other distresses of his situation, among which the low in- trigues of some of his immediate followers were not the least. Writing to his father January 3, 1745, when about to retire, for reasons of policy, to a dull place in the country, he says — ' This I do not regret in the least, as long as I think it of service to our cause. I would put myself in a tub, like Diogenes, if necessary. 7 ' 2 Afterwards (March 7), when contemplating some preparations for the expedition with his own means, he writes to the same person — c I wish ou would pawn all my jewels, for on this side of the water should wear them with a very sore heart, thinking that there might be a better use for them ; so that, in an ur- gent necessity, I may have a sum which can be of use for the cause. 7 Of another sum which he had obtained from his father, and expended in the purchase of broadswords, he says in the same letter — ■' Rather than want it, I would have pawned my shirt : it is but for such uses that I shall ever trouble you with requests for money ; it will never be for jjlate or fine clothes, hit for arms and ammunition, or other things which tend to what I am come about to this country. 73 It is generally believed that the victory, such as it was, gained by the French over the British army at Fontenoy in May, completed the resolution of France not to fit out a new armament for the young chevalier, a diver- sion of the enemy by such means being now considered un- necessary. When Charles was at length despairing of aid from this source, the very sense of resentment seems to have acted as an additional stimulus to throw him back upon the romantic design first propounded to Lord Marischal. He had great confidence in the enthusiasm of his British, and more parti- cularly his Scottish partisans, some of whom had requested him to come to them, if he only could bring a sufficiency of arms and money. He thought if he could once raise his 1 Memoires de Noailles, vi. 22, quoted in Lord Mahon's History of England, iii. 335. 2 Extracts from Stuart Papers, in Lord Mahon's History. 3 Ibid. 16 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. standard in Scotland, his friends would flock to it, and that at this particular juncture, when the British army had just sustained a notable defeat, and the country was drained of troops, he should be able at least to keep his ground until foreign aid should arrive, if not to do something* which should make that aid more likely to come. The loud discon- tents expressed in Britain respecting the war and the exist- ing ministry, held out additional encouragement. He there- fore determined upon a secret voyage to Scotland, no matter how few might share in the danger, or how slenderly pro- vided he might be with money or with military stores. Early in June, we find him at the Chateau de Navarre, near Evreux, writing a letter to his father, not to ask his sanc- tion for the projected enterprise, but to inform him that, before the writing could be in his hands, that enterprise would be commenced. i I am to tell you/ says he, c what will be a great surprise to you. I have been, above six months ago, invited by our friends to go to Scotland, and carry what money and arms I could conveniently get ; this being, they are fully persuaded, the only way of restoring you to the crown, and them to their liberties. ... After such scandalous usage as I have received from the French court, even had I not given my word to do so, or got so many encouragements from time to time as I have had, I should have been obliged, in honour and for my own repu- tation, to have flung myself into the hands of my friends, and die with them, rather than live longer in such a miser- able way here, or be obliged to return to Home, which would be just giving up all hopes. I cannot but mention a parable here, which is : a horse that is to be sold, if [when] spurred, [he] does not skip, or show some sign of life, nobody would care to have him even for nothing ; just so my friends would care very little to have me, if, after such usage, which all the world is sensible of, I should not show that I have life in me. Your majesty cannot disapprove a son's following the example of his father. You yourself did the like in the year 1715 ; but the circumstances now are indeed very dif- ferent, by being much more encouraging. ... I have been obliged to steal off, without letting* the king of France so much as suspect it ; for which I make a proper excuse in my letter to him, by saying it was a great mortification to me never to be able to speak and open my heart to him ; that this thing was of such a nature that it could not be communicated by any of the ministers, but to himself alone, in whom, after God Almighty, my resting lies, and that the least help would make my affair infallible. If I had let prince Charles's voyage and landing. 17 the French court know this beforehand, it might have had all these bad effects : — 1st, It is possible they might have stopped me, having a mind to keep measures with the elector ;* and then, to cover it over, they would have made a merit of it to you, by saying they had hindered me from doing a wild and desperate thing : 2dly, My being invited by my friends would not be believed, or at least would have made little impression on the French court. i I have/ he continues, c sent Stafford to Spain, and ap- pointed Sir Thomas Geraldine to demand succours in my name, to complete the work, to whom I sent letters for the king and queen, written in the most engaging terms to the same purpose. Let what will happen, the stroke is struck, and I have taken a firm resolution to conquer or to die, and to stand my ground as long as I shall have a man remaining with me. . . . Whatever happens unfortunate to me, cannot but be the strongest engagement to the French court to pursue your cause. Now, if I were sure they were capable of any sensation of this kind, if I did not succeed, I would perish, as Curtius did, to save my country and make it happy ; it being an indispensable duty on me as far as lies in my power. ... I write this from Navarre, but it will not be sent off till I am on shipboard. ... I should think it proper (if your majesty pleases) to put myself at his lioli- ness 7 s feet, asking his blessing on this occasion ; but what I chiefly ask is your own, which I hope wdll procure me that of God Almighty, upon my endeavours to serve you, my family, and my country.' 2 One Waters, a banker in Paris, had lent Charles 60,000 livres, which he had employed in paying off the debts he incurred at Paris during the past winter. The younger Waters, also a banker, now advanced to him 120,000 livres, with which he bought 1500 fusees, 1800 broadswords, and a considerable quantity of gunpowder, ball, flints, dirks, and other articles, including 20 small field -pieces. Mr 1 The king of Great Britain was, by the Stuarts and their partisans, only allowed to be elector of Hanover. 2 This remarkable letter is printed in the appendix to Lord Mahon's History, from the Stuart Papers. ' Charles's letters,' says this writer, ' which I have seen among the Stuart Papers, are written in a large rude rambling hand, like a schoolboy's. In spelling, they are still more deficient. With him "humour," for example, becomes umer ; the weapon he knew so well how to wield is a sord ; and even his own father's name appears under the alias of gems. Nor are these errors confined to a single language : who— to give an instance from his French — would recognise a hunting-knife in cooto de chas ? I can therefore readily believe that, as Dr King assures us, he knew very little of the history or constitution of England. But the letters of Charles, while they prove his want of education, no less clearly display his natural powers, great energy of character, and great warmth of heart.' VOL. V. B 18 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Walsh, a merchant in Nantes, agreed to convey him to the coast of Scotland in a brig* of 18 guns, which he had fitted out to cruise against the British trade ; at the same time Mr Rutledge, a friend of Walsh, obtained from the French court the services of the Elizabeth, a vessel of 68 guns and 700 men, which was to cruise on the coast of Scotland. Some obscurity rests on the point ; yet it is clear that the Prince had the use of this latter vessel, to carry his stores, and convoy his own ship, without the knowledge of the French government. While the preparations were making at Nantes, the few gentlemen who had agreed to accompany the Prince lodged in different parts of the town, and when they met in public, took no notice of each other, the better to conceal their design. 1 They were seven in number ; the most important being the Marquis of Tulli bar dine, who, having been concerned in the affair of 1715, was attainted, and thus prevented from succeeding to his father's title and estates as Duke of Athole, which were now enjoyed by his next younger brother. The rest were — Sir Thomas She- ridan, who had been the Prince's preceptor ; Sir John Mac- donald, an officer in the Spanish service ; Mr Kelly, an English clergyman, who had been concerned in the Bishop of Rochester's plot in 17'2*2; O'Sullivan, an Irish officer in the French service; Francis Strickland, an English gentleman; and Mr iEneas Macdonald, banker in Paris, a younger brother of Macdonald of Kinlochmoidart. Lord Mahon says very justly, ' that the charm of this romantic enter- prise seems singularly heightened, when we iind, from the secret papers now disclosed, that it was undertaken not only against the British government, but without, and in spite of, the French.' At seven of the evening of the 22d of June, old style, 2 the Prince embarked at St Nazaire, in the mouth of the Loire, on board Walsh's little vessel, named the Doutelle, attended by his seven friends, besides one Buchanan, a messenger. Proceeding to Belleisle, he was there detained for some days, in expectation of the Elizabeth. Since the letter to his father before quoted, he had written again : 1 1 made my devotions/ he says, * on Pentecost day, re- commending myself particularly to the Almighty on this occasion to guide and direct me, and to continue to me always the same sentiments ; which are, rather to suffer any- 1 Jacobite Memoirs, from the papers of Bishop Forbes, p. 2. 2 Such was tbe day in British reckoning, old style being still used there. In France, the day was esteemed as the 3d of July. Old style is here preferred, as that used throughout the whole of the ensuing narrative. prince Charles's voyage and landing. 19 thing than fail in any of my duties? He afterwards wrote his father's secretary, Mr Edgar — ' I hope in God we shall soon meet, which I am resolved shall not be but at home ; ' meaning in the seat of his father's government. 1 His last words to the same gentleman in a postscript, dated the 12th July (N.S.), were — c After having waited a week here, not without a little anxiety, we have at last got the escort I expected, which is just arrived ; namely, a ship of 68 guns, and 700 men aboard. I am, thank God, in perfect health, but have been a little sea-sick; and expect to be more so ; but it does not keep me much a-bed, for I find the more I struggle against it the better.' None of these letters were sent off till after he had finally quitted the shores of France. He had acted in like manner by his Scottish friends, sending Mr Murray of Broughton to apprise them of his intention of sailing, but too late to allow of their sending any answer that could be expected to reach him before he should have set sail. The Scottish gentlemen consequently met in great anxiety, to deliberate on the message, when it was agreed by all, excepting the Duke of Perth, that the scheme was the extreme of rashness, and Mr Murray was appointed by them to watch for the Prince in the West Highlands, and warn him off the coast. It would thus appear that Charles was, in some measure, under a false impression as to the eagerness of his Scottish friends for the undertaking. Probably only a very few had invited him to come, no matter how attended or pro- vided. Murray actually waited during the whole month of June upon the west coast, when, finding that the Prince did not arrive, and conceiving that the scheme had been given up, he returned to his house in Peeblesshire. To the friends of the cause in England, it does not appear that any message was sent by the Prince before his voyage. All things being in readiness, the expedition sailed from Belleisle on the 2d July. Four days after, in latitude 47 degrees 57 minutes north, and thirty-nine leagues to the west of the Lizard Point, an English man-of-war appeared in sight. D'Eau, the captain of the Elizabeth, came on board the Doutelle, and asked Mr Walsh to aid in attacking this vessel, representing that an immediate engagement might be 1 After all that is here related of the Prince's proceedings, it seems scarcely necessary to allude to a letter of David Hume, in which that generally acute person relates an absurd story, communicated to him by Helvetius the philo- sopher, to the effect that Charles became faint-hearted at the point of com- mencing his enterprise, and had to be carried on board by his followers. The utter inconsistency of the tale with the above unquestionable facts, must be at once apparent. 20 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. the best course, as the English ship, if joined by any other of the same nation, would become more than a match for both of theirs. Mr Walsh, feeling a great responsibility as to the Prince's person, declined this proposal. Captain D'Eau then resolved to make the attack singly. The British vessel proved to be the Lion, of 58 guns, commanded by Captain Brett, an officer who had distinguished himself in Anson's expedition by storming Paita. The engagement between the two vessels lasted five hours, during which the Doutelle looked on from a little distance. While the fight continued, the Prince several times represented to Mr Walsh what a small assistance would serve to give the Elizabeth the advantage, and importuned him to engage in the action; but Mr Walsh positively refused, and at last desired the Prince not to insist any more, otherwise he would order him down to his cabin. 1 At the close of the action, the Lion sheered off like a tub upon the water, but the Elizabeth was unable to give it any further annoyance. The vessel was much damaged in the rigging, and between thirty and forty of the officers and men were wounded or killed, the captain himself being amongst the former. It therefore returned to France to refit, carrying with it the Prince's too slender stores. Charles, nevertheless, continued his voyage, cheering himself up with the hopes he entertained from the ardour of his Scottish partisans. In this voyage the Prince and his friends maintained a strict incognito, as may have been surmised from the liberty which Mr Walsh has just been represented as taking with one who considered himself as rightfully Prince Regent of the British dominions. Charles wore the dress of a student of the Scotch College at Paris, and, to conceal his person still more, he had allowed his beard to grow from the day he embarked. The vessel sailed by night without a light, the better to escape observation. On one occasion it was chased, and prepared for an action; but escaped by fast sailing. After some days' sailing, it approached that re- motest range of the Hebrides which — comprehending Lewis, Uist, Barra, and many others — is commonly called the Long Island, from its appearing at a distance to form a single continent. A large Hebridean eagle came and hovered over the vessel. It was first observed by the Marquis of Tullibardine, who did not at first choose to make any remark upon it, lest his doing so might have been considered superstitious ; but, some hours later, on 1 Jacobite Memoirs. prince Charles's voyage and landing. 21 returning' upon deck after dinner, seeing the eagle still following their course, the marquis pointed it out to the Prince, saying, ' Sir, this is a happy omen : the king of birds is come to welcome your royal highness on your arrival in Scotland.' 1 They now sailed into a strait between the islands of Eriska and South Uist, and, observing some doubtful sails at a distance, made haste to land on the former island, carrying on shore their money, arms, and ammunition. The "Prince was conducted to the house of the tacksman, or tenant, and learned that Macdonald of Clanranald, chief of a branch of that great clan, and who held extensive posses- sions in the West Highlands and Hebrides, was upon South Uist, with his brother Boisdale, 2 while young Clanranald, 3 the son of the chief, and a person in whom he had great confidence, was at Moidart upon the mainland. A mes- senger was despatched to desire an interview with Boisdale, and in the meantime Charles spent the night in the house of the tacksman. He returned on board his vessel next morning, and Bois- dale soon after came to visit him. This gentleman was supposed to have great influence over the mind of his elder brother the chief, who, on account of his advanced age and bad health, did not take an active part in the management of his own affairs. 4 Charles knew that, if Boisdale could be brought over to his views, the rising of the clan would be a matter of course. Here, however, he experienced a disappointment. Mr Macdonald seems to have been well affected to the cause, but strongly impressed with its hope- lessness at the present moment. He spoke in a very dis- couraging manner, and advised the Prince to return home. 1 1 am come home, sir,' said Charles, ' and can entertain no notion of returning to the place whence I came. I am per- suaded that my faithful Highlanders will stand by me.' Boisdale said he was afraid that the contrary would be found the case. Charles instanced Macleod of Macleod 1 Jacobite Memoirs, p. 9. 2 Throughout this narrative, the custom of the country has been conformed to, in designating the Scottish chiefs and landed proprietors by their family and territorial titles. 3 The eldest son of a Highland chief always receives his father's title, with the additional epithet of young; thus, for instance, young Glengarry, young Locheil, &c. In the Lowlands, something like the same custom did lately, and perhaps still does exist, though it is more common to call him the young laird. Ludicrous instances sometimes occur of a man being called the young laird, when he is in reality far advanced in life. 4 Historical and Genealogical Account of the clan or familv of Macdonald, p. 159. 22 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. and Sir Alexander Macdonald of Sleat, as chieftains upon whom he could depend. These were men who could bring' twelve hundred broadswords to the field. Boisdale now gave him the unwelcome intelligence that these gentlemen had not only resolved to abandon his cause, but might be found to act against it. To prove this, he said a messenger might be sent to ask them to join the proposed expedition. As might be expected, Charles in vain exerted his eloquence to induce Boisdale to engage his brother's clan. He plainly told the Prince that he would rather use any influence he had with his brother and the clan to prevent them from taking arms. Charles was greatly disconcerted at Boisdale's coldness, but he took care to show no symptom of depression. He ordered his ship to be unmoored, and set sail for the main- land, expressing a resolution to pursue the enterprise he had commenced. He carried Boisdale along* with him for several miles, and endeavoured, with all his eloquence, to make him relent and give a better answer. But Mr Macdonald continued to express the same unfavourable sentiments; and finally, descending* into his boat, which hung astern, he left the Prince to follow his own apparently hopeless course. 1 Continuing his voyage to the mainland, it was with a still resolute heart that, on the 19th of July, 2 Charles cast anchor in Lochnanuagh, a small arm of the sea, partly dividing the countries of Moidart and Arisaig. The place which he thus chose for his disembarkation was as wild and desolate a scene as he could have found throughout the dominions of his fathers. Yet it was scarcely more unpro- mising than the reception he at first met with from its people. The first thing he did after casting anchor, was to send a boat ashore with a letter for young Clanranald, whom he knew to be inspired with the most enthusiastic affection to his cause. The young* chief did not permit him to remain long in suspense. Next day (the 20th) he came to Forsy, a small village on the shore of the estuary in which the Prince's vessel lay, accompanied by his kinsmen, the Lairds of Glenaladale and Dalily, and by another gentleman of his clan, who has left an intelligent journal of the subsequent events. 3 ' Calling for the ship's boat,' says this writer, ' we were immediately carried on board, our hearts bounding at 1 History of the Rebellion, by the Rev. John Home ; Home's Works, ii. 427. — Jacobite Memoirs , pp. 11, 12. 2 Lockhart Papers, ii. 479. 3 Printed in the Lockhart Papers. prince Charles's voyage and landing. 23 the idea of being* at length so near our long-wished-for Prince. We found a large tent erected with poles upon the ship's deck, the interior of which was furnished with a variety of wines and spirits. On entering this pavilion, we were warmly welcomed by the Duke of Athole, to whom most of us had been known in the year 1715. l While we were conversing- with the duke, Clanranald was called away to see the Prince, and we were given to understand that we should not probably see his royal highness that evening.' Clanranald, being introduced into Charles's pre- sence, proceeded to assure him that there was no possi- bility, under the circumstances, of taking up arms with any chance of success. In this he was joined by his rela- tion, Macdonald of Kinlochmoidart, whom Mr Home has associated with him in the following romantic anecdote, though the journalist does not allude to his presence. Charles is said, by the historian, to have addressed the two Highlanders with great emotion ; to have summed up, with much eloquence, all the reasons for now beginning the war ; and, finally, to have conjured them, in the warmest terms, to assist their Prince, their friend, in this his utmost need. With eloquence scarcely less warm, the brave young men intreated him to desist from his enterprise for the present, representing to him that now to take up arms, without regular forces, without officers of credit, without concert, and almost without arms, would but draw down certain destruction upon the heads of all concerned. Charles per- sisted, argued, and implored; and they still as positively adhered to their opinion. During this conversation the parties walked hurriedly backwards and forwards upon the deck, using all the gesticulations appropriate to their various arguments. A Highlander stood near them, armed at all points, as was then the fashion of his country. He was a younger brother of Kinlochmoidart, and had come off to the ship to inquire for news, not knowing who was on board. When he gathered from their discourse that the stranger was the heir of Britain, when he heard his chief and brother refuse to take up arms for their Prince, his colour went and came, his eyes sparkled, he shifted his place, and grasped his sword. Charles observed his de- meanour, and turning suddenly round, appealed to him — ' Will you not assist me V l I will ! I will ! ' exclaimed Ranald, l though not another man in the Highlands should 1 The person here meant was the Marquis of Tullibardine, -whom the Jaco- bites considered as rightfully the Duke of Athole. 24 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. draw a sword; I am ready to die for you! 7 With tears and thanks Charles acknowledged the loyalty of the youth, and said he wished that all the Highlanders were like him. The two obdurate chieftains were overpowered by this incident, and no longer expressed any reluctance to make an appearance in the cause. 1 The Prince's interview with Clanranald, according to the journalist, who was on board at the same time, occupied no less than three hours. The young chief then returned to his friends, who had spent that space of time in the pavi- lion. ' About half an hour after/ says the journalist, e there entered the tent a tall youth of a most agreeable aspect, dressed in a plain black coat, with a plain shirt, a cambric stock fixed with a plain silver buckle, a fair round wig out of the buckle, a plain hat with a canvas string, one end of which was fixed to one of his coat buttons, black stockings, and brass buckles in his shoes. At the first appearance of this pleasing youth I felt my heart swell to my throat. But one O'Brien, a churchman, immediately told us that he was only an English clergyman, who had long been possessed with a desire to see and converse with the High- landers.' ' At his entry,' continues the same writer, l O'Brien for- bade any of those who were sitting to rise ; he saluted none of us, and we only made a low bow at a distance. I chanced to be one of those who were standing when he came in, and he took his seat near me ; but he immediately started up again, and desired me to sit down by him upon a chest. Tak- ing him at this time for only a passenger and a clergyman, I presumed to speak to him with perfect familiarity, though I could not suppress a suspicion that he might turn out some greater man. One of the questions which he put to me, in the course of conversation, regarded my Highland dress. He inquired if I did not feel cold in that habit, to which I answered that I believed I should only feel cold in any other. 2 At this he laughed heartily ; and he next desired to know how I lay with it at night. I replied that the plaid served me for a blanket when sleeping, and I showed him how I wrapped it about my person for that purpose. At this he remarked that I must be unprepared for defence in case of a sudden surprise ; but I informed him that, during 1 Home's Works, ii. 427. 2 This is a common Highlandman's answer to a very common question. The fact is, that the philabeg, while exposing the knees, invests the haunches and middle with such dense folds, as to give great general warmth. I believe it has been found that the private men of the Highland regiments have no- where complained of their dress so much as in the West Indies. prince Charles's voyage and landing, 25 war or any time of danger, we arranged the garment in such a way as to enable us to start at once to our feet, with a drawn sword in one hand and a cocked pistol in the other. After a little more conversation of this sort, the mysterious youth rose from his seat and called for a dram, when O'Brien whispered to me to pledge the stranger, but not to drink to him, which confirmed me in my suspicions as to his real quality. Having taken a glass of wine in his hand, he drank to us all round, and soon after left the tent/ l During* this and the succeeding day, Clanranald remained close in council with Charles, the Marquis of Tullibardine, and Sir Thomas Sheridan, devising means for raising* the rest of the well-affected clans, who were at this time reckoned to number 12,000 men. On the 22d (July) young Clanranald proceeded with Allan Macdonald, a younger brother of Kinlochmoidart, on an embassy to Sir Alexander Macdonald of Sleat, and the Laird of Macleod, whom Charles was most unwilling to suppose unfaithful to his cause. During the absence of these emissaries, Mr Hugh Macdonald, a younger brother of the Laird of Morar, was brought on board the Doutelle to visit the Prince. This gentleman, after a short complimentary conversation, took leave to caution him as to the necessity of keeping strictly incognito for the present, as the g*arrison of Fort William was not far off, and the neighbouring clan Campbell might be very glad to obtain possession of his person. Charles an- swered, ' I have no fear about that at all.' With reference to the proposed expedition, Mr Macdonald said he had great fears of the event, and, like Boisdale, he recommended the Prince to return to France. Charles said 'he did not choose to owe his restoration to foreigners, but to his own friends, to whom he was now come to put it into their power to have the glory of that event. And as to returning to France, foreigners should never have it to say that he had thrown himself upon his friends, that they turned their backs upon him, and that he had been forced to return from them to foreign parts. In a word, if he could get but six trusty men to join him, he would choose far rather to skulk zvith them among the mountains of Scotland, than to return to France. 1 On the 25th he came on shore from the Doutelle, accom- panied by only the seven gentlemen formerly mentioned. He first set his foot upon Scottish ground at Borodale, a farm belonging to Clanranald, close by the south shore of 1 Lockhart Papers, ii. 480. 26 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Lochnanuagh. Borodale is a wild piece of country, form- ing 1 a mountainous tongue of land betwixt two bays. It was a place suitable above all others for the circumstances and designs of the Prince, being remote, and difficult of access, and in the centre of that country where Charles's surest friends resided. It belongs to a tract of stern moun- tain land, serrated by deep narrow firths, forming the western coast of Inverness-shire. Although in the very centre of the Highland territory, it is not above one hundred and eighty miles from the capital. The Mac- donalds and the Stuarts, who possessed the adjacent terri- tories, had been, since the time of Montrose, inviolably attached to the elder line of the royal family ; had proved themselves irresistible at Kilsyth, Killiecrankie, and Sheriff- muir ; and were now, from their resistance to the disarming act, perhaps the fittest of all the clans to take the field. During the absence of young Clanranald, into whose arms Charles had thus thrown himself, several gentlemen of the family collected a guard for his person, and he re- mained a welcome and honoured guest in the house of Borodale. 1 Considering that no other chief had yet de- clared for him, and that, indeed, the enterprise might never advance another step, it must be acknowledged that the Clanranald family acted with no small share of gallantry ; for there can be little doubt that if he had retired, they must have been exposed to the vengeance of government. c We encountered this hazard/ says the journalist, * with the greatest cheerfulness, determined to risk everything, life itself, in behalf of our beloved Prince.' Charles, his com- pany, and about one hundred men constituting his guard, were entertained with the best cheer which it was in the power of Mr Macdonald, tenant of Borodale, to purvey. He sat in a large room, where he could see all his adherents at once, and where the multitudes of people who flocked from the country around, ' without distinction of age or sex/ 2 to see him, might also have an opportunity of grati- fying their curiosity. At the first meal which took place under these circumstances, Charles drank the grace-drink in English, a language which all the gentlemen present understood ; but for a toast of more extensive application, our friend the journalist rose and gave the king's health 3 in Gaelic — * Deoch slaint an High.' This of course pro- duced universal satisfaction ; and Charles desired to know what was meant. On its being explained to him, he re- 1 Loekliart Papers, ii. 482. 2 Ibid, ii. 482. 3 Charles's father. THE HIGHLANDERS. 27 quested to hear the words pronounced again, that he might learn them himself. He then gave the king's health in Gaelic, uttering the words as correctly and distinctly as he could. 'The company/ adds the journalist, 'then men- tioning my skill in Gaelic, his royal highness said I should be his master in that language ; and I was then desired to ask the healths of the prince and duke.' l It may be scarcely possible to conceive the effect which Charles's flattering attention to their language had upon the hearts of this brave and simple people. CHAPTEE II. THE HIGHLANDERS. 'tis wonderful That an invisible instinct should so frame them To loyalty unlearned, honour untaught, Civility not seen from others, valour That wildly grows in them, but yields a crop As if it had been sowed. — Shakspeare. The people amidst whom Charles Stuart had cast his fate, were then regarded as the rudest and least civilised portion of the nation of which he conceived himself the rightful ruler. Occupying the most remote and mountain- ous section of Britain, and holding little intercourse with the rest of the community, they were distinguished by peculiar language, dress, and manners ; had as yet yielded a very imperfect obedience to government ; and formed a society not only distinct from their immediate neighbours, but which had probably no exact parallel in Europe. The country possessed by this people, forming the north- west portion of Scotland, comprehends a large surface ; but being of a mountainous and rugged character, it has never maintained a large population. In numbers, the Highlanders did not now exceed 100,000, or a twelfth of the whole population of Scotland. The community was divided into about forty different tribes, denominated clans, each of which dwelt upon its own portion of the territory. At the period of this history, the Highlanders displayed, in a state almost entire, what has been called the patriarchal 1 Charles's younger brother, styled the Duke of York. 28 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. form of society. This extreme corner of Europe had the fortune to shelter nearly the last unmixed remnants of the Celts, that early race of people whom the dawn of history shows in possession of the ancient continent, but who were gradually dispelled to the extremities by others which we are now accustomed to call ancient. As they retained their primitive manners with almost unmixed purity, there was to be seen in the Highlanders of Scotland nearly a dis- tinct picture of a state of society compared with which that of Borne might be considered as modern. Owing to the circumstances of their country, the High- landers were, however, by no means that simple and quies- cent people who are described as content to dwell each under his own vine and fig-tree, any more than their land was one flowing with milk and honey. A perpetual state of war with the neighbours who had driven them to their northern fastnesses, and their disinclination to submit to the laws of the country in which they nominally lived, caused them, on the contrary, to make arms a sort of pro- fession, and even to despise in some measure all peaceful modes of acquiring a subsistence. Entertaining, more- over, a belief that the Lowlands had been originally theirs, many of them, even at this period, practised a regu- lar system of reprisal upon the frontier of that civilised region, for which of course the use of arms was indispens- ably necessary. What still more tended to induce military habits, many of the tribes maintained a sort of hereditary enmity against each other, and therefore required to be in perpetual readiness, either to seize or repel opportunities of vengeance. The Highlanders, in the earlier periods of history, appear to have possessed no superiority over the Lowlanders in the use of arms. At the battle of the Harlaw in 1410 (till which period they had been quite independent of the kings of Scotland), the largest army that ever left the Highlands was checked by an inferior number of Lowlanders. Coming into the field sixty-eight years after, at the fight of Sauehie- burn, where they espoused the cause of James III. against his rebellious nobles, c their tumultuous ranks/ says Sir Walter Scott in the Introduction to his Border Minstrelsy, c were ill able to endure the steady and rapid charge of the men of Annandale and Liddesdale, who bore spears two ells longer than were used by the rest of their country- men. 7 They proved not more invincible at the battles of Corrichie, Glenlivat, and others, fought during the six- teenth century. THE HIGHLANDERS. 29 But the lapse of half a century after this last period, during" which the border spear ha*d been converted into a shepherd's crook, and the patriot steel of Lothian and Clydesdale into penknives and weavers 7 shears, permitted the mountaineers at length to assert a decided superiority in arms. When they were called into action, therefore, by Montrose, they proved invariably victorious in that short but brilliant campaign, which almost retrieved a kingdom for their unfortunate monarch. Amidst the exploits of that time, the victory of Kilsyth (1645) was attended with some circumstances displaying their superiority in a remarkable degree. The army arrayed against them, almost doubling theirs in number, consisted chiefly of the townsmen of Fife, which county has been described, in a publication of the time, 1 as remarkable for the enthusiasm of its inhabitants in regard to the cause of this quarrel — the National Co- venant. Religious fervour proved nothing in this case when opposed to the more exalted enthusiasm of ' loyalty unlearned/ and the hardihood of an education among the hills. The Whig militia scarcely stood a minute before the impetuous charge of the Highlanders, but running off in a shameful rout, were killed in great numbers by their pursuers. 2 Though the Highlanders were nominally subjugated by Cromwell, they regained at the Restoration their former privileges and vigour. They were kept in arms, during the reigns of the two last Stuarts, by their occasional employ- ment as a militia, for the harassment of the west country Presbyterians. At the Revolution, therefore, when roused by the voice of Dundee, they were equally ready to take the field in behalf of King James, as they had been fifty years before to rise up for his father. The patriarchal system of laws upon which Highland society was consti- tuted, disposed them to look upon these unfortunate princes as the general fathers or chiefs of the nation, whose natural and unquestionable power had been rebelliously disputed by their children ; and there can be little doubt that, both on these occasions and the subsequent attempts in behalf of the Stuart family, they fought with precisely the same 1 Montrose Redivivus, 1650. 2 Sir John Sinclair of Longformacus reported to a Scottish hishop still living (1846), his having in early life met an aged Highlander who had been at the battle of Kilsyth. The man spoke with savage glee of his performances amongst the hen-hearted Fife men. * It was a braw day Kilsyth ; at every stroke of my sword I cut an ell o' breeks ! ' The people of Fife are said to have consequently got a distaste for the army, which had not ceased at the close of the ensuing century. See Statistical Account of Scotland, xii. 86. 30 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. ardour which would induce a man of humanity to ward off the blow which an unnatural son had aimed at a parent. On the field of Killiecrankie, where they were chiefly op- posed by regular, and even veteran troops, they fought with signal bravery. 1 Their victory was, however, unavailing, owing to the death of their favourite leader, Ian Dim nan Cath, as they descriptively termed him — Dark John of the Battles — without whose commanding* genius their energies could not be directed, nor even their bands kept together. The submission which was nominally paid throughout Britain to the 'parliamentary' sovereigns, William and Anne, was in no degree participated by the children of the mountains, whose simple ideas of government did not com- prehend either a second or a third estate, and who could perceive no reasons for preferring a sovereign on account of any peculiarity in his religion. In the meantime, more- over, the progress of civilisation, encouraged in the low countries by the Union, affected but slightly the warlike habits of the clans. Their military ardour is said to have been, if possible, increased during this period, by the inju- dicious policy of King William, who, in distributing £20,000 amongst them to bribe their forbearance, only in- spired an idea that arms were their best means of acquiring wealth and importance. The call, therefore, which was made upon them by the exiled Prince in 1715, found them as willing and ready as ever to commence a civil war. The accession of the house of Hanover was at this period so recent, and the rival candidate shared so largely in the affections of the people, that very little was wanting to achieve the restoration of the house of Stuart. That little was wanting — a general of military talent, with some degree of resolution on the part of the candidate. The ex- pedition was commanded in Scotland by the Earl of Marr, who had signalised himself by some dexterity in the slip- pery politics of the time, but possessed no other abilities to lit him for the important station he held. In England, the 1 The battle of Killiecrankie was fought upon a field immediately beyond a narrow and difficult pass into the Highlands. The royal troops, under Gene- ral Mackay, on emerging from this pass, found Dundee's army, which was not half so numerous, posted in columns or clusters upon the face of an oppo- site hill. Both lay upon their arms, looking at each other, till sunset, when the Highland troops came down with their customary impetuosity, and, charging through Mackay's lines, soon put them to the rout. Mackay re- treated in the utmost disorder, and reached Stirling next day with only two hundred men. His whole army must have been cut to pieces in retreating through the pass, but for the death of Dundee, and the greater eagerness of the Highlanders to secure the baggage than to pursue their enemies. THE HIGHLANDERS. SI reigning 1 sovereign had even less to dread, in the ill-con- certed proceedings of a band of debauched young noblemen, who displayed this remarkable difference from the Scottish insurgents— that they could not fight at all. Marr per- mitted himself to be cooped up on the north of the Forth, with an army of 8000 or 9000 men, by the Duke of Argyle, who occupied Stirling with a force not half so numerous. An action at length took place on Sheriffmuir, in which it is impossible to say whether the bravery of the Highlanders, the pusillanimity of their leader, or the military genius of Argyle, was most signally distinguished. The Duke of Argyle learning, on the 11th of November, that Marr had at length formed the resolution to fight him, and was marching for that purpose from Perth, set forward from Stirling ; and next day the armies came within sight of each other upon the plain of Sheriffmuir, a mile north- east from Dumblane. They both lay upon their arms all night ; and a stone is still shown upon the site of the High- landers' bivouac, indented all round with marks occasioned by the broadswords of these warriors, who here sharpened their weapons for the next day's conflict. The battle com- menced on Sunday morning*, when Argyle himself, leading* his dragoons over a morass which had frozen during the night, and which the insurgents expected to protect them, almost immediately routed their whole left wing, consisting* of the Lowland cavaliers, and drove them to the river Allan, two or three miles from the field. His left wing, which was beyond the scope of his command, did not meet the same success against the right of the insurgents, which con- sisted entirely of Highlanders. Those warriors had come down from their fastnesses with a resolution to fight as their ancestors had fought at Kilsyth and Killiecrankie. They appeared before the Lowlanders of Perthshire, who had not seen them since the days of Montrose, in the wild Irish shirt or plaid, which, only covering the body and haunches, leaves the arms and most of the limbs exposed in all their shaggy strength. 1 Their enthusiasm may be guessed from a simple anecdote. A Lowland gentleman, observing* amongst their bands a man of ninety, from the upper part of Aberdeenshire, had the curiosity to ask how so aged a creature as he, and one who seemed so extremely feeble, had thought of joining their enterprise. i I have sons here, sir, 7 replied the man, ' and I have grandsons j if they fail to do their duty, cannot I 1 Preface to Pinkerton's Select Old Scottish Poems. 32 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. shoot them V — laying* his hand upon a pistol which he car- ried in his bosom. 1 The attack of these resolute soldiers upon the left wing of the royal army was, to use language similar to their own, like the storm which strews a lee shore with wrecks. The chief of Clanranald was killed as they were advancing-; but that circumstance, which might have been expected to damp their ardour, only served to inspire them with greater fury. ' To-morrow for lamentation ! ' cried the young chief- tain of Glengarry ; 6 to-day for revenge ! ' and the Mac- donalds rushed on the foe with irresistible force. Instantly put to rout, this portion of the royal army retired to Stir- ling, leaving" hundreds a prey to the Highland broadsword. Thus each of the two armies was partially successful and partially defeated. The battle was by no means undecisive in its results. Marr, as he deserved none of the credit of his partial victory, reaped no profit from it, but was obliged to retire to Perth. Argyle remained upon the field, in possession of the enemy's cannon and many of his standards. The conduct of this celebrated warrior and patriot was in every respect the reverse of that of Marr. He had won a victory, so far as it could be won, by his own personal exertions, and that with every advantage of numbers against him. The hu- manity he displayed was also such as seldom marks the details of a civil war. He offered quarter to all he met, in the very hottest of the fight, and he granted it to all who desired it. "With his own sword he parried three different blows which one of his dragoons aimed at a wounded cava- lier who had refused to ask his life. 2 In January, James himself, the weak though amiable man for whom all this blood was shed, landed at Peterhead, and immediately proceeded incognito to join the Earl of Marr at Perth. His presence might inspire some enthusiasm, but it could not give strength or consistency to the army. Some preparations were made for his coronation in the great hall of Scoon, where his ancestors had been invested with the emblems of sovereignty so many centuries ago. But the total ruin of his English adherents, conspired with his own imbecility and that of his officers to prevent the ceremony from taking place. In February, he retired before the ad- vance of the royal army. The Tay was frozen at the time, and thus he and all his army were fortunately enabled to cross without the difficulty which must otherwise have 1 ' Can I no sheet them ? '—these were the exact words. 2 Printed broadside of the battle. THE HIGHLANDERS. 33 attended so sudden a retreat ; directing their march towards the seaports of Aberdeenshire and Angus. I have heard that, as the good-natured prince was passing over, the misery of his circumstances prompted a slight sally of wit, as a dark evening will sometimes produce lightning ; and he remarked to his lieutenant-general, in allusion to the delusive prospects by which he had been induced to come over, l Ah, John, you see how you have brought me on the ice.' 1 The chevalier embarked with Marr and other officers at Montrose; and the body of the army dispersed with so much rapidity, that Argyle, who traversed the country only a day's march behind, reached Aberdeen without ever getting a glimpse of it. We may safely suppose that the humanity of this general, if not the secret leaning to Jaco- bitism of which he was suspected, induced him to favour the dispersion and escape of the unfortunate cavaliers. The Lowland gentlemen and noblemen who had been concerned in the campaign suffered attainder proscription, and in some cases death; but the Highlanders returned to their mountains unconquered and unchanged. In 1719, a plan of invasion and insurrection in favour of the Stuarts was formed by Spain. A fleet of ten ships of the line, with several frigates, having on board 6000 troops and 1*2,000 stand of arms, sailed from Cadiz to England ; and while this fleet was preparing, the Earl Marischal left St Sebastian with two Spanish frigates, having on board 300 Spanish soldiers, ammunition, arms, and money, and landed in the island of Lewis. The Spanish fleet was completely dispersed by a storm off Cape Finisterre; and as everything remained quiet in England, very few High- landers rose. General Wightman came up with the Spanish and Highland force in Glensheil, a wild vale in the west of Ross-shire. The Highlanders, favoured by the ground, withdrew to the hills without having suffered much ; and the Spaniards laid down their arms, and were made pri- soners. During the ensuing twenty years, the state of the High- lands was often under the consideration of government, and some steps were taken with a view to render the people less dangerous, but none with the design of making them more friendly. Three forts — one at Inverness, a second, named Fort Augustus, at Killiewhimmen, and a third, named Fort William, at Inverlochie, in Lochaber — were kept in full 1 Information by a Scottish bishop. VOL. V. C 34 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. garrison, as a means of overawing 1 the disaffected clans. Under the care of General Wade, the soldiers were employed in forming lines of road, for the purpose of connecting these forts with the low country. An act was also passed to de- prive the people of their arms. It was obeyed to some extent by such clans as the Campbells, Sutherlands, and Mackays, whose superiors were, from whatever cause, well affected to the government; but was generally evaded by the Mac- donalds, Stuarts, Camerons, and others, who maintained their zeal for the house of Stuart. Thus the measure was rather favourable to the Jacobite cause in the Highlands than otherwise. Such had been the history, and such was the warlike condition, of the Scottish mountaineers at the time when Prince Charles landed amongst them in July 1745. If anything else were required to make the reader understand the motives of the subsequent insurrection, it might be said that Charles's father and himself had always maintained, from their residence in Italy, a correspondence with the chiefs who were friendly to them. For the service of these unhappy princes, their unlimited power over their clans gave them an advantage which the richest English partisans did not possess. At the same time, as sufficiently appears from the preceding and following chapter, the idea of taking the field for the Stuarts without foreign assistance was not agreeable to the Jacobite chiefs, though, in most instances, their ardour of character ultimately overcame their scruples on that point. The constitution of Highland society, as already re- marked, was strictly and simply patriarchal. The clans were families, each of which, bearing one name, occupied a well-defined tract of country, the property of which had been acquired long before the introduction of writs. Every clan was governed by its chief, whose native designation — Kean- Kinnhe — ' The Head of the Family ' — sufficiently indicated the grounds and nature of his power. In almost every clan there were some subordinate chiefs called chieftains, being cadets of the principal family, who had acquired a distinct territory, and founded separate septs. In every clan, more- over, there were two ranks of people — the Doaine-uailse, or gentlemen, persons who could clearly trace their derivation from the chiefs of former times, and assert their kinsman- ship to the present ; and a race of commoners, who could not tell how they came to belong to the clan, and who al- ways acted in inferior offices. There is a very common notion among the Lowlanders THE HIGHLANDERS, 35 that their northern neighbours, with, perhaps, the exception of the chiefs, were all alike barbarians, and distinguished by no shades of comparative worth. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The Doaine-uailse were, in every sense of the word, gentlemen — poor gentlemen, perhaps, but yet fully entitled, by their feelings and acquirements, to that appellation. On the contrar} r , the commoners, who yet generally believed themselves related to the chiefs, were a race of mere serfs, having no certain idea of a noble an- cestry to nerve their exertions or elevate their conduct. The Doaine-uailse invariably formed the body upon which the chief depended in war; for they were inspired with notions of the most exalted heroism by the well-remem- bered deeds of their forefathers, and always acted upon the supposition that their honour was a precious gift, which it was incumbent upon them to deliver down unsullied to posterity. The commoners, on the contrary, were often left behind to perform the humble duties of agriculture and cow-driving ; or, if admitted into the array of the clan, were put into the rear rank, and armed in an inferior manner. With such a sentiment of heroism, the Highland gentle- man of the year 1745 must have been a person of no mean order. His mind was further exalted, if possible, by a de- voted attachment to his chief, for whose interests he was at all times ready to fight, and for whose life he was even pre- pared to lay down his own. His politics were of the same abstract and disinterested sort. Despising the commercial Presbyterians of the low country, and regarding 1 with a better-founded disgust the dark system of parliamentary corruption which characterised the government of the de facto sovereign of England, he at once threw himself into the opposite scale, and espoused the cause of an exiled and injured prince, whom he looked upon as in some measure a general and higher sort of chief. Charles's cause was the cause of justice, of filial affection, and even, in his estimation, of patriotism ; and with all his prepossessions, it was scarcely possible that he should fail to espouse it. 1 1 In this chapter notice might also have "been taken of the effect which their popular native poetry had upon the minds of the Highlanders. Through- out nearly the whole country, hut especially in Athole and the adjacent ter- ritories, there were innumerable songs and ballads tending to advance the cause of the Stuarts, while there was not one to depreciate them. A Lowlander and a modern cannot easily comprehend, nor can he set forth, the power of this simple hut energetic engine. It has been described to me, however, as some- thing overpowering. Most of the ballads were founded upon tne wars of Montrose and Dundee, and aimed at rousing the audience to imitate the actions of their ancestors in these glorious campaigns. 36 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. CHAPTER III. THE GATHERING. O, high-minded Murray, the exiled, the dear, In the blush of the dawning the standard uprear ; Wide, wide on the winds of the north let it fly, Like the sun's latest flash when the tempest is nigh ! Waverley. At Borodale, the Prince received a reply to the message which he had sent to Sir Alexander Macdonald and the Laird of Macleod. What Boisdale had said of these chiefs proved exactly true. Originally well affected to the Stuart family, they had recently been tampered with by Duncan Forbes, president of the Court of Session, so distinguished as a virtuous and enlightened friend of the Hanover succession, as well as by the genuine love he bore for his native coun- try. Being now disposed to remain on good terms with the government, the two insular chiefs returned for answer, that although they had promised to support his royal highness if he came with a foreign force, they did not con- ceive themselves to be under any obligation since he came so ill provided. They likewise offered the advice, that he should immediately return to France. It was not known at the time, but has since been made manifest, that these chiefs at this crisis did active service for the government, in sending intelligence of the Prince's arrival. Their answer to Charles was so disheartening, that now even those who had come with him joined with his Highland friends in counselling him to give up the enterprise. 1 The example of the two Skye chiefs would, they said, be fatal, as many others would follow it. Nevertheless, Charles adhered to his design, repeating, in reply to all their representations, the same words he had used to Mr Hugh Macdonald. With 1 Young Clanranald was himself shaken in his resolution of arming for the Prince "by the conversation he had with Sir Alexander Macdonald, and re- turned to his own country with a decided disinclination to the enterprise. But when he arrived, he found his clan determined to go out at all hazards, whether he should head them or not, having probably been much gained upon in the interval by the Prince's address. The young chieftain was thus ulti- mately brought back to his former resolution. These facts are stated by Bishop Forbes (Lyon in Mourning, MS. in my possession), on the concurring testimony of Ranald Macdonald, a son of Borodale, and Mr Macdonald of Bellfinlay. THE GATHERING. 37 six good trusty followers, he said, he would skulk in Scot- land rather than return to France. From Borodale, where he lived in the manner described for several days, he despatched messengers to all the chiefs from whom he had any expectation of assistance. The first that came to see him was Donald Cameron, younger of Locheil ; a man in middle age, of great bravery, and uni- versally-respected character. Young Locheil, as he was generally called, was the son of the chief of the clan Came- ron, one of the most numerous and warlike of all the High- land tribes. His father had been engaged in the insurrection of 1715, for which he was attainted and in exile ; and his grandfather, Sir Evan Cameron, the fellow-soldier of Mon- trose and Dundee, had died in 1719, after three-fourths of a century of military partisanship in behalf of the house of Stuart. Young Locheil had been much in confidence with the exiled family, whose chief agent in the north of Scotland he might be considered ; an office for which he was pecu- liarly well qualified, on account of his talents, his integrity, and the veneration in which he was held by his country- men. He was one of the seven gentlemen who, in 1740, entered into an association to procure the restoration of King James ; and he had long wished for the concerted time when he should bring the Highlands to aid an invad- ing party in that cause. When he now learned that Charles had landed without troops and arms, and with only seven followers, he determined to abstain from the enterprise ; but thought himself bound, as a friend, to visit the Prince in person, and endeavour to make him withdraw from the country. In passing from his own house towards Borodale, Locheil called at Fassefern, the residence of his brother John Came- ron, who, in some surprise at the earliness of his visit, hastily inquired its reason. Locheil informed his relative that the Prince of Wales had landed at Borodale, and sent for him. Fassefern asked what troops his royal highness had brought with him ? — what money 1 — what arms ? Locheil answered that he believed the Prince had brought with him neither troops, nor money, nor arms ; and that, resolved not to be concerned in the affair, he designed to do his ut- most to prevent it from going any farther. Fassefern approved of his brother's sentiments, and applauded his resolution, advising him at the same time not to go any farther on the way to Borodale, but to come into the house, and impart his mind to the Prince by a letter. c No/ said Locheil ; i although my reasons admit of no reply, I ought 38 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OE 1745-6. at. least to wait upon his royal highness.' c Brother/ said Fassefern, ' I know you better than you know yourself ; if this Prince once sets his eyes upon you, he will make you do whatever he pleases.' 1 On arriving 1 at Borodale, Locheil had a private interview with the Prince, in which the probabilities of the enter- prise were anxiously debated. Charles used every argu- ment to excite the loyalty of Locheil, and the chief exerted all his eloquence to persuade the Prince to withdraw till a better opportunity. Charles represented the present as the best possible opportunity, seeing that the French general kept the British army completely eng-aged abroad, while at home there were no troops but one or two newly-raised regiments. He expressed his confidence that a small body of Highlanders would be sufficient to gain a victory over all the force that could now be brought against him ; and he was equally sure that such an advantage was all that was required to make his friends at home declare in his favour, and cause those abroad to send assistance. All he wanted was, that the Highlanders should begin the war. Locheil still resisted, intreating Charles to be more temperate, and consent to remain concealed where he was, till his friends should meet together, and concert what was best to be done. Charles, whose mind was wound up to the utmost pitch of impatience, paid no regard to this proposal, but answered that he was determined to put all to the hazard. 6 In a few days/ said he, i with the few friends I have, I will raise the royal standard, and proclaim to the people of Britain that Charles Stuart is come over to claim the crown of his ancestors — to win it, or to perish in the attempt! Locheil, who my father has often told me was our firmest friend, may stay at home, and learn from the newspapers the fate of his Prince !' c No !' said Locheil, stung by so poignant a reproach, and hurried away by the enthusiasm of the moment ; c I will share the fate of my Prince ; and so shall every man over whom nature or fortune has given me any power.' Such was the juncture upon which de- pended the civil war of 1745 ; for it is a point agreed, says Mr Home, who narrates this conversation, that if Locheil had persisted in his refusal to take arms, no other chief would have joined the standard, and l the spark of rebellion must have been instantly extinguished.' 2 1 Home's Works, iii. 7« 2 Mr Home's account of this affair harmonises with all besides that we know of the reckless ardour of the young Prince, and the cautious reluctance of the principal chiefs. We may therefore receive it as in the main true. THE GATHERING. 39 Locheil immediately returned home, and proceeded to raise his clan, as did some other gentlemen, whom Charles then prevailed upon to join him. It being' now settled that he was to erect his standard at Glenfinnin on the 19th of August, he despatched letters on the 6th of the month to all the friendly chiefs, informing them of his resolution, and desiring them to meet him at the time and place mentioned. In the meantime Clanranald, returned from his unsuccessful mission to Skye, actively set about raising his own clan. >^ Charles removed, about the 11th of August, from the farm-house of Borodale to the mansion of Kinlochmoidart. situated seven miles off. While he and his company went by sea, with the baggage and artillery, the guard of Clan- ranald Macdonalds, which had been already appointed about his person, marched by the more circuitous route along the shore of the intervening bays. At Kinlochmoidart 1 he was joined by Mr John Murray of Broughton, who has already been mentioned as an emissary of the Prince to his Scottish friends, and who, after waiting during June to warn him from the west coast, had afterwards returned to his house in Peeblesshire. Mr Murray, who was a man of good talents and education, had now once more come to the Highlands, in order to join an enterprise which it was too late to think of stopping. From this time he acted through- out the campaign as the Prince's secretary. Charles re- mained at Kinlochmoidart till the 18th, when he went by water to Glenaladale, the seat of another chieftain of the clan Macdonald, upon the brink of Loch Shiel. He was here joined by Gordon of Glenbucket, a veteran partisan, Perhaps, however, the ultimate consent of Locheil was less sudden than is here represented. In the volume entitled Jacobite Memoirs, compiled hy the present author from the papers of Bishop Forbes (p. 22, note), it is stated that Locheil, hefore agreeing to come out, took full security for the value of his estates from the Prince, and that it was to fulfil this engagement that Charles, after the unfortunate conclusion of the enterprise, obtained a French regiment for Locheil. It is scarcely necessary to remark, that the presence of generous feelings does not necessarily forbid that some attention should be paid to the dictates of prudence and caution. Locheil might feel that he had a right to peril his life and connexion with his country, but not the fortune on which the comfort of others besides himself depended, especially in an enterprise of which he had a had opinion, and which he only acceded, to from a romantic deference to the wishes of another person. 1 * As the Prince was setting out for Glenfinnin, I was detached to Ardna- murchan to recruit, and soon returned with fifty clever fellows, who pleased the Prince ; and upon review, his royal highness was pleased to honour me with the command of them , telling me I was the first officer he had made in Scotland. This compliment delighted me exceedingly, and we all vowed to the Almighty that we should live and die with our noble Prince, though all Britain should forsake him but our little regiment alone.' — Macdonald's Journal; Lockhart Papers, ii. 483. 40 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. who had figured in the affair of 1715, and who brought with him a prisoner of the opposite party, in the person of Captain Sweetenham, of Guise's regiment, who had been taken by the Keppoch Macdonalds, while travelling from Ruthven barracks, in Badenoch, to Fort William. From Glenaladale the Prince proceeded next morning, with a company of about five-and-twenty persons, in three boats, to the eastern extremity of Loch Shiel, near which was the place where he designed to raise his standard. Meanwhile an incident had occurred which tended not a little to foment the rising flame of insurrection. The governor of Fort Augustus (a military post, at the dis- tance of forty or fifty miles from Charles's landing-place) concluding, from reports he heard, that the Moidart people were hatching some mischief, thought proper, on the 16th of August, to despatch two companies of the Scots Royals to Fort William, as a reinforcement to awe that rebellious district. The distance between the two forts is twenty-eight miles, and the road runs chiefly along the edge of a moun- tain, which forms one side of the Great Glen, having the sheer height of the hill on one side, and the long narrow lakes, out of which the Caledonian Canal has since been formed, on the other. The men were newly raised, and, besides being inexperienced in military affairs, were unused to the alarming circumstances of an expedition in the High- lands. When they had travelled twenty out of the eight-and- twenty miles, and were approaching High Bridge, a lofty arch over a mountain torrent, they were surprised to hear the sound of a bagpipe, and to discover the appearance of a large party of Highlanders, who were already in possession of the bridge. The object of their alarm was in reality a band of only ten or twelve Macdonalds of Keppoch's clan ; but by skipping and leaping about, displaying their swords and firelocks, and by holding out their plaids between each other, they contrived to make a very formidable appearance. Captain (afterwards General) Scott, who commanded the two companies, ordered an immediate halt, and sent forward a sergeant with his own servant to reconnoitre. These two persons no sooner approached the bridge, than two nimble Highlanders darted out and seized them. Ignorant of the number of the Highlanders, and knowing he was in a dis- affected part of the country, Captain Scott thought it would be better to retreat than enter into hostilities. Accordingly, he ordered his men to face about, and march back again. The Highlanders did not follow immediately, lest they should expose the smallness of their number, but permitted THE GATHERING. 41 the soldiers to get two miles away (the ground being* so far plain and open) before leaving their post. As soon as the retreating party had passed the west end of Loch Lochy, and were entering upon the narrow road between the lake and the hill, out darted the mountaineers, and ascending the rocky precipices above the road, where there was shelter from both bush and stone, began to fire down upon the sol- diers, who only retreated with the greater expedition. The party of Macdonalds who attempted this daring exploit was commanded by Macdonald of Tiendrish, who, having early observed the march of the soldiers, had sent expresses to Locheil and Keppoch, whose houses were only a few miles distant on both sides of High Bridge, for sup- plies of men. They did not arrive in time, but he resolved to attack the party with the few men he had ; and he had thus far succeeded, when the noise of his pieces causing friends in all quarters to fly to arms, he now found himself at the head of a party almost sufficient to encounter the two companies in the open field. When Captain Scott reached the east end of Loch Lochy, he perceived some Highlanders near the west end of Loch Oich, directly in the way before him ; and not liking their appearance, he crossed the isthmus between the lakes, in- tending to take possession of Invergarry Castle, the seat of b^ Macdonell of Glengarry. This movement only increased his difficulties. He had not marched far, when he disco- vered the Macdonells of Glengarry coming clown the oppo- site hill in full force against him. He formed the hollow square, however, and marched on. Presently after, his pursuers were reinforced by the Macdonalds of Keppoch, and increased their pace to such a degree as almost to over- take him. Keppoch himself then advanced alone towards the distressed party, and offered good terms of surrender ; assuring- them that any attempt at resistance, in the midst of so many enemies, would only be the signal for their being cut in pieces. The soldiers, by this time fatigued with a march of thirty miles, had no alternative but to surrender. They had scarcely laid down their arms, when Locheil came up with a body of Camerons from another quarter, and took them under his charge. Two soldiers were slain, and Cap- tain Scott himself was wounded in this scuffle, which had no small effect in raising the spirits of the Highlanders, and encouraging them to commence the war. 1 The gathering of the clans was therefore proceeding with 1 Home's Works, iii. 12. 42 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. great activity, and armed bodies were seen everywhere crossing the country to Glenfinnin, at the time when Charles landed at that place to erect his standard. Glen- finnin is a narrow vale, surrounded on both sides by lofty and craggy mountains, about twenty miles north from Fort William, and as far east from Borodale, forming, in fact, the outlet from Moidart into Lochaber. The place gets its name from the little river Einnin, which runs through it, and falls into Loch Shiel at its extremity. Charles disem- barked with his company from the three boats which had brought them from Glenaladale, at the place where the river discharges itself into the lake. It was eleven in the forenoon, and he expected to find the whole vale alive with the assembled bands which he had appointed to meet him. In this he was disappointed. Only a few natives, the in- habitants of a little village, were there to say l God save him! 7 Some accident, it was concluded, had prevented the arrival of the clans, and he went into one of the neighbour- ing hovels to spend the anxious hours which should inter- vene before they appeared. At length, about an hour after noon, the sound of a pibroch was heard over the top of an opposite hill, and im- mediately after the adventurer was cheered by the sight of a large band of Highlanders in full march down the slope. It was the Camerons, to the amount of 700 or 800, ' All plaided and plumed in their tartan array,' coming forward in two columns of three men abreast, to the spirit-stirring notes of the bagpipe, and enclosing the party of soldiers whom they had just taken prisoners. Elevated by the fine appearance of this clan, and by the auspicious result of the little action just described, Charles set about the business of declaring open war against the elector of Hanover. The spot selected for the rearing of the standard was a little eminence in the centre of the vale. The Marquis of Tullibardine, whose rank entitled him to the honour, pitched himself upon the top of this knoll, supported by two men, on account of his weak state of health. He then flung upon the mountain breeze that flag which, shooting like a streamer from the north, was soon to spread such omens of wo and terror over the peaceful vales of Britain. It was a large banner of red silk, with a white space in the centre, but without the motto of ' Tandem Triumphans/ which has been so often assigned to it— as also the significant emblems of a crown and coffin, with which the terror of England at THE GATHERING. 43 one time adorned it. The appearance of the standard was hailed by a storm of pipe-music, a cloud of skimmering* bonnets, and a loud and enduring shout. Tullibardine then read several documents of an important nature, with which the Prince had provided himself, The first was a declaration, or manifesto, in the name of James VIII., dated at Rome December 23, 1743 ; containing a view of the public grievances of Britain, and expressing an earnest desire to do the utmost to redress them ; calling for this purpose on all his loyal subjects to join his standard as soon as it should be set up ; and promising, in the event of his restoration, to respect all existing institutions, rights, and privileges. The second was a commission of the same date, in which James appointed his son Charles to be prince regent. The third was a manifesto by the Prince, dated at Paris May 16, 1745, declaring that he was now come to execute the will of his father by setting- up the royal stan- dard, and asserting his undoubted right to the throne of his ancestors; offering pardon for all treasons to those who should now take up arms in his behalf, or at the least abjure allegiance to the usurper; calling on the officers of the army and navy to come over to his service, in which case he should pay all their arrears, and reappointing as his servants all public officers whatever who should henceforth act in his name ; commanding payment of all jmblic monies to officers authorised by him ; promising the same respect to existing institutions and privileges as his father ; and, finally, calling on all his father's subjects l to be assist- ing to him in the recovery of his just rights and of their own liberties/ The standard was carried back to the Prince's quarters by a guard of fifty Camerons. 1 About two hours after this solemnity was concluded, Macdonald of Keppoch arrived with 300 of his hardy and warlike clan ; and in the evening, some gentlemen of the name of Macleod came to offer their services, expressing great indignation at the defection of their chief, and pro- posing to return to Skye and raise all the men they could. The army, amounting to about 1200 men, was encamped that evening in Glenfinnin, Sullivan being" appointed quarter-master-general. The insurrection was thus fairly commenced ; and it will 1 Amongst the spectators on this occasion was a lady named Miss Jeany Cameron, who afterwards became the subject of many unfounded popular rumours. She was, in reality, a middle-aged lady, of perfect propriety of de- portment, and after this occasion did not see the Prince any more, except when she met him in public during his stay in Edinburgh. 44 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. now be necessary to advert to the means taken by govern- ment for its suppression, as well as to the state of the coun- try upon which Charles was about to descend. CHAPTER IV. PROCEEDINGS OF GOVERNMENT. Duke F.— Come on ; since the youth will not be intreated, his own peril on his forwardness. As You Like It. At the time when the insurrection broke out, George II. was absent in Hanover, on one of those frequent visits to his paternal dominions which, with great appearance of truth, caused his British subjects to accuse him of being more devoted to the interests of his electorate, than he was to those of the more important empire over which his family had been called to reign. The government was in- trusted, during* his absence, to a regency composed of his principal ministers. So far as the northern section of the island was concerned in the affairs of government, it was then managed by a minister called Secretary of State for Scotland ; and the Marquis of Tweeddale held the office in 1745. The negotiations which the exiled family had constantly carried on with their adherents in Britain, and their in- cessant menaces of invasion, rendered the event which had now taken place by no means unexpected on the part of government, and indeed scarcely alarming. During the whole summer, a report had been flying about the High- lands that Prince Charles was to come over before the end of the season ; l but the king's servants at Edinburgh heard 1 The following piece of intelligence appears in the Scots Magazine for June 1745: — ' One David Gillies, born in Fife, having assumed the name and cha- racter of Charles Stuart, Prince of Wales, went about here privately among weak people, and, by conferring honours and places, 'tis said got a good deal of money. Hearing that warrants were issued for apprehending him, he went to the country, but was taken at Selkirk, and committed to jail, together with his accomplices. The justices of peace of the county, having sent to the crown lawyers for their opinion, were advised that it would be taking too much notice of such a rascal to try him in the Court of Justiciary, and that therefore the justices might punish him as they thought proper. P. S.— On the 2d July [the day when the real prince began his voyage], the justices sentenced the mock prince, who called himself David Hay, together with his court, consisting of two men and two women, to be banished the shire by tuck of drum, attended by the hangman, as vagrants ; which was accordingly executed on the 4th.' PROCEEDINGS OF GOVERNMENT. 45 nothing of it till the 2d of July, when the President of the Court of Session came to Sir John Cope, commander-in- chief of the forces in Scotland, and showed him a letter which he had just received from a Highland gentleman, in- forming him of the rumour, though affecting to give it little credit. Cope instantly sent notice of what he heard to the Marquis of Tweeddale, expressing disbelief in the report, but yet advising that arms should be transmitted to the forts in Scotland, for the use of the well-affected clans, in anticipation of any attempt which might be made. The marquis answered General Cope upon the 9th, ordering him to keep a vigilant eye upon the north, but mentioning that the lords of the regency seemed to decline so alarming a measure as sending arms. Cope replied immediately that he would take all the measures which seemed necessary for his majesty's service, avoiding as much as possible the rais- ing of unnecessary alarm. Some further correspondence took place before the end of the month, in which the zeal and promptitude of this much-ridiculed general appear very conspicuous, while the supineness and security of the regency are just as remarkable. Sir John Cope, whose fortune it was to be Charles's first opponent, and who was regarded by President Forbes as a good officer of his standing, had at present under his com- mand in Scotland two regiments of dragoons, 1 three full regiments of infantry, 2 and fourteen odd companies, 3 to- gether with the standing garrisons of invalids in the various castles and forts. The most of these troops were newly raised, being, indeed, intended for immediate transportation to Flanders ; and it was impossible to place much confidence in them, especially as forming an entire army, without the support of more experienced troops. With this little army, nevertheless, Cope found himself obliged to undertake a campaign ag'ainst the formidable bands of the north. He received a letter from the Scottish secretary on the 3d of August, announcing that the young chevalier, as Charles was called, had really left France in order to invade Scotland, and was even said to have already 1 Gardiner's, lying at Stirling, Linlithgow, Musselburgh, Kelso, and Dunse ; and Hamilton's, quartered at Haddington, Dunse, and adjacent places. Their horses, as was then the custom, were placed at grass in the parks near the quarters of the men. 2 Guise's regiment of foot at Aberdeen, Murray's in the Highland forts, and Lascelles's at Edinburgh and Leith. 3 Five of Lees's at Dumfries, Stranraer, Glasgow, and Stirling ; two of the Scots Royals (taken by Keppoch's men) ; two of the Scots Fusiliers at Glas- gow ; two of Lord Semple's at Cupar, in Fife ; and three of Lord John Mur- ray's at Crieff. 46 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. landed there ; commanding him to make such a disposition of his forces as to be ready at a moment's notice ; and pro- mising immediately to send him down the supply of arms he formerly requested. On the 8th he received a letter from the Lord Justice-Clerk (Milton), then residing at Rose- neath, enclosing another letter, dated the 5th instant, which had just been transmitted to Mr Campbell of Stonefield, sheriff of Argyle, by Mr Campbell of Aird (factor in Mull to the Duke of Argyle) ; which letter g*ave him almost certain intelligence of the Prince's landing. Next morning 1 , the 9th, Cope was shown by the Lord President another letter, confirming the news; and he sent all these papers to London, as the best means of rousing the slumbering energies of government. Without waiting for this communication, the Lords Regent published on the 6th of August a proclamation, offering £30,000 for the person of the young chevalier, whom they announced to have sailed from France for the purpose of invading Britain. This proclamation proceeded upon an act of George I., by which the blood of James Stuart, and of his children, was attainted, and themselves outlawed. Charles, on learning the price offered for his life, issued from his camp at Kinlochiel (August 22) a pro- clamation expressing great indignation at 4 so insolent an attempt,' and offering a like sum for the person of the Elector of Hanover. Charles's first idea is said to have been to propose only £30 for the latter object ; but ultimately he was induced to offer the same sum which the government had placed upon his own head. It is amusing to observe, in the newspapers of the period, the various reports which agitated the public mind, and, above all, the uncertainty and meagreness of the intelli- gence which reached Edinburgh regarding Charles's trans- actions in Lochaber. On the 5th of August, it is mentioned in the Edinburgh Courant that the Prince had left France. Next day, it is reported, as a quotation from some foreign journal, that he had actually landed in the Highands, and was sure of 30,000 men and ten ships of war. No other intelligence of note is observable till the 22d, when it is stated that two Glasgow vessels, in their way home from Virginia, had touched somewhere in the north-west High- lands, and learned that the dreaded Pretender was actually there, with 10,000 men, and had sent word to the governor of Fort William l that he would give him his breakfast that morning .' The uncertainty which long prevailed in Edin- burgh regarding the proceedings in Lochaber, shows, in PROCEEDINGS OF GOVERNMENT. 47 a striking manner, how difficult it was to obtain correct intelligence in those days from a district which now would be considered as distant little more than a day's journey. In projecting* measures against the threatened insurrec- tion, Sir John Cope had all along held counsel with those civil officers who, ever since the Union, have exercised in- fluence over the affairs of Scotland — the Lord President of the Court of Session, the Lord Justice-Clerk, the Lord Ad- vocate, and the Solicitor- General. The gentlemen who held the two first of these offices — Duncan Forbes, and Andrew Fletcher — were men of not only the purest patriotism and loyalty, but of good understanding and attainments. Dun- can Forbes, in particular, from his intimate acquaintance with the Highlanders, of whom he had previously converted many to government, seemed well qualified to direct the operations of a campaign against that people. The advice of all these gentlemen tended to this effect — that Sir John Cope should march as fast as possible into the Highlands, in order to crush the insurrection before it reached any height. It is very probable 1 that this advice was dictated by a feeling* of humanity towards the insur- gents, many of whom were the intimate friends and asso- ciates of the advisers. Forbes seems to have wished, by this means, at once to repress those who had risen, before go- vernment should become exasperated against them, and to prevent as many as possible from joining, who, he was sure, would soon do so if the enterprise was not immediately checked. The counsel was more honourable in its motive than prudent in policy. The royal army was not only in- ferior in numbers to that which Charles was believed to have drawn together, but had to contend with all the dis- advantages of a campaign in an enemy's country, and on ground unsuitable for its evolutions : would first have to drag its way slowly over rugged wildernesses, with a clog- of baggage and provisions behind it, and then perhaps fight in a defile, where it would be gradually cut to pieces, or, what was as bad, permit the enemy to slip past and descend upon the low country, which it ought to have protected. The advice was even given in defiance of experience. The Duke of Argyle, in 1715, by guarding the pass into the Lowlands at Stirling, prevented the much superior army of Marr from disturbing the valuable part of the kingdom, and eventually was able to paralyse and confound the whole of that enterprise. 1 Probable from the tenor of their letters.— See Culloden Papers. 48 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Cope is conjectured by Mr Home, 1 though the fact is not so obvious, to have been confirmed in his desire of prompt measures by a piece of address on the part of the Jacobites. These gentlemen, who were very numerous in Edinburgh, remembering perhaps the precedent alluded to, and knowing that Charles, with a small supply of money, would not be able to keep the Highlanders long together in their own country, conceived it to be their best policy to precipitate a meeting between the two armies. They therefore contrived, it is said, that Sir John Cope, who seemed to have no opi- nions of his own, but consulted everybody he met, should be urg-ed to perform the march he proposed, as the measure most likely to quell the insurrection, which, it was hinted hy these insidious advisers, wanted nothing but a little time to become formidable. Thus advised, and thus perhaps deluded, Sir John Cope rendezvoused his raw troops at Stirling, and sent off a letter to the Scottish secretary, requesting permission to march immediately against the rebels. The reasons which he gave for his proposal seemed so strong in the eyes of the Lords Regent, that they not only agreed to it, but expressly ordered him to march to the north and engage the enemy, whatever might be his strength, or wherever he might be found. This order reached Sir John at Edinburgh on the 19th of August, the very day when Charles reared his standard ; and Cope set out that day for Stirling, to put himself at the head of his little army. Next day the commander-in-chief commenced his fatal march. His force consisted of twenty-five companies of foot, amounting in all to 1400 men ; for he had left the two regiments of dragoons behind, on account of their presumed unfitness for a Highland campaign. He carried with him four pieces of cannon (one and a half pounders), as many cohorns, and a thousand stand of arms, to be given to the native troops which he expected to join him as he went along. Besides a large quantity of baggage, he was followed by a train of black cattle, with butchers to kill them as re- quired ; and he had as much bread and biscuit as would serve for twenty-one days ; for the production of which, all the bakers in Edinburgh, Leith, and Stirling had been working for a week. 2 It was Sir John's intention to march to Fort Augustus, the central fort of the three which are pitched along the i Works, iii. 28. Mr Home adds, that he was assured of the fact by the Jacobites themselves. 2 Report of Cope's Trial. PROCEEDINGS OF GOVERNMENT. 49 Great Glen. He considered this the most advantageous post that could be occupied by the king r s army, because it was in the centre of the disaffected country, and ad- mitted of a ready communication with the adjacent places of strength. He accordingly adopted that military road through the middle of the "Highlands which, stretching athwart the Grampians, is so remarkable in the memory of all travellers for its lonely desolation in summer, and its dangerous character when the ground is covered with snow. His first day's march was to Crieff, where he was obliged to halt till he should be overtaken by 100 horse-loads of bread that had been left at Stirling*. Having previously written to the Duke of Athole, LoroTGlenorchy (son of the Earl of Breadalbane), and other loyal chiefs, desiring them to raise their men, the first of these noblemen here visited him ; but the chief of Athole, though disposed to preserve his estate by keeping on good terms with government, was by no means so ardently loyal as to take arms in its defence. Cope was then, for the first time, shaken in his hope of gaining accessions of strength as he went along — the hope which had mainly induced him to go north with so small an army ; and he would have gladly returned to Stirling, had not the orders of government, as he afterwards acknow- ledged, 1 been so peremptory for a contrary course. Lord Glenorchy waited upon the disconcerted general on the afternoon of the same day, and gave him additional pain, by the intelligence that he could not gather his men in proper time. He then saw fit to send back 700 of his spare arms to Stirling. Advancing on the 22d to Amulree, on the 23d to Tay Bridge, on the 24th to Trinifuir, and on the 25th to Dal- nacardoch, the difficulties of a Highland campaign became gradually more and more apparent to the unhappy general, whose eyes were at the same time daily opened wider and wider to the secret disaffection of the Highlanders. His baggage-horses were stolen in the night from their pastures, so that he was obliged to leave hundreds of his bread-bags behind him. Those who took charge of this important de- posit, though they promised to send it after him, contrived that it should never reach its destination, or at least not until it was useless. He was also played upon and dis- tracted by all sorts of false intelligence ; so that he at last could not trust to the word of a single native, gentleman or commoner. 1 Report of Cope's Trial, 17. VOL. V. D 50 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. When at the lonely inn of Dalnacardoch, he was met by Captain Sweetenhain, the officer already mentioned as hav- ing" been taken by the insurgents ; who, after witnessing the erection of the standard, had been discharged upon his parole, and now brought Cope the first certain intelligence he had received regarding the real state of the enemy. Sweetenham had left them when their numbers were 1400 ; he had since met many more who were marching to the rendezvous ; and as he passed Dalwhinnie, the last stage, he had been informed by Macintosh of Borlum that they were now 3000 strong, and were marching to take posses- sion of Corriearrack. Cope soon after received a letter from President Forbes (now at his house of Culloden, near Inver- ness), confirming the latter part of Captain Sweetenham's intelligence. Corriearrack, of which the insurgents were about to take possession, is a lofty and wide-spreading mountain, inter- posed betwixt Cope's present position and Fort Augustus, and over which lay the road he was designing to take. This road, which had recently been formed under the care of General Wade, ascends the steep sides of the mountain by seventeen traverses, each of which leads the traveller but a small way forward in the actual course of his journey. It was the most dangerous peculiarity of the hill, in the present case, that the deep ditch or water-course along* the side of the road afforded many positions in which an enemy could be intrenched to the teeth, so as to annoy the ap- proaching army without the risk of being annoyed in re- turn ; and that, indeed, a very small body of resolute men could thus entirely cut off and destroy an army, of what- ever numbers or appointments, acting upon the offensive. It was reported to Sir John Cope that a party of the High- landers was to wait for him at the bridge of Snugborough, one of the most dangerous passes in the mountain, and that, while he was there actively opposed, another body, marching round by a path to the west, and coming in be- hind, should completely enclose him, as between two fires, and in all probability accomplish his destruction. 1 The royal army had advanced to Dalwhinnie, about twenty miles distant from the summit of Corriearrack, when the general received this intelligence ; and so press- ing had his dilemma then become, that he conceived it improper to move farther without calling a council of war. It was on the morning of the 27th of August that this 1 Report of Cope's Trial, 24. PROCEEDINGS OF GOVERNMENT. 51 meeting took place, at which various proposals were made and considered for the farther conduct of the army. All agreed, in the first place, that their original design of marching over Corriearrack was impracticable. To remain where they were was needless, as the insurgents could slip down into the Lowlands by other roads. Two objections lay against the measure which seemed most obvious, that of marching back again — namely, the orders of government, so express in favour of a northward march, and an imme- diate encounter with the enemy, and the likelihood of the Highlanders intercepting them in their retreat by breaking down the bridges and destroying the roads. The only other course was to turn aside towards Inverness, where they had a prospect of being joined by some loyal clans, and in which case they might expect that the insurgents would scarcely dare to descend upon the Lowlands, as such a course would necessarily leave their own country exposed to the vengeance of an enemy. In reality, as the event showed, the proper course on this occasion would have been to fall back on some convenient post near the frontier of the low country, there to make a determined stand against the clans, as the Duke of Argyle had done in 1715. Yet this expedient was supported by only one voice in the council. It was at last unanimously agreed to turn aside to Inverness — thus leaving the valuable part of the country completely exposed, and sacrificing a real object for the mere sake of obeying- the letter of an order given, probably, in the contemplation of totally different circumstances. Sir John, having taken care to get the seals-manual of his companions to the resolution, issued orders to alter the route of the army. The van had reached Blairobeg, three and a half miles south of Garva- more Inn, and ten miles from Corriearrack, and the rear was at Catlaig, four miles behind, when the troops were ordered to halt, face about, and, retracing their steps, turn off by the road which parts to the east at the last-mentioned place, and proceeds by Ruthven to Inverness. 1 In order to deceive the enemy, who lay upon the top of Corriearrack expecting his approach, the general caused a small portion of his army to advance, with the camp-colours flying, towards the hill, under the semblance of an advanced guard, with orders to overtake the main body with all speed, when they had allowed time for it to get half a day's 1 * Two rowan-trees (mountain-ashes) mark the place where Sir John Cope's army faced about, and avoided an action with the rebels.'— Home. 52 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. march upon its new route. He arrived, by forced marches, at Inverness upon the 29th, without having rested a single day since he left Crieff. CHAPTER V. Charles's descent upon the lowlands. Rouse, rouse, ye kilted warriors ! Rouse, ye heroes of the north ! Rouse and join your chieftains' banners ; 'Tis your Prince that leads you forth. Jacobite Song. At Glennnnin, where the standard had been raised on the 19th, the Prince spent two happy days. So at least we are assured they were by Major Macdonald of Tiendrish, who, when confined in the castle of Edinburgh, told Bishop Forbes c that he had never seen the Prince more cheerful at any time, and in higher spirits, than when he had got. together four or iiYe hundred men about the standard.' He then removed to Kinlochiel — that is, the head of Loch Eil — in the country of the chief of the Camerons. The retaliatory proclamation, offering £30,000 for the person of the reigning king, was i given in our camp at Kinlochiel, August the 22d.' He lodged on the night of Friday the 23d at Fassefern, on the side of Loch Eil, the residence of the young chief's brother. Loch Eil is a branch of Loch Linnhe, the arm of the sea on which Fort William is situated : it was therefore liable to a hostile inroad from the nautical craft of the enemy. A war-vessel having actually appeared at Fort William, the chevalier removed across a hill to Moy, a village on the river Lochy, belonging to the Came- rons. He was now daily receiving intelligence of Cope's northern progress from deserters who nightly left the camp of that general, in order to join their respective clans. On the 26th he crossed the Lochy, and advanced to Letterfinlay, a lonely inn on the brink of Loch Lochy ; he was joined on the way (at Low Bridge) by the Stuarts of Appin, 260 in number, under the command of Stuart of Ardshiel. About midnight, an express arrived from Gor- don of Glenbucket, informing him that Cope had advanced into Badenoch, and was designing to cross Corriearrack ; immediately on which, though the night was extremely Charles's descent upon the lowlands. 53 stormy, he gave orders for his men to go forward and take possession of the hill, and went himself to Invergarry Castle, where he spent the remainder of the nig'ht. At Invergarry he was visited by Fraser of Gortuleg, on a secret embassy from Lord Lovat. This nobleman, now advanced to the seventy-eighth year of his age, was chief of the clan Fraser, and possessed large estates in Inverness- shire : he was able to bring several hundred men into the field. Discontented with the government, and well-inclined to the Stuart family, he was yet disposed to act with great caution. Gortuleg therefore excused the personal presence of the chief on account of his age, but recommended Charles to march into his country of Stratherrick, and raise the Frasers ; at the same time he asked for a patent which had been promised by the old chevalier, creating Lovat a duke, and begged to have an order for seizing the President Forbes dead or alive. The patent chanced to be left behind with the baggage, and was therefore not forthcoming : the Prince so far complied with the other request, as to g'ive an order for seizing the person of the Lord President. "With this Gortuleg returned to his chief. He is found, two days after, writing- a friendly letter to the President, in which he only adverts to his having seen some of the insurgent chiefs at Invergarry, and seems anxious to serve the government by communicating the information he had thus acquired. We shall see more of the crooked policy of Lovat in the sequel. Next day, the 27th, while the royal officers were deter- mining upon their evasive march to Inverness, Charles and his army, now augmented by the Macdonells of Glengarry and Grants of Glenmorriston to 1800 men, proceeded to the foot of Corriearrack, the summit of which was already in possession of the party which had been sent forward the night before. The Prince, always the most eager man of the whole army, is said by Fraser of Gortuleg-, in his letter to the Lord President, to have i called that morning for his Highland clothes, and, tying the latchets of his shoes, solemnly declared that he would be up with Mr Cope be- fore they were unloosed.' The insurgents were informed of Cope's evasive movement by a soldier of the clan Cameron, who deserted in order to convey the intelligence, as soon as he perceived the army turn off at Catlaig. They hailed the news with a loud shout of exultation ; and the Prince, call- ing for a glass of brandy, and ordering every man one of usquebaugh, drank, i To the health of good Mr Cope, and may every general in the usurper's service prove himself as much 54 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. our friend as he has done ! \ * They then descended the steep traverses upon the south side of Corriearrack, with the rapid steps and eager countenances of men who give chase. It was the first wish of the Highland army on this occa- sion that Johnny Cope, as they called him, should be pur- sued, and he and his men cut to pieces. However, when they reached Garvamore, the first stage from the bottom of the hill, it was determined, by a council of war, that the unfortunate general should be left to the consequences of his own false step at Inverness, and that they should proceed in the meantime to take advantage of his desertion of the Lowlands. They were confirmed in this resolution by Mr Murray of Broughton, who represented that, by the in- fluence of the Jacobites in Edinburgh, they would gain easy possession of that capital, and thus give as much eclat to their arms as might be expected from the achievement of a victory. It also appeared that, by this course, if they left the Frasers, the Macintoshes, and other northern clans, whom they expected to join them, the Marquis of Tullibardine would raise the men of Athole before the duke his brother had time to interest them in the cause of government. It was more particularly at this juncture that Charles's enterprise assumed that bold and romantic character for which it was destined to be so remarkable. Having once made the resolution to descend upon the low countries, he did so with spirit and rapidity. Two days sufficed to carry him through the alpine region of Badenoch ; another to open up to his view the pleasant vale of Athole, which might be considered as the avenue into the fertile country he was invading. He seems to have acted entirely like a man who has undertaken a high and hazardous affair, which he is resolved to carry through with all his spirit and address. Nature and education had alike qualified him for such an enterprise. Originally gifted with a healthy and robust constitution, he had taken care to inure himself to a hardy and temperate mode of life ; had instructed him- self in all kinds of manly exercises ; and, in particular, had made himself a first-rate pedestrian by hunting a-foot over the plains of Italy. 2 The Highlanders were astonished to find themselves overmatched at running, wrestling, leap- ing, and even at their favourite exercise of the broadsword, 1 Henderson's History of the Rebellion, 34. 2 Boswell's Tour to the Hebrides (2d ed.), 231. In his march through the Highlands to meet Cope, he walked sixteen Scottish miles one day, in boots, fatiguing the hardiest of his companions. The men, hearing that one of his boots had lost a heel, said they were glad of it, as he would now be obliged to walk more at leisure.— Donald Cameron's Narrative, Lyon in Mourning, Charles's descent upon the lowlands. 55 by the slender stranger of the distant lands ; but their asto- nishment gave place to admiration and affection, when they discovered that Charles had adopted all these exercises out of compliment to them, and that he might some day show himself, as he said, a true Highlander. By walking, more- over, every day's march alongside one or other of their corps, inquiring into their family histories, songs, and legends, he succeeded in completely fascinating the hearts of this simple people, who could conceive no greater merit upon earth than accomplishment in the use of arms, accom- panied by a taste for tales of ancient glory. The enthu- siastic and devoted attachment with which he succeeded in inspiring them, was such as no subsequent events could ever altogether extinguish. Half a century after, when age might have been supposed to deaden their early feelings, his surviving fellow-adventurers rarely spoke of him with- out a sigh or a tear. At Dalwhinnie, where the army cheerfully bivouacked, along with their young leader, on the open moor, a party who had gone upon an unsuccessful expedition against the small government fort of Ruthven, 1 brought in Macpher- son of Cluny, chief of that clan, and son-in-law of Lord Lovat — a man of vigorous character, and one whose acces- sion to the cause at such a moment would have been of considerable importance. He had accepted a command under government, and only the day before attended Sir John Cope at Dalwhinnie, and received orders to embody his clan, in which there were about 300 lighting men ; but he was in reality a partisan of the Stuart family, though, under the present circumstances, not decided to take up arms in its behalf. He was conducted to Charles as a kind of honourable prisoner, and carried along with the army to Perth, whence he returned to raise his clan for the cheva- lier. The same cautious policy which has been attributed to Locheil, is said to have been followed by Cluny. Before consenting to join the Prince, he demanded and obtained from him security for the full value of his estate, lest the expedition should prove unsuccessful. 2 Let not this policy 1 ' In this route, Lochgary, Dr Cameron, and O'Sullivan, were sent to Ruthven, in Badenoch, to take the barracks. Neither side had any cannon. The Highland party endeavoured to set fire to the door ; hut the soldiers fired through holes in the door, killed one man, and mortally wounded two more ; and then the party retired. This garrison consisted only of twelve men, com- manded by Sergeant Molloy.'— Journal of Mneas Macdonald, Forbes Papers, in possession of the author. 2 Young Glengarry communicated this fact, which he said he had from Cluny's own mouth, to Bishop Forbes in April 1752.— Jacobite Memoirs, p. 22. 56 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. be regarded as detracting* too much from any merit of self- sacrifice hitherto attributed to these men. It might appear to them as not only justified, but demanded, in consequence of the failure of the Prince to bring* foreign aid. And, after all, the purchase-money of a Highland gentleman's estate was but a small part of what he risked on this occa- sion, seeing that, in the first place, he took the common hazards of war ; in the second, risked the pains of treason ; and, after these, the loss of his home and country, in which was included all that was enviable in the state and circum- stance of one who enjoyed the veneration, and could control the actions, of perhaps a thousand of his fellow-creatures. As the mountain host descended upon the plain, they were joined, like one of their own rivers, by accessions of strength at the mouths of all the little glens which they passed. But while many of the people joined, and prepared to join them, a very considerable number of the landed pro- prietors fled at their approach ; among the rest, the Duke of Athole. In the absence of this nobleman from his house at Blair, his brother, the Marquis of Tullibardine, took posses- sion of it as his own ; and here Charles spent the night of the 30th of August. Along with Charles, the marquis undertook on this occasion to entertain all the Highland chiefs ; and the supper which he gave was suitable to the distinguished character of the guests. During the evening, it is said, the Prince exerted himself to appear cheerful, though the anxiety arising from his circumstances occa- sionally drew a shade of thoughtfulness over his otherwise sprightly features. He partook only of the dishes which are supposed to be peculiar to Scotland ; and, in pursuance of the same line of policy which induced him to walk in tartan at the head of his troops, attempted to drink the healths of the chiefs in the few words of Gaelic which he had already picked up. To the Marquis of Tullibardine, who, as a gentleman of the old school, always talked in broad Scotch, he addressed himself in similar language; and in all his deportment, he showed an evident anxiety to conciliate and please those among* whom his lot was cast. 1 Observing the guard which his host had placed in the lobby to be constantly peeping in, he affected a desire of enjoying the open air ; and walking out into the lobby, gratified the poor Highlanders with a view of his person, which they had not previously seen, on account of their recent arrival at the house. 2 1 Henderson's History of the Rebellion. 36. 2 Tradition in Athole. Charles's descent upon the lowlands. 57 The morning" after his arrival at Blair, he reviewed his troops. Some whom he had lately seen around him being now wanting, he despatched a few of his officers to bring them forward to Blair, when it was found that their only* reason for lingering behind was, that they had been denied the satisfaction of pursuing General Cope ! At Blair he spent two days, during which he was joined by Lord Nairn, a cadet of the great house of Athole, and by several gentle- men of the country. At Lude, the seat of a chieftain of the clan Robertson, to which he next proceeded, he was very cheerful, and took his share in several dances, including minuets and Highland reels. A faithful chronicler informs us that the first tune he called for was the well-known Jacobite one, * This is no my ain house ' — referring to the alien character of all political arrangements since 1688. 1 Proceeding down the Blair or Plain of Athole, he arrived on the 3d at Dunkeld, and next day he dined at Nairn House, between that town and Perth. Here i some of the company happened to observe what a thoughtful state his father would now be in, from the consideration of those dangers and difficulties he had to encounter, and that upon this account he was much to be pitied. The Prince replied that he did not half so much pity his father as his brother ; " for," said he, " the king has been inured to disappoint- ments and distresses, and has learned to bear up easily under the burdens of life ; but poor Harry ! his young and tender years make him much to be pitied, for few brothers love as we do.'" 2 This evening he entered Perth, where a party of his troops had already proclaimed his father and himself as re- spectively king and regent. He rode on this occasion the horse which had been given to him by Major Macdonald of Tiendrish, and was attended by a cavalcade of gentlemen, amongst whom were the Duke of Perth, Oliphant of Gask, and Mercer of Aldie, who had joined him as he passed through their estates. Well-mounted, and attired in a handsome suit of tartan trimmed with gold-lace, he made a very good appearance. The people, dazzled by the no- velty of the spectacle, hailed him with acclamations, and conducted him in a kind of triumph to the lodgings which had been prepared for him in the house of a Jacobite noble- man. This was the first town of consequence which Charles had yet arrived at, and he had every reason to be satisfied with his reception ; although the magistrates had thought 1 Duncan Cameron's Narrative, Jacobite Memoirs. 2 The same. 58 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. proper to leave their charge, and disappear on the preceding evening. A fair being held at the time in Perth, there were many strangers present, to join in the novel and agitated feelings with which this singular scene was con- templated. The house appropriated for Charles's residence was that of the Viscount Stormont, 1 elder brother to the elegant William Murray, who afterwards became Chief Justice of the King's Bench and Earl of Mansfield. Stormont, like his brother, and all the rest of the family, was a Jacobite at heart, but one who did not feel inclined to risk life and pro- perty in the cause. He did not choose to be present on this occasion to entertain the Prince ; but no attentions were wanting on the part of his household ; and one of his sisters is said to have spread down a bed for Prince Charlie with her own fair hands. 2 The neighbouring seaport of Dundee, though not in the Prince's line of march, was of too much importance to escape notice on this occasion. That very evening Charles despatched Keppoch and Clanranald with a party of Mac- donalds, who, entering the town about daybreak next morn- ing, captured two vessels in the harbour, containing arms and ammunition, which they immediately sent to Perth for the use of the army. The i Duke of Perth,' who had joined the Prince before he reached that town, was, strictly speaking, only James Drummond, proprietor of large estates in Perthshire, and representative of the Drummonds, Earls of Perth, one of the most distinguished of the noble families of Scotland. His grandfather, James, fourth Earl of Perth, had followed the fortunes of James II., and been created a duke at St Germains. The son of this nobleman, joining the insur- rection in 1715, was attainted, so that, at his father's death 1 It was an antique house with a wooden front, standing upon the site of the present Perth Union Bank, near the bottom of the High Street. 2 Information from the late John Young, Esq., W.S., Castle Street, Edin- burgh. Mr Young, as the son of a non-jurant clergyman in Fife, was likely to be correctly informed on such matters. The Stormont family relaxed in their Jacobitism as the great man of their family advanced in legal and state honours ; for which, it may be supposed, the more faithful of the remnants of the party did not like them the better. One day, early in the reign of George III., Hamilton of Kilbrachmont, in Fife, a most determined old par- tisan, and a good deal soured in his temper, calling upon the Misses Murray, was much annoyed at the ostentation with which the good ladies paraded a few portraits of members of the royal family, which had been sent to them by their brother. The irritation was completed by their speaking of the great personages represented as ' the people above.' * People above ! ' exclaimed old Hamilton—' fient nor they were up the lum ! ' Lum being chimney in English. And, thus saying, he flung out of the house. CHARLES'S DESCENT UPON THE LOWLANDS. 09 in 1716, the titles became dormant. But the estates having: been previously transferred to his infant son, were preserved for the benefit of that person, who now lived upon them, boldly assuming the title which had been conferred by James II. upon his grandfather. The so-called duke was thirty-two years of age, brave, frank, and liberal, but dis- liked by many on account of his profession of the Catholic faith, in which he had been reared by a remarkably enthu- siastic mother. When Charles was in the West Highlands, a warrant was issued for the seizure of the duke, and two Highland officers, Sir Patrick Murray of Auchtertyre, and Mr Campbell of Inverary, undertook to execute it. under circumstances extremely discreditable to them. Having asked themselves to his house to dinner, he invited them to come in the kindest terms, as friends and neighbours, and entertained them hospitably. Meanwhile they had ordered a military party to surround the house, and when all was prepared, they announced their warrant. The duke with difficulty restrained his temper, and told them he would step into a closet off the dining-room, to prepare himself to go with them. They, trusting that he could not escape, as- sented. He instantly went down a back stair, through his gardens, and into the adjoining wood, crawling on hands and knees to avoid being seen by the sentinels. Fortunately, he found a horse, though without a saddle, and only hal- tered, on which he rode to the house of his friend Moray of Abercairney. 1 Having thus escaped the fangs of the go- vernment, by which he should otherwise have been held in restraint till after the insurrection was over, he was now by no means less eager than before to promote the cause of the house of Stuart, by personal service, and the aid of his numerous dependents, who of themselves nearly formed a regiment. Charles received considerable reinforcements at Perth. Viscount Strathallan, a cadet of the Drummond family, Lord Ogilvie, son of the Earl of Airlie, and John Roy Stuart, a gentleman of Speyside, and the beau ideal of a clever Highland officer, 2 were amongst the most conspicuous per- 1 Jacobite Memoirs, 16. 2 John Roy was the son of the Baron of Kincardine on the Spey, and line- ally descended from Robert II., the first of the Stuart kings. He was in the prime of life, an excellent soldier, and also a writer of verses, both English and Gaelic, many of which are still traditionally preserved in the Highlands. An old Highland woman, a few years ago (1827), describing John Roy's per- son, which she had seen, said that his eye in particular was very fine — her expression was, like the eye of a horse— of course an exaggeration, yet marking a feature of no common size and brilliancv. 60 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. sons of note who here joined him : the last-mentioned gentleman brought with him from abroad some very agree- able letters from persons of importance, promising assist- ance. 1 He had already been joined by the tenants of Lord Nairn, and the Lairds of Gask and Aldie. The Robertsons of Struan, Blairfitty, and Cushievale, the Stuarts who in- habited the uplands of Perthshire, and many of the tenants of the Duke of A thole, raised by the Marquis of Tullibar- dine, now poured themselves into the tide of insurrection. In raising- the men of lower Perthshire, considerable diffi- culties were experienced by the chiefs and landlords. The Duke of Perth having ordered his tenants to contribute a man for every plough, is said, though with extremely little probability, to have shot one refractory person, in order to enforce his orders among the rest. Tullibardine, from the equivocal nature of his title, found still greater difficulty in raising the tenants upon those estates which he conceived to be his own. But perhaps no one experienced so much difficulty in his levies as the good Laird of Gask, though he was at the same time perhaps the person of all others the most anxious to provide men for the service of his beloved Prince. This enthusiastic Jacobite was, it seems, so ex- tremely incensed at the resistance he received from some of his tenants, that he laid an arrestment or inhibition upon their corn-fields, by way of trying if their interest would not oblige them to comply with his request. The case was still at issue, when Charles, in marching from Perth, ob- served the corn hanging dead ripe, and inquired the reason. He was informed that Gask had not only prohibited his tenants from cutting their grain, but would not permit their cattle to be fed upon it, so that these creatures were abso- lutely starving. He instantly leaped from the saddle, ex- claiming, ' This will never do/ and began to gather a quantity of the corn. Giving this to his horse, he said to those that were by that he had thus broken Gask's inhibi- tion, and the farmers might now, upon his authority, pro- ceed to put the produce of their fields to its proper use. 2 When Charles entered Perth, he had only a single guinea in his pocket. 3 During his march hitherto, he had freely given his chiefs what sums they thought necessary for the subsistence of the men; and his purse was now exhausted, but fortunately at a moment when it was in his power to replenish it. By sending detachments of his men to various 1 A Mr Johnstone, who afterwards wrote a memoir of the insurrection, also joined the Prince at Perth. 2 Tradition. 3 Home's Works, iii. 43. Charles's descent upon the lowlands. 61 towns at no great distance, he raised some of the public money ; and several of his Edinburgh friends now came in with smaller, but less reluctant subsidies. From the city of Perth he exacted £500. Perhaps the most important accession to his force which Charles received at Perth was that of Lord George Murray, whom his brother, the Marquis of Tullibardine, brought down from Athole the day after the army entered the city. This gentleman was advanced to middle age, and had been in arms for the Stuarts at the affair of Glenshiel in 1719. Having served abroad since, in the Sardinian service, he possessed considerable military experience ; but his talents and enterprising character were such as to render knowledge of his profession comparatively a matter of secondary moment. Charles had so much confidence in his abilities, as immediately to make him lieutenant-general of his army — a trust for which he soon proved himself admirably qualified. 1 Charles was compelled to linger eight days at Perth, by the double necessity of providing himself with money, and gathering the Perthshire clans together. He did not, how- ever, spend his time in vain. He seized this opportunity of reducing the ill-assorted elements of his army to some kind of order, and exerted himself to get the men instructed in the various evolutions of military discipline. The sturdy mountaineers were, as may be easily imagined, somewhat intractable, displaying great inaptitude in the conventional rules by which a whole body is to be governed, though, at the same time, every individual evinced a readiness and dexterity in the use of his own arms far beyond what is seen in ordinary soldiers. At a review held on the North Inch, a common near the town (September 7,) Charles was observed to smile occasionally at the awkwardness of their general motions ; at the same time he complimented their agility and wild elegance by calling them 'his stags? 2 Lord George Murray now took some pains to furnish the men with many things which, though they make but a poor appearance in a romantic narrative, are yet emi- nently useful during the actual progress of a campaign. Amongst these were provisions, and the means of carrying them. He caused each man to be provided with a sacken knapsack, large enough to carry a peck of oatmeal — the food chiefly depended upon by these hardy soldiers. He also 1 Lord George Murray was paternal grandfather to the late Duke of Athole. 2 Henderson's History of the Rebellion, 37. 62 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. took measures for supplying* meal and knapsacks to the clans who were on their march to join the Prince. By no other means could this little army have long" been kept together. It would almost appear that Charles occupied himself so closely in business while at Perth, as to have little time for amusement. Not only did he make a point of rising* early every morning" to drill his troops, but it is told of him that, being* one night invited to a ball by the gentlewomen of Perth, he had no sooner danced one measure, than he made his bow, and hastily withdrew, alleging* the necessity of visiting* his sentry-posts. From a newspaper of the time, 1 it appears that he attended divine service on Sunday the 8th of September, when a Mr Armstrong, probably a clergyman of the Scottish Episcopal Church, preached from the text (Isaiah, xiv. 1, 2.) — i For the Lord will have mercy on Jacob, and will yet choose Israel, and set them in their own land : and the strangers shall be joined with them, and they shall cleave to the house of Jacob. And the people shall take them, and bring* them to their place ; and the house of Israel shall possess them in the land of the Lord for servants and handmaids : and they shall take them captives, whose captives they were ; and they shall rule over their oppressors.' The nature of the discourse may be easily conjectured from the text. It is said that this was the first time the Prince had ever attended a Protestant place of worship. Many of the strangers whom Charles found at Perth attending the fair procured passports from him, to protect their persons and goods in passing through the country. To all these persons he displayed great courteousness of manner. One of them, a linen-draper from London, had some conversation with the youthful adventurer, who de- sired him to inform his fellow-citizens that he expected to see them at St James's in the course of two months. 2 1 The Caledonian Mercury. 2 Edinburgh Evening Courant. ALARM OF EDINBURGH. 63 CHAPTER VI. ALARM OF EDINBURGH. Can you think to front your enemies' revenges with the easy groans of old women, the virginal palms of your daughters, or with the palsied interces- sion of such a weak dotard as you seem to he ? Can you think to "blow out the intended fire of your city with such weak breath as this ? Coriolanus. For upwards of a week after Cope's march into the Highlands, the people of Edinburgh had felt all the anxiety which civilians usually entertain regarding an impending action ; but as yet they expressed little alarm about their own particular safety. The common talk of the day amongst the Whigs was, that Cope would soon l cock up the Pretender's beaver' — that he would speedily 'give a good account of the Highland host' — and other vauntings, indicating great confidence. To speak in another strain was considered treason. Prudence joined with inclination, on the part of the Jacobites, to keep this tone of the public mind undisturbed. They knew it to be Charles's wish that the low countries, and also the government, should be as little alarmed as possible by his proceedings. They there- fore conspired with the zealous Whigs to spread a general impression of his weakness. The better to lull the town, and consequently the whole nation, into security, Charles, or some of his officers, thought proper to despatch a person of gentlemanly rank from their camp in Lochaber, with a report calculated to increase this dangerous confidence. They selected for this purpose James Macgregor, or Drummond, son to the celebrated Rob Roy; a man of not the purest character, but who seemed eligible on account of his address, and because he enjoyed some confidence amongst the Whig party. By way of making himself as useful as possible, Macgregor volunteered at the same time to carry with him to Edin- burgh copies of the Prince's proclamations and manifestoes, which he thought he should easily be able to get printed there, and disseminated amongst the friends of the cause. He reached Edinburgh on the 26th, and, being immediately admitted into the presence of the civil and civic officers, reported that the Highlanders, when he left them a day or two ago, were not above 1500 strong at most. As far as he could judge of them, they would run at the first onset of 64 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. the royal army, being* chiefly old men and boys, and very ill armed. When he had performed this part of his duty, he lost no time in setting about the other. His papers were printed by one Drummond, a zealous Jacobite; 1 and so speedily were they diffused throughout the town, that the magistrates were obliged, within three or four days after the arrival of this faithful messenger, to issue a proclama- tion offering a high reward for the discovery of the printer. Macgregor's report, though partially successful in assur- ing the citizens, who immediately learned it through the newspapers, was not so completely effective with the public authorities as to prevent them from taking a measure next day which they had for some time contemplated — that of applying to the king for permission to raise a regiment, to be paid by voluntary subscription of the inhabitants, with which they might at once defend their property and ad- vance his majesty's interests, in case of the town being attacked. Their previous security, however, was about this time slightly disturbed by a piece of intelligence brought to town by a Highland street porter, who had been visiting his friends in the north. This man declared that when he saw the insurgents in Lochaber, their camp was as long as the space between Leith and the Calton Hill (at least a mile) ; 2 a local illustration, which inspired a much more respectful idea of the chevalier's forces than any they had yet entertained. It was not till the 31st of August that the alarm of the city of Edinburgh became serious. On that day the inha- bitants received intelligence of Cope's evasion of the High- land forces at Dalwhinnie, and of the consequent march of the chevalier upon the low country. They had previously looked upon the insurrection as but a more formidable kind of riot, which would soon be quelled, and no more heard of ; but when they saw that a regular army had found it ne- cessary to decline fighting' with the insurgents, who were consequently left at liberty to disturb the open country, it began to be looked upon in a much more serious light. Their alarm was, if possible, increased next day (Sunday, the 1st of September), by the Duke of Athole coming sua- 1 Drummond, some years afterwards, fell under the anger of the govern- ment for similar proceedings, and had his printing-office shut up ; on which occasion the workmen being thrown idle, and public sympathy, at least with one party, being excited in their behalf, it was suggested to them to act the drama of the Gentle Shepherd, which had not before been represented on the stage, though many years published. Thus Drummond's men became the first performers of this celebrated pastoral. 2 Caledonian Mercury. Henderson's History of the Rebellion, 37- ALARM OF EDINBURGH. 65 denly to town on his way from Blair, which, as already mentioned, he had left on the approach of the Highlanders. It was reported that his Grace had been compelled to take this step with greater precipitation than would have other- wise been necessary, by receiving a letter from his brother, the marquis, calling upon him to deliver up the house and estate which he had so long possessed unjustly. But the venerable Thomas Ruddiman, who gave currency to this rumour by means of his paper, the Caledonian Mercury, was obliged during the same week to acknowledge it false, beg the duke's pardon, and pay a fine of two guineas, be- sides being imprisoned for two days. The friends of government now began to make prepara- tions for the defence of the capital. 1 Piled deep and massive, close and high,' and chiefly situated upon a steep and isolated hill, Edin- burgh was then partly surrounded by a wall, and partly by a lake. The wall was of little use but to check smuggling, or evasion of the city customs ; it had no embrasures for cannon, and part of it was overlooked by lines of lofty houses, forming the suburbs, while the lake was fordable in many places. The friends of the Hanover succession were nevertheless of opinion that the city was capable of making a defence, provided that the inhabitants were de- termined upon it, and that arms were obtained from govern- ment. It was at least possible, they thought, to hold out until Cope's troops should come to their relief. On the other hand, a considerable section of the inhabitants, in- cluding the lord provost, Mr Archibald Stewart, and others of the magistracy, were Jacobites, though necessarily mak- ing no outward demonstration of such politics. Everything which they could safely or plausibly do to discourage the idea of defending the town was done ; and doubtless their efforts were attended with some success. Burghal politics came in to add to the difficulties of the time. Opposed to the existing magistracy were the materials of a Whig one, which had been excluded from power for live years ; at its head was Mr George Drummond, a man of virtuous and benevolent character, who had fought in behalf of govern- ment at Sheriffmuir. The time was approaching when, ac- cording to the custom of the burgh, a new election of magis- trates should take place ; and it was obviously the policy of the Whigs to profess an eagerness for the defence of the town. On the other hand, the existing magistracy, con- sidering this as a mere mode of party warfare, or an appeal vol. v. e 66 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. to mob feelings, were the more inclined to go upon the opposite side. ' Defend the town/ or ( not defend the town/ thus became party cries for the ins and outs of burghal office ; and it would have been difficult for any cool onlooker to say whether the Whigs, in their profession of a wish to keep out Prince Charles, or the opposite party, in express- ing their belief that the town was indefensible, were the least sincere. The living force available for defence actually appears to have been of no great amount, although many more formidable enemies have been resisted with something much less. Now that Cope, with his infantry, was off the field, the whole of the regular forces in the south of Scotland, besides the invalids who garrisoned the for- tresses, consisted of two regiments of dragoons — Hamil- ton's at Edinburgh, and Gardiner's at Stirling, both of them newly raised. In Edinburgh there was a body of military police, or gensd'armes, called the Town -Guard, generally amounting to 96 men, but now increased to 126 : these were for the most part elderly men, who had never been active soldiers, but they had the advantage of being pretty well disciplined. There was another body of militia connected with the city, called the Trained Bands, the members of which, exceeding 1000 in number, were ordi- nary citizens possessed of uniforms, in which they appeared once a-year to fire off their pieces in honour of the king*'s birthday, but which none of them had adopted with the prospect of ever becoming active soldiers, or, indeed, with any other view than to enjoy the civic dinner which was given to them on that joyous anniversary. The Trained Bands had, at their first institution in the reign of King James VI., worn defensive armour, and carried the long Scottish spear; but in these degenerate days they only assumed a simple uniform, and were provided with fire- locks so old, as scarcely to be fit for service. To give the reader some idea of the military prowess of these citizen- soldiers, an extract may be made from a pamphlet of the day. 1 The author of this tract says that, when a boy, he used to see the Trained Bands drawn up on the High Street to honour the natal day of Britain's majesty, on which occasions, he affirms, it was common for any one who was bolder than the rest, or who wished to give himself airs before his wife or mistress, to fire off his piece in the street, without authority of his officers : and c I always observed,' 1 Account of the Behaviour of Archibald Stewart. London, 1748. ALARM OF EDINBURGH. 67 says the pamphleteer, ' they took care to shut their eyes before venturing on that military exploit ; ? though he im- mediately afterwards remarks in a note, their fear was perhaps better grounded than he imagined, considering the danger there was of their firelocks bursting about their ears. To increase this hopeful force, the state officers had in- stigated the magistrates, as already mentioned, to raise a regiment, which was to be paid by public subscription. The royal l permission was not procured for this purpose till the 9th of September, on which day a subscription-paper was laid before the citizens, and a dram sent through the town and its neighbourhood to enlist men. But it is un- usual to yield to the solicitations of recruiting-sergeants for the direct purpose of fighting a severe action on the suc- ceeding week. As may be easily imagined, more fortune than life was volunteered on the present occasion. The subscription-paper filled almost immediately; but, after a week, only about 200 men had been procured. Besides this force, which was dignified with the name of the Edinburgh Regiment, a number of the loyal inhabitants associated themselves as volunteers into a separate band or regiment, for which 400 were ultimately collected. The discipline of all these men was wretched, or rather they had no discipline. The members of the Edinburgh Regi- ment were, in general, desperate persons, to whom the pro- mised pay was a temptation, and who cared nothing for the cause in which they were eng'aged. The volunteers, on the other hand, were all decent tradesmen, or youths drawn from the counter and desk, inspired no doubt with a love of liberty and the Protestant religion, but little qualified to oppose the approaching Highlanders. One circumstance may here be mentioned, which seems to have had a great effect in determining the subsequent events ; namely, the ignorance which prevailed in the Low- lands regarding the real character of the insurgents. The people were, indeed, aware that, far in the north, there existed tribes of men living each under the rule of its own chief, wearing* a peculiar dress, speaking an unknown lan- guage, and going armed even in their most ordinary and peaceful avocations. They occasionally saw specimens of these following the droves of black cattle, which were the sole exportable commodity of their country — plaided, bon- neted, belted, and brogued — and driving their bullocks, as J The king arrived in great haste from Hanover on the 31st of August. 68 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Virgil is said to have spread his manure, with an air of great dignity and consequence. 1 To their immediate neigh- bours they were known by more fierce and frequent causes of acquaintance ; by the forays which they made upon the inhabitants of the plains, and the tribute or protection- money which they exacted from those whose possessions they spared. Yet it might be generally said that little was known of them either in the Lowlands of Scotland or in England, and that the little which was known was only calculated to inspire sensations of fear and dislike. The idea, therefore, that a band of wild Highlanders, as they were called, were descending to work their will upon the peaceful inhabitants of the plains, occasioned a consterna- tion on the present occasion such as it is now difficult to conceive, but which must have proved very fatal to the wish which the friends of government entertained of de- fending the country. CHAPTER VII. Charles's march upon Edinburgh. Fr. Her. — Ye men of Angiers, open wide your gates, And let young Arthur, Duke of Bretagne, in. King John. Having recruited both his purse and his muster-roll, and done something towards the organisation and discipline of his army, Charles left Perth on Wednesday the 11th of September. The direct road from Perth to Edinburgh was by the well-known passage across the Firth of Forth called the Queen's Ferry, and the cities were little more than forty miles distant from each other. But as all the boats upon that estuary had been carefully brought to the south side, and as he could not have passed, at any rate, without being exposed to the fire of a war-vessel lying in the firth, as well as to whatever danger was to be apprehended from Gardiner's dragoons, who awaited his approach, he was obliged to take a more circuitous and safe route by a ford- able part of the river above Stirling. Marching, therefore, to Dumblane, he was joined upon the way by sixty of the 1 Sir Walter Scott ; Quarterly Review. Charles's march upon Edinburgh. 69 Macdonalds of Glencoe, in addition to as many more who had previously come to his standard ; and by forty Mac- gregors, the retainers . of Macgregor of Glencairnaig, who had deputed their command to James Mor Macgregor or Drummond, the same person who did the service at Edin- burgh which has been before mentioned. 1 The Prince remained a day at Dumblane, waiting' till a portion of his army, which he had left at Perth, should come up to join the main body. On the evening of the 12th, the whole encamped about a mile to the south of Dumblane. Charles proceeded on Friday, the 13th, towards the Ford of Frew. He passed by Doune, where an incident occurred which showed that he was at least the elected sovereign of the ladies of Scotland. At the house of Mr Edmondstone of Cambus, in the neighbourhood of Doune, the gentle- women of the district of Monteith had assembled to see him pass ; and he was invited to stop and partake of some refreshment. He drew up before the house, and, without alighting from his horse, drank a glass of wine to the healths of all the fair ladies present. The Misses Edmond- stone, daughters of the host, acted on this occasion as servi- tresses, glad to find an opportunity of approaching a person of whom they had heard so much ; and when Charles had drunk his wine, and restored his glass to the plate which they held for him, they begged, in respectful terms, the honour of kissing his royal highness's hand. This favour he granted with his usual grace ; but Miss Clementina Ed- mondstone, cousin of the other young ladies, and then on a visit at Doune, thought she might obtain a much more satisfactory taste of royalty, and made bold to ask permis- sion ' to pree his royal highness's mouV Charles did not at first understand the homely Scottish phrase in which this last request was made ; but it was no sooner explained to him than he took her in his arms and gave her a hearty kiss— to the no small vexation, it is added, of the other ladies, who had contented themselves with so much less liberal a share of princely grace. 2 At this period of his career Charles lost an expected adherent in a mysterious manner. Stewart of Glenbuckie, the head of a small sept of that family in Balquidder, and Macgregor of Glencairnaig, chief of his ancient and famous clan, were both passing Leny House (above Callander) 1 Gartmore MS., quoted in Birt's Letters (2d ed.), ii. 351. 2 Nimmo's History of Stirlingshire, edited by the Rev. Mr Macgregor Stir- ling, p. 564. 70 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. with their respective i fallowings/ to join the Prince, when Mr Buchanan of Arnprior, proprietor of the house, came out and invited the two gentlemen in to spend the night. Glencairnaig positively refused to stop, and marched on with his retainers ; but Glenbuckie consented to accept of Arnprior's hospitality. He supped with his host, appa- rently in good spirits, and was in due time conducted to his bedroom. According to another account, Mr Buchanan went to meet Mr Stewart and his party in Strathyre, where they had a dispute about the majorship of the Duke of Perth's regiment. 1 In any case, Stewart lodged that night in Leny House, and was found next morning in his bed shot dead, with a discharged pistol in his hand. Mr Buchanan alleged that the unfortunate gentleman was the author of his own death ; but was not generally believed. Glenbuckie's men took up the body of their master, carried it home to their own glen, and did not afterwards join the Prince. 2 Arnprior also abstained from joining in the en- terprise, though well inclined to it. Notwithstanding prac- tical neutrality, he was seized a short while before the battle of Culloden, and conducted to Carlisle, where an unsigned letter of his, which had been intercepted on its way to the Highland army, proved sufficient, with the odium of Glen- buckie's suspected murder, to procure his condemnation. It is but justice to the memory of this gentleman to add, that, immediately before his death, he uttered, in presence of a clergyman, a solemn denial of all share in the death of Mr Stewart. 3 The Ford of Frew, by which Charles had to cross the Forth, was a shallow part of the river, formed by the efflux of the Boquhan Water, about eight miles above Stirling. It was expected that Gardiner's dragoons would attempt to dispute the passage with the Highlanders ; but those doughty heroes, who had hitherto talked of cutting the whole host in pieces as soon as it approached the Lowlands, now thought proper to retire upon Stirling. Charles, therefore, found no opposition to prevent him from taking this decisive and intrepid step, which Was, everything considered, much the same to him as the passage of the Bubicon had been to a greater person. Hitherto he had been in a land where the Highlanders had a natural advantage over any troops which might be sent to oppose them ; but he was now come to the frontier of a country where, if they fought at all, they must 1 Lyon in Mourning, MS. 2 Information from a daughter of Glenbuckie, who was alive in 1827. 3 The whole declaration is in the Lyon in Mourning, MS. in my possession. Charles's march upon Edinburgh. 71 fight on equal, or perhaps inferior terms. The adventurer's heart was, however, screwed up to every hazard. Some of his officers had just questioned the propriety of venturing into a country so open and hostile ; and various less deci- sive measures were proposed, and warmly advocated. But Charles was resolved to make promptitude and audacity his sole tactics and counsellors. Coming' to the Drink of the river, he drew his sword, nourished it in the air, and point- ing" to the other side, walked into the stream with an air of resolution. The river having" been somewhat reduced by a course of dry weather, he found no difficulty in wading" across. When he reached the opposite side, he paused upon the bank, 1 and congratulated every successive detachment as it reached the land. Charles dined in the afternoon of this day at Leckie House, the seat of a Jacobite gentleman named Moir, 2 who had been seized on the preceding night in his bed, and hurried to Stirling Castle by the dragoons, on suspicion that he was preparing to entertain the chevalier. 3 The remain- der of the day's march was in a direction due south, to the Moor of Touch ; and it was for a time uncertain whether Charles designed to attack Edinburgh or Glasgow. The latter presented great temptations, on account of its being unprotected, and quite as wealthy as Edinburgh ; and Charles had sufficient reason to owe it a grudge, on account of its zeal against his family on all occasions when such zeal could be displayed. But the eclat of seizing the seat of government, and the assurance of his Edinburgh friends that he would easily be able to do so, proved decisive in confirming his own original wishes to that effect. He, however, sent off a detachment to demand a subsidy of £15,000 from the commercial capital. 4 1 Dougal Graham's Metrical History, 15. 2 Mr Moir had married the heiress of Leckie : his own patrimonial estate was a very small one, at some distance. He would sometimes point out the latter to his friends at Leckie House, saying, with true Jacobite wit, ' Yon is my Hanover.' 3 Lockhart Papers, ii. 487- 4 The conduct of the insurgent army on first entering the Lowlands, is minutely portrayed by Dougal Graham, the metrical historian of the insur- rection, who seems to have been present, and observed their proceedings. The reader will be surprised to find young Locheil, with all his amiable qua- lities, represented as shooting one of his clan for petty theft : — 1 Here for a space they took a rest, And had refreshment of the best The country round them could afford, Though many found but empty board. As sheep and cattle were drove away, Yet hungry men sought for their prey ; 72 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. The Highland army moved eastwards next day, fetching 1 a compass to the south of Stirling, in order to avoid the castle guns. Meanwhile Colonel Gardiner, who had re- treated from Stirling the preceding night, continued to retire "before them, designing to fall back upon the other regiment, which was now lying near Edinburgh. In this day's march the Prince passed over the field of Bannock- burn, where his illustrious ancestor, Bruce, gained the greatest victory that adorns the Scottish annals. He spent the night succeeding this brief day's march in Bannock- burn House, the seat of Sir Hugh Paterson, a gentleman attached in the most enthusiastic manner to his cause. Sir Hugh was descended from the last archbishop of Glasgow, and was married to a sister of the Earl of Marr, who com- manded the insurgent army in 1715. The army lay upon the neighbouring field of Sauchie, where King James III., in 1488, was defeated and slain by his rebellious subjects. 1 From this place Charles sent a message to the magis- trates of Stirling, who submitted to him, and sent out pro- visions to be sold to the army. On the 15th the Prince proceeded to Falkirk, where his army lay all night among* some broom to the east of Cal- lander House. He himself lodged in that mansion, where he was kindly entertained, and assured of faithful service, by the Earl of Kilmarnock. His lordship informing Charles that Gardiner's dragoons intended next day to dispute the passage of Linlithgow Bridge, Charles despatched a band of 900 well-armed Highlanders to attack him, who, without delay, marched during the night on this expedition. But the dragoons did not wait to come to blows. They retired precipitately to Kirkliston, eight miles nearer Edinburgh ; Took milk and butter, kirn and cheese, On all kinds of eatables they seize : And he who could not get a share, Sprang to the hills like dogs for hare ; There shot the sheep and made them fall, Whirled off the skin, and that was all ; Struck up fires, and boiled the flesh ; With salt and pepper did not fash. This did enrage the Camerons' chief, To see his men so play the thief ; And finding one into the act, He fired, and shot him through the back ; Then to the rest himself addressed— " This is your lot, I do protest, Whoe'er amongst you wrongs a man. Pay what you get, I tell you plain ; For yet we know not friend or foe, Nor how all things may chance to go." '—P. 16. 1 Lockhart Papers, ii. 444. Charles's march upon Edinburgh. 73 and the Highlanders entered Linlithgow without disturb- ance before break of day. Charles brought up the remainder of the army to Lin- lithgow about ten o'clock that forenoon, when he was only sixteen miles from Edinburgh. It was Sunday, and the people were about to attend worship in their ancient church; but the arrival of so distinguished a visitor suspended their pious duties for at least one day. Linlithgow, perhaps on account of its having been so long a seat of Scottish royalty, was possessed by a Jacobite spirit ; and on the present occa- sion, it is said that even some of the magistrates could not restrain their loyal enthusiasm. Charles was conducted in triumph to the palace, where a handsome entertainment was prepared for him by Mrs Glen Gordon, the keeper of the house, who, in honour of the visit, set the palace well a- flowing with wine, of which she invited all the respectable inhabitants of the burgh to partake. The Prince mingled in their festivities with his usual grace. 1 The Highland army, at four o'clock in the afternoon, marched to a rising ground between three and four miles to the eastward (near the twelfth milestone from Edin- burgh), where they bivouacked, while the Prince slept in a neighbouring house. 2 They proceeded next morning (Monday the 17th) towards Edinburgh, from which they were now distant only four hours' march. On reaching- Corstorphine, Charles thought proper, in order to avoid the guns of Edinburgh Castle, to strike off 1 Mr Bucknay, provost of Linlithgow in 1745, was a keen Jacobite. On the 10th of June preceding the commencement of the insurrection, he had attended a sort of fete given in the palace by Mrs Glen Gordon, in honour of the old chevalier's birthday, when a large bonfire was kindled in the inner court, the fountain in the centre adorned with flowers and green boughs, and King James's health drunk. When the Highland army drew near, the provost fled towards Edinburgh ; but his wife and daughters remained, and waited upon the Prince, with tartan gowns and white cockades, and had the honour of kissing his hand at the cross.— See Jacdbitism Triumphant; a pam- phlet dated 1753, which appears to have been occasioned by the following ridiculous circumstance. Some of the Jacobite gentry around Linlithgow suspecting that the postmaster of the town (a notorious loyalist) was in the habit of opening their letters and exposing them to government, Mr James Dundas of Philipstoun wrote a letter to Provost Bucknay, of which the fol- lowing are the ipsissima verba : — ' Sir — Is it not very hard that you and I cannot keep up a correspondence for that damned villain of a postmaster ? (Signed) Ja. Duxdas.' They expected that the object of their suspicions would open this epistle, and be overwhelmed with shame and rage. To their surprise, the letter passed inviolate. There remained, however, the joke, of which the post- master became aware some years afterwards ; and the pamphlet is a sort of memorial arising out of the process for defamation which he then insti- tuted against Mr Dundas before the Court of Session. 2 Lockhart Papers, ii. 445, 74 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. into a by-road leading in a southerly direction towards the little village of Slateford. His men there bivouacked for the night in a field called Gray's Park, which at that time bore a crop of pease nearly ripe. The tradition of Slateford relates, that the proprietor of the ground applied to Charles at his lodgings for some indemnification for the loss of his crop. He was asked if he would take the Prince Begent's bill for the sum, to be paid when the troubles of the country should be concluded. The man hesitated at the name of the Prince Kegent, and said he would prefer a bill from some person whom he knew. Charles smiled at his caution, and asked if he would take the name of the Duke of Perth, who was his countryman, and at the same time a more credit-worthy man than he could pretend to be. The rustic accepted a promissory note from the duke. CHAPTEB VIII. CAPTURE OF EDINBURGH. E. Phi.— Now, citizens of Angiers, ope your gates ; Let in that amity which you have made. King John. The delay of the Highland army at Perth for a time sub- dued the alarm which had been excited in Edinburgh by the first intelligence of Charles's descent upon the Lowlands. But when he set out from that city, and was understood to be marching upon Edinburgh, all the terrors of the citizens were renewed, at least of that part of them who looked upon the Highland army as a public enemy, or who conceived their entrance into the city to be inconsistent with the safety of private property. On the other hand, the Jacobite part of the population could scarcely conceal their joy at the news of every successive day's march which Charles made towards the city. The conflicting ferment into which the passions of all ranks of people were thrown by the course of public events, was now increased in a great degree by another agitating matter — the election of heads of incorporations, which began to take place on the 10th of September, as prepara- tory to the nomination of the magistrates. So engrossing* a matter was this, that the magistrates were obliged to dis- continue the repairs which they were making upon the city CAPTURE OF EDINBURGH. 75 walls, because it was impossible to get workmen to attend to their respective occupations. Sir John Cope had sent one of his captains from Inverness early in the month, to order a number of transports to sail from Leith to Aberdeen, in which he might bring back his men to the shores of Lothian. These vessels sailed on the 10th, escorted by a ship of war ; and as the weather was excellent, they were expected to return very soon with an army of relief. From that day the people of Edinburgh, according to Mr Home, were continually looking up with anxiety to the vanes and weathercocks, watching the direction of the wind. As no certain dependence could be placed upon Cope's arrival, the Whigs did not, in the meantime, neglect in aught the training of their civic levies. Drills took place twice a-day. Professor Maclaurin, the celebrated mathe- matician, exerted all his faculties in completing the works of defence which he had designed ; and the walls began to bristle with old pieces of cannon, which had been hastily collected from the country around. The various gates or ports of the town were all strongly barricaded, and a guard appointed to each. If we are to believe this party, all their measures were thwarted and clogged by difficulties thrown in their way by the provost. To one proposal, he would object that he had no authority ; to another, that it was treasonable — adding, with a sneer, that i he knew no treason but what the law had made so : ' some efforts of zeal he scoffed at ; others he held as more productive of danger than safety. Personally, he afforded no active en- couragement to any plan of a defensive nature : some were suspiciously blundered in the working : for example, in the digging of a ditch at the Well-house Towner, under the castle, the earth was thrown outwards, so as to be favourable to the assailing, rather than to the defending party. Now, also, he gave countenance and publicity to every rumour which magnified the insurgent forces. The Whigs accuse him of having always had a set of Jacobites in his company, from whom he seemed to take counsel. Their advices were, on the other hand, listened to with reluctance. No incident of importance occurred in Edinburgh till Sunday the 15th, when, a false alarm reaching the city that the insurgents were advanced within eight miles, it was proposed that Hamilton's and Gardiner's regiments of dragoons should make a stand at Corstorphine, supported by a body of infantry composed of the volunteers, Edin- burgh Regiment, and'Town-Guard. 76 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Public worship had commenced this day at the usual hour of ten, and the ministers were all preaching with swords by their sides, when the fire-bell was rung as a signal of ap- proaching danger, and the churches were instantly deserted by their congregations. The people found the volunteers ranked up in the Lawnmarket, ready to march out of town ; and immediately after, Hamilton's dragoons rode up the street, on their way from Leith to Corstorphine. These heroes clashed their swords against each other as they rode along, and displayed, in their language, the highest symp- toms of courage. The volunteers, put into heart by the formidable appearance of these squadrons, uttered a hearty huzza, and the people threw up their hats in the air. But an end was soon put to this affectation of bravery. The mothers and sisters of the volunteers began to take alarm at seeing them about to march out to battle, and with tears, cries, and tender embraces, implored them not to hazard their precious lives. Even their male relations saw fit to advise them against so dangerous a measure, which, they said, staked their valuable persons against a worthless rabble. Many then began to demur, saying that they had engaged to defend the town, but not to march out of it. At this juncture Captain Ex-Provost Drummond, anxious to stop the spreading murmurs, led off his company down the West Bow towards the West Port, trusting that the rest would follow. His astonishment was great when, on reaching the Port, and looking round, he found that, so far from other companies having followed, his own had melted away in the course of its brief march, and he had only a few of his immediate friends behind him. Some had gone back to the Lawnmarket ; others had slipped down closes, as lanes are called in Edinburgh, and thus va- nished. A city wag afterwards compared their march to the course of the Rhine, which at one place is a majestic river flowing through fertile fields, but, being continually drawn off by little canals, at last becomes a small rivulet, and almost ceases to be distinguishable before reaching the ocean. 1 Drummond immediately sent back a lieutenant to know what had detained the regiment ; and this gentleman, out of all who remained in the Lawnmarket, found one hun- dred and forty-one who still retained some sense of either shame or courage, and professed to be willing to march out of town. The lieutenant brought these down to the 1 True Account of the Conduct and Behaviour of Provost Archibald Stewart, p. 18. CAPTURE OF EDINBURGH. 77 West Port, where, being* added to the Town -Guard and the half-fledged subscription -regiment, they made up a body of three hundred and sixty-three men, besides officers. Even this insignificant band was destined to be fur- ther reduced before making a movement against the ap- proaching danger. As they were standing within the West Port, before setting out, Dr Wishart, a clergyman of the city, and Principal of the College, came with several other clergymen, and conjured the volunteers to remain within the walls, and reserve themselves for the defence of the city. The words of the reverend man appealed directly to" the sentiments of the persons addressed ; only a few affected a courage which could listen to no pro- posals of peace. Happily, their manhood was saved the shame of a direct and point-blank retreat. Drummond having sent a message to the provost, bearing, that unless he gave his final permission for their march, they should not proceed, they were gratified with an answer, in which the provost congratulated them upon their resolution not to march ; on which Drummond withdrew, with the air of a man who is baulked by malice in a design for the public service ; and all the rest of the volunteers dispersed, except a few, chiefly hot-headed college youths, who re- solved to continue in arms till the end of the war. 1 Mean- while the Town-Guard and Edinburgh Eegiment, in num- ber one hundred and eighty men, marched out, by order of the provost, to support the dragoons at Corstorphine ; being the whole force which the capital of Scotland found it possible on this occasion to present against the descendant of its ancient kings. It was generally expected that an attack would be made during the succeeding night. The walls were guarded by six or seven hundred men, consisting of trained bands, volunteers, armed seceders, and a few of the Duke of Buc- cleuch's tenants ; but no pains were taken by the magis- trates to encourage, refresh, or duly relieve these men. If a Whig reporter is to be believed, it was even found that, at eleven at night, one of the gates — one presented to- wards the position of the enemy — was standing wide open, 1 A story is told of one John Maclure, a writing-master, who, knowing the irresolution of his fellow- volunteers, and that they would never fight, assumed what the reviewer of Mr Home's Works (Quar. Rev. No. 71-) calls ' a professional cuirass ;' namely, a quire of writing-paper, upon which he wrote, * This is the "body of John Maclure— pray give it a Christian burial.' The same humorist, finding himself jostled in the ranks at the West Port, called out, ' Stand about ! we're all alike burgesses here.' 78 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. without a sentry ! l In the course of the night, the two re- giments of dragoons retired to a field betwixt Leith and Edin- burgh, and the infantry entered the city. Brigadier-General Fowkes arrived on the same night from London, in order to take the command of this little army of protection. He did so next morning ; and by an order from General Guest, governor of the castle, marched out to Colt Bridge, a place two miles to the west of the city, where he was joined in the course of the forenoon by the civic troops. A person who saw these soldiers at their post, 2 describes them as having been drawn up in the open field to the east of the bridge, in the form of a crescent, with Colonel Gardiner at their head, who, on account of his age and infirm health, was muffled in a wide blue surcoat, with a handkerchief drawn round his hat, and tied under his chin. The Edinburgh Regiment and Town-Guard he describes as looking extremely dismal ; but certainly their hearts could not be fainter than those of the dragoons. The event showed that few had escaped the panic of this momentous day. On retreating the preceding night to their quarters be- tween Edinburgh and Leith, the dragoons had left a small reconnoitring party at Corstorphine, which is about two miles in advance of Colt Bridge. It was with this party that the panic commenced. The insurgents, observing them on their approach to Corstorphine, sent forward one or two of their number on horseback to take a view of them, and bring a report of their number. These gentlemen, riding up pretty near, thought proper to fire their pistols towards the party ; and the poor dragoons immediately, in the greatest alarm, wheeled about, without returning a shot, and retired upon the main body at Colt Bridge, to whom they communicated all their fears. The whole party im- mediately broke up, and commenced a retreat, not to Edin- burgh, with the design of still defending it within the walls, but to the open country beyond it. In this move- ment, afterwards styled the Canter of Coltbrigg, the men rode over the ground now occupied by the New Town, where they were exposed to the view of the citizens. The Jacobites beheld the spectacle with ill-concealed pleasure, while the Whigs were proportionately discouraged. A clamour immediately rose in the streets, which, till 1 This important fact is stated, from personal knowledge, by a volunteer, in a paper (now in my possession) which appears to have been drawn up for the information of the Solicitor- General. The gate was that called Bristo Port, which might be considered, on this occasion, as the second in point of im- portance. 2 Henderson's History of the Rebellion, 43. CAPTURE OF EDINBURGH. 79 this period, had been crowded with anxious faces ; and hundreds ran about, crying that it was madness to think of defending- the town after the dragoons had fled, and that if this measure was persisted in, i they should all be murdered V A message from the young chevalier 1 had previously been delivered to them, importing, that if they admitted him peaceably into the town, they should be civilly dealt with, but that resistance would subject them to all the pains of military usage ; and the general cry now was, that the town should be'surrendered. The provost, in returning from the West Port, where he had been giving orders, in consequence of the retreat of his militia, was assailed upon the street by multitudes of the alarmed in- habitants, and implored to call a meeting of the citizens, to determine what should be done. He consented with some reluctance to do so, or rather the people pressed so close around him and his council in their chamber, that a meet- ing was constituted without his consent. He then sent for the officers of the crown, whose advice he wished to ask ; but it was found, to the still greater consternation of the people, that all these gentlemen had deserted the city. The meeting was then adjourned to a larger place, the New Church Aisle, where the question of l Defend, or not defend, the town,' being put, by far the greater part of those pre- sent exclaimed in favour of the latter alternative, and all who attempted to urge the contrary measure were borne down by clamour. Whig reporters of the time call this a packed assembly ; but it appears to have fairly enough re- presented the general feeling of the moment. While the ferment was at its height, a letter was handed in from the door, addressed to the Lord Provost, Magistrates, and Town- Council of Edinburgh. Deacon Orrock, a shoemaker, got this document into his hands, and announced that it was subscribed l Charles, P. R.' On this the provost rose, and saying he could not be present at the reading of such a letter, left the assembly. He was, however, prevailed upon, after some time, to return, and permit the letter to be read, when it was found to run as follows : — ' From our Camp, 16th September 1745. Being now in a condition to make our way into the capital of his Majesty's ancient kingdom of Scotland, we 1 Delivered between ten and eleven in the forenoon by Mr Alves, a gentle- man of Edinburgh, who had passed the Highland army on the road, and been intrusted with it by the Duke of Perth. Mr Alves was put into prison that afternoon by the provost, for having been so imprudent as to communi- cate the message to the people on the streets, instead of confining it to his lordship's own ear. 80 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. hereby summon you to receive us, as you are in duty bound to do ; and in order to it, we hereby require you, on receipt of this, to summon the Town-Council, and to take proper measures for securing* the peace of the city, which we are very desirous to protect. But if you suffer any of the usurper's troops to enter the town, or any of the cannon, arms, or ammunition, now in it (whether belonging to the public or to private persons) to be carried off, we shall take it as a breach of your duty, and a heinous offence against the king and us, and shall resent it accordingly. We promise to preserve all the rights and liberties of the city, and the particular property of every one of his Majesty's subjects. But if any opposition be made to us, we cannot answer for the consequences, being firmly resolved, at any rate, to enter the city ; and in that case, if any of the inhabitants are found in arms against us, they must not expect to be treated as prisoners of war. Charles, P. R.' The tenor of this letter decided the meeting in their pro- posal for a capitulation, and a deputation, headed by Bailie Gavin Hamilton (father of the late ingenious inquirer into the national debt), was despatched to Slateford, where they understood Charles to have taken up his quarters for the night, with power to intreat time for deliberation. In the course of the afternoon, when the inhabitants were violently debating in the New Church Aisle, a gentleman, whose person was not recognised by any one, rode up the West Bow upon a gray horse, and rushing rapidly along the lines of the volunteers, where they were standing in the Lawnmarket, cried with a loud voice that he had seen the Highlanders, and they were 16,000 strong ! Without stopping to be questioned, he was out of sight in a moment ; but the impression he made upon the faint-hearted volun- teers was decisive. Four companies immediately marched up to the Castle Hill, and surrendered their arms to General Guest, from whom they had received them ; and their ex- ample was speedily followed by all the different bodies of militia that had been supplied with arms from the castle magazine. When this transaction was completed, Edin- burgh might be said to have virtually resigned all hope of defence, though the Trained Bands still continued upon the walls, with their rusty firelocks in their hands, and the gates were still barricaded. Throughout these scenes of civic pusillanimity, there were not wanting instances of vigorous resolution and con- sistent loyalty. Mr Joseph Williamson, an advocate (son CAPTURE OF EDINBURGH, 81 to the celebrated Mass David Williamson, minister of the West Church of Edinburgh during- the reigns of the last Charles and James), who had been intrusted with the keys of the gates, on account of his office of town-clerk, on being asked by the provost to deliver up his charge, absolutely refused to do so ; and when commanded peremptorily by his lordship, implored that he might be permitted at least to escape over the walls, so as not to share in what he con- sidered the general disgrace of the city. 1 A similar enthu- siast, by name Dr Stevenson, though he had long been bed- rid through age and disease, sat for some days, as one of the guards, at the Xetherbow Port, in his arm-chair! 2 The deputies, who had gone out in a carriage to Slateford at eight o'clock, returned at ten, with a letter from Charles, reiterating his demand to be peaceably admitted into the town, and pointing out that his manifesto and his father's declaration were a sufficient guarantee for the protection of the city. 3 By this time the magistrates had been informed, though it afterwards appeared prematurely, that General Cope's transports were arrived off Dunbar (twenty-seven miles east from the city), and felt disposed to hold out, in the hope of speedy relief from a government army. A second deputation of two persons (one of whom was father of the late Mr Coutts, banker) was therefore sent to Slate- ford about two o'clock in the morning, with a petition for a little longer time. According to one account, the Prince simply refused to admit them to his presence ; but Mr Home says that they prevailed on Lord George Murray to second their applica- tion ; and from another source 4 we have the actual words 1 Williamson did go over the walls through the night, and was the first man to reach London with the intelligence of the surrender of Edinburgh. 2 MS. Note to a copy of Lord Hailes's pamphlet against the extension of the city of Edinburgh, 1753. 3 The letter was as follows : — 1 His Royal Highness, the Prince Regent, thinks his manifesto, and the king his father's declaration, already published, are a sufficient capitulation for all his Majesty's subjects to accept of with joy. His present demands are to be received into the city as the son and representative of the king his father, and obeyed as such when he is there. His Royal Highness supposes that since the receipt of his letter to the Pro- vost and Magistrates, no arms or ammunition have been suffered to be carried off or concealed, and will expect a particular account of all things of that nature. Lastly, he expects a positive answer to this before two o'clock in the morning, otherwise he will find himself obliged to take measures conform. By his Royal Highness's command, John Murray. At Gray's Mill, 16th Sept. 1745.' 4 Lyon in Mourning, MS. VOL. V. F 82 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. of a reply sent to them : — ' His Royal Highness has already given all the assurances he can, that he intends to exact nothing* of the city in general, nor of any in particular, but what his character of regent entitles him to. This he repeats, and renews his summons to the magistrates to receive him as such.' Dated at three in the morning. The deputies were then ordered ' to get them gone.' 1 Charles, during this anxious night, slept only two hours, .and that without taking off his clothes. 2 Finding that the inhabitants of Edinburgh were paltering with him, and afraid that the city would soon be relieved, he gave orders, at an early hour in the morning-, for an attempt to take the city by surprise. The gentlemen whom he selected for this purpose were Locheil, Keppoch, Ardshiel, and Sullivan. They were commanded to take the best-armed of their re- spective parties, to the amount of about 900, together with a barrel of powder, to blow up one of the gates if necessary. Mr Murray of Broughton, who was well acquainted with the localities, acted as guide. This band mustered by moon- light upon the Borough Moor, where they could hear the watches calling the rounds within the castle. Strict silence and abstinence from intoxicating liquors were enjoined the men — the latter precaution being probably less with a regard to the success of the enterprise than the safety of life and property, after the troops should have obtained pos- session of the town. Several plans for breaking into the city were agitated ; but at length it was determined to attempt getting access by stratagem. A select party of twenty-four was planted close to the Netherbow Port ; an- other party of sixty took station in St Mary's Wynd, close by ; while the remainder hung a little way off, but ready to advance at a moment's notice. Locheil then sent forward one of his men, disguised in a riding-coat and hunting-cap, so as to appear as the servant of an officer of dragoons, in which character he was to knock at the wicket, and request admission, under pretence of being sent by his master to bring something which had been forgot in the city. The man did as he was bid; but without success, the guard ordering him to retire, under pain of being shot at. Tlfe chiefs were now at a loss how to proceed, for morn was breaking, and Locheil was anxious to avoid using violence. Mr Murray of Broughton recommended that they should retire to St Leonard's Crags, and wait for further orders ; ] Provost Stewart's Trial. 2 Caledonian Mercury. CAPTURE OF EDINBURGPI. 83 and they were about to follow this advice, when an accident enabled them to accomplish their object. The hackney- coach which took out the last party of deputies to Slate- ford, and afterwards brought them back to the city, was now returning- to its master's quarters in the Canongate. The port was opened, contrary to orders, to allow it egress ; and no sooner had that been done, than the Highlanders, who had not yet retired, rushed in and took possession of the gate. 1 The guard was so slender, that this feat was much more easily performed than they expected ; but not know- ing what resistance they might meet, they rushed into the High Street, sword in hand, with one of those outcries with which they were accustomed to make an onset in the field of battle. 2 The neighbouring people, roused from their beds, looked over their windows, and beheld in the dusk of the morning their street filled with a thickening troop of those enemies whom they had been so anxious to exclude, while the pipes screamed out a stormy pibroch, such as might have suited a day of fight. 3 A first object of the intruding party was to seize the guard-house in the High Street, and disarm the men posted there. They then went to the different ports of the city, and also to all the posts upon the walls, and relieved the guards, as quietly, says Mr Home, as one guard relieves another in the routine of duty on ordinary occasions. 4 They fixed a strong guard at the head of the West Bow, to cut off all communication between the city and the castle, using the Weigh-House as their court of guard ; and the remainder of the body drew themselves up in two lines upon the street, to await the ar- rival of the army. When the inhabitants began to stir at their usual hour of rising-, they found the government of the city transferred from the magistrates in the name of 1 The first man who entered the city was Captain Evan Macgregor, a younger son of Macgregor of Glencairnaig, and grandfather to Sir Evan Mur- ray Macgregor, Bart., chief of this ancient clan. In consideration of his gallantry, he was that night raised to a majority hy the Prince at Holyrood House. — MS. account of the campaign by J>uncan Macpharig. 2 Lockhart Papers, ii. 488. 3 The tune was called ' We'll awa to Sherramuir to haud the Whigs in order,' according to the report of an aged female, whose mother, servant at the time to Commissioner Cochrane (father of the late Earl of Dundonald), saw from her master's windows in the Netherbow the scene above-described. 4 Mr Home perhaps adopted this idea from a saying to the same effect, which tradition puts into the mouth of a Highlander. A citizen of Edin- burgh, taking a stroll round the walls on the morning of this momentous day, observed a mountaineer sitting astride upon a cannon, with an air of great vigilance and solemnity, as if deeply impressed with a sense of his duty as a sentinel. The citizen accosted him with a remark, that surely these were not the same troops which mounted guard yesterday. * Och, no,' said the Highlander, ' she pe relieved.' 84 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. King George, to the Highlanders in the name of King James. 1 1 At the period of these memorahle transactions, there were two newspapers regularly published in Edinburgh— the Evening Courant, and the Caledonian Mercury. The former continued throughout all the subsequent campaign to express such violent hostility to the insurgents, that the editor was burnt in effigy at Rome on the 10th of June 1746, amongst the other festivities with which the birthday of the old chevalier was there celebrated. The Mercury, on the contrary, was so enthusiastic a Jacobite, that it was afterwards very much discountenanced and even persecuted by government. There is some- thing quite amusing in the conduct of the Courant on the occasion of Charles's entry into Edinburgh. So long as the Highlanders were at a distance, the edi- tor talks of them with the most dignified contempt. Even when they had pushed their way to Perth, he describes them as ' a pitiful ignorant crew, good for nothing, and incapable of giving any reason for their proceedings, but talking only of snishing, King Jamesh, ta rashant (the regent), plunter, and new progues.' At every successive advance, however, which they made towards Edinburgh, and at every additional symptom of imbecility displayed by the protectors of the city, this tone is perceptibly decreased, till at last, in the number for Tuesday, September 17, it is altogether extinguished, and we only find a notice to the following effect : — ' By order of Mr Murray of Broughton, Secretary. Since our last, the Prince, with his Highland army, has taken possession of this place ; but Ave must refer you for particulars to our next.' Our next, however, did not come out for a week, instead of appearing, as it ought to have done, at the distance of two days ; and during the whole stay of the Prince in Edinburgh, the editor seems fain to say as little on either side as possible. The Mercury, which, as already mentioned, was then under the charge of Ruddiman, the distinguished grammarian, both talks with more respect of the Highland army when at a distance, and afterwards becomes more readily its organ of intelligence, than the Courant. In the first publication after the capture of Edinburgh, " affairs ' are stated to have ' taken a surprising turn in this city since yesterday, Highlanders and bag- pipes being now as common in our streets as formerly were dragoons and drums.' Then follows an account of the taking of the city, concluding with a statement that ' the Highlanders behave most civilly to the inhabitants, paying cheerfully for everything they get,' &c. Both papers are printed without the affix of a printer's or publisher's name— a circumstance which at once indicated their terror of government, and tbe compulsion under which the Highland army had laid them. They are also unstamped ; because the Stamp-office, as well as the banks and other public offices, had been removed into the castle before the army approached. It remains to be stated, that Provost Archibald Stewart was afterwards apprehended, and, being confined for fourteen months, and only liberated on finding bail to the enormous amount of £15,000, was tried by the High Court of Justiciary, upon an obsolete statute of the Scottish James II., ' for neglect of duty, and misbehaviour in the execution of his office.' The trial, which took place in March 1747, lasted for two or three days, and was considered the most solemn ever witnessed in this country. He was acquitted by a unani- mous jury. My impression is, that Mr Stewart acted throughout exactly as might have been expected of a Jacobite who wished to keep a fair face to- wards the government. On the other hand, after the government troops had committed the blunder of leaving the Lowlands exposed, great daring for the repulse of the Highlanders was not to be reasonably expected in Edinburgh ; and the citizens at large most unquestionably betrayed feelings which gave only too good a colour to the actual proceedings of their provost. prince Charles's entry into Edinburgh. 85 CHAPTER IX. prince Charles's entry into Edinburgh. To match this monarch, with strong Arcite came Emetrius, king of Inde, a mighty name, On a bay courser goodly to behold — * * * * His amber-coloured locks in ringlets run With graceful negligence, and shone against the sun ; His nose was aquiline, his eyes were blue, Ruddy his lips, and fresh and fair his hue : Some sprinkled freckles on his face were seen, Whose dusk set off the whiteness of his skin : His awful presence did the crowd surprise, Nor durst the rash spectator meet his eyes — Eyes that confessed him born for kingly sway, So fierce, they flashed intolerable day. Palamon and Arcite. Intelligence of the capture of Edinburgh having* been conveyed to the Prince, he prepared, at an early hour, to leave his lodging's in Slateford, and lead forward the re- mainder of his army. This march, though short, was not altogether free of danger ; for he could see from his present position the flag of defiance flaunting on the battlements of the castle, and apparently daring* him to venture within the scope of its guns. The eminent position of that fortress was such as to command nearly the whole country for miles around, and it was a matter of difficulty to discover a path which should conduct him to the cit}^, without being ex- posed to its fire. Some of his train, however, by their ac- quaintance with the localities, enabled him to obviate this petty danger. By the direction of his guides, Charles made a circuit to the south of Edinburgh, so as not only to maintain a safe distance from the castle, but to keep some swelling* grounds between, which screened him from its view. Debouching upon the open or turnpike road near Morningside, and turning towards the city, he reached a sequestered and al- most obsolete cross-road, which turns off to the east by the house of Grang'e, and completely precludes the view of the city or castle. Charles conducted his army along this road, and soon entered the King's Park near Priestfield, by a breach which had been made in the wall. 1 It must have been with elated feelings that Charles tra- 1 Lockhart Papers, ii. 446. 86 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. versed this venerable domain, whose recesses had so often sounded to the bugle-horn of his royal ancestors, Leaving 1 his troops about noon in the Hunter's Bog, a deep and sheltered valley betwixt Arthur's Seat and Salisbury Crags, he rode forward, with the Duke of Perth on one hand, and Lord Elcho on the other, 1 some other gentlemen coming up behind. When he reached the eminence under St An- thony's Well, where he for the first time came within si^ht of the palace, he alighted from his horse, 2 and paused a few moments to survey the scene. The park and gardens below, intervening betwixt the Prince and the palace, were now filled with the inhabitants of Edinburgh, who, on learning that he approached the city in this quarter, had flocked in great numbers to see him. The crowd consisted of all ranks and persuasions of people, excepting only those who had taken a leading part in op- posing his entrance into the city. The Jacobites of course abounded; and many of these now approached Charles, where he was standing beside his horse, and knelt to kiss his hand. He received their homage and congratulations with smiles, and bowed gracefully to the huzza which im- mediately after rose from the crowded plain below. 3 Descending to the Duke's Walk, a footpath through the park, so called from having been the favourite promenade of his grandfather, he stood for a few minutes to show him- self to the people. As it was here that he might be said to have first presented himself to the people of Scotland, it may be necessary to describe his appearance. The figure and presence of Charles are said by one of his historians, who saw him on this occasion, 4 to have been not ill-suited to his lofty pretensions, He was in the prime of youth, tall and handsome, of a fair complexion ; he wore a light-coloured peruke, the ringlets of which descended his back in graceful masses, and over the front of which his own pale hair was neatly combed. His complexion was ruddy, and, from its extreme delicacy, slightly marked with freckles. His visage was a perfect oval, and his brow had 1 This young nobleman, son of the Earl of Wemyss, had joined him the night before. 2 Hist. Reb., with an account of the genius and temper of the clans. 3 « He came to the royal palace, at the abbey of Holyrood House,, amidst a vast crowd of spectators, who, from town and country, flocked together to see this uncommon sight, expressing their joy and surprise together by long and loud huzzas. Indeed the whole scene, as I have been told by many, was rather like a dream, so quick and amazing seemed the change, though no doubt wise people saw well enough we had much to do still.'— Journalist in Lockhart Papers, ii. 489. 4 Mr Home. prince Charles's entry into Edinburgh. 87 all the intellectual but melancholy loftiness so remarkable in the portraits of his ancestors. His neck, which was long, but not ungracefully so, had, according to the fashion of the time, no other covering* or incumbrance than a slender stock buckled behind. His eyes were large and rolling, and of a light blue. The fair, but not ill-marked eyebrows which surmounted these features, were beautifully arched. His nose was round and high, and his mouth small in pro- portion to the rest of his features. He was above five feet ten in stature, and his body was of that straight and round description which is said to indicate not only perfect sym- metry, but also the valuable requisites of agility and health. In the language of one of his adherents, 1 he was as l straight as a lance, and as round as an egg. 7 By all ladies who ever saw him, his person was excessively admired ; and the powers of fascination which he could exercise over the male sex have been sufficiently attested. On the present occasion he wore a blue velvet bonnet, bound with gold lace, and adorned at top with a white satin cockade, the well-known badge of his party. He had a short tartan coat, on the breast of which hung the star of the order of St Andrew. A blue sash, wrought with gold, came gracefully over his shoulder. He wore small-clothes of red velvet, a pair of military boots, and a silver-hilted broadsword. 2 After he had stood for a few minutes in the midst of the people, he mounted a fine bay gelding, which had been pre- sented to him by the Duke of Perth, and slowly rode to- wards the palace. Being an excellent horseman, a murmur of admiration ran at this moment through the crowd, which soon amounted to, and terminated in, a long and loud huzza. Around him, as he rode, there was a small guard of ancient Highlanders, 3 whose outlandish and sunburnt faces, as they were occasionally turned up with reverence towards the Prince, and occasionally cast with an air of stupid wonder over the crowd, formed not the least striking fea- ture in this singular scene. The Jacobites, delighted beyond measure by the gallant aspect of their idol, were now indulging themselves in the most extravagant terms of admiration. With their usual propensity to revert to the more brilliant periods of the 1 The Wanderer, or Surprising Escape, &c. Glasgow, 1752 ; p. 17.. It is added by that writer that he ' would tight, run, or leap with any man in the Highlands.' 2 Hist. Reb., with an account of the genius and temper of the clans. 3 Most of them stooping with age, and imperfectly armed. See Hist, of the Rise, Progress, and Extinction of the Reb. in Scot. 8vo. London, sold by R. Thomson, &c. p. 30. (A violent party production.) 88 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Scottish monarchy, they fondly compared Charles to King Robert Bruce, whom they said he resembled in his figure, 1 as they fondly anticipated he would also do in his fortunes. The Whigs, however, though compelled to be cautious in the expression of their sentiments, talked of him in a diffe- rent style. They acknowledged he was a goodly person, but observed that, even in that triumphant hour, when about to enter the palace of his fathers, the air of his countenance was languid and melancholy ; that he looked like a gentle- man and man of fashion, but not like a hero or a con- queror. 2 Charles approached Holyrood House by the same path over which George IV., seventy-seven years after, was drawn thither in his daily progresses from Dalkeith. As he was parading along, the Duke of Perth stopped him a little, while he described the limits and peculiar local cha- racteristics of the King's Park. It was observed on this occasion by an eye-witness, that during the whole five minutes the duke was expatiating, Charles kept his eye bent sideways upon Lord Elcho (who stood aside at a little distance), and seemed lost in a mental speculation about that new adherent. As the procession — for such it might be termed — moved along the Duke's Walk, the crowd greeted the principal personage with two distinct huzzas, which he acknowledged with bows and smiles. The general feeling of the crowd seemed to be a very joyful one, arising in some cases from the influence of political prepossessions, in many others from gratified curiosity, and perhaps in still more from the satisfaction w T ith which they had observed the fate of the city so easily decided that morning. Many had previously conceived Charles to be only the leader of a band of predatory barbarians, at open warfare with pro- perty, and prepared to commit any outrage for the accom- plishment of his purposes. They now regarded him in the interesting light of an injured prince, seeking, at the risk of life, one single noble object, which did not very obviously concern their personal interests. All, more or less, resigned themselves to the charm with which the presence of royalty is so apt to be attended. Youthful and handsome ; gallant and daring ; the leader of a brave and hardy band ; the com- mander and object of a most extraordinary enterprise; un- fortunate in his birth and prospects, but making apparently one manly effort to retrieve the sorrows of his fate ; the de- scendant of those time-honoured persons by whose sides the 1 Home's Works, iii. 71. 2 Ibid, iii. 71. prince Charles's entry into Edinburgh. 89 ancestors of those who saw him had fought at Bannock- burn and Flodden ; the representative of a family pecu- liarly Scottish, but which seemed to have been deprived of its birthright by the machinations of the hated English — Charles was a being calculated to excite the most fervent emotions amongst the people who surrounded him. The modern sovereign, as he went over the same ground in his splendid chariot, was beheld with respect, as the chief magistrate of the nation ; but the boot of Charles was dimmed, as he passed along, with kisses and tears. A remarkable instance of the effect of these feelings occurred as Charles was entering the palace. When he had proceeded along the piazza within the quadrangle, and was just about to enter the porch of what are called the Hamilton apartments, the door of which stood open to receive him, a gentleman of mature age stepped out of the crowd, drew his sword, and, raising it aloft, marshalled the way before him up stairs. James Hepburn, of Keith, in East Lothian, who adopted this conspicuous mode of en- listing himself, did not act altogether under the influence of a devoted attachment to the Stuart family, but was sti- mulated by a sense of the injustice of the Union, which he said had ruined his country, and reduced a Scottish gentle- man from being* a person of some estimation to being the same as nobody. Since the insurrection of 1715, in which he was engaged, he had for thirty years kept himself in constant readiness to strike another blow for what he con- sidered the independence of his country. Learned and intelligent, advanced in life, and honoured by all parties of his countrymen, this man is said, by Mr Home, who knew him, to have been a perfect model of ancient simplicity, manliness, and honour. That he was inspired with as pure and noble a sense of patriotism as any Whig* that ever breathed, it is impossible to doubt. The Jacobites beheld with pride a person so accomplished set the first example in Edinburgh of joining* the Prince ; auguring that his 1 silver hairs ? would c purchase them a good opinion. 7 The Whigs, on the other hand, by whom he was equally ad- mired, looked with pity upon a brave and worthy gentle- man thus offering* himself up a sacrifice to the visionary idea of national independence. 1 The Prince being* thus established in his paternal palace, it was the next business of his adherents to proclaim his father at the Cross. The party which entered the city in 1 Home's Works, iii. 72. 90 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. the morning- had taken care to secure the heralds and pur- suivants ; whose business it was to perform such ceremonies. About one o'clock, therefore, an armed body was drawn up around the Cross ; and that venerable pile, which, notwith- standing" its association with so many romantic events, was soon after removed by the magistrates, had the honour of being* covered with carpet for the occasion. 1 The officers were clothed in their fantastic, but rich old dresses, in order to give all the usual eclat to this disloyal ceremony. David Eeatt, a Jacobite teacher of Edinburgh, 2 then proclaimed King James, and read the commission of regency, with the declaration dated at Rome in 1743, and a manifesto in the name of Charles Prince Regent, dated at Paris May 16, 1745. An immense multitude witnessed the solemnity, which they greeted with hearty but partial huzzas. The ladies, who viewed the scene from their lofty lattices in the High Street, strained their voices in acclamation, and waved white handkerchiefs in honour of the day. 3 The Highland guard looked round the crowd with faces expressing wild joy and triumph, and, with the license and extravagance appropriate to the occasion, fired off their pieces in the air. The bagpipe was not wanting to greet the name of James with a loyal pibroch ; and during the ceremony, Mrs Murray of Broughton, whose enthusiasm was only sur- passed by her beauty, sat on horseback beside the Cross, with a drawn sword in her hand, and her person profusely decorated with white ribbons, which signified devotion to the house of Stuart. 4 CHAPTER X. cope's preparations. Cope sent a letter from Dunbar, Saying, 'Charlie, meet me if ye daur, And I'll learn you the art o' war, Right early in the morning.' Jacobite Song. Whilst the Highlanders were proclaiming King James at the Cross of Edinburgh, Sir John Cope was landing his troops at Dunbar. The evasive movement of this general 1 Caledonian Mercury. 2 Boyse's History of the Rehellion. s Mr Home. 4 Boyse, 77. cope's preparations, 91 had been most unfortunate, as it completely deprived the Lowlands of such protection as his troops were able to afford. He showed, however, all possible anxiety to repair the consequences of his error, marching' his army without delay from Inverness to Aberdeen, where it was embarked with the design of landing* in some Lowland port, and in the hope of still being* in time to protect the principal parts of the kingdom. Sir John's infantry was reinforced at Dunbar by the craven dragoons, who had fled thither as the safest place within their reach. Of their flight an amusing, though perhaps highly -coloured, account has been given in a pamphlet already quoted. 1 'Before the rebels/ says the writer, i came within sight of the king's forces [then posted at Colt bridge], before tbey came within three miles' dis- tance of them, orders were issued to the dragoons to wheel, which they immediately did with the greatest order and regularity imaginable. As it is known that nothing is more beautiful than the evolutions and movements of cavalry, the spectators stood in expectation of w^hat fine manoeuvre they might terminate in, when new orders were immediately issued to retreat; they instantly obeyed, and began to march in the usual pace of cavalry. Orders were repeated every furlong* to quicken their pace ; and, both precept and example concurring*, they quickened it so well, that before they reached Edinburgh, they quickened it to a very smart gallop. They passed in inexpressible hurry and confusion through the narrow lanes at Barefoot's Parks, in the sight of all the north part of Edinburgh, to the infinite joy of the disaffected, and equal grief and consternation of all the other inhabitants. They rushed like a torrent down to Leith, where they endeavoured to draw breath ; but some unlucky boy (I suppose a Jacobite in his heart) calling to them that the Highlanders were approaching, they immediately took to their heels again, and gallopped to Prestonpans, about five miles farther. There, in a literal sense, timor addidit alas — there fear added wings, I mean to the rebels ; for, otherwise, they could not possibly have imagined these formidable enemies to be within several miles of them. But at Prestonpans the same alarm was repeated. The Philis- tines be upon thee, Sampson ! They gallopped to North Berwick ; and being now about twenty miles to the other side of Edinburgh, they thought they might safely dis- 1 * A True Account of the Behaviour and Conduct of Archibald Stewart, Esq., late Lord Provost of Edinburgh, in a Letter to a Friend. Lon- don : 1748.* 92 HISTORY OF THE REEELLION OF 1745-6. mount from their horses, and look out for victuals. Accord- ingly, like the ancient Grecian heroes, each began to kill and dress his provisions — egit amor dapis atque pugnce — they were actuated by the desire of supper and of battle. The sheep and turkeys of North Berwick paid for this warlike disposition. But behold the uncertainty of human happiness ! When the mutton was j ust ready to be put upon the table, they heard, or thought they heard, the same cry of Highlanders. Their fear proved stronger than their hunger ; they again got on horseback ; but were in- formed of the falseness of the alarm time enough to prevent the spoiling of their meal. By such rudiments as these, the dragoons were so thoroughly initiated in the art of running, that at the battle of Preston they could practise it of them- selves, though even there the same good example was not wanting. I have seen an Italian opera called Cesare in JEgitto — Caesar in Egypt — where, in the first scene, Csesar is introduced in a great hurry, giving orders to his soldiers, Fugge, fugge ; alio scampo — Fly, fly ; to your heels ! This is a proof that the commander at Coltbridge is not the first hero that gave such orders to his troops.' The ( Canter of Coltbridge' is related by Mr Home with circumstances somewhat different, but not less ridiculous. After passing through Leith and Musselburgh, they en- camped for the evening in a field near Colonel Gardiner's house at Preston. Between ten and eleven at night, one of their number, going in search of forage, fell into a dis- used coal-pit, which was full of water, and making an outcry for assistance, impressed his companions with a belief that their dreaded enemy was upon them. Not stopping to ascertain the real cause of the noise, or to relieve their unfortunate fellow-soldier, the whole mounted their horses, and with all imaginable speed gallopped off to Dunbar. Colonel Gardiner, awaking in the morning, found a silent and deserted camp, and was obliged, with a heavy heart, to follow in the direction which he learned they had taken. There was little danger that he should have missed their track, for, as he passed along, he found the road strewed with swords, pistols, and firelocks, which they had thrown away in their panic. He caused these to be gathered, and conveyed in covered carts to Dunbar, where he arrived in time to greet General Cope as he landed. The disembarkation of the troops, artillery, and stores, was not completed till the 18th of September ; when Mr Home, author of the history already quoted, presented himself at the camp, and gave the general all the information he could cope's preparations. 93 desire regarding the numbers and condition of the Highland army. The author of ' Douglas 7 had gone to the different posts about the city, and counted the men there stationed ; he had then ascended the hill which overlooked the bivouac of the main body, and reckoned them as they sat at food in lines upon the ground. The whole number, in his estima- tion, did not exceed two thousand ; but he had been told that several bodies from the north were on their march to join them. The general asked his informant what sort of appearance they made, and, in particular, how they were armed ; to which the young poet replied, that most of them seemed to be strong, active, hardy men, though many were of an ordinary size, and, if clothed like Lowlanders, would appear inferior to the king's troops. The Highland garb, he said, favoured them, as it showed their naked limbs, which were strong and muscular ; while their stern coun- tenances, and bushy uncombed hair, gave them a fierce, barbarous, and imposing aspect. As to their arms, he con- tinued, they had no artillery of any sort but one small unmounted cannon, which he had seen lying upon a cart, drawn by a little Highland pony. Fourteen or fifteen hun- dred of them were armed with firelocks and broadswords, and many others had only either the one or the other of these weapons. Their firelocks were of all sorts and sizes — muskets, fusees, and fowlingpieces ; but they must soon provide themselves more generally with that weapon, as the arsenal of the trained bands had fallen into their hands. In the meantime, he had seen one or two companies, amounting altogether perhaps to a hundred men, each of whom had no other weapon than the blade of a scythe fastened end-long upon a pole. 1 General Cope dismissed Mr Home, with many compliments for bringing him so accurate an account of the enemy. The king's army was joined at Dunbar by several judges and other civil officers, who, having fled from Edinburgh on the evening before the Prince had entered it, now resolved to remain with the royal troops, not as fighting men, but as anxious and interested spectators of the approaching action. There also came a few noblemen and gentlemen of the country, attended by their tenants in arms. Among these was the Earl of Home, who, being then an officer in the Guards, thought it his duty to offer his services when the king's troops were in the field. The retinue which this nobleman brought along with him was such as to surprise 1 Home's Works, iii. 76. 94 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. many persons. At the time when the Lowlands of Scotland were equally warlike, and equally under the influence of the feudal system with the Highlands, his lordship's ancestors could have raised as many men upon their dominions in Berwickshire as would have themselves repelled the che- valier's little army. In 1633, the Earl of Home had greeted Charles I., as he crossed the Border to visit Scotland, at the head of 600 well-mounted gentlemen, his relations and re- tainers. The whole force that the present earl could bring, besides himself, to assist his sovereign in opposing a public enemy, consisted of two body servants ! 1 It was not till the day succeeding the disembarkation, Thursday the 19th of September, that the royal army left Dunbar to meet the insurgents. It is said to have made a great show upon its march ; the infantry, cavalry, cannon, and baggage occupying several miles of road. The country people, long unaccustomed to war and arms, flocked from all quarters to see an army going to fight a battle in Lothian, and with infinite concern and anxiety beheld this uncom- mon spectacle. 2 The army halted for the night in a field to the west of Haddington, sixteen miles east of Edinburgh. In the even- ing, it was proposed to employ some young people who followed the camp to ride betwixt Haddington and Edin- burgh during the dark hours, lest the Highlanders, whose movements were rapid, should march in the night-time and surprise the army. Accordingly sixteen young men, most of whom had been volunteers at Edinburgh, and among whom the author of ' Douglas 7 was one, offered their services. About nine at night eight of them set out, in four parties, by four different roads, for Duddingstone, where they understood the Highlanders to be encamped. They returned safe at midnight, reporting that all was quiet ; and the other eight then set out in the same manner. 3 1 Home's Works, iii. 77- 2 Ihid. iii. 78. 3 It was the duty of two of this little corps to pursue the coast road towards Musselburgh. Their names were Francis Garden and Robert Cunningham — the one afterwards better known by his judicial title of Lord Gardenstone, and the other by his official designation of General. On approaching Mussel- burgh, says Sir Walter Scott in a lively contribution to the Quarterly Re- view, ' they avoided the bridge, to escape observation, and crossed the Esk, it being then low water, at a place nigh its junction with the sea. Unluckily, there was at the opposite side a snug thatched tavern kept by a cleanly old woman called Luckie F , who was eminent for the excellence of her oysters and sherry. The patrol were both ton vivants ; one of them, whom we remember in the situation of a senator, was unusually so, and a gay, witty, agreeable companion besides. Luckie's sign, and the heap of oyster shells cope's preparations. 95 On the morning of the succeeding' day, Friday the 20th of September, Cope continued his march towards Edin- burgh by the ordinary post-road from Haddington, After marching a very few miles, it occurred to him that the defiles and enclosures near the road would, in case of an attack, prove unfavourable to the action of cavalry, and he resolved to adopt a less-frequented and more open path. On coming to Huntington, therefore, he turned off to the right, and took what is called the Low Road ; that is, the road which traverses the low country near the sea, passing by St Germains and Seton. At the same time he sent forward his adjutant-general, the Earl of Loudon, accompanied by the Earl of Home, to mark out a camp for the army near Musselburgh, intending to go no farther that day. The soldiers are described as having been in high spirits during the march ; the infantry feeling confident in the assistance of the cavalry, and the cavalry acquiring some portion of the same courage by a junction with the infantry. The first files of the troops were entering the plain be- twixt Seton and Preston, when Lord Loudon came back at deposited near her door, proved as great a temptation to this vigilant foriorn- hope as the wine-house to the abbess of Andouillet's muleteer. They had scarcely got settled at some right pandoi-es, with a bottle of sherry as an accompaniment, when, as some Jacobite devil would have it, an unlucky north-country lad, a writer's (that is, attorney's) apprentice, who had given his indentures the slip, and taken the white cockade, chanced to pass by on his errand to join Prince Charlie. He saw the two volunteers through the window, knew them, and guessed their business : he saw the tide would make it impossible for them to return along the sands, as they had come. He therefore placed himself in ambush upon the steep, narrow, impracticable bridge, which was then, and for many years afterwards, the only place of crossing the Esk : and how he contrived it I could never learn, but the courage and assurance of his province are proverbial, and the Norland whip- per-snapper surrounded and made prisoners of the two unfortunate volun- teers before they could draw a trigger.'* They were immediately conducted to the camp at Duddingstone, and put into the hands of John Roy Stuart, commander of the Prince's bodyguard, who at once pronounced them spies, and proposed to hang them accordingly. Thrown into consternation by this sentence, they luckily recollected that a youthful acquaintance, by name Colquhoun Grant, bore a commission in the very body which John Roy commanded ; and they intreated him to lead them before that person, who was able to attest their innocence. Colquhoun Grant, who lived many years afterwards as a respectable writer to the signet in Edinburgh, used to relate that he never was so much surprised in his life, and at the same time amused, as when his two young friends were brought up to him for his verdict. Stuart introduced them with the following words : — ' Here are two fellows who have been caught prowling near the camp. I am certain they are spies, at least this oldest one (Mr Garden); and I propose that, to make sure, we should hang them baith.' Mr Grant of course inter- fered in behalf of his friends, and afterwards getting them into his own cus- tody, took it upon him to permit their escape, f * Quarterly Review, vol. xxxvi. 177- f Information by the late Henry Mackenzie, author of the ■ Man of Feeling.* 96 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. a round pace, with information that the Highlanders were in full march towards the royal army. The general, sur- prised, but not disconcerted by this intelligence, and think- ing 1 the plain which lay before him a very proper place to receive the enemy, called a halt there, and drew up his troops with a front to the west. His right was thus ex- tended to the sea, and his left towards the village of Tranent. Soon after he had taken up his ground, the chevalier's army came in sight. CHAPTER XL THE PRINCE'S MARCH TO PRESTON. When Charlie looked this letter upon, He drew his sword the scabbard from, Crying, ' Follow me, my merry, merry men, And we'll meet Johnnie Cope in the morning.' Jacobite Song. Three days of rest in Edinburgh, where they were sup- plied with plenty of food, and did not want opportunities of improving their appointments, had meanwhile increased in no inconsiderable degree the efficacy and confidence of the Highland army. Learning that Cope had landed at Dunbar, and was marching to give him battle, the Prince came on Thursday night to Duddingstone, where, calling' a council of war, he proposed to march next morning and meet the enemy half way. The council agreed that this was the only thing they could do ; and Charles then asked the Highland chiefs how they thought their men would behave in meeting a general who had already avoided them. The chiefs desired Macdonald of Keppoch to speak for them, as he had served in the French army, and was thought to know best what the Highlanders could do against regular troops. Keppoch's speech was brief, but emphatic. He said that the country having been long at peace, and few or none of the private men having ever seen a battle, it was difficult to foretell how they would behave ; but he would venture to assure his royal highness that the gentlemen wxmld be in the midst of the enemy, and that the clansmen, devoted to their chiefs, and loving the cause, would certainly not be far behind them. Charles, catching the spirit of the mo- ment, exclaimed he would be the first man to charge the foe ! But the chiefs discountenanced this imprudent pro- THE PRIXCE'S MARCH TO PRESTOX. 97 posal, declaring that in his life lay the strength of their cause, and that, should he be slain, they would be undone beyond redemption, whether victorious or defeated. They even went so far as to declare that they would go home, and endeavour to make the best terms they could for them- selves, if he persisted in so rash a resolution. This re- monstrance with difficulty repressed the ardour of their young commander, whose great passion at this moment seems to have been to strike a decisive blow, and share per- sonally in its glory. 1 On the morning of Friday the 20th of September, when the king's army was commencing its march from Hadding- ton, the Highlanders roused themselves from their bivouac near Duddingstone, and prepared to set forward. They had been reinforced since daybreak by a party of Grants from Glenmorriston, 2 as they had been the day before by some Maclauchlans and Athole men. The Prince, putting himself at the head of his army, thus increased by 250, presented his sword, and said aloud, * My friends, I have thrown away the scabbard!' 3 He was answered by a cheerful huzza; and the band then set forward in three files, Charles marching on horseback by their side, along with some of Ijjs principal officers. The army proceeded from Duddingstone Park, where they had what was called their camp, by the road which passes Easter Duddingstone, and enters the main or post- road near Magdalen Bridge. A lady, who in early youth had seen them pass the last-mentioned village, 4 was able, in 1827, to describe the memorable pageant. The High- landers strode on with their squalid clothes and various arms, their rough limbs and uncombed hair, looking around them with an air of fierce resolution. The Prince rode amidst his officers at a little distance from the flank of the column, preferring to amble over the dry stubble-fields beside the road. My informant remembered, as yesterday, his graceful carriage and comely looks, his long light hair straggling below his neck, and the flap of his tartan coat thrown back by the wind, so as to make the jewelled St 1 Home's Works, iii. 81. 2 Grant of Glenmorriston arrived with his little party in great haste, anxious not to be too late for the first battle. He had travelled all night, and was of course travel-soiled and unshaven. When he rushed into the Prince's pre- sence at Holyroodhouse, his appearance drew an ill-timed, but probably half- j ocular remark from Charles as to his beard. The chief turned away with kindling wrath, saying, * Sir, it is not beardless boys who are to do your busi- ness.'— Information from the late Mr W. Grant, W.S. 3 Caledonian Mercury. 4 The late Mrs Handasyde of Fisherrow. VOL. V. G 98 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OP 1745-6. Andrew dangle for a moment clear in the air by its silken ribbon. He was viewed with admiration by the simple vil- lagers ; and even those who were ignorant of his claims, or who rejected them, could not help wishing him good for- tune, and at least no calamity. Soon after falling into the post-road, the insurgents con- tinued their march till they entered the Market-gate of Fisherrow — an old narrow street leading to the bridge across the Esk. One there went up to a new house upon which the tilers were engaged, and took a long slip of wood, technically called a tile-lath ; from another house he abstracted an ordinary broom, which he tied upon the end of the pole. This he bore aloft over his head, emble- matising what seemed to be the general sentiment of the army, that they would sweep their enemies off the face of the earth. The shouts with which the symbol was hailed on the present occasion testified the high courage and resolution of the troops, and but too truly presaged the issue of the approaching conflict. Charles, in passing along the Market-gate, bowed gracefully to the ladies who sur- veyed him from their windows. 1 The army now passed along the ancient bridge of Mussel- burgh— a structure supposed to be of Roman origin, and over which the Scottish army had passed, two centuries before, to the field of Pinkie. Proceeding directly onward, the column traversed, not the town of Musselburgh, but the old post-road which winds to the south, behind the gardens of Pinkie House. When passing these gardens, Lord George Murray, who led the van, received intelligence that Cope was at or near Preston, and was likely to seek the high grounds to the south, so as to obtain an advantage over the Highland army. Being convinced that the High- landers could do nothing unless they got above the enemy, he immediately struck off through the fields to the right, with which he was well acquainted, ordering the army to follow him. By half an hour of quick marching, he reached the height near Fawside, and then marched slow, that the rear might close up. He now became aware that Cope had remained content with his position at Preston, and therefore commenced a slanting march down -hill towards Tranent. On coming within half a mile of that village, the army halted. During the last two miles of their march, they had had the enemy within sight. 2 1 Tradition in Fisherrow. 2 Lord George Murray's Narrative, Jacobite Memoirs, 36. THE PRINCE'S MARCH TO PRESTON. 99 At this early stage of the campaign, the mode of forming the Highland army was extremely simple, on account of the want of horse and artillery. The column in which it always moved was merely halted at the proper place, and then facing about, became at once a line. Such was the evolution by which, on the present occasion, Charles brought his men to their first tete-a-tete with the devoted host of his antagonist. When the royal troops first perceived the Highlanders they raised a spirited shout, to which the others readily re- plied. The two armies were about a mile distant from each other, with a gentle slope and a long stripe of marshy ground between. It was a little after noon, and the weather was favourable for immediate combat. Both armies had marched the equal distance of eight miles, and were alike fresh and ardent. It was Charles's wish, as it had been his expectation, to engage the enemy before nightfall ; and the ground appeared perfectly favourable for the purpose. The descent towards Cope's position, though gentle, was suffi- cient to increase the natural speed and impetuosity of the Highlanders, whose ancestors had been always successful in conflicts fought in that manner. But Cope had not the same eager desire of battle; and various considerations, arising from the nature of the ground, interposed to prevent an immediate attack on the part of the Highlanders. The English general had at first arranged his troops with their front to the west, expecting the enemy to come directly from Musselburgh ; but when he saw them appear on the southern heights, he altered his position accordingly, and now lay upon a plain swelling gently up from the coast, with Cockenzie and the sea behind him, the intricate little village of Preston, with its numerous parks and garden- walls, on his right, Seton House at a distance on his left, and a deep ditch or drain traversing* the morass before him. On all sides but the east he was inaccessible, except, perhaps, by a column which no enemy could ever have thought of directing* against him. By examining the country people, who, as usual, flocked about him in great numbers, the Prince soon learned that to attack General Cope across the morass was impracticable, except at a great risk. In order to ascertain the point still more satisfactorily, Lord George Murray despatched Colonel Ker of Graden, 1 an officer of experience, to survey and 1 The Prince had granted a commission as colonel to Mr Ker, at Lin- lithgow, on the 13th September— a copy of which is in possession of the author. 100 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. report upon the ground. Mounted upon a little white pony, Mr Ker descended alone from Tranent, and with great de- liberation approached the post of the enemy. When very near it, he rode slowly along the edge of the morass, care- fully inspecting" the ground on all sides, and scanning 1 the breadth and depth of the ditch. Some of the king's troops moved along the ditches, and shot at him ; but he was not in the least discomposed. Coming to a stone fence which he required to cross, he dismounted, pulled down a piece of the dike, and then led his horse through the breach. When he had completely satisfied himself, he returned to the army, and reported his observations to the lieutenant- general. The morass, he said, could not be passed without the troops being exposed to several unreturned fires, and was therefore not to be thought of. 1 When Charles learned this, he moved a considerable part of his army back to Dol- phingston, and affected to meditate an attack upon Cope's west or right flank. The English general observing this, resumed his first position, in order to meet the insurgents w T ith the front of his army. Charles, probably deterred from makings an attack in this quarter by the park-dikes, which so effectually screened the enemy's front, now once more shifted his ground, and returned to his first station near Tranent. The king's army faced round at the same time. The whole afternoon was occupied by these evolutions. When evening approached, General Cope found himself still in possession of the advan- tageous ground he had originally chosen ; but it was feared by some unconcerned spectators that he had been perhaps over-cautious in his evolutions ; that he had cooped himself up in a narrow place, while the Highlanders were at liberty to move about as they pleased ; and that he had disheartened his men by keeping them so carefully on the defensive, while the Highlanders were proportionably animated by feeling themselves in the predicament of an attacking party. 2 Cope had not acted altogether on the defensive. Sullivan had posted fifty of Locheil's men at the parish church at the bottom of the village, 'for what reason,' says Lord George Murray, The lovely young Flora sat sighing her lane, The dew on her plaid, and the tear in her ee. She looked at a boat with the breezes that swung., Away on the wave like a bird of the main, And aye as it lessened, she sighed and she sung, ' Fareweel to the lad I shall ne'er see again. Fareweel to my hero, the gallant and good, Fareweel to the lad I shall ne'er see again !' Jacobite Song. The weather continued fair till the boat containing* the Prince had got several leagues from shore, when it became somewhat stormy. Exposed in such a vessel to the cold night air, at the mercy of a raging sea, and at the same time haunted by the fear of man's more deadly hostility, the sensations of the little party cannot be supposed to have been very agreeable. Charles could not help perceiving the uneasiness of his attendants, and anxious to compensate, by all the means in his power, for the pain which he occasioned to them, he endeavoured to sustain their spirits by singing and talking. He sang the lively old song entitled 'The Restoration ;' and told a few playful stories, which yielded them some amusement. When day dawned, they found themselves out of sight of land, without any means of determining in what part of the Hebrides they were. They sailed, however, but a little way farther, when they perceived the lofty mountains and dark bold headlands of Skye. Making with all speed towards that coast, they soon approached Waternish, one of the western points of the island. They had no sooner drawn near to the shore than they perceived a body of militia stationed at the place. These men had a boat, but no oars. The men in Miss Macdonald's boat no sooner perceived them, than they began to pull heartily in the contrary direction. The soldiers called upon them to land, upon peril of being shot at ; but it was resolved to escape at all risks, and they exerted their utmost energies in pulling off their little vessel. The soldiers then put their threat in execution by firing, but fortunately without hitting the boat or any of its crew. Charles called upon the boatmen 'not to mind the villains;' Charles's wanderings — skye. 297 and they assured him that, if they cared at all, it was only for him ; to which he replied, with undaunted lightness of demeanour, 'Oh, no fear of me V He then intreated Miss Macdonald to lie down at the bottom of the boat, in order to avoid the bullets, as nothing, he said, could give him at that moment greater pain than if any accident were to befall her. She refused, however, to do as he desired, unless he also took the same measure for his safety, which, she told him, was of much more importance than hers. It was not till after some altercation that they agreed to ensconce themselves together in the bottom of the boat. The rowers soon pulled them out of all further danger. When once more fairly out to sea, and in some measure recovered from this alarm, Miss Macdonald, overcome with the watchfulness and anxiety of the night, fell asleep upon the bottom of the boat. Charles had previously rendered the kindest attentions to his amiable preserver, refusing* to partake of a small quantity of wine which Lady Clanranald had brought to him before embarking, upon the plea that it should be reserved for her, both on account of her sex, and the extraordinary hardships she was undergoing. He now sat down beside her, and watched with tender and anxious regard, lest the boatmen should happen to disturb her in the course of their awkward evolutions. In the eagerness of Duke William's emissaries to take Charles upon the Long Island, where they had certain information he was, Skye, on which the Prince was now about to land, was left comparatively unwatched. The island was, however, chiefly possessed by two clans — the Sleat Macdonalds and Macleods, whose superiors had proved renegade to the Stuart cause, and even raised men on the opposite side. Macleod went so far in his hostility as to exert himself personally, and with real eagerness, to effect the capture of the Prince. Parties of their militia were posted throughout the island, one of which had nearly taken the boat with its important charge when it was off Water- nish. At the same time the people of the island did not in general sympathise in the views of their chiefs, and there were some gentlemen of both clans who were well-affected to the Prince, and had even been in arms on his behalf. Proceeding on their voyage a few miles to the northward, the little party in the boat put into a creek, or cleft, to rest and refresh the fatigued rowers ; but the alarm which their appearance occasioned in a neighbouring village quickly obliged them to put off again. At length they landed safely at a place within the parish of Kilmuir, about twelve 298 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. miles from Waternish, and very near Sir Alexander Mac- donald's seat of Mugstat. Sir Alexander was at this time at Fort-Augustus, in attendance on the Duke of Cumberland; but his spouse, Lady Margaret Macdonald— one of the beautiful daughters of Alexander and Susanna, Earl and Countess of Eglintoune, a lady in the bloom of life, of elegant manners, and one who was accustomed to figure in the fashionable scenes of the metropolis— now resided at Mugstat. Well-affected from education to the house of Stuart, and possessed of humane feelings, she had pitied the condition of the Prince in the Long Island, of which she was made aware, and had sent him, as has been already stated, the newspapers of the day, which he had regarded as a great obligation. Mr Mac- donald of Balshair, who served as a medium for this inter- course, had recently transmitted a letter of thanks, written by the Prince to Lady Margaret, enclosed in one to his brother Donald Roy Macdonald, one of the Prince's cap- tains, who was now residing, for the cure of a wound in his foot (got at Culloden), in the house of Mr John Maclean, surgeon in Trotternish. Donald Roy, a well-bred Highland gentleman, 1 delivered the Prince's letter to Lady Margaret with his own hand, and immediately after, as he had been ordered, desired her ladyship to burn it, for the sake of her own safety, as well as that of the Prince. But, kissing it, she said, ' No, I will not burn it — I will preserve it for the sake of him who sent it to .me. Although King George's forces should come to the house, I hope I shall find a way to secure the letter.' 2 She hid it in a closet. The purport of Balshair's letter to Donald Roy was, that the Prince (the escape with Flora Macdonald not being then projected) de- signed to leave the Long Island and take refuge in a small solitary isle named Fladdachuan, six miles from Trotternish, and inhabited by only one family, tenants under Sir Alex- ander Macdonald. Donald was desired to keep a look-out, and be ready to assist the Prince with necessaries in that island. ' At the interview which Donald had with Lady Margaret, she entered heartily into the scheme, and gave him six shirts, and twenty broad pieces of gold, for the 1 He was one of the only two gentlemen of Sir Alexander Macdonald's fol- lowing who went out. Mr Forbes preserves several Latin verses by him, bearing out the representation made by General Stewart, in his work on the Highland regiments, respecting the learned education given in those days to the gentlemen of the Western Islands. 2 When some troops afterwards came to the house in quest of the Prince, she deemed it prudent to destroy this document, which she did with great regret Charles's wanderings— skye. 299 Prince's use. She offered blankets, which Donald refused, as he could not g*et them carried without the risk of exciting 1 suspicion. During 1 the interval between the receipt of these letters and the arrival of the Prince in Skye, Donald had gone to Fladdachuan to look out for the expected stranger, but of course in vain. Lady Margaret had also more re- cently received, by a Mrs Macdonald of Kirkibost in North Uist, a letter informing her of the altered scheme, and of the concern which Miss Flora was taking in the matter. She was therefore in some measure prepared for the arrival of the Prince in Skye, but not for his coming so near her residence. When the boat containing the Wanderer had landed, Miss Macdonald, attended by Neil Mackechan, proceeded to the house, leaving Charles, in his female dress, sitting on her trunk upon the beach. 1 On arriving at the house, she de- sired a servant to inform Lady Margaret that she had called on her way home from the Long Island. 2 She was imme- diately introduced to the family apartment, where she found,, besides Mrs Macdonald of Kirkibost, a Lieutenant Macleod, 3 the commander of a band of militia stationed near by, three or four of whom were also in the house. There was also present Mr Alexander Macdonald of Kingsburgh, a gentle- man of the neighbourhood, who acted as chamberlain or factor to Sir Alexander, and who was, she knew, a sound Jacobite. Miss Macdonald entered easily into conversation with the officer, who asked her a number of questions — as where she had come from, where she was going, and so forth — all of which she answered without manifesting the least trace of that confusion which might have been expected from a young lady under such circumstances. The same man had been in the custom of examining' every boat which landed from the Long Island : that, for instance, in which Mrs Macdonald of Kirkibost arrived had been so examined ; and I can only account for his allowing that of Miss Flora to pass, by the circumstance of his meeting her under the imposing courtesies of the drawing-room of a lady of rank. Miss Macdonald, with the same self-possession, dined in Lieutenant Macleod's company. Seizing a proper opportu- nity, she apprised Kingsburgh of the circumstances of the Prince, and he immediately proceeded to another room, and sent for Lady Margaret, that he might break the intelligence 1 Narrative (MS.) in my possession, by Colonel Macalister of Barr and Cour in Argyleshire. 2 Flora Macdonald's Narrative, Jacobite Memoirs. 3 Son of Donald Macleod of Balmeanagb. 300 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. to her in private. She was greatly alarmed, insomuch as to scream, and exclaim aloud that she and her family were un- done ; but Kingsburgh, who was a cool, sensible man, soon calmed her fears in some degree, assuring her that, if ne- cessary, he would take the Prince to his own house. He was now, he said, an old man, and it made little difference to him whether he should immediately die with a halter about his neck, or await a natural death, which could not be far distant. 1 It was then agreed to send an express to Donald Roy, requesting his immediate attendance on business of the utmost importance. It does not appear to have been thought that Donald was in any danger from Lieutenant Macleod ; and indeed the reverse of this appears, for he tells us himself 2 that he at this time used to meet the militia men and jest with them on his late career as a rebel officer. For the protection, however, of Lady Margaret, the letter was directed by Mrs Macdonald of Kirkibost, and put into the messenger's hands, as from her. When Donald soon after approached the house, he saw Lady Margaret and Kingsburgh walking together in the garden, as in deep consultation. Her ladyship's first address to him was, c Oh, Donald, we are ruined forever!' 3 The three now held an anxious council as to the best means of disposing of the Prince, whose resting-plaoe for the mean- time was at the bottom of the garden in which they were walking. It was suggested that he might proceed in the boat to the island of Raasay; but this was seen to be dan- gerous, as he would require to pass a military party in sail- ing along the coast in that direction. It was at last deter- mined that he should be sent overland to Portree, the prin- cipal port in Skye, and thence transported to Raasay. What made this island seem so fitting' a refuge was, that the pro- prietor, a principal man of the clan Macleod, had been in the Prince's army with his ' following,' his eldest son alone remaining loyal, to save the estate in case of the worst. It was arranged that Donald Roy should be at Portree on the arrival of the Prince, after having in the meantime sought out the young Laird of Raasay, in order to consult about putting his Royal Highness under his father's charge. It was further contemplated that Raasay and Donald Roy might conduct the Prince to Seaforth's country on the main- land, and place him amongst the Mackenzies; but after- wards it was found that Charles objected to this part of the J Colonel Macalister's Narrative. 2 Narrative printed in Jacobite Memoirs. 3 Donald Roy's Narrative. Charles's wanderings— skye. 301 scheme, thinking that to go from place to place was safer than to stay in any one district. Donald Roy now set out in quest of young" Baasay, who, he understood, was at Tottrome near Portree. Soon after, while Miss Flora still carried on conversation in the dining- room, Kingsburgh took his leave, as to go home ; provided himself with a bottle of wine, a tumbler, and some biscuits ; and went to introduce himself to the fugitive Prince. Charles was not now so near Mugstat House as at first. Mackechan had in the meantime gone to inform him that Kingsburgh was to come and take charge of him, and also to conduct him to a more secluded spot at a greater distance. Kingsburgh had some difficulty at first in finding the place : at length, seeing a few sheep run off in alarm, and cross a dry-stone enclosure, and calculating that they must have been startled by a human being, he went to the spot, and there found Charles in his female disguise. The Prince, on seeing him, rose up and came forward threateningly, with a large knotted stick in his hand. ' Are you Mr Macdonald of Kingsburgh? 7 he demanded; which being answered in the affirmative, he instantly changed his demeanour, and said, 6 Then let us be going.' Kingsburgh requested him to delay a little while, in order to take some refreshment, and spreading out his wine, tumbler, and biscuits upon the top of a rock, enabled the famished Prince to make a hearty meal, in the course of which he drank familiarly to his future conductor. They then proceeded on their journey, the first object of which was Kingsburgh House, situated at some miles' distance on the north shore of Loch Snizort. As they walked along, Mr Macdonald remarked, in high spirits, how fortunate it was that he had been at Mugstat that day. He had come, he said, without any reason of either business or duty which he could remember. 'I'll tell you the cause,' said Charles ; c Providence sent you there to take care of me.' He evinced on other occasions an inclination to suppose himself under the protection of a special Providence; and he certainly had as much cause for forming such a notion as the most of those who have fallen into the same belief. Some time after, when it might have been supposed that Kingsburgh and the Prince would be a little way advanced on their journey, Flora Macdonald rose from table to take her departure. Lady Margaret affected great concern at her short stay, and intreated that she would prolong it at least till next day; reminding her that, when last at Mugstat, she had promised a much longer visit. Flora, 302 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. on the other hand, pleaded the necessity of getting* imme- diately home to attend her mother, who was unwell, and entirely alone in these troublesome times. After a proper reciprocation of intreaties and refusals, Lady Margaret, with great apparent reluctance, permitted her young friend to depart. Miss Macdonald and Mackechan were accompanied in their journey by Mrs Macdonald of Kirkibost, and by that lady's male and female servants, all the five riding on horse- back. They soon came up with Kingsburgh and the Prince, who had walked thus far on the public road, but were soon after to turn off upon an unfrequented path across the wild country. Flora, anxious that her fellow-traveller's servants, who were uninitiated in the secret, should not see the route which Kingsburgh and the Prince were about to take, called upon the party to ride faster ; and they passed the two pedestrians at a trot. Mrs Macdonald's girl, however, could not help observing the extraordinary appearance of the female with whom Kingsburgh was walking, and ex- claimed that she i had never seen such a tall impudent- looking woman in her life ! See ! ' she continued, addressing Flora, 6 what long strides the jade takes! I daresay she's an Irishwoman, or else a man in woman's clothes.' Flora confirmed her in the former supposition, and soon after parted with her fellow-travellers, in order to rejoin Kings- burgh and the Prince. These individuals, in walking along the road, were at first a good deal annoyed by the number of country people whom they met returning from church, and who all ex- pressed wonder at the uncommon height and awkwardness of the apparent female. The opportunity of talking to their landlord's factotum being too precious to be despised, these people fastened themselves on Kingsburgh, who, under the particular circumstances, felt a good deal annoyed by them, but at last bethought himself of saying, ** Oh, sirs ! cannot you let alone talking of your worldly affairs on Sabbath, and have patience till another day?' They took the pious hint, and moved off. 1 In crossing a stream which traversed the road, Charles held up his petticoats indelicately high, to save them from being wet. Kingsburgh pointed out that, by doing so, he must excite strange suspicions among those who should happen to see him ; and his Koyal High- ness promised to take better care on the next occasion. Accordingly, in crossing another stream, he permitted his 1 Account of the P *s escape, Scots Magazine, 1749. Charles's wanderings — skye. 303 skirts to hang* down and float upon the water. Kingsburgh again represented that this mode was as likely as the other to attract observation ; and the Prince could not help laughing at the difficulty of adjusting this trifling and yet important matter. His conductor further observed that, instead of returning the obeisance which the country people made to them in passing by a curtsy, his Royal Highness made a bow ; and also that, in some other gestures and atti- tudes of person, he completely forgot the woman, and re- sumed the man. 'Your enemies/ remarked Kingsburgh, 6 call you a pretender ; but if you be, I can tell you you are the worst at your trade I ever saw.' ' Why/ replied Charles, laughing, c I believe my enemies do me as much injustice in this as in some other and more important par- ticulars. I have all my life despised assumed characters, and am perhaps the worst dissimulator in the world.' The whole party — Charles, Kingsburgh, and Miss Macdonald • — arrived in safety at Kingsburgh House about eleven at night. The house of Kingsburgh was not at this time in the best possible case for entertaining guests of distinction; and, to add to the distress of the occasion, all the inmates had long been gone to bed. The old gentleman, however, lost no time in putting matters in proper trim for affording a supper to the party. He introduced Charles into the hall, and sent a servant up stairs to rouse his lady. Lady Kingsburgh, on being informed of her husband's arrival, with guests, did not choose to rise, but contented herself with sending down an apology for her non-appearance, and a request that they would help themselves to whatever was in the house. . She had scarcely despatched the servant, when her daughter, a girl of seven years, came running up to her bedside, and informed her, with many expressions of childish surprise, that her father had brought home the most \ odd, muckle, ill-shaken-up wife she had ever seen — and brought her into the hall too ! ' Kingsburgh himself immediately came up, and desired her to lose no time in rising, as her presence was absolutely necessary for the entertainment of his fellow-travellers. She was now truly roused, and even alarmed ; the mysterious sententiousness of her husband suggesting to her that he had taken under his protection some of the proscribed fugitives who were then known to be skulking in the country. As she was putting on her clothes, she sent her daughter down stairs for her keys, which she remembered to have left in the hall. The girl, however, came back immediately, 304 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. declaring', with marks of the greatest alarm, that she could not go into the hall for fear of the tall woman, who was walking" backwards and forwards through it in a manner, she said, perfectly frightful. Lady Kingsburgh then went down herself, but could not help hesitating, when she came to the door, at sight of this mysterious stranger. Kings- burgh coming up, she desired him to go in for the keys ; but he bade her go in herself; and, after some further demur, in at last she went. On her entering, Charles rose up from a seat which he had taken at the end of the hall and advanced to salute her. Her apprehensions were now confirmed beyond a doubt ; for, in performing the ceremony of the salute, she felt the roughness of a male cheek, and such were her feel- ings at the discovery, that she almost fainted away. Not a word passed between her and the unfortunate stranger. When she got out of the hall, she eagerly made up to Kingsburgh, and disclosed to him all her suspicions. She did not upbraid her husband for having been so imprudent, but, on the contrary, asked if he thought the stranger would know anything regarding the Prince. Kingsburgh then took his wife's hands into his own and said seriously, c My dear, this is the Prince himself.' She could not restrain her alarm when he pronounced these emphatic words, but exclaimed, i The Prince ! then we'll be all hanged ! ' Kings- burgh replied, i We can die but once — could we ever die in a better cause 1 We are only doing an act of humanity, which anybody might do. Go,' he added, l and make haste with supper. Bring us eggs, butter, cheese, and whatever else you can quickly make ready.' i Eggs, butter, and cheese ! ' repeated Mrs Macdonald, alarmed upon a new but scarcely less interesting score— the honour of her house- wifeship ; ' what a supper is that for a prince — he'll never look at it ! ' ' Ah, my good wife/ replied Kingsburgh, 1 you little know how this poor Prince has fared of late ! Our supper will be a treat to him. Besides, to make a formal supper would cause the servants to suspect some- thing. Make haste, and come to supper yourself.' Lady Kingsburgh was almost as much alarmed at her husband's last expression as she had been about her provisions* ' Me come to supper ! ' she exclaimed ; ' I know not how to be- have before majesty ! ' < But you must come,' Kingsburgh replied ; c the Prince would not eat a bit without you ; and you'll find it no difficult matter to behave before him — he is so easy and obliging in conversation.' Supper being accordingly soon after prepared, and Miss CHARLESES WANDERINGS — SKYE. 305 Flora Macdonald introduced, Charles, who had always paid the most respectful attentions to his preserver, placed her upon his right hand, and Lady Kingsburgh on his left. He ate very heartily, and afterwards drank a bumper of brandy to the health and prosperity of his landlord. When his repast was finished, and the ladies had retired, he took out a little black stunted tobacco-pipe which he carried with him, and which, among" his companions, went by the name of ' the cutty? and proceeded to take a smoke, informing 1 Kingsburgh that he had been obliged to have recourse to that exercise during his wanderings on account of a toothache which occasionally afflicted him. Kings- burgh then produced a small china punch-bowl, and, in Scottish fashion, made up, with usquebaugh, hot water, and sugar, the celebrated composition called toddy, dealing it out to Charles and himself in glasses. The Prince was pleased to express himself greatly delighted with this bever- age, and soon, with Kingsburgh's assistance, emptied the little bowl, after which it was again filled. The two friends, unequal in rank, but united in common feelings, talked over their glasses in a style so familiar, so kindly, and so much to the satisfaction of each other, that they did not observe the lapse of time, and it was an hour not the earliest in the morning ere either thought of retiring. It might have been expected that Charles, from fatigue, and from a wish to enjoy once more the comforts of a good bed, to which he had been so long a stranger, would have been the first to propose this measure. On the contrary, Kingsburgh had to perform the disagreeable duty of breaking up the com- pany. After they had emptied the bowl several times, and when he himself was become anxious for repose, he thought it necessary to hint to the Prince that, as he would require to be up and away as soon as possible on the morrow, he had better now go to bed, in order that he might enjoy a proper term of sleep. To his surprise, Charles was by no means anxious for rest. On the contrary, he insisted upon i another bowl,' that they might, as he said, finish their conversation. Kingsburgh violated his feelings as a host so far as to refuse this request, urging that it was abso- lutely necessary that his Royal Highness should retire, for the reason he had stated. Charles as eagerly pressed the necessity of more drink ; and, after some good-humoured altercation, when Kingsburgh took away the bowl to put it by, his Royal Highness rose to detain it, and a struggle ensued, in which the little vessel broke into two pieces, Charles retaining one in his hands, and Kingsburgh hold- VOL. V. T 306 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. ing the other. 1 The strife was thus brought to an end, and the Prince no long-er objected to go to bed. After having retired from the supper-table, Lady Kings- burgh desired Miss Flora to relate the adventures in which she had been concerned with his Royal Highness. At the termination of the recital, the hostess inquired what had been done with the boatmen who brought them to Skye. Miss Macdonald said they had been sent back to South Uist. Lady Kingsburgh observed that they ought not to have been permitted to return immediately, lest, falling into the hands of the Prince's enemies in that island, they might divulge the secret of his route. Her conjecture, which turned out to have been correct, though happily without being attended with evil consequences to the Prince, determined Flora to change the Prince's clothes next day. So much did Charles enjoy the novel pleasure of a good bed, that though he seldom, during his distresses, slept above four hours, he on this occasion slept about ten, not awaking till roused, at one o'clock next day, by his kind landlord. Kingsburgh inquiring, like a good host, how he had re- posed, the Prince answered that he had never enjoyed a more agreeable or a longer sleep in his life. He had almost forgot, he said, what a good bed was. Kings- burgh begged leave to tell his guest that it was full time to think of another march. It would be proper, he conti- nued, for him to go away in the same dress which he wore when he entered the house, in order to avoid raising sus- picions among the servants ; but as the rumour of his dis- guise might have taken air, it would be advisable to assume another garb at the earliest opportunity. The only refor- mation he thought it would be allowable to make in his habiliments at present, was a change of shoes those which the Prince had brought with him being worn so much that his toes protruded through them. Kingsburgh happened to have a pair in the house which he had never worn, and those he provided for the accommodation of his Royal High- ness. When Charles had shifted the old for the new, Kings- burgh took up the former, tied them together, and hung them up in a corner of his house, observing that they might yet stand him in good stead. Charles asked him what he meant by that, and the old man replied, ' Why, when you are fairly settled at St James's, I shall introduce myself by shaking these shoes at you, to put you in mind of your 1 This howl, and the tumhler which Kingshurgh took from Mugstat, that the Prince might drink his wine from it, were, in 1827, in the possession of Colonel Macalister of Barr and Cour. Charles's wanderings — skye. 307 night's entertainment and protection under my roof.' Charles smiled at the conceit of the good old gentleman, and bade him be as good as his word. Kingsburgh accordingly kept these strange relics, or the greater portion of them, as long as he lived. After his death, and when all prospect of Charles's restoration to St James's was gone, his family permitted the remainder to be cut to pieces, and dispersed among their friends. It is the recollection of one of his descendants that Jacobite ladies often took away the pieces they got in their bosoms. 1 When Charles was to dress, Mrs Macdonald caused her daughter to act as his handmaid, for, as she afterwards told Bishop Forbes, l the deil a preen he could put in.' While Miss Macdonald 2 was dressing him, he was like to fall over with laughing. After the pinners, gown, hood, and mantle were put on, he said, i Oh, Miss, you have forgot my apron. Where is my apron ? Get me my apron here, for it is a principal part of my dress.' Kingsburgh and his lady in- formed their friends afterwards that at this time he behaved not like one that was in danger, but as mirthfully as if he had been putting' on women's clothes merely for a frolic. Lady Kingsburgh having asked a lock of his hair, to pre- serve as a keepsake, he laid down his head upon Flora's lap, and told her to cut off as much as she chose. Flora severed a lock, the half of which she gave to Lady Kings- burgh, and the other half retained for herself. In the evening, after having taken another hearty meal, Charles addressed himself to his departure. He had ob- served that Mrs Macdonald, like most ladies of birth and fashion of her time, took snuff; and on approaching her to take his leave, he asked to have l a pinch from her mull.' The good lady took that opportunity of presenting the box to his Royal Highness as ' a keepsake.' He accepted it with many thanks, rendering at the same time his warmest acknowledgments of the kindness with which he had been treated under her roof. After he had taken a tender fare- 1 Within the second board of the 5th volume of Bishop Forbes's collection of papers entitled ' The Lyon in Mourning,' now in my possession, are two small pieces of leather, carefully sealed down, with the following note : — ' The above are pieces of one of the lugs of those identical brogs which the Prince wore, when disguised in the female dress, under the name of Betty Burke, as handmaid to Miss Flora Macdonald.' It appears, from the con- tents of the volume, that Mr Forbes had written to Kingsburgh requesting these fragments, and received them, along with a letter from that gentleman, dated July 15, 1748. 2 This lady afterwards became Mrs Macalister, and was, I presume, mother of Colonel Macalister, who in 1827 obligingly wrote for me the manuscript which has been quoted. 308 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6, well, she went up stairs to his bedroom, and folded the sheets in which he had lain, declaring* that they should never again be washed or used till her death, when they should be employed as her winding-sheet. She was afterwards induced to divide this valuable memorial of her distinguished guest with the amiable Flora, who, it may be mentioned, many years afterwards carried her moiety of it to Ame- rica. In the course of her strangely adventurous life, and though often reduced to situations of the greatest distress by the republican insurgents, she never parted with it till the day of her death, when her body was wrapped in its precious folds, and consigned with it to the grave. Charles now set out from Kingsburgh, with the intention of walking to Portree, about fourteen miles distant, where he had the cheerful prospect of finding a boat ready to con- vey him to Eaasay. He was attended by his faithful friends Flora and Kingsburgh, the last carrying under his arm a suit of male Highland attire for his Royal Highnesses use. When they had got to a considerable distance from the house, Kingsburgh conducted the Prince into a wood, and assisted him in changing his clothes. The suit which he now put on consisted, as usual, of a short coat and waist- coat, a philabeg and short hose, a plaid, a wig, and a bonnet. Kingsburgh and the Prince then took a parting embrace, in doing which tears fell from the eyes of both, and a few drops of blood from the Prince's nose. The former being alarmed at sight of the blood, the Prince told him that it was usually so with him when he parted from dear friends. He then set out with Mackechan 1 on his journey, a little 1 At a meeting of Mr and Mrs Macdonald of Kingsburgh, and some other persons, in Lady Bruce's house, citadel of Leith, July 11, 1747, the conversa- tion turned on a small work descriptive of the Prince's wanderings, entitled ' Alexis, or the Young Adventurer; a Novel.' (London, T. Cooper, 1746.) In the report of the conversation, which has been preserved by Bishop Forbes, one of the persons present, the following passage occurs with respect to that pamphlet : as relating to the father of a historical personage of no small note, it seems worthy of being preserved. ' It was represented to Kingsburgh that his lady, during his confinement, had been telling some folks that, upon conversing with him (her husband) about the pamphlet Alexis, he should have said that he knew nobody who could be the author of it but Neil Mackechan, so pointed and exact it was in giving the narrative. Kingsburgh, looking to his lady, said, " Goodwife, you may remember I said that I knew nobody who could be the author of that pamphlet but Neil Mackechan or myself." ' When it was suggested that Neil Mackechan (a low man) could not be thought capable of drawing up anything of that sort, Kingsburgh and his lady informed the company that Mackechan had been educated in the Scots College in Paris, with the view of commencing clergyman ; but that, after getting his education, he had dropt the design ; that therefore he was capable enough, and that he had proved a great comfort to the Prince in his wander- ings, by talking to him in the French language about matters of importance Charles's wanderings — skye. 309 herd-boy acting* as their guide, and Miss Flora proceeding* to the same place by a different way. Kingsburgh hid the cast-off garments of Betty Burke in a bush, where they lay for some time ; but at length, from fear of the military, he carried them home, and burnt the whole except the gown. The preservation of the gown was owing to his daughter, who insisted upon keeping it as a relic of their Prince, and because it was a pretty print. A Jacobite manu- facturer of the name of Carmichael, at Leith, afterwards used it as a pattern, and sold an immense quantity of cloth, precisely similar in appearance, to the ' loyal' ladies of Scotland. 1 When Donald Roy made application to young Raasay, he was mortified by the information that old Raasay had left his hiding-place upon the island, and gone to Knoy- dart, a part of Glengarry's estate upon the mainland. The young gentleman, however, though he had been reserved from the insurrection for the purpose of saving the estate, was as well-affected to the chevalier as either his father or his younger brothers, who led out the clan, and instantly proposed to conduct the Wanderer to Raasay, where he could at least remain concealed till the old gentleman's advice might be obtained for farther procedure. Donald approved of the plan ; but the difficulty was how to get a boat. They could not trust a Portree crew, and all the Raasay boats had been destroyed or carried off by the military, except two, belonging to Malcolm Macleod, a cousin of young Raasay, which he had somewhere con- cealed. There was at that time in the same house with young Raasay a younger brother, named Murdoch Macleod, who had been wounded at the battle of Culloden, and was now slowly recovering. Murdoch, being informed of the busi- in their difficulties, when perhaps it was not so prudent or convenient that those who were present should know what they were conversing about. They told likewise that they had never been so much afraid of any person's con- duct as that of Mackechan ; because he was a good-natured man, and very timorous in his temper. But they frankly owned they had done him great in- justice, by entertaining any suspicions about him, for that he had behaved to admiration, and had got abroad with the Prince, the great wish of his soul, for he could never think of parting with him at any time, but upon condition of meeting again, which Mackechan was so lucky as frequently to accomplish, even when at parting they could scarce condescend upon a time or place when and where to meet. 1 Bishop Forbes has also preserved a fragment of the ' identical gown,' which, he says, was sent to him by Mrs Macdonald of Kingsburgh. Beneath it he has fastened a piece of the apron-string, which he says he got from Miss Flora Macdonald, November 5, 1747, ' when I saw the apron, and had it about me.' The two fragments do not seem in the least to have suffered from time. 310 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. ness in hand, said he would once more risk his life for Prince Charles ; and it having* occurred that there was a little boat upon a fresh-water lake in the neighbourhood, he, with his brother and some women, brought it to the sea, by extraordinary exertion, across a Highland mile of land, one-half of which was bog, and the other a steep precipice. The gallant brothers, with the assistance of a little boy, rowed this to Raasay, where they hoped to find Malcolm Macleod, and get one of his good boats, with which they might return to Portree and receive the Wanderer; or, in case of not finding him, they were to make the small boat serve, though the danger was con- siderable. Malcolm Macleod, who was soon to act a conspicuous part in the deliverance of the Prince, had been a captain in his service, and fought at the battle of Culloden. Being easily found by his cousins, he lost no time in producing one of his boats, which he succeeded in manning with two stout boatmen, named John Mackenzie and Donald Mac- friar, who had also been in the Prince's army. Malcolm, being the oldest and most cautious man of the party, sug- gested that, as young Raasay was hitherto a clear man, he should not on the present occasion run any risk ; but that he himself and Murdoch, who were already 'as black as they could be/ should alone conduct the expedition. Young" Raasay answered, with an oath, that he would go, < though it should cost him the estate and the head.' 'In God's name, then/ said Malcolm, e let us proceed ! ' The two boat- men, however, now stopped short, and refused to move, till they should be informed of their destination. They were sworn to secrecy, and made acquainted with not only the extent of their voyage, but also its object ; after which, they expressed the utmost eagerness to proceed. The boat soon crossed the narrow sound which divides Raasay from Skye, and being landed about half a mile from the harbour of Portree, Malcolm and Macfriar were despatched to look for Prince Charles, while young Raasay and Murdoch remained on the shore. Donald Roy and Malcolm Macleod now met at a little public-house, the only one in the village, and soon after Miss Flora joined them, and gave information of the ap- proach of the Prince and his two attendants. Immediately thereafter, the boy who had attended Charles as his guide came to the door, and asking for Donald Roy, informed him that a gentleman wished to see him at a little distance. He went in the direction indicated, and found the Prince, Charles's wanderings — skye. 311 who embraced him kindly, putting his head first over one shoulder and then over the other, and desiring* him to be equally unceremonious, for, night though it was, there might still be sufficient light to enable any lurking by- stander to observe their motions, and who could not, of course, fail to suspect the real state of the case if he saw one gentleman treating another with the etiquette due to a prince. It had been a rainy evening, and Charles was thoroughly wet. On Donald expressing his regret for this circumstance, the Prince said, ' I am more sorry that our lady (for so he used to name Miss Macdonald) should be exposed to such an evening. 7 They now went into the inn, Donald going first ; but no ceremony- seems to have passed on meeting Miss Macdonald and Malcolm Macleod. The Prince called for a dram in the first place, of which he seemed in much need, as the rain was streaming down from his plaid, and he had no trews or philabeg. 1 The company joined in urging him to shift and put on a dry shirt, Donald Roy offering him his philabeg. He at first refused, from delicacy towards Miss Macdonald ; but he was at length prevailed on to disregard ceremony. When he had put on the fresh shirt, some food was brought in, and he fell to it as he was, his long walk having furnished him with a ravenous appetite. Donald Roy, notwithstand- ing the anxiety of the moment, fell a-laughing at the strange figure he now cut ; when, seeing the Prince look- ing at him, he said, 6 Sir, I believe that is the English fashion.' ' What fashion do you mean?' 'Why, they say the English, when they intend to eat very heartily, cast off their clothes. 7 * They are right/ said Charles, ' lest any- thing should incommode their hands when they are at work. 7 He now asked for a drink; but there being no fermented liquor in Skye except in gentlemen's houses, he was obliged to slake his thirst with water from a dirty- looking wooden and rough-edged vessel, which the landlord employed to bale his boat. Donald Roy took a draught from this unpleasant cup, and handed it to the Prince, with a whispered assurance that it was tolerably clean, and that prudence required him to drink from it without hesitation, lest he should raise suspicions among the people of the house. Charles then put it to his lips, and took a hearty draught, after which he put on his philabeg and other clothes. Donald Roy urged him to make haste to leave the house, 1 Such is Donald Roy's statement, though another narrator describes the Prince as getting a full Highland suit from Kingsburgh. 312 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. as, there being* but one room for all comers, he ran a con- siderable risk of being" detected. Though anxious to stay all night, on account of the rain, he now prepared to set out for the boat, but first made an endeavour to prevail on Donald to accompany him, for he said he had experienced so much fidelity and kindness from the Macdonalds, that he thought he should feel himself safe if he still had one of that clan with him. Donald excused himself, on account of his wound, which forbade his travelling' except on horse- back, and also because, by remaining in Skye, he might be of greater service to him than by accompanying 1 him. It was agreed, however, that young Raasay should return in the boat on the ensuing Thursday, and, meeting Donald at a particular place which they appointed, carry him over to join the Prince in Raasay. Charles now called for some tobacco, that he might smoke a pipe before departing, and the landlord brought a quarter of a pound of a very coarse kind in the scales, for which Charles gave him sixpence. Donald Roy desired the man to bring the change. The Prince smiled at his exactness, and was for refusing the three - halfpence ; but Donald insisted on his taking this little sum, as * the bawbees/ he said, c might in his present situation be useful to him. 7 Donald then showed him a separate pocket in his sporran, or Highland purse, into which he slipped them. The little party had drunk a whole bottle of whisky. In aying the reckoning, the Prince got change for a guinea. le then desired to have change for another guinea; but the landlord had only eleven shillings more. Charles was for taking this sum in lieu of his guinea, as likely to be more useful to him than the piece of gold ; but Donald Roy prevented him, on the plea that such an appearance of in- difference to money was calculated to raise suspicion of his quality. He now took farewell of Miss Flora Macdonald and Mackechan. Approaching the young lady, he said, 1 1 believe, madam, I owe you a crown of borrowed money. 7 She told him it was but half a crown ; which he accordingly paid her, with thanks. He then saluted her, saying-, ' For all that has happened, I hope, madam, we shall meet in St James 7 s yet. 7 Before leaving the house, he tied a bottle of whisky to his belt at one side, and a bottle of brandy, with some shirts (which had been brought from Kingsburgh), and a cold fowl in a napkin, at the other. As the party were leaving the door, they observed the landlord looking after them : to deceive him, they took a different way from that intended, and approached the boat by a circuitous I CHAKLES'S WANDERINGS— SKYE. 313 route. When Donald afterwards returned to the house to take some rest, this man, whose name was Charles Macnab, was very inquisitive about the stranger, who he was, and where he had parted with him. Donald said, with affected indifference, that he was only a brother rebel, a Sir John Macdonald, an Irishman, who had been skulking among his friends in Skye, but was now gone for the continent. Macnab said he had entertained a strong notion that the gentleman might happen to be the Prince in disguise, 'for he had something about him that looked very noble.' 1 Donald afterwards went to Kingsburgh, to tell the good people there of the Prince's safe departure, and next to Mugstat, to give the like information to Lady Margaret Macdonald. At the latter place, he met and spent a pleasant evening with Lieutenant Macleod, the gentleman whom Miss Flora had amused to such good purpose. 2 1 Donald Roy's Narrative. 2 * About six or eight days after the Prince left Skye, Captain Ferguson followed him in hot pursuit ; and having extorted from the boatmen at, or in their return to South Uist, an exact description of the gown and dress the Prince had wore, he first went to Sir Alexander Macdonald's, where, after a strict search, hearing only of Miss Flora Macdonald, he thence proceeded in all haste to Kingsburgh, where he examined every person with the utmost exactness. He asked Kingsburgh where Miss Macdonald, and the person who was with her in woman's clothes, had lain ? Kingsburgh an- swered, he knew where Miss Flora had lain ; but as for servants, he never asked any questions about them. The captain then asked Lady Kingsburgh whether she had laid the young Pretender and Miss Flora in one bed ? To which she answered, "Whom you mean by the young Pretender I do not pretend to guess ; but I can assure you it is not the fashion in Skye to lay mistress and maid in one bed." Upon visiting the rooms wherein each had lain, the captain could not but remark that the room the supposed maid had possessed was better than that of the mistress. ' Kingsburgh was made a prisoner, and by General Campbell's order he went on parole, without any guard, to Fort Augustus, where he was plundered of everything, thrown into a dungeon, and loaded with irons. When Sir Everard Fawkener examined him, he put him in mind how noble an oppor- tunity he had lost of making himself and his family for ever. To which Kingsburgh replied, " Had I gold and silver piled heaps upon heaps to the bulk of yon huge mountain, that mass could not afford me half the satisfac- tion I find in my own breast from doing what I have done." While Kings- burgh was prisoner at Fort Augustus, an officer of distinction came and asked him if he would know the young Pretender's head if he saw it ? Kingsburgh said he would know the head very well if it were on the shoulders. " But what if the head be not on the shoulders— do you think you should know it in that case?" " In that case," answered Kingsburgh, " I will not pretend to know anything about it." So no head was brought him. ' Kingsburgh was removed hence to Edinburgh castle, under a strong guard of Kingston's light horse. He was at first put into a room with some other gentlemen, and afterwards removed into one by himself, without being allowed to go over the threshold, or to see any person, except the officer upon guard, the sergeant, and the keeper ; which last was appointed to attend him as a servant. And here he was kept till, by the act of grace, he was set at liberty on the 4th of July 1747 ; having thus, as an author observes, got a 314 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. When the Prince entered the boat, and the names of all the individuals composing* the crew, including young" whole year's safe lodging for affording that of one night.'— Scots Magazine, 1749. Alexander Macdonald, Esq. of Kingshurgh, died February 13, 1772, aged eighty-three. In the diary of Sir James Mackintosh (see his Memoirs by his son), is an interesting anecdote of Kingsburgh, which one might wish to be true, if it is not. * The excellent President Forbes represented to the Duke of Cumber- land, that to execute so popular a man as Kingsburgh would excite a new rebellion. But he was so deeply involved in the escape of Charles, that his destruction seemed to be certain. At Fort Augustus, while he was a pri- soner, an order came to the officer on guard for the release of some prisoners. Amongst others, the officer called the name of Alexander Macdonald, asking Kingsburgh if that was not he. He answered, "That is my name; but I suspect there must be some mistake." The officer said, " D you! what mistake ? Is not your name Alexander Macdonald ? " Kingsburgh said it was, but repeated his warning twice or thrice. He at last went out and met a friend, who advised him instantly to go out and leave the fort. Kingsburgh said, " No, I must wait at the opposite alehouse till I see whether the officer gets into a scrape." He waited. In two hours an officer came with a body of soldiers, and made the subaltern on guard prisoner for having set at large so dangerous a rebel. Kingsburgh immediately ran across the street, and saying to the officer, " I told you there was a mistake," surrendered himself.' Miss Macdonald, having taken leave of the Prince, left Portree imme- diately, and proceeded to her mother's house of Armadale in the district of Sleat. She never told her mother, or any one else, what she had done. Eight or ten days after her arrival, she received a message from Donald Macdonald of Castleton, a neighbouring gentleman, requesting her to come to him, and stating that he sent the message at the instigation of an officer of an inde- pendent company, who proved to be Macleod of Talisker. Somewhat sus- picious of what might happen, she consulted her friends, who unanimously advised her not to go ; but ' go she would.' * On her way, she met her step- father returning home, and had not gone much farther, when she was seized by an officer and a party of soldiers, and hurried on board Captain Ferguson's vessel. General Campbell, who was on board, ordered that she should be well treated ; and finding her story had been blabbed by the boatmen, she confessed all to that officer. She was soon after transferred from the ship commanded by Ferguson to one commanded by Commodore Smith, a humane person, capable of appreciating her noble conduct. By the permission of General Campbell, she was now allowed to land at Armadale and take leave of her mother : her stepfather was by this time in hiding, from fear lest his concern in the Prince's escape should bring him into trouble. Flora, who had hitherto been without a change of clothes, here obtained all she required, and engaged as her atten- dant an honest good girl named Kate Macdowall, who could not speak a word of any language but Gaelic. She then returned on board the vessel, and was in time carried to the south. It chanced that she here had for one of her fellow- prisoners the worthy Captain O'Neal, who had engaged her to undertake the charge of the Prince — and who, by the way, had made her the offer on that occasion of his hand in marriage, as a protection to her good fame. When she first met him on board, she went playfully up, and slapping him gently on the cheek with the palm of her hand, said, ' To that black face do I owe all my misfortune ! ' O'Neal told her that, instead of being her misfortune, it was her highest honour, and that if she continued to act up to the character she had already shown, not pretending to repent of what she had done, or to be ashamed of it, it would yet redound greatly to her happiness. The vessel in which she was having put into Leith Road early in Septem- * The words of her own narrative, Jacobite Memoirs. Charles's wanderings — skye. 315 Raasay, were announced to him, he would not permit the usual ceremonies of respect, but saluted them as his equals. ber, and remained there till November, many of the well-affected in Edin- burgh had an opportunity of paying her in person the homage due to her character. Amongst these was the Rev. Mr Forbes, the Episcopal minister of the port, whose pen was fortunately active on the occasion. I extract the following from his memoranda :— 1 In the journal taken, &c. Miss Macdonald has omitted several things which she particularly mentioned to those who conversed with her when she was lying in the Road of Leith, on board the Eltham and the Bridge water ships-of-war. She told that when the Prince put on women's clothes, he pro- posed carrying a pistol under one of his petticoats, for making some small defence in case of an attack ; but Miss declared against it, alleging that if any persons should happen to search them, the pistol would only serve to make a discovery. . . . The Prince was obliged to content himself with only a short heavy cudgel, with which he designed to do his best to knock down any single person that should attack him. 1 She used likewise to tell that, in their passage to the Isle of Skye, a heavy rain fell upon them, which, with former fatigues, distressed her much. To divert her, the Prince sang several pretty songs. She fell asleep, and to keep her so, the Prince still continued to sing. Happening to awake with some little bustle in the boat, she found the Prince leaning over her with his hands spread about her head. She asked what was the matter. The Prince told her that one of the rowers, being obliged to do somewhat about the sail, be- hoved to step over her body (the boat was so small) ; and lest he should have done her hurt, either by stumbling or trampling upon her in the dark, he had been doing his best to preserve his guardian from harm. When Miss Macdonald was telling this particular part of the adventure to some ladies that were paying their respects to her, some of them with rapture cried out, *' Oh, Miss ! what a happy creature are you, who had that dear Prince to lull you asleep, and to take such care of you with his hands spread about your head when you was sleeping ! You are surely the happiest woman in the world ! " "I could," says one of them [Miss Mary Clerk*], " wipe your shoes with pleasure, and think it my honour so to do, when I reflect that you had the honour to have the Prince for your handmaid. We all envy you greatly." Much about the same time, a lady of rank and dignity [Lady Mary Coch- rane!] being on board with Miss Macdonald, a brisk gale began to blow and make the sea rough, and not so easy for a small boat to row to Leith. The lady whispered to Miss Macdonald that she would with pleasure stay on board all night, that she might have it to say that she had the honour of lying in the same bed with that person who had been so happy as to be guardian to her Prince, Accordingly, they did sleep in one bed that night. Several ladies [My Lady Bruce, i: Lady Mary Cochrane, Mrs Rattray, § Mrs Cheap, Miss Peggie Forbes, Miss Susie Graham, Miss Magdalen Clerk, Miss Mary Clerk, Miss Rachie Houston, Miss Peggie Callander] made valuable presents to Miss Macdonald ; namely, gowns, shirts, head-suits, shoes, stockings, &c. &c. Commodore Smith made her a present when she was in Leith Road of a handsome suit of riding clothes, with plain mounting, and some fine linen for riding shirts, as also a gown to her woman Kate Macdowall, and some linen to be shifts for poor Kate, who [had] generously offered herself to Miss Macdonald, when she could get not one that would venture to go with her. * * ' When Miss Macdonald was on board the Bridgewater in Leith Road, ac- * One of the daughters of Mr Hugh Clerk, merchant in Leith, a son of Robert Clerk of Listonshiels, a cadet of the Penicuik family. f Probably a daughter of Thomas, sixth Earl of Dundonald. £ Widow of Sir William Bruce of Kinross. In her house, in the citadel of Leith, Mr Forbes at this time lived. § The wife of Mr Rattray, surgeon in Edinburgh, the same who had been for a short time a prisoner at Inverness. 316 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. It was nearly daylight (July 1) when he left Portree. < As they were rowing along" in the boat, the Prince conversed counts had come that the Prince was taken prisoner, and one of the officers had Drought the news of this report on hoard. She got an opportunity of talking privately to some who were then visiting her, and said, with tears in her eyes, " Alas ! I am afraid that now all is in vain that I have done ! The Prince at last is in the hands of his enemies ! " Though at that time great fear was entertained about the truth of this account, yet those that were with Miss Macdonald endeavoured all they could to cheer her up, and to dissuade her from believing any such thing ; but still fears haunted her mind, till the matter was cleared up, and the contrary appeared. * * ' One day, in the Road of Leith, a lady [Miss Rachie Houston] asking Miss if she had any books on board, she said she had only a prayer-book, but re- gretted much the want of a Bible, which that lady soon furnished her with in a present, in two pretty pocket volumes handsomely bound. That she might have some innocent and useful employment for her time, care was taken by a lady [Lady Bruce] to send her a thimble, needles, white thread of different sorts, &c. with some linen and cambric, cut and shaped according to the newest fashions. This piece of friendship Miss Flora admired as much as any instance of kindness and regard that had been shown her, because all the time she had been in custody she was quite idle, having no work to do, and thereby time passed very dully on. ' While she was in the Road of Leith, she never was allowed to set her foot once on shore ; though in other respects the officers were extremely civil and complaisant to her, and took it exceedingly well when any persons came to visit her. Sometimes they were so obliging as to come ashore for good com- pany to attend her, and frequently declared that if they knew any person to come on board out of curiosity, and not out of respect for Miss Macdonald, that person should not have access to her. This genteel behaviour makes it to be presumed that their orders were so exceedingly strict, that they could not dare to bring her ashore. Commodore Smith, commander of the Eltham, behaved like a father to her, and tendered her many good advices as to her behaviour in her ticklish situation ; and Captain Knowler of the Bridge- water used her with the utmost decency and politeness. When company came to her, she was indulged the privilege, by both these humane and well- bred gentlemen, to call for anything on board, as if she had been at her own fireside ; and the servants of the cabin were obliged to give her all manner of attendance ; and she had the liberty to invite any of her friends to dine with her when she pleased. Her behaviour in company was so easy, modest, and well adjusted, that every visitant was much surprised; for she had never been out of the islands of South Uist and Skye till about a year before the Prince's arrival, that she had been in the family of Macdonald of Largoe, in Argyleshire, for the space of ten or eleven months. ' Some that went on board to pay their respects to her used to take a dance in the cabin, and to press her much to share with them in the diversion ; but with all their importunity, they could not prevail with her to take a trip. She told them that at present her dancing days were done, and she would not readily entertain a thought of that diversion till she should be assured of her Prince's safety, and perhaps not till she should be blessed with the happiness of seeing him again. Although she was easy and cheerful, yet she had a certain mixture of gravity in all her behaviour, which became her situation exceedingly well, and set her off to great advantage. She is of a low stature, of a fair complexion, and well enough shaped. One would not discern by her conversation that she had spent all her former days in the Highlands ; for she talks English (or rather Scots) easily, and not at all through the Erse tone. She has a sweet voice, and sings well, and no lady, Edinburgh-bred, can acquit herself better at the tea-table than what she did when in Leith Road. Her wise conduct in one of the most perplexing scenes that can happen in life, her fortitude and good sense, are memorable instances of the strength of a female mind, even in those years that are tender and inexperienced.' The ship in which Miss Macdonald was confined left Leith Road on the 7th Charles's wanderings— skye. 317 to and fro, and frequently said that friends who showed their friendship in distress were the real friends, and that of November, and carried her straightway to London, where she was kept in a not less honourable captivity in the house of a private family, till the pass- ing of the act of indemnity in July 1/47, when she was discharged without being asked a single question. Her story had by this time excited not less interest in the metropolis than it had done in Scotland. Being received after her liberation into the house of the dowager Lady Primrose of Dunnipace, she was there visited by crowds of the fashionable world, who paid her such homage as would have turned the heads of ninety-nine of a hundred women of any age, country, or condition. On her mind they produced no eifect but that of surprise : she had only, she thought, performed an act of common humanity, and she had never thought of it in any other light till she found the world making so much ado about it. Lord Mahon mentions, I do not know upon what authority, that a subscription to the amount of £1500 was raised for her in London. Mr Robert Cole of London possesses an original letter of hers, addressed to Innes and Clerk, merchants of that city, and dated at Kingsburgh April 23, 1751, in which she makes mention of £627 lodged in their hands for her behoof by Lady Primrose, and that she under- stood that more would follow from the same quarter. Soon after returning to her own country, Flora was married (November 6, 1750) to Mr Alexander Macdonald, younger of Kingsburgh, to whom she bore a large family of sons and daughters. When Dr Johnson and Mr Boswell visited Skye, they were entertained by Mr and Mrs Macdonald at Kings- burgh. Johnson, in his ' Journey to the Western Islands,' introduces her well-known maiden name, which he says is one ' that will be mentioned in history, and, if courage and fidelity be virtues, mentioned with honour.' He adds, ' She is a woman of middle stature, soft features, gentle manners, and elegant presence.' Soon after this period, under the influence of the passion for emigration which was then raging in the Highlands, Kingsburgh. and his lady went to North Carolina, where they purchased and settled upon an estate. She bore with her across the Atlantic the sheet in which the Prince had lain, that it might serve as her shroud, wherever it should be her fate to lay down her bones. Mr Macdonald had scarcely been settled on his property, when the unfortunate contest between the colonists and the mother country involved him in trouble. Like most of his countrymen in America, he sided with the British government, and the consequence was, that he was imprisoned as a dangerous person. On being liberated, he took arms against the colonists, as captain in a regiment called the North Carolina Highlanders, and he and his wife met with many strange adventures in the course of the contest. At the conclusion of the Avar, they found it necessary to leave the country of their adoption, and return to Skye. In the voyage homeward, the vessel encountered a French ship of war, and an action ensued. While the other ladies were confined below, Flora insisted upon remaining on deck, where she endeavoured, by her voice and example, to animate the sailors. She was unfortunately thrown down in the bustle, and broke her arm ; which caused her afterwards to observe, in the spirit of poor Mercutio, that she had now perilled her life in behalf of both the house of Stuart and that of Brunswick, and got very little for her pains. She spent the remainder of her life in Skye, and at her death, which took place March 5, 1790, when she had attained the age of seventy, was actually buried in the shroud which she had so strangely selected for that purpose in her youth, and carried with her through so many adventures and migrations. She retained to the last that vivacity and vigour of character which has pro- cured her so much historical distinction. Her husband, who survived her a few years, died on the half-pay list as a British officer ; and no fewer than five of her sons served their king in a military capacity, Charles, the eldest son, was a captain in the Queen's Rangers. He was a most accomplished man : the late Lord Macdonald. on seeing him lowered into the grave, said, * There lies the most finished gentleman of my family and name.' Alexander, the second son, was also an officer : he was lost at sea. The third son, Ranald, 318 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. he hoped his friends would not have reason to repent for the services done him, and that he would happily yet end what he had begun, or die in the attempt/ 1 He slept a little on the passage to Raasay, and, after a voyage of ten miles, they landed at a place called Glam. As almost all the houses in the island had been burnt by the soldiery, and as some were not eligible as places of concealment, it was not without difficulty that the Prince was accom- modated. A resolution was at length made that the whole company should lodge in a little hovel which some shep- herds had lately built, though it could aiFord them abso- lutely nothing but shelter from the open air. When they had settled here, young Eaasay went away, and in about two hours returned with a young kid, which they imme- diately proceeded to roast, and ate with butter, cream, and oaten bread, the Prince preferring the last to a wheaten loaf, and calling it his own country bread. c After their little repast was over, he began to inquire narrowly about the damages done in the island. Upon his being' told of all the houses burnt, and of the other great depredations in the island, to which the houses were but a trifle, he seemed much affected, but at the same time said that, in- stead of the huts burnt, he would yet build houses of stone. Afterwards, walking on a narrow green near the cottage, he said that this was a bitter hard life, but he would rather live ten years in that way than be taken by his enemies, and seemed a little surprised himself how he did bear such fatigues ; " for," says he, " since the battle of Culloden, I have endured more than would kill a hundred : sure Pro- vidence does not design this for nothing. Pm thus cer- tainly yet reserved for some good.' 7 Thus they passed the day, and after having taken some supper, he went to rest with as great pleasure, and in outward appearance as little concerned, as if in the greatest prosperity.' 2 Though there were no parties of military upon Raasay, was a captain of marines, of high professional character, and remarkable for the elegance of his appearance. James, the fourth son, served in Tarlton's British Legion, and was a brave and experienced officer. Lieutenant- Colonel John Macdonald of Exeter, was the last survivor of these gallant soldiers. There were, moreover, two daughters, one of whom, Mrs Major Macleod of Lochbay, in the Isle of Skye, died within the last few years. Flora lies buried in a mausoleum of the Kingsburgh family in the churchyard of Kilmuir, without a stone to mark her grave. Donald Roy Macdonald, who had taken such an important interest in the Prince's progress through Skye, skulked in caves, where he was supplied with necessaries by Lady Margaret Macdonald, till the passing of the act of indemnity in 1747, when he was enabled to go at large. 1 Narrative by Murdoch Macleod, Lyon in Mourning, MS. iv. 862. 2 Murdoch Macleod's Narrative. Charles's wanderings — skye. 319 and although all the inhabitants were well-affected, it was thought proper by Charles's attendants to use the utmost caution. Watches were established upon the tops of all the neighbouring heights, and no one of the party appeared in public except young Raasay, who was, as already men- tioned, a clear man. Donald Roy being stationed upon Skye, to give intelligence in case of any annoyance from that quarter, the Prince might have almost considered himself secure upon this wild and secluded island. Laying- aside the wretchedness of his lodging, he might also be esteemed as not in the worst possible predicament as to living. Young Raasay was in the midst of his own flocks, and had only to use insidious means to procure for his Royal Highness and the whole party plenty of fresh provisions. The Prince's bed of state here was one made, in the primitive Highland fashion, of heather, with the stalks upright, and the bloom uppermost. He enjoyed long, but not unbroken slumbers, often starting, and giving uncon- scious expression to the feelings and imagery of his dreams. Malcolm Macleod, who watched him on these occasions, in- formed Mr Roswell that his half-suppressed exclamations were sometimes in French, sometimes in Italian, and oc- casionally in English ; though the ingenious tourist could not help questioning Malcolm's ability to distinguish at least two of these tongues. One of his expressions in English was, * Oh God, poor Scotland ! ' his mind having probably been then engaged in lamenting the military tyranny by which, in consequence of his unfortunate enter- prise, a great part of the nation was so bitterly agonised. The only stranger, besides the Prince, then known to be upon the island of Raasay, and of course the only person from whom they apprehended particular danger, was a man who had come about a fortnight before for the ostensible pur- pose of selling a roll of tobacco. The tobacco had been long sold, and yet the man wandered about, apparently reluctant to quit the island. Nobody knew anything about him, and he was suspected to be a spy. One day John Mackenzie came running down from the place where he had been watching, with the alarming intelligence that this mys- terious individual was approaching the hut. The three gentlemen who attended the Prince — young Raasay, Mur- doch Macleod, and Malcolm — immediately held a council of war upon the subject, the result of which was, that the man should be put to death without ceremony. The mind of Charles shrunk with horror from the proposal, and assum- 320 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. ing a grave and even severe countenance, he said, i God forbid that we should take away a man's life who may be innocent, while we can preserve our own.' The gentlemen, however, persisted in their resolution, while he as strenu- ously continued to take the merciful side. In the midst of the debate, John Mackenzie, the watchman, who sat at the door of the hut, said in Erse, i He must be shot : you are the king*, but we are the parliament, and will do what we choose.' Charles, seeing* his friends smile, asked what the man had said, which being reported to him in English, he observed that he was a clever fellow ; and, notwithstand- ing the perilous situation he was in, he could not help laughing. 1 Fortunately the unknown person walked past, without perceiving that there were people in the hut. Mal- colm Macleod afterwards declared that, had he stopped or come forward, they were resolved to despatch him ; that he would have done so himself, although the victim had been his own brother! Dougald Graham, indeed, reports that young Raasay had his pistol ready cocked for the purpose. After a residence of two days and a half upon the island of Raasay, Charles expressed a strong wish to leave it, alleging that it was too narrow to afford good room for skulking, and also professing an anxiety to meet with Donald Roy Macdonald in Skye. His attendants com- bated his wishes, but he insisted on the point so earnestly, that they at last gave way. The whole party accordingly set sail, on the evening of the 3d of July, in the same open boat which had brought them over to Raasay. Before they had proceeded far, the wind began to blow hard, and to drive so much sea-water into their vessel, that they begged to return and wait a more favourable opportunity. But the Prince insisted upon proceeding, in spite of every danger, exclaim- ing that Providence had not brought him through so many perilous chances to end his life in this simple manner at last. To encourage them, he sang a lively Erse song, although very little acquainted with that language. They continued their voyage, notwithstanding that the water came into the boat in such quantities, as to require the utmost exertions of Malcolm to keep it from sinking. 1 Gentlemen/ he said, c I hope to thank you for this trouble yet at St James's.' After a rough voyage of about fifteen miles, they landed safe, about eleven o'clock at night, at a 1 Mr Boswell, by conversing with this man, discovered that, in reality, he had no intention of amusing Prince Charles by an allusion to the power which the British parliament had exercised over the fortunes of his family, but spoke only from the simple idea that many voices were better than one. — See BosweU's Tour, 2d edition, p. 228. Charles's wanderings — skye. 321 place called Nicholson's Great Rock, near Scorobreck in Troternish, the northern limb or peninsula of the Isle of Skye. There being* no convenient landing-place, the party had to jump out into the surf, and haul the boat ashore. Charles, who was already drenched to the skin, and in- cumbered with a large greatcoat, was the third man to fling himself into the sea for this purpose. After landing^ he eagerly assisted in hauling the boat ashore. The only lodging which the party could find to solace them for all the fatigues and discomforts of their voyage, was a lonely cow-house belonging to Mr Nicholson of Scoro- breck, a mansion about two miles distant. Lest there might be some people in this hovel, young Raasay went forward to inspect it, while the rest walked slowly behind. ' What must become of your Royal Highness/ said Murdoch, i if there be people in the house, for certainly you must perish, if long exposed to such weather?' ' I care nothing for it/ replied the Prince, ' for I have been abroad in a hundred such nights.' Young Raasay having come back reporting that the byre was empty, they entered, kindled a fire, and lying down around it, partook of some bread and cheese, their only provisions. At an early hour in the morning young Raasay went away to meet Donald Roy, according to the appointment which had been made with him. The Prince, who had stretched himself beside the fire, slept till noon, when he rose and went out with Murdoch to a little hill near by, where Malcolm Macleod and the two boatmen had been standing sentry. He ordered them to go in and take some sleep, of which, he said, they had much need, and he himself should meanwhile keep watch. He here ex- pressed to Murdoch great anxiety for the return of his elder brother, saying he would wait for him till eight o'clock, but no longer. He then asked Murdoch if he could travel well, to which the youth replied in the negative, his wound being still unhealed. The Prince then asked if he knew his cousin Malcolm well, and if he was a discreet man, who might te safely trusted. Murdoch gave a strong testimony to both the discretion and fidelity of Malcolm ; which seems to have determined the Prince as to his next movements, He told Murdoch that he expected to get a boat on the other side of Skye to carry him to the island of Rum. In case this expectation should not be fulfilled, he wished Murdoch to be within two days at a particular point a few miles off with his own six-oared boat, which he understood to be an excel- lent sailer, in order to take him off if necessary. Lest, how- ever, it should be judged unsafe for him to sail in that boat VOL. V. U 322 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. through the strait between Skye and the mainland, on ac- count of the guards there posted, he wished Donald Roy to go to Sleat and have another boat ready for him in that district. ' All this/ said he to Murdoch, c you must endea- vour to manage aright, for it is a matter of the utmost con- sequence. It will be a piece of great friendship, which I shall never forget.' He also expressed a strong wish that the concern of young Raasay in aiding his concealment should be kept a profound secret, adding that he, for one, would never say a word about it. 1 The Prince now returned with Murdoch to the byre, designing to wait there till eight o'clock ; but the sight of a stranger at a distance determined him to set out sooner. After presenting Murdoch with his silver spoon, knife, and fork, and desiring him to keep them till he saw him again, he left the hovel, with Malcolm Macleod alone in his company. When they had walked about a mile, Malcolm made bold to ask his Royal Highness where he intended to go, ' Mal- colm/ answered the Prince impressively, ' I commit myself entirely to you ; carry me to Mackinnon's bounds in Skye ;' meaning that portion of the island which belonged to the chief of Mackinnon, the only one of the three great pro- prietors of Skye who had been concerned in his late enter- prise. Malcolm objected that such a journey would be dangerous, on account of the militia who patroled the island ; but Charles answered that there was nothing now to be done without danger. ' You, Malcolm/ he continued, ' must now act the master, and I the man.' Accordingly, taking the bag which contained his linen, and strapping it over his shoulders, he desired his faithful companion to go in advance as a gentleman, while he trudged behind in the character of a servant. Malcolm acquiesced in the plan; and it was also agreed that the Prince should pass for one Lewie Caw, the son of a surgeon in Crieff, and lately in the Highland army in a medical capacity, but who was now known to be skulking in Skye amongst some relations. They set forward in this fashion towards Mackinnon's country, which was distant twenty-four Highland miles, and could only be reached from this point by traversing a very wild and mountainous tract. 2 Malcolm, though himself an excellent pedestrian, as most of his countrymen were, used afterwards to own that, in 1 Murdoch Macleod' s Narrative. 2 A list of the things carried by Charles on this occasion has been preserved — ' two shirts, one pair of stockings, one pair of brogues, a bottle of brandy, some scraps of mouldy bread and cheese, a three-pint stone bottle for water.' — Lyon in Mourning, i. 141. Charles's wanderings— skye. 323 this long* and painful journey, he found himself far excelled by Prince Charles, whose rapidity of motion was such, that it was with the greatest difficulty he could be restrained to his proper place in the rear. His Royal Highness informed Malcolm that, trusting* to his speed of foot, he felt little apprehension on the score of being* chased by a party of English soldiers, provided he g*ot out of musket-shot ; thoug*h he owned he was not just so confident of escaping* any of the Highland militia who might fall in with him. Malcolm asked him what they should do if surprised before getting to the proper distance. ' Fight, to be sure/ was the Prince's reply. < I think,' rejoined Malcolm, i if there were no more than four of them, I would engage to manage two.' ' And 1/ added Charles, ' would engage to do for the other two.' In walking over the mountains, they kept as much as possible out of sight of houses ; but they occasionally met a few country people wandering about. On these occasions Charles took care to display the demeanour of a servant ; touching his bonnet when spoken to by his apparent master, and also when addressing him. As they went along, it occurred to the Prince that the waistcoat he wore, being a scarlet tartan with a gold twist button, was too fine for a servant, and he proposed to exchange it for that worn by Mr Macleod. While he was putting on his companion's vest, he said, 1 1 hope, Macleod, to give you a much better vest for this yet.' On approaching Mackinnon's country, in which many of the people, having been in the Highland army, might be presumed to know the Prince, it was thought proper still further to deepen his disguise. Taking off his periwig, and putting it into his pocket, he took out a dirty white napkin, and desired Malcolm to tie that about his head, bringing it down upon his eyes and nose. Over this he put his bonnet. He then tore the ruffles from his shirt, and took the buckles out of his shoes, putting strings in their place. He desired his friend to look at him, and say if he was yet sufficiently disguised. Macleod told him that he thought he might yet be recognised. Charles said, 1 This is an odd, remarkable face I have got, that nothing can disguise it.' Macleod, however, did not think the risk of detection lay alone in the face. He used to say that Charles could dissemble everything but his air. i There is not a person,' said he, ' that knows what the air of a noble or great man is, but, upon seeing the Prince in any disguise he could put on, would see something about him that was not ordinary, something of the stately and grand.' In the course of their walk, Malcolm informed him of 324 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. the many barbarities committed by the Duke of Cumber- land after the battle of Culloden. The Prince was amazed, as he might well be, at the recital, and said he could scarcely believe what he heard. Macleod, in the narrative he after- wards communicated to the Rev. Mr Forbes, states some particulars respecting" the personal condition of the Prince at this time, which modern ears might dislike to hear. To put the matter into the most delicate form, the reader must be asked to imagine the worst feature of the squalor of a wayside beggar. i This serves/ says Malcolm, 6 to show that he was reduced to the very lowest ebb of misery and distress, and is a certain indication of that greatness 01 soul which could rise above all misfortunes, and bear up, with a cheerfulness not to be equalled in history, under all the scenes of wo that could happen. He used to say that the fatigues and distresses he underwent signified nothing at all, because he was only a single person ; but when he re- flected on the many brave fellows who suffered in his cause, that, he behoved to own, did strike him to the heart, and did sink very deep into him.' 1 The principal support which the two pedestrians had during their long 1 walk was derived from a bottle of brandy carried by Malcolm, with the assistance of the wayside springs. This source of comfort became exhausted before the end of their journey, all except a single glass, which the Prince insisted that his companion should drink, pro- testing' that he could better endure to want it. When the bottle was fairly drained, Malcolm hid it in the ground, where he afterwards found and resumed possession of it in quieter times. After a journey of more than thirty English miles, they arrived in the morning at Ellagol, near Kilmaree, in the country of Mackinnon, where they happened to meet two of that clan who had been engaged in the insurrection. The men stared at the Prince for a little, and soon recognising' him, fairly lifted up their voices and w^ept. Malcolm im- mediately put them on their guard, lest such an expression of sympathy, though honourable to them, should discover their Prince to his enemies. He also swore them to secrecy upon his naked dirk, after the fashion of the Highlanders, and requested them to go away, without taking further notice of his Royal Highness. It is barely necessary to say that they kept their word. Being now near Mackinnon's house, Malcolm asked the 1 Jacobite Memoirs, 476. Charles's wanderings — skye. 325 Prince if he wished to see the laird. Charles answered that, with the highest respect for the worth and fidelity of old Mackinnon, he did not think him the person precisely fitted for his present purpose ; and he wished rather to be conducted to the house of some other gentleman. Malcolm then determined that the Prince should go to the house of his brother-in-law, Mr John Mackinnon, who had been a captain in the insurgent army. Leaving Charles at a little distance, till he should recon- noitre, Malcolm entered the house himself, and saw his sister, who informed him that her husband had gone out, but was expected back very soon. He intended, he said, to spend a day or two in her house, provided there were no soldiers in the neighbourhood. She assured him he would be perfectly safe. Then he informed her that he had brought a brother in distress along with him, one Lewie Caw, whom he had engaged, from pity, as his servant, and who had fallen sick during their journey. Mrs Mac- kinnon desired that Caw might be instantly brought in and entertained. Charles being immediately introduced, the lady of the house could not help saying, as he entered, ' Poor man ! I pity him. At the same time, my heart warms to a man of his appearance.' She provided the two with a plentiful meal, during which Charles sat at a respectful distance from the table, with his bonnet off, partaking only of the inferior articles. Malcolm, moved by the Prince's humility, re- quested him to draw near the table and eat along with him, as there was no company in the house. But Charles answered, he knew better what became a servant ; and it was only after an earnest intreaty, that, making a profound bow, he at length permitted himself to take advantage of the offer. When their meal was concluded, a serving girl came in with warm water, after the mode of ancient High- land hospitality, to wash Malcolm's feet. This was a cere- mony much needed in the present case by the Prince, for, in the course of the journey, he had fallen into a bog, and bemired himself up to the middle. When the woman had washed Mackinnon' s feet, he said, ' You see that poor sick man there ; I hope you will wash his feet too ; it will be a great charity, for he has as much need as I have.' i No such thing-/ said she in Gaelic, her only language ; ' although I wash the master's feet, I am not obliged to wash the ser- vant's. What ! he's but a low country woman's son ; I will not wash his feet indeed.' After some intreaties, he pre- vailed on her to wash the Prince's feet ; but she performed 326 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. the office so roughly, that Charles had to intreat Macleod to intercede with her for somewhat gentler usage. The two travellers afterwards went to sleep, while Mrs Mackinnon took her station on the top of a neighbouring hill, to watch the approach of the least danger. Charles only slept two hours, but Malcolm, having suffered more from fatigue, continued in bed a good while longer. On rising, he was astonished to find his indefatigable companion dandling and singing to Mrs Mackinnon's infant, with an appearance of as much cheerfulness and alacrity as if he had endured neither danger nor fatigue. An old woman sat near him looking on. Malcolm could not help ex- pressing his surprise at so extraordinary a sight, when the Prince exclaimed with gaiety, and half- forgetting his assumed character, i Who knows but this little fellow may be a captain in my service yet?' 'Or you rather an old sergeant in his company/ said the old woman. Malcolm, now hearing that his brother-in-law was ap- proaching the house, went out to meet him, in order to sound his disposition in regard to Prince Charles. After the usual salutations, pointing to some ships of war which lay at a distance, he said, l What, Mackinnon, if the Prince be on board one of those 1 ' 6 God forbid ! ' was Mackinnon's devout answer. Malcolm, then assured that he might be trusted, asked, 6 What if he were here, John ? Do you think he would be safe ? ' i That he would,' answered Mackinnon ; i we should take care of him.' 6 Then, John/ said Malcolm, ' he is in your house.' Mackinnon, in a transport, was for running in immediately and paying his obeisance ; but Malcolm stopped him, till he should compose himself, and be tutored to preserve his Royal Highnesses incognito. When he was fairly instructed as to his beha- viour, Malcolm permitted him to enter ; but no sooner had the warm-hearted Highlander set his eyes upon the unfor- tunate Prince, than he burst into tears, and had to leave the room. During the course of the day, a consultation being held as to the best means of transporting Charles to the main- land, it was agreed that John Mackinnon should go to his chief and hire a boat for that purpose. He was enjoined to keep the secret from the old gentleman, and to pretend that the boat was intended for the use of his brother-in-law alone. He went accordingly ; but the force of clanship proved too much for his discretion, and he disclosed the fact of the Prince being in his house. The chief, delighted with the intelligence, at once got ready his own boat, and, with his Charles's wanderings — skye. 327 lady, set out to pay his respects to the Wanderer. On John returning" to the house, and confessing what he had done, Charles felt somewhat uneasy, hut resolved to make the best of the circumstances. He went out and received the old chief, and the whole party then partook of an enter- tainment of cold meat and wine, which Lady Mackinnon laid out in a neighbouring* cave upon the shore. It was now determined that Charles should be conducted by the old laird and John Mackinnon to the mainland, while Malcolm should remain in Skye, lest he should be missed, and thus create suspicion, and also to interrupt or distract the pursuit which would probably be made after the Prince. It was about eight o'clock at night when the party repaired to the water's edge, where the boat was lying ready to sail. At that moment two English men-of-war hove in sight, apparently bearing towards them ; and Mal- colm, in high alarm, counselled the Prince to delay his voyage till next morning, more especially as the wind was favourable to the enemy, which it would not be to his boat. Charles, however, would not listen to his suggestions, urg- ing, with enthusiastic vehemence, the result of former good fortune, and that he felt confident the wind would change in his favour the moment that he required its good services. He then remembered the two contingent appointments he had made with Murdoch Macleod, for a meeting with that gentleman or with Donald Roy Macdonald, and bethought him of the duty under which he lay in civility to apprise them of the step he was now taking. Malcolm said it was no matter, and offered to make the apology himself. c That's not enough,' said the Prince : i have you paper, pen, and ink ? I'll write a few lines ; I'm obliged to do so in good manners.' Writing materials being presented, he penned a letter in something like the following terms : — 6 Sir — I have parted (thank God) as intended. Eemember me to all friends, and thank them for the trouble they have been at. I am, Sir, your humble servant — James Thomson. Ellighuil, July 4, 1746.' To this letter he affixed no address : it is stated by Malcolm Macleod, in his Narrative, to have been designed by the Prince for Murdoch ; on the other hand, Donald Eoy affirms that it was meant for him, and that to him Malcolm sent it. 1 The dispute does not seem to be one of much consequence. 1 There is an angry letter on this point by Donald in Bishop Forbes's collec- tion. He accuses Malcolm of lying and vainglory— I would hope without any just cause. 328 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. The Prince next took out his purse, and desired Mal- colm's acceptance of ten guineas, along* with a silver stock- buckle* The generous Highlander refused to take the money, which he saw, from the slenderness of the Prince's purse, could ill be spared ; but Charles at length prevailed upon him to accept the gift, asserting that he would have need of it in the skulking life he was now leading-, and at the same time expressing a confidence that he would get his own exchequer supplied on reaching the mainland. c Malcolm/ he then said, ' let us smoke a pipe together before we part.' A light was instantly procured from the flint of Malcolm's musket, and the two fond, though un- equal companions, took a last parting smoke from the stumped pipe or cutty which Charles had hitherto used in his wanderings. Malcolm obtained, and for a long time preserved this fragment of pipe, which he afterwards was induced to present to Dr Burton of York, a devout Jacobite, who was at the pains to get a handsome case made in which to keep it. After a tender and long -protracted adieu, the Prince went into the boat, which, with the chief and Mr John Mackinnon, immediately put out to sea, under the manage- ment of a few stout rowers. The affectionate Malcolm sat down upon the side of a hill, partly to watch the proceed- ings of the two tenders, and partly that he might see his dearly beloved Prince as long as distance and eyesight would permit. He afterwards used to tell, with the true superstitious reverence of a stickler for the jus divinum, that, precisely as the Prince predicted, he had not gone far out to sea when the wind shifted in such a manner as to part him effectually from the inimical vessels. Malcolm returned home next day by the way of Kings- burgh, where he related the Prince's late adventures to a grateful and admiring audience. He had to inform Lady Kingsburgh of one circumstance, which must have given her unqualified pleasure. During his travels with the Prince, his Royal Highness had expressed a high sense of the value of her ladyship's present — the snuff-box already mentioned. He had asked the meaning of the device which adorned the lid — a pair of clasped hands, with the words c Rob Gib ' — which Malcolm explained as emblematic of sin- cere friendship, and as alluding to a circumstance in which an ancestor of the Prince was concerned. Rob Gib was the court fool of Scotland in the reign of James V. ; it was a saying of his that all the official courtiers served his majesty for selfish ends, except himself, who, for his part, had no Charles's wanderings— the mainland. 329 other contract with the king than c stark love and kindness.' The Prince expressed himself an ardent admirer of the principle symbolised by the device, and declared he would endeavour to keep the box as long- as he lived. Malcolm being asked his opinion of the Prince, as one who had seen him in the extremes of both prosperous and adverse fortune, replied that 'he was the most cautious man he ever saw, not to be a coward ; and the bravest, not to be rash.' About ten days after he had parted with the Prince, Malcolm was apprehended, put aboard a ship, and conveyed to London, where he was kept in confinement the same space of time as Miss Flora Macdonald. On being dis- charged from jail, Miss Macdonald was provided with a postchaise, to convey her back to Scotland, by a Jacobite lady of quality resident in London ; and being desired to choose a person who might accompany her, she named her fellow-sufferer Malcolm. ( And so,' Malcolm used after- wards to observe triumphantly, i I went up to London to be hanged, and returned in a braw postchaise with Miss Flora Macdonald.' 1 CHAPTER XXVIIL Charles's wanderings — the mainland. On hills that are by right his ain, He roams a lonely stranger ; On ilka hand he's pressed by want, On ilka side by danger. Yestreen I met him in a glen, My heart near bursted fairly, For sadly changed indeed was he — Oh, waes me for Prince Charlie ! Jacobite Song. That part of the mainland to which the Prince was now directing his course, might be considered as well qualified 1 Boswell's Tour to the Hebrides ; where a vivid portraiture has been pre- served of this excellent specimen of the Highland gentleman, as he appeared in 1773. * He was now,' says Mr Boswell, ' sixty-two years of age, hale and well-proportioned, with a manly countenance, tanned by the weather, yet having a ruddiness in his cheeks, over a great part of which his rough beard extended. His eye was quick and lively, yet his look was not fierce ; but he appeared at once firm and good-humoured. He wore a pair of brogues— tartan hose which came up only near to his knees— a purple camblet kilt— a black waistcoat— a short green cloth coat, bound with gold cord— a yellowish bushy wig— a large blue bonnet, with a gold thread button. I never saw a figure which gave a more perfect representation of a Highland gentleman. I wished much to have a picture of him just as he was. I found him frank and polite, in the true sense of the word.' 330 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. to afford him shelter, as far as the physical character of the country and the dispositions of its inhabitants were con- cerned. It was the same well-affected district which he had selected for his first landing, and in which he had reared the standard of his enterprise. Consisting" of ranges of rough mountains, alternating with long narrow arms of the sea and fresh-water lakes, it was very suitable for a skulking life. On the other hand, it had been visited and laid waste by the barbarous soldiery, whose post at Fort- William was not far distant, and some of whom were scattered in parties over the country. After a rough night voyage of thirty miles, during which they passed and exchanged a few words with a boat con- taining armed militia, but which could not stop to inspect their company, on account of the storm, Charles and his friends landed at four in the morning (July 5) at a place called Little Mallack, on the south side of Loch Nevis, one of the estuaries mentioned. Knowing that there were military in the neighbourhood, they were afraid to leave this place, and accordingly remained in it for three days and three nights, sleeping in the open air. The Laird of Mackinnon having on the fourth day gone with one of the boatmen to seek a cave for a lodging, the Prince, with John Mackinnon and the other three rowers, took to the boat, and proceeded up the loch. As they turned a point, they suddenly struck their oars upon a boat tied to a rock, and saw iive men with red crosses over their bonnets standing on the shore. These men, who were government militia, immediately called out, demanding whence they came. The boatmen answered from Sleat. The militiamen ordered them to come ashore, intending, of course, to inspect the boat, and finding their order not complied with, they instantly jumped into their own boat and gave chase. At the time when the boat containing the Prince came in sight of these men, Charles was sitting in the bottom, between Mackinnon's knees, and covered by Mackinnon's plaid, in order to be out of sight, in case of any such misadventure occurring. On being hailed by the men, he was for jumping ashore ; but Mac- kinnon would not allow him to do so, and constrained him, though with some difficulty, to remain in his present situa- tion. Now that the hostile party was in pursuit, Charles was constantly inquiring of Mackinnon if they were gain- ing upon them. Mackinnon replied in the negative, but nevertheless gave his men directions to have their muskets ready, in case of their being overtaken, and when they fired, to be sure to take good aim. The Prince, hearing Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 331 these orders, intreated that no life might be taken without absolute necessity; to which John heartily agreed, but nevertheless said that, if forced to come to blows, he would make it his endeavour that not a man escaped to tell the tidings. Presently they approached a part of the shore where the hill was wooded down to the very beach. i Here/ said he to the Prince, l it may be quite safe to land, for, if once we be on shore, the red crosses will be obliged to sheer off, for fear of our firing at them from behind the trees.' The boat had no sooner touched the shore, than the Prince, with Mackinnon and one of the men, leaped out, and nimbly ascended the hill, from the top of which they beheld the adverse party, as predicted by John, returning from their fruitless pursuit. Mackinnon, congratulating the Prince on his escape, asked his pardon for thwarting his wishes in the boat, which Charles, it may be imagined, readily granted. His reason, he said, for wishing to jump ashore was, l that he would rather fight for his life than be taken prisoner ; but he hoped that God would never so far afflict the king his father, or the duke his brother, as that he should fall alive into the hands of his enemies.' 1 On this eminence the Prince slept three hours, and then returning to the boat, he re-embarked, and crossed the loch to a little island near the seat of Macdonald of Scothouse. Here Charles remained, while John Mackinnon went to Scothouse with a message to Clanranald, who was there residing. As John was drawing near the house, he saw Clanranald walking by himself, who no sooner spied the approaching stranger, than he hastened to get within doors. John overtook him, and seized him by the skirts just as he was entering the door. The old chief, turning round in alarm, was reassured when he found himself addressed by John Mackinnon. They went to the back of the garden to converse, and there John informed him that he had come to apprise him of the Prince being in the neighbourhood, and that it was the wish of his Eoyal Highness that Clan- ranald should advise as to his future course, and point out some one into whose hands he might now with safety be put. Clanranald, although he had befriended Charles in South Uist, was not now disposed to do so, probably in consequence of the trouble which had in the interim befallen others who had concerned themselves in his behalf. He therefore treated Mackinnon's message with coldness, say- ing that he did not know of any one who could take charge 1 John Mackinnon's Narrative, Jacobite Memoirs, 490. 332 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. of the Prince, and that the only course he could advise him to take, was to return to whence he came, and remain in the island of Rona — this being 1 a small grass island evidently unfit to shelter the royal fugitive. Mackinnon took leave of him in great indignation, and returned to report his mission to the Prince, who heard the recital with tranquil- lity, only remarking, ■ Well, Mr Mackinnon, there is no help for it ; we must do the best we can for ourselves,' 1 They now returned across the loch to Little Mallack, where they had first landed from Skye, and where they were rejoined by the old Laird of Mackinnon and the other boatman. Having resolved to apply to Macdonald of Morar, they set out for the house of that gentleman, which was situated on the fresh-water lake, Loch Morar, about seven or eight Highland miles distant. As they passed a cottage on their way, they observed some people coming down towards the road, whereupon the Prince caused John Mackinnon to fold his plaid for him, and throw it over his shoulder, with his knapsack upon it, tying* a handkerchief about his head, to complete the disguise. As they went along, a stranger asked John if that was his servant, to which he answered in the affirmative, adding that, as the poor fellow was not well, he intended to leave him at Morar's house. On their way, they received at a sheiling a draught of milk from the hand of Archibald Macdonnell, a grandson of Scothouse. At another cottage belonging to Scothouse they bought another draught of milk, and obtained a guide to conduct them to Morar, the night being dark, and the road bad. At the ford near Morar's house, which was pretty deep, Mr Mackinnon desired the guide to take that poor sick young fellow (pointing to the Prince) upon his back and carry him across. The man said, in the true Highland spirit, of which the maid-servant at John Mac- kinnon's house had afforded another specimen, < The deil be on the back where he comes, or any fellow of a servant like him ; but I'll take you on my back, sir, if you please, and carry you safely through the ford.' Mackinnon de- clined the proposal, saying that, if the lad must wade, he would wade too, to help him, and take care lest any harm should happen to him. He then took hold of the Prince's arm, and they went through the ford together. The man's 1 The particulars of this interview were obtained by the Rev. Mr Forbes from the mouth of John Mackinnon, as that gentleman lay confined with lameness in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh April 25, 1761. They are recorded more at large in the Lyon in Mourning, viii. 1831. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 333 refusal in reality pleased the Prince and his friends very much, as it proved that his person was pretty well con- cealed. At an early hour in the morning' they reached Morar, which they found to have been burnt, in consequence of its owner being in the insurrection. Mr Macdonald and his family were accommodated in a bothy or hut near the ruins of the house. Mackinnon entered this small mansion by himself, and roused the family, when Morar hastily rose from bed, and came to the door to greet the Prince. Having 1 dismissed his children and servants, he introduced Charles into the house, where his lady, a sister of Locheil, no sooner beheld that sad spectacle of fallen royalty, than she burst into a flood of tears. The only refreshment she could set before the party was some cold salmon warmed again, without bread. The Prince and his friends were then conducted by Morar to a cave near by, where they slept ten hours. Morar now went to seek for young Clanranald, whose aid or advice might, he thought, be of service to the Prince. Returning next day to the party, he appeared, to their great surprise and regret, in quite a diiferent humour from what he had manifested at their first arrival. When he told the Prince that he had been unable to find young Clanranald, Charles said to him, l Well, Morar, there is no help for that ; you must do the best you can yourself.' He answered that he could do nothing' for his Eoyal Highness, and as little did he know of any person to whose care he could recommend him. ' This is very hard/ said the Prince; 'you were very kind yesternight, Morar, and said you could find out a hiding'-place proof against all the search of the enemy's forces, and now you say you can do nothing at all for me. You can travel to no place but what I will travel to ; no eatables or drinkables can you take but what I can take a share along with you, and be well content with them, and even pay handsomely for them. When fortune smiled on me, and I had pay to give, I found some people ready enough to serve me ; but now that fortune frowns on me, and I have no pay to give, they forsake me in my necessity.' Morar's conduct highly incensed John Mackinnon, who said, 'I am persuaded, Morar, though you deny it, you have met with your betters, and got bad counsel, otherwise you would not have changed your mind so much as you have done in so short a time.' Morar persisted in denying that he had seen young Clanranald, or received any bad 334 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. counsel; but he was as firm in continuing to refuse all further aid to the Prince. Charles, completely overcome by his feelings, now broke out with — ' Oh, God Almighty ! look down upon my circumstances, and pity me, for I am in a most melancholy situation. Some of those who joined me at first, and appeared to be my fast friends, now turn their backs upon me in my greatest need; and some of those again who refused to join me, and stood at a distance, are now among my best friends ; for it is remarkable that those of Sir Alexander Macdonald's following have been most faithful to me in my distress, and contributed greatly to my preservation.' Then he added, 'I hope, Mr Mac- kinnon, you will not desert me too, but do all for my pre- servation that you can. 7 The aged chief, supposing himself to be here addressed, declared, while the tears gushed from his eyes, ' 1 never will leave your Eoyal Highness in the day of danger, but will, under God, do all I can for you, and go with you wherever you order me.' ' Oh no/ said the Prince, ' that is too much for a person of your advanced years, sir. I heartily thank you for your readiness to take care of me ; but one of your age cannot well hold out with the dangers and fatigues I must undergo. It was to your friend John here, a stout young man, I was addressing myself. 7 ' Well, then/ said John, ' with the help of God I will go through the wide world with your Royal High- ness. 7 The old laird here accordingly parted with them, and the Prince and John Mackinnon proceeded, with a son of Morar's for guide, to Borodale, the residence of Mr Angus Macdonald, and the place where Charles had first lodged after his landing from France. He said he was sure that honest old Angus Macdonald would do all he could for him. In the course of the night the little party had crossed into Arisaig, and before day, they arrived at Borodale, where they found the house burnt, and the proprietor lodging, like Morar, in a bothy or hut. John Mackinnon went in abruptly, desiring Angus to rise. He was at first a little alarmed, but soon recognising Mackinnon 7 s voice, rose in his blankets, and came to the door. John asked him if he had heard anything of the Prince, to which he answered 'No.' 'What/ said John, 'would you give for a sight of him?' 'Time was/ replied the old gentleman, 'that I would have given a hearty bottle to see him safe ; but since I see you, I expect to hear some news of him. 7 ' Well, then/ said Mackinnon, 'I have brought him here, and will commit him to your charge. I have done my duty ; Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 335 do you yours.' i I am glad of it,' said Angus, l and shall not fail to take care of him. I shall lodge him so securely, that all the forces in Britain shall not find him out.' l According to the tradition of Angus Macdonald's family, the Prince did not enter this humble bothy without reluc- tance, remembering that one of his sons had never been heard of since the day of Culloden. He felt distressed at the idea of meeting a mother who had suffered this sad loss on his account. When he did enter, he approached the lady with tears in his eyes, and asked if she could endure the sight of one who had been the cause of so much distress to her and her family. Yes, she said, she would be glad to serve her Prince, though all her sons had perished in his service, for in doing so they had only done their duty. 2 John Mackinnon now left the Prince, and returned to his house in Skye, where he no sooner arrived, than he and two of his rowers were taken by a party of militia, who conveyed them to Kilvory, and placed them in the cruel hands of Captain Ferguson. Being required by this mon- ster to disclose the place of the Prince's retreat, and giving a positive refusal to the demand, Ferguson caused one of the men to be stripped, tied to a tree, and lashed till the blood gushed from both his sides ; he also threatened Mac- kinnon with the same treatment. Nothing could extort a confession from these faithful men. Mackinnon was then sent on board the Furnace sloop-of-war, where he met with civil treatment from General Campbell. He was afterwards sent to London, and confined there till July 1747 . 3 Angus Macdonald kept the Prince for three days in a hut in the neighbouring wood, and in the meantime his 1 John Mackinnon's Narrative, Jacobite Memoirs, 496. 2 Communicated to me by the late Mr Macdonald of Glenaladale (originally of Borodale), grandson of the lady. It only seems doubtful whether the inci- dent took place now, or at the end of April, when the Prince embarked at Borodale for the Long Island. t 3 Mr Mackinnon came to Edinburgh at the beginning of the year 1761, afflicted by a severe lameness from the top of his thighs downwards. He was then in necessitous circumstances, and had left a wife and four children in Skye poorly provided for. From an independence of spirit, he chose rather to go into the public infirmary than be a burden to particular friends ; but after a residence there of six months, he was dismissed uncured, and with no hope of relief except from the waters at Bath. Carried thither by the generosity of a faithful few residing in Edinburgh, he received every kindness suited to his circumstances from Thomas Bowdler of Ashley, Dr Haviland, and some other Jacobite gentlemen ; but here also he steadily insisted, against their wishes, upon going into the public hospital. His disorder defied all remedy, and he died on the 11th of May 1762, aged forty-eight. Dr Haviland then gave his body a place in the same grave in which he designed to be buried himself. An inscription intended for a monument over his grave (never executed) appeared in the Scots Magazine for that year. 336 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. youngest son, John Macdonald, went with a letter from Charles to Mr Macdonald of Glenaladale, lately major of the Clanranald regiment, whom he expected to befriend him in the present exigency. During the absence of this messenger, intelligence was received of the capture of the old Laird of Mackinnon in Morar's bothy; 1 and it being then judged unsafe for Charles to stay any longer so near Borodale, he was conducted, by Angus and another son named Ranald, to a more secure place of retreat, at the distance of four miles along the shore to the eastward. The coast there consists of a steep precipice : in the cleft between two rocks a hut had been artfully constructed, with the grassy side of the turf outwards, so that it exactly resembled a natural green bank, This hut formed the new hiding-place of the royal fugitive. The vessel in which John Mackinnon was kept after his capture having come into Lochnanuagh, lay for some time at anchor close to this retreat, without any one on board having the slightest suspicion that it was a place of concealment. The Prince remained secure in this place for several days. Two days after he had despatched John Macdonald to Glen- aladale, namely, on the 15th of July, the letter was delivered into the hands of that gentleman, who immediately came to Borodale, and paid the Prince a visit. Next day Angus Macdonald received a letter from his son-in-law, Angus Mackechan, residing in the glen of Morar, informing him that a rumour was beginning to be whispered about of the Prince being concealed at Borodale, and offering for the acceptance of his Royal Highness a more secure asylum which he had prepared in Morar. The Prince sent Ranald Macdonald to survey and report upon the nature of this asylum, and next day sent out John to watch the motions of the military. The latter soon returned, with the alarm- 1 This gentleman was sent to London in the vessel commanded by the atro- cious Ferguson, in which also were Donald and Malcolm Macleod. Though subjected to the same severe privations and cruel usage with the rest, and nearly seventy years of age, he maintained rather better health than any of his companions. After lying for a long time in the Thames, he was put into the New Jail in South wark, whence he was liberated in July 1747. Bishop Forbes thus notices the death of this old gentleman : — « May 7, 1756.— Died at his house of Kilmaine, in the Isle of Skye, John Mac- kinnon of that ilk, i. e. the old Laird of Mackinnon, in the 75th year of his age, leaving issue two sons and a daughter, Charles, Lachlan, and Margaret, all born after the 71st year of his age. He used to say he hoped God would not take him off the earth but on the field of battle, when fighting for his king and country. He frequently retired to the cave in which the Prince, and he himself, and his lady, dined just before the Prince's leaving Skye in his skulking, and there he would have entertained himself with laying down a plan for the Restoration, and with the execution thereof in theory, and then came home extremely well pleased.' Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 337 ing intelligence that a government ship had entered Loch- nanuagh, being, it would appear, the same in which John Mackinnon was confined. Charles, without waiting for Ranald's return, set out with Glenaladale, Angus and John Macdonald, to Glen Morar; and on the way, at a place called Corry-bincabir, met Angus Mackechan, who informed them that young Clanranald had come to a place a few miles off, in order to conduct his Royal Highness to a retreat which he had prepared for him. Charles would gladly have gone immediately to put himself under the protection of young Clanranald, but the lateness of the hour determined him to prefer the Glen Morar asylum for that night, and go to the other place next day. Borodale, who had gone on before as an advanced guard, learning, in the course of the night, that General Campbell, with several men-of-war and a considerable body of troops, had anchored near Loch Nevis, while Captain Scott had brought another party into the lower part of Arisaig, waited upon the Prince next morning (the 23d) with that alarming intelligence. The situation of the Prince was now in the highest degree critical. He seemed in a great measure surrounded by his enemies ; for they, having be- come aware of his landing amongst the estuaries formerly mentioned, had drawn a cordon of troops along from the head of Loch Hourn, the most northerly, to the head of Loch Sheil, the most southerly, so as to leave him scarcely any chance of escape on the land side. The cordon con- sisted of single sentinels, planted within sight of each other, who permitted no one to pass unchallenged. By night, large fires were lighted, between which the men continually passed to and fro, so as to leave no place for more than a few minutes at a time unvisited. It was now impossible for the Prince to join young Clanranald, for the troops were interposed. To remain where he was seemed equally dangerous, as the enemy might be expected gradually to close in upon him, and make his capture almost a matter of certainty. Feeling the necessity of using great caution, he now parted with Angus Macdonald and Angus Mackechan, and taking with him only Glenaladale, Lieutenant John Mac- donald, Glenaladale's brother, and the other John Mac- donald, son of Angus of Borodale, that the party might be as little conspicuous as was consistent with his safety, he set out at eleven in the forenoon, and by mid-day reached the top of a hill called Scoorveig, at the eastern extremity of Arisaig, where he stopped to take some refreshment, VOL. V. V 338 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. while one of his attendants (John Macdonald, brother to Glenaladale) went to Glenfinnin for intelligence, and to appoint two men stationed there to join the Prince that evening* on the top of a hill called Swerninck Corrichan, above Loch Arkaig, in Locheil's country. The Prince soon afterwards set out, with his two remaining" friends, and about two o'clock came to the top of a hill called Fruigh- vain. Here, observing some men driving cattle, Glenala- dale walked forward to inquire the reason, and soon after returned with the intelligence that they were his tenants flying before the approach of a strong body of troops, who had come to the head of Loch Arkaig, to prevent the Prince from escaping in that direction. It was of course unad- visable to pursue that route, and the wanderers immediately despatched a messenger to Glenfinnin, which was only about a mile off, to recall Glenaladale's brother and the two men who were to have gone to Loch Arkaig. Glenaladale like- wise sent a man to a neighbouring hill for Donald Cameron of Glenpean, an honest farmer, who had removed thither with his effects on the approach of the soldiers, and who, from his acquaintance with the country, promised to be an excellent guide. While they waited the return of these messengers, one of the tenants' wives, pitying the condition of her landlord, came up the hill with some new milk for his refreshment. The Prince, perceiving her approach, covered his head with a handkerchief, and assumed the appearance of a servant who had got a headache. The day was excessively warm, and the milk, of course, grateful to the palate of a wayworn traveller; but Glenaladale used afterwards to confess that he could as well have spared the officious kindness of the good woman. It was with some difficulty, moreover, that he could get her dismissed with- out the pail in which she had brought the milk, so as to enable him with safety to give the Prince a share more suitable to his real than his supposed rank. The messenger who had been sent to Glenfinnin soon after returned, without having found Glenaladale's brother or the two men (they having run off towards the place where they expected to find the party), but brought intelligence that a hundred of the Argyle militia were approaching the very hill on which the Prince was stationed. On this alarm- ing news, the terrified party dislodged, without waiting for Glenpean ; and set forward on their perilous journey. About eleven at night, as they were passing- through a hollow way between two hills, they observed a man coming down one of the hills towards them ; upon which Charles and young Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 339 Macdonald stepped aside, while Glenaladale advanced to discover whether he was friend or foe. This person turned out to be the very individual they were most anxious to see, Donald Cameron of Glenpean, who had made all haste to overtake them after receiving- their message. Glenaladale immediately brought him to the Prince, who had lodged one night in his house soon after the battle of Culloden, and to whom he now recounted all he knew regarding the position of the king's troops. As desired by the messenger, Donald had brought all the provisions he could g'ather ; but the whole consisted of only a few handfuls of oatmeal and about a pound of butter. Miserable as this fare was in quality and amount, it proved of great service during the next few days, while the party were passing through the guards. The Prince no sooner saw it, than, having been previously almost famished, he ate heartily of it : for four days he got nothing' but a little of the oatmeal and butter. 1 It was probably to this period of his career that he alluded when, some weeks after, in passing into Badenoch to meet Locheil, he told a gentleman of the Keppoch tribe that he had come to know what a quarter of a peck of meal was, hav- ing once subsisted upon such a quantity for the better part of a week. 2 Donald Cameron, assuming the character of their guide, now set forward with them through a road so wild and rugged, as to be almost impervious even in daylight. Tra- velling all night with untiring diligence, they arrived next morning (July 24th) at the top of a hill in the braes of Loch Arkaig, called Mam-nan-Callum, from whence they could perceive their enemy's camp, distant about a mile. Cameron knew that this hill had been searched the day before, and therefore conjecturing that it would not be again searched that day, he counselled that they should take up their abode there till the evening, and endeavour in the meantime to procure the refreshment of sleep. They reposed for two hours, after which the whole party, except the Prince, got up to keep sentry. They had not been long awake, when they were alarmed by the appearance of a man at a little distance. Cameron, on account of his acquaintance with the country and its people, was selected to approach and accost this person, who, to the great joy of the whole party, turned out to be Glenaladale's brother/ This gentleman had no sooner discovered, on the preceding day, that the Prince 1 Statement taken down from Donald Cameron by Bishop Forbes : Lyon in Mourning. 2 Lyon in Mourning, viii. 1828. 340 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. did not keep his appointment, than he began to wander, in a state of extreme alarm, through the country in search of either his Koyal Highness or of intelligence regarding his fate. The same apprehensions which he had entertained regarding the party, they had entertained regarding him ; and it was now with sensations of the utmost pleasure that these unfortunate gentlemen mutually congratulated each other upon a meeting which they had so little reason to expect. Charles remained with his trusty little band upon the hill Mam-nan-Callum all that day, without experiencing any disturbance from the soldiers. They set out about nine in the evening towards the south, and at one in the morning (July 25) came to Corrinangaul, on the confines of Knoidart and Loch Arkaig. Here Cameron hoped to fall in with and procure provisions from some of the people who had fled before the face of the encroaching soldiery. During this harassing and perilous march, the party had had no food but a little of Donald Cameron's oatmeal and butter, eaten without culinary preparation. For two days the Prince had now been skirting along the interior of that chain of sentries which has been described as extending from Loch Hourn to Loch Sheil. In his dreary and stealthy night journeys he could distinctly see the fires which marked the posts of the enemy, and even hear the stated cries of the sentinels, as they slowly crossed back- wards and forwards. These fires were placed at brief in- tervals, and every quarter of an hour a patroling party passed along to see that the sentinels were upon the alert. It seemed scarcely possible that the forlorn little party should evade or break from a toil whose meshes were at once so strong and so closely set. Yet the want of provisions, and the fear of being soon inextricably environed, rendered it imperatively necessary that they should make the attempt, though it were only to anticipate their fate. This desperate enterprise being fixed for the succeeding night, Glenaladale and Glenpean ventured down to some sheilings in search of provisions, while the Prince and the other two Macdonalds remained upon the hill. The sheilings were found to have been abandoned, and the two commis- saries returned without their errand. It was then judged proper to shift from their present situation to a secret place upon the brow of a hill at the head of Lochnaig, which was about a mile from the position of the troops, and where they might expect to spend the intervening day in greater security. Here they slept for some time. After Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 341 awaking", Glenpean and Glenaladale's brother were sent off to the hill above them in quest of food, while Glenaladale and the younger Macdonald watched over the Prince, who still remained asleep. The commissaries did not return till the afternoon, when two small cheeses proved all that they had been able to procure throughout the country. This was very dry food ; and as they did not know when they might get more, they were obliged to use it very sparingly. To increase the mortification of the unhappy Prince, the com- missaries reported that a troop of a hundred men were com- ing up the opposite side of the hill in search of the fugitive country people, and that they possibly might light upon their place of concealment. Under these distressing circumstances, it was Charles's wisest, or rather his only policy, to remain as closely con- cealed as possible. Notwithstanding, therefore, that the soldiers searched very narrowly, and all round him, he kept perfectly close, with his company, till eight in the evening, when, the search being done, they set out at a quick pace towards the steep hill called Drumachosi. In ascending this hill, immediately after passing the small camp in the valley, the Prince met a nearly fatal accident. The night was very dark, the hill very steep, and the gentlemen went in a line, Donald Cameron first, the Prince next, after him Glenaladale, behind whom came the two John Macdonalds. In crossing a small rivulet which gushed out of the hill, and glided over a precipice, Charles slipped a foot, and fell, and he would certainly have tumbled over the rock, and been dashed to pieces below, if Cameron had not seized him by one arm, and Glenaladale by the other, and so recovered him. 1 On reaching the top of the hill, they discerned the fires of a camp directly in their front, which they thought they could scarcely shun. Resolved, however, to make the attempt at all hazards, they approached the dreaded object till they could actually hear the soldiers talking to each other. Then creeping up the next hill, they spied the fires of another camp, which also seemed to lie directly in their path. Here they at last determined to make the attempt. Cameron at this juncture, with the true generosity of a Highlander, proposed to go forward himself, and prove the possibility of escape, before permitting the Prince to hazard his more precious person. ' If I get safe through/ he re- marked, ' and also return safe, then you may venture with 1 These particulars are given in a letter addressed by Glenaladale to Bishop Forbes, and which the bishop received in December 1749 ; a copy of which document is preserved in his collection in my possession. 342 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. greater security, and I shall be all the better fitted to con- duct you.' Be it remarked, he made this courageous pro- posal in the face of an omen which, though ridiculous enough, was perhaps sufficient to have unmanned a person who, with equal superstition, had not so noble or so excit- ing a cause to brace his nerves. He began to complain that his nose was itchy, a clear sign, he averred, that they had great dangers to go through. Charles, notwithstanding his perilous circumstances, could not help laughing at this fan- tastic alarm, though he must have been at the same time deeply impressed with admiration of the devotedness and real bravery of the Highlander. Glenpean having put the passage to the proof, and, to the great joy of the company, returned in safety, the whole set forward, headed by him as guide. It was now about two o'clock in the morning, and the brilliancy of the fires was beginning to fade before the advancing lights of day. Be- twixt the two posts which they intended to cross there was a small mountain stream, whose winter torrents had, in the course of ages, worn a deep channel among the rocks. Up this deep and narrow defile, at the moment when the sentinels were returning to the fires, and had their backs turned towards the place, the party crept upon all-fours, with the stealthy caution and quiet of a party of Indian savages. A few minutes sufficed to carry them to a place where they were completely screened from the observation of the enemy. Having thus escaped from one of the greatest dangers which had yet environed him, Charles, whose spirits always displayed great elasticity, gaily addressed Glenpean with an inquiry about his nose. The good gentleman confessed it was a great deal better since they had passed the sentries, but that it was still c a wee yeuky.' ' What! Donald/ cried the Prince gaily, c have we still more guards to pass ? ' After walking about two miles, they came to a place on the Glenelg side of the head of Loch Hourn called Corris- corridale, where, finding what they considered a well-con- cealed spot, they called a halt, and partook of some refresh- ments. As already mentioned, the commissariat was in a miserable state. Animal spirits, however, compensated every privation to Charles. Cutting a slice of cheese, which he covered with oatmeal, and seasoning that dry fare with a drink from the neighbouring spring, he contentedly stretched the form upon the cold ground, whose home, in the words of the old song, c should have been a palace.' He passed the whole of the succeeding day in this place, with- out any improvement in his food. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 343 It was now resolved, as the West Highlands had become so unsafe a place of residence, to repair northwards to a portion of the Mackenzie's country, which, on account of the loyalty of the inhabitants, had not been subjected to a military police. They decamped for this purpose about eight o'clock at night, when, to their indescribable alarm, they discovered that they had spent the day within cannon- shot of two of the enemy's posts, and that at this moment a company of soldiers was employed in their immediate neighbourhood in driving some sheep into a hut for slaughter. This, however, only hastened their march; and about three o'clock in the morning (July 27) they reached Glenshiel, a wild vale in the estate of the Earl of Seaiorth. The little provision they had had being now entirely ex- hausted, Glenaladale and John Macdonald (Borodale's son) were sent out in search of supplies, while Charles remained behind, with Cameron and the elder Lieutenant Macdonald, Glenaladale's brother. While Glenaladale was inquiring* among some country people about a guide to conduct them to Pollew, where he understood that some French vessels had lately been seen, a Glengarry man came running* up, hav- ing been chased by soldiers out of his own country, where they had killed his father the day before. Glenaladale knew this man at first sight, and being aware that he had served in the Prince's army, and was a trustworthy person, re- solved to keep him in reserve as a guide to Glengarry's country, in case he should not succeed in his present quest. Having then furnished himself with some provisions, he returned to the Prince ; and as soon as they had refreshed themselves, the whole party retired to a secure place on the face of an adjacent hill, in order to sleep. Getting up about four in the afternoon, they dismissed their faithful guide, Cameron, who could no longer be of any service. Soon after. Glenaladale. observing ""the Glengarry fugitive pass- ing in his way back to his own country, slipped out of his den. and, without disclosing his purpose, used arguments with the man to induce him to remain in a by-place till such time as he could be sure of a guide to Pollew. He then returned to the Prince, who approved of his precaution. About seven o'clock, the man whom he had employed to procure a guide to Pollew, brought intelligence that the only French vessel which had been there was g*one, and that a guide could not have been procured, even though. that had not been the case. Glenaladale immediately dis- missed the messenger, and brought this intelligence to the Prince, whose course it was now resolved to change in the 344 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. way proposed. Accordingly, the Glengarry man being* in- troduced to his Koyal Highness, and having undertaken the office, the whole party set out late at night towards the south, designing to form a junction, if possible, with Locheil and some other chiefs, who, it was understood, still remained secure even in the vicinity of the enemy's forts. Charles experienced at this juncture one of those remark- able deliverances which induced so many of his adherents to believe that his life was under the immediate and constant care of Heaven. Before proceeding very far on this night's journey, Glenaladale, clapping his hands upon his side, declared he had lost his purse. As this contained forty guineas, which the Prince had confided to him for the purchase of provisions, and which was the sole stock of the company, Glenaladale was extremely perplexed at the loss, and proposed to return to the place from whence they had just set out, in order to search for it. Charles opposed this measure, and used many intreaties to prevent it ; but Glenaladale insisted upon the necessity of recovering what was so important to them, and accordingly went back along with the younger lieutenant, while the Prince, with Glen- aladale's brother and the guide, remained behind to await their return. While Glenaladale was absent, Charles spied an officer and two private soldiers advancing underarms along the path which they had just left. Trembling with joy at so signal a deliverance, he and his friends retired behind a rock, where they could see the motions of the soldiers, without being seen by them. The men passed by, unconscious of the prize which had so nearly fallen into their hands. Though rejoicing in their own preservation, Charles and his two companions remained in a state of great anxiety for the safety of Glenaladale and his companion, who might chance to meet the enemy in their turn. On coming to their last resting-place, these two gentlemen found the purse, but, upon opening it, discovered, to their mortification, that the gold was gone. 6 Reflecting/ continues Glenaladale's Journal, i that it might have been taken away by a little boy whom their landlord had sent with a present of milk to Glenaladale, and whom they had left at the place where the purse was forgotten, they went back a mile farther to their landlord's house, whose name was Gilchrist Macrath, 1 and 1 Glenaladale speaks only of having obtained provisions from this Macrath, while the Prince remained in hiding at a distance. In Mr Home's history, a somewhat different account is given, I know not on what authority. The whole passage in that work is as follows : — ' After having crossed the line of posts, Glenaladale, thinking the West Highlands a very unsafe place for Charles, resolved to conduct him to the Ross- shire Highlands, amongst those Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 345 through his means got the boy to restore all back, which he did to a trifle/ Fortunately, in returning" to the Prince, they took a different route, and thus escaped the little party of soldiers, who must otherwise have met them. When the company was once more reunited, they joined heartily in returning thanks to God for their safety. Charles was now so thoroughly impressed with a belief of his immunity from danger, that he said he ' scarcely believed he could be taken though he had a mind to it.' They travelled all the remainder of the night, till they came to a hill-side above Strathcluanie, where, choosing a secret place, they rested till three o'clock in the succeeding afternoon (July 28). Then setting out again, they had not walked above a mile along the hill-side, when they were Mackenzies who had remained loyal, and therefore were not visited with troops. These Mackenzies Glenaladale thought would not hetray Charles; and the person whom he pitched upon to confide in was Sir Alexander Mac- kenzie of Coul. Charles and his attendants, setting out for Ross-shire on foot, suffered greatly in their journey from want of provisions ; and when they came to the Braes of Kintail, inhabited by the Macraws, a barbarous people, among whom there were but few gentlemen, necessity obliged them to call at the house of one Christopher Macraw. Glenaladale, leaving Charles with the French officer at some distance, went to Macraw's house, and told him that he and two of his friends were likely to perish for want of food, and desired him to furnish them with some victuals, for which they would pay. Macraw insisted upon knowing who his two friends were, which Glen- aladale seemed unwilling to tell. Macraw still insisted ; and Glenaladale told him at last that it was young Clanranald, and a relation of his. Not- withstanding the consequence of the persons, Macraw, though rich for an ordinary Highlander, made Glenaladale pay very dear for some provisions he gave him. Having received the money, he grew better humoured, and desired Glenaladale and the other two to pass the night in his house ; which they did. In the course of the conversation they talked of the times, and Macraw exclaimed against the Highlanders who had taken arms with Charles, and said that they and those who still protected him were fools and madmen ; that they ought to deliver themselves and the country from distress, by giving him up, and taking the reward which government had offered. That night a Macdonald, who had been in the rebel army, came to Macraw's house : at first sight he knew Charles, and took an opportunity of warning Glenaladale to take care that Christopher should not discover the quality of his guest. Glenaladale desired this man, who seemed so friendly and so prudent, to give him his opinion, as he had traversed the country, what he thought was the safest place for Charles, mentioning at the same time his scheme of carrying him to the country of the Mackenzies ; which Macdonald did not approve, saying that there were some troops got among the Mackenzies, and that he thought their country by no means safe ; but that he had passed the former night in the great hill of Corado, which lies between Kintail and Glenmorriston ; that in the most remote part of that hill, called Corambian, there lived seven men upon whom the Prince might absolutely depend, for they were brave and faithful, and most of them had been in his army. As Charles wished to get nearer Lochaber and Badenoch, where Locheil and Cluny were, he resolved to go to Corambian. Next morning he and his attendants set out, taking Macdonald for their guide,' &c. &c. It is possible that Glenaladale omitted or slurred over this circumstance, out of delicacy to Macraw, or Macrath, who seems to have behaved on the occasion in a manner very uncharacteristic of the genuine Highlander. 346 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. alarmed by hearing several shots fired on the top of the hill, which they rightly judged to be occasioned by the soldiers chasing and murdering the poor people who had fled thither with their cattle ! They now steered their course north- ward, and late at night reached the top of a high hill betwixt the Braes of Glenmorriston and Strathglass, where they lodged all night, the Prince reposing in an open cave, so narrow, as not to permit him to stretch himself. This was one of the most uncomfortable nights he had as yet spent. The rain had fallen heavily and incessantly during the whole of the preceding day, and he was of course wet to the skin. No fire could be had to dry him. Without food, and deprived of sleep by the narrowness and hardness of his bed, the only comfort he could obtain was the miser- able one of smoking a pipe. The Glengarry man now informed the party of a band of skulkers who, he knew, haunted this neighbourhood, and were, he thought, likely to prove efficient friends to the Prince, in whose army they had served. These were the famous Seven Men of Glenmorriston, usually represented as robbers, but who only were so in a modified sense. As persons engaged in the Kebellion, they had seen their little possessions given as a prey to the spoiler; they had also seen seventy of their fellow-dalesmen recompensed for surren- dering, by being sent as slaves to the colonies. Rendered desperate, they had entered into an association of offence and defence against the duke and his army, binding themselves by solemn oath never to yield, but to fight on any parti- cular emergency to the last drop of their blood, and never, till the day of their death, to give up their arms. At first they were seven in number — namely, Patrick Grant, a farmer, commonly called Black Peter of Craskie; John Mac- donnell, alias Campbell; Alexander Macdonnell; Alexander, Donald, and Hugh Chisholm, brothers ; and Grigor Mac- gregor. Afterwards, in the course of their marches with the Prince, an eighth, Hugh Macmillan, joined them, and took their oath. They lived at this time a wild life amongst the mountains, supplying themselves with necessaries chiefly by bold attacks upon the military parties, from whom they often retrieved cattle and other spoil. 1 As some specimens of the doings of these men — About 1 The adventures in connexion with the Glenmorriston men are here for the first time minutely and faithfully described, the information being derived from the Rev. Mr Forbes's reports of conversations he had, in 1751, with Patrick Grant, the chief of the party.— Lyon in Mourning, from p. 1660 to p. 1703. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 347 twenty days before the Prince joined them, seven private soldiers, journeying" from Fort Augustus to Glenelg with some provisions, particularly wine and wheaten bread, which were carried on the backs of two horses, were, at a rough part of the way, attacked by four of the Glenmorriston men, the two Macdonnells and Alexander and Donald Chis- holm, who, firing, shot two of the men dead. The others ran off, leaving" their guide to shift for himself; and the assailants then buried the slain men, let loose the horses, and carried the hampers to their cave. Some days after, meeting" one Robert Grant, a native of Strathspey, who went about for the purpose of informing* on all the men he could discover to have been in the Rebellion, they shot him dead, and cutting* off his head, placed it upon a tree in a little wood near the high road in Glenmorriston, where it long remained as a terror to similar evil-doers. Three days after this violent act, they met a herd boy, who informed them that the cattle belonging to an uncle of Patrick Grant had been driven off by a large party of soldiers ; and the tale was soon confirmed by their observing* the cattle moving along a part of the road from Fort Augustus to Glenelg, about eight miles from the former place, and near the hill of Lundy. The seven men made all speed to overtake the military party, and on getting within hearing*, called out to them, in the most threatening manner they could assume, not to advance one step farther, but to leave the cattle to them, and be gone. The officers, three in number, drew up their party as for resistance, and sent one Donald Fraser, a militiaman, to learn what they wanted, and to order them to surrender, and take advantage of the royal protection. To this Patrick Grant answered, that nothing but the cattle would satisfy them, and that they would fight to their last breath rather than surrender. They also hinted at friends whom they had in the rear. The officers, apparently staggered at their boldness, and knowing how dangerous a few enemies were amidst the neighbouring rocks, did not attempt to fight with them, but ordered the cattle to be driven forward. The seven men then made a lateral movement, and commenced a running fire, two by two, with some effect. Still, the cattle and the soldiers moved on. The assailants then went forward to a narrow and dangerous pass, where, taking up a strong position, they gave their fire with such effect, that the men, terrified at this unusual kind of warfare, fell into confusion, and many fled. The officers then sent a second message, but with the same result, and strange to say, the affair ended by the men being allowed 348 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. to carry off the cattle, together with a horse laden with provisions. 1 It was into the hands of such men that the Prince was now to pass. The proposal of the Glengarry man being* acceded to, he set out at three in the morning of the 29th, with Glenaladale's brother, to seek for them, and, if possible, nego- tiate for their receiving the distressed party under their care, without the Prince being mentioned. The two messengers were successful. The Glenmorriston men agreed to receive the party (the chief of whom they understood to be Glenala- dale), and it was arranged that the fugitives should repair to a cave called Coiraghoth, in the Braes of Glenmorriston, where the men engaged to meet them by a particular hour. Charles accordingly set out with his attendants for this place, where they found, at the time of their arrival, only three of the men — namely, the two Macdonnells, and Alex- ander Chisholm. Glenaladale went forward to converse with them, and hinted that he had young Clanranald in his company. They professed that they would be very glad to see young Clanranald, and take all possible care of him. They were then brought out to meet the party ; but they had no sooner set eyes upon the person who was to pass for young Clanranald, then they knew him to be the Prince. He was received by them with the greatest demonstrations of fidelity and kindness, and conducted to their cave, where, at Charles's request, they took an oath, administered by Glenaladale, in the dreadful terms then customary among the Highlanders — 'that their backs should be to God, and their faces to the devil, that all the curses the Scriptures did pronounce might come upon them and all their posterity, if they did not stand firm to the Prince in the greatest dangers, and if they should discover to any person, man, woman, or child, that the Prince was in their keeping, till once his person should be out of danger.' This oath they kept so well, that not one of them spoke of the Prince having been in their company till a twelvemonth after he had sailed to Prance. Charles proposed that he and Glenaladale should take a like oath of fidelity to the men — namely, that if danger should come, they should stand by one another to the last drop of their blood ; but the men refused to take this pledge from the Prince and Glenaladale. Charles now broke a fast of about forty-eight hours by a 1 This story, as well as the two preceding, was reported by Patrick Grant himself to the Rev. Mr Forbes in 1751, and its truth was attested by the Donald Fraser mentioned in it, who happened to be in Edinburgh at the same time. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 349 refreshment of mutton, butter, and cheese, with some whisky. Next day, the other four, who had been absent in search of provisions, returned with a dead deer and a live ox. These men also knew the Prince at first sight, and. took the same oath with the rest. They killed the ox in his presence. They still wanted bread, and only had a little salt; but fresh water was supplied to them in abundance by a spring" which glided through the cave. On his arrival at the cave, Charles, who was always anxious to limit the number of those to whom he trusted himself, said he was perfectly well satisfied with the three men as a guard, and hinted that, in case he should wish to shift his quarters, it might not be necessary to wait for the return of the other four. On this being communicated to the three men, they (being unable to speak a word of English) desired Glenaladale to inform his Royal Highness that they could not comply with such a proposal, in consequence of the oath they had taken to keep by each other, and that if the Prince wanted them to be useful to him, which they would gladly be with all their heart, he behoved to trust himself to the other four as well as to them. In this there was not only high principle towards their comrades, but a prudential consideration of what was best for the Prince ; for, by re- maining together, they could better keep watch around their position, and allow of the detachments necessary for obtaining provisions. When the four men had taken the oath, Charles told the whole seven that they were the first privy council he had had sworn to him since the battle of Culloden, and that he should never forget them or theirs 'if ever he came to his own.' Hereupon one of them hinted to him that a priest who used to come amongst them in Glenmorriston frequently had told them that King Charles II., after his re- storation, was not very mindful of his friends. Their guest said he was heartily sorry for that, and hoped he should act differently : for this he gave them his word, the word of a Prince. Three days of repose and good nourishment in Coiraghoth recruited the Prince considerably, and being afraid to stay too long in any one place, he and his attendants shifted their quarters (August 2) to another and equally romantic cave about two miles off, named Coirskreaoch. Here, after taking some food, and planting sentries at proper points of outlook, they made up a bed of heath for the Prince in a small recess resembling a closet opening from the cave. He remained in this cave four days ; when, hearing that one Campbell; a 350 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. captain of militia, and factor to the Earl of Seaforth, was encamped within four miles of him, he thought proper to remove. On the evening of the 6th, he and his attendants set out in a northerly direction, and by break of day on the 7th they had passed the height of the country, and come in upon Strathglass, a district belonging to 'the Chisholm.' 1 In the evening, two of the men who had been left as scouts brought intelligence that they need be in no apprehension from the factor Campbell for that night; and they then repaired to a neighbouring sheiling, or hut, where, after kindling a fire, and taking some refreshment, they prepared a bed for the Prince, composed of sods with the grass uppermost, on which he slept soundly the whole night. He remained in this place two days. During that time he despatched a messenger to Pollew, to learn with greater certainty if any French vessels had touched at Pollew, and if they were still there. That he might be ready to take advantage of these vessels, if any such should be at Pollew, he resolved to draw somewhat nearer to the west coast. His messenger, before setting out, had been appointed to bring him intelligence to a particular place judged convenient for the purpose. Early in the morning of the 9th, he and his friends and attendants, about a dozen persons in all, set out to the northward by an unfrequented moor-road, and came that night to a sheiling^ where they halted for a few hours. At two o'clock in the morning of the 10th, they once more addressed themselves to their journey, and at noon came to Glencannich, where they passed the remainder of the day in a wood, and at night repaired to a neighbouring hamlet. At two o'clock in the morning they left this place, and climbed a hill called Peinacherine, on the north side of Glencannich, where they passed the day, and sent off two of their party to obtain a fresh supply of provisions. This place, which is about forty Highland miles from Pollew, is the most northerly point which the Prince reached on the mainland. 2 At night they repaired to a sheiling, in which they remained two days, waiting for the return of the mes- senger. At the end of that time 3 the man rejoined them, 1 The chief of this small clan, whose residence is at Erchless .Castle in Strathglass, is so st}ded in the Highlands. 2 So says Patrick Grant, in his report to the Rev. Rohert Forbes. A cave is shown in Glenstrathfarrar, to the north of Glencannich, as having been used by the Prince ; but if Grant be correct, the Prince never was in Glenstrath- farrar, nor within the distance from it of seven miles. 3 ' In Glencanna, upon Lammas day,' said Patrick Grant, ' the Prince spoke much to the praise of one of the daughters of the king of France, and drank her health, and made all the company do so likewise, Patrick does not re- member her name; but the Prince told them that her hair was as black as a Charles's wanderings— the mainland. 351 with intelligence that the only vessel which had ever touched at Pollew had sailed again, leaving a couple of men, who had set out for Locheil's country in quest of the Prince. Anxious to know if these men had any despatches for him, he resolved to return towards Locheil's country, in order, if possible, to meet them. They set out at night (August 13), and recrossing the water of Cannich, and passing near young Chisholm's house, arrived about two in the morning at a place called Fassana- coill in Strathglass. Here it was thought proper to tarry, until scouts should bring back intelligence of the state of the country to the south, and if the search for him was over in that quarter, and the troops returned to Fort Augustus. While the scouts were absent, the party remained in a dense wood, completely concealed from the neighbouring people. They were supplied with provisions by one John Chisholm, a farmer, who had been in the insurgent army, but to whom they did not at first confide the secret of the Prince being of the party. Charles having at length expressed a wish to see Chisholm, Patrick Grant and another were despatched to brings him. They desired him to come along with them to see l a friend whom they knew he would like well to see.' Apprehending from this that they had a person of some consequence with them, he said he had a bottle of wine which a priest had left with him, and he should be glad to take it along with him. i What, John/ said Grant, ' have you had a bottle of wine all this time, and not given it to us before 1 ' On coming into the presence of the Prince, John knew him at first sight. Patrick Grant, according to his own simple recital, put the bottle of wine into the Prince's hancls, and requested him to drink to him, ' for/ said he, 6 1 do not remember that your Royal Highness has drunk to me since you came among our hands. 7 ( Accord- ingly, the Prince put the bottle of wine to his mouth, and drank a health to Patrick Grant and all friends. John Chisholm having' received good payment for any provisions raven, and that she was a mighty fine agreeable lady, being sweet-natured and humble ; that he (the Prince) could not fail to love her, as he was sure she entertained a great regard for him, as did likewise the dauphin, whom the Prince commended much. Upon this John Macdonnell said, " As that lady is so good-natured, agreeable, and humble, would to God we had her here, for we would take the best care of her in our power, and, if possible, be kinder to her than to your Royal Highness." This made them all laugh heartily, and the Prince answered, "God forbid, for, were she here, and seized, to ransom her person would make peace upon any terms the Elector of Hanover would propose." They spoke upon this lady a whole hour without intermission.'— From Reports of Conversations with Patrick Grant, by the Rev. R. Forbes, 1752. 352 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. he had furnished, and finding that they had been purchased for the use of his Prince, immediately offered to return the whole price, and pressed the thing" much ; but the Prince would not hear of it at all, and ordered him to keep the money. ? Chisholm took the same oath as the Glenmorriston men. Some traits of the Prince's personal condition and con- duct while with the Glenmorriston men, as reported by Patrick Grant, may be appreciated by those who still re- gard with a feeling of melancholy interest the tale of the last Stuart. His clothes, which were of the Highland fashion, were coarse, tattered, and squalid almost beyond description, and he constantly slept in them, seldom get- ting a clean shirt above once a fortnight. He continued, accordingly, to suffer from the annoyance which Malcolm Macleod described him as suffering from in Skye. He was also afflicted with a very distressing ailment of the bowels. Nevertheless, ' he bore up under all his misfortunes with great resolution and cheerfulness, never murmuring or complaining of the hardness and severity of his condition.' He was observed to make a practice of withdrawing him- self every morning and evening to perform his devotions. 6 Glenaladale/ said Patrick Grant, * was interpreter between the Prince and us, and it was agreed upon that we should say nothing but what the Prince should be made to under- stand, and that the Prince should say nothing but what we likewise should be made to understand. By this means the Prince discovered that we were much addicted to com- mon swearing in our conversation, for which he caused Glenaladale to reprove us in his [the Prince's] name ; and at last the Prince, by his repeated reproofs, prevailed on us so far, that we gave that custom of swearing quite up.' Patrick Grant stated that the Prince walked so nimbly in the daytime, that few persons could hold out with him ; but he did not travel so well by night, when, being unac- customed to the rough and boggy ground on the Highland hills, he was constantly getting himself immersed in some deep hole, from which his companions had to draw him out. All the time he was with the Glenmorriston men, his appetite was observed to be good. When the party were at their meals, they sat in a circle, each having his morsel on his knee. The Prince would never allow them to keep off their bonnets when in his company — probably a pre- caution against his rank being detected, in the event of any hostile party approaching them before they were aware. He used to give directions about their homely cookery, and sometimes tended a roast himself. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 353 It would appear that not exactly everything* said by the men was interpreted to the royal wanderer. After he had parted with them, and got into new hands, conversing" about these faithful adherents, he remarked that he had often heard them use the expression Ho Sia?i, which he supposed to be the name of one of them, and that certainly that person was the chief amongst them, since they ad- dressed him so often. In reality, this expression was Aos Ian — ' Hark you, John ! 7 — which they often had occasion to use to John Macdonnell, one of the cleverest of their num- ber, and to whose judgment they usually deferred in all important matters. It will amuse the reader to learn that Bishop Forbes, with true Jacobite feeling, adopted the mis- taken phrase of the Prince, and applied it afterwards as a name to John Macdonnell, and wished him to hand it down to his children. ' Patrick Grant said that the Prince, when with them, used to declare that he had great confidence in the king* of France as a true and fast friend; and that the king* his father, and his own brother Henry, w r ould risk all to save him. He used to say much in praise of Prince Henry, as one preferable to himself in all respects, and as one of the greatest spirits and activity.' In due time the spies returned with intelligence that the troops had returned to their camp at Fort-Augustus, and that there was consequently a prospect of the Prince being- able to execute his design of crossing the Great Glen, and joining Locheil in Badenoch. They therefore set out at six in the morning of the 17th, and, travelling by an unfre- quented road, at ten in the forenoon reached the Braes of Glenmorriston. Having passed the day on the top of a hill, they set out at night, but had not travelled above a mile, when they learned that a strong military party had been sent to the Braes of Glengarry in quest of the Prince. Upon this it was resolved to proceed no farther, until the motions of the enemy should be farther known ; and they repaired to a neighbouring* sheiling, where they passed the remainder of the night. In the morning of the 18th, three men were sent off towards Loch Arkaig, in Locheil's coun- try, two of whom were to seek out, and, if possible, form an appointment for the Prince with Cameron of Clunes, while the other was to turn at Glengarry, and bring back intel- ligence of the movements of the party said to be in that district, so that Charles might perhaps be able to proceed, even while the meeting with Clunes was in the way of being arranged. VOL. V. W 354 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. We have here a remarkable anecdote of the Prince, which may be best related in the language in which Mr Forbes has reported it from the mouth of Patrick Grant. When returned to Glenmorriston Braes, ' the Prince was pretty positive to proceed forwards sooner than the Glenmorriston men thought it safe for him, and they would by no means allow him to go, till they should think it safe for him so to do. In a word, the kind contention ran so high, that they threatened to turn their backs upon him, and to leave him, if he did not listen to their counsel, as they knew the country best, and what dangers might happen to him in it ; and im- mediately insisted upon his taking some little refreshment and rest, and staying there as long as they judged it safe for him. But the Prince refused to eat or to drink, because they would not do as he desired. Upon this they plainly told him, that if he did not eat and drink heartily, he could not well hold out with the fatigues he was obliged to undergo in his present situation ; that if he should happen to turn faintish by abstaining from meat and drink too long, and then danger should come nigh them, he would not be in a condition either to get away from it, or to act his part in any shape so well as he would wish to do ; and therefore they urged him more than ever (as being absolutely neces- sary for him) to take some refreshment and rest ; which accordingly he did. The Prince said, " I find kings and princes must be ruled by their privy council, but I believe there is not in all the world a more absolute privy council than what I have at present," &c. They added, they had rather tie him than comply with him, so well did they know his danger. The Prince was at last obliged to yield the point, as he found them positive to the last degree, and as they assured him, if he complied with their requests in behalf of his safety, the enemy should not get within two miles of him without being discovered. This was the only time (said Patrick Grant) that we ever differed with the Prince in any one thing, and we were very sorry for it.' It is distressing to think that, on the very day when Charles was acting thus unreasonably with his humble but faithful followers on the Braes of Glenmorriston, the brave Bal- merino and the gentle Kilmarnock were laying down their lives in his cause on the ensanguined scaffold of Tower- hill. While the party rested at this place, Patrick Grant and Alexander Chisholm went out to forage for provisions, and in the course of their walk met the Laird of Glenmorriston (Grant), who had been in the Prince's army, and had had his Charles's wanderings— the mainland. 355 house burnt and his lands pillaged in consequence. Glen- morriston asked them where they now lived, as they were seldom seen — what they were doing: — and how did they obtain the means of subsistence. 'AYhat is become/ said he, < of the Prince ? I have heard that he has passed the Braes of Knoidart.' Even to this gentleman, whom habit had trained them to regard with the greatest respect, they would not disclose any of their secrets, merely remarking, that as the enemy were plundering the country, it were a pity not to share in the spoil ; and that they accordingly did so, and made a shift to live upon it. On their return to the Prince, they informed him of this interview, and said that, if his Royal Highness pleased, they would bi^ng* Glenmorriston to see him, he being a faithful and trusty friend. l The Prince said he was so well pleased with his present guard, that he wanted none other ; and that he had experienced poor folks to be as faithful and firm as any men, rich or high, could be.' 1 1 Bishop Forbes's report of conversations with Patrick Grant. Some less authentic anecdotes of the Glenmorriston men have been circulated. It is stated that at the first introduction of the Prince to their fraternity, as they were sitting at dinner, one of them, with great tact, exclaimed, ' Ha, Dougal M'Cullony, I'm glad to see thee ! ' and welcomed him as an old acquaintance of his own order, being then uncertain if his rank could be safely confided to the rest. This story does not appear to be true, though it is certain that the men generally called the Prince by the name Dougal, for safety. It has also been stated that, to supply him with linen, they attacked some officers' ser- vants travelling behind a military detachment, killed one of them, and seiz- ing a portmanteau, brought it home to their cave. A still more questionable tale represents them as going in disguise to Fort- Augustus, and bringing back newspapers for the Prince. Another dubious tale, referring to nearly this period, may here be adverted to. A young man named Roderick Mackenzie, the son of a jeweller in Edin- burgh, and who had been in the Prince's Life-Guards, resembled him much in person. While skulking in the Braes of Glenmorriston, he was beset by a military party, and finding escape impossible, he assumed a bold air, faced the soldiers, and as they poured the shot into his body, exclaimed, ' Villains, you have killed your Prince !' The men, believing that they had secured the grand prize, cut off the head of the unfortunate youth, and brought it to Fort-Augustus, where we have already seen that application was made to Macdonald of Kingsburgh to ascertain if he thought he could distinguish the head of the Prince, detached from his body. It is said that the head was generally looked on as the head of the Prince, and that Duke William carried it to London along with him, in order to ascertain the fact with more preci- sion. One Richard Morison, who had been the Prince's valet, now lay a prisoner in Carlisle ; he was hastily summoned to London, and promised par- don on condition that he would truly declare if the head was that of his late master. Morison having fallen sick on his arrival, an interval ensued, during which the head became so putrid as to make recognition impossible, but Morison nevertheless secured his pardon. That there is some truth in this story we can scarcely doubt, yet it is suspiciously deficient in locality and date. I find that the Rev. Mr Forbes made inquiry respecting the circum- stances, but never could obtain any certain particulars. A lady, however, informs me that she remembers, when a child, visiting in their house at the head of Gray's Close in the High Street of Edinburgh, two old ladies who 356 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. On the 19th, the man who was to bring* intelligence from Glengarry came back, reporting that that district was clear of troops. The Prince, therefore, with his party, now ten in number, set out in the afternoon, under the benefit of a fog, and passing through Glenmorriston and the minor vale of Glenluing, arrived late at night on the Braes of Glengarry. When they came to the Garry Water, it was found breast-deep with the rain ; nevertheless, they crossed it in safety, and ascending the hill for about a mile, tarried there for the remainder of the night in the open air, not- withstanding that it rained heavily. Early in the morn- ing (August 20), the heavy rain still continuing, they ad- vanced six Highland miles across hills and moors, and about ten in the forenoon came to the hill above Auchnasual, where the two messengers had been appointed to meet them on their return from Cameron of Clunes. They passed the day in a most inconvenient habitation, ' it raining as heavy within as without.' 1 Towards the afternoon, after they had begun to despair of the return of their messengers, and were deliberating what should be done, the two men came in, bringing a message from Clunes to Glenaladale, to the eifect that he could not wait upon him immediately, but had directed that the party should lodge for that night in a certain wood two miles off, where he would meet them in the morning. Two of the men, Patrick Grant and Alexander Macdon- nell, were now despatched to reconnoitre their proposed lodging-place, and finding it suitable, they quickly returned to bring forward the party. Their provisions were now reduced to half a peck of meal, and they had starvation staring them in the face. By the greatest good fortune, Patrick shot a large hart at the place where they were to pass the night; so that when the Prince and the rest arrived, they had one of the finest meals they had as yet enjoyed. They were this evening joined by Macdonnell of Loch- garry, who had been the commander of a regiment in the insurgent army ; and early next day, as appointed, Cameron of Clunes came to them : both of these gentlemen lived in concealment in the neighbouring mountains. By them the were understood to be the sisters of this Mackenzie, and who enjoyed a small pension on that account. The effects of the incident in allaying the heat of the search for the Prince have obviously been much exaggerated ; for it is within the ten days after the duke's departure from Fort-Augustus, that we find the exertions made to capture him in Arisaig by means of the chain of posts. 1 Glenaladale's Journal. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 357 Prince was conducted that afternoon (August 21) to a wood at the foot of Loch Arkaig, where he and his party lay that night. Here the Glenmorriston men left him, and returned to their own glen, all except Patrick Grant, who stayed behind, that the Prince might be enabled, when he should get a supply of money, to make, through him, a pecuniary acknowledgment of the services of the fraternity. Grant accordingly waited for some days, and ultimately carried home with him twenty-four guineas, being at the rate of three guineas for each man. 1 1 The public may be anxious to know the subsequent history of these men. How long they kept together, or pursued their wild mode of life, I have not ascertained : probably it was not later than July 1747, when the act of indem- nity permitted all the less distinguished rebels to show their faces once more in society. In 1751, Grant informed Mr Forbes that Alexander Macdonnell and Alexander Chisholm were then dead. Gregor Macgregor was taken some time after ' the troubles,' and imprisoned in Inverness, but had the good for- tune to make his escape, and in 1751 was ' alive and in good health, and as ready for a good ploy as ever.' The attack upon the soldiers and seizure of the cattle having excited much notice, Chisholm of Strathglass, on whose ground it had taken place, was incited to attempt to capture the Glenmor- riston men, who were suspected of being the actors in that strange adven- ture ; and accordingly, in November 1746, John Macdonald was taken in his bed, and carried to Inverness. He was kept there for many months, but at length liberated, there being no evidence against him, and the act of indem- nity being then passed. Patrick Grant, when Mr Forbes saw him in 1751, had come from the High- lands in a state of poverty, and ignorant of English, but determined on going abroad, and seeking out the Prince. ' If he be on the face of the earth,' said he, ' I'll find him out, and, meet when we will, he and I shall never part again.' It was with great difficulty that some rational people, into whose hands he fell, prevailed on him to give up this mad project. While lingering in Edinburgh, he fell into company with the same Donald Fraser who had acted as a messenger between the officers and the Glenmorriston men. Fraser reminded him jocularly that on that occasion Grant had taken from him a quarter of a pound of tobacco, which, he said, Patrick should now replace or pay. * What ! ' said Patrick, ' repay you that ! No ; you were an enemy then, and the tobacco was lawful spoil ; I will never pay you for that.' The company, all of them Jacobites, enjoyed this conversation very much. Patrick Grant was pressed into the army in 1759, and served in North America. At the peace of 1763, he returned to Glenmorriston with a Chelsea pension. John Macdonnell, who had been one of the leaders of the outlawed frater- nity, and whom the Prince had supposed to be called Os Ean, lived for many years after in the Braes of Glenmorriston. In May 1754, ' John Macewan Vic-William, alias Macdonnell, some time residenter in Ballado in Glenmor- riston,' was sentenced at Inverary to be hanged for theft and robbery ; which sentence was carried into effect at Inverlocby on the 31st of the month.* This man, on being apprehended, had given himself out as one of the Glenmor- riston men who had protected the Prince, thinking that the identity of his name and locality would favour the imposture, and that the imposture would operate in his favour, in the event of his being brought to trial. It had, in reality, that effect, for many gentlemen in the Highlands exerted themselves, after his condemnation, to save his life. The rumour thenceforth became general in the north of Scotland that one of the Glenmorriston men, who had scorned the bribe of £30,000, was hanged for stealing a cow ! The tale * Scots Magazine, 1754, p. 202. 358 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Charles now once more turned his thoughts to Cluny and Locheil, who, he understood, were living in a compa- has often been repeated, and lastly in the * Tales of a Grandfather,' published in 1830 — so difficult is it to overtake any false allegation with a contradiction. The real state of the case, as above stated, appears in Mr Forbes's papers, being the result of a conversation in 1756 with Patrick Grant. It is added in the same place, that the real John Macdonnell was a Campbell, who, on removing to the property of Macdonnell of Glengarry, had, as was customary, taken the name of that chief. John was supported for some years by Mr Macdonald of Glenaladale ; but at the death of that gentleman, he fell into poverty. In 1762, we find Mr Macnab of Inchewen making an endeavour to raise some money amongst his Jacobite friends for John, whom he represents as then above sixty years of age, unable to work, and burdened with a sickly wife and a young family. Of the condition of the man at that time, we have an affecting picture in the following letter addressed by a Mr Mackenzie, teacher in Tain, to Mr Forbes : — ' I happened to be two weeks ago in Strath- glass, at the young Chisholm's house, and on the 25th ult., as I was walking alone by the river's side, I met an aged man, who saluted me, as is ordinary in the Highlands, and asked if I had snuff; which I answered by giving him my box, which introduced a parley. I inquired whence and who he was. He answered from Glenmorriston, and that his name is John Maccoilvee Eandue, or, if I pleased, John Macdonnell. I inquired if he knew Patrick Grant. He said very well, and that he had shared in the cause of Patrick's reputation ; that he frequently attended, summa fide, his R 1 Master, ministering sometimes to his relief, and that the P e called him often by the name of Os Ean. I told him, if he could find good credentials for what he advanced, his fidelity at the critical juncture might yet avail him. He declared that Patrick Grant and others of repute could vouch for what he asserted ; that he was now reduced to great want. He had one of his sons, a pretty boy, with him, seeking service for him, having kept him a little time at a charity school. After giving him a mite to buy his supper, we bade good night.' It appears that more than one sum of five pounds was raised in the south, and sent to this poor man, whose history is ultimately summed up in the following passage of a letter by Bishop Forbes, dated June 8, 1775 : — ' Poor Os Ean, upon failing of his usual moiety, joined the emigrants in August last, to seek a grave in a foreign land, where his merit is not known, and would be little regarded.' Hugh Chisholm long survived this period. He was in Edinburgh for a considerable time between the years' 1780 and 1790, and gave some account of the Prince's adventures with the Glenmorriston men to Mr Home. At this time he fell under the notice of Sir Walter Scott, who gives the following particulars respecting him in the * Tales of a Grandfather :' — ' Another, by name Hugh Chisholm, resided in Edinburgh, and was well known to your grandfather, then a young man at college, who subscribed with others to a small annuity, which was sufficient to render him comfortable. He returned to his native country, and died in Strathglass some time subsequent to 1812. He was a noble commanding figure, of six feet and upwards ; had a very stately demeanour, and always wore the Highland garb. The author often questioned him about this remarkable period of his life. He always spoke as a high-minded man, who thought he had done no more than his duty, but was happy that it had fallen to his individual lot to discharge it. . . . Hugh had some particular notions and customs. He kept his right hand usually in his bosom, as if worthy of more care than the rest of his person, because Charles Edward had shaken hands with him when they separated. AVhen he received his little dole (I am ashamed of the small amount, but I had not much to give), which he always did with the dignity of one collecting tribute rather than receiving alms, he extended his left hand with great cour- tesy, making an excuse for not offering the other, " that it was sick." But the true reason was. that he would not contaminate with a meaner touch Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 359 ratively agreeable concealment in Badenoch, far to the south of the Great Glen of Albyn — that profound valley, filled with a chain of lakes and rivers, which has since become the bed of the Caledonian Canal. Chines, however, informed him that it would not be safe for him to attempt to cross this water-pervaded g'len, as every isthmus and ferry along* its whole extent was guarded by the military. It was judged prudent that he should remain for the pre- sent near Loch Arkaig, and only send a messenger to apprise Locheil where he was, and to request him, if possible, to join him in his present retreat. One John Macpherson, or Maccoilveen, a tenant of Locheil, was accordingly engaged, and sent on this errand. Locheil had about the same time learned that Charles was on the mainland, and not far to the north of the Great Glen, and from his fastness in Badenoch he sent his brothers, Dr Archibald and the Rev. John Cameron, by different roads, to obtain information respecting him. The doctor had not travelled far when he met Maccoilveen, whom he eagerly questioned, but in vain. The faithful Highlander having been ordered to say not a word of the Prince to any but Locheil, would tell nothing but that he was going to that chief with intelligence of great consequence. Dr Cameron about the same time met with the two French officers who had landed in June from a vessel at Pollew, and had since then been wandering about in quest of the Prince. They had come from Dunkirk, with sixty other young men, who, with the gallantry of their nation, had formed themselves into a company of volunteers for the purpose of rescuing the commander of an enterprise which had excited their admiration. Four officers had landed, but two were immediately taken, and of these two, one named Fitzgerald was hanged at Fort -William, on the charge of having been a spy in Flanders. After the other two had wandered for some time about Seaforth's country, the hand that had "been grasped by his rightful Prince. If pressed on this topic, or offered money to employ the right hand, he would answer with pas- sion that, if your hand were full of gold, and he might he owner of it all for touching it with his right hand, he would not comply with your request. He remained to the last day of his life a believer in the restoration of the Stuart family in the person of Charles Edward, as the Jews confide in the advent of the Messiah ; nor could he ever be convinced of the death of his favourite Prince. A scheme, he helieved, was formed by which every fifth man in the Highlands was to rise — if that numher was insufficient, every third man was to be called—" if that be not enough," said the old man, raising himself and waving his hand, " we will all gather and go together." Such delusions amused his last years, hut when I knew him he was perfectly sane in his intellects.' 360 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Lochgarry, hearing* that they had letters for the Prince, sent Captain Macraw and his own servant for them, that they might be sent to Locheil, since the Prince was not to be found. It seems to have been in consequence of what Lochgarry did, that they were now on their way to visit Locheil ; though how two such men could travel unharmed through such a country, it seems difficult to account for. Br Cameron, with the two officers and the Prince's mes- senger, returned to Locheil. The two gentlemen told the chief that they had left their papers with Mr Alexander Macleod, one of the Prince's aides-de-camp, whom they had met in Seaforth's country — a story which proved quite true, but which now only raised a suspicion of their being spies in the mind of Locheil, more particularly as they had not mentioned any such thing to Lochgarry. Locheil com- mitted them to the charge of a friend near by, that they might wait for further orders. 1 Dr Cameron once more set out in quest of the Prince, and at Auchnacarry, the ruined seat of his family, he met his brother, the Rev. John Cameron, who had gone before, by a different way, on the same errand. The two joined, and, attended by four servants, set out in a boat along Loch Arkaig. The Prince at this time lived in a small hut, which had been built for his accommodation in the wood betwixt Auchnasual and the end of Loch Arkaig. The two gentle- men, seeing some men in arms by the water-side, sent two of Clunes's children to learn who they were, and finding they belonged to Clunes, sent the boat for them. When they came, the two gentlemen dismissed their own servants, under the pretence that they were going* to skulk for a few days in the wood, and feared lest a retinue should attract observation. They then crossed the river, and proceeded towards the hut in which they were informed the Prince resided. According to one account, Clunes joined their party as they were proceeding. The approach of this party was the cause of a dreadful alarm to Prince Charles. He was at this time asleep, with one of Clunes's sons, while Patrick Grant kept watch. Patrick, usually so prompt and trusty, nodded at his post, and did not observe the approaching party till it was near at hand. Conceiving them to be a party of militia, he roused the Prince, to whom he proposed that they should instantly fly to the mountains. Charles refused to do this, 1 For these facts, and for the materials of this part of the narrative gene- rally, I ana indebted to a journal by the Rev. John Cameron, transcribed in the Lyon in Mourning. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 361 and said it was much the safer course to remain in ambus- cade, tire at the men when they came near, and take their chance for the rest. He and Grant, with young Cameron, therefore laid their pieces along 1 the stones, and were pre- paring to fire, when, recognising the figure of Chines, they became aware that there was no danger. Alarm was suc- ceeded by great joy when Charles received two brothers of his beloved Locheil, and learned that that chief, though not yet quite cured of the wounds in his ankles, was in good health. He thrice audibly thanked God for the wel- fare of his friend. John Cameron describes his appearance and manners. 6 He was barefooted, had an old black kilt coat on, philabeg, and waistcoat, a dirty shirt, and a long- red beard, a gun in his hand, a pistol and dirk by his side. He was very cheerful, and in good health, and, in my opinion, fatter than when he was at Inverness. They had killed a cow the day before, and the servants were roasting some of it with spits. The Prince knew their names, spoke in a familiar way to them, and some Erse. He ate very heartily of the roasted beef and some bread we had from Fort-Augustus, and no man could sleep sounder in the night than he. ? Next day (August 26) the party removed to a wood called Torvuilt, near Auchnacany. Here Charles now expressed a wish to cross the Great Glen and join Locheil ; but this measure was considered premature by his attendants, on account of a statement having recently appeared in the newspapers that he had gone over Corryarrack with Locheil and thirty men, which would undoubtedly occasion a vigi- lant search in those parts. He was advised to remain where he was, as in all probability the attention of the troops would be withdrawn from the north of the Great Glen, while it was directed with proportionate closeness to the south. In the meantime, Dr Cameron ventured into Lochaber to procure intelligence, and Lochgarry posted himself upon the isthmus betwixt the east end of Loch Lochy and the west end of Loch Linnhe, to watch the motions of the troops. The Prince at the same time despatched his faithful atten- dant Glenaladale, who had shared every privation with him for a month past, to await the arrival of any French vessels on the west coast, and to apprise him of such an event whenever it should take place. Charles remained for some days in the neighbourhood of Auchnacarry. Having heard from Archibald and John Cameron of the two French officers having had an inter- view with Locheil, he expressed a strong wish to see them ; 362 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. but John Cameron represented the suspicions entertained of them by his brother, and recommended caution. The Prince agreed that caution was necessary. It was surprising*, he said, that two men, strangers, without one word of Erse, could escape from the troops, who were always in motion in quest of himself and his followers. Yet, as they might be true men, and have something of importance to commu- nicate, he thought it proper that he should see them, only taking care that, if treacherous, they should have no advan- tage over him. He therefore penned a letter to them, stat- ing that he had retired to a remote country, where he had none in his company but one Captain Drummond and a servant ; as he could not come to see them without danger, he had sent Drummond, to whom, he said, they might communicate whatever they had to say to himself. The officers were then sent for, and brought to a place near his retreat. He went himself, as Captain Drummond, and delivered the letter. They had previously informed Locheil that they had never seen the Prince, and they now seemed to confirm the truth of what they had said, by not appear- ing to recognise him under the assumed character. They communicated to him all their intelligence, which, however, was of little importance to him in his present situation. They asked many questions regarding the Prince's manner of living, and heard his answers with great surprise. After staying two days, they returned to Locheil. Charles after- wards sent to Mr Macleod for their papers, but found them to be of no use, being in cipher, addressed to the French ambassador, and unintelligible for want of the key. Towards the end of August, they were disturbed in their retreat at Auchnacarry by intelligence of the approach of a large military party. This proved to be a detachment of two hundred men, which had been sent from Fort- Augustus, under the command of Captain Grant of Knock ando, in consequence of intelligence that the Prince was skulking in that district. Charles was that day in a hut near the water of Kiaig, a mile from Clunes. It was eight in the morning when Mr John Cameron, who had fortunately gone out for intelligence, returned to give the alarm. ' I wakened the Prince,' says he, i and desired him not to be surprised, for that a body of the enemy was in sight. He, with the utmost composure, got up, called for his gun, sent for Cap- tain Macraw, and Sandy, Clunes's son, who, with a servant, were doing duty as sentries about the wood.' The party mustered eight, and all made the resolution, if escape was impossible, to die fighting bravely with their arms in their Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 363 hands. They were fortunately able to get to the top of the mountain unobserved, by the cover of the wood. That night they travelled to another hill called Mullantagart, which is prodigiously steep, high, and craggy. On the top of that eminence they remained all day without a morsel of food. In the evening one of Clunes's sons came, and told them that his father would meet them at a certain place in the hills somewhat distant with provisions. Charles set out for this spot, which was only to be reached by the most difficult paths. Toiling along amongst rocks and stumps of trees, which tore their clothes and limbs, they at length proposed to halt and rest all night. But Charles, though the most exhausted of the party, insisted upon keep- ing their appointment with Clunes. After proceeding some way farther, Charles had to acknowledge himself utterly incapable of further exertion, when the generous High- landers took hold of his arms and supported him along, though themselves tottering under their unparalleled fatigue. Almost perishing with hunger, and sinking under the dread- ful exertions of the night, they at last reached their desti- nation ; where, to their great relief, they found Clunes and his son, with a cow which they had killed and partly dressed. Here they remained for a day or two, till Lochgarry and Dr Cameron arrived with the welcome intelligence that the passes were not now so strictly guarded, and that the Prince might safely venture at least a stage nearer to Locheil. The Prince now crossed Loch Arkaig, and was conducted to a fastness in the fir-wood of Auchnacarry belonging to Locheil. Here he received a message from that chieftain and Macpherson of Cluny, informing him of their retreat in Badenoch, and that the latter gentleman would meet him on a certain day at the place where he was, in order to conduct him to their habitation, which they judged the safest place for him. Impatient to see these dear friends, he would not wait for the arrival of Cluny at Auchnacarry, but set out for Badenoch immediately, trusting to meet the coming chief by the way, and take him back. Of the jour- ney into Badenoch, a long* and dangerous one, no parti- culars have been preserved, excepting that, as the Prince was entering the district, he received from Mr Macdonald of Tullochcroam (a place on the side of Loch Laggan) a coarse brown short coat, a shirt, and a pair of shoes — articles of which he stood in great need. 1 It was on this occasion, and to this gentleman, that he said he had come to know 1 Lyon in Mourning, MS., viii. 1828. 364 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. what a quarter of a peck of meal was, as lie had once lived on such a quantity for nearly a week. He arrived in Bade- noch on the 29th of August, and spent the first night at a place called Corineuir, at the foot of the great mountain Benalder. This is a point considerably to the east of any district he had as yet haunted. On the opposite side of Benalder, Loch Ericht divides Badenoch from Athole. It is one of the roughest and wildest parts of the Highlands, and therefore little apt to be intruded upon, although the great road between Edinburgh and Inverness passes at the distance of a few miles. The country was destitute of wood ; but it made up for this deficiency as a place of concealment by the rockiness of its hills and glens. The country was part of the estate of Macpherson of Cluny, and was used in summer for grazing his cattle ; but it was considered as the remotest of his grassings. Cluny and Locheil, who were cousins-german, and much attached to each other, had lived here in sequestered huts or sheilings for several months with various friends, and attended by servants, being chiefly supplied with provisions by Macpherson younger of Breakachie, who was married to a sister of Cluny. 1 Their residence in the district was known to many persons, whose fidelity, however, was such, that the Earl of Loudoun, who had a military post at Sherowmore, not many miles distant, never all the time had the slightest knowledge or suspicion of the fact. The Highlanders did, indeed, during this summer exemplify the virtue of secrecy in an extraordinary manner. Many of 1 After the breaking up of the scheme of resistance in May, and the occupation of Lochaber by the troops, Locheil was very anxious to get into Badenoch, ' not only,' says Mr Forbes, reporting the conversation of young Breakachie, ' for ease and safety to his own person, but likewise because he was not able to stand the melancholy accounts that were ever reaching his ears about the cruelties and severities committed by the military upon the people round about him in Lochaber. And even when Locheil was in Bade- noch, such moving narratives were told him of the sufferings of his own people and others in Lochaber, as bore very hard upon him. One day, when accounts were brought to Locheil in Badenoch that the poor people in Lochaber had been so pillaged and harassed that they had not really necessaries to keep in their lives, Locheil took out his purse and gave all the money he could well spare to be distributed among such in Lochaber. " And," said Breakachie, " I remember nothing better than that Sir Stewart Threipland at that time took out his purse and gave five guineas, expressing himself in these words ; I am sure (said Sir Stewart) I have not so much to myself ; but then, if I be spared, I know where to get more, whereas these poor people know not where to get the smallest assistance.'" — Lyon in Mourning, vii. 1480. The conversation, of which the above is a part, occurred in February 1750. Breakachie then assured Mr Forbes that he believed the Clan Cameron must have lost in all about three hundred men in the affair of 1745-6, having suf- fered considerably in all the three battles, as well as in the outrages com- mitted by the military after Culloden. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 365 the principal persons concerned in the insurrection had been concealed and supported ever since Culloden in those very districts which were the most thoroughly beset with troops, and which had been most ravaged and plundered. After the escape of the Prince through the cordon between Loch Hourn and Loch Shiel in the latter part of July, the mili- tary powers at Fort- Augustus seem to have scarcely ever got a ray of genuine intelligence respecting his motions. His friends, all except the very few who attended him, were equally at a loss to imagine where he was, or how he con- trived to keep himself concealed. His enemies i sometimes thought he had got himself removed to the east coast through the hills of Athole, and laid an embargo upon all the shipping from that quarter. At other times they had information that he lurked in the shires of Angus or Mearns, and a search was made for him in the most sus- pected places of those shires ; and particularly the house of Mr Barclay of Urie in Mearns, whose lady was aunt to Locheil by the father, and to Cluny by the mother, was most narrowly searched ; while he was quite safe and uncon- cerned in Benalder.' 1 Next day, August 30, Charles was conducted to a place called Mellaneuir, also on Benalder, where Locheil was now living in a small hut with Macpherson younger of Breakachie, his principal servant Allan Cameron, and two servants of Cluny. When Locheil saw five men approach- ing under arms — namely, the Prince, Lochgarry, Dr Ar- chibald Cameron, and two servants — he imagined that they must be a military party, who, learning his retreat, had come to seize him. It was in vain to think of flying*, even though the supposed military party had been more nume- rous, for he was still a cripple, in consequence of the wounds in his ankles. He therefore resolved to defend himself as well as circumstances would permit. Twelve firelocks and some pistols were prepared; the chief and his four com- panions had taken up positions, and levelled each his piece, and all was ready for saluting the approaching party with a carefully-aimed volley, when Locheil distinguished the figures of his friends. Then, hobbling out as well as he could, he received the Prince with an enthusiastic welcome, and attempted to pay his duty to him on his knees. This ceremony Charles forbade : ' My dear Locheil/ said he, 1 you don't know who may be looking from the tops of yonder hills ; if any be there, and if they see such motions, 1 Narrative written by Donald Macpherson, youngest brother of Cluny ; preserved in Rev. Mr Forbes's collections, MS., in my possession. 366 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. they will conclude that I am here; which may prove of bad consequence. 7 Locheil then ushered him into his hovel, which, though small, was well furnished with viands and liquors. Young Breakachie had helped his friends to a sufficiency of newly-killed mutton, some cured beef sausages, plenty of butter and cheese, a large well-cured bacon ham, and an anker of whisky. The Prince, ' upon his entry, took a hearty dram, which he pretty often called for there- after, to drink his friends' healths ; and when there were some minced collops dressed with butter for him in a large saucepan that Locheil and Cluny carried always about with them, and which was the only fire-vessel they had, he ate heartily, and said, with a very cheerful and lively coun- tenance, " Now, gentlemen, I live like a prince," though at the same time he was no otherwise served than by eating the collops out of the saucepan, only that he had a silver spoon. After dinner, he asked Locheil if he had still lived, during his skulking in that place, in such a good way ; to which Locheil answered, " Yes, sir, I have, for now near three months that I have been here with my cousin Cluny and Breakachie, who has so provided for me, that I have still had plenty of such as you see, and I thank Heaven that your Royal Highness has come safe througb so many dangers to take a part." ' Cluny, on reaching Auchnacarry, and finding Charles gone, immediately returned to Badenoch, and he arrived at Mellaneuir two days after the Prince. On entering the hut, he would have knelt ; but Charles prevented him, and taking him in his arms, kissed him affectionately. He soon after said, i I'm sorry, Cluny, that you and your regiment were not at Culloden ; I did not hear till lately that you were so near us that day.' Cluny, finding that the Prince had not a change of linen, caused his three sisters 1 to set about making some shirts for him. They did so with good will, and soon furnished him with what was wanted. The gentlemen whom Charles here met for the first time in his wanderings were, like all those he had met previously, astonished at the elasticity of mind which he displayed in circumstances of so much discomfort and danger, and under prospects, to say the least of them, so much less brilliant than what had 'recently been before him. 2 1 Isabel, widow of Mackintosh of Aberardar ; Christian, wife of Breakachie ; and Anne, then unmarried, but afterwards the wife of Macpherson of Dal- rady. 2 The Rev. Mr Forbes appears to have taken down the following anecdote, Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 367 The day after Cluny's arrival, it was thought expedient that there should be a change of quarters. They therefore removed two Highland miles farther into the recesses of Benalder, to a shelling called Uiskchilra, c superlatively bad and smoky/ as Donald Macpherson has described it, but which the Prince never once complained of. It may here be remarked, that the precautions which Locheil and Cluny had formerly taken for their safety, were much increased after the Prince had joined them. Breakachie had formerly been intrusted with the power of bringing any one to them in whom he could trust ; but no one was now introduced till after a council had been held, and formal permission given. Trusty watchmen were planted on the neighbour- ing hills, to give notice of the approach of any strangers or military; and Cluny even contrived to have spies in the Earl of Loudoun's camp. After spending two or three uncomfortable days in the smoky sheiling, they removed to ' a very romantic and comical habitation, made by Cluny, at two miles' farther distance into Benalder, called the Cage. It was really a curiosity,' saj-s Donald Macpherson, ' and can scarcely be described to perfection. It was situate in the face of a very rough, high, rocky mountain called Letternilichk, which is still a part of Benalder, full of great stones and crevices, illustrative of the cheerfulness of the Prince under his distresses, from the mouth of Captain O'Neal, while a prisoner in Edinburgh castle, July 1747. ' O'Neal frankly owned that, in place of his being useful to the Prince, by endeavouring to comfort and support him when dangers thickened upon them, the Prince had the like good offices to perform to him, and that he frequently exerted himself, in different shapes, to raise his spirits. One time, having nothing to eat for about two days but some mouldy dirty crumbs in O'Neal's pocket, they luckily happened at last to come to a very mean cot- tage, where they found only an old poor woman, who received them kindly, and gave each of them two eggs and a piece of bear-bannock, but having not so much in her hut as a cup of cold water to give them to put down their morsel, she told them that some lasses had lately gone up the hill to milk the goats, &rc. and that, if they would follow them, probably they might have a drink of milk from them. The advice was very seasonable, and away they went, the honest old woman directing them the way they should go. The Prince skipped so speedily up the hill, that O'Neal could not keep up with him. The lasses gave them plenty of milk, and poor O'Neal lay along upon the grass, being quite undone with fatigue and fear. The Prince did all he could to rouse him up, but all to no purpose. At last the Prince, turning from him, said, " Come, my lasses, what would you think to dance a High- land reel with me ? We cannot have a bagpipe just now, but I shall sing you a strathspey reel ! " The dance went merrily on, and the Prince skipped so nimbly, knacking his thumbs and clapping his hands, that O'Neal was soon surprised out of his thoughtful mood, being ashamed to remain any longer in the dumps when his Prince had been at so much pains to divert his melan- choly. He was sure, he said, that the Prince entered into this frolic merely on his account, for that there could be no danctng at his heart, seeing at that time they knew not where to move one foot.'— Lyon in Mourning, MS. i. 191. 368 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. and some scattered wood interspersed. The habitation called the Cage, in the face of that mountain, was within a small thick hush of wood. There were first some rows of trees laid down, in order to level a floor for the habitation, and as the place was steep, this raised the lower side to equal height with the other, and these trees, in the way of joists or planks, were entirely well levelled with earth and gravel. There were betwixt the trees, growing* naturally on their own roots, some stakes fixed in the earth, which, with the trees, were interwoven with ropes made of heath and birch twigs all to the top of the Cage, it being of a round, or rather oval shape, and the whole thatched and covered over with fog. This whole fabric hung, as it were, by a large tree which reclined from the one end all along the roof to the other, and which gave it the name of the Cage ; and by chance there happened to be two stones, at a small dis- tance from [each] other, next the precipice, resembling the pillars of a bosom chimney, and here was the fire placed. The smoke had its vent out there, all along a very stony part of the rock, which and the smoke were so much of a colour, that no one could have distinguished the one from the other in the clearest day. The Cage was only large enough to contain six or seven persons, four of which number were frequently employed in playing at cards, one idle looking on, one baking, and another firing bread and cooking.' x The hopes of the Prince for an escape from the country were still resting in the prospect of the arrival of some French vessel in the lonely estuaries of the west coast of Inverness-shire. He knew that Colonel Warren was exert- ing himself to fit out a small armament for this purpose ; but still many accidents might occur to mar the consumma- tion of the design. It would appear that two other plans were formed for getting him shipped away from Scotland. The Rev. John Cameron was despatched by his brother to Edinburgh, there to exert himself to get a vessel hired, to come to some appointed station on the east coast, and there lie in readiness to take the party on board. Such a vessel actually was provided; it went to the station; and Mr 1 * All about his Royal Highness, during his abode in Benalder of Badenoch, were Locheil, Cluny, Lochgarry, Dr Cameron, and Breakachie, one Allan Cameron, a young genteel lad of Calard's family, who was principal servant to Locheil, and four servants belonging to Cluny, particularly James Mac- pherson, his piper, Paul Macpherson, his horse-keeper. Murdoch and Duncan Macphersons. This Murdoch the Prince generally called Murick, who, and Paul, could speak no English, and were commonly employed in carrying provisions from Breakachie.'— Donald Macpherson's Narrative, MS. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 369 Cameron returned to Benalder to bring away the party, but found them gone. 1 Breakachie was also sent from Uisk- chilra to find out John Roy Stuart, who was skulking* some- where in the country, with orders to go in company with John directly to the east coast, and there hire a vessel. Lest both schemes should fail, and the Prince be obliged to spend the winter in the Highlands, Cluny, who seems to have had a constructive genius, fitted up a subterranean retreat, boarded thickly all round, and otherwise provided against the severity of the season. But all of these precautions, though wisely taken, proved useless, in consequence of the arrival of Colonel Warren's expedition. Two vessels of force, L'Hereux and La Princesse de Conti, had been fitted out by the exertions of this gentleman, who was promised a baronetcy by the old chevalier in the event of his bringing off the Prince. Setting sail from St Maloes in the latter part of August, they arrived in Lochnanuagh on the 6th of September. Next day four gentlemen, in- cluding Captain Sheridan, son of Sir Thomas, and a Mr O'Beirne, a lieutenant in the French service, landed to make inquiry about the Prince, and were received by Mac- donald of Glenaladale, who had taken his station in that part of the country for the purpose of communicating- to Charles any intelligence of the arrival of French vessels. He now lost no time in setting out to the neighbourhood of Auchnacarry, expecting there to find Cameron of Clunes, who was appointed to be a medium for forwarding the in- telligence to the Prince wherever he might then be. When Glenaladale arrived at the place where he expected to see Clunes, he found that gentleman removed he knew not whither, in consequence of some alarm from the military, who had destroyed^ his hut. Being himself altogether ig*- norant of Charles's present hiding-place, Glenaladale was thrown by this accident into a state of great perplexity and distress, for he reflected that, if the Prince did not quickly come to Lochnanuagh, the vessels might be obliged to sail without him. He was wandering about in this state of mind when he encountered an old woman, who chanced to know the place to which Clunes had withdrawn. Having obtained from her this information, he immediately com- municated with Clunes, who instantly despatched the faith- ful Maccoilveen to convey the intelligence to Cluny, that it 1 This gentleman, "being now left to shift for himself, made his way hack to Edinburgh in disguise, and at last got off in the same coach with Lady Locheil and her children for London, on which occasion the lady passed for a Mrs Campbell. They all got safely to France. VOL. V. X 370 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. might be by him imparted to the Prince. Glenaladale then returned to inform the French officers that they might ex- pect ere long to be joined by the royal wanderer. Charles, meanwhile, had despatched Cluny and Dr Came- ron on some private business to Loch Arkaig. Travelling in a very dark night through the outskirts of Badenoch, these two gentlemen, by great good fortune, met and recog- nised Maccoilveen, as he was proceeding with his message. Had they missed him, they would have gone on to Loch Arkaig, and as Maccoilveen would have communicated with none but Cluny, it would not have been till after their return, and probably then too late, that Charles would have heard of the arrival of the vessels. It thus appears that he was favoured by two remarkable chances in obtaining this important information, without either of which the design of his embarkation would have probably been defeated. Cluny, though he now turned back with Dr Cameron, was so anxious to forward the good news to the Prince, that he immediately procured a trusty man, one Alexander Mac- pherson, son of Benjamin Macpherson in Gallovie, to run express with it to the Cage. He and Cameron arrived there about one in the morning, September 13th, when they found the Prince already prepared to start on his journey. They immediately started, and before daylight, had reached their former habitation in Uiskchilra. From the place where he met Maccoilveen, Cluny had also sent off a messenger, one Murdoch Macpherson, a near re- lation of Macpherson of Invereshie, to stop young Break- achie on his mission to the east coast, and to desire him to return to the Prince's quarters. ' The said Murdoch came to Breakachie when going to bed ; x and then Breakachie's lady, one of Cluny's sisters, finding out the matter, began to talk of her dismal situation, of having so many children, and being then big with child. Upon which Breakachie said, " I put no value upon you or your bairns, unless you can bring me forth immediately thirty thousand men in arms ready to serve my master ! " ' Instantly Breakachie set out on his return to the Prince, and took along with him John Boy Stuart (whom the Prince used to call the Body), but did not allow John Roy to know that the Prince was in Badenoch, but only that they were going to see Locheil, &c. When the Prince heard that Breakachie and John Roy Stuart were coming 1 The original language of the narrative by Donald Macpherson (Lyon in Mourning, vii.) is here used. Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 371 near the hut Uiskchilra, he wrapped himself up in a plaid and lay down, in order to surprise John Roy the more when he should enter the hut. In the door of the hut there was a pool or puddle, and when John Roy Stuart just was entering-, the Prince peeped out of the plaid, which so surprised John Roy, that he cried out, "Oh Lord! my master ! n and fell down in the puddle in a faint. 6 Breakachie likewise brought along* with him to Uisk- chilra three fusees, one mounted with gold, a second with silver, and the third half - mounted, all belonging" to the Prince himself, who had desired Breakachie to fetch him these pieces at some convenient time. AVhen the Prince saw the fusees, he expressed great joy, saying*, " It is remark- able that my enemies have not discovered one farthing of my money, a rag of my clothes, or one piece of my arms ; " an event which the Prince himself did not know till he came to Benalder, where he was particularly informed that all the above things were still preserved from the hands of his enemies. 6 The Prince (as is already observed) arrived at his old quarters in Uiskchilra, in his way to the ships, against daylight, on the morning of September 13th, where he remained till near night, and then set off, and was by day- light, the 14th, at Corvoy, where he slept some time. Upon his being refreshed with sleep, he, being at a sufficient dis- tance from any country, 1 did spend the day by diverting himself and his company with throwing up of bonnets in the air, and shooting at them, to try the three foresaid favourite fusees, and to try who was the best marksman ; in which diversion his Royal Highness by far exceeded. In the evening of the 14th he set forward, and went on as far as Uisknifichit, on the confines of Glenroy, which marches with a part of the Braes of Badenoch, in which last place he refreshed himself some hours with sleep ; and, before it was daylight, got over Glenroy, the 15th, and kept themselves private all day. As they were approaching to- wards Locheil's seat, Auchnacarry, they came to the river Lochy at night, being fine moonshine. The difficulty was how to get over. Upon this Clunes Cameron met them on the water-side, at whom Locheil asked how they would get over the river. He said " Very well ; for I have an old boat carried from Loch Arkaig, that the enemy left unburnt of all the boats you had, Locheil." Locheil asked to see the boat. Upon seeing it, he said, " I am afraid we will not be safe with 1 Meaning any inhabited district. 372 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. it." Quoth Climes, u I shall cross first, and show you the way." The matter was agreed upon. Clunes, upon reflec- tion, said, " I have six bottles of brandy, and I believe all of you will be the better of a dram." This brandy was brought from Fort-Augustus, where the enemy lay in garrison, about nine miles from that part of Lochy where they were about to cross. Locheil went to the Prince, and said, " Will your Royal Highness take a dram ? " " Oh," said the Prince, " can you have a dram here V u Yes," replied Locheil, " and that from Fort- Augustus too;" which pleased the Prince much, that he should have provisions from his enemies. He said, " Come, let us have it." Upon this three of the bottles were drunk. Then they passed the river Lochy by three crossings : Clunes Cameron in the first with so many ; then the Prince in the second with so many ; and in the last Locheil with so many. In the third and last ferrying, the crazy boat leaked so much, that there would be four or five pints of water in the bottom, and in hurrying over, the three remaining bottles of brandy were all broke. When the Prince called for a dram, he was told that the bottles were broke, and that the common fellows had drunk all that was in the bottom of the boat, as being good punch, which had made the fellows so merry, that they made great diversion to the company as they marched along. ' After the morning of the 16th, the Prince arrived, in Auchnacarry, LocheiPs seat, where he was as ill off as any- where else for accommodation, as the enemy had burnt and demolished the place. All the 16th he stayed there, and set out at night, and arrived, the 17th, at a place called Glen- camger, in the head of Loch Arkaig, where he found Cluny and Dr Cameron, who had prepared for him, expecting him. By a very gTeat good chance, Cluny, understanding that he himself and others of them would be necessarily obliged to travel often betwixt Badenoch and Locheil's country, and knowing that it was scarce possible for people travelling that way— even those that could be seen, and much less they that could not — to find provisions in their passage, as all was rummaged and plundered by the enemy, planted a small store of meal, carried from Bade- noch, in the house of one Murdoch Macpherson, in Coilerig of Glenroy, a trusty man, and tenant to Keppoch, in the road and about half way, to be still a ready supply in case of need ; from which secret small magazine he and Mr Cameron brought some with them as they went forward from Benalder, and had it made into bannocks against the Prince's coming to Glencamger ; and when he and his com- Charles's wanderings — the mainland. 373 pany arrived, there was a cow killed ; on which bannocks and beef, his Royal Highness, with his whole retinue, were regaled and feasted plentifully * that night. On the 18th, he set out from Glencamger with daylight, and upon the 19th arrived at the shipping ; what was extant of the Glen- camger bannocks and beef having been all the provisions till then.' Cluny and Breakachie now took leave of the Prince, and returned to Badenoch, for it was the inclination of this chief to remain concealed in his own fastnesses, rather than seek a refuge on a foreign soil. Before the arrival of the Prince, a considerable number of skulking gentlemen and others had assembled, in order to proceed in the vessels to France. Amongst these were young Clanranald, Glenaladale, Macdonald of Dalely and his two brothers. They had seized Macdonald of Barris- dale on the suspicion of his having made a paction with the enemy to deliver up the Prince ; and this gentleman was actually carried to France, and there kept for a considerable time as a prisoner. Charles waited upwards of a day, to allow of a few more assembling, and he then (Saturday, September 20) went on board L'Hereux, accompanied by Locheil, Lochgarry, John Boy Stuart, and Dr Cameron. From the vessel he wrote a letter to Cluny, informing him of his embarkation, and of the excellent state in which he found the vessels. Twenty-three gentlemen, and a hun- dred and seven men of common rank, are said to have sailed with him in the two ships. 'The gentlemen, as well as commons, ivere seen to weep, though they boasted of being soon back with an irresistible force.' 2 The unparalleled tale of the Prince's wanderings is now concluded. For upwards of five months he had skulked as a proscribed fugitive through the mountains and seas of the West Highlands, often in the most imminent danger of 1 At this place the Prince gave the following letter to Cluny, acknowledg- ing his services, and promising reward. Sir Walter Scott, who possessed the original, was good enough to communicate a copy in 1827. The Prince appears to have used new style in his date. Mr M'Pherson of Clunie, As we are sensible of your and clan's fidelity and integrity to us during our adventures in Scotland and England in the years 1745 and 1746, in recovering our just rights from the Elector of Hanover, by which you have suffered very great losses in your interest and person, I therefore promise, when it shall please God to put it in my power, to make a grateful return suitable to your sufferings. Charles, P. R. JHralagich in Glencamgier ofLocharkcvg, 8th Sept. 1746. 2 Newspaper report of the day. 374 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. being taken, and generally exposed to very severe personal hardships; yet he eluded all search, and never lost his health or spirits in any fatal degree. The narrowness of his own escapes is shown strikingly in the circumstance of so many persons being taken immediately after having contributed to his safety. The reader must have already accorded all due praise to the people who, by their kindness and fidelity, had been the chief means of working out his deliverance. Scarcely any gentlemen to whom he applied for protection, or to aid in effecting his movements, refused to peril their own safety on his account ; hundreds, many of whom were in the humblest walks of life, had been in- trusted with his secret, or had become aware of it ; yet, if we overlook the beggar boy in South Uist, and the dubious case of Barrisdale, none had attempted to give him up to his enemies. 1 Thirty thousand pounds had been offered in vain for the life of one human being, in a country where the sum would have purchased a princely estate. The conduct of the Prince himself under his extraordinary dangers and hardships is allowed by all who gave their personal recollections of it to have been marked by great caution and prudence, as well as by a high degree of forti- tude, and a cheerfulness which no misery could extinguish. Perhaps the testimonies to his cheerfulness are only too strong, and might lead to a conclusion different from that intended by the witnesses — namely, that he was scarcely considerate enough of the wretchedness which his ambition had occasioned to others. Here, however, we are met by the strong expressions of sympathy for those injured in his cause which he uttered in Raasay and Skye. It is also expressly stated by several of his fellow-adventurers that he put on appearances of cheerfulness, on various occasions, to keep up the spirits of those around him. His conduct throughout his wanderings appears, upon the whole, credit- able to him, whatever shades may have settled upon his character at a later period. That it entirely pleased the gentlemen who associated with him, is abundantly evident. All of these, in their various narratives, speak of him with the greatest admiration. The Rev. John Cameron, in parti- 1 Much as we must admire the fidelity of the Highlanders on this occasion, it would not be just to human nature to say that it is without parallel. M. Berryer, the eloquent partisan of the fallen dynasty of France, at his trial, October 16, 1832, mentioned that, in the Vendean campaign of that year, the Duchesse de Berri changed her abode not less than three or four times a- week, that every change was known to eight or ten persons at least, and yet, in the course of six months, not a single person betrayed the honourable confidence reposed in him. TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 375 cular, sums up with the following" panegyric : — ' He sub- mitted with patience to his adverse fortune ; was cheerful ; and frequently desired those who were with him to be so. He was cautious when in the greatest danger ; never at a loss in resolving what to do. He regretted more the dis- tress of those who suffered for adhering to his interest, than the hardships and dangers he was hourly exposed to. To conclude, he possesses all the virtues that form the character of a true hero and a great prince.' The interest he bore in the eyes of his followers could not be entirely the offspring 1 of the fascination of birth and rank. I have a letter of Bishop Mackintosh before me, in which that venerable person mentions that he had known many individuals who had gone out to fight for Prince Charles, but he never knew one who regretted having fought for him, or did not seem as if he would have gladly perilled life in his cause once more. ' He went/ says Lord Mali on, l but not with him departed his remembrance from the Highlanders. For years and years did his name continue enshrined in their hearts and familiar to their tongues ; their plaintive ditties resounding with his exploits and inviting his return. Again, in these strains, do they declare themselves ready to risk life and fortune for his cause ; and even maternal fondness — the strongest, perhaps, of all human feelings — yields to the passionate devotion to " Prince Charlie." ? * CHAPTER XXIX. TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. *• And statutes reap the refuse of the sword.' — Johnson. Long before Charles's escape, a multitude of his followers, less fortunate, had met a cruel and bloody death upon the scaffolds of England. The necessity of terrifying the friends of the house of Stuart from all future attempts on its behalf, had reconciled the meek to a policy which there can be no doubt sprang immediately from the vengeful spirit of certain leading men, and particularly the Duke of Cumberland, who had only left the Highlands in order to seek new victims 1 I ance had sons, hut now I hae nane ; I hred them toiling sairly ; And I wad hear them a' again, And lose them a' for Charlie. —O'er the Water to Charlie, No. 37 of Mr Hogg's second series. 376 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. in the south. 1 Few, probably, would deny that the late at- tempt to disturb a settlement in which the bulk of the nation acquiesced/ called for some exercise of the law's severity; but I would hope that, in the present age, there are still fewer who can behold unmoved a cruel death falling as a punishment upon men who, so far from being actuated by the spirit of crime, had been prompted by nearly as high a sense of duty as the mind of man ever experiences. The conduct of the men themselves in their last moments, and the declarations they left behind them, form a most affect- ing commentary on the laws which dictate death and igno- miny for offences of mere sentiment and opinion. The officers of the English regiment taken at Carlisle were the first victims. Eighteen of these unfortunate gentlemen, at the head of whom was Mr Francis Townly, the colonel of the Manchester regiment, were tried before a grand jury at the court-house on St Margaret's Hill, South- wark, in the county of Surrey, on the 15th of July, and four following days. All were condemned to death except one, and on the 29th of the month, four days after the arrival of the Duke of Cumberland at St James's, an order came to their place of confinement, ordering the execution, on the succeeding day, of nine who were judged to be most guilty — namely, Francis Townly, George Fletcher, Thomas Chad- wick, James Dawson, Thomas Deacon, John Berwick, Andrew Blood, Thomas Syddal, and David Morgan ; the other eight being reprieved for three weeks. These ill-fated persons were roused from sleep at six o'clock in the morning of July 30th, to prepare for death. The firmness which they displayed throughout the whole scene was very remarkable. Only Syddal was observed to tremble when the halter was put about his neck. When their irons had been knocked off, their arms pinioned, and the ropes adjusted about their necks, they were put into three sledges. Kennington Common was the place appointed for their execution ; and as the spectacle was expected to be attended with all those circumstances of barbarity awarded by the English law of treason, the London mob had assembled in extraordinary numbers to witness it. A pile of fagots and a block were placed near the gallows, and while the prisoners were removing from the sledges into the cart from which they were to be turned off, the fagots were set on fire, and the guards formed a circle round the place of execution. The prisoners were not attended by clergymen of any per- 1 The duke, after his return to London, continued to ' press for measures of the utmost severity.'— if. Walpole to H. Mann. TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. '377 suasion ; but Morgan, who had been a barrister-at-law, read prayers and other pious meditations from a book of devotion, to which the rest seemed very attentive, joining' in all the responses and ejaculations with great fervour. Half an hour was spent in these exercises, during which they be- trayed no symptoms of irresolution, though their deportment was said to be perfectly suitable, at the same time, to their unhappy circumstances. On concluding prayers, they took some written papers from their books and threw them among the spectators. These were found to contain decla- rations to the effect that they died in a just cause, that they did not repent of what they had done, and that they doubted not but their deaths would be avenged, together with some expressions which were considered treasonable. They like- wise delivered papers severally to the sheriff, and then threw away their hats, which were found to contain other trea- sonable documents. According to the atrocious treason law of Edward III., the culprits were only allowed to hang* three minutes. Then, with life scarcely extinct, their bodies were placed on a block, disembowelled and beheaded, the viscera being thrown into a fire. The mutilated remains were con- veyed back to prison on the sledges, and the heads of Townly and Fletcher were, three days after, affixed upon Temple-Bar, while those of Deacon, Berwick, Chadwick, and Syddal were preserved in spirits, in order to be disposed in the same way at Carlisle and Manchester. The mob of London had hooted these ill-fated gentlemen on their passage to and from their trials ; but at the exe- cution they looked on with faces betokening" at least pity for their misfortunes, if not also admiration of their courage. A circumstance observed at the time excited much com- miseration amongst the crowd. This was the appearance at the place of execution of Charles Deacon, a very youthful brother of one of the culprits, himself a culprit, and under sentence of death for the same offence, but who had been permitted to attend the last scene of his brother's life in a coach, along with a guard. Another circumstance still more affecting came afterwards to the knowledge of the public. James Dawson, the son of a gentleman of Lan- cashire, and who had not completed his studies at St John's College, Cambridge, was attached to a young lady, of good family and fortune, at the time when some youthful excesses induced him to run away from college and join the insur- gents. Had he been acquitted, or if he could have obtained the royal mercy, the day of his enlargement was fixed by the parents of both parties to have been that of their mar- 378 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. riage. When it was ascertained that he was to suffer the cruel death which has just been described, the inconsolable young 1 lady determined, notwithstanding the remonstrances of her friends, to witness the execution ; and she accord- ingly followed the sledges in a hackney-coach, accompanied by a gentleman nearly related to her, and one female friend. She got near enough to see the fire which was to consume her lover's heart, besides all the other dreadful preparations for his fate, without betraying any extravagant emotions. She also succeeded in restraining her feelings during the progress of the bloody tragedy. But when all was over, and the shouts of the multitude rang in her ears, she drew her head back into the coach, and crying, l My dear, I follow thee, I follow thee — sweet Jesus, receive both our souls together V fell upon the neck of her companion, and expired in the moment she was speaking. 1 Bills of indictment having been found by the grand jury of Surrey against the Earls of Kilmarnock and Cromarty, and Lord Balmerino, these three noblemen 2 " were tried by the House of Peers on the 28th of July. This high solemnity was conducted with great state, a hundred and thirty-five peers being present. Lord Chancellor Hardwicke acted on the occasion as lord high steward, or president of the assem- bly. Westminster Hall was fitted up in a most magnificent manner for the purpose. Mr George Ross was appointed solicitor for Kilmarnock and Balmerino, and Mr Adam Gordon for Cromarty, at their own request. When reciprocal compliments had passed between the prisoners and their peers, the indictments were read; to which Kilmarnock and Cromarty successively pleaded ' Guilty/ recommending themselves to the king's mercy. Balmerino, before pleading to his indictment — that is to say, before avowing himself guilty or not guilty — asked the lord high steward if it would avail him anything to prove that he was not at the siege of Carlisle, as specified in the indict- ment, but ten miles distant. His Grace answered that it might or might not be of service, according to the circum- stances : but he begged to remind his lordship that it was contrary to form to allow the prisoner to ask any questions before pleading, and he therefore desired his lordship to plead. 6 Plead ! ? cried Balmerino, who knew nothing of the technicalities of an English court, and whose bold blunt 1 This incident became, in the hands of Shenstone, the subject of a well- known ballad. 2 The Marquis of Tullibardine had died in the Tower, June 9, of an illness which had affected him throughout the whole time of the campaign. TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 379 mind stood in no awe of this august assembly — ( why, I am pleading" as fast as I can.' The steward explained what was technically meant by pleading, and his lordship then pleaded l Not guilty.' The court immediately proceeded to his trial, which was soon despatched. King's counsel were heard in the first place, and iive or six witnesses were then examined in succession, by whom it was proved that his lordship entered Carlisle, though not on the day specified, at the head of a cavalry regiment, called, from his name, Elphinstone's Horse, with his sword drawn. The prisoners had no counsel, but Balmerino himself made an exception, which was overruled. The lord high steward then asked if he had anything further to offer in his defence, to which his lordship answered that he was sorry he had given the court so much trouble, and had nothing more to say. On this the lords retired to the House of Peers, and the opinion of the judges being asked touching the overt act, they de- clared that it was not material, as other facts were proved beyond contradiction. They then returned to the hall, where the steward, according to ancient usage, asking them one by one, beginning with the youngest baron, ' My Lord of , is Arthur Lord Balmerino guilty of high treason ? ' each answered, laying his right hand upon his left breast, ' Guilty, upon my honour, my lord.' The prisoners were afterwards recalled to the bar, informed of the verdict of the court, and remanded to the Tower till the day after next, when they were again to appear, in order to receive sentence. The house immediately broke up, and the prisoners were conveyed back to prison, with the edge of the axe turned towards them. When the court met again on the 30th, the lord high steward made a speech to the prisoners, and asked each of them 'if he had anything to offer why judgment of death should not pass against them ? ' To this question Kilmarnock replied in a speech expressive of deep contrition for his con- duct, and imploring the court to intercede with the king in his behalf. He represented that he had been educated in revolution principles, and even appeared in arms in behalf of the present royal family; that having joined the insur- gents in a rash moment, he had immediately repented the step, and resolved to take the first opportunity of putting himself into the hands of government ; for this purpose he had separated himself from his corps at the battle of Cul- loden, and surrendered himself a prisoner, though he might easily have escaped. He, moreover, endeavoured to make merit with the court for having employed himself solici- 380 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. tously, during* the progress of the insurrection, in softening the horrors which the war had occasioned in his country, and in protecting the royalist prisoners from the abuse of their captors. Finally, he made a declaration of affection for the reigning family, not more incredible from his past actions than it was humiliating in his present condition, and concluded with an asseveration that, even if condemned to death, he would employ his last moments in 'praying for the preservation of the illustrious House of Hanover.' The Earl of Cromarty pronounced a speech of nearly the same complexion, but concluding with a more eloquent appeal to the clemency of his majesty. ' Nothing remains, my lords/ he said, 'but to throw myself, my life, and fortune upon your lordships' compassion. But of these, my lords, as to myself is the least part of my sufferings. I have involved an affectionate wife, with an unborn infant, as parties of my guilt, to share its penalties; I have involved my eldest son, whose infancy and regard for his parents hurried him down the stream of rebellion ; I have involved also eight innocent children, who must feel their parent's punishment before they know his guilt. Let them, my lords, be pledges to his majesty, let them be pledges to your lordships, let them be pledges to my country, for mercy ; let the silent eloquence of their grief and tears, let the powerful language of innocent nature, supply my want of eloquence and persuasion ; let me enjoy mercy, but no longer than I deserve it; and let me no longer enjoy life than I shall use it to efface the crime I have been guilty of. Whilst I thus intercede to his majesty, through the medium of your lordships, let the remorse of my guilt as a subject, let the sorrow of my heart as a hus- band, let the anguish of my mind as a father, speak the rest of my misery. As your lordships are men, feel as men ; but may none of you ever suffer the smallest part of my anguish. But if, after all, my lords, my safety shall be found inconsistent with that of the public, and nothing but my blood can atone for my unhappy crime ; if the sacrifice of my life, my fortune, and family is judged indispensably necessary for stopping the loud demands of public justice, and if the bitter cup is not to pass from me, not mine, but thy will, oh God, be done ! ' The mind of Balmerino was superior to such humiliation. When the question was put to him, he pleaded that an in- dictment could not be found in the county of Surrey for a crime laid to he committed at Carlisle in December last, in regard that the act ordaining the rebels to be tried in such counties as the king should appoint, which was not passed TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 381 till March, could not have a retrospective effect; and he desired to be allowed counsel. On this the Earl of Bath asked if the noble lord at the bar had had any counsel allowed him, and was answered that he had never desired any. Balmerino replied that all the defences which had occurred to him or his solicitor having been laid before a counsellor, and by him judged to be trifling-, he had not chosen to give the court needless trouble ; and that the above objection had only been hinted to him an hour or two before he was brought into court. After some altercation, the court assigned Messrs Wilbraham and Forrester as counsel to his lordship, and adjourned till the 1st of August. Being again brought to the bar on that day, the Earls of Kilmarnock and Cromarty were again asked if they had anything* to propose why judgment of death should not pass upon them, and answered in the negative. The lord high steward informed Balmerino, that having started an objection, desired counsel, and had their assistance, he was now to make use of it if he thought fit. His lordship answered that his counsel having satisfied him there was nothing in the objection that could do him service, he de- clined having them heard ; that he would not have made the objection, if he had not been persuaded there w^as ground for it ; and that he was sorry for the trouble he had given his Grace and the peers. All the prisoners having thus sub- mitted to the court, the lord high steward made a long and pathetic speech, which he concluded by pronouncing sen- tence of death. The prisoners were then withdrawn from the bar. The Earl of Kilmarnock, who was only in his forty-second year, and extremely anxious for life, presented a petition for mercy to the king-, and others to the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Cumberland, intreating them to inter- cede in his behalf with their royal father. The tenor of these petitions was much the same with that of his speech, equally penitential and humble. That to the duke con- tained a vindication of himself from some aspersions which had reached his royal highness, and which he understood had prejudiced that personage against him. It had been whispered that the earl was concerned in the order said to have been found in the pocket of a prisoner after the battle of Culloden, and that, moreover, he had exercised sundry other cruelties upon the prisoners in the hands of the in- surgents. Both of these charges he distinctly denied, and probably with truth — though the assertion that he had vo- 382 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. luntarily surrendered himself to government, contained in his speech, and in the petition to the king", was afterwards confessed by himself to have been made only with the view of moving* his majesty to mercy. The Earl of Cromarty, whose share in the insurrection had been much less conspicuous, made similar efforts to obtain the royal grace. The countess went about, after the sentence had been pronounced, delivering* petitions in per- son to all the lords of the cabinet-council ; and on the fol- lowing Sunday she went in mourning to Kensington Palace to petition majesty itself. When the interesting" condition of this lady is considered, it must be allowed that a more powerful mode of intercession could not have been adopted. She waylaid the king* as he was going to chapel, fell upon her knees before him, seized the hem of his coat, and pre- senting a petition, fainted away at his feet. His majesty raised her up with his own hand, received her petition, and gave it to the Duke of Grafton, who was in attendance, desiring Lady Stair, who accompanied Lady Cromarty, to conduct her to an apartment where care might be taken of her. A day or two after, the Dukes of Hamilton and Montrose, the Earl of Stair, and several other courtiers, interceded with his majesty in the unfortunate earl's be- half. Balmerino made no effort to save his life, but behaved after this period as one who had resigned himself to death, and who despises those who are to inflict it. On learning that his two brothers in affliction had made their applica- tions for mercy, he said sneeringly, that as they had such great interest at court, they might have squeezed his name in with their own. A gentleman calling upon him a week after his sentence, and apologising for intruding upon the few hours which his lordship had to live, he replied, l Oh, sir, no intrusion at all — I have done nothing to make my conscience uneasy. I shall die with a true heart, and un- daunted; for I think no man fit to live who is not fit to die; nor am I anyways concerned at what I have done.' The Earl of Cromarty received a pardon on the 9th of August, and on the 11th an order was signed in council for the execution of Lords Kilmarnock and Balmerino. Cro- marty and Kilmarnock had both alike hoped for pardon, and most persons expected that Balmerino would be the only victim. But the unfavourable impression which the Duke of Cumberland had received of the character of Kil- marnock, together with the prevarications upon which he TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 883 had grounded his claims for mercy, determined, it was sup- posed, that he should also perish. 1 Nothing could mark more strongly the different characters of these two unfortunate noblemen, than the way in which each respectively received intelligence of this final order. It was communicated to Kilmarnock by Mr Foster, a dis- senting or Presbyterian clergyman, who had spent some time before with his lordship in religious exercises, and in some measure prepared his mind for the announcement. When the words of doom fell upon the ear of the culprit, their force was softened by the religious consolations with which they were accompanied, and Kilmarnock received them with tranquillity and resignation. Balmerino, on the contrary, heard the news with all the unconcern and levity with which he might have some months before received an order for some military movement. He was sitting at dinner with his lady when the warrant arrived ; and on her starting up distractedly and swooning away, he coolly proceeded to recover her by the usual means, and then re- marking that it should not make him lose his dinner, sat down again to table as if nothing had happened. He could even scarcely help chiding- her for the concern she had dis- played in his behalf, requesting" her to resume her seat at table, and laughing outright when she declared her inabi- lity to eat. On the Saturday preceding the Monday when the execu- tion was to take place, General Williamson thought proper to give Kilmarnock an account of all the circumstances of solemnity and outward terror which would accompany it. Being informed that an executioner was provided, who, besides being expert, was a very good sort of man, he ex- claimed, c General, this is one of the worst circumstances that you have mentioned. I cannot thoroughly like, for a work of this kind, your good sort of men. One of that 1 The pardon of Lord Cromarty was accompanied by the condition that he should spend the remainder of his days at a particular spot in Devonshire. One of his daughters became Lady Elibank, and was an elegant and admired >,.- woman. One day, in company, when some discussion arose about the beauty of the long gloves she wore on her hands and arms, a lady sitting beside her said, that if her ladyship would excuse the remark, she would say that the hands and arms were sufficient to make any gloves look well. ' Ah ! madam,' replied Lady Elibank, * let us never be vain of such things : these hands and arms at one time washed the clothes and prepared the food of a father, mother, and seven other children.' The child unborn at the time of the earl's condemnation became the wife of j^ Sir William Murray of Ochtertyre. It is alleged, by all who remember Lady Augusta Murray, that she had the natural mark of an axe upon her neck, which was supposed to have been impressed by the labouring imagination of her mother. 384 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. character must be tender-hearted and compassionate ; and a rougher and less sensible person would be much more fit for the office.' Throughout this trying conversation, his lordship is said to have maintained as much composure as the least compassionate reader can do in perusing a mere report of it. When the day arrived, and the general went to inform the earl that the sheriffs were waiting for the prisoners, his lordship, having completely prepared himself for the an- nouncement, was not in the least agitated, but said calmly, c General, I am ready, and will follow you.' In going down stairs he met Balmerino at the first landing-place, who em- braced him affectionately, and said, ( My lord, I am heartily sorry to have your company in this expedition.' The two unfortunate noblemen were then conducted to the Tower- gate, and delivered over to the sheriffs. As they were leaving the Tower, the deputy-lieutenant, according to custom, cried, i God bless King George ! \ to which Kilmar- nock made a bow, while the inflexible Balmerino exclaimed, c God bless King James ! ' The procession moved in a slow and solemn manner towards the house prepared for the re- ception of the lords. In their progress, some person was heard to exclaim from the surrounding crowd, i Which is Balmerino?' when that nobleman instantly turned half round and politely said, 4 1 am Balmerino.' The two lords were conducted to separate apartments, where they remained for some time in retirement with their friends. Kilmarnock received a message from Balmerino requesting an interview, which being consented to, Bal- merino was introduced into Kilmarnock's apartment. The conversation which took place is reported by Mr Foster to have been precisely as follows : — Balmerino. — ( My lord, I beg leave to ask your lordship one question.' Kilmarnock* — * To any question, my lord, that you shall think it proper to ask, I believe I shall see no reason to decline giving an answer.' B. — ' Why, then, my lord, did you ever see or know of any order, signed by the Prince, to give no quarter at Culloden?' K.— 6 No, my lord.' B.— < Nor I neither; and therefore it seems to be an invention to justify their own murders.' K. — ' No, my lord, I do not think that in- ference can be drawn from it ; because, while I was at In- verness, I was informed by several officers that there was such an order signed " George Murray," and that it was in the duke's custody.' B. — ' Lord George Murray ! Why, then, they should not charge it upon the Prince.' His lordship then took his leave, embracing his fellow-prisoner TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 385 with great tenderness, and saying to him, l My dear Lord Kilmarnock, I am only sorry that I cannot pay all this reckoning alone. Once more, farewell for ever ! ' Lord Kilmarnock spent nearly an hour after this con- versation in devotion with Mr Foster and the gentleman attending him, and in making declarations that he sincerely repented of his crime, and had resumed at this last hour his former attachment to the reigning- family. His rank giving* him a precedence in what was to ensue, he was led first to the scaffold. Before leaving the room, he took a tender farewell of all the friends who attended him. When he stepped upon the scaffold, notwithstanding all his previous attempts to familiarise his mind with the idea of the scene, he could not help being somewhat appalled at the sight of so many dreadful objects, and he muttered in the ear of one of the attendant clergymen, ' Home, this is terrible ! ' He was habited in doleful black, and bore a countenance which, though quite composed, wore the deepest hue of melancholy. The sight of his careworn but still handsome figure, and of his pale, resigned countenance, produced a great impression upon the spectators, many of whom burst into tears. The executioner himself was so much affected, that he was obliged to drink several glasses of spirits, to brace his nerves for the work before him. From a rare contemporary print of the execution of Lord Kilmarnock, it appears that the scaffold was very small, and that there were not above six or seven persons upon it at the time his lordship submitted to the block. The block — which is still preserved and shown in the Tower — is a piece of wood, considerably higher than may be generally sup- posed ; the culprit only requiring to kneel and bend a little forward, in order to bring his neck over it. The cloth which originally covered the surrounding rails is turned up in such a manner as to give the spectators below an unin- terrupted view of the scene. The culprit appears kneeling* at the block, without his coat and waistcoat, and the frill of his shirt hanging down. The figures upon the scaffold, all except one of fearfully important character, are dressed in full dark suits of the fashion of King George II.'s reign, and most of them have w^hite handkerchiefs at their eyes, and express, by their attitudes, a violent degree of grief. It was a little after mid-day when the unhappy Kil- marnock approached the scene of his last sufferings. After mounting the scaffold, and taking leave of Mr Foster, who chose to retire, he proceeded to arrange his dress for the occasion. He informed the executioner, to whom he gave VOL. V. y \* 886 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. a purse containing five guineas, that lie should give the signal for the descent of the axe, about two minutes after he should lay his neck upon the block, by dropping a hand- kerchief. Then he went forward and knelt upon a black cushion, which was placed for the purpose before the block. Whether to support himself, or as a more convenient posture for devotion, he happened to lay his hands upon the surface of the block, along with his neck, and the executioner was obliged to desire him to let them fall down, lest they should be mangled or break the blow. Being informed that the neck of his waistcoat was in the way, he rose once more upon his feet, and with the help of one of his friends, Mr Walkingshaw of Scotstoun, had that garment taken off. This done, and the neck being made' completely bare to the shoulder, he again knelt down as before. Mr Home's ser- vant, who held a corner of the cloth to receive his head, heard him at this moment remind the executioner that he would give the signal in about two minutes. That interval he spent in fervent devotion, as appeared by the motion of his hands, and now and then of his head. Having then fixed his neck down close upon the block, he gave the signal, and his body remained without the least motion till the descent of the axe, which went so far through the neck at the first blow, that only a little piece of skin remained to be severed by the second. 1 The head, which immediately dropped into the cloth, was not exposed in the usual manner by the executioner, in consequence of the prisoner's express request, but deposited with his body in the coffin, which was then delivered to his friends, and placed in the hearse. The scaffold was then cleaned, and strewed with fresh sawdust, so that no ap- pearance of a former execution might remain to offend the feelings of Lord Balmerino ; and the executioner, who was dressed in white, changed such of his clothes as were bloody. The under-sheriff then went to the apartment of Bal- merino, who, upon his entrance, said that he supposed Lord Kilmarnock was now no more, and asked how the execu- tioner had performed his duty. Being informed upon this point, he remarked that it was well done. He had pre- viously maintained before his friends a show of resolution and indifference which perfectly astonished them, twice 1 Colonel Craufurd of Craufurdland in Ayrshire, next neighbour to the Earl of Kilmarnock at his seat of Dean Castle, thought it his duty to attend his lordship as a friend on this occasion ; for which simple act of courtesy and humanity he was, it is said, immediately cashiered. TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 387 taking* wine, with a little bread, and desiring them to drink him i ain degrae ta haiven. ? He now said, ' Gentle- men, I will detain you no longer, for I desire not to pro- tract my life ;' saluted them with an air of cheerfulness, which drew tears from every eye but his own, and hastened to the scaffold. The appearance of Balmerino upon this fatal stage pro- duced a very different sensation among the spectators from that occasioned by Kilmarnock. His firm step, his bold and manly, though rough fig*ure, but above all, his dress — the same regimental suit of blue, turned up with red, which he had worn throughout the late campaign — excited ad- miration rather than any emotion of pity. So far from ex- pressing any concern about his approaching death, he even reproved the tenderness of such of his friends as were about him. Walking round the scaffold, he bowed to the people, and inspected the inscription upon his coffin, which he declared to be correct. He also asked which was his hearse, and ordered the man to drive near. Then looking with an air of satisfaction at the block, which he designated as his 'pillow of rest/ he took out a paper, and putting on his spectacles, read it to the few about him. It contained a declaration of his unshaken adherence to the House of Stuart, and of his regret for ever having served in the armies of their enemies, Queen Anne and George I., which he considered the only faults of his life tending to justify his present fate. Finally, he called for the executioner, who immediately appeared, and was about to ask his forgiveness, when Bal- merino stopped him by saying, i Friend, you need not ask forgiveness ; the execution of your duty is commendable.' Presenting the man with three guineas, he added, i Friend, I never had much money ; this is all I now have ; I wish it were more for your sake, and I am sorry I can add nothing to it but my coat and waistcoat. 7 He took off these gar- ments, and laid them upon his coffin for the executioner. In his immediate preparations for death, this singular man displayed the same wonderful coolness and intrepidity. Having put on a flannel vest which had been made on pur- pose, together with a cap of tartan, to denote, he said, that he died a Scotsman, he approached the block, and kneeling down, went through a sort of rehearsal of the execution for the instruction of the executioner, showing him how he should give the sig*nal for the blow by dropping his arms. He then returned to his friends, took a tender farewell of them, and looking round upon the crowd, said, ' I am f 388 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. afraid there are some who may think my behaviour bold ; but (addressing a gentleman near him) remember, sir, what I tell you — it arises from a confidence in God ? and a clear conscience. 7 At this moment he observed the executioner standing with the axe, and going up to him, took the weapon into his own hand and felt its edge. On returning it, he showed the man w T here to strike his neck, and animated him to do it with vigour and resolution ; adding, ' for in that, friend, will consist your mercy.' With a countenance of the utmost cheerfulness he then knelt down at the block, and uttering the following words — c Oh Lord, reward my friends, forgive my enemies, bless the Prince and the Duke, and receive my soul ? — dropped his arms for the blow. The executioner, recollecting the deliberation of Lord Kilmarnock, was thrown out by the suddenness with which the signal was made in the present case, and gave his blow without taking accurate aim at the proper place. He hit the unfortunate nobleman between the shoulders, depriving him in a great measure, it was supposed, of sensation, but not producing death. It has been said by some who were present that Balmerino turned his head half round and gnashed his teeth in the face of the executioner. If this was the case, it fortunately did not prevent the man from recovering his presence of mind ; for he immediately brought down another blow, which went through two-thirds of the neck. Death attended this stroke, and the body fell away from the block. It was presently replaced by some of the bystanders, and a third blow completed the work. 1 The fate of these unfortunate noblemen excited more public interest than perhaps any other transaction connected with the insurrection. The Jacobites, together with all such as were of a bold temperament, applauded the beha- viour of Balmerino ; while the Whigs, and all persons of a pious disposition, admired the placid and devout resignation of Kilmarnock. Every member of the community seemed to have chosen his favourite nobleman, in whose behalf he was prepared to talk, dispute, and even to fight. Innu- merable publications appeared regarding them, informing 1 The day before his death, Balmerino penned a letter for the old chevalier, reciting some of his services, stating that he was about to die ' with great satisfaction and peace of mind * in the best of causes, and intreating that he would provide for his wife, ' so that she should not want bread, which other- wise she must do, my brother having left more debt oh the estate than it was worth, and [I] having nothing in the world to give her.' The chevalier attended to this request, by sending Lady Balmerino £60 in May 1747- Her ladj^ship survived, in straitened circumstances, for a few years- TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 389 the public of their history, and discussing 1 their respective and very opposite characters. James Nicholson, Walter Ogilvie, and Donald Macdonald, forming" a selection from the Scottish officers taken at Car- lisle, were the next victims of the offended state. They were condemned at St Margaret's Hill on the 2d of August (along with Alexander Macgrowther, who was afterwards reprieved), and executed at Kennington Common on the 22d. Nicholson had kept a coffee-house at Leith, and was a man in middle life ; but Macdonald and Ogilvie were both young men of good families, the first a cadet of the family of Keppoch, and the other a native of the county of Banff. They were conducted to the place of execution in a sledge, guarded by a party of horse grenadiers and a detachment of the foot-guards. Macdonald and Nicholson appeared at the last solemn scene in their Highland dress. They spent an hour in devotion upon the scaffold, and were then exe- cuted in precisely the same manner with Francis Townly and his companions, except that they were permitted to hang fifteen minutes before being dismembered. During the course of the two ensuing months many trials took place at St Margaret's Hill, without any of the prisoners receiving sentence of death. But on the loth of November, judgment was pronounced upon no fewer than twenty-two persons, who had been convicted singly at diffe- rent times; and out of these, ^Ye were ordered for execution on the 28th of November. The names of the unfortunate persons were John Hamilton, Alexander Leith, Sir John Wedderburn, Andrew Wood, and James Bradshaw. Ha- milton had been governor of Carlisle, and signed its capitu- lation ; Leith was an aged and infirm man, who had dis- tinguished himself by his activity as a captain in the Duke of Perth's regiment ; Sir John Wedderburn had acted as receiver of the excise duties and cess raised by the insur- gents ; Andrew Wood was a youth of little more than two- and-twenty, who had displayed great courage and zeal in < the regiment of John Roy Stuart ; and Bradshaw was a respectable and wealthy merchant of Manchester, who had abandoned his business, and spent his fortune in the cause for which he was now to lay down his life. The execution of these gentlemen, which took place on the 28th of November, was attended with some affecting circumstances. Before nine o'clock in the morning, the servants of the keeper unlocked the rooms in which Sir John Wedderburn, Mr Hamilton, and James Bradshaw were confined, and uttering the awful announcement that they 390 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. were to die, desired them to prepare themselves for the sheriff, who would immediately come to demand their per- N sons. Although this was the first certain intelligence they had of their fate, they received it with calmness, and said they would soon be ready to obey the sheriff's request. They then took a melancholy farewell of a fellow-officer of the name of Farquharson, who had been respited, and was con- fined on the same side of the prison. The keeper's servants proceeded to rouse the rest of the doomed men, besides one of the name of Lindsay, who was as yet expected to share their fate. When they were told to prepare for the sheriff, Wood inquired if Governor Hamilton had been finally con- signed to execution ; and being* answered in the affirmative, remarked 'that he was sorry for that poor old gentleman.' They were led into the fore-part of the prison, and provided with a slight refreshment. On account of the policy of government in granting reprieves at the last hour, Brad- shaw still hoped to be pardoned, and endeavoured on this occasion to display a confident cheerfulness of manner. Wood, entertaining no such expectations, called for wine, and drank the health of his political idols, boldly assigning to each his treasonable title. Lindsay's reprieve arrived at the moment when he was submitting to have his hands tied, and produced such an effect upon his feelings, as almost to deprive him of the life which it was designed to save. The sanguine Bradshaw, whose halter was just then thrown over his head, eagerly inquired ' if there was any news for him.' The answer was, ' The sheriff is come, and waits for r you They were drawn to the place of execution in two sledges, Bradshaw shedding tears of disappointment and wretched- ness. They arrived at the foot of the fatal tree a little after noon, and the execution immediately took place in the midst of a vast crowd of spectators. The whole prayed for King James, and declared they did not fear death. In the meantime, this bloody work had been proceeding with still greater energy at Carlisle and York, where it was thought necessary to try most of the insurgents who had been taken at Culloden by the forms of an English court of Oyer and Terminer, instead of placing them at the mercy of their countrymen, who were now too generally suspected of disaffection to be intrusted with a commission so important. Carlisle, the principal scene of their misdeeds in England, was selected for the trial of most of the prisoners, as a place more likely than any other to produce a jury of the stamp required by government. The result proved that, however TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 391 much the Scottish people might labour under the impu- tation of humanity, their Cumbrian neighbours were not much tinged with that disloyal vice. About the beginning of August, a herd — for such it might be termed — of these ill-fated persons was impelled, like one of their own droves of black cattle, from the Highlands towards Carlisle, 1 where, on being imprisoned, they were found to amount to no less than three hundred and eighty- five. To try so many individuals, with the certainty of finding almost all of them guilty, would have looked some- thing like premeditated massacre, and might have had an effect upon the nation very different from what was in- tended. It was therefore determined that, while all the officers, and others who had distinguished themselves by zeal in the insurrection, should be tried, the great mass should be permitted to cast lots, one in twenty to be tried, and the rest to be transported. Several individuals refused this extrajudicial proffer of g'race, and chose rather to take their chance upon a fair trial. The evidences were chiefly drawn from the ranks of the king's army. Bills of indict- ment were found against a hundred and nineteen indivi- duals. The time which intervened between the indictment and trial of the Carlisle prisoners was occupied by the judges at York, where the grand jury found bills of indictment against seventy-five insurgents there confined. In this city, not long before, the high-sheriff's chaplain had preached a sermon upon a very significant text — (Numbers, xxv. 5) — l And Moses said unto the judges of Israel, Slay ye every one his men that were joined unto Baal-peor ! ' The judges again sat at Carlisle on the 9th of September, on which, and the two following days, most of the hundred and nineteen prisoners were arraigned. On the 12th, the grand jury sat again, and found bills against fifteen more. Out of the hundred and thirty-three persons in all thus brought to the bar at Carlisle, one obtained delay, on ac- 1 One Maclaren, a Balquhidder man, who had been concerned in cattle- dealing, and had often travelled this road before in more peacef id style, con- trived to make his escape amongst the hills at the head of Dumfriesshire. There is in that district a deep hollow called the Marquis of Annandale's Beef Tub, because the Border thieves used to keep their stolen cattle in it. The road skirted along the top of the steep-down sides of this pit. Seizing a lucky moment, Maclaren enveloped himself in his plaid, and rolled down into the hollow, regardless of the shot which the soldiers sent after him. Being received into the mist which lay at the bottom, he was instantly lost to pursuit ; and it is said that he spent that night in the Crook Inn, where the party had been the night before, and where he obtained concealment, although there was another party of soldiers in the house. 392 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. count of an allegation that lie was a peer, eleven pled guilty when arraigned, thirty- two pled guilty when brought to trial, thirty -seven were found guilty, eleven found guilty, but recommended to mercy, thirty-six acquitted, audi Jive re- manded to prison to wait for further evidence. The trials at York commenced on the 2d of October, and ended on the 7th, when, out of the seventy-five persons in- dicted, two pled guilty when arraigned, smdjlfty-two when brought to trial, twelve were found guilty, four found guilty, but recommended to mercy, andjive acquitted. Seventy in all received sentence of death. The process of all these trials appears to have been extremely simple. Most of the prisoners endeavoured to take advantage of the notorious slavery in which the clans were held by their chiefs, by pleading that they had been forced into the insurgent army against their will ; but their defence was in every case easily repelled. Before the middle of October, an order was sent to Car- lisle for the execution of thirty out of the ninety-one per- sons there imprisoned under sentence ; ten at Carlisle on the 18th (October), ten at Brampton on the 21st, and ten at Penrith on the 28th. Of the first ten, one was afterwards reprieved. The names of the remaining nine were Thomas Coppock, 1 Edward Roper, Francis Buchanan of Arnprior, 2 1 This person seems to have been a young student of theology, of indifferent character. He joined the Prince at Manchester, and was one of those left behind at Carlisle. There was a ridiculous report that the Prince, at Carlisle, on the return of the army, made him bishop of that see. One of the wit- nesses on his trial, improving on the story, said he had received that appoint- ment from Hamilton, the governor of the town for the Prince. Yet this man is seriously spoken of in the contemporary journals as ' the titular bishop of Carlisle.' When condemned, seeing some of his companions weeping, he told them, with some exclamations not very appropriate to the clerical character, to cheer up — they would not be tried by a Cumberland jury in the other world. 2 This is the gentleman alluded to at page 70 of this history. According to documents in the Rev. Mr Forbes's collection, he had not been concerned in the enterprise in anyway, although undoubtedly in his private sentiments he was well-affected to the House of Stuart. He was taken prisoner at his own house of Leny in Perthshire a short while before the battle of Culloden, and carried to Stirling Castle. There, and on his subsequent journey to Car- lisle, he was treated by the military as a man who was a prisoner by mistake. Often, on the road, he was allowed to ride on in front, to order dinner at the inns for the party. At Carlisle, he was, to his own great surprise, put in irons in a dungeon ; and when a friend remonstrated with the solicitor- general in his behalf, that officer said, ' Give yourself no trouble about that gentleman. I shall take care of him. I have particular orders about him ; for he must suffer.' At his trial, nothing could be proved against him but that he had written an unsubscribed letter to the Highland army. An appli- cation was made in his favour at court, but without success. He died lament- ing the neutral course which caution had induced him to take in the late civil war. TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS, 393 Donald Macdonald of Kinlochmoidart, 1 Donald Macdonnell of Tiendrish, 2 John Henderson, John Macnaughton, James 1 This gentleman, the only Highland chieftain "brought to the scaffold on this occasion, had been taken prisoner at Lesmahago, under circumstances narrated at page 178. He had never once drawn his sword in the insurrection, but had entertained the Prince at his house (immediately before the raising of the standard), and had afterwards gone on an embassy from him to the Laird of Macleod and Sir Alexander Macdonald of Sleat. 2 This was the individual who had commanded the party at High Bridge at the beginning of the insurrection I see page 40) , and who had afterwards been taken prisoner in such remarkable circumstances at Falkirk (page 204). The Rev. Mr Forbes, who was confined in the same room with him in Edin- burgh Castle, speaks highly of him (Lyon in Mourning). ' He was,' says Forbes, * a brave, undaunted, honest man, of a good countenance, and of a strong robust make. He was much given to pious acts of devotion [being a Roman Catholic], and was remarkably a gentleman of excellent good manners. He bore all his sufferings with great submission and cheerfulness of temper.' In the course of the summer (1746), he was removed to Carlisle to undergo his trial ; and on the 24th of August we find him writing to his friend Forbes as follows : — ' Dear Sir, you have no doubt heard before now that our trials come on on the 9th of September ; may God stand with the righteous ! The whole ^ gentlemen who came from Scotland are all together in one floor, with up- wards of one hundred private men, so that we are much thronged. They have not all got irons as yet ; but they have not forgot me, nor the rest of most distinction ; and the whole will soon be provided. You'll make my compliments to Lady Bruce and Mr Clerk's family, but especially to Miss Mally Clerk, and tell her that, notwithstanding my irons, I could dance a Highland reel with her. Mr Patrick Murray makes offer of his compliments to you, and I hope we'll meet soon.' The hope under which this letter was written was soon extinguished by the result of his trial. He was there found guilty, though, as happened in too many similar cases, upon evidence altogether false, and with reference to facts in which he had had no concern. His friends and legal agents had all intreated him to plead guilty, as the only chance of escape ; but he was too zealous a partisan of the House of Stuart to make the submission which that would have implied to the Hanover dynasty. On their pressing the advice with some importunity, he declared, in a tone which precluded all further argument, that rather than do so, he would submit to be taken and hanged at the bar before the face of those judges by whom he was soon to be tried. It would appear that some effort was made by his wife and other friends to intercede in his behalf with the government. On the 28th of September, he writes that he is ' in good health, heart, and spirits.' ' If it is my fate,' says he, ' to go to the scaffold, I daresay that I'll go as a Christian and a man of honour ought to do. But it is possible that a broken ill-used major may be a colonel before he dies.' All hope of pardon was soon proved to be vain : the government could not forgive one who had acted so remarkable a part in the late contest, and who had been taken with the blood of its ser- vants still streaming from his sword. On the 17th of October, he addressed the following farewell letter to one of his friends in Edinburgh : — ' My dear Sir, I received yours yesterday, and as I am to die to-morrow, this is my last farewell to you. May God reward you for your services to me from time to time, and may God restore my dear Prince, and receive my soul at the hour of death. You'll manage what money Mr Stewart is due me as you see proper ; for my poor wife will want money much, to pay her rents and other debts. I conclude with my blessings to yourself and to all the honourable honest ladies of my acquaintance in Edinburgh, and to all other friends in general, and in particular those of the castle, and I am with love and affec- tion, my dear sir, yours till death. Donald Macdonnell.' It is impossible to contemplate the fate of a man like Tiendrish without a feeling of interest. In a speech which he delivered on the scaffold, he de- 394 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Brand, and Hugh Cameron. They were executed, accord- ing* to order, with all those circumstances of barbarity which had already attended the former executions. Out of the ten who were appointed to die at Brampton, only six even- tually suffered — James Innes, Patrick Lindsay, Bonald Mac- donald, Thomas Park, Peter Taylor, and Michael Delard— one having died in prison, and the remaining three having been reprieved, Mercy was also extended to three of the ten who were designed for execution at Penrith. The names of those who suffered at the latter place were Robert Lyon, 1 David Home, Andrew Swan, James Harvie, John Robottom, Philip Hunt, and Valentine Holt. In addition to the twenty-two persons thus executed in the west of England, other twenty-two suffered at the city of York; namely, on the 1st of November, Captain George Hamilton, Daniel Fraser, Edward Clavering, Charles Gor- don, Benjamin Mason, James Main, William Collony, William Dempsy, Angus Macdonald, and James Sparks ; on the 8th of the same'month, David Roe, William Hunter, John Endsworth, John Maclean, John Macgregor, Simon Mackenzie, Alexander Parker, Thomas Macginnes, Archi- bald Kennedy, James Thomson, and Michael Brady; and on the 15th, James Reid. Eleven more were executed at Carlisle on the 15th of November ; namely, Sir Archibald Primrose of Dunnipace, 2 Charles Gordon of Terperse, Patrick clared, ' It was principle, and a thorough conviction of its being my duty to God, my injured king, and oppressed country, which engaged me to take up arms under the standard and magnanimous conduct of his Royal Highness Charles Prince of Wales : I solemnly declare I had no by-views in drawing my sword in that just and honourable cause.' 1 Mr Lyon was a young presbyter of the Episcopal church of Scotland, and apparently connected with Perthshire. Under a strong religious sense of duty, particularly with regard to the suffering church to which he belonged, he had joined the expedition, in which he had borne all his own charges. The speech pronounced by him on the scaffold was reprinted in the 25th number of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, on account of the well-ex- pressed and well-reasoned view which it gives of the opinions by which a large portion of Prince Charles's adherents were actuated. In Mr Forbes's collec- tion, besides a copy of this able document, there is one of a tenderer kind, a letter written to his mother and sister in contemplation of death — not seeking, but giving consolation. Mr Forbes has also bound up amongst his papers a copy of ' the Communion Office for the use of the Church of Scotland,' as * authorised by K. Charles I., anno 1636,' being, as Mr Forbes takes care to note, * the identical copy which the Rev. Mr Robert Lyon made use of in consecrating the Holy Eucharist in Carlisle Castle,' where ' he had the hap- piness to communicate above fifty of his fellow-prisoners, amongst whom were Mr Thomas Coppock, the English clergyman, and Arnprior.' 2 In Mr Forbes's collections, is a letter written by Sir Archibald on the day of his death to his sister, commending to her care his wife and children, and regretting nothing but their condition and his own giving way so far to bad advice as to have pleaded guilty in the hope of pardon. ' This day,' he says, * I am to suffer for my religion, my Prince, and my country : for each of TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS. 395 Murray, goldsmith in Stirling, Patrick Keir, Alexander Stevenson, Robert Keid, John Wallace, James Mitchell, Molineux Eaton, Thomas Hays, and Barnaby Matthews. All these unhappy individuals are said to have behaved, throughout the last trying scene, with a degree of decent firmness which surprised the beholders. Every one of them continued till his last moment to justify the cause which had brought him to the scaffold, and some even declared that, if set at liberty, they would act in the same way as they had done. They all prayed in their last moments for the exiled royal family, particularly for Prince Charles, whom they concurred in representing as a pattern of all manly excel- lence, and as a person calculated to render the nation happy, should it ever have the good fortune to see him restored. The lives of nearly eighty persons had now been de- stroyed, in atonement of the terror into which the state had been thrown by the insurrection. There yet remained, how- ever, a few individuals, who, having excited the displeasure of government in a peculiar degree, were marked as unfit for pardon. The first of these was Charles Ratcliffe, younger brother to the Earl of Derwentwater, who had been executed in 1716 ; he had himself only evaded the same fate, at that time, by making his escape from Newgate. This gentleman, taking upon himself the title of Earl of Derwentwater, was made prisoner, in November 1745, on board a French vessel on its way to Scotland with supplies for Prince Charles. After lying a year in confine- ment, he was brought up to the bar of the King's Bench (November 21, 1746), when the sentence which had been passed thirty years before was again read to him. He en- deavoured to perplex the court regarding his identity, but it was established satisfactorily, it is said, by the barber who had shaved him when in the Tower in 1716, and he was condemned to be executed on the 8th of December. That day he came upon the scaffold in a handsome dress, and conducted himself throughout the dreadful scene with a manly courage and proud bearing, which seemed to indi- these I wish I had a thousand lives to spend.' There is also a letter to the same lady, from Mr James Wright, writer in Edinburgh, enclosing the above, and dated 'Carlisle, November 15, four o'clock in the afternoon,' being a very short while after the death of Sir Archibald. ' Madam,' he says, * your brother, who is no more, delivered me this immediately before he suf- fered. I waited on him to the last, and with some other friends witnessed his interment in St Cuthbert's churchyard. He lies on the north side of the church, within four yards of the second window from the steeple. Mr Gordon of Terperse, and Patrick Murray, goldsmith, lie just by him. God Almighty support his disconsolate lady and all his relations.' 396 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. cate that he held the malice of his enemies and the stroke of death in equal scorn. The last of all the martyrs, as they were styled by their own party, was Lord Lovat. This singular old man was impeached by the House of Commons on the 11th of De- cember ; and his trial took place before the House of Peers on the 9th of March 1747 and several successive days. On this momentous occasion he seems to have exerted all the talents for dissimulation and chicanery which had, up to this time, served him so well. But the evidence produced against him was of that kind which no artifice could inva- lidate. He was confronted with a prodigious number of letters which he had written to the exiled family, and in particular to the young chevalier, promising* them his assistance, and negotiating the proposed elevation of his family to a dukedom. These had been procured from Murray of Broughton, who, preferring to live the life of a dog to dying the death of a man, had engaged with govern- ment to make all the discoveries in his power for his own pardon. 1 Lovat could make no effective stand against such documents, and although he uttered an exculpatory and palliative speech of some eloquence, he was condemned to die. During the space of a week which intervened between his sentence and its execution, he maintained, without the least interruption, that flow of animal spirits and lively conversa- tion for which he had been so remarkable throughout his life. He talked to the people about him of his approaching death as he would have talked of a journey which he de- signed to take, and he made the circumstances which were to attend it the subject of innumerable witticisms and playful remarks. When informed, in the forenoon before he left the prison, that a scaffold had fallen near the place of execu- tion, by which many persons were killed and maimed, he only remarked, 'The mair mischief, the better sport.' Though so weak as to require the assistance of two per- sons in mounting the scaffold, he there maintained a show 1 The Rev. Mr Forbes relates that Dr Burton of York informed him that, in September 1746, he (Dr Burton) asked Mr iEneas Macdonald, then in confinement in London, ' his opinion of Mr John Murray of Broughton, par- ticularly whether he entertained any fears about his turning evidence, as the common talk in London gave it out. Mr Maedonald's answer was, that he believed Mr Murray to be so honest between man and man, that in private life he would not be guilty of a dirty or dishonest action ; but then (he said) he knew him to be such a coward, and to be possessed with such a fear of death, that (for his own part) he was much afraid Mr Murray might be brought the length of doing anything to save a wretched life.' — Lyon in Mourning, iii. 522. PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. 397 of indifference to death. He felt the edge of the axe, and expressed himself satisfied with its sharpness. He called the executioner, gave him ten guineas, and told him to do his duty with firmness and accuracy ; adding, that he would be very angry with him if he should hack and mangle his shoulders. He professed to die in the Roman Catholic faith, and spent some time in devotion. As if to be in character to the very last, he resigned his breath with the almost sacred words upon his lips, i Duke et decorum est pro patrid mori. 7 CHAPTEE XXX. PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. * Come, poor remains of friends, rest on this rock.' Shakspeare. The vessels which had taken the Prince and his friends on board at Lochnanuagh, on the 20th of September, made a prosperous voyage to the coast of France. It was the Prince's original intention to proceed to Nantes ; and if he had done so, he would probably have encountered a British squadron under Admiral Lestock, then cruising off the coast of Bretagne. Having altered his course, and been chased by two English sloops of war, from which he escaped in a thick fog, he landed, on Monday the 29th of September (10th October, new style), at Roscoff, near Morlaix, whence he immediately wrote letters to his brother and father, in- forming them of his safety. He arrived in France, full of the ideas which had pos- sessed him immediately after the battle of Culloden respect- ing a new and effectual expedition to be fitted out in his behalf by the French government. It was his wish imme- diately to see the king, in order to use his influence with him to obtain a proper armament. He therefore stopped only two days at Morlaix for rest, and then set out for Paris. Near the city he was met by a band of young noblemen, headed by his brother, who, on meeting him, did not at first know him, on account of the change his person had undergone, being now ' broader and fatter ' than for- merly ; but, on recognising him, fell on his neck and wel- comed him in the most affectionate manner. The govern- ment had ordered the castle of St Antoine to be fitted up for his reception, but they were not disposed to receive him 398 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. openly as the Prince Regent of Great Britain ; and when he formally applied for an interview with the king", then at Fontainebleau, he was not favoured with a public audience, but permitted to come in only a comparatively private or incognito fashion. The truth is, the French had been un- fortunate in the war, particularly by sea, and already the necessity of suing* for peace with Great Britain was begin- ning" to be apprehended. Louis was anxious to give the British court as little further cause of offence as possible. At the same time, it was not in his nature not to admire the singular career of the Prince, and to wish him well. Charles, since he was not allowed a nominally public re- ception in his assumed character, resolved to make his visit, to appearance, as public as possible. He therefore went to Fontainebleau in a splendid equipage and magnificent dress, attended by other carriages, in which were the Lords Elcho and Ogilvie, Mr Kelly his secretary, the elder Locheil, and others of his principal friends. The king, who now saw him for the first time in his life, met him with a warm embrace, and a complimentary speech worthy of the nation most remarkable for such addresses : — ' Mon tres cher Prince, je rends grace au ciel, qui me donne le plaisir extreme de vous voir arrive en bonne sante, apres tant de fatigues et de dan- gers. Vous avez fait voir que toutes les grandes qualites des heros et des philosophes se trouvent unies en vous ; et j'espere qu'un de ces jours vous recevr'ez la recompense d'une merite si extraordinaire/ 1 After staying a little while with the king, the Prince passed to the apartment of the queen, who also gave him a kind reception. The whole court flocked about him to pay their congratulations, and he and his friends that evening supped in the palace. The government had already taken into consideration the sad state of the Scottish officers who had landed in France, and had ordered the sum of thirty-four thousand livres to be distributed amongst them according to their rank. After- wards the further sum of twenty-eight thousand nine hun- dred was given to those officers who had landed with the Prince, young Locheil getting four thousand, his father three thousand, Lochgarry three thousand, John Roy Stuart three thousand, and others in proportion to their rank. The command of a regiment was also conferred on Lord 1 * My dearest Prince, I thank Heaven for the extreme pleasure it gives me to see you returned in safety, after so many fatigues and dangers. You have proved that all the great qualities of the heroes and philosophers are united in you ; and I hope that one day you will receive the reward of such extraordinary merit.' PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. 399 Ogilvie. But when Charles made advances with respect to a new expedition, he found himself treated with coldness- After two interviews with the king", he (November 10th) presented a memorial, earnestly calling his majesty's atten- tion to the wish nearest his heart. Scotland, he said, was on the brink of ruin, and the severity of the government had occasioned such discontent, that if he were again to land in it with a proper armament, the number of his adherents would be tripled. He had become convinced, from his late campaign, that only a moderate army of regular troops was required to enable the people of Great Britain to shake off the yoke under which they groaned ; eighteen or twenty thousand men were sufficient, and these he requested from the French government. No attention seems to have been paid to his demand, which the government probably found itself in no condition to comply with. It is to be remarked, that the idea of a renewal of the late war was not confined to his own ambitious mind, but was greatly encouraged by his Scottish friends, and by none more eagerly than by young Locheil, who for some time refused to take a French regiment which was offered to him, lest his doing so might propagate a notion that the Prince had little hopes of re- newed aid from France. Charles also wrote at this juncture to the king of Spain, condoling with him on the death of his lately deceased father, Philip V., and expressing a strong hope that the friendship he had enjoyed from that monarch would be continued by his successor. As the reluctance *of the French court to befriend him actively became more apparent to Charles, he lost his for- mer tone of moderation. Every high passion, on being thwarted in its object, raises irritation, and it is from this time that we are to date a revolution in Charles's character which has made it almost impossible to recognise, in his middle life and age, the manly, clement, and heroic youth who led the Highland army in 1745. His father earnestly remonstrated against the manner in which he acted towards the court of France, but in vain. Neither did he take any counsel from the many able and high-principled Scottish officers who were now in Paris : almost his sole adviser was his secretary Kelly, who seems to have been eminently unworthy of the confidence reposed in him. About the end of January (1747) he left Paris, and re- tired to Avignon, much against the will of his friends, who regarded the step as an admission that his cause was hope- less. But in reality he contemplated a secret journey to Madrid, in order to try if Ferdinand VI. would give those 400 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. supplies which he could not obtain in France. Travelling* very privately, he reached the Spanish capital early in March, and met with a civil reception from the new monarch, of whom he asked aid in men, arms, and ships with provisions, towards a new expedition. He was in- formed in answer that Spain could at present spare no ships : the other demands were spoken of in a manner which led him to suppose that they would be granted ; but ultimately he found his application unavailing*. He returned to Paris on the 24th of March. He now renewed his applications to the French court, but still without success. Within twenty days from his return to Paris, he is found deliberating on the propriety of pro- posing* marriage to the Czarina 1 of Eussia, with a view to her giving him the required aid — a project from which his father dissuaded him, as not in the least likely to be suc- cessful. All this procedure shows the extreme eagerness which possessed him to be again at the head of an expedi- tion in Britain, and the sense he had of the value of the present crisis. Two things he dreaded above all as likely to preclude a new attempt — a peace between France and England, which the French people eagerly desired, and the completion of the subjugation and disarmment of the Scottish Highlanders by the British government — an event certain to give great discouragement to his English friends, as they depended much on the warlike character of that people for the means of bringing about a restoration. It is no wonder, then, that Charles chafed and groaned under the difficulties which beset him. He saw what he thought the last opportunity of regaining the British crown pass- ing before him, and was unable to take advantage of it, because, as he thought, a few selfish ministers were in- different to his interests in common with those of their own countries. These views were not his own only. We find young Locheil, in February 1747, eagerly urging a new expedition, on however small a scale, to Scotland, on the ground that, if undertaken now, it would find the people unsubdued and still armed, as well as eager to save their country from the slavery to which the existing go- vernment seemed to have doomed it. The spring passed, and summer arrived, and still there was no appearance of a grant of troops or arms on the part of France. The government pressed a large pension on the Prince, but he refused to accept it. It was with difficulty i Elizabeth I., daughter of Peter the Great. She was eleven years the senior of Prince Charles. PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. 401 they could even induce young Locheil to take the command of a regiment. It was at this particular time (June 1747), when he was suffering all the ills attending on those who wait for the favour of courts, that his brother Henry, with his father's full consent, became an ecclesiastic, and accepted a cardinal's hat from the pope. Charles heard with frenzy of a proceeding by which he knew that his cause would he deeply injured in Britain, and which, moreover, was sure to be received everywhere as a tacit acknowledgment on the part of the family that his views on the crown were now hopeless. He had previously regarded his brother with great affection, but he now cast him from his bosom. Even his father he could scarcely forgive for his share in so fatal a step. Lord George Murray at this time came to Paris to pay his respects to him ; but the Prince, though in his wanderings he had spoken mildly of Lord George, was now imbittered against him ; and this honourable man, who had sacrificed his country and family prospects in his cause, was obliged to retire from France not only without seeing him, but under some dread lest the Prince should cause him to be arrested. 1 1 It was probably about the time when the hopes of renewed assistance from France were declining, that Mr William Hamilton of Bangour wrote the following imitation of the Scottish version of the 137th psalm— a com- position of much more than his usual energy, and concluding with an almost prophetic malediction :— On Gallia's shore we sat and wept, When Scotland we thought on, Robbed of her bravest sons, and all Her ancient spirit gone. * Revenge,' the sons of Gallia said, ' Revenge your native land : Already your insulting foes Crowd the Batavian strand.' How shall the sons of freedom e'er For foreign conquest fight ? For power how wield the sword, unsheathed For liberty and right ? If thee, oh Scotland, I forget, Even with my latest breath, May foul dishonour stain my name, And bring a coward's death ! May sad remorse of fancied guilt My future days employ, If all thy sacred rights are not Above my chiefest joy. « Remember England's children, Lord, Who on Drummossie* day, Deaf to the voice of kindred love, * Raze, raze it quite,' did say. * Drummossie, another name for the muir of Culloden. VOL. V. Z 402 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Months passed on, during which the proceedings of the Prince came little to the knowledge of his father or the public. That secretiveness which he had shown in the Highlands when passing from one retreat and one set of friends to another, now reappeared, and it marked much of his future career. It has been said that he rejoiced in the victories gained by the British in the course of the war, rather than in those gained by the French ; but this must be taken with limitation. There is extant a letter in which he congratulated Louis XV. on the victory of Lafelt. While trusting only to obscure, and, it has been said, worthless counsellors, there is indubitable evidence that he freely gave from his means to relieve and support the other gentlemen of his party who had taken refuge in France. In an account current with his banker, Mr George Waters, junior, we find repeated disbursements of large sums to Clanranald, Ard- shiel, Gordon of Glenbucket, Lord Nairn, and others of equal or less note. 1 The unfortunate propensity to drink- ing, by which his last years were so much clouded, is first noticed in 1747, in an unsigned letter to Mr William Mur- ray (titular Lord Dunbar) ; but the reader has seen proof that this taste was awakened in the course of his Highland adventures, being probably attributable in part to the hard- ships he then suffered, and partly to the effect of the evil customs of the country working upon one previously un- accustomed to liquor, and unprepared to indulge in it, par- ticularly under such circumstances, without contracting an uncontrollable liking for it. 2 And thou, proud Gallia, faithless friend, Whose ruin is not far, Just Heaven on thy devoted head Pour all the woes of war. When thou thy slaughtered little ones And ravished dames shall see, Such help, such pity, mayst thou have As Scotland had from thee ! 1 In a letter to his father, Paris, December 19, 1746, he says, * I suppose O'Brien has already given an account to you of what pains I am at, and what has been done concerning the poor Scotch. I told Marquis D'Argenson t'other day how sensible I was at the king's goodness for what he has done for them, and that I would go, if necessary, upon my knees for them, but that I would never ask anything for myself; for I came only into this country to do what I could for my poor country, and not for myself.' 2 Besides the various notices of his liking for ardent spirits given in the chapters descriptive of his wanderings, one or two more may here be noted from the manuscript collections of the Rev. Mr Forbes. In a journal by young Clanranald, Glenaladale, &c. {Lyon in Mourning, iii. 589) it is stated that, when in the forest-house of Glencoridale in South Uist, * he would step into a by-chamber, which served as a pantry, and, when he stood in need of it, put the bottle of brandy to his head without ceremony.' In the Rev. Mr PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. 403 In the spring* of 1748, the inclination of France for peace assumed a definite form, and proposals being in the first place submitted by the king, it was agreed by the powers at war to hold a congress at Aix-la-Chapelle. Charles beheld this transaction as the death-warrant of all his im- mediate hopes ; but, blinded by passionate violence, he had not the prudence to submit with resignation to a turn of affairs altogether beyond his control. During the summer, while the negotiations were going on, it was expected that he would quietly retire from France, as there could be no doubt that one of the stipulations would bind the king to afford him no longer an asylum. On the contrary, he hired a handsome house on the Quai Theatin, and ordered such furnishings for it as marked a determination to remain in Paris. When any one spoke of the treaty, he affected indifference, and changed the subject. Nor was this all. He caused a medal to be struck, with his head on one side, and on the other a quantity of shipping, with the words, Amor et spes Britannia — (' The love and hope of Britain 7 ) — a deliberate insult to the French government, which had suffered so much from the British marine force. The ministers deeply resented this act, and urged the king to take notice of it ; but he declined doing so, apparently from a wish not to exasperate the Prince any further. The Prince of Conti, a very proud noble, soon after meeting Charles in the Luxembourg gardens, addressed him with Forties's report of conversations which he had with Kingshurgh and his wife (Lyon, ii. 209), there is a passage referring to the night which Charles spent in their house :— * The Prince ate four roasted eggs, some collops, plenty of bread and butter, and— to use the words of Mrs Macdonald— " the deil a drap did he want of twa bottles of sma' beer ; God do him good o't ; for weel I wat he had my blessing to gae doun wi't." After he had made a plentiful supper, he called for a dram, and when the bottle of brandy was brought, he said he would fill the glass for himself, " for," said he, "J have learned in my skulking to take a hearty dram." He filled up a bumper, and drank it off to the happi- ness and prosperity of his landlord and landlady.' These, and other like cir- cumstances, are mentioned by the reporters, without apparently the remotest idea that the habits of the Prince were in danger of being permanently af- fected ; but their value as testimony is not the worse on that account. I in- troduce them here in a spirit far from that of blame. Charles had previously, like most natives of southern Europe, been unaccustomed to liquor. On such a person the drinking customs of the people amongst whom he fell were cal- culated to have a fatal effect. It would also appear, from what we every day see amongst the miserably poor, that there is a condition of defective physical comfort in which alcohol presents itself as a remedy and compensation, and in that character is scarcely to be resisted by human weakness. This law is of course as ready to operate upon a prince, suddenly reduced to personal misery, as upon a wretch who has long known it, and perhaps even more so. Probably the habits originally contracted under physical discomfort were, in the Prince's case, revived and confirmed afterwards under the anguish of a disappointed and exasperated spirit, which had unfortunately not been trained to look for superior consolations. 404 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. an air of pleasantry, but with a latent sneer, on this sub- ject. The device, he said, was not very applicable, for the British navy had not proved very friendly to him. ' Cela est vrai, prince,' said Charles; 'mais je suis non obstant Pami de la flotte contre tous ses ennemis ; comme je regarderai toujours la gloire d'Angleterre comme lamienne, et sa gloire est dans sa flotte ! ' l He appears in a more respectable light in the protest for a reservation of his rights which he caused to be presented to the represen- tatives of the various powers met at Aix-la-Chapelle. This document, dated at Paris July 16th, after alluding to the wrongs suffered by his house, and stating the powers granted him by his father, protests c against all which may be said, done, or stipulated in the assembly to the preju- dice and diminution of the lawful rights of our most honoured father and lord, of our own, of the princes or princesses that are or will be born of our royal house.' f We declare,' it proceeds, ' that we regard, and always will regard, as null, void, and of no effect, everything that may be statuted or stipulated which may tend to the acknow- ledgment of any other person whatsoever as sovereign of the kingdoms of Great Britain, besides the person of the most high and most excellent prince, James the Third, our most honoured lord and father, and, in default of him, the person of the nearest heir, agreeably to the fundamental laws of Great Britain.' Finally, 'we declare to all the sub- jects of our most honoured lord and father, and more par- ticularly to those who have given us recently shining proofs of their attachment to the interests of our royal family, and to the primitive constitution of their country, that nothing shall ever alter the lively and sincere love which our birth inspires us with for them ; and that the just gratitude which we have for their fidelity, zeal, and courage, shall never be effaced from our heart. That so far from listening to any proposition that tends to destroy or weaken the indissoluble ties which unite us, we look, and always will look, upon ourselves as under the most in- timate and indispensable obligation to be constantly atten- tive to all that may contribute to their happiness, and that we shall always be ready to spill the very last drop of our blood to deliver them from a foreign yoke.' 2 M. Montes- quieu, to whom Charles submitted a copy of this protest, 1 ' That is very true, prince ; but nevertheless I am a friend to the navy against all enemies whatever, as I shall always look upon the glory of Eng- land as my own, and her glory is in her navy.' 2 These extracts are from a translation of the French original in the Rev. Mr Forbes's collection of papers. PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. 405 complimented him on it, as written with simplicity, with dignity, and even with eloquence. He enclosed a copy of the paper to the king of France, assuring him that, while obliged thus to defend his rights, he entertained the greatest respect for his majesty's sacred person, and hoped never to forfeit his friendship. The treaty, meanwhile, was known to contain a clause stipulating that Charles should no longer reside in France. His voluntary retirement from the kingdom was every day looked for; but in vain. When the king perceived that Charles made no motion to leave his dominions, he des- patched the Cardinal de Tencin with instructions to hint to him, in as delicate a manner as possible, the necessity of his taking that step. The cardinal performed his office with the greatest discretion, and endeavoured with all his eloquence to palliate the conduct of his master. But Charles treated him only with evasive answers, and he was obliged to withdraw without having obtained any satisfac- tory avowal of his Royal Highnesses intentions. The king waited for some days, in the hope that Charles would depart, but was then obliged to despatch another messen- ger with still more urgent intreaties. The person selected for this purpose was the Duke de Gesvres, governor of Paris, who, besides instructions to urge his departure, carried a carte blanche, which the Prince was requested to fill up with any sum he might please to demand as a pension, in consideration of his obeying the king's wishes. When this ambassador disclosed his proposals to Charles, he is said to have treated them with unequivocal marks of contempt, saying that ' pensions were quite out of the question in the present case, and that he only wished the king to keep his word.' The duke pointed out the necessity of the negotiations which required his departure from France ; but Charles, on the other hand, insisted upon the previous treaty between his most Christian majesty and himself, by which they had become mutual allies. The Duke de Gesvres being thus unsuccessful, the Count de Maurepas and the pope's nuncio were one after another sent upon the same errand, and the king even wrote a letter to him with his own hand ; but all without effect. As no attempt was made by either party to conceal these strange proceedings, they soon became known over Europe. In Paris they excited a degree of interest such as no public event was ever before known to occasion. For a person in such peculiar circumstances to thwart the intentions, and disregard the power, of the Grand Monarch, was esteemed 406 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. in that region a most extraordinary instance of daring. His exploits in Scotland, and the fascinating graces of his person, had previously disposed the Parisians to an extra- vagant degree of admiration, and it was completed when to these charms was added that arising from his unmerited distresses. He now became an object of even more attrac- tion than the king himself. Whenever he appeared upon the public walks, the whole company followed him. When he entered the theatre, he became the sole spectacle of the place. On all occasions he seemed the only person who was insensible to the sorrows of his fate; and while he talked with his usual gaiety to the young noblemen who surrounded him, no one could speak of him without ad- miration, and some could not behold him without tears. The public feeling so liberally excited in his favour was by no means agreeable to the king, and far less to the ministry. There were other personages whom it yet further offended. These were the Earl of Sussex and Lord Cath- cart, two British noblemen, then residing in Paris as hos- tages to guarantee the restoration of Cape Breton to its original proprietors the French, in terms of the treaty. Charles was known to have commented with bitterness upon the meanness of the British government in giving hostages to France ; and the two noblemen could not help, moreover, feeling personally piqued at the respect which was everywhere shown to the public enemy of their country, while they themselves were treated with ill- suppressed contempt. They therefore complained to the French monarch that there was one important article of the treaty which he had not fulfilled. His majesty gave them for answer that he only waited the return of a mes- senger from Rome, with an answer to a letter which he had written to the old Pretender, demanding that Charles should be withdrawn, by paternal authority, from the king- dom, before taking active measures to that effect. The messenger mentioned by the king returned on the 9th of December (1748) with a letter from the old chevalier, enclosing another, under a flying seal, addressed to his son, in which he commanded the Prince to obey the king's wishes. His majesty, after having read the last epistle, sent it to Charles, by way of giving him a last chance of declaring his submission to the royal authority ; but the inflexible Prince thought proper to hold out even against his father's commands. He declared openly that no pen- sions, promises, or advantages whatever should induce him to renounce his just rights ; that, on the contrary, he was PRINCE CHARLES IN FRANCE. 407 resolved to consecrate the last moments of his life to their recovery. The king no sooner learned that he was still unwilling to depart, than he called a council of state, where it was determined to arrest him, and carry him out of the kingdom by force. Louis was still so averse to treat his unfortunate ally with disrespect, and still entertained so much regard for him, that when the order for his arrest was presented for signature, he exclaimed, with sorrow which we may hope was not affected, ' Ah, pauvre prince ! qu'il est difficile pour un roi d'etre un veritable ami ! ' — ( ( Ah, poor prince! how difficult it is for a king to be a true friend !') The order was signed at three o'clock in the afternoon, but it was blazed all over Paris before the evening. A person of the Prince's retinue heard and carried him the intelligence, but he affected not to believe it. Next day (December 10), as he was walking in the Tuilleries, a person of condition informed him that he would certainly be seized that very day if he did not pre- vent it by an immediate departure; but, resolved to put the government to the last extremity, he treated the intel- ligence as chimerical, and turning to one of his followers, ordered a box to be hired for him that night at the opera. The preparations made for his arrest were upon a scale proportioned to the importance of his character, or rather were dictated by the extent of public favour which he was supposed to enjoy. No fewer than twelve hundred of the guards were drawn out and posted in the court of the Palais-Royal ; a great number of sergeants and grenadiers, armed in cuirasses and helmets, filled the passage of the opera-house ; the guet, or city police, were stationed in the streets to stop all carriages. The sergeants of the grena- diers, as the most intrepid, were selected to seize the Prince. Two companies of grenadiers took post in the courtyard of the kitchens, where the Duke de Biron, com- mander of the French guards, and who was commissioned to superintend, waited in a coach, disguised, to see the issue of the enterprise. The mousquetairs had orders to be ready to mount on horseback ; troops were posted upon the road from the Palais-Royal to the state-prison of Vincennes, in which the Prince was to be disposed. Hatchets and scaling-ladders were prepared, and locksmiths directed to attend, in order to take his Royal Highness by escalade, in case he should throw himself into some house, and there attempt to stand a siege. A physician and three surgeons, moreover, were ordered to be in readiness to dress whoever might be wounded. 408 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Into this well-prepared and formidable trap Charles entered with all the unthinking* boldness of a desperate man. Scorning" the repeated warning's he had received, and disregarding a friendly voice which told him, as he passed along* in his carriage, that the opera-house was beset, he drove up as usual to that place; where he no sooner alighted on the ground, than he was surrounded by six sergeants dressed in plain clothes, who seized his per- son ; one taking care of each limb, while other two crossed their arms, and bore him oif the street into the courtyard of the Palais-Royal ; the soldiers in the meantime keeping off the crowd with fixed bayonets, and seizing the few per- sons who attended him. When he was brought into the courtyard, Major de Vaudreuil, who had been deputed to act by the Duke de Biron, approached his Royal Highness and said, ' Prince, your arms : I arrest you in the name of the king.' Charles immediately presented his sword ; but that not satisfying his captors, they searched his person, and found a pair of pistols and a poniard, together with a penknife and a book, all of which they removed. They then bound him with silk cord, of which the duke had pro- vided ten ells on purpose, and hurried him into a hired coach, which was immediately driven off, attended by a strong guard. Another party in the meantime entered his palace, and arrested all his followers and servants, who were immediately conveyed to the Bastile, though soon afterwards liberated. Charles was conveyed to the castle of Vincennes, and thrust into an upper room of narrow dimensions, 1 where he was left to seek repose, attended by only a single friend — the faithful Neil Mackechan, who, with Flora Macdonald, had accompanied him in his journey through Skye. 2 So long as he was in the presence of the soldiers, or any officers of the French government, he had maintained a lofty air, and spoken in a haughty tone, as if to show that he was superior to his misfortunes ; but when finally left in this desolate chamber, with only a friend to observe him, he gave way to the tumult of pain- ful feeling which agitated his breast. Throwing himself upon a chair, according to the report of Mackechan, as afterwards communicated to a family in Skye, he elasped 1 The account of the Prince's seizure is from ' An Authentic Account of the Young Chevalier in France,' London, 1749. It is supported by a letter amongst the Stuart Papers, Browne's Appendix, No. clxviii. 2 Neil Mackechan or Macdonald had been, at the Prince's desire, appointed a lieutenant in Lord Ogiivie's regiment of the Scotch Brigade in the service of France. He subsequently had a pension of 300 livres per annum.— Letter of Colonel John Macdonald {son of Flora), MS., in possession of the author. MEASURES FOR PREVENTION, &C. 409 his hands together, and bursting 1 into tears, exclaimed, 1 Ah, my faithful mountaineers ! you would never have treated me thus ! Would I were still with you ! ' — his mind apparently reverting at this moment of peculiar distress to the transient glories of his late brilliant though unhappy enterprise. Charles was kept in confinement till the 15th, when, having given his parole that he would not return to the French dominions, he was taken from Yincennes, and carried by easy stages, under a guard, to Avignon. CHAPTER XXXI. MEASURES FOR PREVENTION OF FURTHER DISTURBANCES. * Sir, I have heard another story- He was a most confounded Tory, And grew, or he is much belied, Extremely dull before he died.' In the parliamentary session of 1747, several measures were brought forward and passed, for the purpose of pre- venting future disturbance on account of the succession. The first was one of mercy, an act of indemnity granting pardon to all who still survived of the late offenders, except- ing about eighty persons mentioned by name, these being generally individuals of some note in the insurrection, or who had been connected with it. 1 At the same time that this 1 Of noblemen excepted, there were the Earls of Traquair and Clancarty; of baronets, Sir James Steuart, Sir John Douglas, Sir James Harrington, Sir James Campbell, Sir William Dunbar, and Sir Alexander Bannerman ; of Highland chiefs and gentlemen of note, Macdonnell of Glengarry, Macleod of Raasay, Macgregor of Glengyle, Grant of Glenmorriston, Robertson of Struan, Chisholm of Comar, Drummond of Bochaldy, Fraser of Foyers, Fraserof Gortuleg, Fraser of Browick, iEneas and James Macdonald, brothers to the late Kinlochmoidart, Stuart of Kynnachin, Robertson of Blairfetty, Robertson of Faskally, and Robert Murray (originally Macgregor) of Glencar- nock ; of Lowland gentlemen of note, Archibald Stuart, late Lord Provost of Edinburgh, Thomas Blair of Glasclune, James Carnegy of Boysack, Charles Cumming of Kinninmond, John Fullerton younger of Dud wick, Alexander Gordon of Carnousie, John Gordon of Avachie, Robert Gordon younger of Logie, James Gordon of Glastyrum, David Hunter of Burnside, John Halden of Lanrick, Andrew Hay younger of Rannes, Alexander Irvine of Drum, James Moir of Stoneywood, Thomas Ogilvie of East Mill, Thomas Ogilvie of Coul, James Stirling of Craigbarnet, John Turner younger ef Tur- nerhall, and Andrew Wauchope of Niddry. The act also excepted those who had formerly been specified in what was called the Act of Attainder. That act, which had been passed in the month of May 1746, after reciting that on or before April 18, certain persons named had traitorously levied war against the king, and were now fled from justice, enacted that the said persons 410 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. act was passed (June 1747), a considerable number of per- sons, including* those who had been apprehended for their concern in the Prince's escape, were liberated. An act was passed for enforcing those already in exist- ence for disarming* the Highlanders. It was now ordained that if any man residing within the Highland line should fail to deliver up his arms before the 1st of August 1747, or if any man should attempt to conceal arms either in his house or in the fields, he was to be for the first offence fined in fifteen pounds, and imprisoned without bail till payment. If payment was not made within one month, he was to be transported to America as a common soldier, if able to serve ; if not able to serve, he was to be imprisoned for six months, and then only liberated on finding security for his good behaviour during the next ten years. If the offender was a woman, she was to be fined in the same sum, im- prisoned till payment, and afterwards confined for six months. A second offence against this law was to be visited should be held guilty of high treason and stand attainted, if they did not v surrender themselves to justice before the 12th of July. The persons named in this act were — Alexander, Earl of Kellie ; William, Viscount of Strath- allan ; Alexander, Lord Pitsligo ; David Wemyss, Esq., commonly called Lord Elcho, eldest son and heir-apparent of James, Earl of Wemyss ; James Drummond, Esq., eldest son and heir-apparent of William, Viscount of Strathallan; Simon Fraser, Esq., eldest son and heir-apparent of Simon Lord Lovat ; George Murray, Esq., commonly called Lord George Murray, brother to James, Duke of Athol ; Lewis Gordon, Esq., commonly called Lord Lewis Gordon, brother to Cosmo George, Duke of Gordon ; James Drum- mond, taking upon himself the title of Duke of Perth ; James Graham, late of Duntroon, taking on himself the title of Viscount of Dundee ; John Nairn, taking upon himself the title or style of Lord Nairn ; David Ogilvie, taking upon himself the title of Lord Ogilvie ; John Drummond, taking upon him- self the style or title of Lord John Drummond, brother to James Drummond, taking on himself the title of Duke of Perth ; Robert Mercer, Esq., otherwise Nairn of Aldie ; Sir William Gordon of Park ; John Murray of Broughton, Esq. ; John Gordon the elder of Glenbucket ; Donald Cameron the younger of Locheil ; Dr Archibald Cameron, brother to Donald Cameron the younger of Locheil ; Ludovick Cameron of Tor Castle ; Alexander Cameron of Dungallon ; Donald Macdonald of Clanranald, junior, son to Ronald Macdonald of Clanranald; Donald Macdonald of Lochgarry; Alexander Macdonald of Keppoch ; Archibald Macdonald, son of Colonel Macdonald of Barrisdale ; Alexander Macdonald of Glencoe ; Evan Macpherson of Clunie ; Lauchlan Maclauchlan of Castle Lauchlan ; John Mackinnon of Mackinnon ; Charles Stewart of Ardsheil ; George Lockhart, eldest son and heir-apparent of George Lockhart of Carnwath ; Lawrence Oliphant the elder of Gask ; Lawrence Oliphant the younger of Gask ; James Graham the younger of Airth ; John Stuart, commonly called John Roy Stuart ; Francis Far- quharson of Monalterye ; Alexander Macgilivrae of Drumaglash ; Lauchlan Mackintosh, merchant at Inverness; Malcolm Ross, son of Alexander Ross of Pitcalny ; Alexander Macleod, son to Mr John Macleod, advocate ; John Hay, portioner of Restalrig, writer to the signet ; Andrew Lumsdale, other- wise Lumsdain, son to William Lumsdale, otherwise Lumsdain, wrjjtsiL in Edinburgh ; and William Fidler, clerk in the auditor's office in the Ex- chequer of Scotland. MEASURES FOR PREVENTION, &C. 411 with no less a punishment than transportation for seven years. Not only were the Highlanders deprived of their arms, but their very dress was proscribed, and by still severer penalties. The same act ordained that, after the 1st of August 1747, if any person, whether man or boy, within the same tract of country, were found wearing the clothes commonly called * the Highland clothes;' that is, the plaid, philabeg, trews, shoulder-belts, or any part whatsoever of the Highland garb, or if any person were found to wear a dress composed of tartan or party-coloured cloth, he should be imprisoned six months without bail for the first offence, and on its repetition be transported for seven years. It was thus hoped that not only would the Highlanders be incapable of again levying war against the state, but that, their distinction as a nation being destroyed, they would with all haste become obedient servants to govern- ment, like the rest of the community. As might have been expected, the result was very different. The clans were, it is true, effectually prevented from ever again going to the field against the House of Hanover, but they were not induced to regard that family or their government with any additional degree of favour. On the contrary, their previous disaffection was exasperated by these harsh mea- sures into absolute hatred. < Even the loyal clans/ says Dr Johnson, t murmured with an appearance of justice, that after having defended the king, they were forbidden for the future to defend themselves, and that the sword should be forfeited which had been legally employed.' But if the loss of their arms occasioned discontent, the change of their dress produced feelings still less favourable to the existing government. Had the whole race been deci- mated, as their historian General Stewart remarks, more violent grief, indignation, and shame could not have been excited among them than by this encroachment upon their dearest national prejudices. It may be said, in conclusion, that if the Highlanders have eventually become good ser- vants to the state, and undistinguishable in dress and demeanour from the rest of the population, no part of the blessing is to be ascribed to this enactment. The next act of the legislature was the celebrated one for abolishing heritable jurisdictions in Scotland. It was sup- posed that, by putting an end to the power which all land- proprietors had hitherto possessed of judging in civil and criminal cases among their dependents, the spirit of clan- 412 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. ship would receive a mortal blow. Accordingly, it was resolved to buy up all these petty jurisdictions "from the proprietors, and to vest them in sheriffs, who should be appointed by the king*. It was also resolved that the hereditary justiciarship of Scotland, vested in the family of Argyle, should be purchased, and transferred to the High Court and Circuit Courts of Justiciary, and that all constabularies should be abolished, except the office of high constable. The whole sum granted by par- liament in exchange for the heritable jurisdictions was £152,000 — one of the cheapest purchases of patronage and power ever made. A companion act abolished the right of •ward-holding, by which landlords commanded the military services of their tenants. By these means the last conspi- cuous features of the feudal system were brought to an end in Scotland. Another act bore reference to the religious body styled the Scottish Episcopalians. The Episcopal church had ceased to be the established religion of the country, when its supporters, the Stuarts, ceased to reign over Britain. Previously to that period, it had been un- popular among the lower orders of people — originally, on account of a prejudice which they had against formalities, and latterly, on account of the injudicious persecutions which this church was the occasion of bringing upon the Presbyterians. Want of popular favour joined at the Revo- lution with another circumstance to procure its downfall. King William, before leaving Holland, had promised, in a declaration, to maintain it in all its privileges ; and when he had settled himself at London, he was prepared to keep his promise. On proceeding, however, to sound the bishops as to their affection to his government, he found them ob- stinate in their adherence to the former monarch, alleging that, as they had already sworn to be faithful to James and his heirs — for such was then the tenor of the oath of alle- giance — they could not in conscience transfer their fealty to him. William then saw fit to establish the Presbyterian church, the members of which, he understood, had already testified their abhorrence of the late government by dese- crating the fanes of Episcopacy, and rabbling out its clergy. From this time the Episcopal form of worship was marked as the religion of the Jacobites, and subjected to a variety of restrictions and persecutions, not more at the hands of the reformed government, than at those of the Presbyterian clergy and common people. In the reign of Queen Anne, when the Earl of Strathmore endeavoured to obtain an act of parliament i for the toleration of all Protestants in the MEASURES FOR PREVENTION, &C. 413 exercise of religious worship/ a strong representation was offered against it by the General Assembly, concluding in these words — ' that they were persuaded that to enact a toleration for those in the Episcopal way — which God in his infinite mercy avert! — would be to establish iniquity by a law, and would bring upon the promoters thereof, and their families, the dreadful guilt of all those sins and pernicious effects that might ensue thereupon. 71 The Episcopal forms continued, nevertheless, to be adhered to by the greater part of the wealth, and rank, and no mean portion of the intel- ligence of the country, down to the year 1745, when, as already mentioned, its chapels sent forth not a few enthu- siasts to join the standard of Prince Charles, and it of course attracted the determined hostility of the existing govern- ment. Duke William, in his march to the north, finding it identified beyond all doubt with the disaffection of the dis- trict of Angus, had thought proper to visit it with the terrors of military law ; and the battle of Culloden had only been gained one week, when he succeeded in closing up every place of worship throughout the country in which a nonjuring clergyman officiated. On this occasion the Bibles, prayer-books, and other furniture of many of the chapels were taken out by the soldiers and openly burnt, and even the buildings were in some instances destroyed. It was now resolved to subject the Episcopalian body to a system of persecution which might have the colour of law. An act was accordingly passed, less than three months after the conclusion of the war, by which it was ordained that any Episcopal clergyman officiating after the 1st of September 1746, without having taken the oaths of allegiance, abju- ration, and assurance, or without praying once, during the performance of worship, for the king, his heirs and suc- cessors, and for all the royal family, should, for the first offence, suffer six months 7 imprisonment; for the second (upon conviction before the High Court of Justiciary), be transported to the American plantations for life, and, in case of returning from banishment, be subjected to perpetual imprisonment. It was also ordained that no proprietor of a closed Episcopal meeting-house should regain possession of it till he gave security for £100 that he would not again permit it to be occupied by a nonjuring clergyman. In order to prevent these unfortunate ministers from officiating even in private, it was also enacted that every house in which five or more persons met to hear them perform 1 Belsham's History of England, i. 293. 414 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. service, should be considered a meeting-house within the meaning* of the act. With a purpose still more malevolent — that of entirely destroying" the apostolical ordination which the clergy of the Scottish Episcopal church had con- tinued to transmit from one to another since the Revolution — it was decreed that no letters of orders should be regis- tered after the 1st of September, except such as had been given by the church of England or the church of Ireland. Cruel as this persecution was, it might not eventually have injured the church so much, if it had not also extended to the laity. The act declared that if, after the 1st of Sep- tember 1746, any person should resort to an illegal Epis- copal meeting-house, and not give notice within five days of such illegal meeting to some proper magistrate, he should be subjected to fine or imprisonment. It declared further that no peer of Scotland should be capable of being elected one of the sixteen peers of parliament, or of voting at such election; and that no person should be capable of being elected a member of parliament for any shire or burgh who should, within the compass of any future year, be twice present at divine service in an Episcopal meeting in Scot- land not held according to law. In this state of things, 1 some of the clergy, who, though steady and zealous Episcopalians, had always professed themselves not Jacobites, feeling it their duty to render their chapels legal meeting-houses, repaired to the proper magistrates, took the oaths to government required by the act, and got their letters of orders registered before the 1st of September. But this compliance availed them nothing. In May 1748, the act of 1746 was amended, and an enact- ment made that no letters of orders not granted by some bishop of the church of England or of Ireland should be sufficient to qualify any Scottish Episcopal pastor, whether the same had been registered before or since the 1st of September 1746 ; and that every such registration, whether made before or since, should now be null and void. This act was directed against the very religion of the Scottish Episcopalians, for it precluded them from the privileges of political repentance. As such it was felt by the English bishops, not one of whom ventured to support the bill, while some spoke strenuously against it, as a flagrant attack on the leading principles of Christian liberty. That these statutes were not mere matters of form, but that the penalties were rigorously put in execution, could 1 Keith's Catalogue, with Appendix, by the Rev. Dr Russell, p. 511. MEASURES FOR PREVENTION, &C. 415 be proved by numerous instances. One clergyman, not more distinguished by his well-known poetical genius than by his piety and private worth, the Rev. John Skinner of Longmay in Aberdeenshire, was imprisoned, in terms of the second act, for six months, in the public jail of the county town, although he had previously taken all the loyal oaths, and for two years prayed for the king by name. Other clergymen, who did not pray for the king by name, suffered similar imprisonments ; and a few were obliged to take refuge in England and elsewhere from the penalties with which they were threatened. The general result of the two statutes was simply to annihilate the conscientious portion of the church. It was now impossible for a lay member of it to con- tinue in the faith of his forefathers and that of his own youth, without incurring* disqualifications of the most grievous sort. Altogether, the persecutions to which the church was subjected were of a nature even more severe than those with which the Presbyterians were visited in the reign of Charles II. In what are considered the hottest periods of that persecution, the clergymen were permitted to retain parish churches, upon the simple con- dition of yielding verbal obedience to the government, and not one individual suffered punishment who was not also a rebel against the state. But in this persecution of a later and milder time, the whole clergy were deprived of even the privileges of dissenters, and exposed to the severest punishment, except death, for simply withholding their al- legiance. The Presbyterians could at any time have saved themselves by pronouncing the Scriptural phrase, ' God save the king ; ' but the Episcopalians could not escape, without actually perjuring themselves — without swearing (by the oath of abjuration) that they believed, what no unprejudiced man could believe, that the Pretender was a supposititious child. If the persecution of the Episcopalians surpassed that of the Presbyterians in severity, it is not less true that the members of the former church displayed fully as much con- stancy under their afflictions. Instead of fomenting civil rebellion, or declaiming in their private assemblies against the government which treated them with so much cruelty, they submitted with meekness to a fate which they could not controvert. Instead of flying* to the fields and publish- ing their grievances at conventicles, they sought to admi- nister those ordinances to private families which they were prevented from dispensing to a congregation. Individual 416 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. clergymen have thus been known to perform worship no less than sixteen times in one day. 1 However much the historian of this period may he dis- posed to condemn the cruelty displayed in these statutes, he must certainly acknowledge that they were attended eventually with the desired effect of disabling* the malcon- tent part of the community. By the first, the Highlanders were deprived of the means of carrying" on an active war- fare, and put in a fair way of becoming* amalgamated with the rest of the community. By the second, the whole people of Scotland were emancipated from their obligations to the aristocracy, and enabled to prosecute commercial and agricultural enterprise with increased effect. By the third, a religious community which had formerly cherished un- failing affection for the House of Stuart was completely broken up, and in a manner compelled to transfer their allegiance to the existing government. The spirit of Jacobitism, during its period of decay, was 1 The shifts to which the Jacobite Episcopalians were put, in order to per- form the ceremonies of religion without incurring legal vengeance, were quite as distressing as those of the nonconformists of King Charles's time. In the Episcopal Register of Muthill in Perthshire there is the following entry, under date of March 20, 1750, in the handwriting of the Rev. William Erskine, Episcopal minister there (father of the late William Erskine, Esq. advocate, better known by his senatorial title of Lord Kinedder) :— ' N.B. — With such excessive severity were the penal laws executed at this time, that Andrew Moir having neglected to keep his appointment with me at my own house this morning, and following me to Lord Rollo's house of Duncrub, we could not take the child into a house, but I was obliged to go under the cover of trees in one of Lord Rollo's parks, to prevent our being discovered, and baptise the child there — namely, Helen, lawful daughter of Andrew Moir and Anne Grey, in Crofthead of Fairnton, born the 18th, and was baptised the 20th of March 1750.' The following anecdote may be related as illustrative of the magnanimity which these unfortunate clergymen occasionally displayed under their afflict- ing circumstances. It refers to an old lady who died lately (1827) in Edin- burgh, and who related it to my informant. This person was born at Dundee, and had the fortune to be the granddaughter, paternally, of a minister of the Established church, while her grandfather by the mother's side was a bishop of the Episcopal communion. Her mother wished ardently that she should be baptised by her father the bishop, while her husband's father, on the other hand, was determined to perform that office himself. Such was the state of the times, that the bishop could not act in the way proposed without great danger, nor was he sure that the paternal grandfather of the child might not be so much exasperated as to inform upon him. Firmly edified, however, in the certainty that his conduct was worthy in the eyes of God, whatever might be its merits in those of men, he resolved to brave every contingency. So firmly, indeed, was he determined to perform his duty, that on reaching his daughter's room, he made this remarkable declaration — ' If there were a gibbet,' he said, 'in one corner of the room, and the child in the other corner, and if I were informed that the said gibbet was to be the certain and immediate penalty of my conduct, still would I baptise the child!* He had just concluded the ceremony when the paternal grandfather arrived to perform the rite in his peculiar way, but as there were no hostile witnesses to prove what had been done, it was impossible to punish the celebrator. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 417 something very different from what it had been in the year 1745. It had till that period been the spirit of young as well as old people, and possessed sufficient strength to excite its votaries into active warfare. But as the Stuarts then ceased to acquire fresh adherents, and their claims became daily more and more obsolete, it was now left entirely to the generation which had witnessed its glories ; in other words, became dependent upon the existence of a few old enthusiasts, more g*enerally of the female than the male sex. After this period, indeed, Jacobitism became identified with the weakness of old age, and ceased to have the power of moving any heart, except one which mig*ht have throbbed with love for Prince Charles, or heaved to the stern music of Gladsmuir and Culloden. CHAPTER XXXII. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. ' Last scene of all, That ends this strange eventful history.' Prince Charles was left at the end of 1748 in Avignon, immediately after having been liberated from the castle of Yincennes. He had not been two months in that city, when suddenly he disappeared, and for a long time little was known of his motions, It is now ascertained that he privately returned into France, attended only by a Colonel Goring, and that in May he visited Paris. About this time he is supposed to have contemplated a match with a prin- cess of the house of Hesse Darmstadt ; but no serious nego- tiation seems ever to have been entered upon. For more than a year he was lost sight of by his friends, and even by his father and brother. Morbid feeling, acting upon a character naturally secretive, seems to have been the cause of this strange conduct. During this time his father occa- sionally addressed letters to him, complaining of his capri- cious behaviour, but in terms of affecting mildness. He first reappears when, according- to Dr King, he visited London. i September . . , 1750/ says that gentleman, 1 1 Political and Literary Anecdotes of his own Times, by Dr William King, Principal of St Mary's Hall, Oxon. Second edition, 1819. Dr King had been a keen Jacobite, and was one of the ablest literary men of the party in 1745. VOL. V. 2 A 418 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. 1 1 received a note from my Lady Primrose, who desired to see me immediately. As soon as I waited on her, she led me into her dressing-room, and presented me to .* If I was surprised to find him there, I was still more astonished when he acquainted me with the motives which had induced him to hazard a journey to England at this juncture. The impatience of his friends who were in exile had formed a scheme which was impracticable ; but although it had been as feasible as they had represented it to him, yet no preparation had been made, nor was anything ready to carry it into execution. He was soon convinced that he had been deceived, and therefore, after a stay in London of five days only, he returned to the place from whence he came.' The writer adds in a note, * He came one evening to my lodgings and drank tea with me : my servant, after he was gone, said to me " that he thought my new visitor very like Prince Charles." " Why," said I, " have you ever seen Prince Charles?" "No, sir," replied the fellow; " but this gentleman, whoever he may be, exactly resembles the busts of him which are sold in Red Lion Street, and are said to be the busts of Prince Charles." The truth is, these busts were taken in plaster of Paris from his face.' It would appear that something of im- portance was contemplated on this occasion by the Prince, as he obtained, with a view to it, a renewal of his powers from his father. Obscurity again settles upon him for a period. Where he travelled, or where he stayed, what name and character he assumed, and by whom he was attended, were unknown to his friends in Britain, and even to those abroad who might have been expected to be most in his confidence. One gentleman who knew him, found him, in April 1752, for a few days at Campvere in the island of Middleburg. He appears, from published papers, to have trafficked a little with the Swedish court, with a view to aid towards a new enterprise ; and I have been informed that at Stockholm there are traces of his having once resided there, particu- larly the insignia he wore in some high masonic character, which are still preserved in one of the lodges established in that city. A letter, of date 12th November 1753, signed He lived to see the prudence of reconciling himself to the reigning family, and being then of course much reviled by his former party, seems to have contracted a furious antipathy to the Prince and all who still adhered to him. I have no doubt that much of what he has written respecting Charles is untrue, and that the rest is grossly exaggerated. The evidence of a party deserter respecting his late friends should obviously be received with caution. 1 The Prince. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 419 with his incognito name John Douglas, but without place, 1 informs Colonel Goring that he had written to Avignon to pay off all his Papist servants, and his mistress, who was also a Papist, and had behaved insolently, but that he still retained two gentlemen and all the Protestant servants. Another letter adds the reason for dismiss- ing his servants, 6 as I am not able to maintain them any more,' and further expresses his hope that if they go to Rome his father will maintain them. The preference of the Protestant to the Catholic servants would seem to indicate attachment for the former religion, which he is said to have about this time embraced. In a letter to his father's secretary, Edgar, 24th March, 1754, 2 we have some revelations showing a decidedly morbid state of mind. ' I 1 Browne's Appendix. 2 This Mr Edgar acted as private secretary to the old chevalier for nearly fifty years. He was a fine specimen of the high-minded, wami-hearted, old Scottish gentleman — a character at no time difficult to find in the Jacohite party, whatever may be thought of the judgment shown by it in its general aims and purposes. To a great-grandniece of Mr Edgar I am indebted for the following particulars : — * Some considerable time after the '15, the British government had reason to believe that another attempt was to be made for the exiled family. Sir Robert Walpole directed his spies to learn who was most in King James's confidence, and what were the character and circumstances of the indivi- dual. He was told that the king's private secretary was the younger son of a Scotch laird of small fortune ; that he was of a generous, hospitable turn, fond of entertaining his countrymen when in Rome ; and that he had but a small salary. This was just what Sir Robert wanted, and he wrote to Edgar, offering a handsome sum if he would betray the intentions of his master. Edgar put the letter into the fire, and returned no answer. Several other epistles, bearing advancing offers, met the same fate. Sir Robert, thinking he had not yet come up to the secretary's price, then wrote (and this time with- out making any conditions) that he had placed ten thousand pounds in the Bank of Venice in the name of Mr Edgar. The secretary then consulted his master, and after a brief interval, returned for answer that he had received Sir Robert's letter. He thanked him for the ten thousand pounds, which he had lost no time in drawing from the bank, and had just laid at the feet of his royal master, who had the best title to gold that came, as this had done, from England. * My mother, when in her teens, during her first visit to Edinburgh, heard this story told at a dinner-party in the house of Dr Webster, amongst a com- pany consisting chiefly of Jacobites, by Mr Andrew Lumisden, who had \ succeeded her granduncle as secretary during the few years in which King James survived his faithful servant. She was delighted with the anecdote, but had doubts of its truth, as she had never heard her father mention it. On retiring from the party, she wrote to her father begging to know if it was true, and if so, why he had never told her of it. The reply was — it was per- fectly true, but that she need not wonder that he had not boasted of his uncle being an honest man. * My mother has several private letters from her granduncle to his nephew (her father), written after the return of the latter from his ten years' exile, consequent on his joining the Prince in '45. They exhibit the amiable cha- racter of the dear old man in the most engaging light. His warm affection for his friends, his native land, and the home of his childhood, continued to the last, though he lived and died far away from all.' 420 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. am grieved to think that our master [his father] should think that my silence was either neglect or want of duty ; but in reality my situation is such, that I have nothing to say but imprecations against the fatality of being born in such a detestable age. There are only two things that, with all due respect that I have, and shall always have, for my master, who is so great a lover of justice that he will never exact from me, and that I can never be capable to do. These are such things as may be either against my interest or honour. My interest does not imply any human views, but only such steps as can conduct to the prosperity and happiness of our country. The unworthy behaviour of certain ministers of 10th December 1748, has put it out of my power to settle anywhere without honour or interest being at stake ; and were it even possible for me to find a place of abode, I think our family have had sufferings enough, that will always hinder me to marry as long as in misfortune, for that would only conduce to increase misery, or subject any of the family that would have the spirit of their father to be tied neck and heel rather than yield to a vile ministry.' Amongst other distresses, he seems about this time to have been troubled by creditors. In September 1754, he writes to Cluny Macpherson, who had remained till now in hiding in Scotland, requiring him to come over with all the money which had been left under his care in Scotland, ' for I happen to be at present in great straits. 5 He made anxious application to the Earl Marischal for his services ; but his lordship was too little disposed to approve of his conduct to commit himself personally even as an adviser. In 1755, a gentleman whose name is given as D s (perhaps Dawkins) communicated to some of the Jacobite party in Britain a very unfavourable account of the Prince's conduct, representing him as one abandoned to a debauched life, insomuch as to bring his health, and even his life, into danger — that in his excesses he had no guard on his con- duct or expressions, and was in some degree void of reason — that he was always too precipitate in taking his resolu- tions, and was then obstinate and deaf to the most solid advice — that he put no value on, and was ungrateful for, the very best services, and was unforgiving and revengeful for the very smallest offence — in short, that he united in his single person all the vices and faults that had ever been in his family, without one of their virtues. In consequence of this representation, certain individuals, whose names have not become known, commissioned a gentleman to SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 421 cany over from them a memorial, reciting" all which had been said, and pointing out the great injury it was calcu- lated to give to his prospects in Britain ; intreating 1 him at the same time to live with circumspection and decency, and proposing to send to him some person entirely trusted by them who might act as his counsellor. It seems likely that a threat to break with him, in the event of his not listening* to their remonstrance, was carried by the mes- senger. The Prince, only enraged by the charges broug'ht against him, replied in scornful terms. l Gentlemen/ he says, ' I some time ago received a very surprising message, delivered in a still more surprising manner. Reason may, and I hope always shall, prevail ; but my heart deceives me if threats or promises ever can. I had always determined to await events in silence or patience, and believed the advances which to your knowledge I have already made, were as great as could be reasonably expected on my part. Yet the influence of well-wishers, of whose sincerity I am satisfied, has made me put pen to paper in vindication of my character, which I understand by them some unworthy people have had the insolence to attack, very possibly to serve some mean purpose of their own. Conscious of my conduct, I despise their low malice ; and I consider it to be below my dignity to treat them in the terms they merit.' 1 Immediately after (September 16), we find him writing- in melancholy terms to Mr Edgar, c My sentiments, my honour, my real interest, joined with the unworthy beha- viour of some people, has reduced me these several years past to great straits, but now more than ever, which obliges me with concern to dismiss the most part of my family. I send you here a list of them, hoping that, when you lay it before the king, he will, out of his good heart, have com- passion on such poor distressed subjects.' For some time after we altogether lose sight of this unhappy Prince, but it is believed that he chiefly resided in great privacy at Avignon. How affecting a scrap of his writing about 1760, which has been preserved — 'De vivre et pas vivre est beaucoup plus que de mourir ! ' 2 The papers of Bishop Forbes contain a number of parti- culars respecting the latter life of the Prince. It appears 1 The remonstrance, and the Prince's answer, are given in Browne's Appen- dix. Dr King seems to allude to this remonstrance when he states that a Colonel Macnamara went to the Prince, as a commissioner from the British Jacohites, to request him to dismiss his mistress, Miss Walkingshaw; which the Prince, he says, refused to do. There is no word of a mistress in the documents above quoted. 2 * To live and not to live is much worse than to die.' 422 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. very decisively from these papers that Charles embraced the religion of the church of England. The bishop pre- serves a copy of a letter dictated by him to his friends in Britain, under date August 12, 1762, and to the following effect : — c Assure my friends in Britain that I am in perfect health ; that I hope it will come like a thunderbolt ; and that I shall not neglect to recompense every worthy subject as soon as it shall be in my power. They may be assured I shall live and die in the religion of the church of England, which I have embraced ; and that no kind thing can be said, but what I wish to all my dear friends, for whose good I wish more to be amongst them, than for any advantage it would be to myself, as I have no great ambition except for their welfare.' In June 1763, the first trace appears, in the bishop's memoranda, of a desire on the part of the British Jacobites that the Prince should marry ; and it is amusing to observe with what piety they hope that such an event maybe brought about, and that it maybe productive of future pretenders to the throne. Mrs Oliphant of Gask, in Perthshire, or, as she is here called, Lady Gask, appears as the moving person in the affair — and the Prince is shadowed forth as a female cousin of that gentlewoman under the designation of Cousin Peggy. A gentleman in London, writing to Forbes, 8th August 1763, mentions that Lady Gask had arrived amongst her friends — the chevalier's court in Italy — and found them all well ; that Cousin Peggy thanked the bishop for a pot of marmalade he had sent her ; and that she only waited for a convenient opportunity to visit her friends in Britain. Another letter, unsubscribed, of date October 27, 1763, mentions that Cousin Peggy had enjoyed a hearty laugh on being informed recently that c a certain friend sacredly preserved the favourite brogues, and made friends drink out of them' — alluding evidently to the Highland shoes worn by the Prince while travelling through Skye in a female dress, and which had been preserved by Mac- donald of Kingsburgh, his guide and host on that occasion. 'The 1st of January 1766' — so runs a paragraph entered by the bishop — i (about a quarter after nine o'clock) put a period to the troubles and disappointments of good old Mr James Misfortunate' — meaning the old chevalier, who, we learn, had long been confined to bed with general weak- ness. Charles, who now considered himself king of Eng- land, had the mortification, as is well known, to find his pretensions acknowledged by no European court, not even hy the pope, for the sake of whose faith his grandfather had forfeited his throne. About a year before the death of the SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 423 old chevalier, Charles had renewed his correspondence with his brother, who acted towards him in the most forgiving" and generous manner, and made the most strenuous exer- tions to prepare the way for the pope acknowledging his royal character, after their father should have departed this life. When James died, Charles was on his way to Rome, and was met on the road, two posts beyond Florence, by Mr Andrew Lumisden, with accounts of the sad event, and of his accession to the nominal dignity of king. Arriving in Rome, he was received by the immediate attendants of his father as king, but the pope positively refused to acknow- ledge his title. l In these circumstances, no one being able to visit him, he was left quite alone : Mr Lumisden com- pared him and his immediate attendants, isolated in Roman society, to the crew of a vessel at sea. Even the heads of the English, Scotch, and Irish colleges were sent from Rome in disgrace for receiving him as king within their own walls. To these distresses was added that of limited income, for the revenues which his father had derived from the courts of France and Spain were not continued to him. He had not more than 15,000 crowns per annum, including an allowance of 10,000 from the pope, which his brother had made over to him. He now withdrew to his late father's seat at Albano, where he lived for some years under the modest title of Count of Albany, but still without aban- doning his pretensions. In the ' Pleasures of Hope,' Mr Campbell has omitted one remarkable exemplification of that passion — namely, its tenacity and intensity in the breasts of an expiring party. We find Bishop Forbes in the ensuing September congratulating- himself on the infor- mation communicated by a * Mr O./ probably Oliphant, that 1 some great and principal persons were beginning to turn their views to my Favourite Lady, as the only one to extri- cate them out of their difficulties, and set to rights their disjointed affairs' — meaning, probably, the troubles occa- sioned by the reception of the stamp act in America. 1 In a letter from John Farquharson of Ardlerg, a refugee Jacobite residing at Dunkirk, to Bishop Forbes, of date May 20, 1767, occurs the following passage :— ' The gentleman [that is, the Prince] is positive that he is the peculiar care of Heaven, as passing through so many dangers, and that he is designed for some great end. He takes all his misfortunes (if you believe those about him) like the true Christian hero. His answer to the pope, when he sent him word that he would not allow him to take on any titles there, was somewhat good. He told the nuncio that the loss of Culloden gave him more real concern than any loss he could suffer by any orders from his holiness, and that whatever titles he would take, neither pope nor conclave could nor had any right to take from him. This I had from a gentleman who was present.'— Lyon in Mourning, x. 1901. 424 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Throughout this and the ensuing 1 year, great anxiety is expressed by the bishop and his correspondents respecting* the equivocal conduct of the chevalier in continuing* Roman Catholic clergymen in his household, and attending* Roman Catholic places of worship, though they are from time to time requested, by persons in his confidence, not to judge too hastily from appearances. Much anxiety is expressed that he should leave Italy, and thoughts seem to have been entertained of his visiting his friends in Scotland — of course incognito. Early, however, in 1769, the worthy beings who looked to him as their legitimate sovereign, and made a religion of their attachment to him, are shocked still more grievously by hearing of his habit of tippling, and that in a drunken fit he had dismissed all his Scottish attendants, and supplied their places with Italians. Much difficulty is experienced by Bishop Forbes in obtaining correct infor- mation on this subject ; but at length he receives full par- ticulars from two individuals who had been at the chevalier's court, and whom he distinguishes only by the appellation of the Fellow-Travellers. At a meeting on the 8th of this month with Bishop Gordon, 1 at Moffat, he communicates these particulars, most curiously glossed by party prepos- session, in the following terms : — 6 That John Hay, 2 Andrew Lumisden, 3 and Captain Urqu- hart had been dismissed for a real act of disobedience. It was true, indeed, that the k had been in use, for some time past, to call frequently for t'other glass of wine at dinner and supper, not from any liking to liquor, but like one absent in mind, when he met with things that vexed him, as too often was the case. One day at dinner he had done so till he was somewhat intoxicated, and in that con- dition proposed going to an oratorio in the afternoon ; but they absolutely refused to attend him. Yea, he went into his coach, ana they would by no means go into it ; upon which he returned to his apartments and dismissed them. 1 Minister of a London congregation of nonjurors. This gentleman had baptised the Prince's eldest child by Miss Walkingshaw. 2 John Hay, who had been a writer to the signet in Edinburgh, and was designed ' portioner of Restalrig,' acted as vice-chamberlain or treasurer to the Prince during the latter part of the campaign of 1745-6. He is described, in a memoir by Sir Thomas Strange (MSS.), as brother to Lord Huntingdon, one of the judges of the Court of Session. Charles, after the death of his father, knighted him. Subsequently to his dismissal, he returned to Britain on a writ of Noli Prosequi, and visited his Scotch friends, including Sir Thomas Miller of Glenlee, then Lord- Justice Clerk. 3 Lumisden was brother-in-law to the celebrated engraver Sir Robert Strange, and published a respectable work on the antiquities of Rome. He soon after made his peace with the government, and returned to his native country. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 425 In a day or two he sent for them to return to their duty ; but they happening to consult with the Cardinal York, he advised them absolutely not to return ; which counsel they followed ; and he took care to have four Italians put into their places, as persons more fit for his purposes and designs. The cardinal would have been well enough pleased had John Stewart, a constant and faithful attendant, been like- wise dismissed ; but that could not take place, as both master and servant, an Athole-man, were not willing to part. Therefore there are still two Britons with him — Mr Wag- staffe, an Englishman, 1 and John Stewart, a Scotsman. He now enjoys more ease and quiet than formerly, and has never been seen concerned in the least with liquor since that event, which had been happily attended with one good effect, to make him think more seriously upon what had happened ; and no man could be of a more firm and deter- mined resolution than he was known to be. Not a blot, nor so much as a pimple, was in his face, though malici- ously given out by some as if it were all over blotted ; but he is jolly and plump, though not to excess, being still agile, and tit for undergoing toil. 7 With respect to his religion, the bishop stated that his informants had been empowered to give out that any demonstrations he might make in fa- vour of the Roman Catholic faith were owing to the difficulty of his situation, as, even between eleven and twelve years of age, he had made up his mind against the truth of its doctrines, and determined on the change that had subse- quently taken place in his professions. It is also stated that he only remained at Rome in the hope of obtaining a recognition of his titles, and a pension from the new pope. We also have the following note : — ' That Mrs Forbes had given the two Fellow-Travellers a piece of seed-cake, which they took entire to the k , making a present of it to him, and withal telling him from whom they had it. " Ay," said he, "a piece of seed-cake from Scotland, and from Edinburgh too ! " Then rising from his seat, and opening a drawer, " There," said he, " you see me deposit it, and no tooth shall go upon it but my own." 7 Charles had further sent a memorandum for a copy of the bishop's nar- rative of his escape, and a cookery book of English pastry puddings ; and we are afterwards informed that the former work, when sent, was translated into Italian, and published at Rome. Soon after, intelligence of a more cheerful nature visits 1 The chevalier's Protestant chaplain. 426 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. these zealous votaries of divine right. A friend recently at Rome informs Forbes that Charles ' is a great economist, and pays all accounts once a-month at farthest, and that he gets up in the morning about four o'clock, takes breakfast about seven, dines at twelve on the plainest dishes, drinks tea at four, sups betwixt seven and eight, and is in his bed- chamber by nine, or before it' — habits, it must be allowed, very different from those of most professed tipplers. ' I heard lately/ says another correspondent of the bishop in 1770, ' that Cousin Peggy was well, much in company now with the great folks, and received all the honours from them she could desire.' It is also curious to observe what hopes were inspired into the breasts of the Jacobites by the Wilkes tumults and the commercial difficulties of this era. In November of the year just quoted, Bishop Gordon writes that ' Cousin Peggy is still lively and active, and ready for employment; and, now troubles seem to be rising in the world more and more, I think it not improbable but she may again find occasion for the exercise of her talents.' In April of the ensuing year, John Farquharson of Ardlerg writes that the king had been using his divine right in a medical way. ' He is now fairly turned physician, and has made this year several wonderful cures, particularly one of a princess, looked upon [as] incurable. This has been of service to him, adds greatly to his character, and has given him the name of the Miraculous Doctor.' In the beginning of 1772 the chevalier made a journey incog, to Paris, travelling a thousand miles in seven days, without being affected by it in his appearance. The move- ment may be surmised to have been connected with a ne- gotiation for his marriage to Louisa, Princess of Stolberg, which the French and Spanish monarchs had concocted. The nuptials, which took place in the ensuing April, seem to have kindled up great joy amongst the Scottish Jacobites. Louisa immediately becomes the subject of loyal toasts, some of them by no means over-delicate in the turn of their allu- sions. An engraving of her portrait is handed about. She is celebrated in stiff but thoroughly cordial verses ; and all is satisfaction and happy expectation. Charles and his wife were privately presented to Louis XVI. in the spring of 1775. They did not on that occasion make any public ap- pearance in Paris, whence they went to Bayonne, on their way to visit the king of Spain. In the ensuing May, a letter from Florence appeared in the English newspapers, stating that he lived there in great poverty, barely able to keep a car- riage, on which he was not allowed to put any armorial SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 427 bearings. He is described as extremely corpulent, owing* to a total disuse of exercise, and much pimpled in the face, in consequence of drinking*. In a work entitled c Letters from Italy, by a Lady/ pub- lished in 1776, the authoress [Mrs Miller] gives an account of two meeting's she had with Charles at Rome, probably in the preceding year. While she was passing the evening at the Duchess of Bracciano's, one of the gentlemen in waiting announced II Re [The King], the title by which he was known at Rome. She was anxious, from motives of prudence, to avoid speaking to him, but on entering, he made her a particular bow, sat down on the same sofa, and began a conversation with her and the duchess. 6 At last he ad- dressed me in particular, and asked me how many days since my arrival in Rome, how long I should stay, and several such questions. ... At my departure, I took leave of the Duchess of Bracciano (agreeable to the custom), and the chevalier, officiously civil, rose up and wished me a good- night. He is naturally above the middle size, but stoops excessively : he appears bloated and red in the face, his countenance heavy and sleepy, which is attributed to his having given into excess of drinking* ; but when a young- man, he must have been esteemed handsome. His com- plexion is of the fair tint, his eyes blue, his hair light-brown, and the contour of his face a long oval. He is by no means thin, has a noble presence and a graceful manner; his dress was scarlet, laced with a broad gold lace ; he wears his blue ribbon outside of his coat, from which depends a cameo (antique) as large as the palm of my hand ; and wears the same garter and motto as those of the order of St Georg;e in England : upon the whole, he has a melan- cholic mortified appearance. 7 There can be no room to doubt that about this time the habits of the unfortunate Prince were undergoing a rapid change for the worse, and that he soon after beg*an to render his wife extremely unhappy. About the year 1778, the poet Alfieri, then under thirty years of age, and the most enthusiastic and passionate of mortals, became acquainted with this princess, whose character is universally allowed to have been as amiable as her person was beautiful. He first saw her in the great g'allery of Florence, and hearing* her say, in reference to a portrait of Charles XII. of Sweden, that she thought the dress becoming, he astonished the in- habitants of the city by two days after appearing in the streets in an exact copy of that extraordinary uniform. A sonnet which he afterwards composed upon her, under the 428 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. title of Ritralto della ma Donna (Description of my Mis- tress), has been thus translated : — ' Bright are the dark locks of her braided hair ; Grecian her brow ; its silken eyebrows brown ; Her eyes— oh lover, to describe forbear ! — Life can their glance impart, and death their frown ! Her mouth no rosebud, and no rose her cheek, May emulate in freshness, fragrance, hue : A voice so soft and sweet, to hear her speak Inspires delight and pleasures ever new : A smile to soothe all passions save despair ; A slight and graceful form ; a neck of snow ; A soft white hand, and polished arm as fair ; A foot whose traces Love delights to show. And with these outward charms, which all adore, A mind and heart more pure and perfect given ; For thee thy lover can desire no more, Adorned by every grace and gift of Heaven.' Unable at length to endure any longer the harshness of her husband, the princess employed the services of Alfieri in enabling her to escape from his influence. According to a plan arranged by the poet, Charles and his wife walked one morning to a neighbouring convent, for the ostensible purpose of inspecting the work of the nuns. The princess, moving smartly in advance, entered the convent, where it had been agreed that she was to receive protection. When Charles came up, he was refused admittance, and he never saw his wife again. The princess soon after removed to Rome, where she was received with brotherly kindness by Cardinal York, and finally she proceeded to Paris. All this was accomplished without her having in the least com- promised her reputation. She ultimately formed a secret alliance, as was supposed, with Alfieri, with whom she lived till his death in 1803. She afterwards resided at Florence, where she died in January 1824, aged seventy-two, having long enjoyed a pension of £2000 per annum from the British crown. 1 Even when sunk in the absolute sottishness which is so apt to befall greatly disappointed men, there were not wanting in Charles Edward gleams of that natural spirit which led him to a hostile shore with seven men, and carried him into the midst of three armies, each his superior : the light of a better day still gleamed fitfully on the dishonoured head of the Last Stuart. When the late venerable primus of the Scottish episcopate (Walker) was at Rome in the early years of the present century, he received from the lips of Cardinal 1 It is said that this lady, after the death of Alfieri, made a left-handed marriage with his friend Francis Xavier Fabre, a French historical painter, whom she appointed her universal executor. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES, 429 York the following 1 anecdote : — ' Mr Greathead, a personal friend of Mr Fox, succeeded, when at Rome in 1782 or 1783, in obtaining an interview with Charles Edward ; and being alone with him for some time, studiously led the conver- sation to his enterprise in Scotland, and to the occurrences which succeeded the failure of that attempt. The Prince manifested some reluctance to enter upon these topics, appearing* at the same time to undergo so much mental suffering-, that his guest regretted the freedom he had used in calling up the remembrance of his misfortunes. At length, however, the Prince seemed to shake off the load which oppressed him; his eye brightened, his face assumed un- wonted animation, and he entered upon the narrative of his Scottish campaigns with a distinct but somewhat vehement energy of manner — recounted his marches, his battles, his victories, his retreats, and his defeats — detailed his hair- breadth escapes in the Western Isles, the inviolable and devoted attachment of his Highland friends, and at length proceeded to allude to the dreadful penalties with which the chiefs among them had been visited. But here the tide of emotion rose too high to allow him to go on — his voice faltered, his eye became fixed, and he fell convulsed on the floor. The noise brought into the room his daughter, the Duchess of Albany, who happened to be in an adjoining apartment. "Sir," she exclaimed, "what is this! You have been speaking to my father about Scotland and the Highlanders! No one dares to mention these subjects in his presence." n It is also an affecting, and, I may surely add, redeeming circumstance in the life of this ill-fated Prince, that amongst the amusements of his last and lonely hours was that of playing on the bagpipe those airs which, in his brighter days, soothed him in the bivouac, or led him to victory. 2 Domenico Corri the musician, in his life of himself, gives some interesting particulars of the Prince's latter years, After stating that some fortunate connexions had raised him to the honour of conducting the concert parties given at Rome by the English and native nobility, he adds — 'This period was the pontificate of Ganganelli, who was the friend of Prince Charles the Pretender, brother of Cardinal York. That Prince frequently gave entertain- 1 The above anecdote was published a few years ago in the Episcopal Magazine, a work conducted by Bishop Russell. 2 A beautiful set of pipes, which belonged to him, having the joints bound with silver, was purchased from his servant early in this century by Mr Skene of Rubislaw, who still (1846) possesses them. 430 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. ments and concerts to the nobility, the conducting- of which was also assigned to me. With Prince Charles I had, previously to this period, lived two years, during which time he had kept entirely private, not seeing any one whatever, it being in the reign of the preceding pope, who had refused to acknowledge the title he assumed. In his retired life Prince Charles employed his hours in exercise and music, of which he was remarkably fond. I usually remained alone with him every evening, the Prince playing the violoncello, and I the harpsichord, also com- posing together little pieces of music ; yet these tete-a-tetes were of a sombre cast. The apartment in which we sat was hung with old red damask, with two candles only, and on the table a pair of loaded pistols (instruments not at all con- genial to my fancy), which he would often take up, examine, and again replace on the table; yet the manners of this Prince were always mild, affable, and pleasing. 7 In Sep- tember 1787, in the prospect of an early dissolution, Charles legitimated, by a deed recorded in the parliament of Paris, his natural daughter, created her Duchess of Albany, and constituted her his sole heir. 1 He latterly lived constantly at Florence, in a palace in the Via Bastino, which belonged in 1818 to the Duchess San Clemente, when the Scottish gentleman who communicates this circumstance temporarily occupied it — the rooms still bearing at that time many of the crowns, mottoes, and devices with which it had been decorated to suit its former inhabitant. On the 30th of January 1788, 2 Charles Stuart sank under an attack of palsy and apoplexy, expiring in the arms of his faithful attendant Mr Nairn, son of the attainted Lord Nairn. His death occasioned a parag-raph in the papers, but made little noise in the general world. In Scotland, however, where his name was associated with romantic achievement and historical recollections, there were still a few faithful hearts to bleed at the intelligence that this last of a lofty line was no more. Sir Walter Scott recollected a gentleman named Stuart, a friend of his father's family, calling one day in mourning, when, 1 The Duchess of Albany was the Prince's daughter "by Miss Walkingshaw. She is said to have received an excellent education, and to have been an elegant and amiable woman. It is also said that Charles long refused to legi- timate her, and that she was for a long time supported by the Cardinal York, who gave her 6000 crowns per annum. She died in 1789, of an abscess in her side, the consequence of a fall from a horse, being then about forty years of age. 2 The 31st was the date given out at the time ; but Lord Mahon ascertained that the 30th was the true date. His attendants appear to have practised a small deception, to avoid raising any feeling among the remnant of the party respecting his dying on a day deemed fatal to the House of Stuart. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 431 being" asked if he had suffered any family loss, he answered, 'My poor Chief! 7 — a brief answer, but sufficient for those to whom it was addressed. Charles was buried with due cere- mony in the cathedral of Frescati, where his brother resided. 1 1 Henry Stuart, Cardinal de York, was not a favourite with the Jacobites during his middle life, probably on account solely of his having accepted honours in the Romish church. His character in latter life appeared that of a mild and inoffensive man. In 1784, when Charles was believed to be dying, Cardinal York presented to the pope, the foreign minister at Rome, and others, a paper declaring the title which he should have to the British crown, in the event of his brother's decease. On the death of his brother in 1788, he took no other steps than to cause this declaration to be read, and to strike a medal bearing his name as * Henricus IX. Angliag Rex,' with the addition ' Dei gratia, sed non voluntate hominum.' He was Bishop of Frescati, and had two rich livings in France, the abbeys of Anchin and St Amand, besides a considerable pension from Spain. The abbeys were lost to him at the time of the French Revolution. On the successful invasion of Italy by Bonaparte, his revenues as cardinal and bishop were also lost, and about the same time he appears to have been deprived of his Spanish pension. To aid the pope in making up the sum required by the French general, the cardinal disposed of his family jewels, including a ruby, esteemed the largest and most perfect known, and valued at £50,000. In the reduced state in which he was now left, he remained in retirement at his villa near Rome till 1708, when the revolu- tionary troops attacked and plundered his palace, and forced him to fly for his life. He went first to Padua, and afterwards to Venice, supporting himself by the sale of a small quantity of silver plate, which was soon exhausted, and he was then quite destitute. Some time after, Sir John Hippesley Coxe, who had been acquainted with Cardinal Borgia in Italy, received from that prelate an account of the condition of the unfortunate Cardinal York. This he com- municated to Mr Andrew Stuart, who drew up a memorial of the case, which was carried by Mr Secretary Dundas to the throne. George III. immediately ordered the Earl of Minto, then ambassador at Vienna, to offer the cardinal, in the most delicate terms possible, a pension of £4000 per annum. The earl, in a letter of February 9, 1800, dated from Vienna, thus addressed the object of the royal bounty : — • I have received the orders of his majesty the king of Great Britain to remit to your eminence the sum of £2000, and to assure your eminence that, in accepting this mark of the interest and esteem of his majesty, you will give him sensible pleasure. I am at the same time ordered to acquaint your eminence with his majesty's intention to transmit a similar sum in the month of July, if the circumstances remain such that your emi- nence continues disposed to accept it. ... In executing the orders of the king my master, your eminence will do me the justice to believe that I am deeply sensible of the honour of being the organ of the noble and touching sentiments with which his majesty has condescended to charge me, and which have been inspired into him on the one hand by his own virtues, and on the other by the eminent qualities of the august person in whom he wishes to repair, as far as possible, the disasters into which the universal scourge of our times has dragged, in a special manner, all who are most worthy of venera- tion and respect.' It is not unworthy of remark, that Charles and his brother Henry had a legal claim on the English government for the arrears of the parliamentary settlement made upon their grandmother, the queen-consort of James II. Charles had empowered his natural daughter to take some steps respecting this claim, and the good offices of Loivis XVI. were sought, for the purpose of representing the case to the British sovereign. Louis declined the task, remarking, with little anticipation of the fate of his own race, ' C'est une famiUe malheureuse; cfont je ne veux plus entendre parler.' The cardinal returned in 1801 to Rome, where he continued to enjoy the pension till his death in June 1807- He bequeathed to the Prince of Wales 432 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. An urn containing his heart was deposited in the same church, inscribed with a few expressive lines by the Abbate Felice. A Scottish periodical work soon after presented the following 1 lines as a proposed epitaph for his monument at Rome : — ' Remote from Britain, in this foreign shrine, Ends the last hope of Stuart's ancient line — Reflection must excite the generous tear, And royalty, secure, will learn to fear. Oh ye of Britain's isle — no more unjust, Your hearts acknowledge here your Charles' dust. The virtuous in the tomh their rights maintain ; Alive his virtues challenged them in vain.' Many whose destiny has never subjected them to severe trials, will call the habits of this unhappy Prince a proof that he never possessed a magnanimous character, as he must have otherwise scorned so wretched a solacement for his misfortunes. Let these persons pray that they may never be reduced to analogous circumstances, or placed in similar temptations. To be born with disputable preten- sions is one of the greatest of misfortunes. Even in the middle walks of life, how often do we see industry, worth, and ability wrecked in their course, in consequence of the inheritation of some claims of property, which the law can-, not be brought to sanction till it has worn out all that could have enjoyed the boon ! How much severer the calamity of being born to the prospect of the highest object of human ambition — ever in view, and ever denied — to be born, in short, as Cardinal York expressed it, a king by the grace of God, but not by the will of man ! It has always appeared to me that, in the case of Prince Charles Edward, the agony of hope deferred and severe disappointment, and the degra- dations ultimately put upon him by individuals who, by birth, were no more than his equals, wore out a spirit origi- nally vigorous, and from which, in happier circumstances, good fruits might have been expected. The subsequent history of a few of the more remarkable individuals who had been concerned in the affair of 1745, and survived it, may here be given. The Duke of Perth died on the 11th of May 1746, in his voyage to France, his constitution having been completely worn out by about three weeks of skulking in the High- lands. His brother, Lord John Drummond, made his escape in the same vessel, and died next year in the French the order of the garter which belonged to his ancestor Charles I., and a ring which had been anciently worn by the kings of Scotland at their coronation. The Prince afterwards caused a monument to be raised to the memory of the old chevalier and his two sons in St Peter's at Rome. SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 433 service at Bergen-op-zoom. Two elegantly-expressed Latin epitaphs for these two unfortunate noblemen, as inscribed in the chapel of the English nuns at Antwerp, and narrat- ing the above circumstances, are copied in the Rev. Mr Forbes's papers. 1 Lord George Murray, after a long concealment in the Highlands, got on board a vessel in the Firth of Forth, and obtained a passage to Holland. The reader has seen the ill success of an attempt he made to see the Prince at Paris. The justice denied to him by Charles, and by many other individuals who had been associated with him in the late enterprise, was done to him by the old chevalier, who gave him an apartment in his palace, and treated him with much distinction. Lord George, under the assumed name of De Valignie, wrote a letter to Mr Hamilton of Bangour, dated Emerich, August 5, 1749, giving an account of the last few days of the campaign of 1745. He also composed a com- plete memoir of the campaign, which was published in the ' Jacobite Memoirs/ 1834. Lord George died at Meden- blinck, in Holland, in 1760. On the death of James, second Duke of Atholl, in 1764, John, the eldest son of Lord George, who had married the only daughter and child of the late duke, would have succeeded to the title in course of law, but for the attainder of his father. A petition to the king, on which the House of Lords gave a favourable re- port, overcame the objection, and the lineal posterity of Lord George have accordingly enjoyed, since 1764, this princely name, and all the great demesnes connected with it. Young Locheil obtained, as we have seen, a regiment in the French service. He did not, however, enjoy this long ; for while on duty at Borgue, he was carried off by an in- flammation of the brain, October 26, 1748. The death of this amiable and truly respectable man was bewailed by both parties. In the Scots Magazine of the time, there was inserted a very honourable poetical tribute to his memory, evidently the composition of one who did not sympathise in his political opinions : it ends with the singular thought, that the gentle Locheil is now c a Whig in heaven.' The elder Locheil died in the same year. The territories of the family were restored to it in 1784, in consequence of an act 1 I mention this circumstance as an addition to the proof that the Duke of Perth really died at sea in May 1746, this fact having of late years heen chal- lenged by a claimant of the Perth titles and estates, who asserts that the duke did not embark for France, but, withdrawing to an obscure place in the county of Durham, there sank into the condition of a shoemaker, married a humble woman, and died in 1782, after becoming the father of several chil- dren, the eldest of whom was father to the claimant. VOL. V. 2 B v. 434 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. then passed for giving* back the forfeited estates to the heirs, under certain restrictions. Macpherson of Cluny remained in hiding on what had been his estate for nine years after the insurrection, chiefly residing in a cave near the site of his destroyed house, and supported by his faithful adherents. He had the charge of the large sum of money which had been secreted in the neighbourhood of Loch Arkaig, and probably kept himself in readiness, on a fitting occasion, once more to appear in arms with his clan for the House of Stuart. Cluny with- drew to France in 1755, and died there in the ensuing year. His estate, which also was restored to his family, is now enjoyed by his grandson. Lord Ogilvie rose to the rank of lieutenant-general in the French service. In 1778 he procured from George III. a free pardon and reversal of his attainder, and was there- after enabled to live upon his family estates in Scotland, where he died in 1803, at the age of seventy-nine. His lady, who had been actively concerned in raising men for the enterprise, and who accompanied her husband on the expedition to England, was taken prisoner after the battle of Culloden, and imprisoned in Edinburgh castle, whence she escaped in the November following. Having made her way to France, she died there in 1757, at the age of thirty- three. It would appear that Lord and Lady Ogilvie were each only about twenty years of age when they entered upon the campaign of 1745. It may be mentioned, to the honour of Lord Ogilvie, that after the death of Louis XVL, he refused any longer to draw his pension as a French officer, and even declined to accept its arrears when these were offered by Bonaparte. Sir James Steuart, being' in France at the time of the battle of Culloden, escaped the dangers which beset so many of his friends, but, excepted from the act of indemnity, he could not return to his native country. For eighteen years he resided abroad with his wife, and during that time, turning his mind to the subject of finance, became one of the most accomplished political economists of his day. Being pardoned and restored to his property in 1763, he published in England, four years thereafter, 6 An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Economy/ which was followed by several smaller works. Sir James died at Colt- ness in 1780. Mr Hamilton of Bangour, after the battle of Culloden, skulked for some time in the Highlands, and then escaped to France. By the intercession of a number of powerful SUBSEQUENT LIFE OF PRINCE CHARLES. 435 friends, he soon obtained a pardon, and returned home; but his constitution being irremediably shattered by the hardships he had suffered in hiding-, he died of a slow con- sumption at Lyons in 1754. Some of the poetry of this gentleman retains popularity, and his name can never be altogether forgotten while that of Wordsworth exists, for it was in consequence of a ballad of Bangour's that the great bard of the lakes wrote his various poems on Yarrow. Sir Alexander Macdonald died in 1747, but the Laird of Macleod survived till 1772, an object of general dislike in the Highlands, not so much on account of his apostacy from the Stuart cause, as for the active part he was believed to have taken in the attempts to seize the fugitive Prince. Prosperity did not smile upon him, and when he died, he left his estate almost hopelessly incumbered. The fortunes of the Siol Tormod were, however, redeemed by his son, the brave, prudent, and generous General Macleod — the man described by Burns as ' a chieftain worth gowd, Though bred amang mountains of snaw.' Mr Murray of Broughton, being taken into custody at Polmod in Peeblesshire, and removed to London, entered into an arrangement with government to give information and evidence, for the purpose of saving his own life. His evidence was the means of destroying Lord Lovat ; but the information he gave against the Duke of Beaufort, Sir Watkyn William Wynne, and other English Jacobites, was of no avail, for want of the second witness required in Eng- lish law. After this dismal surrender of honour, the secretary dragged out a wretched life upon a pension of £200 a-year. On the death of his brother, Sir Charles Murray of Stan- hope, baronet, he assumed the family title, and died in December 1777, leaving three sons, David, Robert, and Thomas, the eldest of whom, an officer in the navy, took up the title after his death. The secretary employed his leisure in his latter days in writing a memoir of the trans- actions of 1745, including a very minute account of the negotiations and other circumstances which preceded it, and in which he had himself been much concerned. 1 Dr Archibald Cameron escaped to France in the same vessel with the Prince, to whom he had been of important service during his wanderings. A letter of Glengarry to the old chevalier's secretary, Mr Edgar, of date ( Boulogne- sur-mer, 16th January, 1750/ and extant in the Stuart 1 This memoir, I "believe, exists in manuscript in the possession of William H. Murray, Esq. of the Theatre-Royal, Edinburgh. 436 HISTORY OF THE REBELLION OF 1745-6. Papers, gives an account of a visit which Dr Cameron had then recently paid to the Highlands ; when he gave out that all might shift for themselves, as the king and Prince had given up hopes of restoration. The letter further states that Dr Cameron took into his possession six thousand louis-d'ors, out of the large sum which he had assisted to conceal near Loch Arkaig ; Cluny Macpherson being unable to prevent his doing so, though he obliged the doctor to give a receipt for the sum. With this money, it was said, Dr Cameron designed to enter into a mercantile copartnery at Dunkirk. In a letter of Lochgarry (cousin of Glengarry) to Prince Charles, dated at Paris, June 22, 1750, the writer relates that he had lately been in Scotland, and saw Cluny, who gave him an account of the money left in his charge, much of which had been * torn from him/ so that the sum now in his hands was only sixteen thousand louis. Loch- garry expresses an anxious wish to be commissioned with Dr Cameron to go to Scotland and bring over the remain- ing sum. It is scarcely possible to make out from these notices any clear idea of Dr Cameron's procedure, more especially as we afterwards find his widow communicating intelligence which had reached her of a proposal having been made by Glengarry to sell himself to the government as an informer. It is, however, certain that Dr Cameron revisited Scotland in 1753, and was then taken prisoner in the house of Stewart of Glenbuckie, by a party of soldiers from the garrison of Inversnaid. Being carried to London, and there arraigned upon the act of attainder, in which his name was included, he was sentenced to die the death of a traitor. His wife, then residing with seven children at Lisle in Flanders, came to London, and presented petitions in his behalf, but without avail. He was executed on the 7th of June, conducting himself on the occasion with a degree of firmness and cheerfulness scarcely less than that manifested by Balmerino. 1 The government was greatly blamed for this act of severity, which then appeared need- less ; but it is probable that they had secret information of certain dangerous traffickings which the agents of the House of Stuart were still carrying on in the Highlands, and acted under the belief that the sacrifice of Dr Cameron was necessary to prevent further attempts on the throne. 1 In the burial register of the old chapel of the Savoy occurs the following entry :— ' 1753, Dr Archd. Cameron, drawn on a sledge from the Tower, and executed at Tyburn for high treason, on Thursday the 7th June, and buried as above in the chancel vault. Vault fee not paid, J. W.' This entry being discovered a few years ago, a few gentlemen combined to put up a small tablet to Dr Cameron near the supposed site of his sepulture. APPENDIX. ACCOUNT OF CHARGE AND DISCHARGE, BY MR MUR- RAY OP BROUGHTON, RESPECTING SUMS OF THE PRINCE'S MONEY IN HIS POSSESSION AFTER THE BATTLE OF CULLODEN. 1 CHARGE. Received from Sir Thomas Sherridan in the wood upon the side of Locharkik, opposite to a place called Callich, about ten days after the battle of Culloden, 1000 guineas, . . £1,050 From Do. more, and, so far as Mr Murray can remember, at the same time with the above, in Spainish coin, 700 pistoles, valued at 17s. 6d. each, . . . . 612 10 Six casks of French gold landed at Burradale, containing louis-d'ores, 35,000 Mr M. thinking it unreasonable that the louis should be given at the value of 20 shillings, as formerly, paid away about 2250 of them as guineas, . . . . 112 10 From a French officer who had landed upon the East Coast with 2000 guineas, 1,000 N. B. This French officer was charged with 2000 guineas, but said he had 1000 taken from him as he passed thro' the Mackenzies' country, and gave in an ac- count of deductions from the other thousand ; but as Mr M. cannot charge his memory with the extent of the sum, he has charged himself with one thousand pounds, tho' he still thinks he did not receive quite so much. ■ Total charge, . £37,775 1 Note in the handwriting of Bishop Forbes. — * N. B. This is a rare and curious paper, taken from the handwriting of John Murray of Broughton, Esq., Secretary to C. P. R., heing charge and discharge of money matters upon, and by, the said Mr Murray.' 438 APPENDIX. DISCHARGE. VOUCHERS. 1. This article may be vouched by Mr M'Donald of Clanronald, younger, Mr Stewart of Ardsheill, Mr Cammeron of Torcastle, Doctor Cameron, Charles Stewart, one of Mr Murray's clerks, and by all the surviving people of Lochaber, Morar, Knoydart, Ariseg, and Moydart. 1. It being judged proper to give some money toward the sup- port of the wounded and the widows of those who died at Culloden, it was agreed to give half a guinea to the former, and a guinea to each of the latter ; and according to the lists given in by those who had an opportunity, the sum amounted to 500 lowis, valued as guineas, . . . £525 2. This sum was paid by Charles Stuart, in presence of L — d Lovit, Locheil, Clanronald younger, M'Leod your, of Neuck, Dod. Cameron, M'Donald, nephew to Cappoch, Mackinnon, Barisdale, Lochgary, Glenbucket, Major Kennedy, and Captn. Alexr. M'Nabb, with some others. 2. At a meeting at a place called Callich, upon the side of Locharkik, where it was proposed to raise a body of men to continue the war. To enable the several commanders to make their compli- ments, there was distributed among them 600 lowis, valued as guineas, ... . 630 3. and 4. This gentleman is still alive, and Mr. M. is ready to believe is a person of veracity, and will acknow- ledge it. 3. To the Laird of M'Kinnan, the same day and place, 40 4. Sent by do. to M'Leod of Raza, and M'Donald yor. of Scotus, being all that remained of the sum Mr M. then had carried with him, ... 20 £1,215 5. This money was paid by Charles Stuart according to the accots. given in to him, except what was due to Barisdale's regiment, which Mr M. paid to Mr Colin M'Kenzie, his adjutant and paymaster, at Doctr. Came- ron's house in Glendesherie, and amounted to about £300. Mr M'Kenzie is now in London. 5. To arrears due the troops, from the beginning of March till the 16th day of April inclusive, accord- ing to the musters of such regiments as had an' opportunity to give them in, about 1500 lowis at a guinea each, ....... 1,575 Carryover, . £2,790 APPENDIX. 439 Brought over, . £2,790 6. and 7. Mr M'Leod your, of Neuck may remember this. Raza having wrote with a little too much warmth, Mr M'Leod made an apology to Mr M. for him, and beg'd that it might not prevent him from sending a sup- ply ; and he will likewise remember that it was by his uncle Bernera that it was sent, and that Mr M. told him that he had given that gentleman £50. Mr M. is in- formed that Bernera is still alive. 6. Sent from the wood on the side of Locharkik by M'Leod of Bernera to M'Leod of Raza, upon the receipt of a letter from him complaining that the former sum was too small, ..... 40 7. To M'Leod of Bernera at the same time, . 50 8. Mr M. paid Mrs Cameron above £40 for part of these cattle in the Doctrs. presence ; the others -he cannot call to mind, being country people. 8. To cattle bought from Doctr. Cameron and others, to supply the men rendezvouzed at Glenmely, . 80 9. Doctr. Cameron was the person Mr M. chiefly im- ployed to procure these horses, and some of them were bought from a tenant of Lochiells in G-lenpayen. 9. To horses to carry the ammunition ingaged to be sent by Mr M'Donald yor. of Clanronald, from the coast of Ariseg to the head of Lochsheill, . 45 10. Mr M. has no other voucher for this article save that the man is alive ; he was one of Col. Baggot's troop, and remarkably well-known all over the Highlands. 10. To Evan Uisile Cameron on the side of Locharkik, 3 3 £3,008 11 and 12. As this gentleman is dead, Mr M. can bring no proof, as the confusion and hurry was very great at the time, tho' if he delivered the £20 to his father, he is still alive, and it will be a presumption of his having at the same time received the £100. 11. To Mr M'Donald of Barisdale, at the head of Locharkik, on the evening we were obliged to disperse, 100 12. To his father by him, 20 13. This gentleman is now alive ; he received his money in a small cottage, in presence of Lochiell his nephew, Cammeron of Torcastle, and many others. 13. To Mr Campbell of Ardslignish at the same time, 40 14. Of this no proof can be brought, unless Sr. Stewart Threpland, who was so kind as to attend him, remembers that he had Spainish coin ; but the great intimacy that Carryover, . £3,168 3 440 APPENDIX. Brought over, . £3,168 3 alwise subsisted betwixt Locheil and Mr M. would seem to confirm it ; and what makes him remember it the better, was his chiding him for being too easy to give money to whoever asked it ; and that by giving him that sum, he had but a few remaining pistoles in his own pocket. 14. To Cameron of Lochiel the same evening in Spainish gold, he bejng then on horseback, ready to set out, and told Mr M. that he had not one farthing left, having given all among his own people, about 40 15. It is impossible to give any other proof of this charge than that everybody present can say how much Mr M. was harassed at that time by demands, insomuch that he was glad to get away, and to send the money that remained in casks along with Lochiel for protection. 15. To several people at the same time and place in small sums, about 100 16. Mr M'Leod will remember that it was with diffi- culty Mr M. could prevail upon him to take it, he saying that he had got enough of his own. 16. To Mr Alexr. M'Leod yor. of Neuck that evening, 50 £3,358 3 17. This article Major Kennedy will remember to have seen Mr M. pay in Morar, upon the receipt of a letter and message from his lordship, when we were together with Clanronald on our way to meet Mr Allan M'Donald, a churchman, and M'Leod, going to the Isle of Uist. 17. To Lord Lovat, to pay his guard, ... 20 18. Major Kennedy and Charles Stewart made this journey with Mr Murray. 18. To expences and small gratuitys in passing^thro' Moydart and Arrisaig, with a view to have'gone over to the Isle of Uist to the Prince, ... 10 19. This gentleman is now in Scotland. 19. To Cameron of Dungallon in Gleneurich, . 100 20. There were there several of the Cameron officers all in want of money, to whom Mr M. gave each a small sum. 20. To several officers, and others of the same name, and at the same place, about .... 50 21. This gentleman wrote a letter to Mr M., saying that he had got intelligence from one M'Kenzie that a body Carry over, . £3,538 3 APPENDIX. 441 Brought over, . £3,538 3 of 300 French were landed in the north near to Caith- ness, and begging him to prevail with Lochiell to raise some men and march north, but the intelligence was laugh'd at. 2h To some M'Donalds who were sent with a letter from Barrisdale, 5 5 22. This Cameron of Torcastle may remember, he being present when Cameron came to ask Lochiell's advice about his surrendering to Genl. Campbell. 22. To Donald Moir Cameron, adjutant to Lochiel's regiment, in a wood upon the side of Lochsheill, 5 5 23. There were likewise in company Torcastle and his son, and Mr M. imagines none of the surviving gentlemen can have forgot it. 23. To guides, &c, when Locheill, Major Kennedy, Sir David Murray, Sir Stewart Threpland, and others, went over to Appin, . . . . 10 £3,558 13 24 and 25. This gentleman is living, and Mr M. flatters himself will be ready to acknowledge it. 24. To Mr Stewart of Ardsheil, in the wood above Ballaheulish, where Locheill, Sir Stewart Threp- land, Sir David Murray, Major Kennedy, &c. were with him for some days, 100 25. To him as arrears due to his regiment till then not paid, Mr M. thinks more than . . . 100 26. This will not admit of a voucher, but it is reason- able to believe that Mr M. could give them no less. 26. To the boatmen who carried us over into Appin, 5 27. The major is still living ; he seem'd very sensible of the favour, and said it was just one year's pay. 27. To Major Kennedy, in the wood of Ballaheulish, when he went to • surrender himself at Fort- William, 150 28 and 29. Ardsheil will be able to call both these articles to mind, having applyed to him to employ people to look for it, and when found, he sent his servant with it. 28. To recovering a pocket-book, dropt by Mr M. in the above-mentioned wood, 5 29. To the express, one Donald Stewart, a servant of ArdsheiPs, who was sent with the pocket-book to Glenlyon, . 3 3 Carryover, . £3,921 16 442 APPENDIX. Brought over, . £3,921 16 30. This gentleman is now in Scotland. Mr M. is only doubtfull whether it was £150 or only 100 louis-dores, but thinks it was 100 louis's & 50 guineas ; if he has over- charged him, he hopes it will be forgiven, as it is not done with a view to exhaust the sum. 30. To Sir Stewart Threpland, in the wood near to Kinlochleven, 150 31. Mr Cameron cannot have forgot this, for M. M. insisted upon his conveying of it to his wife, and pro- bably Sir Stewart Threpland, then present, may remem- ber the conversation. 31. To Doctr. Cameron at the same time and place, 100 32. This sum was given at the same time with the two former, it having been agreed upon betwixt Locheill and Mr M. that he M. should go to Glenlyon, where he ex- pected to meet his sister Mrs M'Dougal, and send her back to Edinburgh to procure a ship for them ; and in case she did not come, he was to proceed himself south to procure one and bring her to the east coast of FyfFe, it being then reported that the P. was sailed in a meal ship from the island of Uist for France. This Sir Stewart Threpland and Doctr. Cameron cannot have forgot, there being no access at that time to raise any of the money that was buried. 32. To Cameron of Lochiell, at the same place, to enable him to supply the P , in case of his re- turning to the main land — Louis, 1,000 Guineas, 500, 525 33. This article may easily be imagined. "We were seven in company, and obliged to send out scouts every night, the enemy being on all quarters. 33. To expences when in Rannoch and Glenlyon, to- gether with Dr Cameron and Dr. Murray, . 20 £5,716 16 34. This gentleman is now in Scotland. He met Mr M. in Rannoch, and conducted him south so far as Monteith. Mr M. believes him to be a man of candor and veracity, and that he will acknowledge it. 34. To Alexander M'Nabb, captain in Kappoch's regiment, as arrears due his company, . 30 N. B. It is to be observed that Capt. M'Nabb was no follower of Kappoch's, but brought his company from Brodalbin. So was not included in the ar- rears paid to Kappoch regmt. Carry over, . £5,746 16 APPENDIX. 443 Brought over, . £5,746 16 35. Mr M. gave this money to Mrs Menzies of Culdairs in her own house, she having informed him of their being in that country. 35. To Mr Norval Hume and other three gentlemen then skulking in Glenlyon, 25 36. This money was given to him upon the south side of Glenlyon, among the rocks — where Sir D. Murray, Dr Cameron, Mr John Cameron the minister, now an officer in Lord Ogilvie's regiment, and M. M., had sleept that night — to buy whiskie and snuff for Lochiell, with a fair wig, and other things to disguise Mr M. when he went south. 36. To John M'Naughton to purchase necessarys when in Glenlyon, 5 5 37. This must alone hang upon her and Mr M.'s asser- tion. 37. To Mrs Macdougal to carry her south, . 42 38. This money Mr M. gave her at her own house of M., to be taken care of by her husband, and two days after he received a message by his former servant, Robert Buchannan, that the money was buried in the garden. The pistols, tho Mr M.'s property, and often demanded, have always been refused. 38. Deposited in Mrs Menzies of Culdairs's hands louis-dores, 3500 guineas 351, 368 11 £9,687 12 Likewise a pair of pistols inlaid with gold, which Mr M. had given him by the P e. 39. This money Mr M. gave in Brodalbine, Capt. M'Nab being present. 39. To Robert Buchanan, when he brought the ac- count of the moneys being buried, ... 55 40. This affair is too remarkable to have escaped the memory of any present. A court-martial having sit upon two men who were suspected, and the circum- stances appearing so strong, that the members were ready to condemn them, about 1 1 o'clock at night, Mr Harrison came to Mr M., then in bed in the next room, and told him that he had discovered the cask, and would deliver it next morning. Mr M. desired the court- martial to break up, and set the men at liberty. Next day there was a meeting about it, when Mr Harrison refused to name the persons, as the discovery had been made to him in confession. But the thing being strongly Carryover, . £9,692 17 444 APPENDIX. Brought over, . £9,692 17 insisted on, Bishop M'Donald agreed that he should de- scribe them, which, together with other circumstances, made it plain that D 1 and this Irishman were the persons concerned. There were present at this meeting at the foot of Lochmorar, Bishop M'Donald, Mr Har- rison, M'Donald of Clan Ronald yor., Alexander M'Leod of Neuck yor., Barrisdale, Major Kennedy, M'Donald yor. of Seotus, and several others." N.B. — Mr M. is informed that the above-named D 1 is now an officer in Lord Ogilvie's regiment. 40. When the French ships were attacked at Burra- dale, the money was landed, and secreted in a wood, lest the enemy had prevailed and made a descent, and whilst it was there, one of the casks was carried off by an Irishman, whose name Mr M. has forgot, and one D 1, a Lancashire man, now an officer abroad ; but, finding that they could not convey away the whole, D 1 asked one Harrison, a churchman, if he would hear his own companion's confession, which Harrison hav- ing agreed to, the Irishman carried him in to the wood, and discovered the cask, but at the same time broke it open, and took one bag, which, upon reckoning the whole sum in the wood upon the side of Locharkik, was found to have contained 700 louis-d'ores, 700 £10,392 17 41. This sum of 15,000 louis-dores, 1000 in each bag, counted over exactly, was divided into three parcels, 5000 in each, one parcel put under a rock in a small rivulet, the other two parcels in the ground at a little distance, the holes made and the money deposited by Sir Stewart Threpland, 1 Mr Alexander M'Leod yor. of Neuck, Major Kennedy, and Doctor Cameron. Carry over, . £10,392 17 1 This gentleman, so frequently mentioned in Mr Murray's paper, and also alluded to in several parts of the preceding narrative, was a younger brother of the young gentleman slain in the pursuit at Preston, both being the chil- dren of Sir David Threipland, Bart., of Fingask, in Perthshire. Sir David, who had been engaged in the insurrection of 1715-16, when he entertained the old chevalier for a night in his house, was, in 1745, only the tenant of estates which had once been his property. Being then old and infirm, he was unable to go out, but he sent to the field all his sons who were then of >an age to bear arms. After the battle of Culloden. Stewart Threipland remained in company with Locheil, to whom, in his then woimded condition, he was of considerable service, having been bred to the medical profession. An anec- dote, reflecting the highest credit on his benevolence, is related in a note at page 364. Some time in the month of July he left Locheil in his concealment, and went to Edinburgh in the disguise of a Presbyterian probationer. From the Scottish he made his way to the English capital, in the company of Mr William Gordon, a bookseller of good repute in those days, whose apprentice APPENDIX. 445 Brought over, . £10,392 17 41. Buried near to the head of Locharkik, opposite to Callich, lowis-dores, 15,000 42. This money was buried in two parcels, 6000 in each, all in bags of 1000 each, the night before we were obliged to retire from Lochiell's house of Achnacarry, by Doctor Cameron and Mr Alexander M'Leod, who carried it upon their shoulders from the above-mentioned house. 42. Buried near the foot of the above-mentioned lake, lowis-d'ores, 12,000 43. About 90 guineas of this sum he had in his pocket when he was taken. 43. Mr M. carried in his pocket from Glenlyon, . 110 10 44. Mr M. bought this horse from a gentleman in Bal- whidder, to carry him south, in presence of Capt. M'Nab and Murray, brother to the Laird of Glencairnock. 44. To a horse, 5 5 Total discharge, £37,508 12 Total charge, . . . £37,775 Balance, 266 8 £37,775 £37,775 he appeared to be. Afterwards he escaped abroad, where he remained a con- siderable time, living in intimacy with Mr Hamilton of Bangour, Sir James Steuart, and Mr Andrew Lnmisden. In time he found himself at liberty to return home and live in peace. Having an estate by his wife, he was enabled to succour many of the unfortunate men of his party— at one time he had no fewer than twenty depending upon him. Not long before the act of 1784, for restoring the forfeited estates, Sir Stewart, as he was called by courtesy, bought back Fingask. The title of the family was formally restored in 1824, and is now enjoyed by his grandson, Sir Peter Murray Threipland of Fin- gask, Bart. It may here be not improper to introduce an anecdote connected with the birth of Sir Stewart Threipland, which appears highly characteristic of the Jacobite party. It is related in the language of the late Mr Moncrieff Threip- land of Middleton, younger son of Sir Stewart. ' * * When the troops of the government had possession of Fingask in 1716, and some of the soldiers were quartered in the house, the good lady [Sir David's lady] became alarmingly ill ; and in the midst of much anxiety and care — her husband and sons at a distance — uncertain of their fate, and the cause in which they were embarked giving way on every side — my father was born. It was thought that, under all the distressing circumstances of her situation, she could not survive, and a clergyman of the Episcopal church in Perth was sent for privately (the clergy of that persuasion being marked men at that period, as known adhe- rents of the Jacobite cause). He, having administered the sacrament, pro- posed, as so favourable an opportunity might not occur again, to baptise the child. This suggestion, communicated in a whisper to the nurse, and others who were in attendance, was at once assented to by them ; but the difficulty consisted in knowing by what name the infant should be called, his father having left no directions, and his poor mother being thought much too weak to be consulted on the subject. The good lady, however, had heard a little 446 APPENDIX. N. B. Mr. M. gave twenty guineas to his nephew, Sir David Murray, in Glenlyon ; but as he has since been informed that the young gentleman says he returned it, his pockets being tore, it is not charged. There was a small sum given to some few M'Leans at Glenmaly, but as Mr M. don't remember the exact sum, he has not charged it. There was a small sum given to Charles Stewart when sent from Appin to Morar, to procure intelligence of the Prince. And at the same time, some money given to a son of Cameron of Cluns, who left Appin together with Stewart, both paid in the wood above Balloheullish. A trifflle given to John Bain, Mr Murray's servant, when sent from Glenlyon to Lochiell. A small sum to John Cameron, uncle to John Cameron of Kin- lochleven, at the head of that lake. And Mr M. likewise thinks there was some money paid to the troops at Glenmaley ; but as they were few in number, the sum must have been inconsiderable. A trifflle to the boatmen who carried Lochiell, Sir Stewart Threp- land, Sir David Murray, Doctor Cameron, and Mr M. up Lochleven. Qn. 1. Has as honest an account been made of the 27,000 louis- dores ? 2. Has the person to whose care it was committed applyed as little of it to his own use ? of what was passing near her bed, and drawing hack the curtain, she called out in a faint voice, "Stewart, Stewart!" This was enough, and by that name accordingly was my father christened before the clergyman left the house.' It may also be not unworthy of notice that this heroine was a member of the family of Smythe of Methven, and probably a descendant of the high- spirited lady who, in the reign of Charles II., took such bold measures to put down the conventicles in her neighbourhood. For some notice of that lady and her an ti- covenanting proceedings, see * Tales of a Grandfather.' END OF HISTORY OF REBELLION. Edinburgh : Printed by W. & R. Chambers.