'?^^:^*- inw Km 1 r^B ^^^HhHH^D^ \i ¦utt|Hlf 1 ^^HMH^^Vi ml In j ^^Z.2 PS a" •y "<'?, CjjfJ,''r///' '/'//// /',' '//,-l'/J/r^ ^y J, ^yy//r^ ' ^Jw//r/ /d^i_ HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, THE SECOND VOLUME. ABERDEEN: PRINTED AT THE CONSTITUTIONAL OFFICE, BY WILLIAM BENNETT. HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, From M DC XXXVII to M DC XLL JAMES GORDON, PARSON OF ROTHIEMAY. IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. IL ABERDEEN: PRINTED FOR THE SPALDING CLUB. MDCCCXLI. 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS. page History op Scots Affairs : The Argument, vii The Third Booke [continued], 1 The Fourth Booke, 189 HISTORY SCOTS AFFAIRS. THE ARGUMENT. THE ARGUMENT. THE THIRD BOOKE. CHAPTER XXX. XXXI. xxxii. xxxiii. XXXIV. xxxv. XXXVI. XXXVII. XXXVIII. XXXIX. XL. XLI. XLII. XLIIL XLIV. XLV. XLVL Moderator's speech. ™. Lord Erskine joins the Covenanters ; and others The Assembly is continued ; they vote themselves competent judges of the bishops, and that they were to proceed in theit trial. Commissioners from Strathbogy advise with the Commissioner about staying .™.™. . Answer to the Bishops' Declinator. Council meet, and write the King. . Assembly continue to sit. Argyle joins them ; and several other lords.™ Ministers who had been objected to in the Declinator are cleared and Committees. Bishop of Galloway's process begun. Proclamation for dissolving the Assembly. Sum of the King's reasons Assembly's protestation against the proclamation ; and the sum of the reasons. The King's exceptions to the above protestation Unanimity of the Assembly. Mr. Alexander Carse. Trial of six Assemblies referred to a Committee. Account of six Assemblies, and the High Commission,. PAGE 3 6 7 2627 27 28 3134 3839 40 Processes against Mr. David Mitchel, Dr. Patrick Panter, and Mr. Alexander Gladstanes 43 Argyle's speech. Speeches concerning Arminianism , 45 Bishop of Orknay submitts to the Assembly ; also Sir Archibald Stuart of Blackball; also Mr. John Forbes, an Anti- Covenanter, and on his way to Ireland. Mr. Mitchel deposed, and ordered to be excommuni cated. Committee to examine into exceptionable things against the Mimsters of Edinburgh. Witnesses against the Bishop of Galloway. 47 X THE ARGUMENT. CHAPTER XLVIL xLvm. XLIX. L. LL LIL LIIL LIV. LV. LVL LVIL LVIIL LIX. PAGE LX. LXL LXIL LXIIL LXIV. LXV. LXVL LXVIL L XVIIL Arminianism condemned. Mr. Robert Bailey's speech against it. Com mittee to censure the Ministers of Edinburgh. Mr. Alexander Gladstones deposed..™..™..™..™. .„. „ Committee's exceptions to the six Assemblies. They are declared un- Intrant oath nullified. Exceptions. Dr. Robert Hamilton deposed. Mr. James Forsyth ; Mr. John Crighton deposed. _„,„„.„„ Animadversions on the Service Book., The Assembly condemn and prohibit the Service Book.. The Author's opinion on this subject, and of impartial people at that time. ~~ Summary of Bishop Lesly's defence of the Service Book in his Lysi- machus Nicanor. Animadversions on the Book of Canons.. Book of Canons rejected and condemned. Opinion of sober men upon this. Animadversions on the Book of Ordination : said book rejected. High Commission Court condemned. Opinion of sober people about the Book of Ordination and the High Commission. Commission to visit the shire of Angus, to sit at Dundee Mr. Alexander Lindsay, bishop of Dunkeld, submitts. Mr. George Haliburton's process referred to the Angus Committee. Mr. James Auchnleche referred to a Committee. Sydserfe, bishop of Gallo way, deposed and excommunicated. .,„ .. Archbishop of St. Andrews trial; [he is] deposed and excommunicated. Whyteford, bishop of Brichen, deposed and excommunicated. The Author's reflection on this. „ „„ More of Bishop Whitefoord. Negotiation with Lindsay, archbishop of Glasgow. . ~~™_^ Interpretation of the Confession of Faith. Diocesan Episcopacy ab jured and removed by said Confession. Reasonings and observations on this conclusion. .™_™, Mr. Robert Bailey's behaviour concerning this question. He furnished Mr. Spang with the materials of his Historia Motuum Mr. Robert Bailey's opinion ; also Rutherford's and Knox's., 49 51 54 58 79 79 81 82 91 92 92 93 94 95 99 100 100 IOI 102 105 106 107 THE ARGUMENT. XI CHAPTER LXIX. LXX. PAGE Assembly's Act concerning Episco- LXXL LXXIL LXXIIL LXXIV. LXXV. LXXVI. LXXVII. LXXVIIL LXXIX. LXXX. LXXXL L XXXIL LXXXIII. LXXXIV. LXXXV. LXXXVL LXXXVIL LXXXVIIL LXXXIX. XC. XCL Witnesses sworn against Bishopps pacy, from the printed Acts. ,,,,„.. „„,, ., ,,„ 109 Vote about Episcopacy put a second time. Mr. Robert Bailey. Mar quess of Hamilton publishes a declaration concerning Episcopacy, contrary to the Act of Assembly. Substance thereof. ™..™, 113 Assembly's answer to Hamilton's Declaration. .„„„-. 118 Mr. Row subscribes the Covenant : he is son of Mr. John Row, Minis ter of Carnock. Committee for constitutions and laws to prevent corruptions in future. ...„..,„. 127 Five Articles of Perth condemned. The Act.™.. 127 Mr. John Abernethy, bishop of Caithness. Mr. Patrick Lindsay, archbishop of Glasgow Mr. David Lindsay, bishop of Edinburgh, deposed. Mr. Adam Ballentine, bishop of Aberdeen, deposed.. Mr. John Maxwel, bishop of Ross, deposed. „ Mr. James Wedderburn, bishop of Dunblane. Mr. James Forsyth. Mr. John Graham, bishop of Orkney. . Mr. John Guthry, Mr. Patrick Lindsay, archbishop of Glasgow. . Mr. James Fairley, bishop of Argyle. Mr. Neil Campbell, bishop of The Isles. . Several ministers deposed. Lindsay, bishop of Dunkeld.. Abernethy, bishop of Caithness. Wedderburn, bishop of Dunblane.^ Moderator ordered to pronounce, next day, the sentence of [deposition] of fourteen bishops. Mr. Andrew Rollock renounces his subscrip tion of the Declinator. Sentences read over. Ceremony of pronouncing the sentences of excommunication. Earl of Wigton. Mr. William Annane. Mr. Robert Hamilton ; and Mr. Henry Scrimgeor. Dr. Robert Hamilton, at Glassford. Mr. Thomas Mackenzie, archdeacon of Ross. Dr. George Wisheart, of St. Andrew's. , 131131 133 134 136 137138 138 140 141 142143 145 146 146 146 147 150 XCII. Mr. Andrew Shepheard. Edinburgh. . Committees at Jedburgh, Glasgow, and 152 Xll THE ARGUMENT. CHAPTER XCIH. XCIV. XCV. XCVL XCVH. XCVIIL XCIX. C. CL CII. CIIL CIV. CV. CVL PAGE Provincial Synods, Kirk Sessions, and National Assemblies restored. 153 Dr. Patrick Panter. Town of Edinburgh. Mr. John Lundie. Bishop Patrick Forbes vindicated. Bishop Elphingston's foundation. 154 Intention of sending visitors, to furnish a pretext for sending arms to suppress Huntly... _~ — - — . , 157 John Gordon of Crosseirne. Mr. John Bell, Glasgow. Mr. John Moyle. Acts of Assembly read over, old acts renewed. ___ Dr. Guild's supplication about salmon fishing on Sunday. Visitation of Glasgow College.— 157 161 Deposed ministers to be excommunicated, if they did not acquiesce. Places of doing penance for the bishops ; [they] may be relaxed in articulo mortis. Committees. Visitations of Colleges. Edinburgh gets the Moderator .„_„ Churchmen not to take civil offices. Mr. Andrew Cant. Index and Acts of Assembly. Acts, etc. to be read in pulpits. Mr. Archibald Johnston and Mr. Robert Dalgleish to license the press. Yearly Assemblies. Mr. Robert Blair trans ported to St. Andrews. Lex Rex. Procurator's place. Ratifica tion applied for.. __„.. 162 163 Moderator concludes the Assembly. tions to Argyle's speech . Argyle's speech. King's excep- His exceptions to the Assembly. Many ministers drawn aside by influence. . King's Declaration against the Assembly. . The Assembly's Protestation in Answer. . 165 171 173175175 177 The Marquis of Hamilton returns to court. Ministers turned out by the committees. [The Covenanters] think of levying an army and taxes. The King declares the Scots rebels in the beginning of 1639. 186 THE ARGUMENT. XIU THE FOURTH BOOKE. CHAPTER PAGE I. King incensed. , 191 II. Proceedings ofthe Covenanters in their own vindication. Their Mani- III. Its reception favourable in England. 193 IV. The King publishes a counter Declaration ; is necessitated to take arms and declare the Covenanters rebels ; his endeavours to raise money. Contributions from the English clergy and nobility. 194' V. The King orders his domesticks, with their vassals, to meet him in arms at York, on the twenty-sixth of January ; also letters written to the nobility to the same purpose. Earl of Arundel made general ; other officers. , — . 195 VI. Huntly's allotment ; Aberdeen fortified; Huntly's proceedings at Aber deen. ^ . — 196 VII. Assistance expected by Huntly from the King to Aberdeen. Scots ships seased ; posts stopped and searched. King's councels betrayed VIII. Berwick and Carlisle garrisoned. King's proclamation, twenty-seventh of February. ™ 198 IX. Preparations of the Covenanters in their own defence. Information for Defensive Arms read in pulpits, circulated in write, but not printed. _, , -™ . — ........ 202 X. Corbet's Refutation 203 XI. The Covenanters levy men. Colonel Robert Munro. Marquis of Argyle. Montrose opposed to Huntly. General Sir Alexander Lesly. Clan Cameron join the Covenanters, in opposition to Huntly. Meeting at Perth. Taxes 204 XII. Covenanters fortify proper places. Leith. Colonel Alexander Hamil ton their master of artillery. Dalkeith. Regalia. Edinburgh castle seized ; also Dumbarton. ..„. 207 XIII. Marquis of Huntly's rendevous at Turreff. James Ogilvie, Earl of Findlater. The Earl Marischal declares for the Covenanters 210 XIV. Montrose puts himself in a state of offence ; intimates the time of his return to the north. . 217 XIV THE ARGUMENT. CHAPTER XV. XVI. XVIL XVIII. XIX. XX. XXL XXIL XXIIL XXIV, XXV. XXVL XXVIL XXVIH. XXIX. XXX. XXXI. xxxn. XXXIH. XXXIV. xxxv. XXXVL Argyle appointed to take care of Airly, and prevent his joining Huntly; also to fall upon Badenoch, etc. in a certain event. 218 Montrose's following. „.. 218 Huntly's awkward situation. Commissioners sent by him to treat with Montrose. Montrose resolves to visit the old College of Aberdeen. Second deputation. Montrose's answer and behaviour. Trepida tion among the Covenanters. Foolish alarm at Montrose. Prodigy ; author eye-witness of it. 219 Huntly disbands, and retires from Inverury to Strathbogie 224 Commissioners return to Aberdeen. The Loyalists fly. Bishop Bel lenden flies. Bishop's house demolished , . 225 Montrose marches for Aberdeen ; seizes cannon, arms, etc . 226 Montrose marches against Huntly, leaving Kinghorn governour of Aber deen ; encamps at Inverury. . 228 Their severity upon the Loyalists. . 228 Interview betwixt Huntly and Montrose at Lowess. 229 Huntly returns with Montrose to Inverury, where he subscribes a paper, but not the Covenant. Terms which Huntly obtained for his friends. 231 Designs of Forbesses and Frasers to detain Huntly at Inverury. 232 Montrose marches back to Aberdeen. Argyle falls upon Airly. 234 Solemn Committee at Aberdeen ; [they] send for Huntly.. 234 Assurance given Huntly. Forbesses and Frasers press to detain him, and particularly Frendraught . 235 Montrose allows himself to be overruled. Huntly carried to Edin burgh ; ever after resented Montrose's behaviour to him 237 Huntly committed to the castle of Edinburgh. His second son, Aboyne, allowed to return ; goes to Berwick. Two of Huntly's daughters married „. 238 Answer to King's Manifesto, which was dated twenty-seventh February. 240 King's Proclamation. . . , 246 Hamilton comes to the Firth with a fleet..^ ~ 248 Keeps correspondence with the Covenanters. His mother's behaviour. 249 Those elected to parliament last year conveen ; answer Hamilton. 250 Army set on foot against the King. General Lesly gets the command ; settles the command and distribution of the forces left for the de fence of the kingdom. .„.„„,.„_„„ 252 THE ARGUMENT. XV CHAPTER xxxvn. XXXVIII. XXXIX. XL. XLI. XLII. XLIIL XLIV. XLV. XLVI. XLVII. XLVIIL PAGE Troubles in the north renewed. Lesly encamps at Dunse Law ; King at Berks, near Berwick. Fall of a bank near the Scottish oamp discovers round stones flt for balls. 253 Huntly's friends conveen at Strathbogy, to repair their breach of pro mise to him; their vain hopes. Account of the insurgents at Strath bogy : what set them in motion. Covenanters at Turreff. 254 Gordons resolve to drive them away. Sir George Ogilvie of Banfe. Gordons dispute who should command them, also, what commission they had to fight . 256 March to Turreff; come within musket shot. Covenanters fly ; not pursued ; loss inconsiderable. -.~^„ 257 Gordons fall to plundering; cause the inhabitants subscribe the King's Covenant. This affair called The Trott of Turreff. 258 Gordons return to Strathbogy, and from thence to Aberdeen ; their de bates. Strathloch advises them against being on the offensive; mediates between them and Marshal, Barrens' Reign ; go to Durris in order to jcwn Donald Farquharson and Huntly's Highlanders 260 Meantime Strathloch goes to Dunnotter to Marshall. His answer. Gordons disband. . ,, ..,, 261 A number of the Barons return to Aberdeen> where Marshal beats up their quarters. , 262 Gordons return to Strathbogie ; cross the Spey. Agreement between Banff and Innes. Articles subscribed. Innes gains Banff over ; and northern Covenanters disband. 262 Montrose collects his army ; comes through Aberdeen to the kirk of Udny. Barons disband. Montrose lays siege to Gight. 264 Raises the siege speedily, being informed of Aboyne's arrival in the road of Aberdeen. Aboyne's story. The supply given him by Hamilton. Dr. Nicholas Monk came to visit the Aberdeen Doctors. 265 Montrose marched from Aberdeen the day preceding Aboyn's coming. Aboyn comes on shore ; is met by several of his father's friends ; goes for Strathbogie. James Grant, a son of Carron ; John Dow Gare ; Aboyne censured for taking them into his party. XLIX. L. He returns to Aberdeen reinforced ; publishes a band of abjuration. Read of Cowie. Aboyne and Gun march to Stonehaven ; their views ; cannon shipped. 266 268 269 xvi THE ARGUMENT. CHAPTER PAGE LI. Lie at Muchals all night ; Aboyn marches towards Fetteresso..™__ 270 LII. Aboyn's powder blown up accidentally. Ships that had Aboyn's cannon and powder on board driven to sea. Aboyn advances to Meagre hill. Gun censured. Skirmish. Second party from Stonehaven. Aboyn's horsemen retreat. His Highlanders run away in confusion ; the rest reel and mutiny against Gun ; all drop off in companies. — 271 LIII. Aboyn sends to Aberdeen, ordering his men to return. This called The Read of Stonehaven. , . .. . , 274 LIV. Montrose follows Aboyn. Outguards skirmish, Aboyne possesses the bridge of Dee, Resistance by the Aberdeen's men ; Dundee's men repulsed, Montrose's cannon brought up ; makes a feint as if to cross at Banchory ; is followed by the cavalry by Gun's advice. Johnston wounded; defendants discouraged retreat to Aberdeen. Gun and Arradoul (Gordon) dispute. Covenanters march straight to Aberdeen. . , , 275 LV. Covenanters enter Aberdeen in great choler; imprison ; hardly restrain ed from setting fire to the town ; Marshal and Muchols save it. . 280 LVI. News arrives of the pacification of Berwick, on the twentieth of June, by sea. It was signed only on the eighteenth. Hostilities cease on both sides. __„.__ _„. 281 LVII. Aboyn goes to the King at Berwick 282 HISTORY SCOTS AFFAIRS. THE THIRD BOOKE. HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. THE THIRD BOOKE. XXX. How soone the Commissioner was gone, candles wer brought in A. D. 1638. to the churche ; and the moderator begann for to exhorte the members of the w^~T T , Assemblye that since kinges wer Chryste's subjectes, no member of that speech. meeting should suffer themselves, either for feare of or favour to any man, for to be reduced from the obedience to Chryste's commandes in the leaste ; that now they wer to reley upon Chryste's immediate praesedencye amongst them, whom, from the very beginning of ther bussinesse, they had founde going favourably alonge with thera ; that Chryst biddes all expect that thinges shall come for the best to thoise who comitte themselves to him for ther gwyde ; that they needed not for to be discouraged for any blockes that should be cast into ther waye, specially with thoise wherby it was ma nifestly discovered how praejudicial this worke they wer about was to the kyngdome of Sathan and of Antichryste, as also how acceptable it was to Chryste, the Generall of this combate, for to rebuild the ruines of his be loved Zion. XXXI. Immediatly therafter Lord Erskyne,* eldest sonne to the Earle Lord Erskine of Marre, stood upp and made a speeche (with teares, say such as have J"'"^ *^ '-'*'" wryttne this narratione,t although himself, who is presently living and is and others'. Earle of Marr,(') deneys it constantly,) to this pourpose : My Lordes and the rest, my heart hath been long with yow ; I will dally no mor with God ; I begge to be admitted into your blessed Covenant, and pray yow all to pray * This was done by Erskyne after the vote for continuance of the Assemblye. f So that the Moderator and some others weeped after him for company. MS. Historye of Glasgow [Assembly. See Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 119.] (1) [John, ninth Earl of Mar, succeeded to that title in 1654. He died in September, 1668.] 4 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. God for mee, that he would forgive me for dallyng with him so longe.* It ¦ is undoubtedly true that much after this fashione the Lord Erskyne tooke the Covenant, which he, presently living whilst I wrytte this, deneys not ; only he protestes that it was with his conscience, although now he fyndes mor sorrowe for tacking the Covenant so unadvysedly then he founde then for his supposed delaye in swearing thertoo. Three other of meaner qwalitye t desyred the same, and so all thes four wer presently admitted into ther Covenant. It is reported by some,t and suspected by mor, that thes menj specially the Lord Erskyne, wer resolved to enter in Covenant befor that tyme, but wer reserved on pourpose for doing it that honoer, for the encouragement of others : For no sooner had they sworne, and the moderator receaved them all by the hande, but presently he desyred the whole audience for to admire God's approbatione and sealing of ther proceedinges, that even at that instant, when they might have feared some shrinking and back- slyding, because of the present rupture. He had moved the heartes of thes men to begg admittaunce into ther societye. Immediatly therafter, diverse stoode up and spocke, but all much about one, and to this sence : They had seen how carefuU and punctwall the King's Commissioner was, lycke a good servant, faithfully for to serve the King his maister, and to observe his instructiones ; how much mor then ought they to be carefuU to be founde faithfuU in following his instructiones who was maister to them and to the Comissioner's maister lyckwayes : a compliment that the moderator, amongst others, had passed oftner then once that night. The Assem- XXXII. Thes exhortatory speeches being ended, it was thought fitt that bly >5 con- ygj.y night, befor the rysing of that sessione, least some, befor they mette * Historia Motanm, pag. 110. f Mr. Patricke Forbesse from Hollande, and his colleague [Matthew Mackaile], and one James Malcolme, merchant bui gesse of Edinburgh. [Patrick Forbes was the nephew of Patrick Forbes of Corse, Bishop of Aberdeen, and the son of the well-known John Forbes, minister at Alford, who was banished from Scotland for the part which he took in the General Assembly at Aberdeen, in 1605. " Mr. Patrick Phorbus," says a MS. account of the Glasgow Asserably, " was so much the more gladly received, because that his father before him had been ane sufferer for the truths of Christ Jesus. To whom the moderator said thir words, ' Come forward, Mr. Patrick ; before, ye were the son of a most worthy father, but now ye appear to be the most worthy son of ane most worthy father.' " Patrick Forbes became afterwards " chaplain to the loyal Earl of Teviot, at Dunkirk ; and return ing home with the King at the Restoration, was consecrated Bishop of Caithness, anno 1662." Errol MS. He died in 1680.] X Large Declaration, pac/. 287. Ch. XXXIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. againe, should be threatned, others allured to desert the Assembly,(') for to A. D. 1638. putt it to voicing : First, whither, notwithstanding the Kinge's Comissioner's j^ ^ departing and protestatione, they wold adhere to ther owne protestatione selves compe- and continow the Assemblye. They aU voiced affirmativly, except the Lord Jf "*jj."^^®^ °*^ Carneggye, commissioner from the presbytrye of Brichen ; Sir Johne Car- and that they neggye of Eithye, commissioner from the presbytrye of Arbrothe; Mr. Johne were to pro- Ananil^^^ and Mr. Joseph Brodye,(3) commissioners from the presbytrye ^j.^^!. of Strabogye ; the ministers and laye elder commissioners from the presby trye of Peebles ; Doctor Johne Strange, Principali of the Colledge of Glas gow ; Doctor Johne Barron,'*^ comissioner from the Universitye of St. An drews, with some others,* who refoosed to sitte with them any longer. Some (1) [" It was good we were all put to it it presently," says Baillie ; " for if it had been delayed till the morrow, it is feared that many would have slipt away." — Letters, vol. i. p. 118.] (2) [Parson of Kinore. This parish now forms part of that of Huntly.] (3) [Minister at Keith.] (4) [Dr. John Barron, Provost of St. Salvator's College, St. Andrew's, and brother to the learned Dr. Robert Barron, Professor of Divinity in Marischal College, and Bishop elect of Orkney.] • Adde Mr. Patrick Mackgill, Mr. Patricke Lyonne, Mr. Thomas Thoris [minister at Udny], Mr. Johne Wattsone, Mr. Thomas Makenzie. [Spalding adds, the Constable of Aberdeen " John Kennedy of Kermuck, a ruling elder of the Presbytrye of Ellon ;" and " Mr. Andrew Logie, person of Rayne." Hist, of Troub. vol. i. p. 81. The names ofthe members who withdrew were expunged from the roll of the Assembly ; so that they do not appear in the list which was afterwards published by Warriston, in the Answer to the Bishops' Declinator, and is reprinted in Stevenson's Hist, of the Church of Scot. vol. ii. p. 475 — 481 ; and in the Records ofthe Kirk, p. 109 — 111. So much of this document as relates to the Synods of Angus and The Mearns, Aberdeen, and Murray, is subjoined. L THE SYNOD OF ANGUS AND THE MEARNS. " Presbyterie of Meggill. M. George Symmer minister at Meggill. M. George Halyburton minister at Glen- ylla. lames Lord Cowper Elder. Presbyterie of Dundie. M. Andrew Wood minister at Monyfooth. M. lohn Robertson minister at Achter- house. David Grahame of Fentrie Elder. lames Fletcher Provost of Dundie. Presbyterie of Forfar. M. lohn Lindesay rainister at Aber- lemno. M. Silvester Lammy minister at Glames. M. Alexander Kynninmount minister at Killimure, lames Lyon of Aldbarre Elder. David Hunter Provest of Forfar. lohn Grahame Bailie of Montrose. Robert Demster Bailie of Brechen. Presbyterie of Merns [^Fordoun]. M. lames Sibbald minister at Benholme. M. Andrew Mill minister at Fetteresso. Mr. Alexander Symson minister at Con- weth [Laurencekirk]. Sir Gilbert Ramsay of Balmain Elder." No commissioners appear from the Presbyteries of Brechin and Arbroath, or from the burghs of Arbroath and Bervie. 6 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Commission ers from Strathbogy advise with the Commis sioner about staying.! of thes (its saide) pretended they would have stayed, but complained that ther comissiones did give them no latitude to staye after the removall of the Kinge's Comissioner. The second thing that was voted was, whither or not the Assemblye, though discharged by the Commissioner, was competent judge to, the Bishopps, and whither they wold goe on in ther tryall, not withstanding the reasones contained in ther Declinator : and this passed affirmativly, without a contrarye voice ; and so for that night the Assembly was dismissed.* XXXIII. After the rysing of the Assemblye the two above named ministers, commissioners for the presbytrye of Strabogye, went to the Kinge's Comissioner, humbly desyring his grace to tell them what theye should doe, they being cast in two extremes betuixt disobedience to the Kinge's commande and the members of the Assembly, who wer resolved all IL THE SYNOD OF ABERDEEN. " Presbyterie of Aberdene. M. David Lyndesay minister at Bal helvie. M. William Guild minister at Aberdene. lames Skein of that Ilk Elder. M. lohn Lundie Humanist for the Vni- versitie of Aberdene. Presbyterie of Deir. M. Andrew Cant minister at Pitsligo. M. lames Martine minister at Peterhead. M. Alexander Martine minister at Deir. Alexander Fraser of Fillorth Elder. Presbyterie of Aufurd. M. lohn Young minister at Keig. M. lohn Ridfurd minister at- Kinbettock [Towie]. M. Andrew Strachan minister at Tilli- neshill. M. MichaeU Elphinstoun of Balabeg Elder. Presbyterie of Turreff. M. Thomas Michell minister at Turreffe. M. William Dowglasse minister at Forg. M. George Sharpe minister at Fyvie. Walter Barclay of Towie Elder. Presbyterie of Kinkaime [^O'Neil']. M. Alexander Robertson minister at Clunie. Presbyterie of Garioch. M. William Wedderburn minister at Bath elnie [Old Meldrum]. Andrew Baird burges of Bamfe.'" No commissioners appear from the Presbyteries of Ellon and Fordyce, from the city of Aberdeen, from The Marischal College, or from the burghs of Kintore, Inverury, and Cullen. IH. THE SYNOD OF MURRAY. " Presbyterie of Forresse. M. William Falconer minister at Dyke. M. lohn Hay minister at Raffert. M. David Dumbar minister at Edin- kaylly. William Rosse of Clava Elder. M. John Dumbar Bailie of Forresse. Presbyterie of Innernesse. M. lohn Howistoun minister at Wartlaw [Kirkhill]. M. Patrick Dumbar minister at Durris [Dores]. lames Fraser of Bray Elder. Robert Bailie Bailie of Innernesse.' No commissioners appear from the Presbyteries of Strathbogie, Abernethy, Aberlonr and Elgin, or from the burghs of Elgin and Nairn.] """emy, Aberlour. * Historia Motuum, p. 111. Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, Answer to the Bishops' Declinator. to sitt, with whom they wold gladly concurre, if they thought the hazard A. D, 1638 wer not greate to follow. To whom the Commissioner replyed, that they might sitt still, and remaine with the rest of the members of the Assembly. " O, but," says Mr. Joseph Brodye, " your grace has commanded them to ryse, under paine of treasone : how shall we doe for that ?" " That's trwe," sayes the Commissioner, " and I cannot but commende your loyaltye, and if you wUl lett me know your names particularly, and wher you live, I will macke your fidelitye and obedience knowne to his Majestye :" and, withaU, caused tacke a note of ther names. The Commissioner furder did ques- tione them if they wanted charges or any thing else for ther journey home- ' wardes, and he wold supplye them ; they tould him they wanted nothinge, only they thanked his grace for his offer, and so tooke leave. This them selves, after ther returne, made no councell of, but related it to manye. XXXIV. I shall heer macke a pause, and, befor I proceede any furder, give ane accompt of the ansuer which was published afterwardes, in the name of the Assembly, to the Bishopps their Declinator ; which, being printed not long after this tjrme of the Assembly, and published at London, ther was ane answer lyckwayes printed to it at Edinburgh, at lenth, but not that which but in few wordes on haiste was readde in the Assembly, after the Declinator was presented. The summe of the Declinator see above, in the sixth sessione ofthe Assemblye.") To the preface, which containes, First, The necessity of nationall synods ; Second, The authoritye wherby synodes are called; they ansuer,* That the bishopps' protestatione concerning the necessitye of nationall synods, is protestatio contra factum ; since, for many yeares past, the bishopps have been the only impediment and hin- derers of calling Generall Assemblyes, being to them as dreadfuU as a generall councell to the Pope. To the second they ansuer, that heerby the bishopps, for ther own privatt interest heerin, doe flatter the King ; for, albeit it be ingenously acknowledged, that the supreme magistrate may in- dicte a synodef when he thinkes expedient, yet are not all guUtye of trea sone who shall necessarly conveene at any time without his warrant; for then all Christians, for the first three hundred yeares after Chryst, should have (1) [See above, vol. i. p. 160—168.] * Historia Motuum, pag. Ill, et seqq. [See also Stevenson's Hist, of the Church of Scot., vol. ii. p. 518—534.] ¦f See the questione of the power of calling Synodes handled, and all that is heer instanced for it, ansuered by. Grotius, De Jure Mctgistratus Circa Res Ecclesiasticas, cap. 7mo. 8 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. been traitors. If it be excepted that ther is a disparitye betuixt ane hea/- ' thne and Christian prince, it is not deneyed but ther is ; and that therfor the Christian magistrat's consent ought to be sought, and all meanes pos- , sible used for obtaining it. But what if he refoose to asiste, the Churche being in daunger ; what if he disdaine or neglecte that dutye ; what if he leave off to doe his dutye in the manifest daunger ofthe Churche; must the Churche be guiltye of treasone for using this necessarye meanes for obviat ing evUls lycke to faU upon it ? Paria sunt non apparere et non esse ; et error cui non resistitur approhatur ; et Veritas cum minime defensatur opprimitur ; negligere imperium cum possis deturbare perversos nihil aliud est quam fovere, dist. 83 canone error. Therfor if the magistrate be willfuUy wanting to doe his dutye, the Churche is as free to macke use of its owne right, as the anciente Christianes wer. Morover, the mor sounde papistes doe not give so much power to the Pope in calling synods (though they judge him monarche of the Churche) as the bishopps doe give to the Kinge. See Antonius de Rosellis, J. V. D. in Monarchia parte 2da, cap. 30. et parte 3a, cap. 3. who dyed in the time ofthe Emperor Frederick the Third, anno 1467. See Antonius de Dominis, [arch] bishop of Spalato, lib. 2. de Repub. eccle- siast. cap. 7, num. 18.; Jacobus Almainus, a Sorbonist divyne, who lived anno 1510: Who thinke that the Churche may conveene in an Assemblye (though the Pope should refoose to licence it), by way of requisitione or admonitione denunciativly, though not by waye [of] authorisatione and prae- ceptivlye ; and the reasone and fundatione of ther opinione they laye, because such a preiveleidge and right belonges to the Churche by divyne right. If thes arguments can be of force for the right of generaU councells against the Pope's flatterers, then much mor they must be concluding for the right of a churche in convocating nationall synods, as being mor necessaire ; which is not denyed by Dr. Richard Feeld, though he wer episcopall, lib. 5. of the Church, cap. 52. Of old, the primats called national synods, yet we reade not that they gott a speciall consent from the magistrat to indicte eache of them ; because Emperors and Kinges being Christians, are sup posed for to give tacite consente, whilst they themselves embrace Christiane relligione, and give freedom to their subjectes to professe it publicklye : For principali concesso, accessoria omnia concessa videntur, sine quibus principale sartum tectum conservari nequit. Hence the learned author, in his Tractate for Church Liberty e in Defence of the Venetians against the Pope, sayes that the Emperors, by yeelding liberty to Christians by ther edictes, to Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 9 professe Christian relligion publicklye, did lyckwaye give them libertye for A. D. 1638. to call synodes freelye ; for this is a substantiall and absolutly necessarye pairte of Christian worshipp : Therfor, since it is graunted by acte of Parlia ment, anno 1592, it is not necessaire to be alwayes seeking a new warrant from the King for that ende. But the bishops instance that, albeit it wer so of old in the Churche of Scottland, yet that it cannot be so now, without the breach of standing lawes; for in the Parliament 1592, it is declared that it belonges to the King or his Commissioners for to designe the tyme and place of ane Assemblye; whichis [confirmed] in the Parliament, anno 1612. To which the Assembly ansuers : That the title of the acte of Parliament 1592, is a ratificatione of the libertyes and preiveleidges ofthe trwe Churche; therfor, albeit that acte declare that it is the King's right, or his Com missioner's, to designe tyme and place, yet it is with that cautione if he be present ; which cautione insinuates that, in the Kinge or his Com missioner's absence, the right belonges to the Churche so to doe ; but that thes- wordes are not to be understoode of any privative right competent to the Kinge, as if it were left to his arbitriment to indicte or not indicte a synode, for thus that acte of Parliament should coutradicte the title therof, and this wer to robbe- the Church of its right, and not ratifie its rightes and preiveleidges. Other thinges necessaire to be spockne concerning this subjecte, the As sembly referres to a particular tractate, published upon that subjecte, to whiche they sende the reader. And then having past the preface, tl\ey an suer the exceptiones against the Assembly as followes : — First, To the first they answer. It is a calumney, as the dates of the let ters sent for that pourpose will cleare ; and suppose it wer so, it is knowne that if ther be assuraunce that ane Assemblye is to meete, that it is very uswall for presbytryes in such a case to choose ther Commissioners before the day bee particularly designed ; and that the bishopps cannot deney this, if they wiU but remember the waye of choosing Commissioners to the As sembly, at St. Andrews, anno 1617. Second, To the second they answer, That that acte of ParUament, 3, Jac. 6, 1572, is proscrybed and out of use ; that the cause of that acte was, that some wold not acknowledge Jacobus VI. to be King whilst his mother lived ; but that law ceased with her deathe. Secondly, If this ex- ceptione render the members of the Assembly uncapable to vote, then the bishopps themselves, and as many as entred into the ministry after her 10 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. deathe, would doe weall to purge themselves from this imputatione. Thirdly, That acte does not concerne all ministers in generall, but only suche who had ecclesiasticall titles and benefices. Fourthly, If ther be any omissione therof, it is to be laide upon the bishops ther negligence, who did not cause putt that acte in exeecutione ; but it is not to be charged upon minis ters, except it proved that they have refoosed it ; which cannot be objected to any, since that graduates in Universityes, and such as lately subscrybed the Confessione of Faithe, have willingly tackne that oathe of fidelitye. Third, To the third they ansuer. That they would never have refoosed the subscriptione to the Kinge's Covenant, if another sence had not been putt upon it, viz. that it did subsiste with all innovationes already intro duced, and that it was no barrier to the bringing in of mor ceremonyes : therefor they are not to be holdne for rebells to the Kinge's commande, till it be first proved that ther praedecessors tooke that oathe in the sence that the King now declares it to be tackne in ; and that all subscribents are tyed to follow the first subscribents meaning is cleare by the acte of councell in September, 1638. Fourth, To the fourth, Seing that, by old lawes, not only bishopps, but also abbots and priors, as weall as they, doe macke upp the third estate of Parliament, it must follow that such as speacke against bishopps can be no mor guiltye then thoise who crye downe abbots and priors. As for thes lawes, whairby bishopps are fully restored unto ther places and dignityes, specially 1584, they answer, That thes ordinances wer repealed, anno 1587, by the acte of annexatione ; and in place of bishopps and abbots, the small barrons, comissioners from the shyres, wer erected into a third estate, who yet sitt in Parliament, and out amongst whom the Lordes of the Ar ticles are chossne in aeqwall number with the other two estates, for to sup ply the defecte of the ecclesiastickes, who wer then excluded ; nor have the ParUaments which foUowd ever tackne away that right from the barrons. But, albeit it be confessed, that the bishopps alone doe macke upp the third estate, shall therfor such be accounted guilty of treasone who doe challendge the bishops faultes, and saye that bishopps are lyable to be cen sured in Assemblyes? which was confessed at Glasgow Assemblye, 1610, by themselves, and is declared by the King that they are lyable to Assem blyes by his proclamatione, in September, 1638. Are episcopacye and the bishopps faultes [so] inseparable, that bishopps must not be censured, least ther dignity be woronged, and [if] which some stiU crye out, that ministers vices Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. H ought to be distinguished from ther office, why doe they confounde these A. D. 1638. thinges heer ? That which troubles them most is, that God's faithfuU ser- vauntes ar no mor affrighted with the buggbeare of the episcopall hierarchy, but doe call a spade a spade. Fifth, To the fifth, that presbytryes have forfeitted ther right of electione of Commissioners, or sending them to the Assembly, because they have de pryved ther moderators who wer appoynted by the bishopps, acording to the actes of the Assembly at Glasgow, 1610, they ansuer. That, in that very pretended Assembly, it was expressly provyded, that ther should be yearly GeneraU Assemblyes holdne ; therfor, since this was not performed, the bishopps have forfitted that concessione : That thes actes appoynt bishopps to desygne moderators in provincialls, with consent of presbytryes present ; which, since they did it not, it was cleare that the presbytryes wer in ther oune place againe, except the bishopps can prove that the moderators are designed at the provinciall synods ; which will not be gottne done. Secondly, Many of thes moderators have willingly dimitted ther functiones, in which case it is laufull for presbytryes, by the acte of that Assembly, to choose new ones ; others, chosne by the bishopps, are yet keeping ther places. Finally, albeit presbytryes had turned out all such moderators, no man can justly conclude from thence that presbytryes have no power nor preiveleidge, but aU to be forfeitt : the farrest that can be concluded is, that they are answerable for the breach of the actes of Generall Assemblye. Sixth, To the sixth, that laicke elders asisted at the electiones, etc. [they] ansuer. Since that gentlemen from the Reformatione doe asiste in church sessiones, who can thinke it absurde that they asiste ministers in presby tryes? whichis [not only] the practise ofthe Churches reformed in Holland and Fraunce, but enacted in this churche ; see Second Book of Discipline, oftne to this pourpose ; and General Assembly, 1582, ordaines ministers to reqwyre elders to keepe presbytryes speciaUy in matters of concernement, amongst which choise of comissioners to Generall Assemblyes is a maine one. The Assembly at Dundee, 1597, appoyntes the number of ministers and elders to be sent from presbytryes to synodes, presbytryes then being made upp of bothe ; so that without ther advyce nothing was done in the Churche ; see Ambrose, 1st ep. to Timothee [cap. 5.]. If ruling elders are worne out of use, after so many actes for them, such as have aimed at bishoprickes are to be blamed for it, who looked upon them as ther only remora ; yet a few yeares intermissione ought not to prescrybe Churche canones received 12 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. and approvne, since no acte of Assembly can be instanced wherin they are abolished. Now it being dangerouse for any one to passe from his right and power in divyne matters, and since the Second Booke of Policye declares the office of ruling elders to be agreable to God's worde ; ther is no reason to upbraide them with the cloathing themselves with that which is ther right, for preventing the present hurt offered to relligione. Seventh, To the seventh. Since they name no minister, who, by tri- bunitian sermons, has stirrd up the people to rebellione, nor any presbytrye sending ther commissioners, nor any synod to whom they are sent knowes any suche, all this is to be holdne for a calumney ; nor doe they think that the bishops would conceale such, if they knew ther names whom they slander with treasone and schisme at evry worde ; but generalis are deceitfuUe. Eighth, To the eighth we ansuer. That such ministers are not to be ac counted shismatickes, because they have opposed episcopall tyrantes (and modestly too), who wer obtruding upon the Churche the dregges of poperye ; nor yet perjurd ministers, if they tooke not that ungodly unwarranted oath which the bishopps constrained many to sweare, who neither knew the Churche constitutiones nor the bishopps designes, who wer corrupting all puritye. Sure it is that, without perjurye, it was ever laufull in sinefull pro mises for to breacke [faith] . As for the oathe of intrantes, it wanted both truth in the matter sworne, and justice in the cause of the swearing it : Jus tice in the cause, because it was obtruded for the establishment of episcopal tyrannye in the Churche, which is now evident, albeit at first it was not so, and consequently at this tyme frees all from perjurye, specially, that oath hav ing been concerning things indifferent (as the bishopps confesse) which come to be removed when they hinder a greater good, without respect to ane oathe, least the bonde of pietye be the hinderaunce of godlinesse : Next, that the oath wanted the truth, in the matter sworne, viz. the laufuUnesse of the Assembly of Pearthe, and the five articles ther obtruded, together with diocesene episcopacye and its appendices, consistent with the first esta bUshed discipline of the Churche ; albeit many thought it so, being deceived by invincible ignorance, yet now the productione of the authenticke regis ters of the Churche has aboundantly cleared the contrarye : Morover this oathe tackne praejudgeth the oathe tackne laufuUye by aU ministers, in ther fathers' persones, and by themselves, whUst theye tooke degrees in Universi tyes : Therfor, since such rash oathes bynde not, the ministers who breacke them are not to be holdne for perjured ; for justice breackes unjust bondes. Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 13 But what if this objection macke against the bishopps themselves, Who dare A. D. 1638. not deny but that they have brockne the cautions to which they wer bounde by oathe at ther inauguratione to ther bishoprickes, by the acte [of] Assem bly at Montrose, anno 1600, which notwithstanding then, whither English or Popish, they abjured by oathes, and which scarce will be beleeved except ther main man had printed it: They confesse that they swore to observe some of thes cautiones for a tyme, rather then with a designe to observe them continwallye therafter ; a chinke through which heathnes would be ashamed to macke an escape, who abhorred that of the poet, Juravi lingua, mentem injuratam gero. As for thes four commissioners, who are alledged to be fledde from the censures of the Churche of Irelande (for ther are but four of them at most), it is ansuered. They are Scottish by birth, and by professione ministers of the Churche of Scottlande ; ther cryme was only because that, adhering to the simplic'tye of the rytes of the Churche of Scottlande, they could neither be wonne by force nor allurmentes for to confesse that the English Hierarchy and Service Booke wer altogether agreable to the worde of God : So that albeit they were censurable in Ireland upon that accompt, yet was not the Churche of Scottland tyed to acknowledge ther censures, since it did mantaine paritye of pastores, and lyckwayes did owne a mor pure simple forme of discipline : Furder, it did acknowledge such as wer called to the ministrye laufuUy to be laufull ministers, since that censure did not bynde any without Irelande. As for the ministers within the Church of Scottland whom the bishopps affirme to bee lyable to censures, and under processe, it is ansuered. They know none such, except they meane the High Commission, which is an unlaufull judicatory, and sett upp from its originall for to silence faithfuU ministers ; and it is trwe which Gelasius sayes, causa 11. quest. 3., Apud Deum et ejus ecclesiam neminem potest gravare injusta sententia : ita ergo ea se non absolvi desideret, quia se mdlatenus perspicit obligatum. Lastly, they saye, that ther needes some solide proofe to macke out that which the bishopps affirme, that all the ministry of the Assembly deserve deposition, it being a bloody sentence ; that the bishops did ca lumniate boldly, knowing that somewhat stiU would sticke. Ninth, To the ninth, that laicke elders are admitted to a definitive voice in the Assembly, they ansuer. First, That such ought not to be called laickes ; for the Bookes of Discipline calle them churchmen : and justly are they called clerici, though chossne out amongst the people, for a caUing to any ecclesiasticke function makes men clericos, if so be that Gratian speacke 14 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. truthe, dist. 21. cap. Cleros, ex Isidoro, et causa 12 q. 1. cap., duo sunt ge- nera, he proves out of Hierom, Clericos sic dictos quia sorte electi sunt, ut in Christi ecclesia deserviant : and [if] they are to be esteemed laickes when they receede from ther charge, that they ought not to be called laickes whilst they beare ane ecclesiasticke functione and a publicke charge. Se cond, This exceptione admitted, destroys aU the Synods holdne in Scottland since the Reformatione, not excepting the corrupt Episcopall Assemblyes, wher still some elders had voice ; this wiU anuU all Assemblyes of the Churche over sea; this assertion is censurable in the bishopps, though nothing else wer to be objected to them : nor wiU it be a retreate to them to saye " that such laickes as are delegated by the supreme magistrate have power of a definitive suffrage :" for thus they robbe the Churche of its right, which ever sent such as it best pleased; that this was knowne in the pri mitive Churche, whose practise the Churche of Scottland has foUowed, in which laickes (as they contemptibly call them) were still commissionate, and that by express acte of the Assembly at Dundee, 1597, wher both ther number is defynd, and lyckwayes it is declared that presbytryes have power to send them, and to elect them also : That of old godly princes thought it eneuch to admonish Churches whom they should sende, but the nomina tione of such they left to the Churche, who had the right, as they knew. To thes wordes of the CounceU of Calcedon, Mitte foras superfluos, to such, as Whittacker's ansuer is not satisfactorye (that thes superjlui wer the clergymen, monkes, and laickes, who favoured Eutiches, whom they thought fitt to exclude, for shunning of tumultes, since they had laufuU dele- gatione from none) ; if they by thes meane the gentrye and nobles sitting in the Assembly, then they putt an unsufferable effront upon men of honour : If this ansuer doe not please them, then lett the bishopps be content to heare Matthew Sutlive, an episcopaU man for them, de concil. Ub. 1. cap. 34. who retortes this argument upon Bellarmine, who therby would debarre laickes from the Synodes: " That thes wordes are not the wordes of the Fathers of the Councell of Chalcedon, but that Dioscorus and the Egyptians, fa vourers of heretickes, did so crye out. Thus," says he, " whilst Bellarmine can fynde no safe subterfuge amongst the testimoneyes of orthodoxes, he is constrained to flee to the heretickes, and to seek their asistance :" So doe the bishopps heer, to whom they doe not grudge this passage. To Theo- dosius the younger his wordes, they ansuer. If it be tackne strictly what he spocke, it is hard for to defende the supreme magistrate his definitive voice, Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAJRS. 15 against papistes, who macke use of this passage against his power in Church A. D. 1638. matters ; or how will ministers be proved to have power to vote contrare to papalls, who deney it to them upon this accompt ? for bishopps will sweare that presbyters are not in the order of the most holy bishopps, nor wiU Athanasius be spared ; who, at the Council of Neece, had a hande in the transactiones against Arrius, then befor he was a bishopp. [And what if Theodosius did meddle in the affairs of that Councell of Ephesus ?] Will that or will not that voide all the actes of that Councell ? But, albeit he was not present, yet he sent Candidianus, who did acqwaynt the Emperor with aU thinges : Wherfor Whittacker thinkes this to be fained, since it is not to be founde in the old coppyes, and because it is apparent in itselfe to be false. Lastly, Thes thinges are saide to be ill translated out of the Greeke ; for rov %l,a Tov xaraxiytv rSt itrifxi^an, should bc rendered eorum qui sunt extra cata logum episcoporum, and not eorum qui non sunt in ordine episcoporum : so the sence is that they only wer to vote who had comissione, as also such as wer reported by the bishopps out of the letters of pubUcke authoritye which they used to present, as Junius does weall observe. To the commande of the Empresse Pulcheria they ansuer. That it was very just, being that such as she commanded to be thrust out did intrude themselves, and carry very uncivilly, without any comissione ; the which cannot be applyed to the ruling elders sent to this Synode ; To which may be rejoynd, that ther wer laickes at the Councell of Calcedon, without delegatione from the Em peror, whom the bishops did bringe alonge with themselves ; it was graunted to thes to be present, which is deneyd to others ; but to what pourpose wer they present, if they had no vote ? Lastly, To that of Mar- tinus, the Archimandrite, they ansuer, that he refused to subscrybe, putting it over upon the bishopps, because he favoured Eutiches, the hereticke, who was condemned by the Councell. They say furder. That by this instance it is probable that, in the tyme of the Councell of Calcedone, that others besydes the clergye should have a definitive voice in Synodes : otherwayes, why should the Synod have reqwyred the subscriptione of one who was abbot of a society of monkes ? For Hierom sayes, alia est mona chorum causa alia clericorum ; clerici oves pascunt, ego pascor ; and, in another place, he sayes, monachus non docentis, sed plang entis habet officium: Nay, and the very CounceU of Chalcedone did decreet that monkes should not meddle with the office of churchmen ; because they wer laickes, and inferior to deacons and other ministers of the Churche : But albeit aU thes 16 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. wer graunted to be as the bishopps would have it, yet it wiU not follow thence that the Assembly is null, because the questione is not now if the Assembly should be constitute as it was in thes corrupt tymes of the Churche, but if ruling elders can consiste with the discipUne of the Churche of Scottlande : The bishopps objectiones to the contrary are all borrowd from Romanistes, to whom the doctors of the Reformed Churche ansuer fuUye, so that it is a shame for the bishopps to disowne the protestantes, and with papaUs to affirme that only churchmen have decisive voice in Synod. Are ther not amongst the people who are able ? Have they not concerne ment in opposing errors of the Churche ? ShaU they be debarred, because they are laickes ? This will exclude evne the supreme magistrate, and his delegates, to whom the bishopps doe yeeld a definitive voice. But because the bishopps bragge that Scripture and antiquitye are for them, it shall be scene that Scripture and antiquitye are not wantinge for that elders be caUed to voice who have giftes and a calling so to doe. Instance Actes [chapter] xv. verse 4 ; to what pourpose is the questione brought to all the churche, if all had not interest iu giving sentence ? See verse 7 ; et verse 12, [which] proves that others spocke besyde the apostles and presbyters ; and verse 22, " Then pleased it the apostles and elders, with the whole churche, to send chossne men of ther own companie to Antioche :" the word 'itols is [as] weall applyable to laickes, as to the apostles and elders, and implyes a definitive voice : verse 23, the synodicke letters wer sent in the name of the apostles, elders, and brethren ; therfor it followes that the people gave sentence and subscrybed; now, subscriptiones are most certaine proofs of a definitive voice : Againe, verses 25th and 28th, " it seemed good unto us," is [repeated] ; out of which testimoneyes Ludovicke, Cardinal of Aries, in the Synod of Basile, coUectethe, That others besydes bishopps had a definitive voice in the Synode. Any that would see the vindicatione of this place against the papalls, lett them reade all our doctors who have wryttne therof and of Synods, against the papistes. Reason lyckwayes proves it : for being that a Synode ought to consiste of a representative of aU the Churche of that natione, it must follow that it ought to consiste of aU sortes, and orders, and degrees of men, quia quod ad omnes pertinet, Jirmum esse non potest sine consensu omnium : et quod omnes tangit ab omnibus trac- tari et approbari debet : which, to this pourpose, is citted by Jewell, as a canon confirmed by Theodosius in the CounceU of Calcedone : which Dr. Feild sales is founded in nature and reasone. But thinges to be handled Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS 17 in Synodes pertaine to all ; and laickes as weall as clergy emen are citti- A. D. 1638. zens of the churche, to whom God oftne tymes gives the gifte of inter- pretatione in as great measure, and oftne in a greater then to ministers ; which, since it is givne for the good of the whole churche, it is very un- juste for to hyde ther talent under a bushell. Now, what place is meeter for the exercise of this gifte then a Synode ? whoise judgement is not authoritative but inquisitive and bynding, by reasone of the proofe brought from God's worde. Now, if authoritye may be competent as weall to laickes as to the clergye, and is givne unto them by publicke comissione, who ought for to qwarell with ther being present at Synodes ? And if any thinke that thes giftes are only competent to bishopps, let him remember the heavy complainte of Gregory Nazianzene against the bishops of his tyme, Qui licet rustici, idiotae, illiterati, nulla sacrarum literarum scientia praediti, nec in rebus sacris exercitati, in Synodis tamen ausi fuerint judicium ferre. Therfor, Spalato says (lib. 7. cap. 3) that Nazianzen did justly distaste thes Synods; lyckwayes Marsilius Patavinus (def. pacis, parte 2da, cap. 9.) observes of the greater and lesser clergye of his tyme. Ft deo teste, (sayes he) et fidelium multitudine, sacerdotes plurimos abbates et prelatos quosdam me vidisse 8f audiisse memini adeo diminutos, ut nec grammatice quidem congruum scirent proferre sermonem, ideoque suadet generate concilium, per non sacerdotes integrari ; having for to prove that, brought the example of the Apostles, and Isidorus his authoritye. Therfor they looke ill to the good of the churche who sleight the learndest of the laitye and tacke in the ignorant amongst the clergye ; see Spalat. [de repub. ecclesiast.] lib. 7, cap. 3. The practise of the primitive churche, [even] after the episcopall ambitione prevailed, wiU be founde frequent eneuch this waye, and such ex presse footestepps of this custome that they cannot be blotted out : Theo doret, bishop of Cyrus, epist. 81, desyres a Synode which may consiste not of bishopps alone, but of judges and others, eminent in dignitye and skillful of divyne matters. Marsilius Patavinus, ubi supra, cittes Isidorus Merca tor his sentence, and approves it, which runnes thus, Deinde ingrediantur et Laid, qui electione Concilii interesse meruerunt : much mor, then (sayes Marsilius), scoUers and skilled in divinitye, albeit they be not priests. The canons of the [second] CounceU of Orange wer subscrybed by illustriouse men of remarke, Magdeburg. Cent. 5. cap. 9. At the Councell of Colonia Agrippina, Coline, 887, laickes wer present, by whoise consent the canons of that CounceU wer published. At the CounceU of Metis, [Concilium] 18 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A, D. 1638. Metense, under Arnulphus, severall earles (or comites') wer present, noble- men and other laickes, fearing God, In the beginning of the first chapter the fathers saye thus : Episcopi, presbyteri et fideles Laid qui ante nos fuerunt, juxta sacram canonum authoritatem saepius in Christi nomine con^ venientes, justitiam Dei staUierunt, et idcirco suis diebus piacem hab-aerunt : see Spalato, ubi supra, for mor of this. The author of the Review of the Councell of Trent, albeit a papiste, yet, lib. 1. cap. 8., sayes, Ab omni sae culo post receptam Christiani nominis professionem, laicis suffragium defini- timim competivisse in conciliis : to prove this he cittes Actes xv. 23, and many Frensh and Spanish Synodes. At the Councell of Constance wer present twenty-four dukes, one hundred and forty earles (or comites) and many commissionat from cittyes and universityes, doctors, and professors of the law, all of them laickes. A greater number of laickes wer present at the [fir^t] Councell of Pisa. If Cyprian's tymes be looked unto, it will be founde that not only bishopps and presbyters wer present at CounceUs, but all the people also, or the greatest pairt therof. Lastly, As Sutlivius, an episcopaU man, says, de concil. lib. 1, cap. 8. [parag ult.], N'u.lla lege aut consuetu dine, -eel prindpes et docti viri a suffragiis dedsiols in condlio excluduntur, neque aliquid contra eos inoestigari poterit, licet omnes angulos perreptet Bellarminus, or any who have after him, or will undertacke the defence of so desperat a cause : Therfor, since thes authors testifie that such as are meerlye laickes have had, and may, and ought to have, a definitive voice in anye councell, evne in generall councells, by what law can thoise be re foosed it who are elders in churches ? who, by reasone of ther office, are to be joyned to churche men, and reockned to be suche, and not at evry third worde, by way of derisione and contempt, to be called laickes : The prac tise of the Reformed Churches, who aU runne this way, and ther doctors should not be sleighted : or, if any disdainfuUy will rejecte them, lett him heare that of Augustine, Qui contempta veritate praesumit consuetudinem sequi, aut circa fratres invidus est et malignus quibus Veritas revelatur, aut circa Deum ingratus cujus inspiratione ecclesia instruitur. Tenth, To the tenth, that the Assemblye is pairtye, looke for ansuer to the dispute betuixt the moderator and Doctor Bacanquell, session seventh,(i) and adde as follows : Since the bishopps declyne the Assembly as pairtye, why doe they call themselves members of the Churche of Scottlande ? since (1) [See above, vol. i., p. 175—178.] Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 19 the Synod, by the commissioners from churches, representeth aU and evry A. D. 1638. one of the Scottish churches ; so they cannot be members of it who cast all and evry one as pairtye. Secondly, Since the Nationall Assembly is the supreme churche judicatorye, and has power to decyde all churche contro- versyes, it cannot be declyned, saye the divynes of Great Brittaine, in the Synod of Dorte, annis 1618, 1619: Nor are any exceptiones to be hearde against it, which is the highest judge. Thirdly, Albeit the comissioners of the Assembly, befor its indictione, did praecondemne thes thinges that wer to be disputed in the Assemblye, they did but that which was ther dutye ; adhering to the doctrine and discipline first established, they opposed them selves, according to ther charge, to such as wer corrupting bothe, which be longeth to aU ministers : aU this will be no hinderaunce but any thing can be brought against them by the bishopps out of God's worde, for they are willing to embrace that, and chaunge their opinione. Fourthly, It cannot be proved that anything has been privatly condemned by any commissioners which was not befor condemned by the Churche of Scottlande, as they are ready to demonstrate: As for episcopacy, they did not praecondemne it, but referred it to the Assembly to be judged whither it ought to be looked upon as one of the corruptiones of the discipline of the Churche of Scott lande : For the five Articles of Pearthe, they did not simply then abjure, but only did promise for to abstaine from the practise therof till the synod should declare whither they wer to be accounted amongst the errors condemned in the NationaU Confessione. Nor is the instance concerning the Reformers declyning the Councell of Trent to any pourpose; for as ther is such a dis paritye betuixt the two Assemblyes themselves, that any protestant may be ashamed to paralell the two together, wherin bishopps wer judges, the popes slaves, the popes will the rule of ther decisione, to gratifie whom all wer sworne, which was so reUigiouslye observed by them, that they durst not give ther definitive voice in the lightest matters, till it was sent in a cloak- bagg from Rome to Trent : Ther is lyckwayes a disparitye betuixt the first Reformers and thes bishopps ; for the Reformers disclaimed union to the Churche of Rome, having abjured it as Anti- Christiane ; as for the bis hopps, they doe professe themselves to be members of this churche ; Ther for if the bishopps follow ther example, they must renounce our communion : And refusall of some Fathers to be present at the xnrrilxms Synodis, is ill ap plyed by the bishopps to a just refusall by them to be seene at this Assem blye ; since they are citted for to purge themselves of crymes laid to ther 20 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. charge. To what they say, that the judges are pairty, it is answered. That the cause for which the bishopps are cited, concernes not the ministrye alone, but the whole Churche ; and the bishopps did agree, anno 1600, that they should be answerable to the censure of annwall GeneraU Assemblyes, in case they transgressed the cautiones prescrybed to them : Therfor, since by agreement it is appoynted that the pairty offended shall lyckwayes be judge, that exceptione is frivolouse. Eleventh, To the eleventh, concerning that hatred which the members of the Assembly beare to the bishopps. It should be proved. The renewing of the Covenant they confesse, but not out of hatred to the bishopps, or to hurt them (or any man), if they be free from the challendge laide against them by ther Covenant : they show ther hate against the faultes, not the persones of men. As to that lybell wherby the bishopps wer citted, which they instance as an unquestionable proofe of ther hate, it is answered. That the lybell contained two sortes of crymes ; first of thes about which ther was fama clamosa and publicke scandall ; second sort wer so notoriouse, that it was questioned whither in a cause so notoriouse, wittnesses wer needfuU or not ; and if any doubte, he may be easily cleared by an over reading of the lybell. Some of ther personall faultes wer so clearly proved, that the As sembly was ashamed for to insiste in the enquery any longer. Some of thes crymes objected wer not proved, pairtly for want of tyme, and pairtly by reasone of the wittnesses ther absence, and not as if our consciences did witt- nesse ther innocency. If the bishopps desyre to have thes thinges proved, they may for us ; but it is to be feared that they shall faU under the ac- cusatione. But they say, why was tbat lybell reade publickly in aU the churches of the kyngdome ? Ansuer, not for to proclaime ther crymes, but because this was the surest and the only way left for citatione, being that the King's Comissioner refoosed to graunte processe against them, that so for want of citatione they might escape censure. Nor need they heere to crye out against wante of charitye ; for charitye that is discreet so covers sinnes that it does leave its own place to justice, which commandes to rebuke openly such as sinne openlye ; and none doubtes but the safety of the Churche ought to be mor regarded then the fame or reputatione of incen- diars and seducers. As for the precept of the apostle, not to rebuke an elder, etc. it meanes an oulder in yeares ; otherwayes such as sinne pub- Uckly must be pubUckly rebooked, of whatever age he bee. Nor did any member of the kyngdome suffer praejudice, the accusatione being against Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 21 bishopps themselves, and not the order of episcopacye, of which already, in A. D. 1638. the ansuer to the fourth exceptione. The citatione super inquirendis is deneyed, for the speciall undenyable crymes are instanced. As for three summondes, they wer not necessary, and are only to be befor inferior judi- catorys, which meet oftner then once a yeare, but not befor the highest judicatoryes, for else delinquents would escape censures till the third yeare. But what needs three summondses successivly ? for by ther declinator they acknowledge the first ; for, as the lawiers saye, Citatio vero contumaciam indu cer e potest, si scientia citationis apprehenderit citatum, atque ita comperiatur malitiose aut dolose latitare. Of the lycke nature is ther exceptione that the summonds ought to have been directed out by the General Assembly ; for it is the ordinare practise for sessiones to cite to presbytryes, and presby tryes to synods, etc. : This is only questiond by the bishopps, that, for wante of forme, they may escape censure. Lastly, Wheras they object that the summondes did charge evry one of the bishopps with^aU the crymes therin contained ; the Assembly ansuers. That this was done because all of them together had conspyred into ane factione, and because they wer all guiltye of some crymes ther specifyed. Twelfth, To the twelfth it is ansuered. That the bishopps, as bishopps, have no voice in Generall Assemblyes, is cleare. By the acte of Assembly at Montross, 1600, and the yeare 1597, it was enacted, that whatever minister came to the Assembly, they should be commissionate from presby tryes ; which two church actes are neither yet abrogate, nor ought to be abrogated, because they are founded upon the law of nature, and are in . continwall custome in other Reformed Churches, amongst whom thes only are admitted to vote who have laufuU delegatione from the churches : Be cause the synod representeth the churche, therfor such as are not com missionate from the churches to the synode cannot represent any churche ; except they will affirm, with Bellarmine, that the churche is represented by bishopes, as the republicke is represented by the prince ; which Whittacker, in his Controvers. de conciliis, aboundantly refootes, controv. 3. quaest. 3. Adde to this, that all the doctors of the Reformed Church affirme that it is necessaire for such as are to have voice in synods for to be accomplished with necessary giftes and a laufuU call ; which laufull call they explaine to be chossne and commissionat by the churche for that effecte. If the bishops have this, lett them shew it ; if they instance old counceUs, then lett them remember quod veritati a nemine praescribi posse ; and that the 22 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Church of Scottland is not to be modelised acording to the methode of old councells, seing it has extirpate that hierarchye as ane human inventione, which did macke waye for Antichryste ; nor can it be proved that episco pacy is as yet restored by any free Assemblye. Thirteenth, To the thirteenth they ansuer. That they justly refuse prece- dencye to the primates and metropolitans of this natione, since it is agreed in the Booke of Discipline of the Church of Scottlande that a moderator be chossne by common consente ; which liberty stoode unbrockne tUl anno 1616, in the pretended Assembly of Aberdeen, that the Archbishop of Saint Andrews obtruded himself for moderator, without any title or custome. Nor is this any new thing, seing that in the Councell of Antioche (un der Galien and Aurelian), holdne against Paulus Samosatenus, Malchion a presbyter of Antioche, did preceede ; see the Cent. Magdeburg. As for the canons of the CounceUs of Niece and Antioche, they are not to pourpose, for ther actes concerning discipline are disused amongst aU the Reformed Churches ; and for the NoveUs of Justiniane it is ansuered. That municipaU lawes of forraigne princes cannot prescrybe to other kingdomes, not governed by thes lawes. The bishops ought to prove it out of the worde of God, or at least out of actes of Assemblyes, that they have right to moderate in councells. They cite the actes of Parliament, annis 1606 and 1609, wherein they saye the bishopps wer restored, in integrum: to their temporaUtyes : the acte restores them, but no furder ; and in the Assemblyes holdne annis 1606 and 1610, they did not offer to usurpe that power, though thes Assemblyes wer holdne after the Parliaments of that years: and they know that the Synod at Linlithgow, 1606, ordained that- the moderator should be chosne by acte of the Assemblye and ther voice ; which acte isnot abrogate by no other acte to this daye. But then they teU us that they have their presidencye from Chryste ; wherin they foUow the footstepps of the bishopps of England, who pleade a jus divinum for their order ; which paradox they wUl sooner mantaine by amputations then dis- putationes : By their example they owne that order (which once they abjurd), first as toUerable ; then to be necessair, not only jure apostolica, but divino. But then why doe they not instance one passage of scripture to prove it so to be ? since the canonistes defyne jus divinum to be that which is contained in the law and evangile, and abydes still unchangable, (lib. 1 . Jure Canon, tit. 2) ; and aU that stand at defyance with Rome owne scrip- tur as the only judge of controversye. And, questionlesse, if they had Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 23 scripture for it, they would shew it, except they be Cassander's followers, A. D. 1638. who are so enamoured with antiquitye that they thinke ther is a, jus divinum founded therupon ; of whom Chamier has truly prophecyed that the state of the church shall be miserable : For, sales he, except that God doe re straine the attemptes of the semi-papistes, it is to be feared that the papistes shall not become mor correcte, but that we shall be mor corrupte ; of whom, if ye will, yow may heare the censure of ane ancient father, viz. That it is devilUsh for to putt divyne authoritye upon any thing that is without the authoritye of the scriptures : this censure, out of ther love to antiquitye, it may bee that they will listne too mor calmelye. But, albeit a bishop have his call from Chryste, by what authoritye doe they exercise it in the Church of Scottlande, which never consented to the setting upp therof? And since they ascrybe it neither to Parliaments nor Assemblyes, they must be holdne for usurpers, for the which, amongst other crymes, they are citted. But, saye the bishopps, we have our laufull caU, by the elec tione of the chapter, and episcopaU consecratione, by the Kinge's consente, acording to the old laudable constitutiones of this kyngdome. To this the Assembly ansuers. If heerby they understand popish canons, we leave them to thes lawes ; yet that wiU not be a defence, for thes lawes are oftne rescinded by posterior constitutiones, et posteriora deroga.nt prioribus : But lett them shew the least shaddow of warrant graunted by GeneraU As semblyes for episcopall election by chapters; on the contrare, they are condemned by Assemblyes as popish. As for the free consent and voice of the chapter, it is a frivolouse tale to mentione it, for it is weall knowne that the King names the bishop to be chossne by his letters, and the chapter must give their consent to his imperiouse requeste ; Nor gett the people any voice in ther electione, as of olde, as themselves will not deneye ; albeit Cyprian sayes that Cornelius of Rome, and other bishopps in his tyme, wer so chossne ; and he sayes that they cannot be otherwayes chosne, since the people ought to nominate such as are able, and reject others. Wher is that canon (says Athanasius), ut a pala.tio mitteretur epifcopus? See mor of such electiones, in Spalato de Repub. Ecclesiast. lib. 3. cap. 3. Therfor, since they are not elected as in Cyprian's dayes, and are but usurpers, they have no reasone to macke use of any passage of Cyprian. Rather lett them heare Gregory Nazianzen, concerning the f^oQ^it^, ^ phi- larchia of bishopps : Propter hanc res omnes nostrae jactantur et conc-utiim- tur, propter hanc fines terrae versantur in suspitione, et bello, eoque surdo, 24 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS; [B. IIL A. D. 1638. et ne nomen quidem habente : propter hanc periculum est ne magnum illud et NOVVM nomen amittamus, utinam neque esset praesidentia, neque loci praelatio, neque violenta praeeminentia, ut ex .tola virtute cognosceremur. Nunc autem dextrum hoc latus et siriistrum, sublimior et inferior sedes, et ilia praeeundi vel eodem gradu incedendi invecta consuetudo multas nobis clades necquicquam intulerunt, etc. Now what is meant by that magnum et novum nomen? Augustine telles us, Epist 19, ad Hieronymum : Secundum honorum vocabula quae jam ecclesiae usus obtinuit episcopatus presbytero major est. Yow must know that he speackes of episcopacye, which, in his tyme, differed from presbytery, not in the thinge itself, but the title ; not in the power, but the honor : What wold he have saide if he had seene the pryde that bishopps at this day have brought into the churche ? Fourteenth, To the fourteenth, the Synod deneys [not] that the power of ecclesiasticaU ordinatione was givne to the bishopps [of old] by permissione ; yet wiU it not follow that by the Lord's warrant the bishopps in Scottland have it. Morover, if bishopps cannot be judged by presbyters who are or dained by them, no mor could the presbyters of the Churche of Alexandria be judged by ther bishopp, for they ordained him, [if] Hierome may be trusted, who says, Eos semper unum ex se electum, et in excelsior e gradu col- locatum, Episcopum nominasse : this passage alone is eneuche to close ther mouthes who ascrybe the right of ordination to bishopps alone. And because bishopps of old wer not judged by presbyters, it will not foUow that the lycke ought to be in Scottlande, which declares aU ecclesiastickes subjectes to ane General Assembly's censure : none argue thus but thes who, disclaiming Church canons, runne to custome : And this argument is the begging of the questione ; for it is in vaine for the bishopps to pleade to be judged acording to old canons, seing that the Church of Scottland is not obleidged to be regulated by ther example ; and, if the canons be acuratly followed, then no bishopp can be judged but befor twelve bishopps, the accusation being proved by fitt \yittnesses. Causa 2da, quest. 5. Canone, Nullam dam- nationem, Sf Praesul non damnetur ; this canon is said to be made by Silves ter, bishop of Rome, in Constantinus Magnus his dayes : This waye doe the bishops enclyhe [when they cite] ConcU. Carthag. 2. Can. 10. Now, if bishopps reqwyre to be judged acording to thes canons, it is lycke that in haist ther processes shaU not be made ; for all thes formalityes wiU never be founde in a NationaU Synode ; for the want wherof they wiU escape aU censur, the which is ther maine aime. Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 25 Therfor, since all ther exceptiones are frivolouse, ther protestations fol- A. D. 1638. lowng must fall to the ground. As for that clause concerning the necessitye of the churche to be governed by bishopps, the synod wonders at ther impudence, since they cannot prove it by Scripture so to bee ; for it is neither simply necessaire, being that many churches have flowrished and prospered without it, wher it was never heard of; nor is it necessaire, in some respectes, for its utilitye, because that ^^oiS^lx, albeit it was first sett upp of a good intentione, yet made waye, unperceived, to the ambitione of manye, as Nazianzen tells yow, vide supra ; what thinke ye would he have saide if he had seen our bishopps, whoise ambitione has brocke through all barriers, and now rageth because it sees itself lycke to be restrained? But why saye we ambition ? He is blynde who does not descrye a doore opne to Antichryste : for the aristocraticke apostolicke governement of the churche, by a per- petwall concessione of prioritye of order to one, has turned and been chaunged, by little and little, into olygarchye, and lastly into the tyranny of one oecumenicke universall pope. How helpfuU it has been for to promove peace, the distracted condition of this churche will wittnesse, which has found episcopacye, since it was sett upp heer, to have been still the fewell of schisme, and not the remedye ; for nothing divydes a churche mor then desyre to rule ; which may be observed in the popes of Rome, whoise heade can be borne upp with none other then episcopall shoulders : And it would macke Democritus laughe for to heare six bishopps protest, in name of all the Churche of Scottland (for more then six subscrybe it not), and a few ministers, either brybed, or terrifyd, or cheated by false narratives, as sun- drye of them, with teares, did ingenowsly acknowledge ; yet thes few must macke upp all the Churche of Scottlande, whoise authoritye, and all her Assemblyes they stryve to anui be such a prodigiouse protestatione. They say that they are carefuU that nothing be determind in the Assembly con trare to the churche its liberty, the Kinges power, etc. ; of which it is cleare that hitherto they have had little regarde : Yet thes thinges they upbraid, that they may macke us hatefuU to the King and neighbour churches; albeit the Assembly never intended to worong the Kinges authoritye, or to putt any marke of infamy on neighbour churches, who will not tacke it evill if this church, aiming at puritye, reject all that which she fyndfes contrarye therunto, albeit receaved by others ; to whom, as the Churche of Scottland does not attempt to praescrybe, so she thinkes others ought not to praescrybe to her by ther example, specially of thes 26 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. HL A. D. 1638. churches amongst whom some dregges does yet remaine of the Romish disease : see Rainold in Thesibus de ecclesia, thes. 5. parag. 29. And thus much shortly lett it suffice to have saide in ansuer to the bishops ther Declinator. This answer to the bishopps Declinator, if it gott an answer, it came not out in publicke ;(i) for about the tyme that ther DecUuator was putt out, the troubles wer begunne ; and the penns which had been ther weapons on both sydes, for a whyle wer exchaunged with pickes ; armyes on both sydes in the feelds ; and the King reduced to that extremes that he was necessitate to give way to the abolitione of Episcopacye in Scottland, and to retreate all his former declarations against the Covenanters, and all his censures that he had past upon the former protestations, and approve all as good service which the Covenanters had done, and to lett the bishopps shift for them selves, and others be censured who did owne his interest. But to returne to the narratione of the Assembly. Council meet, XXXV. The Commissioner, after he had left the Assembly, that very and write the njght, though late, assembled the Councell ; non absent but Argylle, who excused his absence, and the Lord Almond, then sicke. The CounceU did that night resolve on two thinges ; first, to wrytte a letter of thankes to the King for his gratiouse proferrs made by his Commissioner at the Assembly ; next, to draw upp a proclamatione for dissolvinge the Assemblye. The letter, besyde thankes to the Kinge, contained in it a great commendatione of Hamilton's skill and honestye, and ane offer to mantaine with ther lyves and fortunes the Kinge's person and royall authoritye, promising in all other actiones to approve themselves his Majestyes most loyall and humble servantes : [subscryved by] Traquair, Roxburgh, Marre, Murrey, Lith gow, Perthe, Wigtoune, Kingorne, TuUibardin, Haddingtoune, Gallo- (1) [Though Gordon seems not to have seen it, nor indeed to have known that it existed, an Answer to the Bishop's Declinator was published in the beginning of 1639. It differs in many points from the Responsio Synodi ad Episcoporum protestationem, printed by Spang, (Historia Motuum, p. Ill — 142,) and of which Gordon, in the text, has given a translation. Baillie thus notices it : — " Our next purpose was the bishop's declinature. Two answers in writ were framed to it, and both read by the clerk. They were confessed to be raw and rude, but promised to be perfected with the first conveniency ; as indeed, some days thereafter, I saw two papers, one of the clerk's forming, possibly with Mr. Calderwood's help, another of Mr. Andrew Ramsay's more short. Both contained solid answers to all that was material in the bishop's invectives ; yet were thought meet to be cast in a third better mould, which ye see in print, The Answer to the bishops declina ture." — Letters, vol. i., p. 113. And see Stevenson's Hist, ofthe Church of Scot., vol. ii. p. 518—534.] Ch. XXXVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 27 way, Annandaile, Lauderdale, Kinoule, Drumfreeise, Southeske, Angusse, Elphinstonne, Naper, DaUyeU, Haye, WiUiam Elphinstonne, James Car michael, Hamiltoune, Blackehall ; and dated at Glasgow, November twenty- eighth, 1638.(1) To this letter the Earle of Argylle refoosed to sett his hande ; as he lyckwayes did refoose to subscrybe the proclamatione which was drawne upp the next morning, and signed by the Comissioner and Councell. XXXVI. But notwithstanding of the Comissioners abrupt departur the night befor, yet the Assembly, who after his removall had voted ther owne sitting still, did acordingly conveene the next day : And with thes did the Earle of ArgyUe joyne himselfe ; although he had no comissione to be a ruling elder, yet he entred as a weall wisher, to see thinges framed right. The moderator espying him to be present, (though he knew weall eneuch he was to come), as if it had been unexpected, fell to request him in his owne name, and in the name of all the Assemblye, that he wold be entreated for to stay with them during the sitting of the Assembly, and be wittnesse to all ther actiones, that he might beare recorde how orderly and legall ther proceedings should bee. This he suffered himself, with very little difficultye, to be perswaded to yeeld to ; it being very weall knowne to all that he was come ther both to be wittnesse and a director of ther actings. It is affirmed* that som wer glade of his comming, as supposing the King and Commissioner had pourposly directed him to waite ther ; which, as it was not true, so it was not tackne so by the Assembly, for all knew that the King befor now suspected him, and the Assembly knew he was ther freende. It was also much about this tyme that the Earl of Marr, Earl of Wigtoune, Earl of Kinghorne, Earl of Gallowaye, the Lords of Naper and of Almonde, and BlackhaU, declared lyckwayes to the Assemblye that they had subscrybed the Covenant, which the King had enjoyned, acording to the sence and practise that it was subscrybed in anno 1580 ; and saide that they thought it only meetest that the true sence and explicatione therof should be searched out of the Registers of the Assemblye, and no wher else. XXXVII. Therafter the Assembly, tacking notice that the bishopps in their Declinator had objected to them, that some ministers wer members ther who were under the churche censures, both at home and in Irelande, they (i) [See the King's Large Declaration, p. 289.] * Historia Motuum, p. 184. A. D. 1638. Assembly continue to sit. Argyle joins them ; and several other lords. Sess : 8va, November 29. Thursdaye. Ministers who had been objected to in the Declina tor are clear ed and re ceived. 28 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. Committees. Bishop of Galloway's process be gun. Pro clamation for dissolving the Assembly. Sum of the King's rea sons. beganne to enquyre concerning thes. Four of them had fledde out of Irelande, viz. Mr. Robert Blaire,(') Mr. Johne Levistoune,(2) Mr. James Hamiltoune, W and Mr. James Macklellane,(^) who had gottne a call to places in Scottlande : [They] declared that they had been questioned in Irelande for no other reasone but because they did adhere to the puritye of church discipline, and refoosed for to practise all thes ceremonyes that the Churche of Ireland was burthened withall ; and, withall, they shewed that the processes ledd against them wer not formall nor legaU. After them the three ministers^ in Scott land, viz. Mr. Samuel Rutherfoorde, and Mr. David Dickson,* who wer sus pended and coniynd by the High Comissione, did so fully cleare themselves of all that was laide to ther charge by the High Comissione, that all the Assembly wer easily perswaded for to thinke that they had gottne woronge. Thus, themselves being wittnesses in ther owne processes, and ther judges owning them as guiltless before they wer questioned, and no man appearing to say any thing against them, they gott all of them a quicke absolvitor.! XXXVIII. The next thing that the Assembly fell upon was for to con stitute some mor Comittyes. First, One of thes ComittyesJ wer appoynted for to searche the registers of the Assembly ; and to declare and report from thence the true and reall sence of the Confessione of Faithe, as it was sub scrybed ab initio, anno 1580 ; and to macke an enqwyry whither all the new innovationes and chaunges which the discipline of the Churche of Scottland had suffered in the praeceeding yeares could subsiste therwithall, or if they (1) [Minister at Ayr.] (2) [Minister at Stranraer.] (3) [Minister at Dumfries.] (4) [Minister at Kirkcudbright.] (5) [There were only two mimsters in Scotland under the censure of the Court of High Commission; the third person alluded to was Alexander Gordon of Earlston, elder for the presbytery of Kirkcudbright. See Baillie's Letters, vol. i., p. 121. Records of the Kirk, pp. 149, 150.] * Mr. Samuel Rutherfoorde was confyned at Aberdeen ; Mr. David Dickson at Turreff. [Rutherford was minister at Anwoth ; Dickson at Irvine.] t Alexander Gordon of Earlston, his comission is challendged, but Argylle defended it, and gott it approvne. [See Records ofthe Kirk, p. 150.] X Names of that Comitty : Mr. Andrew Cant, Dr. Guild, Mr. David Dicksone, Mr. Thomas Mitchell [Mr. David Lindsay, Mr. James Martine, Mr. Harry Rollock, Mr. Walter Balcanquell, Mr. Robert Hendersone, Mr. Thomas Wilkie] ; Lordes, Rothess, Lowdon, Balmerino, [Burleigh] ; Lairdes, Sir William Douglasse, Laird of Keir, Laird of Auldbar ; Burgers, James Cohrane, Patrick Belle, James Fletcher. [Dr. Guild seems not to have been a member of this committee. See Records of the Kirk, p. 151 ; Baillie's Letters, vol. i., p. 121.] Ch. XXXVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 29 wer destructive therunto. Second, Another Comittie* wer appoynted for to A. D. 1638. peruse the Service Booke and Booke of Canons diligentlye, and the Booke of Ordinatione, and report to the Assembly all that they founde censurable in any of the three. Third, There was a third Comittyet appoynted for to coUect the greivaunces of the churches, and represent them to the Assem blye, so ordering them, that lycke overtures, they might be proposed orderly and seasonably to the Assembly, eache of them in ther owne place.J And now the accusers of the bishopps urged for to gett hearing of ther processe against the bishopps ; which was easily yeelded unto. And the first that they beganne upon was Mr. Thomas Sydserfe, bishopp of GaUowaye, whoise accusatione was publickly reade, himselfe being citted at the churche doore to come in and answere (though they wer sure he would not). It con tained (besyde the general articles that wer charged upon all the bishopps, such as the breach of the conditiones enacted at Montrosse, anno 1600, and the usurping upon the libertyes of the churche), many personal crymes, as was alleadged, wherof he was guiltye, both in his manners and doctrine ; such as opne and ordinar profanation of the Lordes day ; negligence in his pastorall charge, and downright tyrannye (the lycke whairof had scarcely been heard) both over the ministers and others ; as also, that he had frequently and familiarly conversed with papistes, who, for ther obstinacye, wer ex communicated ; also, that he had affirmed, in hatred off the reformed rel ligione, that papistes he loved better then puritans ; that he mantained and defended many popish tenents ; and, lastly, that both in publicke and privat he defended Arminianism. § The tryall of his processe and his sentence was delayed for the tyme ; for the Assembly wer expecting evry minute that * Second Comitty men wer : Mr. Andrew Ramsey, Mr. Robert Bailye, Mr. Edward Wright, Mr. Gilbert Rosse, Mr. Alexander Petrye, Mr. Wilham Menezeis, Mr. John Oswell, Mr. Samuel Rutherfoorde, Mr. Alexander Carsse, Mr. William Douglasse, Mr. John Haye. [In other lists the name of John Adamson appears, and that of Gilbert Ross is omitted. See Records of the Kirk, p. 152. ; Stevenson's Hist, of Church of Scot. vol. ii., p. 587. ; Baillie's Letters, vol. i., p. 121.] f Third Comittye men for tacking in complaints against the bishopps wer : Mr. Thomas Ramsey, Mr. William Sympsone, Mr. David Dalgleishe, Mr. Donald Mackgillivorich, Mr. John Duncan, Mr. George Summer, Mr. David Murrey, Mr. George HaUiburtoune, Mr. Alexander Martine, Mr. William Falconer, Mr. David Monroe, Mr. George Leslye, Mr. Walter Steward ; Earl of Eglintoune ; Laird Durye, younger ; Mr. Alexander Peerson, and others. [Compare Records ofthe Kirk, p. 151.] I MS. History referres the nomination of thes three Comittyes to Session ninth. § It was objected against the Bishop of Gallowaye, That he had a custome to sweare ordinarly in his anger ; that he called his horse Puritane, who would doe nothing without 30 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A, D. 1638. the Kinge's Commissioner wold, by opne proclamatione, command the As- sembly to dissolve, as yesternight he had done by worde of mouthe, himself being personally present. Nor wer they deceived of ther expectatione. For that forenoone, being November twenty-ninth, the King's heraulds, with coates of armes on ther backes, went to the mercatt crosse of Glasgow, and ther solemnly, with sounde of trumpetts, did reade the Kinge's proclama tione for dissolving of the Assemblye. The summe wherof was to this pour pose : * First, The Kinge gives a particular accoumpt of all his concessiones to them, both for to remove ther jealousyes, as also for to assure them of his intentiones towards the preservatione of reUigione ; he shewed that for all that, the wished effectes had not followed ; for albeit he had graunted to them a free Assemblye, yet ther meeting was not suche, because it was made upp mostly of thes who had protested against his concessiones in his proclama tione, September twenty-second, although themselves had oftne petitioned for such thinges as wer graunted ther. Second, Because they had and wer dayly and howerly gwarding and watching about the CasteU of Edinburgh, suffering nothing to be imported therin but at ther discretione, and stopped openly the importatione of ammunition or any necessaires to any of his houses within the kyngdome : deneying that liberty to ther King which the meanest of them did arrogate to themselves, (an acte without praecedent or example in the Christian world). Third, By convocating unlaufuU CounceU Tables of nobilitye, gentrye, etc., within Edinburgh, without regarde to the lawes of the kyngdome ; and [they] conveene ther without warrant from authoritye, and treate ther upon matters civUl and ecclesiasticke, and send from thence ther orders and injunctions to ther subordinate tables in the countreye, and to ther under-ministers ; and, under colour of reUigione, exercise unbounded authoritye and unwarrantable, and reqwyre obedience to ther iUegall and unlaufuU procedurs and directions, to the great praejudice of authoritye and laufull monarchicaU governement. Fourth, The course for electione of ther commissioners to the Assemblye iUegaU and uniformall; some under censure of the Churche in Scottlande, others censurable in Irlande ; some banishd for preaching against monarchye, others suspended; some irregularly admitted to the ministrye ; some of them denounced rebeUs at the beating ; (for his lyfe and conversatione otherwayes they cleared him) ; that he had brockne all the caveatts, had transgressed against the actes of Generall Assemblys and bookes of policye. * Large Declaration, pag. 290. Ch. XXXIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 31 home, and consequently uncapable to be judges or to stande in judgement; A. D. 1638. all the members bounde by oathe for to overthrow episcopacye ; peremp- torye and illegall proceedings of presbytrys, who, at ther owne hande, with out order of law or due forme, did thrust out moderators laufuUy established, placing others who wer most enclynable to ther assistance ; for choosing comissioners to the Assemblye, laicke elders sett upp, having aeqwall voices or mor voices then the ministers, who choosed both the ministers and ruling elders to the Assemblye. Fifth, Comissioners chossne by privat instructiones and nominatione from the Tables, who wer such as wer only knowne to favour them. All which the King, blyndefolding his judgement, was patiently pleased for to suffer, but that they had still proceeded. Sixth, And come armed to Glasgow, in great numbers, contrary to the lawes of the launde and his pro clamatione, dated sixteenth November. Seventh, Had refoosed assessors to his Commissioner for to vote in the Assemblye. Eighth, Refoosing to reade the DecUnator of the bishopps, which shewed why the Assembly ought not for to proceede to the electione of a moderator without them, or for to admitte comissioners from presbytryes befor they wer heard to object against them : Refoosing to rest satisfeed with the declaratione givne in by the Commis sioner, signed by him, and registred in ther bookes of Assemblye ; and on the contrare, doing all that might tende to the destructione of episcopacy, although one of the three estates of the kyngdome, thus overturning the very fundamentall lawes. Therfor the King dischargeth it, under pain of treason, nullifies the actes of it, forbiddes aU subjectes to obey it, and he commandes all to remove thence within twenty-four howres after the publi- catione of thes presents : with this provisione alwayes, that his declaratione, under his Comissioner's hande, shaU stande firme to all his good subjectes in all tyme to come. He promised, furder, to protect all who should incurre daunger heerafter for disobedience to the actes of that praetended Assem bly, etc. And it was dated at Glasgow, Novembris twenty-nine, 1638, and the fourteenth yeare of the Kinges raigne; subscrybed by Hamiltoune, Traquaire, Roxbrughe, Murraye, Linlithgow, Perthe, Kingorne, TuUibar din, Hadingtoune, Galloway, Annandaile, Lauderdale, Kinnoule, Drum- freise, Southeske, Belheaven, Angusse, Dalyell, John Haye, WiUiam Elphinstonne, James Carmichael, John HamUtoune. XXXIX. No sooner was the proclamatione readde, but it was receaved Assembly's with a protestatione, readde in the same place by Mr. Archebald Johnston, ^'^°|nst\*;he" clerke of the Assemblye, asisted by the Lord Erskyne, and diverse others proclama- 32 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. young noblemen and gentlemen. It was thought that the paper which the ,. ~„ clerke readde was not the protestatione which was afterwardes printed ; for tion ; and the ^ ^ rr t • -i ^ sum of the he readde something out of a paper to that pourpose, and oftered it by the reasons. name of a protestatione to the herauld who readde the Kinges proclama tione, which paper the clerke of the privye councell offering to receave, Mr. Archebald Johnston refoosed for to delyver it, saying, He must stay till it w;er wryttne. And it is very probable that it was not that same protesta tione which was printed ; for it is not probable that they could, in so short tyme, frame a categoricke answer (which they strove to doe in all ther pro testationes) to the proclamatione, whoise contents they could not know peremptorly, speciaUy my Lord Argylle, being removed of his own accorde when it was drawne upp. However it was, yet therafter ther was an ansuer to the proclamatione printed at Edinburgh afterwardes, under the name of The Protestatione of the Generall Aseemblye of the Churche of Scottlande, made at the highe kirke and merkatt crosse of Glasgow, Novembris twenty- eight and twenty-nine, 1638 : Wherof the short summe foUowes.* First, They intitle themselves the members of a free lawfull Generall Assemblye, conveend by the King's warrant ; and then, after a narrative of ther peti tioning the indictione of the Assemblye, and the King's concessione, they shew that the graunte therof was with praelimitations of the members, or manner or matter therof, or the order, so farr as they wer destructive to its freedome ; and, since it mett, they shew that the Comissioner, by protest ing against all the actes therof, had furder restrained its freedome, as also by excepting against the members therof; but now, since the Comissioner, after seven dayes' sitting, does discharge the Assembly, under paine of treasone, for such causes as are contained in the Kinges former proclama tione, or the bishopps ther Declinatour, which they have alreadye (they saye) fully ansuered, or for such reasones as wer proposed in the eleven articles givne in by the Comissioner to them, which lyckwayes they have fuUy ansuered, or for such exceptiones as he has tackne against the consti tutione and actings of the Assembly, since the downe sitting therof ; which lyckwayes they have shewed all to be orderly done : For thes causes, and out of conscience to the truth of God, King's honour, churches Ubertye, etc. They declare that they cannot dissolve the Assemblye, First, For the * See Large Declaration, page 294. Note reader, that Historia Motuum [p. 188] has sleighted this protestation, and setts downe one which was made afterwards on December [eighteenth] at Edinburgh, for it. Ch. XXXIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 33 reasones already printed, concerning the necessitye of conveening ane As- A. D. 1638. sembly, which are strenthned by his Majesty's indictione, his Comissioner's presence, and seven dayes' sitting, and the King's declaratione, exhibite by him to be registred in ther bookes. Second, For the reasones made in ther former protestationes, to which they now judiciaUy adhere, as also to the Confessione of Faith and Covenant. Third, Because the booke of policye, registred in the bookes of Assembly, declares it unlaufull for to hinder or dissolve Assemblyes ; but so it is that the Confession of Faith, commanded to be subscrybed by the King, does relate to discipline, as it was established in anno 1580. Fourth, Because, secundum legem et praxim, the Kinge, by his praerogative, has neither grownde nor warrant, by acte of Parliament nor Assembly, to dissolve Assemblyes : But, upon the con trarye, his Majesty's prerogative, by actes of Parliament, is declared to be no wayes praejudiciall to the preivileidges which God has graunted to his spiritwall office-bearers of the churche. Fifth, The Generall Assemblys have been in use for to proceede without interruptione ; as may wittnesse ther procedur against Mr. Robert Montgomerye, though the King charged them with letters of horning for to leave off. Sixth, Because now to dis solve, after all ther adresses, preparations, and ther convention in the Assembly, wer to offend God, and to increase combustions in the churche, and deceive all men's expectationes. Seventh, It is most necessary to sitt still, for removall of the praejudices that may ensue upon the subscriptione of two covenants ; the first being a nationall covenant with God, renewd, with a necessarye explanatione, which corruptions, introduced since thes tymes of the first signing therof, has enforced us to adde : Therefor ther is a necessitye for to determine that both thes Covenantes are but one and the same, etc. Therfor, they protest, for themselves and others. First, That they are not guiltye of any ill meaning towards the Kinge. Second, That all the comissioners' and the bishopps' protestationes, proponed or to be proponed, may be discussed befor the Assembly, as the highest judge. Third, That the Comissioner depart not tUl thinges be settled ; and they declare, in God's presence, that they shall proceede in all thinges, without praejudice, acording to the lawes of the launde, actes of church, God's worde, and the light of ther consciences. Fourth, That if the Comissioner depart, it may be laufuU for them to sitt still, till all thinges being settled, it be dissolved by common consente. Fifth, That it may be holdne for a free laufuU GeneraU Assembly, and acordinglye obeyd by aU the members 34 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A D. 1638. of the churche. Sixth, That whatever inconveniences fall out by ther sitting, it be not imputed to them, but to the prelatts and ther adherents, as the disturbers of the church, and overthrowers of the libertyes therof; whom they doe citte againe and againe for to ansuer befor the present Assembly, and to defende themselves against the accusations aUeadged against them : Lyckeas, they doe, by ther present protestatione, summond and cytte all the lordes of the Kinges councell, or any other, who have procured, consented, or ratifyd this present proclamatione, to be ansuer able to the King and the three estates of Parliament, for ther councell givne in this matter, conforme to the acte of Parliament, 12 act. Jacobus IV., Parliament 2 ; protesting for remedy of law against aU and evry one of them. FinaUy, they doe adheare to all their former protestationes; and since in this they wer surprysed by the Comissioner, who removed and would not heare them, they protest that it shaU be laufull to them to enlarge and adde mor reasones to ther protestatione, for ther fuller clearinge ; upon which they tooke instruments. This was done in the high churche of Glas gow, in the audience of the Assembly, begunne in the audience of the Comissioner, who removed, and refoosed for to heare the rest of it to the ende, Novembris twenty-eighth, and upon the Mercatt Crosse of Glasgow, Novembris twenty-ninth, respective, anno 1638. The King's XL. Befor I proceede to the history of the Assembly I shall heer sette th ''^b*'""^ *° downe the exceptiones tackne against this protestatione by the Kinge.cO protestation. First, He observes that much is repeated heer which was in former protesta tiones. Next, He questiones how they could protest so confidently in the name of noblemen, barrons, gentlemen, ministers, burgesses, and commons, subscrybers of the Confessione of Faithe, since they neither wer actwally nor could possibly, in that space, be acqwaynted with what past at Glasgow at that tyme. Third, " That the Comissioner first indicted ane Assembly praelimited, which he fynding clearly, made a journey to the King to obtane a free Assembly," The King sayes it is false. No such thing was done either by him or his Comissioner ; but, on the contrary, that themselves did praelimitate the Assembly, the Comissioner's desyre being that ther might be conference concerning the forme of it, because that Assemblyes, for many yeares, wer out of fashione, and so ther order weer forgottne. Fourth, He exceptes against ther assertione that ther Assemblye was consti- (1) [See the King's Large Declaration, p. 302—316.] Ch. XL.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 35 tute " of such members as, by aU law and reasone and custome of that church, A. D. 1638. wer ever admitted in ther free Assemblyes," since they knew that ther was no law for lay elders' voices : Next, [he asks] if ther wer reason for it, that laickes, many of them ignorant mechanickes, should sitt in the highest eccles iasticaU judicatorye, and by ther voices determine poyntes of faithe, and by ther voices inflicte censures of excommunicatione upon ministers and bishopps, specially since they, sitting in aeqwall numbers, weall neer with the clergye, if they gett but a pairt of the ministry to vote with them, ther vote may carrye it, and perhaps the learndest and holyest men [be] thus overborne in vote by the ignorant multitude : Lastly, he deneys that ever ministers wer chosne by voice of ruling elders befor that tyme for to be comissioners to Assemblyes. Fifth, He challendged ther declaratione and proceedings to want synceritye, because they affirme that the Comissioner " did unexpectedly departe and discharge any furder meeting or proceeding in this Assemblye," which themselves did notwithstanding expect ; for. First, The Earle of Rothesse told the Commissioner that they did looke for the discharge of the Assembly, and therfor had provyded a protestatione ready wryttne, which they desyrd him to staye and heare, and it was putt to voices if they wold adheare to it. Second, The very protestatione itself telles that it was reade first in the High Church, then at the Crosse of Glas gow. Third, The moderator's speeche to the Comissioner was discovered to be praemeditated and penned for the pourpose, and far better then his or dinary extemporary speeches, which did lett see it was provyded against the Comissioner his removall. Sixth, To ther assertione, " that they had fully satisfeed all the reasones of the bishopps' Declinatour, and his eleven ar ticles, and that the Comissioner acknowledged it," he sayes it is untrue ab- solutlye : And wheras they affirme that the Comissioner knew that the ruling elders wer to have voice in the electione of Comissioners, he sayes its true ; but then he knew not how to helpe it, and declared his opinion against it, that the King would not be satisfeed therwithall; and that ministers wer as ill satisfeed with it as anye. Seventh, For the third asertione, he does looke upon it as so derogatory to royall praerogative, that it does deserve no ansuer but justice ; being that therby no mor power is givne to the King in ther Assemblye, if he had been present ther, then to Thomas Patersone, a taylor of Edinburgh, who sate Comissioner ther.CO Eighth, He deneyes (1) [As one of the commissioners from the city of Edinburgh.] 36 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. that ther Assembly is constitute by God's worde, though they doe affirme ¦ it. Ninth, He sayes that they will have the Comissioner's seven dayes stay ane acknowledgement of its laufuUnesse ; but they conceale that he entred solemne protestatione against evry thinge they said or did; which will implye, if they argwe right, that they acknowledge his proclamationes, though they protest against them. The lycke (sayes he) may be said con cerning the Comissioner his exhibitione of the King's declaratione. Tenth, He sayes ther second and third reasones are ther oune fancyes : They have sworne so, and interpreted the oathe so, therfor they must adhere to all : if ther oathe be amisse, it is unlaufull to keep it. Eleventh, For ther fourth reasone he ansuers, it is an untruth altogether : he affirmes he has power to raise Assemblyes ; Parliament 21, Jac. 6, act 1, gives him power to indicte Assemblyes; therfor to raise them. Nam ejusdem est destituere cujus est insti- tuere. And for that they doe deney that ther is any such practise, he sayes it is untrue, and does instance the Assembly at Aberdeen, discharged by Jacobus VL, who wer conveened befor the Lordes of CounceU, and declyning ther authoritye, and appealing to a GeneraU Assembly, wer fetcht within compasse of treasone, and put into the hands of the judge criminal. Fur der, " that, by dissolving Assemblyes, he does destroy the Church preive leidges," he sayes it is untrue and seditiouse: and instanceth an acte of Par Uament to the contrary, ratifying Assembly at Glasgow, June, 1610, and re scinding the 1 14th act of Parliament anni 1592 which gave power to Generall Assemblyes, in some cases, to indicte new GeneraU Assemblyes. Twelfth, To ther fifth reason he ansuers, it does not conclude because one Assembly did wickedly, ergo another may doe so too; and wUles them to call to mynde how they wer punished who kept Aberdeen Assemblye. For ther sixth reasone, he deneyes that ther is any reasone in it. Thirteenth, In ther se venth reasone, wherin they say they cannot ryse till they fynd both the Covenantes one, he answers. If they mean the Confession of Faithe, they need not sitt ane bower for that pourpose, both being one to a syUable : But if they meane ther owne additiones and explications, wherby they destroye the text, then they must sitt till the world's ende ; for thes two wUl never consist, his father's Confession of Faith, and ther glosses. Next, it seemes they thinke not both Confessiones one, for they have hindered the subscrip tione of the Confessione enjoyned by him ; so if they be men of ther worde, they should have sittne still yet. Next, to ther protestationes, he ansuers, That ther first, third, fourth, and fyfth, are not worth the readinge, as con- Ch. XL.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 37 taining nothing but tautologies, and tacking God's sacred name in vaine. A. D. 1638. For ther second and latter ende of the sixth, he conceaves it a boldnesse un- beseeminge subjectes for to reqwyre the Kinge's Comissioner not to depart from the Assembly till they wer pleased ; which he tackes as an affront to royall authoritye. And for ther cittation of the councell for to answer as de linquents before the King and three estates of Parliament (which he won ders how they can macke three without bishopps) ; he thinkes it a cryme that, for its boldnesse, called rather for admiratione then for refutatione. As for the Parliament, act 12, Jacobus IV., he thinkes the printer has printed it amisse, for ther [is] no word of Assemblyes, rather it gives too much to the councell ; but he thinkes it uswall with them to perverte Scripture, and mis- cyte actes of Parliament, as supposing the readers will not be at the paines to peruse them. Lastly, Wheras they lay the fault of raising the Assem blye upon the bishopps' councell, he protestes it was done by his owne spe cial commandement, when no bishopp was neer him to give him any such advyce. And for ther seventh protestatione, it being uswall with them, he tackes no notice now. Finally, He concludeth that all impartial men should judge whither he could any longer continow that Assembly, without endanger ing his authoritye, they having perused all ther actinges, his reasones against them, and ther protestationes. He did shew furder that liberty and limita- tione are not destructive one of another ; for that freedome which admitteth no boundes is not libertye, but licentiousnesse. And then for a conclu- sione, he shewes what reasone he had for to except against ther choise of comissioners ; as. First, That they refoosed to treate with the Comissioner concerning the manner of the Assemblye, or matter to be handled ther, alledging all thinges wer to be handled upon the place : wheras it is certaine they directed four severall papers of proclamations from ther Tables, two avowed, and others sent privatlye. Second, Some Comissioners chosne before indictione of the Assemblye. Third, Ther laye elders forme of choise was not warranted so much as by ther bookes of discipline, nor agre able therunto ; and though it had been so, yet it did not relevate, thes bookes being wryttne by private men, and not confirmed by Parliaments. And, suppose ther had been law, yet fourty yeares prescriptione reqwyred a newe reviving of the law befor it could be practised ; and it wold be thought hard measure in a prince for to putt in practise old lawes, and tacke penaltyes for them, without a new intimatione. Fourth, In many presbytryes the lay elders disagreed wholly in ther electione from choosing thes ministers which 38 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. ther fellow ministers choosed, and carryd it from them by pluralitye of voices. Fifth, The men elected as laye elders could not be thought able and fitt men, since they wpre never elders befor ; aU or most of them newly chosne ; some of them chosne lay elders the very daye befor the electione of the comissioners to the Assemblye ; which shewed that they wer chosne to serve the tume of ther associatts. Sixth, The institutione of laye elders is, by ther oune principles, for to watche over the manners of thoise in the paroshms, wher theye doe live. Now it is amisse for any man to be chossne elder from a presbytrye, who is not ane inhabitant within any paroshine of the praecincte of that presbytrye ; and yet diverse noblemen wer chossne ruUng elders from presbytres, within the praecinct wherof they never did dweU ; which is contrare to sence, reasone, and ther oune groundes. Se venth, Ther ruling elders have assessors, without whoise consent they wer not to voice, which is contrare to law and practise. Eighth, Lay elders are a burthen to the ministrye, and many presbytryes, forced to yeeld to them, did proteste against it in the tyme to come. Ninth, Some comissioners wer chossne who wer not fitte, and the fittest passed by ; because they knew that new men neither knew ther oune liberty, nor the Assemblyes, and would easily swallow bothe : Some comissioners wer under churche cen sure, and som depryved by the church ; some expelled out of uneversityes, for readinge doctrines contrare to monarchy ; some wer banished men ; some wanted ordinatione ; some admitted to the ministrye lately, contrary unto the standing lawes ; and all chosne by laye elders. Tenth, Diverse members who sitte ther wer rebeUs, and at the home. Eleventh, The Kinge's Co venant, the oath of aUedgance, the oathe of supremacye, ought to have been tackne by all who sate there ; nor is any man capable to be a judge who does not tacke aU the three : but so it is, that thes three oathes wer not aU, or not at aU, tackne by most pairt or any of the Assemblye. XLI. Thes wer the exceptiones tackne by the King against ther pro testation, and the constitutione of ther Assemblye; other exceptiones against it we shall heare afterwardes. The Comissioner is now removed, who ever since his downe sitting had disturbed them with protestationes ; but, uno avulso non deficit alter, Argylle succeeded, not as a formaHe Comissioner from the King, not as having any comissione, but as a director and as sistant, as it has been told alreadye. During the Comissioner's aboade, it is saide that few ministers spocke, and but seldome. Rothesse, ane Earle, is saide to have spockne mor that tyme then all the ministers, except the Unanimity of the Assembly. Mr. Alexan der Carse. Ch. XLII.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 39 moderator. I cannot tell how truly this is saide, but its sure ther was no minister spacke oftner then hee. Ther was a great harmonye observed in ther voting ; for whatever the first man who was called in the roUe (whoise name was Mr. Alexander Carsse, minister at PoUwart, one of the comis sioners from the presbytry of Dunce) did vote, all the rest did ordinarly follow ; so that by his voice the Assemblyes judgement in ende beganne to be knowne, and the caUing the vote of the Assembly heer (as in some which foUowd) grew but tedioiise to the hearers. This suffered (then and after) but ane iU constructione, for it was thought to be done by a palpable praeagreement. Others said that Mr. Alexander Carsse would be mor famouse to posteritye then any father that ever had sittne in any generaU counceU, Greeke or Latine ; for he behoved for to bee tackne for a man of unparaleUd judgement, both for soundnesse and profoundnesse, from whoise judgement not one of the whole Assemblye (except Mr. Robert Baily once) did ever swerve in the least particulare, seing the rest did constantly foUow as he beganne.C*^ But, after the interruptione of so many protestationes and proclamationes, it is high tyme for to resume the threede of my narration of the progresse of the Assembly, wher, tUl the closure, after the eight sessione therof, all thinges went on in a sweet harmoniouse unitye. XLII. In the next sessione, ther was a motione made for tryall of the Assemblyes of the churche, which had been holdne as foUowethe : First, Ane GeneraU Assembly, holdne at Linlithgow, anno 1606. Second, Ane other GeneraU Assembly holdne ther, anno 1608 ; one at Glassgow, 1610; one at Aberdeene, 1616; one at Saint Andrews, 1617; one at Peart, 1618. It was to be reqwyred if they wer to be holdne for laufuUe Assem blyes, or not. Much was spocke against them, but nothing for them ; for such as sate ther either had praecondemned them, or else wer ignorant how they past, and could say nothing for them, but tooke the argmnentes for ther nuUitye, mostly upon trust. It had been no difficult matter to have putt ther authoritye to a presente vote, and gottne them determined un laufuU, by what was aUedged against them ; but it was thought fitt to use some formaUtye in a matter of so great weight ; to which pourpose, therfor, the matter is referred to a comittye, * or select number of ministers, who (1) [See the King's Large Declaration, pp. 315, 316.] * Comittye nominate wer, Mr. Johne Belle, elder, Mr. Richard Inglishe, Mr. Johne Robertsoune, Mr. Andrew Woode, Mr. Andrew Blaire, Mr. Andrew Smythe. Lordes Hume, Sinclaire, Cranstoun, Yester, Couper, Balmerinoche. Lairdes Towey-Barcley, Sfr Thomas Keer, after his Peebles comission was examined and declared good. [Compare Records of the Kfrk, p. 154.] A. D. 1638. Trial of six Assemblies referred to a committee. Sessio 9a. Novembris 30. Fry daye. 40 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. wer appoynted for to search the registers of the Assemblyes, and for to reporte all that they founde concerning thes Assemblyes worthy to be tackne exceptione against them. The comitty wer very diligent in ther tryall and enqwrye, for they did macke ready a report, in foure dayes space after they wer delegated, and gave in such reasones against evry one of these six Assemblyes (as we shall afterwardes heare) as wer aUowed all of by the Assembly, and past in ane acte for nullifying them ; serving thes poor Assemblyes with that measure, which since they have begunne for to serve ther oune withaU. But because it may be worth our enqwyry and the reader's paines to be resolved why thes six Assemblyes wer nuUifyed, be- yonde any other that ever had been holdne befor them (though not after them), I shall render ane short acounte of the ende of the calling of thes Assemblyes, and the principali actes and passages of them. XLIIL* In the year 1606, King James did indicte ane Assembly of the churche at Linlithgow, December tenth, and deputed Sir George Hume, Earl of Dumbarr, to preseede ther, wher wer present one hundred and thirty-six ministers ; noblemen and barrons, and others, thirty- three. The King did remonstrat, by his letter, to the meeting, f that he had called them cheefly for regulating the tumultuary carriadge of some of the ministrye, whom in vaine he had essayed to pacific, (for not long befor he had called a number of them that wer questionable for speacking against him to courte) ; but, since nothing had prevailed, he had now conveened them to sett downe such rules as might prevent the lycke for the tyme to come. To which pourpose overtures wer proposed concerning the modera tors of presbytryes and provinciall synods, that, in the severaU presbytryes, the most experienced man should be designed moderator, and that bishopps should constantly preseede in synods ; and thes moderators to be in all fol lowing tyme constant members of the Generall Assemblye. Thes over tures, with some cautiones, wer passed in ane acte by the Assemblye, yet not without grumbling of manye presbyterians, who saw episcopacye by Account of six Assem blies, and the High Com mission. this meanes setting up its heade. Nor did the actes gett full obedience at first ; for, anno 1607, the Synode of Pearth did oppose thes actes, and discharged the constant moderator, whom the Assembly had nominated. The lycke was done by the Synode of Fyfe. * Note reader : The following digressione, concerning the six Assemblys anulled at Glas gow, as also concerning the Highe Comission, pertaines properly to the First Booke of this Historye. t Spottswood, pag. 500. [edit. Lond. 1677,] Ch. XLIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 41 Inthe year 1608, the King toocke occasione, upon the revoult of Huntlye, A. D. 1638. Anguss, and EroU, to poperye, for to call an Assembly at Linlithgow, in ' Julye, wher the Earles of Dunbar, Wenton, and Laudian, preseeded for the Kinge. [The] Bishop of Orkney [was] elected moderator in this Assembly. Severall actes wer past against papistes ; nor meete I with any thing heer that tended to the promovall of episcopacye, but that a comissione was ap poynted to be givne to evrye bishopp within his diocesse, for apprehending jesuittes, seminary preestes, excommunicate papistes, etc. ; except that a bishopp did moderate. Afterwardes, in the yeare 1610, the King indicted a meetinge at Glasgow, June sixth. The Earl of Dunbarr, Sir Johne Prestone, and Sir Alexander Haye, secretarye, preseeded [for the King] ; Spottswood, bishop at that tyme of Glasgow, did [moderate.] In this Assembly it was declared. First, That no GeneraU Assembly could be called, without the Kinges consente. Second, That bishopps be moderators of provinciall Assemblyes; or, in ther absence, such as they should appoynte. Third, No excommunicatione to proceed, without the bishop's knowledge or approbatione ; the lycke of absolutione. Fourth, Presentationes of churches that are faUne into the churche handes, jure devoluto, to be disposed of by the bishoppes. Fifth, Ministers ther suspentione or depositione to be done by the bishopp's asistaunce. Sixth, Ministers, at ther entrye, to sweare obedience to the King, and to his ordinarye bishopp diocesane. Seventh, Visitationes to be by the bishopp, or by his delegattes. Eighth, Bishopps to moderate presbytryes wher they reseede ; or, in ther absence, such as the bishopp appoyntethe. Ninth, No ministers to dispute against thes conclusiones, nor dispute about the aeqwa- litye or inaeqwalitye of ministers, as tending to the schisme and disturbance of the churche its peace. It was immediatly after this Assembly that the Archbishop of Glasgow and the Bishops of Brichen aud Galloway went to Londone, and wer consecrated by the three bishopps of London, Eli,* and Bathe, October twenty-first [1610]. And, because it will fall shortly to be spockne of againe, it is to be noted that immediatly after this the King gave order now for an High Comission to be sett upp in Scottlande, for the ordering of causes ecclesiasticaU. It was modelled acording to the patterne of the EngUsh High Comissione ; * Dr. Andrews. F 42 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A, D, 1638. and, in February, anno 1611, was proclaimed, with the approbatione onlye of the bishopps, and such of the ministrye as they caUed for to imparte it unto ; who, yow may be sure, wer not rigide presbyterians : But ther was no approbatione of [a] GeneraU Assembly sought therunto ; for it was not very lycke that it would have been obtained : And it was as little pleasing to the nobUitye as the clergye ; for, by this meanes, they sawe mor power putt into the bishopps' handes then they lycked weaU of ; and what was added to the bishoppes' power this waye, they tooke as ane restrainte and diminutione of ther oune;* nor is it any mervaiUe that, after the beginning of the troubles, one of the thinges that they did first declare against was the Highe Comissione. The summe of ther power in direct articles was as foUowethe, for I am not to transcrybe all that has been spockne by such as have anato mised it,t and have endeavoured for to demonstrate it very boundlesse in its consequences of its power : Such as are curiouse may see the booke themselves. First, It was appoynted that nothing should come before the High Comis sione, but such matters as bishopps could not gett rectifyd in ther par ticulare diocesses, or which they neglected to trye. Second, That bishopps should resyde at ther oune cathedraU churches, and repaire them if they coulde. Third, Bishopps should visite ther diocesse once evrye thirde yeare at leaste. Fourth, Or at least once in seven yeare all the diocesse.CO Fifth, That the boundes of dioceses be made contigouse and proportionable one to another ; not some of them too great, others too little. Sixth, Pres bytryes to be but of ten or twelve ministers for censuring scandalls, but to excommunicate by the bishop's warrant ; and bishopps, if they fynde cause, shall have power to discharge ther meetings. Seventh, Ministers, with the bishopps' approbatione, shall nominate some laickes in ther paroshines for to asiste in repairing of the churche, provydinge of elements for the com munione, contributiones for the poor, with other necessary services ; but no laicke ruling elders to be sett up. Eighth, The ministers and ther asso- * See Spottswoode, joap'p'. 514 et 515, lib. 7. f Mr. David Calderwood, in his Altare Damascenum, [pp. 14 — 16, edit. Lugd. Bat. 1708] has givne a large deductione of the power of the Highe Comissione ; but Spottswoode, Hist. lib. 7.pagg. 514 et 516, does mentione no other articles of ther power, but such as are heer sett doune, which, as the juditiouse reader will observe, are not all, and some of them but reductive therunto. (1) [According to Spottiswoode (p. 514), the fourth article is, " That every Archbishop visit his Province every seven years at least."] Ch. XLIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 43 ciatts to censure notoriouse offendours ; or, if they be obstinate, to referre A. D. 1638. them to the bishopp. Ninth, Ministers shall be admitted by impositione of handes of bishopps, with two or three ministers asisting him ; and a booke of ordinatione to be drawne upp. Tenth, The electione of bishopps shall be acording to the Conference anno 1571; and that vacante sede, the deane and chapterfi^ shall bee vicarius in omnibus ad episcopatum pertinentibus. Eleventh, Deane and chapter to conveene once evry yeare, and nothing to be done except they bee capitulariter congregati ; and that they keep a re gister of aU that passeth and is done concerning the administratione of the rentes of the diocesse. Twelfth, Generall Assemblyes shall be called by supplicatione directed to the King ; and the members therof to bee bishopps, deanes, archdeanes, and such ministers as are chosne by the reste. Thir teenth, No youthes to preach ordinarlye in publicke, till they receive impo sitione of handes and ordinatione. And then in anno 1612, the King, by his letter, discharged summare excommunicatione of fugitives who wer guiltye of capitall crymes and durst not compeere ; which was consented unto by the bishopps, contrare to the principles of the presbyterians, as afterward was seene : for at this tyme, and after the Assembly of Glasgow 1638, summar excommunicatione came in fashione agane, and was made greate use of ; as after we shall heare. In the yeare 1616, King James called ane Assembly at Aberdeene, Au gust thirteenth, wher the Earl of Montrosse was Commissioner : Wher, amongst other thinges, [it was enacted,] First, That a booke of leiturgie should be drawne upp : Second, That the actes of the GeneraU Assemblyes should be gathered and putt in forme of canons : Third, That childeren being catechised, should be confirmed by bishopps. To thes the King added some others, which they shewed him would not be admitted without a new Assemblye. Therfor, anno 1617, at King James his last being in Scottland, [he] came to Saint Andrewes, July tenth, wher he was mett by the archbishopps and bishopps, and some thirty-six ministers : Wher the King beganne anew to presse the overtures which befor he had urged after Aberdeen Assem blye ; but nothing was then concluded, for severall of the ministrye, by ther protestationes, did oppose any conclusione at that tyme. All thinges, ther for, wer putt off to a GeneraU Assembly, to be holdne at Saint Andrews, (1) [« Dean ofthe Chapter," according to Spottiswoode, p. 515.] 44 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. twenty-fifth November, 1617 ; at which dyett the Earl of Hadingtoune, and Viscount Stormont, preseeded for the Kinge. But all that could be con cluded ther was privat communione, and that ministers should give the elements out of ther owne handes to the people. Other thinges wer waved. But King James would not tacke thes two actes as satisfactory : therfor, the next yeare, being 1618, he indictes ane Assembly at Pearth, August twenty-fifth, wher the Lordes Hadingtoune, Carnegye, and Scoone, wer Comissioners for the Kinge. Archbishop Spottswood moderated that As semblye ; and ther at last the King gott thes articles to be concluded, which he had so long pressed : Whiche wer five in number : First, That all should kneele at the communione. Second, That private communion should be administred to the sicke. Third, Privat baptisme, in caise infantes could not befor ther deathe be transported to the churche. Fourth, Childeren to be confirmed by. bishopps, when they wer to give accounte ofthe Catachesis. Fifth, That the five Christian festivalls of, first, Christmasse ; second. Pas sion, or Good Fryday ; third. Resurrection, or Pash Daye ; fourth, Ascen- tione Daye ; fifth, Coming of the Holye Gohst, or Wittsunday, be observed yearly in the Churche. It shall not be needfuU to give yow any furder accompt of this Assembly, which was solemnely confirmed immediatly therafter by acte of ParUament :(') For, many yeares befor it was condemned in this Assembly of Glasgow 1638, the presbyterians did lett loose ther pennes against it and its formalitye, wrytting a booke against all the indirect wayes of its constitutione and trans actiones; which was afterwardes ansuered by a bishopp,* and is to be seen in print as yet extante. And then for these fyve articles, which proved a rocke of offence to the presbyterians, befor ever the Assembly of Glasgow satt downe, ther wer polemicke disputtes in printe extant against thes articles, and against episcopacye itselfe ; though the most pairt of the authors, as being subject to the episcopall lashe, did at that tyme conceale ther names. But having givne my reader some accounte of thes Assemblyes, and the endes why they wer conveened, it is now high tyme to come backe to our comittye againe, and to tacke notice of thes reasones and exceptiones which they pre sented against them to the Assembly of Glasgow, which yow shaU heare in the twelfth session, December fourthe. (0 [The Acts of the Perth Assembly were not ratified by the Parliament until 1621.] * Defence of the Assembly of Pearthe, by Mr. David Lindsey, Bishop at [Brechin. See above, vol. i. p. 95, note"]. Ch. XLV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 45 XLIV. Upon the first of December, the Assembly conveend betymes in A. D. 1638. the morning, but did not sitt long, because of severall ministers, members pj,Z^^ of the Assemblye, who wer to preache the next daye, being the Lorde's against Mr. daye, in Glasgow, and some of the neerest places adjacent therunto. Yet ^^Vn'^Pt that day the controverted comissione from the presbytrye of Peebles was rick'paiiter, approved (of which I spake befor) ; and next ther was a processe givne in a"d Mr- against Mr. David MitcheU, minister of Edinburgh, and it was publickly Gladstanes. reade. The crymes laid to his charge wer, Firstly, That he defended all the ggssio Ida. poyntes of Arminianisme in his sermones. Secondly, That he had publickly Decembris 1. taught many poyntes of poperye, and that he had oftne most insolently in- ^ "'' ^^^' veighed against the Confessione of Faith of the Churche of Scottlande befor many wittnesses, who had deponed all this upon oathe. Next, That without advyce or consent of the Churche, and against the mynde of the presbytrye and sessione, he had pubUckly readde the Service Booke. Finally, That he had appealed from the Synod to ane Generall Assembly ; yet, that now being called upon, hee had willfully absented himselfe ; to aU which contu- macye, he had superadded his subscriptione to the bishops' Declinator ; for which contumacy alone (albeit he had been innocent of all the rest), they judged him worthy to be deposed from the ministrye, and excommunicated, by vertwe of the acte of Assembly 1582. The lycke thinges wer objected against Dr. Patricke Panter, preacherC) at Saint Andrews : And then his coUeague, Mr. Alexander Glaidstons'* accusa tione was reade of that same nature with the former two ; which was distin guished from the rest in this, that he was charged with ordinary drunk- nesse and profanitye of lyfe and conversatione : And, after the reading of thes processes, the Assembly voiced them guiltye of the forsaide crymes. The bishopps wer lyckewayes caUed upon with ther adherents, and, amongst others. Dr. Eliot, though no subscribent of the bishopps' Declinator ; and after this the sessione ended. XLV. Upon Moonday, December third, the Assembly satt downe againe; Argyle's wher first Argylle stoode up, and made a short speeche (though no member speech. of the Assembly), exhorting all that wer present, specially the ministers, concerning to speacke respectfuUy and sparingly of the King and his royal praeroga- Arminianism. (1) [Dr. Patrick Panter was Professor of Divinity, and Principal of the New College, at St. Andrews. His Latin poem on the exploits of Wallace has been much admired. See Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 123.] • Archdeane of Saint Andrews, and preacher ther. 46 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. HL Sessio Ila. Decembris 3, Moondaye. A. D. 1638. tive; teUing them that ther wer spyes upon the Assembly, who tooke par ticular notice, and related aU that was spockne, either in privat conference, pulpitts, or Assemblye, or whatever was done : He saide that so good and gratiouse a prince would be mor moved with ther proceedings by ther mo desty e, then by ther arrogant loftye speeche, which, he saide, was good for nothing, but rather to encrease then quensh wrathe, and that it was for the good of the Church so to doe ; To the ende, therfor, that the innocent should not suffer for the guUtye, he exhorted them aU to be sparing, or ra ther silent, in thes thinges, wherby no beneifitt could be reaped, but rather losse to the whole kyngdome. Ardgylle his exhortatione was seconded by the moderator ; who, first giving his Lordship thankes for his good and zeal- ouse counceU, saide that the Lord of Heaven was judge, the kirke index, and the magistrate vindex : He exhorted all to give evry one his dew, and wished all ther present to carry as in the presence of God, the kirke, and kyngdome. The occasione of this warning was a sermon preached the day befor, by Mr. George Gillespye, then minister at Weems (who afterwarde grew mor remarkable) : His text was, " The King's heart is in the handes of the Lorde," etc. ; which, albeit to the judgement of the hearers, he did handle pertinentlye, yet they thought it was little prudence in him (who was not so much as a member of the Assemblye), a young man, for to speacke so freely concerning the Kinge's power, at such a tyme as it was spockne- Otherways, aU wer satisfeed with his doctrine ; and ArgyUe and the moder ator kept themselves in generaU, without any reflection on him, though it was knowne whom they meaned.^O Then the moderator spocke to the Assembly, shewing them that, since Arminianisme was beginning to spring upp in the churche, it wer good to choke it in the beginning, and therfor thought fitt that some of the ministers present should macke a short refutatione of the five articles. To this pour pose, Mr. David Dickson, minister at Irvin, had been befor advertished to prepare himselfe ; who, now being called upon by the moderator, did macke a long exhortatory refutatione of Arminianisme, too tediouse to be sett downe heer .(2) The summe of it tended to shewe that ther errors stoode upon four piUars. First, That the Arminians did place electione in man towards God, and not in God towards man. Second, That they placed the deathe of (1) [See Stevenson's Hist, of Church of Scot. vol. ii. pp. 602, 603.] (2) [See it at length in Records of the Kirk, p. 156—159.] Ch. XLVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS 47 Chryste in a covenant betuixt God and man, as man was in the state of in- nocence.CO Third, In man, his actual conversione to God, that they did at tribute too much to man his co-operatione, graunting God once to have free will to man, but to man the whole glorye of the executione and prosecuting this redemption. Fourth, That, in the state of perseveraunce, they sett man alone, and not with God's grace, as the meane acording to the elec tione. After he had instanced the Arminian argumentes to mantane thes tenents, he then ansuered all ther objectiones. When Mr. David Dickson had made ane ende, the moderator did request Mr. Andrew Ramsey to speacke something to that poynte, whom he affirmed to his knowledge (though unadverished), yet alwayes to be in readinesse against suche errors. Mr. Andrew ansuered, that he should speacke what was presently come into his thought ; so he feU on, in the next place, and having expounded the goldne chaine of God's electione, of his grace and mercye, he did refute all the errors of the Arminians, drawing them to fyve heades, to the great satisfactione of all the Assembly, speciaUy of the most pairt of the ruling elders ; who, with a devoute ignoraince, applauded thes deep poynts with ane implicite faithe, although many doubted if all of them understood either the Arminian tenents, or the refutatorye argumentes ther of : But that was all one, they wer sure to saye with the reste. XLVI. And now, after many publicke citationes at the church door, they beganne for to examine the severaU processes of the bishops. In order to this, ther wes a roUe of wittnesses givne in, who wer present and ready to depone upon oathe against the Bishop of Galloway, Mr. Thomas Syd serfe. It was urged by the bishopp's accusers, that the several wittnesses oathes might be tackne judiciaUy befor the Assemblye, that therafter they might be examined befor a comitte appoynted for that pourpose. But at this instant comes in one of the Bishop of Orkneye's sonnes, with letters from his father ; wherin he did at first excuse his absence from the Assem blye, by reasone of his infirmitye, and then declared that he submitted him self to the Assemblye in full wordes which wer " that he should be ready and willing for to performe what should be imposed or reqwyred of him." This was a matter of joye to all the Assembly, but of as much detestation to all bishopps, or such as wer episcopall ; particularly to Joseph HaU, A. D. 1638. Bishop of Orknay sub. mitts to the Assembly ; alsoSir Archi bald Stuart of Blackball; also Mr. John Forbes, an Anti- Coven anter, and on his way to Ireland. Mr. Mitchel de posed, and ordered to be excommuni cated. Com mittee to ex amine into (1) [Dickson's words are these : " They extend Christ's death in drawing on a bargane betwixt God and man, to put man in the termes that Adam fell into, that man may take a new essay of himselfe, by the force of universall grace, to hold his feet where Adam fell."] 48 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. exception able things against the ministers of Edinburgh.Witnesses against the Bishop of Galloway. bishopp of Norwiche, who was so unsatisfeed with the bishop of Orkne for his submissione, that, upon that very accounte, in a* booke wryttne by him shortly after, Joseph Hall reflectes upon him, and twittes him sharply, as a man most unworthy to have been a bishopp. The bishopp of Orkneye's excuse, which did cast the fault of his absence on the distance of the way, winter seasone, and his oune old age, being sea soned with the first fruictes of the episcopall submissione, raade all proceed ing against him to [be] demurrd for that tyme. It was a high tyde of proselyttes now : For after this, in comes a minister with a comissione from Sir Archbald Steward of Blackhalle, counceller ; who, in Sir Archbald's name, declard to the Assembly that he, the saide Sir Archbald had not putt his hande to the Kinge's proclamatione made lately at Glasgow ; next, that he would stand to his subscriptione of the Covenant, affirming his relligione at his subscriptione and now to be one and the same, which was sett downe in the first Covenant and profest, anno 1580. After him came in one Mr. Johne Forbesse,(0 brother to Sir WiUiam Forbesse of Cragivarr ; who having left off his pourpose of going for Ire lande, being then in his journey, and ane opposer of the Covenante, stept into the Assembly, and solemly engadged himself therunto. This chaunge, so soddaine, was thought a great mercye ; howbeit such as looked furder then the outsyde of thinges, knew the impulsive cause of his soddaine chaunge to have flowed from a privatt advertishment that he had to recall him ; wherin he was certifyde by his elder brother, that Mr. David Ballan tyne, minister at Kincardin,(2) was lately decesed, and that churche, which is a very considerable benefice, vacant : And, to his great comfort, he knew that it was at the disposall of his eldest brother, then patrone. Yet thinges wer so handsomly carryde, t,hat a bearer, with a packett, came to him, and gave publicke appearance, some four howers after the saide Mr. Johne his subscriptione, with the newes of Mr. David BaUantyne his death, and a de syre from his brother to returne and leave his journey e ; which was inter- * Joseph Hall's Episcopatus Juris Divini. (0 [John Forbes, parson of Kincardine, younger brother of Sir William Forbes the first baronet of Craigievar, and nephew of Patrick Forbes of Corse, Bishop of Aberdeen. See Douglas' Baronage, p. 76. Mathew Lumsden's Genealogy of the House of Forbes, p. 22. Inverness, 1819. Records of the Kirk, p. 160.] (2) [Kincardine O'Neil, then one of the richest benefices in the diocese of Aberdeen.] Ch. XLVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 49 preted by such as tooke all for current coyne, to be a gratiouse providence in behalf of the new proselyte.* For a closure of this sessione, Mr. David Mitchell (of whom befor) was tliryce publickly citted; his processe all readde over, his censure was voted; and, without a contrarye voice, he was degraded from the ministrye, andf ordained to be excommunicated. After this ther was a comittye J appoynted, who, after the rysing of the Assembly, should sitt and cognosce upon some thinges givne in against the ministers of Edinburgh, and some other minis ters about Edinburgh, which last action did putt ane ende to this sessione. XLVII. Upon Tewsdaye, the fourth of December, the twelfth sessione of the Assembly was holdne ; wher the Arminians were staged anew (ther doctrine, not ther persones, for I fynde of none that was putte to it by waye of dispute in the Assembly upon that accompt) : To which pourpose the mo derator desyred Mr. Robert Baillie, minister at Kilwining, for to fall on (whom befor he had advertished to be ready to speacke to that poynte). Mr. Baillie drew out his papers, and reade a refutatione of Arminianisme, wryttne by himself, printed since ;(') therin he shewed the ryse and pro gresse and history of Arminianisme ; he had ane examen of ther doctrine, and refooted it out of the Scripture, and out of St. Augustine's wryttinges cheefly amongst the fathers of the Churche ; and, lastly, he ansuered ther objectiones ; which discourse gott ane uniforme approbatione from all the Assemblye as a solide and sinnewye disputatione. That which was thought a straunge kynde of proceeding against the Arminians was. That, upon the report of three ministers, the whole Assem bly did condemne all the Arminian tenents ; and, which is yet straunger. That they did not defyne thes tenents, nor have emitted a synodall sufireige : so that to this daye it is hardly knowne, furder then the generaU, what wer the poyntes of Arminianisme condemned by this Assemblye, and how farr. A. D. 1638. Arminian ism con demned. Mr. Robert Bai ley's speech against it. Committee to censure the ministers of Edin burgh. Mr. AlexanderGladstones deposed. Sessio 12a. Decembris 4. Die Martis. Tewsdaye. * See MS. Hist, of the Assembly of Glasgow. t Nota. Mr. William Spang, in his Historia Motuum, [p. 199], mentions not the last pairt of Mr. David Mitchell his censure. t This Comittye, see pag. 50, session twelfth, at lenth. Spang putts it to session eleventh ; but Mr. T. A. ["Thomas Abernethy] in his MS. to session twelfth. Tanta est concordia fratrum. [The Committee seems to have been appointed in the twelfth session. See Records ofthe Kirk, p. 160. Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 124.] (1) [Dr. Irving enumerates two works by Baillie on the subject of Arminianism, " An Antidote against Arminianism," and " A Scotch Antidote against the English Infection of Arminianism. Lond. 1652." See Irving's Lives of Scotish Writers, vol. ii. p. 68. Ste venson's Hist, of Church of Scot. vol. ii. p. 608.] G 50 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. or how many they condemned. The King, in his Great Declaratione, * stickes not to tell us that, under the name of Arminianisme, they did then condemne many thinges receaved by all the Reformed Churches ; which the King could as weall judge of if it wer true as the most of the ruling elders who sate ther, not to say ministers. And it was thought a straunge pro cesse to accuse bishopps and ministers (as was befor spockne), and condemne them for Arminianisme before Arminianisme was condemned ; no, not once to licence them for to retreate ther opinione ; a courtesy not refoosed to heretickes in the purer tymes of the Churche. How ther ansuer to all this " that Arminianisme was poperye, and under that-name was abjured by the Confessione of Faithe of the Churche of Scottlande" wUl satisfee, I leave itto evrye reader to considder and determine ; seing that I wrytte other mens censures and challendges but not myne owne, as unwilling to mixe annalls and critickes together. Arminianisme being condemned, there was ane indytment givne in against Mr. WiUiam Maxwell, minister at Dunbarr ; wherin he was accused, pairtly for hereticall doctrine, pairtly for scandalouse and lewde lyfe and conversa tione, as : First, That a man might keepe the law, otherwayes that God wer unjust to impose it upon man. Second, That the distinctione of sinne, in mortall and veniaU, was lauful and justifiable. Third, That the sainctes might faU awaye ; that he kneeled befor the Eucharist was givne ; that he tooke silver out of the church-boxe, and disposed of it without consent of his sessionall elders, and that he did not restore it, etc. Then up stoode James Cochrane and Thomas Paterson, rulinge elders from Edinburgh, desyring a comittyef to be nominate to censure the minis ters of Edinburgh. Ther reasones wer, because of the averssnesse of the people, both from the persones preaching and conversationes of ther minis ters ; and so much the rather because they had declyned the Assembly then sitting at Glasgow ; as also by reasone of the great necessitye of Edinburgh, in some measure destitute of preachers (of whom some wer now degraded * See the Large Declaratione, pagg. 319 e< 320, wher it is instanced against this ansuer " viz. that Arminianisme and Popery are one," that the Dominicans and the Jesuitts differ heerin as much as the Protestants did, yet both of them popish : Secondly, That the Lu therans, who adhere to the Augustan Confessione, doe hold the Arminian tenents, yet are they the first protestants ; so that it was ridicolouse for to condemne that as popery, or any of thes tenents as popish, which learned men amongst the papistes reject, and also learned men amongst the protestants mantaine. See mor in that place to this pourpose. t Vide pag. praeceding. Ch. XLVUL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 51 by the Assembly*), and they unwiUing to keep others. This request was A. D. 1638. weall entertained, and ther desyre graunted; the comittye appoynted to consiste of noblemen, barrons, ministers, burrows, who wer to judge of the ministers of Edinburgh ther abilityes, as also the delinquencyes of some adjacent ministers, such as Leith, Dunbar, and some other places. Next came ane accusatione against Mr. Alexander Gleddstans, minister at Saint Andrews. It was lybelld against him. That he was a runnagate, a beastley drunkard, of which cryme many instances wer aUedged unfitt to be repeated; that the contributione gathred for the releefe of the poor mi nisters of the Palatinate was by him converted to his owne use, and never de lyvered ; [that] in his doctrine he said that the Jesuittes wer good and sownde, ours the contrarye; also, that he railed against the Covenanters, calling them brainsicke rebells ; that he was slacke in discipline, and never punished sinne ; that he practised the Articles of Pearthe before they wer enacted by ane Assemblye ; that he swore great oathes he had rather deney God than be a puritane ; that he was sure that the author of The Practise of Pietye") was condemned in hell, for that booke made all the ladyes in the land puri- tanes. He was not present to ansuer for himself; therfor witnesses wer ad mitted and sworne : What was proved is not come to our knowledge ; how ever the result was, he was voted to be deposed from his ministrye, and that without one contrare sufireige. It would seeme, if all the lybell wer truthe, if we reflect upon the justice done to other ministers since that tyme, and then in the lycke cases, that the Assembly wer blame worthye for so gentle a cen sure as a simple depositione, without any additionall censure ; but if they wer guiltye of any sinne of ommissione that way at this Assembly (which many think they were not), yet that error was fully amended in the folio wng yeares by Generall Assemblyes, Church Comissione, Synods, and Presbytryes. XLVIII. And now at last that comittye which was appointed to trye Committee's the sex last GeneraU Assemblyes, gave in ther declaratione and judgement exceptions of the unlaufuUnesse of all and evrye one of them : Which they grownded Assemblies. pairtly upon reasones tackne out of the registers themselves of the Assem- They are de- blyes, or out of the registers of presbytryes. Secondly, From King James fui_ Sixth his letters. Thirdly, From the testimoney of some ministers present • Mr. D. M. [Mr. David Mitchell.] (0 [This work was written by Bayly, bishop of Bangor from 1616 to 1631 ; it was trans lated into the Welsh, Hungarian, and Polish tongues ; more than fifty editions of it were pub lished in the course of a hundred years.] 52 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. in this Assembly, who had been eye witnesses to the proceedings in the former sex, as they affirmed. The course that they tooke for nuUifyng them was the informalitye of their caUing, or constitutione, or procedur. Thus they wer pulled upp, roote and braunche, without passing any censure upon the actes of thes former Assemblyes as voide of themselves, ex capite ini- quitatis ; for this was ane easyer and neerer waye. The exceptiones wer drawne upp in wrytte by the comitte, and readde in the face of the Assem bly, albeit some wer of opinion that all thes exceptiones wer in readinesse befor either Assembly or comittye satt downe, and that ther was a praede- termination to condemne thes six synods upon any accompt : It is certaine that some of them wer so much qwarelled with that long befor the Assem bly at Glasgow, the Assembfy at Pearth, both its formalitye and its five articles, did afford matter to many pennes, according as they wer affected or disaffected to it, for to dispute for it or against it. The summe of ther reasones for nuUyfyng all and each of the six wer as foUowethC) : It was alledged against the Assembly at Linlithgow, anno 1606, First, Because the indictione was but seven dayes befor the opening of the Assembly. Second, Comissioners wer caUed to it not by presbytryes but by the Kings private letters. Third, The Kings letters call it onlye a meeting to treate only about conclusiones ; but they had no power from presbytryes to con clude any thinge. Fourth, Presbytrys did limitate comissioners not to con clude any thing contrare to established discipline, nor to vote as in ane As sembly, but to protest if any thing praejudiciall to this wer attempted. Fifth, The actes of this meeting are not in the register of the Assemblyes. Sixth, The next Assembly, at Linlithgow, 1608, acknowledge Mr. Patrick Gallowaye to have been moderator at the immediatly preceeding Assembly ; but he moderated, anno 1602, at the Assembly of Halyroodhouse ; ergo, they doe not acknowjedge this for the immediate praeceeding Assemblye. Against the Assembly at Linlithgow, 1608, it was objected. First, That forty-two noblemen, barrons, and bishopps sate heerin, without any comis sione, contrare to acte of Dunde, 1597. Second, Out of some presbytryes came mor then three ministers commissioners, contrare to the acte at Dun dee, 1597. Third, They wanted ruling elders from presbytryes. It was objected against the Assembly holdne at Glasgow, 1610, First, That such wer chosne comissioners whom the King and bishopps did designe, (1) [See Records of the Kirk, p. 24 — 26 ; Historia Motuum, p. 200—203.] Ch. XLVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 53 and it w,as assured that none other would be accepted. Second, Ther wer A. D. 1638. no ruling elders present. Third, Some presbytryes sent mor ministers then three. Fourth, Threttye noblemen and bishopps had vote therin upon the Kinge's call, without comissione. Fifth, They wer allured to vote the Kinge's waye or threatned. Sixth, The principali actes wer made in co- N. B. mittees by the noblemen and bishopps, and reade in the Assembly only to be approvne. Seventh, Sundry e ministers got rewardes and brybes to vote the Kinges waye ; and such as contrould him wer threatnd with deprivatione and banishment. As for the Assembly at Aberdeen, anno 1616, First, The bishop of Saint Andrews usurped the place of moderator. Second, It was indicted but twenty dayes befor it did meet, so that all could not conveene. Third, Ther wer twenty-five noble and gentlemen calld by the Kinge who voted ; some ministers voted without comissiones. Fourth, Mor comissioners then oue from brughes. Fifth, Ruling elders wer excluded. Sixth, The Arch bishop of Saint Andrews, with his owne hande, did interlyne, adde, chaunge, vitiate the scrolls and minutes of that Assemblye. The Assembly at Saint Andrews, 1617 (said they). First, Was not to be founde in the registers. Second, The indictione so informall, that the scroUs therof declare many comissioners refoosed to be present. Third, The King, in his letter to Perth Assembly, calles it only a meeting, wherin ther was disgrace offered to him. Fourth, All the corruptiones of the four former Assemblyes had ther confluxe into this and the foUowng Assembly. Against the Assembly at Pearth, 1618, they remonstrated. First, That it was indicted but twenty dayes befor the holding of it. Second, No lau full electione of moderator. Third, Nor of a clerke. Fourth, The dioceses of Orkney, Catnesse, Rosse, Argylle, and Isles, five in all, wer totaUy absent. Fifth, Nynteen noblemen and barrons, and eleven bishopps, did vote without comissione ; thirty-six brughs absent ; no ruling elders ; and some brughs present had two or three comissioners. Sixth, Some presby- N.B. tryes did send mor ministers comissioners then three ; some ministers voted without comissione; others who had comissiones wer rejected, and ministers wanting comissiones putt in ther place. Seventh, The bishopps practisd some of thes thinges that wer voted in that Assembly befor the Assembly sate downe, viz. geniculatione at communion, etc., so ther voices wer prae- judged. Eighth, Ministers wer threatned to voice affirmative, under paine 54 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Intrant oath nullified. Exceptions.Dr. Robert Hamilton de posed. Mr. James For syth ; Mr. John Crigh ton deposed. Sessio 13. December 5. Wedinysdaye, of deprivatione, imprisonement, banishment. Ninth, The vote was stated, " Whither the Five Articles, in respect of his Majestye's commandement, should passe in acte, or not ?" and not if they wer conforme to God's word. Tenth, It was declared by the bishopps, that whither they voted for the Five Articles or not, yet they should passe in ane acte and be practised. This is the short summe of the reasons givne by the comittee appoynted for tryall of thes sex Assemblyes. The Assembly having heard thes reasones, and the proofes of aU and eache of thes reasones grownded upon the evidences forsaide, declared all thes sex Assemblyes, " and evrye one of them, to have been from the be- ginninge unfree, unlaufuU, and nuU Assemblyes, and never to have had, nor heerafter to have, any ecclesiasticall authoritye, and ther conclusiones to have been, and to bee of no force, vigour, nor efficacye ;" and prohibited all defence and^observaunce of them ui all tyme to come. The King tooke exceptione against the last pairt of this acte, and declared that it was an ouncoth forme of procedure for to rescinde six Assemblyes as null and voide, notwithstanding that two of them even then, and for some tyme after that, wer still in force by severall actes of ParUa ment, and diverse actes of the other four wer at that tyme standing ratifyd and confirmed by Parliament actes. XLIX. Upon Wedinysday, December five, the thirteenth sessione of the Assembly conveened ; where the moderator did declare, that since the six Assemblyes (presently spockne of) wer founde null, therfor it behoved necessaryly to foUow that aU the noveltyes wherwith the Church was burthend, by vertwe of the actes of the saide Assemblyes, did lyckwayes fall to the ground ; and so amongst the rest, the oathe which intrant ministers tooke for observing aU or any of thes noveltyes, to be null in itself, and not obligatory unto any minister who had tackne it, as also all subscriptiones givne by any to this effecte. The reasone of the nulUtye of this oathe was declared to bee, because the bishopps, who gave the oathe, did suppose somewhat to be constituted by the Churche which was not so, viz. that the Churche had givne power to the bishopps to exacte such ane oathe, which they, by ther nuUifyng the six Assemblyes, declared was not givne ; as also that the Church had established thes noveltyes, which she never did by any free laufull Assemblye. They declared* that if intrant ministers had not • See print Assembly of Glasgow, Act. Sess. 13. toria Motuum, p. 203.] [Records of the Kfrk, p. 26 ; His- Ch. XLIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 55 supposed all this, that they would never have tackne the oathe; therfor, A. D. 1638. since it was apparent to all that thes oathes were not obligatory, as being deceitfully procured by the bishopps, they did declare, by ther unanimouse vote, that all ministers who had tackne sueh oathes wer discharged from observing thes oathes in any tyme comming. And furder, the Assembly, by ther vote, did unanimously declare, that the power of presbytryes, provincial and General Assemblyes, had been unjustly suppressed, but never laufuUy abrogated ; and therfor that it had been most laufuU for them, notwithstanding of any poynt unjustly objected by the prelatts to the contrarye, to admitte, suspende, or depryve ministers respective within ther boundes, upon relevant complaints sufficiently provne, and to choose ther owne moderators, and to execute all the poyntes of ec clesiasticall jurisdictione, acording to ther oune limits appoynted to them by the kirke. The exceptiones tackne with the dispensatione of the oathe of intrants by the mor knowng wer : First, That it was very improper for ministers to sitt judges and dispence with themselves ; for it is certaine ther wer many minis ters members of this Assembly, who voted against the oath in ther oune fa vours. Second, That ther wer ane 'as-n^-nns in tacking the oath of the Covenant befor this acte ; for all who gott the benefitt of this acte of nullifying thes episcopall oathes, it seems they ought first to have been dispenced with for the former, and then to have sworne the oathe of the Covenant, and not, simul et semel, for to have sworne two contradictorye oathes : Nor will that which was made the pretext, salve this solaecisme, as the Doctors of Aber deen have fully evinced in their Duplyes ; for, first, that which the intrants swore too was enacted by a standing law ; so, without sinne, they could not lay by the practise by ane oath, till the practise was declared unlaufull ; or, if they did limitate ther suspensione of the practise till a free Assembly did sitte, either such as did limitate themselves thus, did suppose the General Assemblyes determinatione infallible, or, if not, that then they supposed (as it was true) that themselves in the Assembly wer to be judges in ther owne cause, as it fell out. A third exceptione was, whuther or not all intrants did sweare the observaunce of thes ceremonyes cum hoc intuitu vel supposi- tione that they wer imposed by Assemblyes laiifuUe ; for who does not see N. B, that this practise does opne a doore to repeale all oathes and subscriptiones, if after times shall declare nuUitye in former Assemblyes, The last, and not the least, exceptione against the repeaUng of this oathe was, Supposing 56 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. the oathe had been fraudulently extorted by bishopps from intrants, yet, if the thinges which thes intrant ministers swore to observe wer ex parte rei in themselves laufull to have been observed, and not sinnefuU constitutiones ; Whither the fraudulencye of the meanes used to move intrants to tacke the oathe could be excuse eneuche to free the swearer from his obligatione ? Casuistes, who dispute this case, give the instaince of Joswas oathe made to the Gibeonitts, which God himself declared obligatory ; yet it was frau dulently extorted, and the promise made to the Gibeonitts founde contrarye to God's positive commande, which was not to spare any of thes nationes, nor enter in leagues with them. Ther is another instaince givne of one man compelled by a theefe for to [promise to] paye him so much money, which casuistes lyckwayes suppose the swearer obleidged unto, because the promise in itself is not unlaufuU ; for, except it be provne that ane oath is vinculum iniquitatis, it must be confessed that many thinges indeed may hinder men from macking ane oathe, which will not excuse them from ob serving ane oathe once being tackne, the impediments befor and after ane oath not being of aeqwall latitude. After this acte was past, ther wer many witnesses sworne against the bishopps of Brechin and GaUoway. And then ther came in a complainte against Dr. Robert Hamiltoune, minister at Glasseforde (he who presented the bishopps Declinator) by his parishoners, for not observing church discipUne ; for brybery ; for suffering fornicatione unpunished in his house ; for refoosing to visite the sicke ; that in his ordinar discourse he used oathes to floorishe his discourse withall ; that he was ane ordinare profaner of the Sabbath daye ; that he had oftne deserted his charge, and stayed some tymes four, some tymes fyve moneths at once at courte ; that he had perse cuted some most violently with excommunicatione ; that to some he had re foosed the benefitt of marriadge, and baptisme to some of his parishoners ther children, because they wold not kneel at the communione ; and his great cryme, that he had declyned the Assemblye, and had railed against it, being summoned befor it, bidding the officer goe hang himself, wold he compeer befor a rebelUouse conventicle, that he was ane honester man then any who wer at that Assemblye.* The proofes against him * It was objected against Dr. Hamiltoune lyckways, that he suffered children to dve without baptisme ; that he had musicke and dauncinge in his house upon the Lords day afternoone ; that he said images wer laufull ; and swore that he would keep the Service Booke in his churche, and use it in despyte of puritans and the devill. Ch. xlix.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 67 wer admitted ; and Dr. Hamiltoune, by unanimouse vote of the Synode, A. D. 1638. was deposed from the ministeriall functione, session twentieth, Decembris thirteenth.* It is ane observatione, that many about that tyme and since have had. That, in thes tymes, no ministers wer accused as faulty, but such as wer Non-Cove nanters, or active against [the Covenant] ; and scarce any such wer ever ac cused, who escaped depositione ; if justly or not, it is very hard to determine; for none can be so uncharitable as to thinke that all such wer proceeded against in thes tymes upon unjust and groundlesse accusationes. But the wonder is, that amongst all the ministers who tooke the Covenant, not one in ther tymes was accused or founde out, to whoise charge any thing was laide lycke thes Non-Covenanter ministers, who wer accused or deposed. Whither it was that the godly pairty of the ministrye did close with the Covenant, and the profaner parte of them oppose it, or if it wer upon any other accompt it fell out so, I doe leave it to the reader to judge. After Dr. Hamiltoune, one Mr. James Forsyth/,) was complained upon, and wittnesses against him sworne ; but the lybell was not readde at this sessione. Then wer all the caveatts reade publickly, which the bishopps wer obleidged to stand too at ther admissione (which you may fynde in the long summonds givne out against the bishops, of which befort^)), which they wer declared to have brockne all and evrye one. And therafter the lybell against the Archbishop of Saint Andrews was readde ; of which mor afterwardes. In the closure of this sessione, Mr. Johne Creightoune, minister at Pasley, was citted. His indytment contained. That he lived atheistically ; that he enclyned to popery and Arminianisme ; that he praised the popish im plicite faithe, affirming it was better then that of the protestants, and suffi cient to salvatione ; that he saide it was easye for to reconceUe protestants and papistes, if puritans and jesuitts wer awaye ; that he said that men might fuUfiU the law, otherwayes God wer unjust for to commande the keeping of it ; he defended that praedestinatione of forseen workes was good orthodox doctrine, and that none did hold the contrary, except some braine sicke madde fooles, who followed Calvin's doctrine ; that he teached and mantained universall grace with all the errors consequent therupon ; that he allowed auricular confessione, and mantained free wille ; that papistes and * Nota. Dr. Hamiltoune was not sentenced with depositione till the twentieth sessione. (1) [Minister at Kilpatrick.] C2) [See above, vol. i. pp. 127, 128.] H 58 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. in. A. D. 1638. Animadver sions on the Service Book. Sessio 14. December 6, Thursdaye. protestants wer both saved, and evrye man that beleevs in Chryst onlye ; that the world might have been saved weaU eneuch without Chryste's deathe ; that the sainctes might faU totally awaye from saving grace ; that he bap tised a chylde on ane ordinarye daye in his bedde, for lazinesse for to ryse, without any prayer, with his night cappe on, using no exhortatione to the parents, putting a little water on the chylde, pronouncing the wordes of baptisme, and no mor ; that one daye, whilst he was going to churche, a poor distressed man asking almes of him, he did strycke the poor man with his foote, to the effusione of the beggar his bloode ; and being advertished of his uncharitable deaUnge, he ansuered. What other was it to stricke such a one then to strycke a dogge : For which crymes and heterodoxies, he was by full vote, depryved of his ministeriall functione ; and except he macke his publicke repentaunce, he was ordained to be excommunicated. The King, in his Large Declaratione,* reportes that at the votinge of one of thes ministers' deprivationes (but names not who), [the Moderatour of the Assembly] did move a questione to the Assemblye, Whither, if the depryved minister should baptise a chylde, the chylde must not be baptised againe ? But that, one of the ministrye tooke him off instantly, by teUing him that they never did baptise thoise children who had been baptised by popish preestes ; and so no mor was spockne of that matter. This passage I doe insert upon the trust of the relator ; because albeit that Declaration be much qwarrelled at, yet it is very unlycke that such a passage would have been inserte, if it had not been publicke and befor many wittnesses. L. Upon Thursday the sixth of December, the Assembly satte for the fourteenth sessione ; wher the moderator beganne with a short speeche of the evill and goode that the Service Booke had done, and then desyred Mr. Andrew Ramseye to give in his dihgence, and observationes upon the new leiturgie : Which Mr. Andrew acordingly presented in wrytte, and therin laboured to prove that the Service Booke was heathinish. Popish, Jewishe, and Arminiane, both in matter and ceremoney. Some others who wer upon that comittye for tryall ofthe Service Booke, gave in ther notandums against it, such as Mr. Robert Bailye, Mr. Edward Wright, Mr. Samuel Rutherfoorde, Mr. WiUiam Douglasse, Mr. Johne Haye, and some others : Yet thes observa^ tiones being reade (which tooke upp the whole tyme of that sessione), it was thought that the comittye was sett downe rather to coUatione ther severall ob- • Pag. 320. Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 59 servationes, then in so short a tyme that it was probable that they could draw A. D. 1638. upp all that was wryttne by them, and publickly reade at that tyme. I shall not trouble my reader with giving ane accounte of all the exceptiones at lenthe, as about that tyme they wer sett downe in severall tractats, some of which are by me in manuscripts. The most materiall wer as foUowes : The comittye declared that the Service Booke was to be rejected. First, Because for the maner of introductione therof : It was brought into the Churche without consent of the Churche, or vote of GeneraU Assemblye, to whom it belonged to determine the lycke. Second, Because it thrusts out a laufull and uswall service already practised in the Churche ; and in its place setts upp another leiturgye, patched upp out of the Roman masse booke, ther booke of ceremoneyes and breviare, t which does containe many thinges superflouse and ridiculouse, many thinges superstitiouse, as also the seeds of great errors and idolatrye, and in manye places is worse then the Englishe Service Booke. Amongst thinges superstitiouse and ridicolouse. First, The presbyter is holdne (pag. 70 of the Service Booke |) to saye or reade the mattens and vespers evrye daye publicklye or privately. Now, if he reade them privatly and alone, to what pourpose are ther responsoryes, except himself answer in name of the Churche as ther representative? Next, if thes prayers be appoynted by publicke authoritye, and the presbyter be the Churches delegate to saye them daylye, what else is this but to sett up the popish Canonicke Howers, two [out] of seven [of them]?- See Bellarm. tom. 4. controv. lib. 1. de bonis oper. cap. 10. Second, Ther is no certaine place appoynted for the morning and evning publicke prayers, but it is re- * See Spang, Historia Motuum, pag. 204, et seqq. [" Animadversiones in librum litur- giae ab Episcopis obtrusum ecclesiae Scoticae." The " Animadversions on the Service Booke" in the text are translated from this document.] Mr. Robert Baillie, his Animadver siones on the Englishe Service Booke wer afterwardes published by the Assembly of Divynes at Westminster, anno 1644. See them sett downe in William Sanderson's Historye of King Charles I. [p. 682—687. Lond. 1658. fol.] t Missale, Rituale, Breviarium, Romanum. (1) [Signature a 4. Though Gordon, following Spang, has quoted the Service Book by the page, the leaves of that work are not numbered or marked, except by the printer's sig natures. In order to facilitate reference, these will be given in the notes.] t Printed in folio, anno 1637, by R. Younge, at Edinburgh. 60 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B, IIL A. D. 1638. mitted to the bishopps discretione ;(') to whom it is recommended, W to re- duce the shape of the churches to the olde forme that they wer buUded in, viz. as they wer in tyme of popery, answerable to the forme of Solomon's temple, devyded into the portico, navis et sacrarium.* Third, Some thinges are appoynted to bee pronounced by the presbyter with a lowde voice, other thinges againe with a lower voice, which is a popish practise in the masse ; also, the prayers, the confessione of faith, and some other thinges, are com manded to be saide or sunge, albeit they are not putt in metricall numbers. Fourth, Albeit the posture of the bodye at prayer be a thing indifferent, yet, in some prayers, ther is a commande in that booke for to howe the knee ; and at other tymes to stande ; and in other prayers the posture of the bodye is left arbitrarye to all : Sometymes the people are commanded to praye and not the presbyter, sometymes the contrarye, and sometymes both are biddne praye together ; sometymes one of them repeates, sometymes they ansuer, at other tymes they pairte the prayer betuixt them : The presbyter is com manded sometymes to turn his face towards the people, therfor he some tymes must turne awaye his face from them : They are biddne stand when the evangUe is readde, sitte when the epistle is readde, and bow the knee when the decalogue is readde : That ther behoved to be a frequent turning and turning backward againe of that booke from the psalmes to the coUectes, thence to the hymnes, thence to the psalmes, to the lessones, and finaUy to the littanies. Fifth, Ther are many new and ouncoth wordes in it, which all do savour of poperye, such as the Scottish understoode not at aU, bor rowd from the Romish Leiturgie : such as " Mattens, Vespers, Advente, the Epiphanye, Septwagesima, Sexagesima, Quinqivagesima, Dominica, Rogations, The Ordinary of the Place, Collects, Littanyes, Venite, Te Deum, Benedictus, Magnificat, Nunc dimittis, Sabbatum cantate. Dies (1) [Sig. b 8. Rubric : " The Morning and Evening Prayer shall be used in the ac customed place of the Church, Chappell, or Chancell, except it bee otherwise determined by the Ordinarie of the place : and the Chancels shall remaine as they have done in times past."] (2) [Gordon seems here to have misunderstood Spang, whose words are these : " NuUus certus locus destinatur matutinis et vespertinis precibus publicis ; sed remittitur arbitrio Episcopi, qui sedulo studebit templorum formam ad tempora praecedentia revocare, hoc est, quando Papismus regnabat." Historia Motuum, p. 205.] * It is reported that William Laude, Archbishop of Canterbury, at his being in Scottland, anno 1633, qwarelled extremly with the forme of the church of Bruntiland (which is quadrate, suported with four pillers aequidistant), telling them who were present, that it was hard to tell, in a churche of such a shape, where to place the altar. Ch. L.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 61 Cinerum, Oblations, Antiphonia, Purificatione of Women." Also some chap- A. D. 1638. ters of the Actes of the Apostles, and of the Prophetts of the Old Testa- ment, are called epistles. Other termes, such as " Offertorye, Annunciation of our Ladye, Officiare, Corporal, both Kyndes," etc., they thought it was to be doubted least under thes uncoth and Latine words, the Latine Ser vice wer also latent. Sixth, In the Calendar some sainctes are insert of whom it is doubtsome whether they wer sainctes or not : such as Ludanus, Saint David, Kentigerne, Fabianus, Agnesse, Vincentius, Blasius, Valentinus, Colmannus, Saint Patrick bishopp, Cuthbert, Benedicte, Gilbert, Serfius, Saint George, Dunstanus, Suithinus, Nomen Jesu, .Mgidius, Ninianus, Ada- mnanus, Sapientia, Crispinus, Hugh bishopp, Silvester, etc. Seventh, The confessione of sinnes and absolutione is appoynted to be readde befor prayer, pag. 35 ;(0 as if confession wer not a prayer, and as if therin many thinges wer not sought from God. Eighth, The wordes of the conclusione of the Lorde's Prayer are sometymes appoynted to be repeated, sometymes to be omitted ; nor can it be tould why it should be so.c^) Nirith, Evrye daye the hyme Te Deum laudamus is appoynted to be readde or sunge ; as if an hyme composed by men wer holyer then all the psalmes and hymnes dictated by the Holy Gohste. Tenth, " The presbyter, clerke, and aU the people together, must repeate the Lorde's Prayer with ane lowde voice," pag. 42.(^) How much confusione is ther heer, and are not the presbyters of the clergye ? Eleventh, In the Litany they ascrybe many names to God, and they are to repeate one and the same prayer oftne ; eight tymes " Good Lord deliver us" is repeated ; " We beseech thee to heare us good Lord" is two and twenty tymes repeated : The presbyter designes only the evills whiche the people deprecate, as also thes good thinges which the people doe praye for. Twelfth, Thes wordes, " By the mysterie of thy holy Incarnation, [by thy holy] Nativitie [and] Circumcision, [by thy] Baptisme, [Fasting and (1) [Sig. A 2.] (2) [Sig. A 2. Rubric : " Then shall the Presbyter or Minister begin the Lords prayer with a loud voyce. And in this, and all other places of the Liturgie, where the last words, for thine is the kingdom, &c. are expressed, the Presbyter shall reade them. But in all places where they are not expressed, he shall end at these words, but deliver us from evil. Amen." Compare St. Matthew, vi. 9 — 13. with St. Luke, xi. 2—4.] (3) [Sig. A 5. Here and elsewhere, Gordon, by translating from Spang, has fail ed to preserve the exact words of the original. The Rubric quoted is : " Then the Presbyter, Clerkes, and people, shall say the Lord's prayer, in English, with a lowd voyce."] 62 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638, Temptation,] by thine agonie and bloudy sweat, by thy Crosse and Passion, by thy precious Death and Buriall, by thy glorious Resurrection and As cension, [and by the coming of the holy Ghost], Good Lord deliver us :" What other thing can such expressions be accounted but meere adjurationes ? Thirteenth, After four and fourty prayers, of which the Lorde's Prayer is one, at last it is said'') " Let us pray ;" as if aU the praeceeding wer not to be accounted for prayers. Fourteenth, In the lessons at the Euchariste, the epistle is putt before the evangile, which is against the order of the byble ; nor is ther any thankesgiving after the reading of the epistle, whilst it is most carefuUye appoynted that the doxologye should still shutt upp the reading of the evangne.<2) Fifteenth, It is said'^) that the innocent infantes murdered by Her ode wer Chryste's wittnesses or martyres, and that " they wer such as expressed God's praise, not by speacking but dyinge ;" wher it is censure worthy. That thes infantes are called Innocents without any expli cation, which savours of Pelagianisme : Second, That all of them in generall wer Chryst's martyrs, whUst they wer not martyres neither in habite nor acte ; not in habite or in resolutione of ther heartes, much lesse in the acte, since they cannot be said none of them to have dyed for the faithe, which they knew not ; and, furder, aU of them cannot be firmly and confidently averred to have dyed in the faithe. Sixteenth, In the coUectes of the third(^' and fourth(s) Sunday after Epiphanye, and in the Septwagesima, (s) ther is a (1) [Sig. B 4.] (2) [Sig. M. 8. Rubric : " Immediatly after the Collects, the Presbyter shall read the Epistle, saying thus : The Epistle written in the Chapter qf at the verse. And when he hath done, he shall say : Here endeth the Epistle. And the Epistle ended, the Gospel shall be read, the Presbyter saying : The holy Gospel is written in the chapter of at the verse. And then the people all standing up shall say : Glory be to thee, O Lord. At the end of the Gospel, the Presbyter shall say : So endeth the holy Gospel. And the people shall answer : Thanks be to thee, O Lord."] (3) [Sig. C 5. Collect for Innocents day : " Almighty God, whose praise this day the young Innocents thy witnesses have confessed and shewed forth, not in speaking, but in dying : mortifie and kill all vices in us, that in our conversation our life may expresse thy faith, which with our tongues we do confesse, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."] (¦») [Sig. D 2. This collect is the same with that appointed in the present English Book of Common Prayer for the same day.] (5) [Sig. D 2. Collect : " God which knowest us to bee set in the midst of so many and great dangers, that for mans frailnesse we cannot alwayes stand uprightly : grant to us the health of body and soule, that all those things which wee suffer for sinne, by thy help wee may well passe and overcome, through Christ our Lord. Amen."] (6) [Sig. D 4. This collect is the same with that appointed in the English Book of Common Prayer for the same day, except that in the conclusion the words " with thee and the Holy Ghost, ever one God," do not occur in the Scotish Service Book.] Ch. L.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 63 deprecatione against some certaine daungers ; as if thes dayes wer mor fatall A. D. 1638. then other dayes. Seiwnteenth, In the collect of the third Sunday of Lent,(i) defence against enemyes is prayed for; as if thes dayes wer fuUer of daunger then other dayes, or else that suche petitione made on such a daye wer sufficient for preventing that. Eighteenth, The day of the passion has three collects,(') whilst some dayes have none at all, and all other dayes eache but one. Nineteenth, In the coUecte of the twelfth Sunday after the Trinity daye,(3) ther is a prayer, " that God would graunte thes thinges which Christians dare not seeke in ther prayers ;" a petitione verie unagreable with the !rX)j{»f j{/« of the Christian professione. Twentieth, All the collects, for the most pairt, are tackne de verbo ad verbum out of the masse booke. Twenty-first, In the rubrick that is prefixed to the Lord's Supper, (*) " it is appoynted that the Holy Table be covered with a tableclothe, and a cleane linning clothe, and other decent utensiles :" This may implye all the super stitiouse toyes whairwith the papistes adorne ther altars, viz. the crosse, candles, phylacteryes, etc., and so much the rather, since that the framers of that booke doe not anye wher declare against the use of suche thinges. Twenty-second, The presbyter being to officiat, is commanded to stande at the northerne syde of the altare, who must be clothed with a surplice, if the bishopp thinke expedient ;(*) for, anno 1633,* they gott power graunted to the Kinge for to impose anye habite to churche men, which he should think fittinge. Twenty-third, After the repeating of the Lorde's Prayer, the pres byter is commanded, with his face turned to the people, to recite clearly (1) [Sig. E. This collect is the same with that appointed in the English Book of Common Prayer for the same day.] (2) [Sig. F 8. They are the same with those appointed in the English Liturgy.] (3) [Sig. J 7. Collect. " Almighty and everlasting God, which art alwayes more ready to heare then we to pray, and art wont to give more then either we desire or deserve . powre down upon us the abundance of thy mercy, forgiving us those things whereof our conscience is afraid, and giving unto us that that our prayer dare not presume to ask, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."] (4) [Sig. M 6. Rubric : " The holy Table having at the Communion time a Carpet, and a fafre white linen cloth upon it, with other decent furniture, meet for the high mysteries there to be celebrated, shall stand at the uppermost part of the Chancell or Church, where the Presbyter, standing at the north-side or end thereof, shail say the Lords prayer, with this Collect following for due preparation."] (6) [Sig. b 8. Rubric : " And here is to be noted, that the Presbyter or Minister at the time of the Communion, and at other times in his Ministration, shall use such Ornaments in the Church as are prescribed, or shall be by his Majestie, or his Successors, according to the Act of Parliament provided in that behalf."] * See first Parliament, Charles I., anno 1633. 64 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D, 1638. and distinctly the decalogue, and the people must all of them kneele at that tyme ;(') whence it appeares that he must saye the Lorde's Prayer, with his backe to the people, and with a low voice : Furder mor, it may be asked, why the people must kneele whilst the decalogue is repeated, and yet kneel ing is not enjoynd unto them whilst the Lorde's Prayer is saide. (2) Twenty - fourth. It is appoynted(^) that the servaunt or deacon ofthe churche " shall offer the basone with the oblationes of the faithfuU people to the presbyter who is officiatinge, who shall tacke it, and, with a low bowng of his knee, shall laye it upon the altar, and offer it unto the Lorde :" Wher ther is lurk ing. First, Judaisme, whilst God, by this meanes, is supposed to be present befor consecratione mor at the altar then else wher ; a thing that the papistes cannot awaye withe : Secondly, Poperye, whilst the people's offering must goe befor the sacrifice ; and, next, whilst, by this meanes, two offeringes are made, one of money, another of bread and of wyne. Twenty-fifth, Kneel ing is oftne commanded, whUst no wher is ther to be founde a commande ment of seriouse preparatione befor the communion, or that ther should be spritwall and inward worshipp in the very acte therof. Twenty-sixth, Ther is a permissione to use rownde wafers,(^) commonly called Hostias, and thes unleavened. Twenty-seventh, The presbyter is commanded to stande whilst he prayes for the Kinge,(5) and ther are two prayers for the King,(s) (1) [Sig. M 6. Rubric : " Then shall the Presbyter, turning to the people, rehearse distinctly all the Ten Commandements : The people all the while kneeling, and asking God mercy for the transgression of every duty therein ; either according to the letter, or to the mysticall importance of the said Commandement."] (2) [There is not in the Scotish Service Book any rubric such as that which, in the English Book of Common Prayer, follows the Absolution in the order for Morning Prayer : " Then the Minister shall kneel, and say the Lord's Prayer with an audible voice ; the people also kneeling, and repeating it with him, both here, and wheresoever else it is used in Divine Service."] (3) [Sig. N. Rubric ; " The Deacon, or (if no such be present) one of the Church wardens shall receive the devotions of the people there present in a bason provided for that purpose. And when all have offered, hee shall reverently bring the said bason with the oblations therein, and deliver it to the Presbyter, who shall humbly present it before the Lord, and set it upon the holy Table. And the Presbyter shall then offer up and place the bread and wine prepared for the Sacrament upon the Lords Table, that it may be ready for that service."] (4) [Sig. O. Rubric : " And to take away the superstition, which any person hath or might have in the Bread and Wine, (though it be lawfull to have wafer bread) it shall suf fice that the Bread be such as is usuall : yet the best and purest Wheat Bread that conve niently may be gotten."] (5) [Sig. M 7.] (6) llbid.] Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 65 but not one for his Qween, nor childeren. Twenty-dghth, The presbyter, A. D. 1638. at celebratione, must intimate such festivall dayes as are to be observed the foUowng weeke.C) Twenty-ninth, If the people come to the sacrament of the Lord's Supper mor unfrequently or negligently, the presbyter is com manded, evne whilst he is celebrating the communione, to exhorte them to approache :(2) Now it wold be knowne, since the people have made knowne to the presbyter ther intentione to communicate, as in another rubrickeC^) they are enjoyned to doe, to what ende is such an exhortatione as this ? Now, if the people had no former intention to communicate till they be exhorted at that tyme, it would be known if the presbyter will then admitte them, though any of them wer guiltye of scandall, without satisfactione ? or, if they communicate then, will he putt them to it to satisfee afterwardes for ther scandall ? Thirtieth, Some holy dayes have prefaces for the pour- pose,(4) others have none ; and why ? Thirty-first, The presbyter officiating is commanded to stande, and not for to kneele, whUst he is recyting the prayer of consecratione ; and he must stand in such a place wherin with most freedome he may have the use of bothe his handes, whilst, in the meane tyme, he standes alon at the altar, pag. 207 :(^> It is worth the en- qwyrie what they meane by the free use of both his handes ; is it to cast the signe of the crosse in the aire ? or is it that he may elevate the pattine and chalice, and hft them high upp ? Yea, is it not also appoynted in this rubricke, that he shaU stand at the west syde of the altare, with his backe towardes the people, and his face to the easte ? Such toyes as thes con- verte the Lordes Supper into a comedye, and exposes such a mysterye to (1) [Sig, M 8. Rubric : " After the Creede, if ther be no Sermon, shall follow one of the Homilies which shall hereafter be set forth by common authority. " After such Sermon, Homily, or exhortation, the Presbyter or Curate shall declare unto the people whether there bee any Holy-dayes, or Fasting-day es the week following."] (2) [Sig. N 2. After the prayer for the whole state of Christs church militant here in earth, follow this Rubric and Exhortation : " Then shall follow this exhortation at certain times when the Presbyter or Curate shall see the people negHgent to come to the holy communion. "We be come together at this time (dearly beloved brethren) to feed at the Lords supper, unto the which in Gods hehalfe I bid you all that be here present, and be seech you for the Lord Jesus Christs sake, that yee will not refuse to come thereto, being so lovingly called and bidden of God himself," etc. etc.] (3) [Sig. M 6.] (4) [Sig. N 5. Proper prefaces upon certain Festivalls.] (5) [Sig. N 6. Rubric: " Then the Presbyter standing up, shall say the prayer of consecration, as followeth, but then during the time of consecration, he shall stand at such a part ofthe holy Table, where he may with the more ease and decency use both his hands."] QQ HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. the mocke of the prophane, and saddnes the heart of the godlye. Thirty- second. In the prayer of consecratione(') the wordes of the institutione are directed to God by way of prayer, not to- the people, as Chryst did ap poynte it. Thirty-third, Albeit the leiturgie of the Lordes Supper did beginne with the Lords Prayer, yet now, after the offering upp of Chryst, pag. 209,(^) it is repeated, prefacing it with this remarkable clause " We dare saye ;" wherby they imply, that at the first saying it was without confi dence, because that Chryst was not yet offered : Thes thinges are popish (nugae) raveries. Thirty -fourth. The presbyter is commanded to devyde the offering of money, and tacke the half to himselfe :(3) This is sett downe as a motive for to macke him swallow downe all thes ceremonyes with the bet- Baptisme. ter wiUe. Thirty-fifth, It is saide that it is most expedient to baptise in the English tounge :<¦') Heir it is questioned why as much is not saide con- ' cerning the rest of the pairtes of Gods worshipp ? and is it not mor expe dient in some places of Scottland to celebrate all sacred dutyes in the Irish tounge, as being in many places of Scottland better understoode then the Englishe tounge ? Thirty-sixth, It is saide that the primitive churche did celebrate baptisme only at Pashe and Pentecoste, and that as neer as we can we are to imitate this custome, albeit it ought not only to be practised,* pag. 215 :(5^ It is questioned why that ancient custome is heer mentioned; is it to shew that the fathers thought not baptisme simply necessaire ? which the authors of the Service Booke thinke not," for afterward verye expressly they affirme the necessitye of baptisme : Or is it that thes fathers may be accused (1) [Sig. N. 6.] (2) [Sig. N 7. Rubric: " Then shall the Presbyter say : As our Saviour Christ hath commanded and taught us, we are bold fo say."] (3) [Sig. N 8. Rubric: " After the divine service ended, that which was offered shall be divided in the presence of the Presbyter, and the Church- wardens, whereof one half shall be to the use of the Presbyter to provide him books of holy divinity : the other half shall be faithfully kept and employed on some pious or charitable use, for the decent furnishing of that Church, or the publike relief of thefr poore, at the discretion of the Presbyter and Church-wardens. "] (4) [Sig, O 2. Rubric] * [Licet] in solidum revocanda non sit. [Historia Motuum, p. 210.] (5) [Sig. O 2. Rubric: " It appeareth by ancient Writers, that the Sacrament of Bap tisme in the old time was not commonly ministred, but at two times in the year : At Easter and Whitsuntide. At which times it was openly ministred in the presence of all the Con gregation, Which custome now being grown out of use ; (although it cannot for many considerations be well restored againe) it is thought good to follow the same, as neere as conveniently may be,"] Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 67 for ther lazinesse, and ther neglecte of the salvatione of infantes ? But if it A. D. 1638. be so, why propose they thes fathers for a patterne ? Turpe est doctori, etc. Thirty-seventh, In the celebratione of baptisme, pag. 215,(0 the godfathers are desyred to be present at the font, not the parents ; and the sanctitye of the baptismali font is much cryed upp : But it would be knowne what mor efficacye of sanctitye in a fount then in a basone ? Thirty-eighth, Albeit it be tould the curate that the infant is to be baptised, yet he must againe en- qwyre if the chyld be already baptised.C^) Thirty-ninth, Ther is a peculiar way of consecratione appoynted for the baptismali font, and the water must be chaunged twyce evry monethe, and consecrated anew when it is chaunged, pag. 216.<3) Fortieth, In imitation of the ancients, who enqwyred at such as, being come to age, wer to be baptised. Firstly, If they beleeved ? Se condly, Renounce yow deviU, world, etc. ? Thirdly, Will yow be baptised, etc. ? They propose the selfe same questiones ridicolously eneuch (satis) unto infantes, in whoise place the godfathers are commanded to ansuere, I beleeve, I will be baptised, etc.^^> Forty-first, The godfathers, and not the parents, are obleidged to bring upp the chylde in the growndes of ther relligione.<5^ Forty-second, It is said that, in such as are to be baptised, two thinges are reqwisite, repentaunce and faithe ; which the infantes performe by ther godfathers :(^) Which assertione is unsownde ; for since infantes are baptised as being within the covenant wherby God has promised that he will bee a God to the parentes and to ther seede, and since infantes are not the seede of ther godfathers, how can the faith or repentaince of godfathers avaUe them ? Forty-third, In the leiturgie of marriadge, pag. 242,('') the Marriadge. brydegroome must have a ring, whiche he must laye upon the presbyters booke befor he delyver it to the bryde : This, it would seeme, supplyes the place of the popish benediction by holy water : The presbyter gives the ring to the bridegroome, quho puttes the ringe upon the brydes ring finger of (1) [Sig. O 2. Rubric] (2) [Ibid.} (3) [Sig. O 2. Marginal note : " The water in the font shall be changed twice in the moneth at leest : And before any childe be baptised in the water so changed, the Presbyter or Minister shall say at the font the words : Sanctijie this fountain of baptisme, thou which art the Sanctifier of all things."] (4) [Sig. O 3. O 4.] (5) [Sig. O 5.] (6) [Sig. P 3. The Catechisme.] (7) [Sig. P 6, where the same rubric occurs as that which is in the English Liturgy.] 68 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. the lefte hande, and sayes " with this ringe I the wedde, with my body I the worshipp :" The worde worshipp proper only to reUigiouse adoratione. Visiting Sick. Forty-fourth, In Visiting the Sicke, pag. 249,(0 one forme of prayer, con solation, exhortatione, is praescrybed for the use of all the sicke, without any distinctione. Forty-fifth, At buriaUs, ther is reading, praying, and singing. Forty-sixth, Lastly, Churchinge of women is appoynted, which savours of Judaisme, etc. Next, for the seedes of errors which are scatterd ther, is. First, Apocry pha is caUd a pairt of the Old Testament, pag. 1 1 ;(2) and that some bookes and chapters of the canonicke Scripture are said to be lesse aedifyinge, and that they may better [be] omitted then Apocrypha's chapters, which they do appoynte to reade ; much also of the canonicke Scripture is not to be reade pubUckly at aU, such as the Canticles, all the Apocalyps, except only two chapters therof, and a pairt of the nineteenth chapter : It may be questiond if the popish error sprung not from hence to think Apocrypha canonicke Scrip ture, because it was publickly readde in the Churche ? Second, Observatione of saintes dayes, pag. 31,(3) and angells dayes ; yea, mor saintes dayes then the Jewish had festivalls under the law ; quere, if the worshipp of saintes tooke not its originall hence amongst the papists ? Third, pag. 38,(*) It is said " Having overcome the bitternesse of deathe, thow didest opne the Kyngdome of Heaven to all beleevers," and in the epistle to be readde in the vespers(0 of Pashe, this is applied to 1st Peter, iii. 17(*) ; queree, does not this savour of Limbus Patrum ? Fourth, In the order of the buriall, they praye, pag. 262, (^) that we, together with our deceased brother, and all others dead in the trwe faith and confessione of thy name, may obtaine perfect ab- (1) [Sig. Q 2.] (2) [Sig. a 6 : " The order how the rest of holy Scripture (beside the Psalter) is ap pointed to be read. The old Testament is appointed for the first Lessons at Morning and Evening Prayer, and shall be read through every year once, except certain books and chap ters which be least edifying, and might best be spared, and therefore are left unread."] (3) [Sig. b 8.] (4) [Sig. A 3. Hymn of Te Deum Laudamus: " When thou haddest overcome the sharpnesse of death : thou diddest open the kingdome of heaven to all beleevers."] (5) [The "Vigil of Pasch, or Easter Even, is meant.] (6) [Gordon seems here to have misunderstood Spang, whose meaning indeed is not very clear. His words are these : — " Devicta mortis acerbitate, aperiiisti regnum coelorum om nibus credentibus, pag. 38. & in epistola praelegenda ad vesperam Paschatis, applicatur 1. Pet. 3. 17. Annon sapiunt haec limbum patriarcharum ?"] (7) [Sig. Q 8. The prayer referred to is the same as that which is appointed in the English Liturgy ] Ch. L.] history of SCOTS AFFAIRS. 69 solutione and ane consummated blessing, both of soule and bodye; quere, A. D. 1638. will not prayer for the deade qwickly grow out of such a roote ? Fifth, " From whordome, and all mortall sinnes, save us, good Lord" :('^ Heer is expresse distinctione of sinnes into mortall and venialle. Sixth, At Christ masse, such as pray saye, this day the sonne of God is borne :(^' Whence it followes, Chryst was as oftne borne as ther are yeares from his nativitye, viz. 1637, a yeare befor the comitty satt downe : Or, if it be understood of the day of the moneth, then it cannot be a prayer in faith, for the day nor yeare nor moneth is not founde in Scripture : The lycke also is said concerninge the Circumcisione, Epiphanye, (3) and other feastes. Seventh, In the coUecte of the third Lordes day after Pash,'*) it is saide that God showes the light of his truth to all that are walking in error ; contrare to Psalm cxlvii. verses 19, 20. Eighth, In the collect at the feast of Michaelmasse, Michael is called a created angell;'^) contrare to Apocalypse xii. 7. Ninth, Inthe rubricke befor the communion, the praeparatione of communicants seems to be no mor but that such as are to communicate, the night befor lett the presbyter know ther names, or that same day that they are to communicate :(*) albeit a preacher cannot' in so short a space enqwyre in ther lyfe and manners, nor tacke awaye scandaUs nor discords. Tenth, ibid. Such as are guiltye of scandall is admitted to communicate, provyding that he resolve for to satisfie afterwardes :(0 g'Mm^M/-, is not this contrare to Chrystes institution, who biddes us first be reconceiled, etc. ? Eleventh, As the booke itself wants all church authority, so, pag. 29, (^) it commandes to receave the homilyes that are to be (0 [Sig. B 2. The Letany : " From fornication, and all other deadly sinne, Good Lord deliver us."] (2) [Sig. C 3. The Collect for Christmas day : " Almighty God, whioh hast given us thy only begotten Sonne to take our nature upon him, and this day to be borne of a pure Virgin : Grant that we," etc.'] (3) [Sig. C 7. The collects referred to are the same with those appointed in the English Book of Common Prayer for the same days.] (4) [Sig. G 8. The collect is the same with that appointed in the English Liturgy.] (s) [Sig. M 2. The Collect is substantially the same with that appointed in the English Liturgy, Spang's words are these : " In collecta ad festum S. Michaelis, Michael ille Angelorum princeps, Apocalyps. 12. 7- refertur inter Angelos creates, cum tamen sit lesus Christus."] (6) [Sig. M. 6. Rubric: " So many as intend to bee partakers ofthe holy Communion, shall signifie thefr names to the Presbyter or Curate over night, or else in the morning afore the beginning of Morning prayer, or immediatly after."] (T) [Sig M 6 Rubric] (8) [Sig. M 8. Rubric : " After the Creede, if there be no Sermon, shall follow one of the Homilies which shall hereafter be set forth by common authority."] 70 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. composed by publicke authoritye: Hence it follows that prayer and preaching "" must depend upon publicke civil authoritye ; and that, in matters of relli gione, the church is tyed to blynd obedience ; and that the foundatione of faithe is ane proclamatione procured, or to be procured, from courte. Twelfth, The prayer of the offertorye contradictes the inscriptione ; which is, Lett us praye for Chrystes universaU church, heer militant upon earthe : Butt in the prayer ther is a commemoratione of the deade, and a restrictione of the catalogue of sainctes to such as are now in glorye :W So that thus ther is a waye made to the canonizatione and invocatione of sainctes : Lyckwayes ther prayer is made for the dead who have spent ther lyfe in the faithe, and now rest from ther labours :(i) By which way BeUarmine does confesse that the soules in purgatorye are best descrybed. Thirteenth, Auricular confes sione is urged upon the people, pag. 204,(2) and absolutione is expressly offered to them. Fourteenth, The communion may be celebrated, if three or four be present, />a^, 214(3); thes may be deacon, sub-deacon, and clerke, albeit none of the people be present : What can be lycker privatte masse ? Fifteenth, It is ther appoynted that all communicat thryce evrye yeare, but specially at Pashe w : This is JudaicaU, nor doe we read that Chryst affixed it to any (1) [Sig. N 1. In the prayer for the church militant, the Scotish Service Book has the following sentences, in place of the concluding sentence of the same prayer in the English Liturgy : — " And we also blesse thy holy name for all those thy servants, who having finished their course in faith, do now rest from their labours. And wee yeeld unto thee most high praise and hearty thankes for the wonderful! grace aind vertue, declared in all thy saints, who have been the choice vessels of thy grace, and the lights of the world in thefr severall generations : most humbly beseeching thee, that we may have grace to follow the example of their stedfastnesse in thy faith, and obedience to thy holy commandements, that at the day of the general resurrection, wee, and all they which are of the mysticall body of thy Son, may be set on his right hand, and hear his most joyfull voice. Come yee blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world. Grant this, O Father, for Jesus Christs sake our only Mediatour and Advocate. Amen."] (2) [Sig. Q 4. The Visitation of the Sick. The rubric and collect are the same as those in the English Liturgy; except that the clause in the former "if he humbly and heartily desire it" does not occur in the Scotish Service Book.] (3) [Sig. Q 5. The Communion of the sick. Rubric : " But if the sick person be not able to come to the Church, and yet is desirous to receive the Communion in his house, tlien he must give knowledge over night, or else early in the morning, to the Presbyter or Curate, signifying also how many be appointed to communicate with him : and having a convenient place in the sick mans house, where the Presbyter or Curate, raay reverently minister, and a sufficient number, at least two or three to receive the Communion with the sick person, with all things necessary for the same, he shall there minister the holy Com munion. "] (4) [Sig. O 1. Rubric : " And note that every parishioner shall communicate at the least three times in the year, of which Pasch or Easter shall be one."] Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 71 one tyme. Sixteenth, pag. 216,(i> To perswade the people of the necessitye A. D. 1638. of baptisme, they cite the wordes, John iii., except a man be borne agane of water and of the spiritt, etc. : which wordes are not to be tackne for the bap tisme of water ; and ther it is saide that God has sanctifyd the fonte ; with out any warrant of Scripture. Seventeenth, In the exhortatione after the crosse in baptisme,(2) this grounde is tackne for confessed, that all who are outwardly baptised are regenerated : pag. 224, (3) it is saide that baptised in fantes have all thinges needful to salvatione : Which they saye who mantaine totall and finall apostasy of the sainctes. Eighteenth, The interrogationes proposed at the examinatione of private baptisme, pag. 223(*\ presume that such may baptise who are both ignorant of the matter and forme of bap- time. Nineteenth, It is said, pag. 231,(5) t]iat Chryst has redeemed me and all mankynde : This implyes universaU redemptione. Twentieth, pag. 235, (^' It is saide that ther are two sacraments generally necessaire to salvatione : This implyes that ther are other sacraments lesse necessaire ; and after ward it is said that orders, matrimony, pennance, and confirmation are of that number. Twenty-first, pag. 236,0 The internall pairtes of the sacrament of the Lordes Supper, are saide to bee the bodye and blood of Chryste, which are trulye tackne in the Holy Supper ; yet no wher, neither in the leiturgye of the Euchariste, nor in the catechism, is ther any explicatione of that phrase to distinguish it from transubstantiatione. Twenty-second, Confir- matione, pag. 237, 238,(8) acording to the definition of a sacrament in the catechisme, wiU be a sacrament, viz. " ane outward and visible signe of ane inwarde and spiritwall grace, dispenced on us* and instituted by Chryste as (1) [Sig. 0 2. The exhortation is the same with that in the English Liturgy.] (2) [Sig. O 4. The exhortation is the same with that in the English Liturgy.] (3) [Sig. O 6. Private Baptisme. Exhortation after the Gospel : " Doubt ye not there fore, but stedfastly beleeve, that he hath likewise favourably received this present Infant, that he hath embraced him with the arms of his mercy, that he hath given unto him the blessing of eternall life, and made him partaker of his everlasting Kingdome."] (4) [Sig. O 6. They are the same as those in the English Liturgy, except that a sixth question is added in the Scotish Service Book : " Whether think you the childe to bee law fully and perfectly baptized ?"] (5) [Sig. P. The Catechisme.] (6) [Sig. P 2.] (7) [Sig. P 3.] (8) [Sig. P. 4.] * In nos collatae. [Historia Motuum, p. 215. The words of the Catechisme are, "an outward and visible signe, of an inward and spfrituall grace, given unto us, ordained by Christ himself, as a means whereby we receive the same, and a pledge to assure us thereof." Sig. P3.] 72 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. a meanes by which grace is receaved, ancl ane earnest wherby we are assured of that grace" : Heer the outward signe is impositione of handes by the bishopp, who only can confirme ; the internaU and spiritwall grace is defence and strenthe against all the assaults of deviU, world, etc. ; in the prayer after impositione of handes, the bishopp sayes,(0 " we power forth most humble prayers to thee for thes childeren, upon whom, acording to the ex ample of thy Apostles, we doe laye our handes, that therby we might macke them the mor assured by this sign of thy good will towards them" : Whence it followes that impositione of the bishopp's handes is " signum obsignator- ium" the meanes by which grace is conferred : Adde to this, that by reasone of the bishopp, who only has power to dispence of it, it is preferred to the two undoubted sacraments ; and, morover, this confirmation is absolutly termed necessaire : Now, what does all this differ from the papistes? Ticenty-third, And what wiU hinder matrimony to be tacitly reockned upp amongst the sacraments ? For the ring, being twoched by the presbyters booke, will be holye, signifying a symbole of grace, intimating that such as are marryed must live in mutwall peace and love, and acording to Chrystes commands. Twenty-fourth, In the celebratione of matrimonye, pag. 242,(2) the bryde- grome is taught by the presbyter to saye to the bryde, " I macke the par taker of all my goodes, or I endow the with all my goodes of fortune, in the name of the Father, Sonne, and Holy Goste" : By which wordes the husband is holdne to communicate to his wyfe aU his goodes, both movable and immovable, except he would be perjured. Twenty-fiftli, In the order of the visitatione of the sicke, pag. 253,(3) tijg sicke man is commanded for to macke a particular confessione of his sinnes befor the presbyter, from which he is to be absolved by the presbyter : This practise lookes very lycke auricular confessione. Twenty-sixth, In tyme of pestelence, or the raging of any contagiouse sicknesse, it is permitted to the minister to celebrate the Lords Supper with the sicke persone alone ;(^) and if with one sicke per sone, why not with any other persone alone ? Twenty-seventh, It is said, (0 [Sig. P 4. " We make our humble supplications unto thee for these children, upon whom (after the example of the holy Apostles) we have laid our hands, to certifie them (by this signe) of thy favour and gracious goodnesse toward them."] (2) [Sig. P 6. The words referred to are the same with those in the English Liturgy.] (3) [Sig. Q 6. The Communion of the sick. The Rubric referred to is the same with that m the English Liturgy.] (4) [Sig. Q4.] Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 73 pag. 267,(0 " that ther was ane holy discipline in the primitive churche, A. D. 1638. so that notoriouse sinners in the beginning of Lent wer brought to publicke pennance, and that such did most humbly submitte themselves to undergoe punishment in this worlde, that so ther soules might be safe in the daye of the Lorde : in place wherof, till the lycke discipline can be restored (quhich is most to be wished) it seemed good at this tyme to read befor yow the generall curses which God pronounceth against impenitinent sinners :" What other is all this, then to wishe that the penitentiary actes of satis factione may be restored ? And it is false that ther was anye such custome in the primitive churche, except they meane to disgwyse the corrupt churche of Rome with such a title and name. All which things doe evi dently shew that the authors of this booke doe inclyne to the present churche of Rome. Lyckewayes in this booke are contained the seedes of idolatrye : for. First, The calendare containeth a catalouge of some men and women whom, in a spe ciall waye, they dignifie with the name of sainctes : What other is this but the canonizatione of sainctes, which makes way to the invocatione of sainctes ? Second, To this ende lyckwayes inclynes the dedicatione of dayes in the honour of the sainctes, which this church, ever since the Re formatione, did ever accompt popish idolatrye. Third, The Blessed Vir- gine, pag. 14.(2) jg called our Ladye. Fourth, In the prayer of consecratione of the elements of the communion, thes wordes are to be readde : " blesse and sanctifie with thy worde and spiritt thes thy creatures of bread and of wyne, that they may become to us the bodye and bloode of thy dear Sonne :"(') which are the very formall wordes of the canon of the masse for transub stantiatione. The apostle sayes, indeed, that the creaturs are sanctifyd by the worde and prayer ; but wher was it ever heard that thinges uncapable of spiritwall grace are sanctifyd by the spiritt ? Meane whyle, the contryvers of the booke have sufficiently bewrayd ther meaninge, viz. that God, by the omnipotencye of his spiritt, wold miracolously macke that wyne and (i) [Sig. R 2. "A Commination against sinners, with certain Prayers to be used divers times in the year, and especially on the first day of Lent, commonly called, Ashwednesday." The exhortation referred to is substantially the same with that in the English Liturgy.] (2) Sig. a 7. Table of Lessons proper for some holy-daies : " Annunciation of our Ladie."] (3) [Sig. N 6. " Vouchsafe so to blesse and sanctifie with thy word and holy Spirit these thy gifts and creatures of bread and wine, that they may bee unto us the body and bloud of thy most dearly beloved Son."] K 74 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. breade to be turned into the true body and bloode of Chryste. For the sanctificatione which is prayd for in thes wordes is a certaine chaunge, either sacramentall, or spiritwall, or by transubstantiatione : It is not sacra- mentaU, for then other words wold not be necessaire but the wordes of Chrystes institutione : Nor is it spritwall, for then they wold saye with the English leiturgye, " sanctifie us with thy worde and spiritt, that we may be partackers of the bodye and bloode of Chryste :" ('^ It remaines, therfor, that thes wordes should be understoode concerning transubstantiatione, and to this pourpose the booke mackes mentione of the corporall, which worde they doe not use till after the consecratione. Fifth, pag. 208.(^^ It is noted upon the margent, that when the presbyter comes to thes wordes of the institutione " he tooke breade," then, being to officiate, he shall tacke breade in his handes. And in the Roman missall it is ordered that, whilste the preest repeates the wordes " Hoc est enim corpus meum," he must lift or ele vate the hostia above his heade, that it may be seen and worshipped by all. Nor is it to be doubted but the sence is one heer, if the place that the pres byter standes in, and the place wher the people are at that tyme, be atten- tivly considdered ; for the presbyter, in this acte, standes at a distaunce from the people, at the west syde of the altare, with his backe to the peo ple, and the people are all on ther knees without the chancell : therfor it is necessair for him to elevate the patten and chalice, that the people may see it, otherwayes it wer in vane for him to tacke into his handes the species (as the booke speackes). Adde to all, that by such a scitvatione of presbyter and people, both are engadged for to praye with ther faces towards the easte : Heer is a deceitful! insinuation of idolatrye. Sixth, The papistes have a twofold oblatione in the masse ; the first preparatorye, of breade and wyne to be consecrated ; the seconde, of the hostia, after consecratione : this booke containeth bothe. The first is expressly in the offertorye : the seconde is in the memoriall of the oblatione, (^^ after the prayer of consecratione ; for (1) [The words ofthe English Liturgy are these : " Grant that wee receiuing these thy creatures of bread and wine, according to thy Sonne our Sauiour Jesus Christs holy insti tution, in remembrance of his death and passion, may be partakers of his most blessed body and blood."] (2) [Sig. N 6. Marginal note : " At these words (took bread) the Presbyter that officiates is to take the Paten in his hand. At these words (took the cup) he is to take the chalice in his hand, and lay his hand upon so much, be it in chalice or flagons, as he intends to consecrate."] (3) [Sig. N 6. After the prayer of consecration follows this memoriall or prayer of oblation . " Wherefore 0 Lord and heavenly Father, according to the institution of thy Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 75 besyde that the title it self mackes it cleare, the wordes of the memorial A. D. 1638. themselves macke it out fuUye : and albeit it macke mentione of the sacri- fiee of praise or thankes givinge, yet, by that worde, no spiritwall sacrifice is to be understoode, which consistethe in praise and thankes giving, but the sacrifice of Chrystes bodye, so termed because God is therby praised, Bel larmine so interpreting it, de Missa, lib. 2. cap. 21. Seventh, Albeit the presbyter stoode befor consecratione, yet, after consecratione, he must kneele : 3.^6., pag. 104,(0 he sayes, that Chrystes flesh is eatne and his blood drunke ; and it is prayed that our bodyes may be purifyd by his bodye, and that our soules may be washed in his bloode: All thes phrases are very grosse, being proposed so rawly, without any explicatione or distinctione, from the popish errors. Eighth, The bishopp or presbyter officiating is commanded to communicate himself in both kyndes befor he delyver it to the people, /?a^. 210 :(2) Wher,_;^rs^, the worde species smells of poperye; as if the materiaUs of the elements of breade and wyne did not remaine after dearly beloved Son our Saviour Jesus Christ, we thy hurable servants do celebrate and raake here before thy divine Majestie, with these thy holy gifts, the memoriall which thy Son hath willed us to make, having in remembrance his blessed passion, mightie resurrection, and glorious assension, rendring unto thee most heartie thankes for the innumerable benefits procured unto us by the same. And we entirely desire thy Fatherly goodnesse, mercifully to accept this our sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, raost humbly beseeching thee to grant, that by the raerits and death of thy Sonne Jesus Christ, and through faith in his bloud, we (and all thy whole church) raay obtain remission of our sinnes, and all other benefits of his passion. And here wee offer and present unto thee, O Lord, our selves, our souls and bodies, to be a reasonable, holy and lively sacriflce unto thee, humbly beseeching thee, that whosoever shall be partakers of this holy communion, may worthily receive the most pre cious bodie and bloud of thy Son Jesus Christ, and be fulfilled with thy grace and heavenly benediction, and made one bodie with hira, that he may dwell in them, and they in him. And although wee be unworthie, through our manifold sinnes, to offer unto thee any sacri flce : yet wee beseech thee to accept this our bounden dutie and servioe, not weighing our merits, but pardoning our offences, through Jesus Christ our Lord ; by whom, and with whom, in the unitie of the holy Ghost, all honour and glory be unto thee, O Father al mightie, world without end. Amen."] (0 [Sig. N 7. After the memoriall or prayer of oblation, follows the Lord's Prayer, and iraraediately thereafter this Rubric : " Then shall the Presbyter kneeling down at Gods board, say in the name of ail them that shall communicate, this collect of humble accesse to the holy communion, as followeth : ' We do not presume to corae to this thy table (O mercifull Lord) trusting in our own righteousnesse, but in thy manifold and great mercies. We be not worthie so rauch as to gather up the crumbes under thy table. But thou art the same Lord, whose propertie is always to have mercie : grant us therefore, gracious Lord, so to eat the flesh of thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and to drink his bloud, that our sinfull bodies may bee made cleane by his body, and our souls washed through his most precious blood, and that wee raay everraore dwell in him, and he in us. Amen.' "] (2) [Sig. N 7. Rubric : " Then shall the Bishop, if he be present, or else the Presbyter that celebrateth, first receive the communion in both kindes himself, and next deliver it to other Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons (if any be there present) that they may help him that celebrateth ; and after to the people in due order, all humbly kneeling."] 76 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. consecratione : second, it seems to imply a consuming of the sacrifice, wher- in BeUarmine, de Missa. lib. 1. cap. 27. wiU have its forme to be placed, for heer the sacrifice is accompUshed, and is consumed by the presbyter, befor the people be admitted. Ninth, In the leiturgie of baptisme,(0 the chylde who is to be baptised is signed with the crosse : which is ane humane additione, and a symbolicall ryte without warrant, superadded to Chrystes institutione; a seed lyckwayes of ane horrible idolatrye amongst the papistes, which this churche has expressly abjured as suche. Tenth, Such as are marryed, pag. 244,(2) are biddne bow the knee befor the altare : and what other is this but that which is enjoyned in the solemnity es of marriadge by the Romishe ritwale, or booke of ceremoneyes ? Lastly, The new Scottish Service Booke, in many thinges, is worse and mor corrupt then the English Service Booke : for. First, There are manye mor sainctes putt in its calendare, then in that of Englande.(^) Second, Befor the communion, the English leiturgye exhortes all who are to commu nicate to be myndefuU of the poore ; in place of which exhortation the new booke bidds rehearse some sentences tackne out of the Roman offertorye.(*) (1) [Sig. O 4.] (2) [Sig. P 7. The Rubric is the same as that in the English Liturgy.] (3) [The following saints occur in the Kalendar of the English Church, but do not ap pear in that prefixed to the Scotish Service Book : " Hilary, Bp. & C." (13th January) ; " Edward, King of West Sax." (18th March) ; " Ven. Bede, Presb." (27th May) ; and " St. Alban, Mart." (17th June). The Scotish Kalendar contains the following saints, none of whom is found in the English: " David, King." (llth January) ; " Mungo, Bishop." (13th January) ; « Colman," (18th February) ; « Const, 3. King." (llth March) ; « Pa trick." (I7th March) ; " Cyril, Bishop." (18th March) ; " Cuthbert, Bishop." (20th March) ; « Gilbert, Bishop." (1st April); " Serf, Bishop." (20th April) ; " Columba." (9th June) ; " Palladius." (6th July) ; " Ninian, Bishop," (18th September) ; " Adaman, Bishop." (25th September) ; « Margaret, Q." (16th November) ; " Ode, Virgin." (27th November) ; " Drostane." (4th December). It was part of the King's instructions to the Scotish bishops, ' " that in their Kalendar they should keep such Catholick Saints as were in the English, such of the Saints as were most peculiar to that Kingdom (especially those which wei'e of the Royal Blood, and some of the most holy Bishops) being added to them : but that in no case St George and St Patrick be omitted." Heylyn's Life of Archbishop Laud, p. 325.] (4) {^English Rubric : Scotish Rubric : " After such Sermon, Homily, or exhorta- " After such Sermon, Homily, or exhorta tion, the Curate shal declare vnto the peo- tion, the Presbyter or Curate shall declare pie, whether there be any holy dayes or unto the people whether there bee any Holy- fasting dayes the weeke following, and ear- dayes, or Fasting-dayes the week following, nestly exhort them to remember the poore, and earnestly exhort them to remember the saying one or moe of these Sentences fol- poore, saying (for the offertory) one or moe lowing, as he thinketh most conuenient by of these sentences following, as hee thinketh his discretion." most convenient by his discretion, according to the length, or shortnesse of the time that the people are offering."] Ch. L.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 77 Third, Albeit in the English ther be some sentences by which the people A. D. 1638. are exhorted to almes giving, yet all of them, for the most pairt, are tackne out of the New Testament, and they speacke only concerning almes, so that there is no feare that the wordes be perverted into any other sence; but the new one has many sentences of the Old Testament which can only be understoode concerning the Leviticall sacrifices and oblations.(0 Fourth, In the English booke, the people are bidde praye that God wold accept of the almes of his people, etc. : but in ours, ther is a thankes giving super added for such as are deade in the faithe, etc. ;(2) so that it does mor resem ble the popish masse,, as was befor observed. Fifth, In the English booke, the holy table is placed in the middle of the nave of the temple or sacrarium : but in ours, the altar must be putt in the qwyre within the chancell, and one syde of the altar must twoche the easterne walle.(^) Sixth, In the English leiturgye, after the prayer of consecratione, the presbyter is biddne com municate and then immediatly give to the people : but in ours, after the prayer of consecratione (different from that of the EngUsh), the prayer of the second oblatione followeth, according to the ideea of the masse. Seventh, In the Englishe, the presbyter delyvering breade to the people is bidd saye, " Tacke eate, for a memoriall that Chryst has dyed for yow, eate him with faith in your hearte, with thankes givinge" ;(0 which goldne sentence, which cuttes the throate of transubstantiatione, is altogether omitted in our leiturgye, because, forsoothe, it is not to be founde in the canon of the (1) [The verses in the English Liturgy are these : St. Matthew v. 16 ; vi. 19, 20; vii. 12, 21 ; St. Luke xix. 8 ; 1st Corinthians ix. 7, 11, 13, 14 ; 2d Corinthians ix. 6, 7 ; Gala tians vi. 6, 7, 10 ; 1st Timothy vi. 6, 7, 17, 18, 19 ; Hebrews vi. 10 ; xin. 16 ; 1st John iii. 17 ; Tobit iv. 7, 8, 9 ; Proverbs xix. 17 ; Psalms xii. 2. The verses in the Scotish Li turgy are the following : Genesis iv. 3 ; Exodus xxv. 2; Deuteronomy xvi. 16; 1st Chro nicles xxix. 10; Psalms xcvi. 8 ; St. Matthew vi. 19, 20; vii. 12; St. Mark xii. 41, 42, 43,44; 1st Corinthians ix. 7, 11, 13, 14; 2d Corinthians ix. 6, 7; Galatians vi. 6, 7; 1st Timothy vi. 17, 18, 19; Hebrews vi. 10; xiii. 16.] f2) [Allusion is made to the difference between the prayer for the church militant in the English and the corresponding prayer in the Scotish Liturgy. See above, p. 70, note (i).] (3) [English Rubric : Scotish Rubric : " The Table at the Communion time, " The holy Table having at the Commu- hauing a fafre white linnen cloth vpon it, nion time a Carpet, and a faire white linen shall stand in the body of the Church, or in cloth upon it, with other decent furniture, the Chancell, where Morning and Euening meet for the high mysteries there to be ce- Prayer be appointed to be said." lebrated, shall stand at the uppermost part of the Chancell or Church."] (4) [" Take and eat this in remembrance that Christ died for thee, and feed on him in thine heart by faith with thankesgiuing."] 78 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. masse. Lyckewayes, it is to be observed, that in the giving of the cupp the English has, " drinke this for a rememberaunce that Chrystes bloode was shedde for yow, and give thankes" :(0 which wordes are not to be founde in cures, because they are not in the Roman masse book. Eighth, The English bidds delyver the elements into the peoples handes : No such worde in oures ; so it seemes they may be putt into ther mouthes. Ninth, The English bidds putt both elements into the peoples handes : Ours has no such worde, being content to bidde the people communicat in ther oune order : that is to say, the laickes must be removed without the qwire, as being a prophane multitude, for which cause the qwire is railed with a wodne raile : for ought we know, it may be heer insinivate that the commu nion of the people in ther order is different from that of the clergye, not only by reasone of the place, but by reasone of ther communicating under both kyndes, as the papistes speacke : Nor doe we suspect without cause that the contryvers of our booke had some such thing in ther heade ; for they have already plainly declared that ther is no grownd in Scriptur to prove the necessitye of communicatinge under both kyndes : it is called a traditione by Doctor Whyte, Bishop of EU, in his booke, lately printed, called Sunday no Sabbath,(2) pag. 97 ; and Bishop Montacue,(3) expressly, in his booke of Origins, pag. 396, " Wher (sayes hee) is ther a commande in Scripture to baptise infants, or bidding communicantes participate in both kyndes in the Lordes Supper ? Of thes thinges we maye saye, that the Scripture teaches no such thinge, the Scripture commands not this". Is it not justly to be feared that pwrposly they have omitted mentione of giving bothe elements, that they may opne a doore in the next editione of ther booke to this graunde sacreiledge ? Tenth, In our liturgye, the reliques of the consecrate breade must be covered with the corporall, and the Lordes table must be covered with a decent carpett : but no mentione of the lycke in the English, nor of the worde corporalle to expresse the linnens wherwith (0 [" Drinke this in remembrance that Christes blood was shed for thee, and be thankefuU."] (2) [The well-known work " Sunday no Sabbath" was written by Dr Pooklington, canon of Windsor and prebendary of Peterborough. But Francis White, Bishop of Ely, pub lished a Treatise on the Sabbath, to which, as indeed appears from the words of Spang, re ference is here made : " ad traditionem refertur ab Eliensi episcopo White, libro nuper impresso, de Sabbato, pag. 97." Historia Motuum, p. 221.] (3) [Richard Montague, Bishop of Chichester from 1628 to 1638, of Norwich from 1638 to his death in 1641.] Ch. LIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 79 the elements are covered ; this kynde of name to it was never hearde of in the church befor transubstantiatione. Eleventh, In the English booke, all the collection of almes is ordained to be putt into the common boxe ; but in ours, it must be devyded, and the presbyter must have one halfe. Twelfth, Our booke mackes mentione of the offering breade and wyne ; but no worde of the lycke into the Englishe. Thirteenth, Our booke approves round unleavened wafers ; the English booke bidds use ordinary leavened breade. Fourteenth, The English booke biddes carrye the reliques of the bread and wyne to the curates house, and macke use of them : our booke wUl have the remander therof, as if holy, to be eatne in the churche itselfe. Fifteenth, If ther be not eneuch of elements consecrated for the present vse, our booke wiU have mor elements consecrated anew : no such practise in the Englishe. Sixteenth, In the first prayer befor baptisme, in our booke, these wordes are to be readde " sanctifie this baptismali fonte" ; which is wanting in the Englishe. Seventeenth, In the margent of our booke (ibid.) the water of the fonte must be twyce renewd monethlye, and be consecrated anew, but with a prayer for the pourpose : all which is wanting in the Englishe booke of leiturgye. (0 LI. Considering, therfor, the manner of the introductione, and the mat ter of the booke to contane such thinges as are above related, and itselfe to be the very popish frame of service ; therfor the Assembly, in one voice, did rejecte it, and condemne it as illegally introduced, and erroneouse for the matter, repugnant to the doctrine and discipline of the reformed churche, to the Confessione of Faithe, constitutiones of GeneraU Assemblyes, and Actes of Parliament establishing the trew relligione : and did prohibite the use and practise therof: and ordaines presbytryes to proceed with the cen sures of the churche against all such as shall transgresse.(2) LII. That this Service Booke was introduced upon the churche very illegally, evry man confessed ; and for the materialls being ane botch potche .A. D, 1638, The Assem bly condemn and prohibit the Service Book. The Author'^ opinion on this subject, (1) [The objections to the Scotish Service Book, founded on its differences from the English Liturgy, will be found stated at more length in Baillie's " Ladensivm aimxxTxx- fins, The Canterbvrians Self- Conviction : Or, An evident demonstration of the avowed Arminianisme, Poperie, and tyrranie of that faction, by their owne confessions ; With a postscript for the Personat Jesuite Lysimachus Nicanor, a prime Canterburian. The thfrd Edition augmented by the Author, with a large Supplement, [pp. 95-113] Printed for Nathaniel Bvtter. 1641."] (2) See print Actes of Assembly Glasgow, pag. Kirk, p. 26.] 12. act sess. 14. [Records of the 80 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. of the masse booke, English Service Booke, and some new additiones, ,~T. albeit the exceptiones (above related) tackne against it, it may be with tial people at some, wer not all thought relevant, but that in charitye manye thinges, or that time. some thinges, might have been capable of a better constructione then was putt upon them ; yet all who looked upon it with unpartiaU eyes, saw just causes to except against it, .and that in all this ther was as much as might give just cause of offence to cordial protestants : And it was thought the me dicine was worse than the disease, by such a cure thrust upon the patient ; for albeit that afterward the Assembly of Divynes and Scottland, by esta blishing the Directorye,(0 confessed the necessitye of a churche leiturgye, and that eache minister ought not in the forme of publicke service for to be left to his owne discretione, which could not chuise but produce many ill conse quences; yet such a Directory as this Service Booke did put the patient out of one sicknesse into an other worse then the former, • which was, that ministers prayed extempore. For if the prayers and forme of service used befor in the churche of Scottland wer only qwarelld at, who does not see that heerby the Frensh churche was tacitly condemned, from whom that modeU was mostly borrowd. And now supposing that the old modell was faultye in nothing but in its disconformitye with the churche of England (for evne the bishopps who wer justling it out, could not laye so many chaUendges against it as against the Service Booke, is heer givne in by the foUowers of the old Scottish formes), evry one did, upon that supposition, justly con clude that the bishopps new leiturgye (though it had been free of aU the chaUendges laide against it), yet was not so necessaire as to trouble the peace of such for it who wer unwilling to embrace it, and who wer accus tomed with ane other service not heterodox nor suspitiouse any way in its materiaUs. But to foUow the threede of my narratione. After the Service Booke, upon the exceptions forsaide, was voted downe, the comittie gave in ther observationes upon the Booke of the Episcopall Canons, of which booke I spocke befor, which wer as foUoweth. But befor I doe insert them, (1) [A Directory for the Publike Worship of God throughout the three Kingdoms of Scotland, England, and Ireland. With an Act of the Generall Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland, for establishing and observing this present Directory. Together with an Act of the Parliament of the Kingdom of Scotland approving and establishing the same : An Act of the Committee of Estates concerning the Printing thereof: and an Act of the Commis sion of the Generall Assembly for the Printing, and for the present practice of it through out the said Kingdom of Scotland. Edinburgh : Printed by Evan Tyler, Printer to the Kings most Excellent Majestie. 1645.] Ch. LIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 81 having gott into my hande as I am wrytting this, a kynde of defence of the Service Booke, I shall give yow ane short accounte therof, and leave all to the readers judgement, least it be thought that the contryvers therof have not been hearde. LIII. In defence of the Service Booke, sayes the counterfitt Jesuitt, Lisy- machus Nicanor :* First, The booke purgeth itself from all superstitione, wher it telles us " that the multitude of ceremonyes are rejected, because of the multitude and of ther superstitione". And in the celebration of the com munione, it recommendes the use of common breade " for avoiding of su perstitione". For ceremonyes it caUs them indifferent thinges that may be omitted ; that if they burthen mens consciences they must be tackne away ; and if any be retained, it is for discipline and order, but are not aeqwall with Gods lawe. Second, It contanes no pairtes of the masse ; for it keeps Chrystes institutione and Paules repetition therof. And it is deneyd that sub speciebus panis et vinj the body of Jesus Chryst and his blood is bodily offered upp by the preiste to God the Father, a propitiatorye sacrifice for the quicke and the deade : no such thing in aU that booke. Third, Want ing superstitione and all the essentiall pairtes of the masse, it can opne no doore to poperye ; and when thinges tende to superstitione, it does appoynte to barre them out. Fourth, If it be reade without praejudice, it will be founde : first, to containe nothing contrary to Gods worde. Second, It is that far from being contrare to the practise of the primitive churche, that it is agreable ther unto. Third, The poyntes condemned in it are not controverted betuixt clas- sicall divynes and papistes, but agreed upon by both sydes. Fourth, Nothing contrary therunto in the Scottish Confessione of Faithe ; no divyne eminent amongst the Reformersf did ever condemne this booke of the least poynt of poperye : Contrarly they commende it. So Bucer Script. Anglic, in con. pag. 456, " In the ceremonyes of the Englishe Lyturgie, I have founde nothing which is not tackne out of the worde of God, or at least which is repugnant to it, so it be favourably understoode." Calvine, epist. 200, fol. 336, declares that he found no fault in it at all ; and worot to the EngUsh exiles at Franc- furde, who had made a rent and schisme in the churche, to be moderat and A. D. 1638. Summary of Bishop Les ly's Defence ofthe Service Book in his Lysimachus Nicanor. * Dr. Lesly, Bishopp of Downe, in his Lysimachus Nicanor, pag. 27, et seqq. [The Epistle Congratulatorie of Lysyraachus Nicanor was written not by Bishop Leslie, but by Mr. John Corbet, minister at Bonhill. See above, vol. i. p. 8, note.'] t He meanes the English Service Booke, it wold seeme ; for the Scottish Service Booke was not wryttne many yeares after Bucer and Calvin passed ther judgement of the English Leiturgye. 82 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. returne to the churche. " Vos ultra modum rigidos esse nolim." " In Anglo- rum controversia moder ationem semper tenui, cujus me non pcenitet." It was Calvine and Peeter Martyre who perswaded Bishop Hooper to conformity, speciaUy to putt on the surplice, which he did. So farr hee ; as for his other defences, they are recriminationes, and not defences of the Service Booke. This is all that I have mett with in defence therof, which I leave to the reader his judgement.* Now follow the comittye ther ANIMADVERSIONES DPON THE BOOKE OF CANONS OBTRUDED UPON THE CHURCHE OF SCOTTLANDE.(0 Animadver sions on the Book of Ca nons. LIV. First, This Booke of Canons is obtruded without any consent or approbation of the churche or GeneraU Assembly ; yet such as are episco pall confesse that ecclesiasticall canons wer never any wher made but in synods. So sayes Lanclot Andrewes, Bishop of Winchester, in his Ser mone of the Trumpetts, published and revised and dedicated, with the rest of his sermons, to the Kinge, by WiUiam Lawd, Archbishop of Canterburye : as also the ordinare practise of the convocatione house in the churche of Englande, which amongst them standes for a nationall synod, teaches the same. Second, With one dash, they in it overturne aU the discipline of the church of Scottlande, and all the actes of assemblyes for eighty yeares paste : and in place therof, it settes upp a new discipline, formed by the bishopps alone, without assistaunce or consent of all or anye of the minis trye ; whairby a meer tyrranny and soleshipp of the bishopps is established over aU the churches, and whairby ane irresistible power is givne to them for to chaunge and acte all thinges in the churche acording to ther plea sure. Adde to all, that in this booke ther are some thinges openlye contra dictorye, some things directly contrarye to the Actes of Parliament, and some great errors. It overturnes the receaved discipline established by Generall Assemblys and confirmed by Actes of Parliament ; First, For first it interdytes minis- * Mr. Robert Baily, in his Ansuer unto Lysymachus Nicanor, [subjoined to his Laden- sium Aurmcira.x(i(rii\ has givne some short reply to all that is said heer in defence of the Service Booke ; but it is so short and generall that it wer needlesse to insert it, for he ansuers Lysymachus Nicanor as little as Lysymachus Nicanor does ansuer all that is object ed against the Scottish Service Booke. (0 [Translated from " Animadversiones in librum Canonum ab Episcopis obtrusum eccle siae Scoticae," Historia Motuum, pp. 222 — 229.] Ch, LIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 83 ters and laickes from medling with church matters ; cap. 8, sec. 4 :(0 whence A. D. 1638. it foUowes that church sessions must be discharged, as also all presbytryes ; and that laices are to have no voice in any churche judicatorye, although comissionate. Second, It mackes mentione of no churche judicatorye, but only diocessan synods, wher the bishopp is to have all the power alone at his arbitriment(2) : Lyckwayes, it transferres the exercise of all ecclesiasticke power(3) wholly upon the bishops officiall or comissarye alone, as if oflSiciaUs wer Chrystes institution; cap. 8, sec. 1.(0 Third, Interdidt aliis omnibus ecclesiasticorum conventibus pro rebus ecclesiasticis ; cap. 8, par. 2.(^) Once only and upon the by, as if spockne recklesslye (quasi authoribus incogitan- tibus), ther is mentione in it of nationaU synods ;(^) but no mentione who (1) [Chap. VIII. Of Synodes, Sec. 4. " Who-so-ever shall heere-after aflSrme, that it is lawfull for anie Presbyter, or Lay-man, joyn tlie, or severallie, to make Rules, Orders, or Constitutions, in causes Ecclesiasticall ; or to adde or detract from anie Rubrickes, Arti cles, or other thinges nowe established, without the King's Authoritie, or His Successoures, shall bee excoramunioated, ipso facto ; and not restored, till hee repent, and revoke such his bolde and sohismaticall attemptes."] (2) [Chap. VHI. Of Synodes, Sec. 1. " For the better tryall of all disorders which raay fall out amongst the Clergie, and the retaining of Unitie in Doctrine and Discipline ; It is ordayned, That in everie Diocesse, Assemblies shall bee kept twyse a yeare, in such places, and at such tyraes, as the Bishop shall appoynt. And if anie Presbyter absent him selfe, without a lawfull excuse signified at the tyme, hee shall bee suspended to the next Synode."] (3) [The words of Spang are these : " Exercitium etiam spiritualis jurisdictionis in commis saries seu officiales Episcopi, in solidum transfert, quasi vero ofBciales illi essent a Christo instituti ministri ecclesiastici."] (4) [Chap. XIX. Of Commissaries, and their Courts, Sec. 1. " No man here-after shall bee admitted Coramissarie, or Officiall, to exercyse anie Spirituall lurisdiction, except hee be of age xxx years at least ; and one who is Master of Artes, or Bachelor of Lawes, & well skilled in them ; as lykewyse well-affected in Religion, of good and exemplarie lyfe, and obedient to the Orders of the Church."] (5) [Chap. VIII. Of Synodes, Sec. 2. " Because all Conventicles, and secret meet- inges of Church-men, haue ever beene justlie accounted hurtfuU to the peace of the Church wherin they liue ; It is ordayned. That no such Meetinges bee kept by Presbyters, or anie other persones whatsoever, for consulting vpon matters Ecclesiasticall : And, That all mat ters of that kynde bee onlie handled in the lawfull Synodes helde by the Bishops, and es tablished by authoritie."] (6) [Chap, VIII. Of Synodes, Sec. 3. " Nationall Synodes, called by His Majesties Authoritie, for matters concerning the state of the Church in generall, shall bind all per sons, as well absent, as present, to the obedience of the Decrees thereof in matters Eccle siasticall. And if anie shall affirme or mayntayne, that a Nationall Synod so assembled, ought not to bee obeyed, hee shall bee excommunicated, till hee publicklie repent, and revoke his errour."] Sec. 4. " But it shall not bee lawfull for the Bishops themselues, in a Nationall Synod, or otherwyse, to alter anie Rubricke, Article, Canon Doctrinall, or Disciplinarie, what-so- ever ; vnder the payne aboue mentioned, and his Majestie's farther displeasure."] 84 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. are to be its members, whence it may be weall concluded that the bishopps judge themselves the only members of Generall Assemblyes : for nationaU synods are the church representative, and the bishopps already have de clared themselves to be the representative of the natione.* Fourth, They whoUy rejecte the order of deacons^^^ as it is instituted by the Holy Ghost, and receaved into this churche ; and in place therof certaine oeconomi aire to be chosne by the bishope(2), (a new plantation, and alltogether unknowne to the Scottishe) who are putt in office of deacones. It gives all the power, nay a tyrannicall power, to bishopps. For ffrst, To them alone, or to ther chapellans, is the power givne to examine such as are to enter into the functione of the ministrye ; cap. 2, sec. 3. Second, It is in the bishopps power for to graunte letters of dimissione to ministers ; cap. 2, sec. 5. Third, It is only the bishopp who must ordaine ministers ; cap. 2, sec. 7. Fourth, The bishopp may give ministers licence to be non residents ; cap. 3, sec. 1 : whill residence is knowne for all that to be juris divini. Fifth, It forbidds ministers to preach any wher but in ther oune churches, what ever occasion or necessity ther be for it, except they first purchasse license from the ordinarye (for so does that booke terme the bishopp) ; cap. 2, sec. 2. Sixth, The bishopp may dispence ministers from catechising the ignorants of ther paroshin; cap. 3, sec. 6.(3) Seventh, Ministers are for- biddne publickly to refoote heresyes vented by other ministers in ther pul pitts, except ther ordinary licence them so to doe; cap. 3, sec. 7(0 : so then * Ecclesiae representativae exornarunt. [Historia Motuum, p. 223.] (1) [By the Scotish Book of Canons, the order of deacons was placed on the same footing, in all respects, as in the Church of England.] (2) [By Chap. XVI. Sec. 6, the distribution of alms among the poor is appointed to be made by the Presbyter and two Church- Wardens, in the presence of six chief men of the parish.] (3) [Chap. IIL Of Residence and Preaching. Sec. 6. " It is the duetie of Presbyters, not onelie to stirre vp the affections of people by exhortation ; but lykewyse to inform their judgement, by solide instruction, that they may bee acquaynted with the groundes of their Profession : Therefore It is ordayned. That there be catechizing everie Sunday in the afternoone, except the Bishop dispence with it, as hee findeth cause."] (4) [Chap. III. Of Residence and Preaching. Sec. 7. " If anie Preacher shall in the Pulpit particularlie, or of purpose, impugne, or confute the doctrine deUvered by anie other Preacher in the same Church, or in anie Church nigh adjoyning, before hee hath acquaynt ed the Bishop of the Diocesse therewith, and receaved order from Him, what to doe in that case, because vpon publicke dissenting and contradicting, there may growe much offence, and disquietnesse, to the people ; The same beeing notified to the Bishop Hee shall not suffer the Preacher anie more to serue in that place which hee hath once abused except hee faythfullie promise, to forbeare all such matter of contention in the Church, vntill order bee taken therein by the Bishop ; who with all convenient speede shall so proceede, as publicke satisfaction may bee given to the Congregation where the offence was committed : Neyther Ch. liv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 85 if the bishopp vente the same heresye, orthodox ministers must be qwyett. A, D. 1638. and the bishopp must bee obeyed, et pereundum populo. Eighth, Albeitt Actes of Parliament or Churche Actes wer never so sinnefuU, yet (if once they be enacted), cap, 3, sec. 8, ministers are forbiddne for to speacke against them, but they must propose ther scruples to the ordinary, and ac- qwiesce modestly in his determinatione.(0 Ninth, Ministers must be trans planted upon no accompt, but with licence from ther ordinarye ; cap. 4. sec. 4.(2) Tenth, Bishopps only have power to licence marriadge without three proclamationes of banns.(3) Eleventh, Bishopps must indict only the tyme and place of synods.^*' Tioelfth, Bishopps only must plant scoolemaisters and readers in churches.(^) Thirteenth, Nothing must be printed without the bishopp or his capellans licence ; cap. 12, sec 1 :C^) But what ifthe bishopp be heterodox, then all orthodox Wryttings must be aeternally silenced, or at least the bishopps death must be waited for, till one orthodox succeede, shall anie Preacher vse bitter invectiues agaynst his fellow-Presbyter or Preacher ; or goe about indirectlie to worke his disgrace with the people ; vnder the paine of being censured, as a prophaner of the Word." Compare Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical of the Church of England, 1603, can. 53.] (0 [Chap. III. Of Residence and Preaching. Sec. 8. " No Presbyter or Preacher shall presume in Sermons, to speake agaynst his Maiesties Lawes, Statutes, Acts, or Ordin ances : But if hee conceaue anie scruple or doubt, let him goe to his Ordinarie, and receaue instruction." The General Assembly which met at Perth in March, 1597, had ordained " that no minister shall reprove his Majestie's lawes, statutes, acts, and ordinances, unto the tyme that first he be advysit with his Presbytrie, Synodall, or Generall Assemblies, complaine and seek remedie of the same from his Majestie, and report his Majestie's answer, before any further proceeding." Booke of the Universall Kirk, p. 443 ; Archbishop Spot tiswoode, p. 442 ; Calderwood, p. 395] (2) [Chap. IV. Of the Conversation of Presbyters. Sec. 4. " If anie Ecclesiasticall person shall goe out of his Diocesse, to sute Plantation in another, or accept of anie place, hee shall bee recalled by his Ordinarie, and returned to his Charge. And if hee disobey, bee disposed. "] (3) [Chap. VII. Of Marriage. Sec. 4.] (4) [Chap. VIII. Of Synodes. Sec. 1.] (5) [Chap. X. Of Schoole- Masters. Seel. Chap. XL Of Curates, and Readers.] (6) [Chap. XII. Of Printers : " For restrayning the Libertie of Printing, which is greatlie abused, in setting foorth Bookes, Ballads, Satyricall Lybels, and other Pamphlets, repugnant to the Trueth, or not agreeing with Honestie and good Manners ; It is ordayned. That nothing heere-after bee imprinted, except the sarae bee seene, and allowed, by the Visiters appoynted to that purpose." The Glasgow Assembly of 1638, " by vertue of their ecclesiastical authority, discharged and inhibited all printers within this Kingdome, to print any act of the forraer Assemblies, any of the acts or proceedings of this Assembly, any con fession of Faith, any Protestations, any reasons pro or contra, anent the present divisions and contraversies of this time, or any other treatise whatsoever which may concerne the Kirk of Scotland, or God's cause in hand, without warrand subscribed by Mr. Archibald Johnston, as Clerk to the Assembly, and Advocate for the Kirk." Records of the Kirk, p. 39 ; Steuart of Pardovan's Collections, b. iii. tit. iii. sec. 6 ; Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 149 ; Historia Motuum, p. 286.] 86 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. which bygone experience has shewed to be rare. Fourteenth, The minis- ter is commanded to send to the bishop yearly a catalouge of people marryed, of childeren baptised, and of deade people specially, whoise deathe may be ganefuU to the bishopp by confirmation of ther testamentes.(0 Fifteenth, The bishopp only must appoynte publicke fastes; cap. 14, sec. 1(2) ; so that without his consent it wUl be a sinne to fast for sinne. Sixteenth, The bishopp must tell what place of the churche the pulpitt must stand in, which pulpitts must be decent; cap. 16, sec. 5(3): that is to saye, the bishop has power to licence the reading of the Evangile out of the higher pulpitt, be cause they saye it is holyer then any other place or pairt of Sacred Scripture, as being uttered by Chrystes mouthe : and the bishop may licence the read ing of any other pairt of the Scripture out ofthe pulpitt box or the readers seate : and what if by that decencye of the pulpitt, ministers be compelld to have pulpitts of woodde only, as a simboUical significatione of the crosse of Chryste, acording to Amularius, lib. 3, de divinis officiis. Seventeenth, The bishop must have the oversight of all thinges appoynted to piouse uses, and all the wryttes or deedes or instruments that concerne such thinges (0; cap. 17, sec. 5, 6, 10 : Now, who shall ansuer for the bishop his trust, since (1) [Chap. XIII. Of Christninges, Weddinges, and Burialls, to be registrated : " In everie Paroch- Church within the Kingdome, a Parchment Booke shall bee provided, at the Charge of the Parochin ; where-in shall bee written the daye and yeare of everie Christning, Wed ding, and Buriall : which shall bee kept, and layde vp in a sure Coffer, to bee provided also by the Parochin, and not taken foorth by the Presbyter, or anie other, except when the Christninges, Weddinges, and Burrialls are to bee recorded. And to the effect those bee not neglected, the Presbyter shall everie Lord's Day, after Prayers, or Sermon, take foorth the sayde Booke, and wryte there-in the names of all persons Christned, with the names and Syrnames of their Parentes : The names also of all persons married, and buried in that Parioch in the weeke preceeding ; with the day and yeare of everie such Christning, Wed ding, and Buriall, And everie yeare once, within one moneth after the first day of Januarie, transmit vnto the Bishop of the Diocesse, a true Copie of the names of all persons Christ ned, married, and buried, the yeare before within his Parochin ; with the dayes and moneths of every such Christning, Marriage, & Burial, subscribed with his hand : to the end the same may be preserved in the Bishops Register. Wherein if hee shall bee found negligent, hee shall bee called, and censured, for the contempt of this necessarie Constitution. "] (2) [Chapter XIV. Of publicke Fastes. Sec, 1. " None in holie Orders shall without the License and direction of his Ordinarie, appoynt or keepe anie solemne Fastes, or bee present thereat of purpose ; vnder the payne of Suspension, or other punishment, which the Bishop shall thinke fit to inflict."] (3) [Chap. XVI. Of things pertayning to the Church. Sec. 5. " A Pulpit lyke-wyse, decent and comelie, must bee provided, and placed in a convenient part of the Church, for Preaching the Word of God. And if anie question aryse, for placing the same, it shall bee determined by the Bishop of the Diocesse." Compare the English Constitutions, can. 83.] (4) [Chap. XVII. Of Tithes and Landes, dedicated to Chvrches. Sec. 5. " Thinges dedicated to Holie and Religious Uses, and such other thinges as are offered willinglie, or Ch. liv.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 87 many bishopps by experience are founde sacreledgiouse ; or in caise the A. D. 1638. bishopp wer challendged with this cryme, how shaU it be provne against him, seing himself has the proofes in his oune keeping, who maye very easily destroye aU the recordes and evidences therof? Therfor as heerin, so they have been very discreet in ther censure of sacraleidge, cap. .17, sec. 1(0; for ther is no pennance laide upon them but simple restitutione without mor. Eighteenth, No man must be excommunicate without a warrant under the bishopps hande; cap. 18, sec. 3:(2) Matthew xviii. 1 7, (^) meanes otherwayes; except the bishopp be ther only meand by the churche, and represent it as a prince does his kyngdome. Nineteenth, It is forbiddne for to absolve ex communicate persones without the bishopps warrand ;(^) and why not ? for he who can only bynd should only loose againe. Twentieth, The bishopp may by Latter- Will left to anie pious Use, shall bee carefullie looked vnto by the Bishop and Presbyter, that they bee not lost, nor converted to anie other vse. And if anie man shall fraudfuUie detayne thinges offered, or left by Latter- Will to the Poore, or anie pious Use, hee shall bee suspended from all benefites of the Church as a Murderer of the Poore, and irreligious crosser of the good intentions of People." Sec. 6. " If anie Presbyter shall with- holde, detayne, or destroy, or deliver into the handes of Competitors, anie Wryting, or Instrument what-so-ever, where-by the Donation of Ecclesiasticall Goods, or their Right, or Possession, may bee instructed, or in the pursuit of acquyring them, shall privatelie transact with the partie, without the knowledge and consent of the Ordinarie, to the hurt and prejudice of the Chvrch, in anie sort, hee shall refound the losses, which came by his deede, and bee deposed from his Function." Seo. 10. " Everie Arch- Bishop, and Bishop, shall in their severall Diocesses, procure a true Note of all the Gleabes, Landes, Meadowes, Orchards, Houses, Implementes, and portion of Tithes, belonging to anie Chvrch ; and take care, that the same may bee preserved in their Registers, for a perpe tuall memorie."] (1) [Chap. XVII. Sec. 1. " For-as-rauch as the Goods of the Church, of what-so-ever sort, are not committed to the disposing of persons Ecclesiasticall, but onelie to thair dis pensing ; It shall [not] be lawfull to anie Arch-Bishop, Bishop, Parson, Vicar, or anie Church man, to set, alienate, or put away from the Church, and present vse there-of, his Benefice, Church- Rent, or anie part of the sarae, to anie person, or persons, whether Wyfe or Chyld, Friend or Stranger, mediatelie or immediatelie. And who shall bee proved to doe the con trarie, shall eyther bee compelled to restore the same, or bee deposed from his Office, Be nefice, and Living."] (2) [Chap, XVIII. Of Censures Ecclesiasticall, Sec. 3. " Neyther shall anie Presbyter pronounce the Sentence of Excommunication, till hee haue showne the Processe to the Or dinarie, and obtayned His Approbation vnder His Hand."] (3) [" And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church : but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican."] (4) [Chap. XVIII. Sec, 6. " If anie person bee excommunicated in one Diocesse, hee shall not bee absolved in another, without lawfull Warrand from the Bishop, who caused pronounce the Sentence. And the Contraveaner shall bee suspended from his Function, and the Ab solution null; vntill hee who is excommunicated haue performed his Satisfaction in the place where hee was sentenced,"] 88 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Ucence any to converse with excommunicate persones; cap. 18, sec. 5.(0 Is not this to give Ucence to dispense with the law of Chryste ? Twenty-first, Ministers ther sentence of depositione must not be pronounced by any but the archbishopp, or the bishopp of that diocese wher the minister lives : thus profane ministers, if they syde with the bishopp in promovall of cere monyes, will be safe, howbeit never so guiltye of other crymes, as experience shews it. Twenty-second, The bishopp must designe and appoynte the habite of all churche men :(2) and what ther habite must bee is not difficult to judge ; for they urge conformitye in all thinges with the churche of Eng lande, and it must be that same which is appoynted, canon 74, of the EngUsh Constitutions,(^) and if ther be any discrepancye betuixt the popish church mens habite and that of the church of Englande, our bishopps, who evrye daye are stryving to improve all thinges, wUl help that; and as they have almost restored all the masse, why should they not also give us the habite agreable therunto ? for it wer a shame to swallow ane oxe and worrye on his taile, or to straine a gnatt after they have thus swallowed a camell. Twenty-third, Lastly, As if it wer troublesome to our bishopps to containe the violent current of ther power within any brinkes or boundaryes ; cap. 19, sec. ult.,('^ they assume power to themselves, acording to ther owne (1) [Chap. XVIII. Sec. 5. " Andif anie shall after intiraation [of the sentence of excom munication] resort to, or converse with anie who is excommunicate, (those excepted who are by naturall duetie bound to attende them, or who are licenced by the Bishop) they shall in curre the sarae Censure, and bee excommunicated themselues."] (2) [Chap. XV. Of decencie in Apparell, enjoyned to persons Ecclesiasticall: « The Chvrch of Christ being ever desirous that Her Clergie should bee had in outward reverence, and regard, for the worthinesse of their Calling, did thinke it fit, to haue them knowne to the people, by a prescribed and decent forrae of Apparell : whose judgement wee following, doe ordayne. That all Arch-Bishops, Bishops, Deanes, Masters of CoUedges, Doctors in Divinitie, Presbyters, Deacons, Masters of Artes, and Bachelours of what Facultie soever, shall vse Apparell beseeming their Degrees, and abstayne from all light and new-fangled Garmentes ; eyther in colour, or fashion, no wayes beseeming the gravitie of their persons and Places."] (3) [« Archbishops and Bishops shall not intermit to use the accustomed apparel of their degrees. Likewise all Deans, Masters of Colleges, Archdeacons, and Prebendaries, in Ca thedral and Collegiate Churches (being Priests or Deacons,) Doctors in Divinity, Law, and Physic, Bachelors in Divinity, Masters of Arts, and Bachelors of Law, having any Ecclesias tical Living, shall usually wear Gowns with standing Collars and Sleeves straight at the hands, or wide Sleeves, as is used in the Universities, with Hoods or Tippets of silk or sarcenet, and square caps. And all other Ministers admitted or to be admitted into that function shall also usually wear the like apparel as is aforesaid, except Tippets only."] (4) [" Lastlie : In all this Booke of Canons, where-so-ever there is no Penaltie expresslie set downe, it is to bee vnderstood. That (so the Cryme or Offence bee proved) the Punish ment shall bee arbitrarie, as the Ordinarie shall think fittest,"] Ch. LIV] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 89 arbitriment, to inflict punishment upon such as doe transgresse the canons, A. D. 1638. which are enacted with no speciall sanctione therunto added : this is the cape- stone that they sett upon this prowde buildinge : and if any thing be wantinge, they crowne it with this supplement : To conclude, the summe of all comes to this, that the bishopp may judge all men, and himselfe be judged by none. Thirdly, This booke containes some thinges contradictorye. For, cap. 18, sec. 2,(0 it condemnes summary excommunicatione without a citation ; yet, cap, 8, sec. 4,(0 such as contradicte synods and ther decrees, and doe not acquiesce therin, all such as shall chaunge the rubricke, canon, the wordes of thes bookes, viz. the Booke of Canons, Leiturgye, Ordinatione or Ho- melyes (albeit none of them wer printed at that tyme, but only the Booke of Canons), they are declared excommunicate ipso facto : Next, they en joyne residence to all presbyters ;(3) yet, cap. 11,(0 curatts are reockned upp amongst laufull ministers ; whois only use is for to supply the vice of non residents, nor can ther use be any other. Fourth), This booke containes some thinges contrary to actes of Par liament. [For,J cap. 7, sec. 6,^^^ the innocent party divorced is forbiddne to marrye as long as the adulterouse party divourced(^) lives ; yet in the actes of Parliament, the contrare is warranted : Next, cap. 17, sec. 7,(^) pastores who dye without chUderen must leave a great pairt of ther goodes to piouse uses, albeit thes goodes have been left to them by ther progenitors, which (0 [Chap. XVIII. Of Censures Ecclesiasticall. Sec. 2. " The Censure of Excommvni- cation, beeing the highest Censure which the Church can inflict, may not bee suraraarie, nor ordinarlie vsed; but after lawfull Citation, and due Admonitions preceeding."] (2) [See above, p. 83, note, CD.] (3) [Chap. III. Of Residence and Preaching, Sec. 1.] (4) [Chap. XI. Of Curates, and Readers : " Everie Bishop within his Diocesse, shall take tryall of the qualitie of the Curates and Readers, and permit none to reade, or con ceaue publicke Prayers in the Church, vnlesse hee bee in hohe Orders, and lawfullie author ised by the Bishop."] (5) [Chap. VII. Of Marriage. Sec. 6. " In all Sentences of Separation, h Thoro Sf Mensa, there shall bee a Caution inserted, that the persons so separated, shall live continent- lie, and chastlie, and not contract marriage with anie person, during each others lyfe." Compare the English Constitutions, can. 107.] (6) [This objection, it would appear, proceeds on a misunderstanding of the canon referred to, which seems to apply not to cases of Divorce, but to cases of Separation a thoro et merna.'] (7) [Chap. XVII. Of Tithes and Landes, dedicated to Chvrches. Sec. 7. " For the greater encowragement of people to the workes of Pietie, and Charitie, If anie Bishop, or Church-man shall depart this lyfe, leaving no Children, nor Successour of himselfe, hee shall leave his Goods, or a great part of them, to the Chvrch, and holie Uses. Or if hee haue Children, for whom hee must provide ; yet according to his abilitie, hee shall leaue some Testimonie of his loue to the Chvrch, and advancement of Religion."] M 90 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B, III. A. D. 1638. many thinke is appoynted for no other reasone but that aU may come into the bishopps treasurye, since he is to have a care of the lycke goodes ; nor any meanes left how he may he called to ane accompt : But whatever grounde ther may bee for such a conjecture, sure it is that the bishopps, by this meanes, tacke mor power to themselves over the goodes of defunct minis ters then ever any king of Scottland assumed over the goods of free sub jectes. This canone mackes the bishopps lords of the goodes and fortunes which others laufuUy possesse as ther owne, and to which none other has any right ; and it is contrare to the commone and receaved maxime of our lawes, which constitutes the last will of free men adying to be free. Fyftlye, It has in it some very great errors, amongst which this is one, that the bishopp may give warrant to converse with excommunicate per sones ; contrare to Matthew xviii. 17. Second, That he may licence non- residency ; albeit, de jure divino, faithfuU pastors must resyde with ther flockes. Third, It forbidds marriadge to the innocent party divorced ;(0 contrarye to Matthew v. 32, et Matthew xix. 9, which the reformed churches maintaine against the councell of Trent, sess. xxiv, can. vii.(0 who have such doctrine as our bishopps. Fourth, Cap. 8, sec. 4,(0 the booke speackes as if the churche of Scottlande wer not reformed, either in doctrine or disci pline : Heer lett all judge what a doore the bishopps opne to innovationes ; and hence it is that they macke no mentione at aU of the Confessione of Faith, ratifyde by actes of parUament long agoe. Fifth, They caU order a sacrament ; cap. 2, sec. 7 :(0 For aU thinges are to be founde (acording to (0 [See above, p. 89, notes (5), (6).] (2) [" Si quis dixerit, Ecclesiam errare, cum docuit, & docet, juxta Euangelicam & Apostolicam doctrinam, (Matt. 19.; Lucae 16.; 1 Cor. 7.), propter adulterium alterius conjugum matrimonii vinculum non posse dissolvi ; & utrumque, vel etiam innocentem, qui causam adulterio non dedit, non posse, altero conjuge vivente, aliud matrimonium con- trahere ; moecharique eum, qui dimissa adultera aliam duxerit, & eam, quae dimisso adultero, alii nupserit ; anathema sit." Concil. Trident. Can. et Decret. Vide etiam Catech. Con cil. Trident, par. ii., cap. viii., secc. xxvii. xxviii. xxix.] (3) [Chap. VHL Of Synodes. Sec. 4. " But for-as-much as no reformation in Doctrine or Discipline, can bee made perfect at once in anie Church ; Therefore it shall and may be lawfull, for the Church of Scotland, at anie tyme, to make Remonstrance to His Majestie, or His Successoures, what they conceaue fit to bee taken in farther consideration^ in, and concerning the Premisses."] (4) [Chap. II. Of Presbyters and Deacons, their nomination, ordination, function and charge. Sec. 7. "That the greater reverence may bee carried to that holie Calling [of the Ministry], all Ordinations shall bee made by imposition of handes, and with solemne prayers, openlie in the Church, after the morning Service ended, and before the Communion, in the forme and verie wordes praescrybed in the Booke of Ordination, and in presence of two or three Presbyters of the Diocesse, who shall laye on handes together with the Archbishop, or Bishop."] '^ Ch. lv.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 91 ther catechese its definitione) that macke upp a sacrament : For the outwarde A. D. 1638. ryte is impositione of handes, the inward benefitt is the Sacred Spirit; " Re- ceave," sayes the ordaining bishopp, "the Holy Go^te." Now, since they doe pray for Gods grace to such as are to be ordained, it is necessair that the promise be fuUfuUed, if they would have the prayer to be of faithe : Lyck wayes they professe that such an institutione is divyne, as if such a grace wer only dispenced by the handes of the bishopp. Sixth, The lycke may be coUected that they thinke of pennance; for why, otherwayes, should they with the Papistes call confession and absolutione sacramentall, and cause printe that worde in capitall letters, [cap.J 18. sec. 9(0 ? Lastly, To macke all thinges have the greater authoritye, the authors of this booke flatter the Kinge. For, cap. 1, sec. 2,(2) they ascrybe to the King and his successors, without any limitatione, all that power in church matters that ever was competent to the Kings of Juda : Hence it will follow that our Kinges have power to wrytte Scripture, as David and Solomon had:* And, cap. 8, sec. 4,(3) they declare the King and his successors to be supreme judges in all ecclesiasticke matters, both in doctrine and discipline ; albeit the power finally to decyde controversyes in any churche belonge to the nationall synode of that churche, as the divynes sent by King James the Sixth to the councell of Dorte doe roundly affirme and mantaine,(0 without any ambiguitye of wordes. LV. Upon thes considerationes, mostly, t therfor did the Assembly, aU Book of Ca in one voice, rejecte and condemne the Booke of Canons, as contrarye to "°^^ ^^^^ ^n ed. (0 [Chap. XVIIL Of Censures Ecclesiasticall. Sec. 9. «Al-be-it SACRAMENTALL CONFESSION AND ABSOLVTION, haue beene in some places verie much abused ; Yet, if anie of the people bee grieved in mynde, for anie delict, or offence com mitted, and, for the vnburthening of his Conscience, confesse the same to the Bishop, or Presbyter, they shall, as they are bound, minister to the person so confessing, all Spirituall Consolations, out of the Word of God," etc.] (2) [Chap. I. Of the Chvrch of Scotland. Sec. 2. " Whosoever shal herafter afiirm, That the king's Majestie hath not the same Authoritie in Causes Ecclesiasticall, that the godlie kings had amongst the lewes, and Christian Emperours, in the Primitiue Church ; or impeach, in anie part, his Royall Supremacie in causes Ecclesiasticall ; let him bee ex- coraraunicated, and not restored, but onelie by the Arch-bishop of the Province, after his Repentance, and publicke Revocation of these his wicked Errours." Compare the English Constitutions, can. 2.] * But not as kings. This added by J. G. (3) [See above, p. 83, note CO.] (4) [Sessione 29. illius synodi, in responsione ad protestationem Remonstrantium." His toria Motuum, p. 229.] t See print actes of the Assembly at Glasgow, act sess. 14, December 6. [Records of the Kirk, p. 26.] 92 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL Opinion of sober men upon this. A D. 1638. the Confessione of Faithe, repugnant to the established governement, the Booke of Discipline, and the actes and constitutions of our kirke : prohibitts the use and practise of the same; and ordained presbytryes to proceede with the censures of the church against all such as shall transgresse. LVI. This Booke of Canons, which had the same common parents with the Service Booke, felt the lyke fate ; and sober men thought that by such a damnatorye sentence it gott but justice. The informality of its introduc tione was notoriouse ; and for the straine therof manye who understoode bothe deemd that it resembled a Boniface, or a Gregory, or a Clement, sitting in the Vaticane of Rome, compyling ther Decretalls, or Clementines, or Extravagants. For many sober ministers, who otherwayes favoured the bishopps, wer startled with thes Cannons, and thought them grossly extra^ vagantt, as bewraying a too great neglect of all the churche in the intro ductione of them, and a too great usurpatione of power to themselves in the Canons ther sett downe. All saw that the bishopps, seeking heerby for to fathome in the whole power of the churche too quickly, did heerby lose themselves and the power that they wer possessed with, mor qwickly then they dreamed off. Howbeit Lysimachus Nicanor tooke upp the buckler in his invective against the covenanters, for to defend the Service Booke, yet he has not had the boldnesse for to pleade for the Booke of Canons, but passeth it over in silence. The Booke of Cannons beinge overthrowne, the next booke which was brought to the test was the Booke of Ordinatione, ane other whelpe of that same Utter with the two former. The exceptiones givne in against it wer as foUoweth : ANIMADVERSIONES UPON THE BISHOPPS THER BOOKE OF ORDINATIONE OF PRESBYTERS AND DEACONS.^*) Animadver sions on the Book of Ordination : said book rejected. LVII. First, This booke is made upp without any consent or approba tione of any Nationall Assemblye ; nor has it any ecclesiasticke or civiU authority, albeit the bishopps have severall tymes already made use of it. Second, It mackes the bishopps a thirde order of the clergye, distincte from presbyters. Third, It setts upp a new order of deacons, who are to have no charge of the poore, as the deacons had. Acts vi. ; and it gives power to (1) [Translated from " Animadversiones in librum ordinationis Episcoporum, presbytero- rum, & Diaconorum," Historia Motuum, pp. 229, 230.] Ch. LVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 93 thes deacons to baptise and marrye. Fourth, It reqwyres of intrants to the A. D. 1638. ministrye new and unwonted oathes, contrare to actes of parliament : nor are such as are to be admitted to the ministrye sufiered to know what they are to sweare till the very instante that they are to gett orders, and to tacke the oathe ; so that they cannot be saide to sweare with judgement. Fifth, It affirms that the episcopall forme of ordinatione is agreable and warranted by actes of General Assemblyes ; which is false. Sixth, It referres the tryall and examinatione of intrants to the bishopp, debarring the pres bytrye, to whom properlye it doeth belonge. Seventh, It licenceth a bishopp to laye handes soddainly on such as he never saw befor ; for he has the knowledge of the intrants lyfe and manners, by a superficiaU relatione of his archdeacon or capellane. Eighth, It putts the power of ordinatione into the handes of the bishop alone, excluding all presbyters from any pairt therin, furder then being wittnesses. Ninth, The whole forme of ordina^- tione is papisticke, and tackne out of ther rytwall booke. (0 Tenth, It affirmeth that the bishopps have gottne that power and jurisdictione from God. Other observationes wer givne in upon thes three bookes, for the fourth of them, viz. the Booke of Homelyes, saw never the light, but was stiffled in the very birth therof. The Assemblye, therfor, upon thes con siderationes, and withall fynding it ane impediment to the entrye of fitt and worthy men to the ministrye, and to the discharge of ther duty after ther entrye, conforme to the church discipUne, did therfor all in one voice rejecte and condemne the Booke of Ordinatione ; and did forbidd all use and practise therof, etc., ut supra.(^) LVIII. In the last place, the Assembly tooke to its cognitione the High Com- High Commissione court ; and declared that, by setting upp therof, all ec- ™ssion court clesiasticke jurisdictione and power was overturned and jumbled ; and that aU powers heerin wer confounded and cast together in a medlye ; that it was unagreable with church constitutiones (albeit it did belye the resemblance of a supreme ecclesiasticall judicatorye), and with the actes of Parliament ; that it was contrare to the actes of Parliament and fundamentall lawes, specially that of James I. Parliament 3, statute 48, and James IV. Parlia ment 6, statute 79, whairin it is expressly ordained that the subjects be ruled by no other lawes then thes of the kyngdome ; that in this judicatorye, the (1) [" Tota forma consecrationis Episcoporum & Archiepiscorum pontificia est, & ex rituali Romano translata." Historia Motuum, p. 230.] (2) [See Records of the Kirk, p. 26.] 94 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. power of both the swordes, as weall civiU as ecclesiasticke, was givne unto churche men, and such as wer meerly secular, and that such therby gott into ther handes the power of church discipUne and the keys : Finallye, they declare that it was tribunal extraneum, a straunge judicatorye, erected without the consent of ParUament and Churche, and that the only ende therof was for to establish the episcopaU tyrannye :(0 For which reasones the Assembly, all in one voice, condemned it as unlaufuU, prohibited the use of it as praejudiciall to the libertyes of Chrystes church and kyngdome, the Kings honor in mantaining the established lawes and libertyes of the churche and its judicatoryes ; and ordained presbytryes to proceede against aU trans gressors, ut supra, etc.^) Opinion of LIX. The Booke of Ordinatione aU saw informally introduced, and be- ^b'^Uh^°B*' k ^y*^® *''^^*' ^'^^^ ^^® ^° other ill in the contents therof; for by this booke the of Ordination neighbour reformed churches ther practise of ordinatione by presbyters, and the High ^^ gjg^ ^f ^^ churche of Scottlande, for many yeares after the Reforma- Commission. . niii i_j Commission to tione, was heerby tacitly condemned, and many hundereths, yea thousands, visit the shu-e of ministers declared laickes (which the learned episcopall men dare not at Dundee. saye), and qwyte unministred to the great offence both of clergye and peo ple ; so that no body but such ministers as had been lately ordained by bishopps, wer dissatisfeed with the removall heerof. And how ridicolouse it is to affirme that none have power of ordinatione jure divino but bishopps, or ever had, I referr the reader to the learned polemicke tractats that have been in the past yeares wryttne upon that subjecte. And finaUy, for the High Comissione, its forme of establishment all thought illegall, its constitutione a mungrell clero or episcopo laicall eccle- siastico-civill judicatorye. Yet many did thinke, as beefor I have related, that the nobUitye ther enmitye at that judicatorye flowed not meerly upon such an accompt as the Generall Assembly declared, but upon a particular interest, as fynding themselves made too much obnoxiouse to the lashe of churche discipline, seconded with brachium seculare, which they never much fancyd. However it was, as it was sett upp without consent or approbatione, the nobiUtye, gentrye, or ministrye, ther consent was unanimouse eneuch (though ther endes might be diverse) for to pull it downe, and putt it out of doors againe. The discussing of the reasones against the leiturgye, bookes of canons, ordinatione, ahd the court of the High Comissione, did tacke (0 [Historia Motuum, pp. 231, 232.] (2) [Records of the Kirk, p. 26.] Ch. lx.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, 95 upp all this sessione, as it wealle might seeme to doe ; yet, before the rysing therof, a comissione was ordained to sitt at Dundee, to visite aU Angusse after the dissolutione of the Assembly. The members therof wer em- powred from the Assemblye for to tacke in the complaintes of all or any of the shyre of Angusse, against any of the ministrye who had been accused befor this Assemblye, and for to heer the proofes of the lybells givne in against them. The reasone of this comissione was, because it was now winter, and many of the wittnesses not able (or perhaps unwiUing) to be pre sent to depone against the accused ministers. Ther was another reasone, which was, that in Angusse ther was a considerable pairtye of the gentrye and ministrye disaflPected to the Covenante, who behooved to be looked after. The members of this comittye wer composed of noblemen, barrons, ministers, and burgers, inhabitants of Angusse, but mostlye of Fyfe, who wer mor generallye zealotts(0 ; they all gave ther oathes de fideli administra tione, and gott the Assemblyes full power, as if it had been done in face of the Assembly, but they wer to be answerable upon ther honours to the next Generall Assemblye, for aU ther actinges. So this sessione ended. LX. Upon Frydaye, December seventh, the Assembly conveened againe, when first ther wer letters presented from the Bishop of Dunkeld, Mr. Alexander Lindseye, submitting himself to the Assemblyes censure, pro mising to adhere to all the decrees therof, as of a laufull GeneraU Assem blye. He excused his absence by reasone of the winter seasone, and his ould age and bodily weacknesse. Argylle did stand upp upon the reading of the letter, and gave him the testimoney of a modest and peacably disposed man. This was done after the moderator had reade the names of wittnesses against Mr. William Annand, minister at Aire, and against the Bishops of Rosse, Edinburgh, and Dumblaine, who wer all sworne ; and seing that severall of thes witnesses wer of the members of the Assembly, they wer discharged, for the greater formalitye, from having voices as judges in the processes of thoise against whom they had borne witnesse. Befor they proceeded with the trial of the bishopps, which now they wer about, it was desyredby the moderator that Mr. George HaUiburtons(2) pro cesse might be putt to a periode. The reasone was, because the Lord Lindsey, who was a maine agent in it, behoved necessarly to goe to Edin burgh ; for, by letters brought by Mr. George Winerhame, the noblemen (0 [See a list of them in Records of the Kirk, p. 164.] (2) [He was minister at Crail.] A. D. 1638. Mr. Alexan der Lindsay, bishop of Dunkeld, submitts. Mr. George Haliburton's process refer red to the Angus Com raittee. Mr. Jaraes Auchnleche referred to a Committee. Sydserfe, Bishop of Galloway, deposed and excommunicated. Sessio 15. Decembris 7. Frydaye. 96 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. ruling elders wer advertished that HamUtoune was tacking some course to provyde the casteU of Edinburgh with ammunitione, which it was thought needfuU for to preveent and hinder. Lyckwayes it was certifyd that one of the Kings shipps was entred the Firth of Forthe ; for which reasones it was held fitt that the Lord Lindsey, Rothesse, Johnstoune, "Wachtoune,(0 and Sir WiUiam Scott, should goe thither and keepe the next councell daye. Then was Mr. George Haliburtons accusatione reade, the heades wherof wer mostly provne, being, first, simony ; secondly, that he, the said Mr. George, deneyed the sacraments to many honest men, and gave them to scandalouse persons ; that he had putt of honest men from his sessione, and putt worse in ther places ; that he had kept upp the collectiones gathered for the use of the poor ministers of the Palatinate, and for the supply of the poor people of Orkneye in the tyme of famine ; that he had made use of a false key (as some saide), and therwith tackne out money out of the church boxe ; that he had declyned the Assembly, and appealed to the King, or any competent judicatorye appoynted by the Kinge. In his absence, George Halliburton, laird of Keillor, answered for him, who deneyed that his kins man Mr. George had appealed from the Assemblye. He furder undertooke to move him to ansuer before his oune presbytrye : he, the laird of Keillor, added that he and his freends wer willing and able to serve the Lord Lind sey to good pourpose. Thes considerationes, specially Keillor being knowne to be a Covenanter, moved the Lord Lindsey to desiste, and to remitte the tryall of Mr. George Haliburton to the presbytrye wher he Uved, or to the commissione of the Assemblye for the shyre of Angusse, wher Mr. George Haliburton lived ; and this was yeelded too by the whole Assemblye.(2) After him, Mr. James Auchnlecke(3) was called upon and citted, who did compeer and answer for himselfe. He was accused of several poyntes of (1) [Sir Patrick Hepburn of Waughton, ruling elder for the presbytery of Dunbar.] (2) [Records of the Kirk, p. 165. "Lord Lindsay," says Baillie, "urged vehemently the deposition of Mr George Haliburton minister of Crail, yet when we perceived that the main thing alledged against him was, but meddling with the church-box, and negligence in counting for it, and that the chief quarrel was his late transportation to Crail, (it being a great benefice), against Lord Lindsay's will, the great patron of it, we would not gratify any man's humorous spleen, but referred the trial of that process to the presbytery of St Andrew's, showing that we thought the man's negligence in counting, being yet helped by refunding, of some moneys, needed not to be so odiously exaggerated with the name of sacri lege as it was." Letters, vol. i. p. 128.] (3) [A minister in the presbytery of Dundee.] Ch. lx.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 97 Arminianisme, which he deneyed that he mantained.(0 His tryaU was A. D. 1638. remitted to a comittye of ministers, who wer appoynted to give in ther dUi- gence the Tewsday foUowinge, Decembris twelfth. The members of that comitye wer Mr. James Bonnar ; Mr. Samuel Rutherfoorde ; Mr. John Moncreifle ; Mr. Alexander Sommerveill ; Mr. Johne Marten ; and Mr. Mathew Birsbane.(0 Now did the Assembly proceed to the tryall and proofe of the lybell givn in against Mr. Thomas Sydserfe, bishop of Gallowaye, sessione octava.* To it did the wittnesses give ther affirmative testimoney. To the rest of his ac cusation was added that he was contumaciouse to the Assembly, and wiUfuUy did absent himself, though he knew himselfe to be summoned, and, for the tyme, did macke his aboade hard by in the countreye. Befor his sentence was past, the moderator made a short speeche(^) of the ills done by the bishops, and exhorted the Assemblye to be attentive to ther accusationes and proofes therof, that so, with cleare consciences, they might give ther voices. Nor did they neglect the formailitye of calling upon Dr. Robert Hamiltoune, as procurator for the bishopps, and him consequentlye ; but neither of them answering, the Assembly voted that the saide Mr. Thomas should bee from thenceforth deposed from his episcopall and ministeriall function, and be excommunicated(0. Sir George Stirling of Keir, and Mr. Silvester Lambe, (1) [" The man,'' says Baillie, " cleared himself to us of all, but some quirks in the se cond article. The gentlemen, [the ruling elders and comraissioners] who understood not well, thought everything here capital heresy." Letters, vol, i. p, 128.] (2) [Compare this with the list in Records of the Kirk, p. 165.] * Vide supra, sess, 8. [p. 29.] (3) [It is printed in the Records of the Kirk, p. 165 ; and in Stevenson's History of the Church of Scotland, vol. ii., pp. 618—620.] (4) [Lord Hailes has printed a remarkable letter regarding Sydserf, written from Paris, by Robert Burnet of Crimond, to Archibald Johnston of Warriston. " For Mr. Sydeserf, sometime Bishop of Galloway, he came here five or six weeks ago, and by [without] my knowledge, by the address of other Scotsmen, he took his chamber in the house where I am, and has been since my being here. I could have wished he had not come here, as long as I had been here, rather to have satisfied other men's scruples, whom I have no intention to offend, than my own ; for the Lord is my witness, to whom I must answer at the last day, I think there was never a more unjust sentence of excommunication than that which was pro nounced against some of these Bishops, and particularly against this man, since the creation of the world ; and I am persuaded, that these who did excommunicate him did rather ex communicate themselves from God, than him ; for I have known him these twenty-nine years, and I have never known any wickedness or unconscientious dealing in him ; and I know him to be a learneder and more conscientious man (although I will not purge him of infirmities more than others) than any of those who were upon his excommunication. And, alas, Brother ! what would you be at, that now when you have beggared him, and chased 98 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. minister at Glammes in Angusse, desyred that his excommunicatione might proceede after the ordinar forme ; Mr. David Lindsey, (0 a minister, saide that he desyred a tyme to be advysed concerning his excommunication :(0 Wherupon the moderator tooke occasione to speacke of the nature and se veraU kyndes of excommunicatione, shewing that it was ordained to punish the bodye that the soule might be saved ; that the church of England had a forme of excommunicatione, called lata sententia, wherby thes who did such a thing ipso facto wer excommunicated ; which was specifyd in ther bookes of canons ; but that such a forme was papisticke, and so not to be used : Next, he told of another forme of summar excommunicatione practised by the GeneraU Assembly* against Mr. Patrick Adamson, bishop of St. Andrews, which forme he thought unmeet to use against the bishopps ; that they would use only the ordinare forme, which is after citatione, which, since the bishopps have sleighted, he thought fitte to proceede to that censure against them. Mr. Arichbald Johnston, clerke, did second the moderator heerin, and shewed that the scriptur did warrant it in that passage. Si ecclesiam non audiverit, etc.i^) It was suggested by one Mr. Thomas Abernetthy (who him by club-law out of the country, would you have him reduced to despair, and will you exact that every man, yea against his conscience, shall approve your deeds, how unjust so ever, yea out of the country ? As I wrote to you before, none of the ministers of Paris would believe rae, that you would or durst excommunicate any for not subscribing that Co venant ; and the rainisters declared to him, that, notwithstanding his excommunication, they would admit him to the communion, since his excommunication was not for any crime, but par raison d'etat seulement; but he communicates with the English. All Scots and English here, both of one party and other, respect him ; and I assure you he defends the Protestant religion stoutly against Papists, and none of our Soots Papists dare meddle with him, after they had once essayed him. Be not too violent then, and do as you would be done to, for you know not how the world will turn yet." Memorials and Letters relating to the Reign of Charles I. pp. 72 — 75. Glasgow, 1766. During his residence in France, Bishop Sydserf " exercised his Episcopal ofiice in the chapel of Sir Richard Brown the King's ambassador at Paris, by ordaining priests, and amongst the rest the laborious Mr. John Durel." Skin ner's Ecclesiastical History of Scotland, vol. ii. p. 348. Lond. 1788. " He dyed at Edin burgh, 1663, leaving 400 merks to the poor of Kirkwall." MS. Account of Scotish Bishops.] (0 [Parson of Belhelvie.] (2) [« Excomraunication," says Baillie, " seemed to me so terrible a sentence, and that obstinacy, the formal cause of it, required admonition, and some delay of time after the clo sure of the process, that I voiced him to be deposed, but not presently excommunicated- In this I was followed by some five or six, but the rest went on to present excommunica tion." Letters, vol. i. p. 129. See Records ofthe Kirk, p. 166; Stevenson's Hist, of Ch. of Scot. vol. ii. p. 618.] • Rather by Mr. Andrew Melviii. See Spotswoods Historye, lib. 6. [p. 345. Cal derwood, pp. 199, 200. The sentence of excommunication proceeded from the provincial synod of Fife.] (3) [St. Matthew, xviii. 17.] Ch. LXL] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 99 of a deposed preest was tumed a Covenanter minister lately,) to a minister A, D. 1638. who did sitt neerest to him, that it was proved against the bishopps that they called themselves the churche of Scottland ; therfor, if the Assembly did not excommunicate them, they would excommunicate the Assemblye ; that, therfor, since they wer citted befor the Assembly to heare sentence passe against them, either the Assembly, being thus engadged, behoved presently for to excommunicate the bishopps, or, if they did not so, then they behoved for to accounte the bishopps the church of Scottlande, and that themselves did wante power to proceede against the bishopps. The minister, to whom this was whispred, proposed this learned dilemma as from himselfe. In ende, it was concluded that presently the bishopps should be censured with excommunicatione, but all at one tyme, after all ther pro cesses were discussed and made out. As for pronouncing a particular sen tence of excommunicatione against evry of the bishopps severaUy, it was dislycked by the Assembly as a thinge unnecessaire, although the modera tor proposed that overture. LXI. The archbishopp of St. Andrews tryall proceeded next, (for they Archbishop of kept no order). The articles wherwith he was charged wer breache of the St. Andrews n n -1 p 1 •, , 1 ¦ • trial; [he is] caveatts, ut supra ; that he was guilty ot prophanitye, by playing, gaming, deposed and and travelling in journeys on the Lords daye; that he was a Simoniake, excommuni- and sacreledgiouse ; that he had kept upp for his owne private use fiftye thousand merkes, appoynted for the releefe of Mr. Mortoune and his com pany, out of the Turkish slaverye ; as also that he had abstracted fyve thousand merkes mortified [by] Mr. WUkye for the bursery of St. Andrewes ; that he had kept upp the stocke and annwell rentes of the coUectione within his diocese, for the use of the depauperate ministers within the Palatinate ; that he used to sitt upp late and tipple in tavernes ; that he railed bitterly upon aU praecedent General Assemblyes ; that he was guiltye of crimen falsi, havinge blotted and chaunged at his pleasure the actes of the As sembly last holdne at Aberdeen ; that he was guiltye of many prophane wrytts and speeches against thoise whom he caUed puritans ; that he was a countenaincer of heterodoxe pastors and professors, whome, albeit it was in his power, he did not restraine the yeares past, the church beinge muche troubled by suche ; that consequently, since he winked at ther errors, he tooke ther guilt upon himselfe. His accusers offered to prove that he was guiltye of many other grosse crymes, or at least that ther wer very pregnant praesumptions therof against him. For which reasones the Assembly did 100 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Whyteford, bishop of Brichen, de posed and excommunicated. The Author'; reflection on this. vote that he should not only be depryved from the ministeriall and episcopaU functione, but lyckwayes excommunicated; and that so much the rather, because to aU his former crymes he had now added contumacye against the Assembly, and declyned it ; as has been told abefor. Sir George Stirling of Keire desyred that, befor his excommunication, he should be citted pub Uckly three Lordes dayes from the pulpitt of Glasgow, for the mor forma litye, as he aUedged, lest enemyes should gett any advauntage against the Assembly ; but the vote carryd otherways, and the laird of Keers over ture was sleighted as superflouse.(0 LXII. The last who was called upon in this sessione was Mr. Walter Whytefoorde, bishop of Breichen, together with the procurator, Dr. Ro bert HamUtoune ; but neither of the two answering, his accusation was readde, and the witnesses ther depositiones tackne. It was objected to him, besyde the breache of the cautiones, etc., that he was oftne guUtye ofi^ beastly drunknesse ; that he cam in to the porters lodge of his owne dwel ling upon a tyme, and ther sleepd a good space befor he could goe upp staires againe ; that, upon a tyme, he was so drunke that he could not containe his urine, which was discerned by such as stood by to faU upon the grownde ; that on a tyme, after he made water against a wall, he went awaye with his nackednesse discovered, and in that posture daunced a space in his owne court yarde. For thes and other reasones, the Assembly or dained that he should be deposed and excommunicated, without any contra dictorye voice(2) ; and this was the laste acte of that sessione. i LXIII. The reader cannot chuse but blushe to reade thinges of this nature ; nor would I sett them downe heer, but that they wer publickly objected, and stande upon recorde in such papers as have come to my (1) [Archbishop Spottiswoode did not long survive the Glasgow Assembly. He died at London, on the 26th November, according to the inscription on his tomb, or, according to other authorities, on the 26th or 27th December, 1639. A brief memoir of his life, by Bryan Duppa, Bishop of Winchester, is prefixed to his History of the Church and State of Scotland. Lond. 1677.] (2) [" The Bishop of Brechin," says Baillie, " was proven guilty of sundry acts of most vile drunkenness ; also a woman and child brought before us, that made his adultery very probable ; also his using of a massy crucifix in his chamber. The raan was reputed to be universally infamous for many crimes ; yet such was his impudence, that it was said he was ready to have compeared before us for his justification ; but was stayed by the Marquis [of Hamilton], lest his compearance should have been for an acknowledgement of the judicatory." Letters, vol. i. p. 129. Mr. Srimuel Rutherford al'udes to " the adulteries of Whiteford, popish prelate of Brichen, whose Bastard carae weeping to the Assembly of Glasgow in the armes of the whore." Lex, Rex : The Law and the Prince, [preface, sec. 12.] London, 1644.] Ch. lxiv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 101 handes. If aU wer trwe, this miserable man fell under a just censure ; yet, A. D. 1638. though it had been so, modestye and charitye would have pleaded the sup- pressing of some of thes crymes ; it being questionable whither the acting or divulging them wer the mor scandalouse. It was thought that, propter honorem sacerdotij, thinges of this nature should have been suppressed ; and that charitye, which covers the multitude of ofiences, did not warrant so goggle eyed ane enqwyrye into the escapes of such as wer not only men, but of that selfe same order and fratemitye with ther pretended judges. Many have thought, to this daye, that by such procedur the mouthes of the enemyes of the reformed relligion wer opned to raUe against aU, without distinctione ; the instances of a few being so carefully suggested by thes of ther owne order. LXIV. It might have been thought that Mr. Walter Whytfoord, bishop More of of Breichne, was sufficiently affronted in the last sessione ; yet at the next S^,|!?Pf meeting of the Assembly, Saturdaye, December eighth, which was the six- Negotiation teenth sessione therof, Mr. Matthew Weemes, not reqwyred to any mans 'fith Lindsay, seminge, stoode upp and did tell them that the moneyes which he had Glasgow. gottne from the bishopp of Breichne to give to ane whore Aloisia Creich- Sessio 16. toune (who was alledged to have borne a chylde to the said bishopp in December 8. adulterye), for to tell the truthe, and not to slander the saide bishopp un- justlye, and to macke her declare who they wer that suggested her to slander the bishopp (shee being putt too it for to confesse the facte, and that the bishopp was guilty) and for to mantaine her in prisone only out of commiseration, and not for mantenance of that chyld as was alledged : But, said Mr. Mathew, To what ende did the bishopp give money to the said Aloisia to goe to England, Ireland, and Holland, and two hundereth merkes at evrye tyme that he gave her any ; specially the said bishopp having no enemyes to questione him, but rather freendes to conceale the facte ; all this falling out befor the troubles or the questioning of the bishopps. This accusatione was ex superabundanti ; for the bishopp was al ready sentenced and his facte tackne for graunted ; so it was past by.* * * Note, Reader : That the woman, who did accuse the bishopp of Breichen for solliciting her to uncleannesse, was afterwards putt to it amongst others blackcoats, sorae six in number, for to poynt at the man who had lyen with her ; which she could not doe, but raistooke an other for him, although the bishopp was present looking on: And it is saide that in ende she confessed freely that she was suborned by the meanes of the Earle of Hartfell for to accuse the bishop of Brechen of that infamouse cryme. [The earldom of Hartfell was not created until 1643, when it was erected in favour of James, the first Lord Johnstone, who had dis tinguished himself by his zeal in the cause of the Covenant.] 102 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Herafter the moderator proposed the reading of Mr. Patrick Lindseye, archbishop of Glasgow, his processe, and that after proofe he should be censured. But the Earle of Weems, who had been conferring with that archbishopp, desyred that some tyme might be graunted for to use meanes to reclaime him. Weems declared in the bishops name, that, against his privatt judgement, and being pairtly compelled and importuned by Mr. John MaxweU, bishop of Rosse, and others, he had been wonn to sub scrybe the bishopps Declinator. This moved the Assembly for to appoynt some of ther number for to conferre with the bishopp, and to move him for to give that under his hande which he had spocke in privatt to the Earle of Weems, and therwithall a subscrybed submissione to the censure of the Assemblye : Yet (albeit it was thought that the bishopp was unwilling to be excommunicate,) all that negotiatione with him proved ineffectwall. Interpreta- LXV. ArgyUe therafter desyred to be heard speacke; which being wU- Confession of ^^"^^7® graunted, he tould the Assembly, That it was not unknowne to them Faith. Dio- that he, being one of the Kinges councellors, behoved, upon Tewsday next, T^" b'^r'd" ^^ ^^ Edinburgh, ther to attende the counceU that daye ; he desyred, befor and removed his parting from them, he might know the Assemblyes judgemente and by said Con- interpretatione of the Confessione of Faithe, that, for the good of the churche, he might macke knowne ther rationall and just procedurs unto the privy councell ; and this so much the rather he pressed because he saide he knew that it was the judgement of some of the lordes of counceU that the Generall Assembly wold not explaine the Confessione of Faithe or Covenante.(0 This request was secounded by the Earle of Rothesse, who saide that Argylles desyre was both laufull and necessair to be gone about, notwithstanding of all the other affairs of the Assemblye. The Lord Lowdone therafter, to that pourpose, made a long speeche ; wherin he de duced a long narratione of ther proceedings since the beginning of the late troubles, inveighing against the churche of Scottlande its corruptiones ; and that the sleighting of aU ther supplicationes made to the counceU, comis sioner, or King, had necessitate ther entring into a Covenant with God, which God had owned by bearing it through all oppositions, and moving the Kings heart so as to graunt them a free Assemblye for the decisione of N.B. all thinges questionable, wherof the very sence of ther Covenant was one; and, therfor, as Argylle had done, so he lyckways desyred that it might be explained : First, Because many who had tackne it did thinke that the Ser- (1) [Records of the Kirk, p. 166.] Ch. LXV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 103 vice Booke, Booke of Canons, etc., might subsist with it. Second, Because A. D. 1638. severaU of the lords of councell and sessione had subscrybed it with ane "' explicatione, it was needfuU to lett them know whither they wer tyed by ther subscriptione and explicatione. Third, Because it was alledged by some of the foUowers of the pretended prelatts, that it neither excluded novationes, ceremoneyes, nor offices of the Inglishe churche, but was only against papistes, otherwayes that all other thinges might very weall stande therwith, and wer not abjured by ther subscription therof. Fourth, That since the ambigouse sence had brought men for to subscrybe it diverslye, viz. some acording to the Kinges sence therof, others acording to the institutione of it, and, lastly, some acording to the present professione therof, including all corruptiones introduced, or to be introduced, he thought it very neces saire to have the true sence of it knowne. Thes reasones, and many others, moved the Assembly to conclude that the Covenant should be explained acording to the tyme of the institutione , therof; to which pourpose the Assembly warranted the former comittye for to draw upp the explicatione of the Covenant formaUy and clearlye, without any ambiguitye ; which they undertooke. Therafter the moderator readde a pairt of a ministers testament, of seventy-nine years of age, at Norwitch in England ; wherin he declared his confessione to be the same with the church of Scottlande, and that episcopacye was ane antidote worse then the poyson itselfe, and that aU the particularityes pertaining to episco pacye wer the reUckes of the Antichristiane beast yet unbanished from amongst us. And the moderator proferred coppys of that testamentary de claratione to aU that desyred it ; but who that minister was I do not fynde mentioned in such recordes of the Assembly as have come to my handes : It seemes to have been presented at this tyme for to cleare the Assembly ther judgement concerning the sence ofthe Covenant in some measure, and to be ane apologeticke prolouge to the enswing actes. For, when this paper was readde, the moderator arose and made a speeche of all the eviUs that the office and persones of bishopps had brought into the churche since the Reformation; shewing ther incomming and unlaufuU introductione; ther tyrranouse increase in authoritye, pryde, and ambitione; the lamentable continowance therof without any grownde in Gods lawe or the lawes of the kyngdome : The first, he said, was proved already by the learned labowres of many worthy zeelouse pastors ; and the second he off'ered ther presently to shew out of the bookes of Assemblye and Parliament : And, acordingly, 104 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638, Mr. Archbald Jonston, the clerke, did reade a paper,(0 drawne upp by the ' comittye, wherin. First, Was sett downe the necessitye of this declaratione and acte : Second, It did containe all the actes of Generall Assemblyes, from 1576 to 1596, which did rejecte episcopacye altogether, and aU the kynds therof; particularly, it was therin proved from actes of Generall Assembly and ParUament, that the office of a bishopp was never ordained in this kyngdome, although ther titular dignityes of lordes wer aUowed, and stipendes conforme therunto : Third, That paper did containe ane ansuer to such objectiones as seemed to be for episcopacye. The paper being reade and examined, the moderator thought it meet for to put the matter to a vote, aiid to state the questione concerning episcopacye, which was thus : N.B. Whither or not, acording to the Confessione of Faithe, (first published, anno 1580, and universally sworne, anno 1581, and againe renewed, anno 1590,) ther be any other bishopp approved of in this church, except only the pastor of a particular churche, or of one flocke, to whom ther is no ^in^(!a and power graunted over his colleagues : And whither or not, acording to the re ceaved sence of that Confessione (as it was sworne in thes yeares) aU other sortes of episcopacye was abjured, and now for that cause ought to be re moved. After the stating of the question, many actes wer reade de novo, wherin episcopacye, they said, was condemned ; and, last of aU, the acte of counceU past this yeare, 1638, which was the declaratione of the lordes, was reade in confirmatione of thes actes ; and the moderator saide that if N.B. the office of a diocesan bishopp was in any other reformed churche, that it was by toUeratione and not by ordinatione, and that they wold not ansuer for any other churche but for the professione and confessione of ther aune churche. The reading of all thes actes and proofes was so pleasing to Argylle, that he declared that neither the comissionair nor himself, nor any of the prelatts or councellers, ever dreamed that ther reasones wer so rele- vaunt, or that theye could have proved ther assertiones so fuUye, formally, and reUigiouslye as now he had heard them doe ; and he wished that the co missioner had been present to heare it : Furder, he assured the Assembly that he wold relate all that he had seen and heard of this matter unto the councell.(0 When Argylles speech was ended, it was put to the vote in few wordes ; the affirmative was " Abjured and Removed" : this was a (1) [Sec Records of the Kirk, pp. 28—32; Historia Motuum, p. 234.] (2) [See Records of the Kirk, p. 168.] Ch. LXVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS 105 complexe, and in the negative was capable of two ainsuers : First, Neither A. D. 1638. abjured nor removed ; Second, Removed but not abjured ; for the third, viz. abjuratione, stiU presupposed ane removall of episcopacy. LXVI. The King, in his Large Declaratione,* complaines upon the Reasonings iniqultye of this manner of voting. That if ther power had been laufuU they a°d observa- might have removed episcopacy and Pearth Articles ; but that It was be- thirconclu- yond the credite of any ratlonaU man for to beleeve that episcopacye and sion. Perth Articles (of which afterwardes) wer abjured when the Confessione of Faith was first sworne too : Adde to this, that themselves aUowed many, in the first subscriptione of the Covenant, not to abjure episcopacy and Pearth Articles ;t also, that many ministers, members of the Assembly of Glasgow? had sworne at ther admission unto ther benefices, acording to the actes of Parliament, and actes of Generall Assemblyes provyded In that case ; And so, by swearing that thes thinges wer abjured in the first Confessione, that they made aU ministers confesse that they had perjured themselves in tacking the other oathe of conformitye to thes pretended Innovationes. Yet, (as has been already related,) the Assembly founde a salve for this sore ; which was to nulUfie the six former Assemblyes, and all that did fol low therupon consequently as not obllgatorye in themselves ; so that the whole Assembly, without scruple, voted in downeright termes that the office of a bishopp, which differs from that of a pastor over one flocke, acording to the true meaning of the Confessione of Faithe was abjurd, and that therfor it was justly removed, and to be removed out of the churche of Scottlande. Mr. Andrew Ramsey (being to preache the next day and so absent at his studye) sent his voice by wrytte, fuUy consonant with the rest. Yet this vote was unsatisfactorye to manye, by reason of the termes that the Confessione had been subscrybed In : For if they tooke it in an unknowne sence, then it was not sworne in judgement, which still ought to bee one of the great circumstaunces of a reUigiouse oathe : Or, if it was tackne acording to the mynde of him who imposed that Confession, anno 1580, the most knowing saw clearly that King James, who imposed it, meand not the abju ration of episcopacye, nor of Perth Articles ; for he made it his maine worke to estabUsh them. And it Is probable that the Assembly Itselfe thought not ther declaratorye vote sufficient for to cleare the bussinesse and putt It out of * Large Declaration, pag. 324 t Vide supra, lib. 2, [ch. xxxviii,, vol, i, p. 43.] O 106 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, [B. IIL A. D. 1638. controversye ; which appeared too manifestly by that declaratorye clause which they caused subjoyne to the Covenant (of which yow shall heare afterwards), and ordered aU who had formeriy subscrybed it for to subscrybe it anew, with that additione, per expressum. That they subscrybed it acording to the Assemblyes interpretatione. For to tamper thus with a matter of so great consequence as an oath, and a nationaU one too, was for to play with ane edged toole ; as the event since that tyme has saddly verifyd it. Mr. Robert LXVII. And howbeit the vote went faire before the wynde in the As- Baiiey's be- semblye, yet ther was one of the number who, fynding himself sett fast upon cerning tSr ^^'^^ i"ocke presently mentioned, could not away with that complexe vote : question. He That was ]\Ir. Robert BaUye (whom I have had occasione to macke mentione s'^M^'wit^'^' of befor), who, whUst the vote was carrying on, " Removed and Abjured", did th^e nTatlrials vote expressly " Removed, but not Abjured;"* which offended many of the oi his Historia Assembly, he being looked upon for his zeale as one of the most fordwards in j^_ B_ the Assembly, and for his learning to be seconde to few, if to any ther, and for his gravitye and piety in his ministrye, inferiour to none. But he, know ing that aU the actes wer particularly to be read and voiced too againe, had drawne upp a supplicatione to the Assembly In name of thoise ministers who befor had conformed themselves to the Fyve Articles of Pearthe, f for miti- gatione of that acte, at least that it might receive a pubUcke hearing and * Spang, Historia Motuum, pagg. 234, 235. [" The question," says Baillie, " was formed about the abjuration of all kind of Episcopacy, in such terms, as I profess I did not well, in the tirae, understand, and thought thera so cunningly intricate, that hardly could I give any answer, either ita or non. To raake any publick dispute I thought it not safe, being myself alone, and fearing, above all evils, to be the occasion of any division, which was our certain wrack. The farthest I airaed at was, in voicing, to declare shortly my mind. So when all men were called to propone what doubts they had, before the voicing, I, with all the rest, was as dumb as a fish. When it came to my name, many eyes were fixed on me, expecting some opposition ; but all I said was. That according to the express words of the assembly 1580 and 1581, Episcopacy was to be distinguished: Episcopacy as used and taken in the Church of Scotland, I thought to be removed ; yea, that it was a Popish error, against scripture and antiquity, and so then abjured : but Episcopacy simpliciter, such as was in the ancient church, and in our church during Knox's days, in the person of the superintendents, it was for raany reasons to be removed, but not abjured in our Confession of Faith If I had considered the moderator's stating of the question, as now it stands in print, I would have said, without any hesitation, as ray voice, that it seemed to me to be rnXu^tiTniri;, consisting at least of three much different questions, all which required much different answers In voicing, many, to the_ number of fifty and above, and sorae who curiously reraarked, did avow removed Episcopacy, but said nought of their abjuration : yea, sundry of prirae men there yet will avow, that they never thought all Episcopacy abjured in our church If any man, for any respect, dissembled his judgement, his own heart knows, I will judge no man." Letters, vol. i. pp. 132, 133.] \ Large Declaration, pajrjr. 324, 325. Ch. LXVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 107 argwynge ; which the reste having knowledge of, when that acte came to be A. D. 1638. readde and voiced to againe, one of the lordes, a ruling elder, tampred with the clerke, that in calling the list, Mr. Robert BaiUy his name should be omitted, and so the acte passed without so much as asking his voice, who had his supplicatione ready when he should be called upon by his name, but per ceiving that the omissione of his name was pourposely done, he made no more sturre in it, as doubting what the consequence might bee, in caise he stoode pertinaciouse in the defence of his first opinione. Whither or not he reasoned the matter at the stating of the questione, such as have gathred the recordes of this Assembly which have come into mye handes, directly mentione not. Yet Mr. William Spange,* author of the Covenanters Large Manifesto, called Historia Motuum, has sett downe the reason of Mr, Robert Baillyes vote to the full ; which he mighte weall doe, having gottne the In formatione therof from Mr. Robert himselfe, to whom lyckwayes he is be holding for sending over to him unto Campveer the most considerable part of the materialls of that booke : And because it seemes to be substantially the same with Mr. Robert his intended supplicatione, I shall wiUingly tran scrybe it. LXVIIL Mr. Robert Bailiye mantained that episcopacye ought tobe Mr. Robert distinguished ; first. Into that sort of episcopacye whioh some did then Bailey's opi- usurpe contrar to the mynde of the churche ; to which kynde ot episcopacye Rutherford's thes who mantaine the hierarchye ascrybe, and to it alone, a perpetwaU and Knox's. spu-itwall preheminencye and primacye of dignitye over all the diocese, to gether with the whole power of ordinatione and jurisdictione : This kynde of episcopacy, (said he,) the churche did condemne and abjure in Its Confes sione ; and therfor it was absolutly to be removed out of the churche as ane popish error, unknown to Sacred Scripture and pure antiquitye : But, (sales hee,) ther Is ane other kynde of episcopacye, which the holy fathers used in the primitive churche, which was practised in the office of superintendents in Scottland in the beginning of the Reformatione, to which, by the voluntare consent of the ministrye, a certain primacye of order, a,primatus «S<«S»;c«. was yeelded : This sort of episcopacye, albeit he thought not expedient to re estabUsh ; yet he could scarcely bee perswaded to thinke that it was abjured in the Confessione of Faithe : He said that ther was grownde for this dis tinctione, in the formaU words of the acte of the Assembly at Dundee, anno Spang, ubi supra. [Historia Motuum, pp. 234—236.] 108 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. 1580, and reiterated at Glasgowe, anno 1581 : for oftne tymes the office of a bishopp Is repeated " as the bishopps use it now in this kyngdome" : which since it is the manifeste determinatione of the subjecte, viz. episcopacye, to that first kynde of bishopps wherwith the church was then vexed, it can not be extended to all kyndes of episcopacye simply considdered in itselfe. Adde to this, that the only episcopacye which was conderaned in thes Assem blyes was that forme of episcopacye which was not from God : But from the very beginning of the Reformatione, it was the constant opinione of the churche of Scottlande that the office of superintendents was not in itself unlaufull, and that such as wer called rightly by the churche to that office, wer caUed by God, as Is apparent in the forme of ordinatione of superln- tendents,(0 printed in the Psalme Bookes, and in John Knox Church His- torye(0 also ; For the last questione of that forme is in the wordes : " Acknow ledge ye not that the dignity of this office to the ivhich God has called yow, does reqwyre holyness of lyffe, such as the enemyes of the evangile may see" ?(0 By which ansuer of his, Mr. Robert Ballly strove to lett it bee seen that the vote was a complexe, and behoved to be devyded Into mor braunches then one, which is knowne to logltlans to be ¦Jtoxvimw^ ¦, for he saide it was one thinge to enqwyre and vote. Whither any other sorte of bishopp was then allowed Into the Church but he who was the pastore of one flock ; and finother thing to putt it to vote. Whither all other sorte of episcopacye was abjurd and condemned in the Confessione of Faithe. And, lastly, that ther was latent a third queree. Whither all other sorte of episcopacye be to be now removed out of the Churche. But Mr. Robert Bailiye gott no body to seconde his voice nor opinion ; all the Assembly did flattly declare against him, that episcopacye, without distinguishing upon the kyndes therof, was abjurd flattly from the beglnnlnge. True it is, that Mr. Samwell Ruther ford, in a booke of his,* wryttne since that tyme, as he shewes his talent (1) [The Forme and Ordour ofthe Election and Admission ofthe Superintendent: which may serve in electioun of all uther mimsters. At Edinburgh the ninth of March anno 1560. John Knox being minister.] (2) [The Historic of the Reformatioun of Religioun within the Realm of Scotland, b. iii pp. 289 et seqq. Edinb. 1644.] (3) [" Know ye not that the excellencie of this office, to the which God hath called you, requireth that your conversation and behaviour be such as that ye may be irreprehensible, yea, even in the eyis of the ungodly ?"] * Samuel Rutherfoorde's Paules Presbytrye. [A Peaceable and Temperate Plea for Pavls Presbyterie in Scotland, Or a modest and Brotherly Dispute of the government of the Church of Scotland. By Samuell Rutherfurd Professor of Divinity at Saint Andrews. Ch. LXIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 109 mainly in coyning new distlnctiones, Ul to be understoode for the most pairt, and in severaU of his workes, has taught us the airt to shredd the smaUest haires, so in this poynte concerning superintendencye, he has beein very helpfuU to the Assembly's declaratione, and has done much to shew Mr. Robert Baillyes needlesse scrupulositye in his vote : For Samuel Ruther foorde tells us in that booke, that superintendencye was but an office pro tempore for promovaU of reformatione, and only needfuU for the churche (to use his owne langwage), " tlU the breestes and haire of the churche wer growne :"0) so that, acording to his doctrine, beside the Apostles and Evangellstes, ther may be in the churche laufuU officers, from God too, (for so sayes Mr. John Knockes to Mr. John Spottswood,* whUst he admittes him superintendent of Lothian,) yet thes offices must cease at other tymes, and be outed. Belycke, Rutherfoord mackes superintendents analogicaU to nurses ; or to thes timber supporters and frames and scaffolds which ma- sones use, by the helpe wherof they joyne arches, and raise upp waUs to height, and afterward pull downe thes frames and scaffolds as uselesse : Or, if his assertione doe not implye so muche, I shaU leave it to the reader to macke of his assertione what he pleasethe. LXIX. How soone the vote declaring episcopacye to be abjured by the Confessione of Faithe was closed and past, the moderator made ane humble and zealouse speeche of thankesgiving to God for the spiritt of vnltye which he had lent to the whole Assembly, in a matter of so great weight and con sequence ; wherin It was saide that Maister Archebald Johnstoune, clerke, by his discoverye and delyverlnge thee bookes of the Assemblyes, and the lost registers, was a speciall instrument under God. Yet it was thought that this unitye was not unexpected to the moderator ; for, from the beginning of the Assembly, and long befor It satte downe, such as wer but very raw Lond. 1642. The greater part of this treatise is incorporated in its author's later and more elaborate work. The Due right of Presbyteries, Or, A Peaceable Plea for the Government of the Church of Scotland. Lond. 1644.] ¦• Ubi supra, [p. 108.] (1) [" In the first constitution and infancy of our Church there were some visitors, and superintendents for planting of Churches, because breasts and haire of our Churches were not growne, after the example of the Apostles, who sent such to plant, and visit Churches, and appoint Elders in Congregations, Acts 8. 14, 15, 16. Acts 13. 14, 15, 16. Acts 14. 23. Tit. 1. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Acts 21. 17, 18. but after the Church was planted there was no need of such." A Peaceable and Temperate Plea, p. 311. ch. xx. art. 2. See, on the other side. Bishop Sage's Fundamental Charter of Presbytery, as it hath been lately esta blished in the Kingdom of Scotland, Exarain'd and Disprov'd, By the History, Records, and Publick Transactions of our Nation, pp. 119-166. Lond. 1695.] A. D. 1638. Witnesses sworn against Bishops.Assembly'sAct concern ing Episco pacy, from the printed Acts. 110 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. proguosticators did confidently fortell that the Assembly, constitute of such members as did meete ther, would infalUbly declare to the fuU against the order of episcopacye; so that the moderator, at the opening of the Assem bly, it was thought, might have prophecyed that which now was effectwated. After all this, some wittnesses wer sworne against such of the bishops who wer next to be staged, and then the Assembly arose ; and this was the ende of the sessione sixteenth. But because we have hearde what Mr. Robert Bailiye saide for him selfe, we must lyckwayes looke now upon the reasone of the Assemblyes vote ; which is sett downe at lenth In the printe actes of the Assemblye,* and heer only abridged, yet nothing omitted of the substaunce therof; which is much to the pourpose foUowinge : First, After a long narrative (not much unlycke the Lord Lowdons reasones) shewing the necessitye to have the Confessione of Faithe interpreted, f they doe laye for a grownde the wordes of the Confessione of Faithe, as foUoweth : " We professe, that we deteste aU traditions brought into the kirke without, or against the worde of God, and doctrine of this reformed kirke : Next, we abhorre and detest all contrary reUigione and doctrine, but cheiflye, All kynd of papistrye in generaU, [and] particular heades, as they wer then damned and confuted by the worde of God, and kirke of Scottlande, when the said Confession was sworne and subscrybed, ann. 1580. and 1581. 1590. and 1591. Thirdly, That we detest the Roman Antichryste, his worldly mo narchy, and wicked heararchye : Fourtly, That we joyne ourselves to this reformed kirke, in doctrine, faithe, relUglone, [and] discipline, promising and swearing by the great name of God, that we shaU continow in the doc trine and discipline of this kirke, and defende the same acording to our voactione and power," etc. Now, if the meaning of the churche be con siddered, when that Confession was first sworn, it wUl be founde that heerby episcopall governement is abhorred and detested : This is proved. First, By the Booke of Policie, % agreed upon in the Assembly at Edinburgh, * Print actes of Glasgow Assembly, 1638, pagg. 19, et seqq. [Records of the Kirk, pp. 28-32.] t See print actes, pagg. 20, et seqq. [Records of the Kirk, pp. 29-32.] % Nota. Yet this Booke of Policye heer mentioned, and ordained to be subscrybed by all ministers, is a booke wholly unknowne to the most pairt of the ministrye ; and albeit it be registred in the registers of the Assembly, yet it is not to be seen in printe, by the Assemblyes warrant, to this hour. See it printed verbatim in Spotswoods Historye, lib 6 [pp. 289-302; Calderwood, pp. 102-116; Booke of the Universall Kirk, pp. 535-564] Ch. LXIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, HI Apryle twentie foure, 1578, et eodem anno, October twentie foure ; A. D. 1638. which booke is ordained to be registred, by the Assembly at Glasgow, 1581, and to be subscrybed by aU ministers therafter, by acte of As sembly, Edinburgh, 1590, August fourth, and July second, 1591 ; but specially In the second, third, fourth, sixth, seventh, eleventh chapters of that booke. Second, The Assemblye, 1575, declared the name of a bishopp to be common to evrye one that hath a particular flocke. Third, The Assembly, 1576, censured such bishops as had not tackne themselves to particular flockes. The conclusiones of the booke of policye wer ratifyd finally at the Assembly, 1578 ; wher lyckwayes it was remonstrated to the Chancellor and Montrosse, that they had drawne out of the pure fountaine of Gods worde such a discipline as was meete to remaine, which was the booke of policye. Fourth, In the same Assembly also, the corrup tions of episcopacye wer sett downe, and bishopps craved to subscrybe to proposalls for reformatione therof, which wer about eight in number. Fifth, Tbe Assembly at Dundee, anno 1580, abolished the office of a bishop, by a particular acte, as wanting all foundament, ground, or warrant, in Gods word. Sixth, Inthe same Assembly, 1580, session tenth, itwas desyred that the booke of policye might be established by acte of privy councell till a parliament might be holden. And the acte made at Dundee, Its extente was interpreted in Glasgow Assembly, 1581, session sixth, wher bythe office of bishop they declare that they understande the whole estate of bishops as they are now in Scottlande used. Seventh, The Kings Comissioner presented to this Assembly the Confession of Faith, subscrybed by the King, and his housholde, with a plott of presbytryes to be erected; which he offered to asiste the promovall of by his letter ther presented. Eighth, At this Assembly ther was an ordinance past to register the bookes of policye, and presbytryes for to tacke coppyes therof; and [at] the forsaide Assembly, the Confession of Faith subscrybed by the King is homologated by the Assembly. Ninth, In the Assembly at Edinburgh, 1581, Mr. Robert Montgomery, who teached that disciplin was ane indifferent thinge, is ordained to be charged not for to medle with the bishopricke of Glasgow, as an office contrare unto Gods worde, and that under paine of excommunicatione. This Assembly lyckwayes did renew the comissione for erectione of mor presbytryes, and it did acknowledge that It was of Mr.. Andrew Melvills framing. It was pairtly approved and pau-tly rejected by the parliament at Stirling, anno 1578. 112 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. the estate of bishops was condemned. Tenth, In the Assembly, Apryle, 1582, Mr. Robert Montgomery was warranted to be excommunicate, except he leave off" the episcopall functione ; which was done acordingly by him, be cause he refoosed. Eleventh, [In the] Assembly at Edinburgh, 1582, pres bytryes got comissione to trye and censure bishopps ; and, session nineteenth, they declare that no bishop may sitt upon councell in name of the churche. Twelfth, The Assembly, 1586, declared that pastors, doctors, and elders had vote in Generall Assemblyes. Second, That the name of bishop is N. B, common to aU pastors and ministers. Thirteenth, [In] the Assembly, 1587 Mr. Robert Montgomerys admissione to the temporaUtys of the bishopricke of Glasgow Is ordained to be undone. And that same Assembly, by ther let ter to the King, reject Mr. Robert Fonts presentatione to the bishopricke of Catnesse, as to an office unagreable with Gods worde. Fourteenth, [In the] Assembly, 1590, it was ordained that the booke of policye should be sub scrybed by aU intrant ministers, under paine of excommunicatione. And this N.B. forsaid acte was renewed In the Assembly, 1591, and a penaltye imposed upon the moderator, in caise it be neglected. Fifteenth, In the Assembly, Maye twentie second, 1592, session second, thes articles wer drawne upp, viz. That the actes of parliament, made 1584, against the discipline, liberty, and authority of the kirke be annulled ; kirke discipline be ratifyde ; and abbotts, pryors, and prelatts pretending the title of the kirke be not suff'ered. [In] ses sion eleventh, the number of presbytryes wer givne upp and insert. In parUa ment, June fifth, 1592, aU the libertys of the churche and her severaU judi catoryes wer ratifyd largely, and aU contrare actes wer abrogated : The Kings praerogative declared not to be praejudiciall to the same preveleidges grounded upon Gods worde ; the former commissions to bishopps, 1584, rescinded, and all ecclesiasticall matters subjected to presbytryes, acording to the discipline of the churche. Anno 1595, the booke of policye [is] ratifyde and ordained to be printed. Sixteenth, Episcopacye is condemned in thes wordes of the Confession, his wired hierarchye. For the popish hierarchy consisteth of bishops, presbyters, deacons, id est, baptising and preaching dea cons : So determins the councel of Trent, cap. 4,De Sacramento ordinis, can. 6 . Si quis dixerit, in ecclesia catholica non esse hierarchiam divina ordinatione institutam, quae constat ex episcopis, presbyteris et ministris ; anathema sit. So lyckwayes sayes BeUarmine, De Clericis, cap. 1 1 : Tres sunt hierarchiae in ecclesia militante, (sayes hee,) prima pontificum, id est, episcoporum, secun da sacer datum, tertia diaconorum; atque hidiaconi licet, comparati ad sacer- Ch. LXX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 113 dotes, sint ministri, ad plebem tamen comparati sunt principes et praesules : A. D. 1638. This propositione foUowing ; Hierarchia ecclesiastica constat ex pontifice, cardinalibus, archiepiscopis, episcopis et regularibus, was censured by the Facultye* of Theologye in the Universitye of Parise, as foUoweth : In ista prima propositione, enumeratio membrorum hierarchiae ecclesiasticae seu sacri principatus, divina ordinatione instituti, est manca et redundans, atque reducens in errorem contrarium determinationi sacrae Synodi Tridentinae : The propositione was defective, because it omitted presbyters and deacons ; and it was censured as redundant, because It made the hierarchic to consiste of the pope, cardinaUs, archbishopps, and regulars ; the pope Is not within the hierarchie, and primats, metropolitans, and archbishopps, but as they are bishopps. Seventeenth, Finally, this hierarchy is called his hierarchy in the Confessione, id est, the popes ; not that ther is a laufull hierarchy contradis- tincte : But because the hierarchy, whersoever it is, is called his, as other popish corruptions are called his : viz., such as invocatione of sainctes, dedi cation of altars, are called his, not that ther is another laufuU invocation of sainctes, dedication of altars, etc. Lyckwayes, this hierarchy in the Confes sione is distinguished from the popes monarchye. Finallye, The second Booke of Discipline, in the end of the second chapter, does agree upon this conclusione : All titles In the kyngdome of Antechryste, and in his usurped hierarchye, which are not either pastors, doctours, elders, and deacons, together with the offices depending therupon, in one word ought to be rejected. LXX. Upon the hearing of thes reasones and warrants reade in the Vote about Assemblye, they did unanimously vote without contradictione of any one p Pj^^°Pg°^„j (for Mr. Robert Baillyes voice was not sought any mor in this particulaire), time. Mr. That aU episcopacye different from that of a pastour over a particular flocke, ^°^"^;f^f'^y- was abjured in this kirke, and to be removed out of it. Therfor they did Hamilton prohibite, under ecclesiasticaU censure, anye to usurpe, accept, defende, or "^^^^^^^ ^ ^^ obey the praetended authority therof In any tyme commlnge. cerning Episco- The Marquesse of HamUtoune, comissionair, who was sojourning at pacy, contrary Edinburgh whilst thes things wer a doing, upon the hearing of the synod Asslmbly?* °^ of Glasgow ther interpretatione of the Covenant, in a sence destructive Substance unto episcopacye, did instantly, with the asistaunce of some of the bishops, * ^^^°^- pubUsh a declaratione contrary to ther acte ; wherby he declared that epis- * Censura propositionum quarundam ex Hibernia delatarum per sacram facultatem Theo logiae Parisiensis facta. P 114 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A, D. 1638. copacye was not abjured in the Negative Confessione ; and, therfor, did ex- pressly prohibite all loyaU subjectes to subscrybe it in such a sence. This de claratione of his, flrst printed at Edinburgh, and after by the Marquesse of Huntlye his directione at Aberdeene, for substance did proporte :(0 First, That all oathes are to be tackne acording to the meaning of thes who give the oathe, but that neither King James, nor King Charles, nor himself as comissioner for King Charles, who had warranted that oathe to be tackne, did ever any way insinuate the abjuration of episcopacye by that oathe as unlaufuU ; and that because, first, it was not to be imagined that the King would have any to sweare ane unlaufull oathe ; which they behoved to doe if they did abjure episcopacye, it being established by lawes of church and kyngdom, except they first proved episcopacy to be contrary to Gods lawe. N. B. Now, if any should affirme that the actes of Parliament, by which it was in troduced, wer unlawfully and undwly obtained ; then they ought to remon strate ther reasons to thes judicatoryes, that the actes in favour of episco pacye might bee repealed, if any reason wer founde in their alledgance : But for any to hold, that constitutions estabUshed by standing lawes may be abjured befor they be formaUy repealed by these judicatoryes, is a wicked positione, and destructive of the very foundatione of justice, both in church and commonwealthe. Second, This oathe obleidgeth not the now tackers therof furder then it did the first tackers therof : for doctrine and poyntes of faith it did ob leidge them then, and us now, perpetwally, because thes poynts are perpetwaU and immutable. But, for poyntes of discipline and governement, the oath could obleidge no longer then that discipline and governement should stand in vigour by lawes of this church and kyngdome : Now, it is certaine that the church of Scottland, art. 20 et 21 of her positive Confessione, declareth thes thinges alterable at the wiU of the churche, and so repealable by succeeding actes, if the churche fynde cause. Thus, a King and a judge swearing for to administer governement acording to standing lawes at ther admissione, that oath byndes them no longer then thes lawes to which they sweare doe stande laufuUy unrepealed. Since therfor if the first tackers of that oath wer alyve, they could not be saide to have abjured episcopall governement, which has been since established, specially if we considder that the church in her Confessione holds thes thinges alterable at the (0 [It will be found in the King's Large Declaration, pp. 327-337.] Ch. LXX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 115 wUl of the churche ; then it must foUow that we repeating that oathe, can- A. D. 1638. not be said to abjure that governement now, mor then they could be saide to doe it if they wer alyve and repeating the same oathe. Third, The Kings commanding the subscriptione of the Covenant In the same wordes and syUables that the Covenanters have reqwyred ther asso- ciats for to tacke it, cannot prove that heerby episcopacye is by his com mand abjured mor then by ther swearinge : But so it Is, they declared epis copacy not to be abjured by the Covenant to many of ther associats who could not be brought to subscrybe the Covenant tUl it was first protested to them that episcopacye was not abjured therby ; as also other thinges esta bUshed by lawe. And the three ministers, in ther [first] answers to the Doctors of Aberdeens Qwerees, declare that episcopacye, for the present. Is not ab jured, but referred to the tryall of a free General Assemblye : Lyckwayes, such as adhere to the protestatione against the Kinges proclamatione, ninth of September, in the ninth reasou against the subscriptione urged by his Majestye, doe plainly averre, that this oathe urged by the kinge, doeth obleidge the tackers thereof to mantain Pearth Articles and to man- N. B. TAIN Episcopacy. But that several men swearing the same wordes and syllables should be said to sweare in several sences, passeth the capacitye of ordinar understandings to considder how it may be done. Fourth, It Is a received maxime, that oathes ministred to us must either be refoosed, or tackne acording to the knowne mynde, and professed inten tione, and expresse commande of the authority urging them : Whiche even the protesters, totidem verbis, in the place above cited mantaine. But It is weall knowne that the King avowes the upholding of episcopacy in his three kyngdomes ; which the protesters lyckwayes acknowledge in the place above citted. Whence it appeares that episcopacye neither being removed nor sus pended by his Majestys declarations, as other things wer, it will foUow that, in the judgement of thes protesters, the Kinge did no waye intend to have episcopacye abjurd by that oathe. Now, since both major and minor, (as far as relates to episcopacye) ar both acknowledged, how can the King be thought to have caused episcopacye to be abjured ? specially since the protesters themselves, in that place above citted, by a dUemma which them selves must ansuer, have averred that, when that acte of counceU, anno 1581, should come out, yet that it coulde not be Inferred from thence that any such thing was abjured. Fifth, If that acte of counceU be tackne m that sencelesse sence that they 116 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. urge, [yet] it wUlnot appeare that episcopacy was abjured when the oath was first administred : Since the very wordes of that Confessione are, " receaved, beleeved, defended by many and sundry notable kirkes and realmes, but chelfly by the kirke of Scottland, the King's majesty, and three estates therof, as Gods eternaU truthe," etc. But at that tyme bishops, abbots, and pryors, made up the third estate of the realme, which gave approbatione to the Confessione of Faith : therfor it is not to be conceived that this third estate did abjure episcopacy. If it be objected that it was repealed by actes of Generall Assemblye, and qwytte abolished, yet it is replyed, that it was not abrogated by any acte of parliament; but, on the contrary, it was in force by many actes of parliament, because none of them wer repealed. Now it is not to be hoped that In a monarchy, or any weall constituted commonwealth, that Jeswiticall position shall ever tacke place, That what is enacted by a monarch and his three estates of parliament, shall ever be held repealed or repealable by any ecclesiasticke nationall synode. For thes reasones, the comissioner reqwyred all who tooke the oathe for to tacke it in no other sence but such as he declared, and by no other authoritye but of thes who wer delegated by the King for that ende. That episcopall jurisdictione was in force by actes of parliament, and no wayes abolished nor suppressed, anno 1580, nor at the tyme of refor matione of relligione within the realme of Scottlande, the comissioner by his declaratione proved, by Instances of the following actes of parliaqient : First, In the parliament, 1567, cap. 2, wher the popes authority was abolished, it is enacted, That no bishop, nor other prelate in this realme, use any jurisdictione in tyme comming by the popes authoritye. Et ibid, act 3, it is ordained. That all actes, not agreing with Gods worde, and contrary to the Confessione of Faithe, approved by the estates in that parliament, to have no effecte nor strenth in tyme to come. Whence it is cleare, that epis copacye was not condemned by Gods worde, but only bishops ordained not to exerce ther functione by the bishop of Romes authoritye. All which is yet furder cleared by the sixth acte of the saide parliament, rati fyde parliament 1579, cap. 68, which does intimate, that they did not at that tyme innovate or chaunge any thinge in that policye they founde in the churche befor the reformatione, nor did exclude any from ther communion who owned ther confessione. Lyckwayes the King, albeit at his coronatione, by oath, he be obleiged for " to mantaine the trwe reUigione, preaching of the worde, and dwe admi- Ch. LXX,] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 117 nistratione of the sacraments"; yet is he not sworne to any innovation of A, D, 1638. church policye or discipline. Second, [These] subsequent actes of parliament show, that by the munici paU lawes of Scottland, archbishops and bishops wer not only allowed in the church, but had jurisdictione and authoritye to governe the same. First, Acte 24 of the saide parliament, ratifies " all civili preiveleidges graunted by the Kings predecessors to the spiritwall estate " : the lycke [does] acte 35, parliament 1571, wher all actes in their favours are ratifyde. Second, Acte 46, parliament 1572, warrants bishops to depryve aU In feriour ministers, who shall not subscrybe the Confessione of Faithe, and tacke the oathe of alledgance. Ibid. Acte 48, bishops are declared to have authoritye in the deslgna- tione of ministers gleebs. Ibid. Acte 54, bishops [are] appoynted at ther visitationes for to nominate persones to sett the taxatione for upholding churches and church yard dykes, and to conveen and trye persones who embeasle timber or stones belonging to the churche. Parliament 1579, acte 69, the jurisdictione of the churche defyned ; yet no other church officers aUowed, but such as wer aUowed by former actes ; but archbishops and bishops, intended to continow in authoritye, [as is] proved [by these acts foUowing.] First, Acte 71, pariiament 1579, persones returning from traveU, are appoynted, within twenty dayes of ther returne, to passe to bishop, superin tendent, or churche comissioner, and ther give a confessione of ther faithe. And thes actes are ratifyd, acte 99, parUament 1581. Parliament 1584, acte 130, aU men are forbiddne to seeke the dimi nution of the dignitye and authoritye of the three estates of the kyngdome, under paine of treasone. Ibid. Acte 131, aU judgements and jurisdictiones for twenty-four yeares preceeding, not approved by the King and three estates, are discharged. Ibid. Acte 132, bishops appoynted to trye ministers upon crymes merit ing depravatione : the lycke, ibid, acte 133. ParUament 1587, aCte 23, aU actes concerning the churche and its preveleidges are ratifyde. Pariiament 1597, acte 231, ratifies titles and immunityes graunted to prelats ; and declares them the thu-d estate ; and that ministers whom his Majesty shaU provyde to the title and office of a bishopp, shall have vote in 118 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL Assembly's Answer to Hamilton's Declaration. A. D. 1638. parUament ; and that actwall ministers shall only be provyded to such vaking places. Parliament 1606, act 2, restores the estate of bishopps fuUy, who are said there to have been almost fuUy subverted by the acte of annexatione ; and it does declare that neither did King nor estates ever meane to subverte them. ParUament [1609] acte 6, archbishopps and bishopps are fuUy restored to whatever was theirs, etc. Parliament 1617, archbishops and bishopps are ordained to be elected into ther places by ther chapters, and to be consecrated by the rites and order acustomed, and no otherwayes. LXXL This was the summe of Hamiltons Declaratione, published about the time of the Assembly, which the Covenanters had not leisour to ansuer till the Assembly ended : After which tyme ther came forth ane ansuer therto, " Revised acording to the ordinance of the GeneraU Assembly, by Mr. Arch bald Jonston, clerke therunto, Edinburgh, February fourteenth, 1639," which is very long and voluminouse ; nor shall I trouble the reader with any thing but the materiall pairtes therof. True it is, that Mr. William Spang, in his Historia Motuum, who settes downe the declarations as short as he can, and the Covenanters ansuers in a disproportionable lenthe, has printed ane ansuerO somewhat different from that which Mr. Archibald Jonston caused printe ; as any will perceave who compares them together, Spangs being mor elaborate, and heer and ther interwoven with cittationes of fa thers and church historye ; so that it is no hard matter to guesse that his informer had a finger in it. But, passing that floorish made to straungers in Spangs Latine narratione, I must relate that which was ansuered at home, with the Kinges animadversiones therupon ;(2) for he declares that it did de serve no just replye, because nothing contained in the five reasones wer therby weackned. The introductione is very long, and is a recapltulatione of things past, almost and much to the tune of the ordinar proems of ther protestationes. Ther is one passage in it which the King markes with an asteriske : they say that, " In obedience to his (viz. Gods) divyne commandement, conforme to the practise of the godly in former tymes, and acording to the lawdable example of ther reUigiouse progenitors, warranted (') [Historia Motuum, pp. 241 — 263.] (2) [The Assembly's Answer to Hamilton's Declaration is inserted, along with the King's marginal commentary, in the King's Large Declaration, pp, 337 — 363,] Ch. LXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 119 by actes of councell, they did againe renew ther Confessione of Faithe," A. D. 1638. etc. To this the King replyes, that, " Ther is no divyne commandement in j^ g Scripture, nor example of the Christian churche, for subscrybing any Confessione without the consent of the supreme magistrate, if he be a Chris tiane." First, They except that this declaratione is made by the Kings comis sioner, and not by the lordes of the councell, who should interpret ther oune acte : but the councell doe distinguish In ther acte betuixt relligione as it was then, anno 1580, and now, anno 1638. To this the King replyes, that, " The lordes of councell did tacke and wer to tacke this oathe, as weaU as any other, in the known sence of us who commanded it ; and, therfor, any acte of councell for ther explanatione was unnecessarye ; and it is unjustly affirmed that this declaratione or explana tione was made by our comissioner, for It was made by us, but published by him at our commandement, as is plainly expressed in the title of it." Thes are the Kinges wordes. Second, They saye, that albeit the King had not intended to mantaine the reUIgion as profest, anno 1580, yet was his intentione, by causing tacke that oathe, for to cause mantaine true relligione in its puritye ; wherunto as praejudiciall episcopacye was ever condemned ; as also because the corrup tions now received in this kirke are contrarye to Gods worde. The King replyes, " But when shall they be proved to be contrary to the word of God ?" Third, They will have us to distinguish betuixt oathes tendred by the first framers of the Confessione, the whole kirke, who have power for to interprete and explaine the same, and oathes reqwyred, to be renewed by the supreme Magistrate, who as custos utriusque tabulae, and a true sonne of the kirke, ought to receave the [true] meaning of the kirke, and cause his subjectes receave it : And that his Majestye cannot be understood to be fram ing a new Confession of Faith, but renewing the old as it was In anno 1580. The King replyes. First, that, " They themselves doe know that this Con fession was not framed at first by the churche as the positive Confessione was, but by one Mr. Johne Craige, and commanded by the authoritye ofthe Kings father ; he did advyse with the churche concerning it, but they receaved it from him, not he from them," Secondly, " That the supreme Magistrate should, as the sonne of the churche, only receave the meaning of the churche, and cause it to be receaved by his subjectes, is not only the JesuiticaU tenet but ther very wordes and syUables, and, as they are aUeadged 120 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, [B, IIL A. D, 1638, heer, very false, for the greatest pairt of this Confessione containeth not matters of faithe, but of goverment, discipline, and ceremonyes : besyde, this Confessione was first enjoyned by King James and his counceU, befor it was approved by the churche ; how then King James, if he wer now living, should receave the meaning of it from the churche, after he had subscrybed it, and commanded his houshold to doe so ; or how he (viz. King Charles) should now receave the meaning of it from the Generall Assembly after it was subscrybed by his owne commandement," he sales, he could not apprehend. Fourth, They say, if ther wer any reall oppositione betuixt the King his proclamation and the acte of councell, yet the first being his privat, the second his publicke judicall will, posterior derogat priori, publica privatae : (Nota bene.) And the swearers are obleidged to observe rem juratam and the reall mat ter of the oathe (mor then the mynd and mandate of the prescryber), speciaUy since It is no new Confessione : So that the councell have virtuaUy abjured episcopacye, since the churche Interpretts it so ; and any declara tion contrarye is protestatio contraria facto, if they say that episcopacy is not by it abjured. The King replyes to ther assertione, that posterior derogat priori, that, on the contrary, " the first should be preferred : for if his comissioner and councell had explained it contrary to his meaning, his declaratione comming after should be preferred to ther misinterpretatione." To the first reasone of the five, they ansuer. First, That the King, by com manding to subscrybe the Confession of Faith as it was anno 1580, com mands them to abjure whatever is founde by the competent judge to be in troduced since that tyme repugnant therunto, albeit law did countenance it by the corruptlone of the tymes Interveening. Secondly, The lords of counceU have subscrybed the Confession as it was in 1580, in opposition to the present lawes, by returning from the present corruptions in the profes sione, tanquam termino a quo, to the professione 1580, tanquam terminum ad quem : which a great pairt of the councellors and others declare to be ther meaninge. Thirdly, Episcopacye is found by many Assemblyes to be un warranted by Godes worde. Fourthly, Episcopacy was never restored by any Assembly of this churche, nor Assemblyes condemning it repealed, without which a parliament could not reestablish it. Fifthly, The lawes estabUshIng episcopacye extende only to ther cIvUl preiveleidges, and wer alwayes protested against by the churche. Sixthly, If any suche Assem- Ch. LXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 121 blyes did countenance it, they are declared nuU ab initio. Seventhly, The A. D. 1638. breach of covenant, by Introducing such corruptiones, is to be shunned heerafter. Eighthly, Episcopacy is virtwally abjured, anno 1580, and the tryall heerof referred to the Assemblye which has founde it abjured, anno 1580. The King replyes, that, " The last pairt of the first reasone is qwytte omitted, though in it lyeth the principali explicatione of this firste reasone." Second, To the councellers ther determinatione, he replyes, that, " How many of them have determined so ? they know that they are not comparable in number to thoise who have determined the contrarye." And, third, he sayes that ther assertione that episcopacye was never restored by acte of Assembly, was in itself " Most false." To the second reasone of the declaratione, they answer, First, If bishops be warrantable by Gods worde, they cannot be called ceremonyes, and are not alterable ; but if they be ceremonyes, then are they justly exploded. Second, That God warrants not Introduction of new church officers. Third, That, in cap. 19 of the Confession, discipline is called ane unchangable and essentiall marke of Gods [kirke] , And then they bring in many instances for to prove, both from the Confessiones, actes of Assembly, and discipline bookes, that they only aUowed pastors, elders, doctors, deacons ; and that it was not probable that they comprehended episcopacye under any of the four, since they so frequently condemned it. Next, That the prelatts caU episcopacye apostolicke, and not changable : As for the kirke, it had con demned such at aU tymes as held discipUne and poUcye indiff'erent and chaungable, particularly Mr. Robert Montgomerye : That the Assembly, 1596, licenced the King to propose doubtes concernhig discipline, animo aedificandi non tentandi: But withaU that they desyred him to declare befor the states, that he never intended to praejudice the booke of poUcye. Lastly, Though discipline wer chaungable, that specifice, et interposito jura- mento, they had sworne for to mantaine discipline as it was, anno 1580. The King replyes to what they answer concerning episcopacye, its not being judged a ceremony by the prelatts themselves, that, " Because In the XXI. article citted, the worde ceremony is used, therfor they wold inferre that this reasone supposeth episcopaU governement to bee but a ceremonye : But weakly, (sales the King,) for the reason consisteth in the worde policye which they tacke no notice of, and episcopaU governement being a pairt of ecclesiasticall policye, they hold the one alterable (as all they doe who ad- Q 122 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. here to that XXI. article), must needs hold the other so too : nor can it be inferred from any thing in this reason, that episcopall governement is man tained by it to be alterable, but that they themselves, and that XXI. article doe hold it to be so." Secondly, To ther assertione. That the Assembly desyred his father for to declare that he never Intended to chaunge any thing of ther policye, he sayes, The Assembly desyred it ; that might bee ; but did ever his royall father declare so much to the Assembly as they are said to have desyred ? To the third reasone, they answer, that it needs no answer, if the, circumstances of thinges be considdered : That the meaning of ther answers to the Aberdeen Querees was, that they did not expressly abjure epis copacye, but all that was abjured, 1580 : which they referred unto a free Assembly and Assembly recordes to trye. Secondly, That when the coun ceU was urged to subscribe the Confessione, 1580, conforme to the warrants, bearing (that they should mantaine the reUigione now presently professed), they justly feared that it being subscrybed, anno 1638, would comprehende episcopacy and Pearth Articles : which caused the councell declare that they meaned for to subscrybe the Confessione as it was mantained, anno 1580. Thirdly, Albeit by the meaning of the prescryber of the oathe, the swearer wer tacitly bownde to mantaine episcopacye and Pearth Articles ; N. B. yet, considdering the former reasones, he is mor obleidged to the realitye rei juratae, which Is now declared and founde by the soveraine judge com petent, to abjure episcopacye ; whatever the prescryber did meane by the oathe. The Kinges animadverslone upon this paradoxe of swearinge, secundum veritatem rei juratae, is, that, " He defyes any man living to produce from any Jesuite, or the greatest patron of aequlvocatione yet ever heard of, such a wicked position as this is, that the swearer is neither bounde to the mean ing of the exacter of the oathe, nor to his oune meaning who tackes the oathe, but to the realitye of the thing sworne, as it shall be afterwards expli cated by the competent judge : For then no man can tell what he swearethe, when he sweareth, if the declaratione of the competent judge shall come after ; that it wer to be wished that he who sett downe this propositione, had sett his hande to it, that the world might tacke notice of him for ane ignor ant foole and an arrant knave : In the mean tyme, till Johnstone fynde out an other, he must be tackne for the man, because his hande is at this fooUsh pamphlett." Ch. LXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 123 To the fourth reasone they answer. First, That, in contradictory oathes, A. D. 1638. the swearer is mor obleidged to the sence of the thing sworne then to that of the prescryber, or his owne sence, specially wher ther is no new oathe. Second, The oathe was refoosed tiU the councell gave ther sence to be one with the sence of the Covenanters. Third, They doe not meddle with the kirkes of Englande or Irelande, but recommend to them the patterne shewed in the Mounte : they speake onlye of Scottland wher episcopacye was stUl abolished tlU the latter corrupte tymes.* The Kings replye is, that, " This answer is directlye contrarye to the wordes of ther owne protestatione against his proclamatione, dated Septem ber ninth " : See ther ninth reasone in ther protestatione against the sub scriptione to the Kings Covenant, and the reader will fynde it flatly con tradictorye to what they affirme now. Secondly, That, " They doe not meddle with the church of England, but yet in all ther wryttings they declare that the governement of the Church of England is against the worde of God, and the patterne shewed in the Mount : and that ther new fancyd governement, contained in ther imaglnarle booke of discipline is only ac cording to it." To the fyfth reasone they ansuer. First, That befor the subscriptione of the Confessione, anno 1580, abbots, pryors, and bishopps wer clearly banished out of the churche, as the records of the Assemblyes wiU prove. Second, The clause citted in the reasone is of doctrine, and not of discipline, which is after determined, and the hierarchy detested. Third, Collections by way of inference cannot be aUedged ex consequenti against expresse actes of the tyme ; wherin apertissime dicendo, the mackers leave no place to presume for episcopacy : so are the expressions of stylus curiae carefully observed, and actes are saide to be made by the King and three estates, although not a bishop present. Fourth, Ther wer no standing actes of parliament for episcopacye ; or if any wer, by subscrybing the Confessione, 1580, King and subjectes have returned to the same doctrine, as it was then without bishopps : which raay be enacted in the parUament proclaimed to be holdne * Nota bene. When the Covenanters did publish this declaratione, and the King wrytte his replye, the Leagwe and Covenant was not then subscrybed. How farr since they have meddled with the churche of England, is very weall known ; and England bevailes it as much as Scottland does this daye, ther meddling with the governement of Scottland; and it is hard to tell what pattern they meane, England beinge become a kynde of a great Amster dam for sectes and for shismes and anarchy in churche. 124 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. May fifth, 1639. The actes of Assembly and the Booke of Policye, cap. 1 et cap. 10, puttes cleare marches betuixt civIU and ecclesiasticke jurisdictione ; macking evry one independent In matters belonging to ther own jurisdic tione, and evry one subject to another in matters properly belonging to that other. So as Assemblyes cannot macke civiU lawes, nor hinder the macking of them, nor repeale them being made, no mor can a ParUament originally Nota bene, macke ecclesiasticall lawes nor repeale them, nor hinder laufull Assemblyes from macking or repealing them. For albeit actes of Assembly are ratifyd by Pariiament, yet this cannot hinder the Assembly to repeale its owne actes : so that the civIU sanction falls ex consequenti, if so be that the As sembly repeale its owne acte. And to say the contrary of this is qwyte derogatorye to Chrystes prerogative, church libertye, freedome of Assem blyes, and to the nature, ende, and reason of aU ecclesiasticall jurisdictione. See their protestatione, September twenty-second, wher it is proved to be so. For which reasones they declare that the Assemblyes sence only be helde as right, and all reqwyred to subscrybe acordinglye. To this answer of the fyft reasone, the King setts three animadversiones : First, Wher they deney that episcopacye is mentioned as ane estate of parlia ment, when no bishopp was present, he replyes, " That it is most notoriouse that at those parliaments which wer holdne when the Confessione of Faith was first sworne unto, bishopps had voices and wer presente, and so then episcopall governement could not be abjured." For proof of this, he in stances,* out of the rolles of parUament : parUament 1597, sederunt pro clero, sex bishopps, fifteen abbotts ; parliament 1581, three bishopps, twelve abbotts ; 1583, eight bishopps, thirteen abbotts ; 1584, four bishopps, eleven abbotts ; 1584, four bishopps, four abbotts ; 1585, four bishops, nine ab botts ; 1587, five bishops, thirteen abbotts ; 1592, two bishopps, six abbotts ; 1593, two bishopps, six abbotts; 1594, three bishopps, five abbotts; 1597, five abbotts; 1600, two bishopps, six abbotts; 1604, five bishopps, three abbotts; 1606, six bishopps, one abbott, one pryor; 1607, six bishopps and three abbotts; and in this roll the bishopps seates are all mentioned. Secondly, To ther assertione, that the Assembly cannot macke civili laws, etc., he rejoynes, " Let any kyngdome which is acqwaynted with parliamentes • See Large Declaration, pag. 364 et 365, extracted out of the rolles of parliament. Ther is noted that the abbots wer secular men which had gott the abbay laundes, yet re- tamed ther names and places in parliament. Ch. LXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 125 consisting of a monarche and his three estates, digest this propositione, A. D. 1638. and then the parliament can be no mor the highest court of the kyngdome." Thirdly, To ther position, that the cIvIU sanction faUes if the Assembly repeale its owne acte, he ansuers, It Is, " A most false positione : As if the convocation in Englande, or the generall Assembly In Scottland, had power to reconcile the two kyngdoms to the church of Rome, to reduce poperye Into them, and to restore to the church all the abby laundes, notwithstand ing many actes of parUament In both kyngdomes to the contrarye." In the rest of ther ansuer, which Is terribly prolixe, they stepp out of theer spheare (if they wer the delegats of the Generall Assembly who penned the ansuer, and spocke as churche men), and tacke much panes for to ansuer aU the actes of parliament which the comissioner cittes ; although It would seeme that the King and parliament wer most competent interpreters of thes actes, wher the ansuerers will assure us no churche men wer asistant at ther en- actlnge. They tell us that the churche wrestled with episcopacye till anno 1592; and that her policye could not be gottne confirmed in parliament till then ; and. Second, That actes of parliament cannot macke ecclesiasticall officers : That parliament discharging bishopps to depend on the pope did therby simply discharge ther office ; for it depended never on any but him : That Assemblyes all thes tymes censured such as usurped the office or the N. B. title of bishopp ; and wer still remonstrating to the state against the restitu tione of them : That the Kings coronation oath mackes no mention of bishopps : That preiveleidges ratifyd in parliaments to bishopps must be understoode concerning church men then receaved, but not bishopps : That 7 acte of 1 pari. Jac. VI, , referres the examinatione of ministers unto su perintendents, but mentions not bishopps : as for superintendents, they wer permitted only lycke temporary evangelistes ad ecclesiam constituendam, and N. B. afterward abrogate from 1575 in ecclesia constituta : That, annis 1572 et 1573, the Regent brought in bishopps upon designe, which the Assemblye protested against the next yeare ; that thes bishopps titular had no power from the churche : That if parliament gave power to bishopps after that in church matters, it was not as bishopps but as comissionat from the churche, and named by the title of bishopp, wherby they wer best known : That pariiament, 1581, does ratifie presbyteriaU governement, and Is IU citted to prove episcopaU power : That the actes of parUament, 1584, wer protested against by the ministers of Edinburgh, in name of the church of Scottland ; that that tyme was the howr of darknesse, when the Earl of 126 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Arran* did tyrranise. The rest of the actes are answered and interpreted by them, with thes or the lycke distlnctiones, That few bishopps sate thes tymes, and that such as satte wer disownd by Assemblyes, some of them not church men : That they had ther vote in parUament by reason of ther laundes ; that the laundes tackne from them tooke awaye ther vote ; which they doe instance by actes of parliament for ther restitutione : That histo rians doe aU testifie that nobility, barrons, and burrows wer the three estates of parliament, for many hundereths of yeares, without bishopps : And that the 114th acte, parliament 1592, expressly abrogates bishopps and aU former actes made In ther favours, and therfor is not citted at all by the Marquis of Hamiltoune in his declaratione, becaus It establisheth presbyteriaU governe ment : That some gott voices in parliament in name of the churche who wer not churche men, and whom the churche employed not, but wer thrust In ther : That when voice in parliament was obtruded upon the churche as a favour, it was to such as she should comissionat, not to bishops : That the bishopps, without controversye, had vote in Parliament, yet it cannot follow from thence that they are not censurable by Assemblyes, as they declare in ther declinator : That the parliament, 1606, might repone them to ther temporaUtyes and voice in parliament, but could not make them bishopps spirltwaU : That, annis 1606 et 1609, they rode in parliament without comission from the churche, contrar to the cautions of Montrosse: And, finally, That the Assembly conveened lately at Glasgow, 1638, hath proceeded not by actes of parliament (nor should not), but by Gods worde alone ; and that by ther oath they are obleidged to returne to the doctrine and discipline as it was in anno 1580, and renounce foUowng actes contrary thertoo. This is but a short abridgement of ther refutatione and interpretatione of actes of parliament befor mentioned ; to which pourpose they spend threeten pages in ane indifferent smaU character, in folio. Yet the Kinges replye is farr shorter, for he summes it upp in fewer then half as many lynes upon the margent of ther tediouse ansuer, and tells us that, " For the cavUls heer made against the actes of parUament, citted in the explanatione, they will be sufficiently confuted, if the reader wiU tacke the paines to reade * Sir James Steward, father to the Lord Uchiltrye. [Captain James Stewart of Both- well-muir, second son of Andrew second Lord Ochiltree, was in 1581 created Earl of Arran. He was deprived of the title in 1585 ; and was slain in 1596. His eldest son. Sir James Stewart of Killeith, acquired the Lordship of Ochiltree in 1615, and died in 1659.] Ch. LXXIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, 127 the actes ; for then he shaU easilye discover that thes exceptions are not only weacke, but non at aU." LXXII. Having now sufficiently tyred the readers patience with the short summe of thes remonstrances for and against episcopacye, it is now tyme to give ane accounte of the rest of the proceedinges of this Assemblye, which mett againe, Munday, December tenth. The first acte that daye, was one [ ] Row, sonne to Mr. Johne Row, minister at Carnocke, his presenting himself publickly. He tould the Assembly that he had been abroade out of his native countrey for the space of eighteen yeares, travell ing through France, Germany, and Irelande ; and since he was by Gods providence returned at such a gloriouse tyme, his earnest request was, that he might have the honour to be admitted to the subscriptione of the Cove nant : which was no sooner petitioned for, but as readily it was yeelded unto, with uniforme applause and congratulatione ; and the new come home pro- selite matriculate into the Covenant. Immediatly therafter, the moderator saide. That, since the churche had been under long and greate thraldome, wherof the most pairt was tackne awaye alreadye by this Assembly, that ther next course was for to considder upon such positive lawes and constitutiones as might praeveen the lycke corruptions in all following tymes ; and to this ende, proposed the nomina tione of a comittee, who should heare overturs, and propose such as them selves should thinke expedient for the wealle of the church. The members of that comittye wer appoynted to be Mr. Johne Adamson, PrincipaU of Edinburgh College ; Mr. Johne Row, elder of Carnocke ; Mr. James Sib bald ; Mr. Johne Moncrlffe ; the Lord Balmerino ; [ ] ; Lyon of Oldbarre, brother to the Earle of Kinghorne; and James Coheraine, and Gilbert Gowrlaye, two burgers. How soone that this comittye was constituted, the moderator did call upon such ministers as had been at ther studyes upon Saturdaye, when epis copacye was voted downe, that they might homologate explicitly the con- demnatione of episcopacye ; which they aU did, being but few in number, very readily : For albeit they had intended otherwayes, it was now behynde tyme for them to proppe it up by ther suffrage. LXXIII. The Fyve Articles of Pearth wer next brought to the test ; nor was it thought eneuche that the King had discharged them by procla matione, nor that the Assembly had annuUed them by a consequence, having founde the Assembly of Pearth null and voide in itselfe : But it was thought A D. 1638. Mr. Row sub scribes the Covenant : he is son of Mr. John Row, minister of Carnock. Committee for constitutions and laws to prevent cor ruptions in future. Sess. 17. December 10. Moondaye. Five Articles of Perth con demned. The Act. 128 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B, IIL A. D, 1638. necessarye that thes Five Articles should be considderred as in themselves whither they wer lawful or unlaufull. But befor the matter should be voted, it was thought expedient to reade all the actes of Assemblyes condemning such practises, and censuring ministers for practising the lycke in former tymes. Upon this motione, the Lord Lowdon Campbell stoode upp, and declared that he thought it unnecessaire to proceede to furder tryall of thes saide articles, since ther unlaufull introductione was alreadye proved, and since the King had condemned them in his proclamatione. Then Mr. Andrew Ramsey feU to speacke concerning holy dayes, and shwed that to ane holy daye three things wer reqwyred, cessatione from labour, hallowing, and dedicatione. He said that evrye one of the holy dayes observed In Scottlande had thes three conditiones,(') ergo, [etc.] But this was spockne by Lowdon and him after the foUowing paper was reade, which, for substance, is engrossed in the condemnatorye acte of the five ar ticles, much to this pourpose* : First in the generall, they doe fynde and declare that the Fyve Articles, viz. First, Kneeling at the Communion : Second, The fyve festivall dayes ; first, Chrystmass ; second, Good Fryday ; third, Pash daye ; fourth, As- cention daye ; fifth, Wittsonday : Third, Episcopall confirmatione of chUd ren : Fourth, Privat baptisme : Fifth, Celebratione of the Lords Supper privatly, or in privat houses ; are all abjured by the Confessione of Faithe and Covenant, as itwas sworne too and subscrybed, annis 1580, 1581, 1590, 1591 ; contrary to the relligione then profest ; and are confuted by the worde of God and churche of Scottland ; or are rytes and ceremonyes added to the minlstratione of the [true] sacraments, without the worde of God ; or now- rishe the popish judgement against infants departing without baptisme, or absolute necessitye of baptisme ; or rytes, signes, and traditions brought into the kirke, without or against the worde of God and doctrine of this trwe reformed churche. And then they declare particularly : First, Concerning geniculatione or kneeling at the communion, That the sacraments must be ministred, as Chryst himself has ordained : see Con fession of Faith, prefixed to the Psalmes (^) approved by our kirke in the (1) [See Records of the Kirk, pp. 169, 170,] • See print Assembly of Glasgow, pag. 27, acte session 17, December tenth. [Re cords of the Kirk, pp. 32, 33.] Vide Spang, Historia Motuum, pag. 263. (2) [In the journal of the Assembly printed in the Records of the Kirk, it is recorded that, during the discussion on the Articles of Perth, " as some things were cited out of the Ch. LXXIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 129 very beginning of the Reformatione, repeated in the twenty-third chapter of A. D. 1638. the Large Confession, printe amongst the actes of ParUament : That such a gesture is most agreable to Chrystes example, viz. to sitt, and most agreeable to the actione itselfe ; that whatever men have added are to be thought alterations of the Lords institutione, as If they challendged it of imperfectlone : In the Assembly, 1562, ministers are ordained to foUow the rule of Geneva at the minlstratione of the Sacrament, wher John Knox was sometyme minister ; who did condemne geniculatione. Parliament 1567 will not have any thought to be members of this churche, but such as com municate as she does. This acte was renewed, parliament 1581 ; and kneel ing never sett upp tlU Assembly 1618. Second, Concerning the five festivall dayes. First Booke of Discipline, cap. 1 , does thinke it necessaire utterly to abolish them all, [because they are neither commanded nor warranted by Scripture ; and that such as observe them be punished by civil magistrates. In the General Assembly holden at Edinburgh,] anno 1566, the [Large] Confession of Suitzerland is approved in all thinges, except in the article of the festivall dayes. [It was not then the popish observation only, with the popish opinion of worship and merit, which was dissallowed; (for so the reformed kirk in Helvetia did not observe them), but, simpliciter, all observation. In the Assembly holden] anno 1575, complainte was made against the ministers and readers be syde Aberdeene, for assembling people to preaching and prayers upon festivall dayes : And the Regent was to be complained unto, that the people of Drumfreeze had conveyed a reader to ther church at Christesmasse, with musicke, for to reade, because ther oune reader refoosed to goe. Assembly 1577, visitors are appoynted to admonish ministers not to preache at Christs- masse, or administer sacrament at Easter. First Book of Discipline, cap. 9, setts downe the reasons against Easter communion, because at that tyme people did runne superstitiously to it, and wer careless at other tymes. Assembly 1595, observing of festivall dayes, setting on of bonfyres, singing carols, are reockned amongst corruptions to be amended. [Lastly, It was the unanimous opinion of the ministers, that only the Lords day was to be treatise before the Psalme Booke, printed at Aberden, 1625, where prayer is made against hyreling Papists, that God would confound them. In these that are printed at Aberden, Papists are left out : In ane uther prayer, these words, ' the Romish Idol,' are left out ; Then Doctor Guild, in Aberdene, desyred that the printer might macke accompt of it, who had bein the occasion of that." Records of the Kirk, p. 169, See below, book v. ch, xxxv,] 130 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. observed as a festival.] And some added that. Assembly 1690, King James thanked God that our church did exceed the church of Geneva for purity of reformation, as observing no daye but the Lords daye, whilst Geneva kept Youle and Pasche. Third, Concerning Confirmatione, they declare that It is condemned in the Confessione, under the clause of the " five bastard sacraments," as one of them : And that, seing episcopacy was abolished, confirmatione did fall to the grownd by consequence, since none pretended to it but theye : Nor is ther the least inkling of impositione of handes in any acte for catechising younge ones. Fourtli, Concerning administratione of the sacraments in private places, they declare, in the Booke of OrderO) sett downe before the psalmes it is saide, That sacraments are not to be administred in privat corners, as sor cerers use to doe: Assembly 1581, ordaines that sacraments be not ministred in privat houses, but solemnly acording to good order : That Mr. Thomas Cranstone, minister at Tranent, anno 1581, was suspended, and not released till he acknowledged his fault In the kirke of Tranent, as also others, for kneeling at communion, and celebrating the communion on Pash day. All which did macke it appeare that the church of Scottland did oppose all that which might macke baptisme be thought absolutly necessary, or that the sacrament was to be givne as a viaticum. When all this was reade, the moderator stated the questione, Whether the Fyve Articles of Pearthe, by the Confessione of Faithe, as it was meand and professed in the yeare 1580, 1581, 1590, 1591, ought to be removed out of the kirke. Ther was one of the members of the Assembly who did alledge, That such a state of the questione was, in other termes, for to putt it to the vote, whither or not all were perjured, who had practised all thes Five Ar ticles, or any of them, after that nationall oathe was swome.C^) This the (1) [The Book of Conamon Order, or. The Order of the English Kirk at Geneva ; whereof John Knox was Minister. Approved by the famous and learned man, John Calvin.' Received and used by the Reformed Kirk of Scotland, and ordinarily prefixed to the Psalms in Metre.] (2) [Historia Motuum, p. 266, The member alluded to was Baillie, " I was resolved," he says, " to dispute none, yet before the voicing I did complain of the question's stating. That to ask if Perth Articles were to be removed according to our Confession, which was conceived by way of oath and covenant, was all one, as if to ask if they were truly abjured before, and all who had defended them since, were truly perjured ; which was a very hard matter for many to grant. The moderator, a raost grave and wise man, yet naturally somewhat terned,(i) took me up a little accurately, showing I might draw the question so (I) [" Terne, Teknei;, adj. Fierce, wrathful, choleric." Jamieson.] Ch. LXXV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 131 moderator deneyd, saying that he meand no such thing in stating the ques tione. When It came to the vote, without contradictione of any (but one onlye), it carryd affirmatlvelye : Wherupon by acte they prohibite and dis charge all disputing for them, or observing all or any of them heerafter, and did ordain presbytryes to proceede with the censurs of the kirke against all transgressours.C) The methode which the Assembly observed with the Articles of Pearth, first nullifying the Assembly of Pearth, and afterward declaring against evry of the Five Articles particularly, was conforme to that which they used against episcopacye. For having condemned the functione in abstracte, they now thought it high tyme for to censure the bishopps themselves; to which pourpose, the next actione of this sessione was for to enter upon the exa minatione of the particular accusations givne In against evry bishopp. LXXIV. Mr. Johne Abernetthy, bishop of Catnesse, his accusatione was waved and mitigated, by meanes of a letter sent from himself, and ane other from the presbytrye of Jedburgh in his favours, wher (it seems) he had sometyme been a minister. Both letters contained his excuses by rea sones of his siklynesse ; also they did intimate both his subscriptione of, and affectione to, the Covenant. His owne, furder, did professe a willlngnesse to submitte to all the actes of the Assemblye, with a most earnest prayer for the good and happie successe therof. Thes thinges wer weall tackne, and ther acceptaunce was seconded by the Lord Lowdon, Sir William Douglasse of Cavers, and Sir Thomas Kerr, and others, who spocke in his favours ; specially they tould that he 'had wryttne a worke to be published, against the innovationes lately introduced into this churche. Mr. Patrike Lindsey, archbishop of Glasgow, his ansuer was delayd tlU the next daye, it having been reqwyred by such as wer appoynted to speacke with him. LXXV. Mr. David Lindsay, bishop of Edinburgh, his accusatione was readde ; and after cittatione and calling upon him at the church doore, and Dr. Hamiltoune as his procutor, was fownde to be, besyde the generall crymes objected to all the bishopps, viz. breach of the caveats, etc.. That he A. D, 1638. Mr. John Abernethy, bishop of Caithness.Mr. Patrick Lindsay, archbishopof Glasgow. Mr. David Lindsay, bishop of Edinburgh, deposed. strait as I pleased, yet he had not stated it so : however give my voice. When it came to me, I said no more ; for at once I was found no mistaker ; for Mr. Alexander Carse, and after him almost all, answered the question, abjured, and removed ; to whom no man was noted opposite but myself: for here I saw no place for distinction as before in Episcopacy ; and so without any hesitation, I voiced to be removed now, but never before abjured." Letters, vol. i. pp. 133, 134.] (1) [Records of the Kirk, p. 33 ; Historia Motuum, p. 266.] 132 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. had pressed the practise of the Service Booke and the Fyve Articles, and had gone befor others In the practise therof, and of the Booke of Canons, and had obtruded all thes Innovationes extremely upon ministers ; that he had refused to give the order of presbyter to any but such as had first been created deacons, which they instanced In one Mr. Johne Makgie ; that he did kneele befor the altar ; that he had putt on the rochett and other masse lycke apperaU at divyne service ; that he had givne licence to some to marry without thryce proclamatione of ther banes ; by which meanes one gott a warrant to marry his owne fathers sister,* which warrant the minister to whom it was sent refoosed for to obeye ; lyckwayes two men gott warrant in one day for to marry one woman who had her husband livinge ; that he used the ryte of elevatlone very solemnly at the communion ; that he suffered erroneouse doctrine to be preached within his diocesse by some of the ministers of Edinburgh ; and being advertished therof, did connive at it ; that he had defended the error of the ubiqultye of Chrystes bodye, in his booke which he printed in defence of the Assembly of Pearthe, wher he mantaineth kneeling before the elements, in respect of Chryst his bodily presence ther, that we should worshipp Chrystes body and flesh therCO (that booke was cryme eneuch, though no heterodoxie had been founde In it, for to turne him out) ; that at the Kings coronatione, he had used popish toyes in the chappell royall ; that he wold not consecrate ane churche at the Queens Ferrye, because he was not able to opne the doore therof himself, which was conditio sine qua non ; and because he was therfor reprooved by the rest of his coUeagues that wer with him, as also, for that he would have castne holy water upon it, which they wer not satisfeed with, therfor he gave over the worke, and lefte the churche unconsecrated. For aU which crymes, which wer provne, and never a wittnesse excepted against ; as also, for that he had subscrybed the declinator against the synode, and had added contumacye to all his former crymes ; therfor the synod, with ane unanimouse vote, depose him from being not only a bishopp, but also a minister, and withall ordaine him to be excommunicated. * Si credere fas est, (i) [" To beleeuc that the body of Christ is present in the Diuine Person, wherein it subsisteth, albeit locally the same be in heauen, is no errour It is no errour to beleeve the spirituall, powerfuU, and personall presence of Christs bodie at the Sacrament, and in that respect to worship his flesh and blood there," Trve Narration of the Proceed ings in the Assembly at Perth, p. 142, " These passages," says Baillie, " stood twenty years untouched by any that I heard of, till I pointed at them to our presbytery about a year ago." Letters, vol. i. p. 135.] Ch. LXXVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS, 133 LXXVI. With that selfe same order and formalitye did they proceede A. D. 1638. against Mr. Adam Bellandyne,(') bishop of Aberdeen, whoise accusatione did nj7~Ad~m containe, (besyde the crymes objected to all the bishopps,) That he was guiltye Ballentine, of simonye ; that he had obtruded upon the ministrye the Booke of Canons ^1^°"^ °^ and Service Booke ; that he had suspended some ministers, particularly Mr. deposed. Alexander Martin, minister at Old Deer in Buthqhwan, and Mr. James Martin, his brother, minister at Peeterheade, for keeping a fast on the Lords daye ; that he had tackne the oath of obedience, and other unlaufull oathes, from intrants ; that he had admitted Intrants acording to the Booke of Ordinatione ; that In provinciall synods he had played rex, and ther had made canons concerning fasting, without the advyce of the Assemblye or consent therof; that he had suspended the excommunication of a papist in the very acte of pronouncing the sentence ; that he had relaxed the old Lady Abercome from the sentence of excommunicatione, without consent of his bretheren, or any satisfaction givne upon her pairte ; that he had freed some who wer lying under the slander of inceste from churche censures, without consent or advyce of anye ; that at the request of Elizabeth Gordon, Lady Wardesse, he had consecrated a chapell at TlUifour, after the super stitiouse forme and manner ; finally, that he was ane apostate, because, when he was minister, he had subscrybed the protestatione of the ministrye against bishopps, anno 1606, (^) and at that tyme was a great inveigher and persecutor of episcopall ministers ; yet therafter that he turned with the tymes, and had givne brybes to gett himself preferred to be bishopp, and had turned as violently to the other extreme. For thes crymes, which wer either provne or tackne for graunted, and for his refoosall to compeir and ansuer, the most pairt of the Assembly voted him to be excommunicated, besyde ther unani mouse vote for his deposition from his episcopall and ministeriall functione.(3) (1) [Dr. Adam Bellenden, second son of Sir John Bellenden of Auchnoul, was promoted to the see of Dunblane in 1615, whence he was translated to that of Aberdeen in 1635. After the Glasgow Assembly he fled into England. In December, 1640, he was living in London, " in great poverty and misery." Bailhe's Letters, vol. ii. p. 232. He survived the month of April, 1642. Spalding's Hist. Troub. vol. ii. pp. 39, 40.] (2) [Calderwood, p. 531.] (3) [" The next," says Baillie, " that came to be sentenced was Aberdeen. His proper faults were great slanders of frequent simony ; that, though he was removed from the chapel-royal to Aberdeen, as one who did not favour well enough Canterbury's new wayes,(l) yet he had been found tis forward as any to press the canons and liturgy ; that he suspended ministers for fasting on Sundays ; that he enacted in his synod, without voicing. (1) [See Lord Hailes' Memorials of Charles the First, pp. 6, 6, 8, 9, 11, 12 ; Heylyn's Life of Laud, p. 323.] 134 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. LXXVII. Mr. Johne Maxwell, bishop of Rosse, stoode in greater op- ly, J , positione with ther tenents and proceedings then to ansuer, although he Maxwel, was the next who was publickly citted at the church door to ansuere. The bishop of Ross, (.j.-yxaes particularly objected to him wer (besyde the generall sinn of aU his order), that for some yeares past he had caused reade the Service Booke publick fastings to be kept on Wednesdays only ; consecrating the chapel of an infa mous woman, the Lady Wardhouse(i) ; stayed at his pleasure processes against Papists and incestuous persons. He had not subscribed the declinature, as was thought, for lack of no good will, but only through distance of place the writ could not in time be conveyed to him. That defect in his process was supplied by the moderator, with a discourse of his singu larly malicious apostasy, that he had been a man by appearance but too zealous against bishops, and all their course ; so that his vehemency, beyond the grounds of any reason, he knew offended his wise and learned neighbour Mr. Patrick Simpsoo- We decreed him to be excommunicated." Letters, vol. i., p. 135. " The Bishop of Aberdeines proces was red, and the probation thereof. " Mr John Row declaired, that he subscryved the Protestation given in to the Parlia ment 1606, and that there wes no man more against Bishops in the toune of Stirling nor he ; and he was mightilie offendit at Mr John Grahame, who was taking a bishoprick ; yet, nevertheless, he was the man that tooke out the bishoprick out of Mr John Grahames hand.(2) I remember when he subscryvit the Protestation, he subscryvit verie neir the end of the paper ; and it began to weare, when he began to get the bishoprick, we said he was going to loupe the dyke. " The Moderatour said — Mr Patrick Syrasone said to me, he never lyked Mr W™ Coupar, and Mr Adam Ballantyne ; for they were too violent against Bishops, without any light, or good reasons ; and, therefore, he feared that they should never be constant. " Auldbar and Mr David Lyndsay declaired that, they being in the Bishops house, when Auldbar said, ' The only meane to take away abuses and disorders in this Church was a free General Assembly,' he arose in a great flame and passion, and said ' The first article that they would make then will be to pull the crowne off King Charles head.' " Moderatour said — Though his hand be not at the Declinatour, yet he has not submitted himselfe to the Assembly, and this would be considered beyond the rest, (I may call it so,) his apostacie ; for the being once of our opinion, and now so far degenerat, that he is become osor sui facti. " Mr Andrew Cant said — There entered a contest betwixt Craigievar and this Mr Ballantyne, concerning the patronage of the Kirk of Kinghorne, [Kincardine O'Neil,] and was long agitat before the Lords. Alwayes Craigievar presented a Cusing of his, and the (1) [Dame Elizabeth Gordon, wife of Sir John Leslie of Wardhouse, who died on the 29th November, 1640. On the 22d June following, she married Sir Alexander Gordon of Cluny. She died at Durham on the 2d December, 1642; ** and wes" says Spalding, "bureit honestlie out of hir awin native soyll : — a woman of suspect chastetie, and thocht over familiar with Sir Alexander Gordoun laird of Cluny forsaid, thir many yeires bjgone, in hir first husbandis tyme, and thocht an evill instrument to the dounethrowing of both ther fair and florishing estaites.'* Hist, of Troubles, vol. ii., p. 101. Arthur Johnstone has commemorated her charms in three poems, " De Elizabetha Gordonia Wardesiae domina." Arturi Jonstoni Foemata Omnia, p. 424. Middelb. 1642.] (2) ["Mr. Adam Bannatine Minister at Falkland, and sometime a vehement opposit against Bishops, suc ceeded to Mr. George Graham in the Bishopricli of Dumblane. He had said before, that Mr. George Graham the Undoch (1) of Bishops, had gotten the Bisbopriclc of Dumblane the Excrement of Bishopricks. Now he is not ashamed to lick up his excrements, and to accept that mean Bishoprick, to patch up his broken Laird- ship of Kinnocher.'' Calderwood, p. 650.] (1) [" TJNDOCH, Undocht, UsnoTjoHT, Wandodght, j. A weak or puny creature, one who is good for no thing ; applied both to body and mind." Jamieson.] Ch. LXXVII.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 135 pubUckly in his cathedraU churche ; that he used for to bowe his knee befor A. D. 1638. the altar ; that he used the surplice at divyne service ; that he had deposed holy and learned ministers (for non conformitye), and had putt in ther places unlearned and profane whore masters ; that he conversed famUIarly with profest papistes and excommunicats, and being advertished of it, ansuered he had rather converse with them then with puritans ; that having suspended some ministers, without consent, he bidd such as complained of it goe to the sighinge sisters and regrate it to them ; that he had playd at cartes and dyce, and drunkne excessivly, the very Lordes daye that he had com municated ; and that, besyde his ordinar playing at cartes and dyce, he had used such exercise oftne on the Lordes daye ; that he had receaved a minister who was suspended for marrying incestouse persones, for no other cause or satisfactione but because the minister had givne him his hande of confor mitye ; that he had most crwelly extortioned his vassalls, having reduced some of them to extreme povertye and miserye : that he had appointed sett fastes upon Fryday ; that he was an ordinar profaner of the Lordes daye ; Bishop impedit him, pretending that the King had the right, and consequentlie, the Bishop of Aberdeine. At last, the Bishop gave Craigievar 160 merks to desist, to the end that the Bishops sone might get the place. (0 " Mr Thomas Mitchell declaired that he was present by accident when he did consecrat a chappell, the chappell being richlie hung, and all the rest of it. The lady came in, and gave him a catalogue of the things that are within, which she had wrought with her owne hands, and desyred that they might be dedicat to God, and so delyvered the key to the Bishop, who went in and preached a sermon of consecration, and baptised a child, and then went to their foisting. His text was upon Solomons dedication of the temple. " Then the rolles were called. " Mr. Alexr Kerse said — Besyde that he is guiltie of the breake of the Caveats, there are many grosse faults proven against him ; and therefore, albeit he has not subscryvit the declinatour, he deserves deposition and excommunication. " And the whole Assembly voited the samine, except Mr Richard Inglis, and two or three raore, who voited onlie to his deposition." Records ofthe Kirk, pp. 170, 171- " Abredonensi Episcopo objectum prseter vulgaria Episcoporum criraina, flagrans Simonise scandalura, quod libros illos Canonura & liturgiae pastoribus obtrusisset, quod pastores a ministerii functione suspenderit, quia die Dominico jejunium publicum celebrassent ; quod in Synodis provincialibus tyrannidem exercuisset, ac in iis Canones de jejuniis condiderit, pas toribus non consultis : quod Capellas superstitiose dedioasset ; quod Pontificios, & incestus scandalo flagrantes ab ecclesiasticis censuris, reluctante ecclesia, liberasset : Addebant alii, malitiosse apostasiae crimen foedum ; nam licet olira disciplinse purioris acerrimus esset pro- pugnatos, ac prsefervido zelo coUegis gravis fuisset ; postea tamen tempori & scenae serviens, Episcoporum conatibus promovendis sese totum tradiderit : Quare ab omni functione eccle siastica deponitur ac Excommunicandus decernitur." Historia Motuum, pp. 267, 268.] (1) [" Upon tbe 24th of November [1639], Mr. David Bellenden, sone to the bishop, and person of Kincar dine, departed this life in his father's house; and, without ane funeral sermon, was buried." SFalding*. Hist. Troub. vol. i,, p 86.] 136 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. that he had no flocke which he tooke the charge of ; that he had turned his backe. In a manner, upon his charge, and had involved himself wholly into secular afialres, and was become a constant attender of the Kings court or councell ; that he defended many grosse errors of poperye, and all the he terodoxies of the Arminians, publickly both by himself and his associatts ; finaUy, that he was a maine instrument of all the troubles and calamityes of the kyngdome for some tyme past, ane abbetter therof, a boutefeu betuixt the King and his loyall subjectes, stirring upp the King against them ; that his crymes wer notorious^ ; that he had declyned the Assembly and refoosed to appeare : For which reasones the Assembly did vote him to be deposed, and to be excommunicated as infamouse.W Mr. James LXXVIII. The next bishop called upon was Mr. James Wedderburne, Wedderburn, bishop of Dumblaine,* who lately was fledde to Englande. It was objected DunWane against him that he had been very active in drawing upp the Booke of Canons and Service Booke, and therin had concurred with the bishopp of Rosse ; that he had rigorously obtruded them upon the ministers ; that all the tyme (1) [Historia Motuum, p. 268; Records of the Kirk, p. 171. "Ross followed," says Baillie ; " his process was no ways perfect. The long legend of his erroneous doc trines was clean oraitted. It was committed to Durie to search for witnesses of a nuraber of errors, which all knew he gloried to preech even in Edinburgh ; but Durie's information carae not in tirae ; however, it was proven that two years ago he was a public reader in his own house and cathedral of the English liturgy; that he was a bower at the altar, a wearer of the cope and rotchet, a deposer of godly rainisters, and an admitter of fornicators, a com panion with Papists, an usual carder on Sunday ; yea, instead of going to thanksgiving on a communion-day, that he called for cards to play, had often given absolution, consecrate deacon?, robbed his vassals of 40,000 merks, kept fasts ilk Friday, journeyed usually on Sunday, had been a chief decliner of the assembly, and a prime instrument of all the troubles both of church and state. Of his excommunication no man made question." Letters, vol. i. p. 136.] ¦* Nota : Spang, in his Historia Synodi, [Historia Motuum, p. 274] referres the sen tence and depositione of tho bishop of Dunblaine to session ninetenth, December twelfth, die Mercu? ii ; yet Mr. Thoraas Abernetthy, who was present at the .\ssembly, referrs hira to this seventeenth session, and affirmns that it was night when he was calld upon, and that for want of light to wrytte, he could not gett his crymes insert: so sayes his manu script, which is in my hands at the wrytting of this. [The deposition of the bishop of Dunblane seems to have been in the seventeenth session, on the tenth December. See Records of the Kirk, pp. 45, 171. Spang appears to have been misled by his correspondent Baillie. See his Letters, vol. i. p. 141. "I forgot Dumblane's jjrocess. Though hedid not subscribe the dechnature, neither was person.dly sumraoned, having fled to-England; yet was he excommunicated, as one who had been a special instrument of all our raischiefs, having corrupted with Arminianisra divers with his discourses and lectures in St. Andrew's, whose errors and perverseness kythes this day in all the nooks of the kingdom, having been a special penner, practiser, urgor of our books, and all novations. What drunkenness, swearing, or other crimes were libelled, I do not remember."] Ch. LXXIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. ^^^ of his being bishop that he had so carryd himself as if he had tackne plea- A. D. 1638. sure to trample upon the churche ; that he was lying under a pregnant scandall of drunknesse, swearing, and profaning the Lordes daye ; that when he was professor of divinitye in Saint Andrews, it was his uswall cus tome for to inveighe upon many of thes thinges that are receaved In the reformed churches, and to render them dlstastfuU to the hearers, his scoUers ; that he praised the wryttings of papistes and Arminians, and re commended them to his hearers above all others, wherby he did Infect them with all the Arminian errors, and not a few popish errors also, wherby many pairtes of the kyngdome wer infected, and felt the evIU : For which rea sones, with unanimouse vote, he was presently degraded from the minis teriall functione, and ordained to be excommunicated solemnlye. LXXIX. As earles, at ther creatione, use to have some nominate Mr. James knyghtes, to attend them who at that solemnity are knyghted, so the """^^ bishopps, at ther degradatione, had some ministers who bore them com- panye. In the closure of this sessione, one Mr. James Forsythe,(0 a minis ter, was citted to compeer. His accusatione being reade, bore that he was a lewd man in doctrine, lyfe, and conversatione ; that he taught Arminian isme ; that one daye, being In company of ane other minister, as he was about to distribute the elements of the communion, he Interrupted his col league, saying, Siste parumper frater, est quod agam, and then immediatly brouo-ht in a serjeant or messenger at armes to the churche, whom he caused instantly charge aU his parishioners with horning to pay him his vicerage,. who wer conveened to the number of eighteen hundereth communicantes, at which some wer so scandalised, that presently they left the church and would not communicate (and no marvell they did so, If this was true), but forsooke ther devoutions.(2) My informer* complaines he had not light to wrytte the (1) [Minister at Kilpatrick.] (2) [Records of the Kirk, p. 171. " Mr. James Forsyth bare up the bishops train that day. His bill carried sundry foul-like faults, whereof they say he might have cleared him self for the raost part ; but it was his humour to be a deqliner of the assembly, and for no request of friends would pass therefrora. He was accused of reading an inhibition for the teinds against his people on the first communion-day at the table, and betwixt sermon and celebration ; for teaching the lawfulness of bowing at the narae of Jesus ; that our covenant was seditious, treasonable, Jesuitic ; that who kneeled not got no good at the communion. He gave raoney at his entry for his place, and struck a beggar on the Sabbath-day. A number of such things were libelled, and urged hotly against him. The moderator, and others, for his sister's sake, had a great mind to have delayed him ; but no man speaking for him, he was deposed." Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 136.] • Mr. T. A. [Thomas Abernethy.] s 138 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Mr. John Graham, bishop of Orkney. Sessio 18. December 11 Tewsdaye. Mr. John Guthry, rest of Mr. James Forsyth his crymes : However, he was, by unanimouse vote, depryved from his ministrye, and appoynted to be excommunicate, ex cept he make his publicke repentance ; but, in speciall, if he doe not retreate his subscriptione to the declinator givne against the Assembly, and ob leidge himself to obey all the actes therof. And with his sentence the sessione ended for that night. LXXX. The next day, in the fomoone, they satt againe, and proceeded with the tryaU of the rest ofthe bishopps. Mr. [George] Grahme,W bishopp of Orkney, was first publickly citted. His accusation was the breatch of all the cautions ; that he had tackne bandes from ministers at ther entrye for to observe Pearth Articles, etc. ; that he was a publicke profaner of the Lordes daye ; that he had sqwandard and dilapidate the church living in favours of his sonnes and of other gentlemen ; that he had not putt churche censurs in execution against adulterers and divyners ; that he had extor tioned the ministrye for a contributione for to reedifie his cathedrall churche : His maine accuser was one Mr. William Steward. His sentence was (seing he had sent his submissive epistle to the synode, wherin he declared that he would yeild obedience to all the actes therof, and had therin declared that he never loved the noveltyes obtruded upon the churche by the bishopps), that he should only be deposed from the ministeriall functione ; and. In caise he gave not seriouse signes of repentaunce (which the yeare following he gave In to the Assemblye at Edinburgh by a solemne subscrybed recan- tatione), for to bee excommunicate.(^) LXXXI. The next who was citted In order with the rest, was Mr. Johne (1) [George Graham, son ofthe laird of Inchbraky, was proraoted to the see of Dunblane in 1606, whence he was translated to that of Orkney in 1615. " He was," says Bishop Keith, " very rich, and being threatened by the Assembly at Glasgow, he renounced his Episcopal function ; and, in a letter, declared his unfeigned sorrow and grief for having exer cised such a sinful office in the church. By this submission, being only deposed, he was not excoraraunicated ; and thereby he saved his estate of Gorthie and the money he had upon bond, which otherwise would all have fallen under escheat." Catal. of Scot. Bishops, p. 227. " He was a man of a httle spirit, so that being threatened by the Covenanters, he abjured episcopacy in a very abject manner 1639, and joining the Presbyterians took the charge of a privat parish." MS. Account of Scotish Bishops.] (2) [Historia Motuum, p. 269; Records of the Kirk, p. 171. "Orkney's process came first before us. He was a curler on the ice on the Sabbath-day ; a setter of tacks to his sons and good sons, to the prejudice of the church ; he oversaw adultery, slighted charming, neglected preaching, and doing any good there ; held portions of ministers stipends for building his cathedral : yet for his mislike of ther late novations, and letter of submission to the synod, he was only deposed, and ordained, under the pain of excommuni cation, to give tokens of repentance against such a day." Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 137.] Ch. LXXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 139 Guthrye, bishopp of Murreye.C) His accusatione was, besyde the breache of A. D. 1638. the cautions, that he had putt on the surplice In the High Church of Edin- ,-,;g'i~^ burgh, anno 1633, and had then professed that, for to please the King, he Murray. would become yet mor vyle ; that he had sold churches, particularlye had sold the benefice of Abercherder,(2) to Mr. Richard Maitland, which. If It wer true, its lycke that Mr. Richard bought It deer, being accused by the pres bytrye of Strabogye at that tyme for having bought it from the cedent, (Mr. Walter Haye) ; that he had givne warrant for to baptise children begottne in fornicatione without consent of the ministrye or satisfactione by the pairtye ; that he had suffered one Mr. Johne PeeterC^) to teache Arminian isme. After some contest about the manner of his censure. It was voted, because he was not personally citted, that he should only be deposed for the tyme ; and, in caise he macke not his publicke repentaunce in Edinburgh, wher he had preached befor King Charles with a surplice, to the great scandall of the zeelouse people ther, that he shall be excommunicated upon his refusall to submitt to the Assemblys ordinance, which was afterward acordingly done solemnly upon his contumacye. (*) (1) [John Guthrie, laird of That Ilk, minister, first at Perth, afterwards at Edinburgh, was promoted to the see of Murray in 1623. After the Glasgow Asserably, " he did not, as other Bishops, fly into England, but kept possession of the Castle of Spynie ; and when the Covenanters took arms anno 1640, he garrisoned it. But in July that year. Major General Munro marched with 300 men to reduce it. Mr Joseph Brodie, Minister at Keith, and son-in-law to the Bishop, prevailed with hira to surrender, on July 16th, and only the arms and riding horses were carried oif. The Bishop retired to his paternal inheritance of Guthrie in Angus." Shaw's History of Moray, p. 318. " Here he lived contentedly and hospitably, and dyed much lamented." MS. Account of the Scotish Bishops. See Keith's Catal. Scot. Bish. p. 152.] (2) [Now more commonly called Marnoch, from the patron saint. Saint Marnoch, or Mar- nan, whose reliques, preserved here, were of old held in great reverence. See Registrum Moraviense, pp. 246 — 251.] (3) [Probably " Mr. John Peter, rainister at St. Andrews Kirktoun, in Murray," who, about April, 1640, "was deprived for not subscriveing the covenant." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 195.] (4) [Moraviensi episcopo preter vulgaria Episcoporum omnium crimina, objicitur, quod ille primus ausus fuerit superpelliceo indutus sacra peragere, in primario EdenburgenEe civi tatis templo, anno 1633. professus se in regis gratiam, quem palpabat, viliorem adhuc futurura : Ab omni ecclesiastica functione removetur ; nequaquam tamen excommunicandus, nisi Synodi judicio sese submittere renuat." Historia Motuura, p. 269. " Murray had all the ordinary faults of a bishop ; besides his boldness to be the first who put on his sleeves in December, made many urge his excomraunication ; but because he was not formally summoned, the moderator, with some piece of violence, kept hira from that sentence ; and when some objected publickly, he assured he had no reason, for of all the bishops, he had been to him most injurious. I assented the more willingly to the modera tor's lenity in this, hoping to have obtained to poor Glasgow the like favour ; which he 140 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B, IIL A. D. 1638. Mr. Patrick Lindsay, archbishopof Glasgow. LXXXII. After' ^ome conferences and delayes, the archbishopp of Glasgow, Mr. Patricke Lindsey,(0 who all the whyle was resident in his aun house (hard by the Asembly), was called upon. It was reported that he was contented verbaUy to passe from the bishopps declinator (wharof he was a subscryber), but only he would recant It verbally, not by his subscrip tione. The Asemblye thought not that sufficient ; therfor they proceeded to his tryall, though he refoosed to compeir. The articles that he was accused upon was that (besyde the common guilt of all the bishopps) he instantly craved, but all in vain. A fourteen days ago Mr Henry Rollock excommunicated Murray, and that, as I think, in the great church, to perform, as he said, the raan's own prophecy, who said in that place, he would yet be more vile to please the King. There was objected against him, but, as I suspect, not sufficiently proven, his countenancing of a dance of naked people in his own house,, and of women going barefooted in pilgrimage not far frora his dwelling." Baillie's Letters, vol. i., p. 137. " Then there was given in a proces against Mr John Guthrie, pretendit Bishop of Murray, wherein it was found that he had transgressed all the Caveats. It was objected that the Assembly could not proceed against him, in respect he was not personallie sum mondit. The clerk answered that he had summonded him at the Kirk of Edinburgh and Leith, the ordinarie places of citatione in ecclesiasticall causes. 2diie, That he was per sonallie summonded ; but the executions of the summonds was not produced ; 3dlie, It was answered, that the 2 Caveats obleissed every ane of them to compeir before everie As semblie, to make accompt of their doings ; 4, "That the protestatione was sufficient, protest ing that it might be instead of suramonds for thera. " Mr Androw Cant said that he knew him to be a coramon ryder on the Sabbath day, and lykewayes that he was a prettie dancer, as Mr Thoraas Abernethie can testifie. At his daughters brydell, he danced in his shirt. Lykewayes, Mr Androw said, that he con veyed some gentleworaan to a chappell, to make a pennance, all bair footed. .This Mr ¦ Thomas Abernethie declaired to be of trueth. " IVtr Frederick Carmichaell said, that the Bishop being, by occasion, ryding from the church on the Sunday morning, he was desyred to stay all the night, becaus it was the Sabbath day. He answered, he would borrow that piece of the day from God, and be as good to him some uther gate. " The Moderatour said — I think, though he hes not subscryvit the declinatour, yet deposi tion should passe against him, if the Assemblie thinks it good ; and, if he declair his contu macie afterward, when the sentence of the Assemblie comes to his hearing, they will declair that he shall be worthie of excommunication. " Then the rolles were called. " Mr Alex' Kerse said — His not subscryving the declinatour deserves some mitigating consideration. Therefore, I think he should be deposed for the present, not exeeming him from excommunication, if he continow obstinat ; for he deserveth both : and the rest of the Assembly voited the same. Some voited that he should make his repentance in the church of Edinburgh, where, he said, he w'' be more vyld in the eyes of uncals \unco's, strangers'], for the pleasure of his king. Twelfe did voite he should presentlie be excom municat." Records ofthe Kirk, pp. 171, 172.] (1) [Patrick Lindsay, a cadet of the old and honourable house of Edzell, was raised to the see of Ross in 1613, whence he was translated to that of Glasgow in 1633. After the Glasgow Assembly he retired into England, where he died at an advanced age, it is said in 1641, certainly before the 23d July, 1644. Baillie's Letters, vol. ii. p. 44; Keith's Catal Scot. Bish. pp. 264, 265.] Ch. LXXXIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 141 waited mor upon court and High Comissione then upon his charge ; that, A. D. 1638. for preaching twyce in his diocesse, he had receaved mor then fifty thousand merkes of emoluments ; that he made actes and constitutions without con sent of his bretheren, chaunged and made ministers and moderators of presbyterys at his owne pleasure ; that he would suffer no expectant to preache till he subscrybed oathes with trifling articles in them of his own up drawing; that he tooke unlaufull oathes of ministers at ther entrye; that he planted ministers in paroshins who understood not ther langwage ; that he charged ministers to receave the Service Booke with letters of horning, wherin he was singular, and had done the lycke by the Booke of Canons at a provinciaU synode ; that he gave a testimoniaU of a good lyfe to a very scandalouse minister ; that he did discharge all expectants who would not first tacke the order of deacon, then of presbyter, and last of pastor ; that he both fyned and confyned the best ministers, and admitted of others, without advyce, who were lewd men ; that he was slow In punishing crymes, specially the fornicatione of one Alexander Mortimer with the bishopps daughter in the bishops house ; that he was a great extortioner of his vassalls and ane oppressor^of the ministers, and had tackne ten libs. Scottish, from eache of them yearly, under colour of his expences for agenting the church affairs at court ; that he was a seller of comissariotts, clerkeshlpps, and procutor fiscalls places for moneye, as also of benefices and patronages ; that he had stopped the processe of excommunication without consent of the ministrye, and relaxed some from excommunication after that manner. ('' His sentence was depositione, and, if he submitt not to the Assemblye, excommunication ; to which pourpose he gott no longer breathing tyme then the thirteenth of December, two dayes after, for to advyse; but that day, for his contumacye, he was excommunicate with others of the bishopps. LXXXIII. The bishop of ArdgyUe, or Lissmoir, Mr. James FaIrUe,(2) Mr. James was staged in the next place. His crymes wer alledged to be that he had fairley, compeUed the ministry to sweare unlaufull oathes (viz. to obey Pearthe gyle?'' ° ^' Articles, etc.) ; that he had obtruded the leiturgye ; had profaned the Lords (0 [See Baillie's Letters, vol. i., pp. 137. 138 ; Historia Motuum, pp. 269, 270 ; Records of the Kirk, p. 172.] (2) [Jaraes Fairlie, one of the ministers of Edinburgh, was consecrated bishop of Argyll on the 15th July, 1637, according to Keith, or on the 8th August, 1637, according to other authorities. Stevenson's Hist, of Ch. of Scot. vol. i. p. 155. He afterwards conformed to the Presbyterian policy, and became minister of Laswade in Lothian.] 142 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. daye ; that he had preached Arminianisme, speciaUy universall grace, illus- trating it by the simile of a pilot in a storme, who intends to save all within the shipp but is hindered by the violence of the storme, not by the will of the maister of the shippe ; that he did not reside at his charge, nor preache, and, though he should doe so, that he could not be understoode by his Highland sheepe without ane interpreter ; that he was never in Argylle but once, and that only fyve nightes, at which tyme he preached not but exacted his rents. His owning Arminianisme was thought straunge of by some who knew him before tymes to be contrar mynded : some interpreted it to be rather complyance with the tymes as a waye to promotione.CO When his censure was voted, Mr. Alexander Carse, a border syde minister (who, for some years after, had the praescrybing leading vote(^) in Generall As semblyes till it was appoynted that presbytryes should beginne by turnes In a following Generall Assembly), jested at him, and calld him a most vigi lant pastor, who had never sleeped but fyve nights at his charge.C^) He was with the rest voted presently to be deposed ; and in caise he owne not the actes of the Assembly, to be excommunicate : Yet he was, upon his con forming to the tymes. In the foUowng yeares, placed againe into the minis trye, and sate In some General Assemblyes comissionair.* He had been but short tyme bishopp, and his exit was not very farr distant from his en- trado. Mr. Neil LXXXIV. Mr NIgeUt CampbeU,(*) bishopp of The Isles, his accusation bishop'of The ^^ reade next. His sinnes wer only breach of the caveatts, except that Isles. he was a non-resident ; had dilapidate the church goods by setting tackes of the tithes.(^) His censure was depositione, and except he submitt to the (1) [Historia Motuum, p. 270 ; Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 138.] (2) [" In the voicing," says Baillie, " it fell always on Mr Alexander Carse to be first ; very oft the man delivered his voice in a quick merry tale, so that he became to us all most pleasant." Letters, vol. 1. p. 125.] (3) [" Mr Alex' Kerse said — It is said of one that he was so vigilant a Consul that he sleeped nane all his tyme, for he was entered in the morning and put from it ere night. So was it with this Prelat ; for he sleipit but few nights in his Episcopall nest, and was not Weill warmed in his Cathedrall chyre, whill both chyre and cuschane was taken from him. Therefore, depose him only ; and if he obey not the sentence of the Assemblie, let him be excommunicat." Records ofthe Kirk, p. 172.] • Anno 1647. f Neill. (<) [Niel or Nigel Campbell was promoted to the see of The Isles in 1634. (5) [Baillie's Letters, voL i. p. 138; Historia Motuum, p. 270; Records ofthe Kirk p. 172.] Ch. LXXXV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 143 Assembly, excommunicatione. It seemes this bishopp was upon the waye of A. D. 1638. the primitive pietye that resyded in the West Isles, about the Isle of Hya, in the tymes of Columba and Aidanus ; being that, beyond aU the rest, no thing could be objected to him but his being bishopp : so that in all proba- bilitye the episcopall sanctitye was fled to the confynes of Christndome, to hallow anew the barbarouse appendices of the Scottish continent. Twas weall for him, however, that his episcopall sea was at such a distance with the episcopall superintendents, and himself stood at such a neer relatione to Argylle as his surname. LXXXV. Much of the tyme being spent in sentencing bishopps, the Several mi- reere of the sessione was fetched upp with the accusationes and censures of "'^'^j^^ °S" some ministers, all Anti-Covenanters, (for it is to be observed that in thes dayes nothing could be founde to be laide to the charge of any minister who tooke the Covenant,) by name Mr. Andrew Lambe ;(i^ Mr. Johne Mackmath ;(^) Mr. Francis Harvye ;('^ all accusd of Arminianisme, and lewde lyves ; and Mr. Christopher Knolls, who, to boote, was* saide to have gottne a chylde In adulterye, which his wyfe caused a freende of his tacke upon him to be father too. The tryall of all thes accusationes was referred to comittyes, in the respective boundes wher thes ministers lived. In the last place, Mr. Thomas Forrester, minister at Melrosse, his accu satione was reade, to which it Is unnecessair to adde any thinge by way of agredgment, if aU wer true. The presbytrye of Melrosse are saide to have been accusers all of them. It was affirmed that he had saide that preachinge was too common ; that ther was [no] absolute necessitye of it, and that it was no essentiall pairt of Gods worshipp ; that himselfe seldome preached on the Lordes daye ; that he was ane ordinar profaner of it, by keeping courtes and deboshd conversatione therupon ; that he saide that servile workes wer laufuU on that daye ; and had shewd his hearers, by his example, in leading in his corne upon that daye, for to contemne it ; that he had mantained that it was not of morall institutione, and that all who saide so wer leading men (0 [Or Lawmont. See Records ofthe Kirk, p. 172.] (2) [See Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 138. He was minister at Chirnside.] (3) [Ibid.] * Spang has not the confidence to insert this, although Mr. Thomas Abernethy, a ren- negado preest, deposed and chased out of the popish communion, for two fornications he is said to have fallne into in Catnesse, does, in his manuscript relation of this Asserably, racke into thes ordurs, and omitts nothing unregistered which was then published. [See Steven son's History of the Church of Scotland, vol. ii. p. 636.] 144 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. backe to Judaisme ; that conceived prayer by the spirit was but Idle fancyes, comparing such mens prayers to a bird in a cadge, flying heer and ther ; that ther cacologies and tautologies wer intoUerable ; that the right forme of prayer was booke prayer ; and of all thes, the Service Booke contained the best, which all both in publicke and privatt wer to macke use of ; that the readinge of the Service Booke (which he said was a puire and refynd booke), was mor necessaire then preachinge ; that he baptised ordinarly In his chamber, or in privat elsewher ; that at baptisme and absolution he used the signe of the crosse ; that he had caused breake the communion tables, and had converted the timber to privat uses, and In place therof had caused erecte ane altar, which he had caused enclose with a raile, wher himself stoode, giving the sacrament to the people who stoode without the chancell ; he said concerning sitting at the communion, that it was altoge ther unlaufull, for thus did men macke themselves alycke with Chryst, sitt ing cheeke for cheeke with Chryst ; concerning Chrysts presence, he saide it was a questione of curiositye to enqwyre if Chryst was present ther sa- cramentally, or by transubstantiation, or by consubstantlatione, since it was sure that Chrystes body was really present in the Lords Supper ; that he did mantaine aU the poyntes of Arminianisme, and severall poynts of poperye, viz. th.at merlte of workes wer Christian and commendable, and papistes who confyded In them wer saved; that he never used catechisme; that he wanted all reUigiouse worshipp at home; that he had kept upp summes of money mortifyde for piouse uses ; that he conversed with scandalouse companye ; that he said our faith as it was in anno 1580 is and was a falth- lesse faithe ; that he had raUed at Knoxe and other reformers of the church, and had oftne saide, both in publicke and in private discourse. That in few yeares they had done mor hurt to reUigione, then the pope and his factione in ten ages ; that he commonly used to cause dry ve his cowes through the churche to eate grasse in the churche yarde, yea and that he had caused mllke his cowes in the churche.(0 The laird of Libertoune and PhUipp Nisbitt proved that he was in Scott land since his citatione to ansuer the Assembly : For all thes reasons and others, he was, by unanimouse vote, deposed from the ministeriall charge and (1) [Baillie's Letters, vol. i., pp. 138, 139 : Historia Motuum, pp. 270, 271. A satu-ical poem on the Covenanters, in the form of a parody on the Litany, has been sometimes ascribed to him. Guthry's Memoirs, p. 39. It is printed in Maidment's Third Book of Scotish Pasquils, Edinb. 1838.] Ch. LXXXVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 145 declared worthy of the highest church censures : And after his censure past A. D. 1638. the sessione ended. LXXXVI. The Assembly mett againe Wedlngsdaye, Decembris twelve, Lindsay, which daye was the nineteenth sessione therof. Mr. Alexander Lindsey, (') Dunkeld bishop of Dunkeld, was citted at their downe sitting. His sonne ansuered Sessio 19 for him, and presented to the Assembly a letter from his father, wherin he December 12. shewed that he was lying under a long sicknesse ; that he desyred to be con- Wedmgsdaye. tinowed in his bishoppricke If the Assembly intended to lett episcopacye stande in vigour ; otherwayes, he said he was content to dimltte his place and to obey all the actes and constitutiones of the Assembly. His accusa tion was that he was avaritiouse ; that he had sold the comissaryes place ; that he planted ministers, who understood not Irish, into paroshines wher ther was not a worde Scottish ; that, without advyce of the ministrye, he had givne warrants for privett marrladges ; that he had erected ane new paroshin, and had givne the rentes of ane hospittall to be the ministers steepende, wherby all who belonged to the hospitall (if any did) behoved either for to begg or starve ; that he had rejected able men from the minis trye because they refoosed to conforme to Pearthe Articles, etc. After the tryall of bis guilt, many voted to excommunicate him because he had peti tioned that (antiepiscopaU) Assembly for a bishoppricke ; others saide he ought to be depryved absolutly from the ministeriall functione, and sub joyned that a deade stocke lyck him had nothing to doe with such a call- Inge ; but the major pairt determined the vote to be that he should be pre sently depryved from his episcopall functione, and suspended from the mi nistrye tUl he macke his publicke repentaunce and macke sufficient provi sione for the hospitall which he had woronged : And, for to oversee his repentaunce and the restitutione of what he had tackne awaye, wer ap poynted Mr. Robert Murrey, minister at Methven ; Mr. Jon Robertson, minister at Saint Johnstoun ; Mr. Johne Freebaime ; Mr. Johne Fleeming ; Mr. George Wishart ; Mr. WiUiam Menezes ; Mr. George Summer ; the lairdes of Moncriefi", and Lawers ; and some others who wer delegate as a comittye to examine such thinges as wer not made out against him.^^i This was all the favour that his letter could purchase, mor it would if he had not (I) [Alexander Lindsay, brother to the laird of Evelick, was promoted to the see of Dunkeld in 1608. " He being threatn'd 1638 and having before amass'd riches, abjur'd Episcopacie, and accepted a private parish." MS. Account of Scotish Bishops.] (2) [See Records ofthe Kirk, p. 173.] 146 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Abernethy, bishop of Caithness. Wedderburn, bishop of Dunblane. Moderator ordered to pronounce,next day, the sentence of [deposition] of fourteen bishops. Mr. Andrew Rollock re nounces his subscription of the Declina tor. Sentences read over. supplicated for a bishops place : However, to encourage others to submis sione, it was appoynted, after his repentaunce, that he should be planted as minister in the paroshin of* St. Medoce. LXXXVII. Yow have heard befor concerning Mr. Johne Abernethy, the bishop of Catnesse, his submission to the Assemblye. He being citted at this tyme, his accusatione was reade, viz., that he was guilty of simonye. His censure was only that he should be deposed from the episcopall charge, and his repentaunce to be made acording to his abilitye at the sight of some of his owne friendes (for he had subscrybed the Covenant alreadye), who wer nominated to bee Mr. Thomas WUkye, Mr. Thomas Abemethye, Sir WiUiam Dowglasse, Sir Thomas Keerr, and some others. LXXXVIII. I gave ane accounte of the accusatione givne in against Mr. James Wedderburne, bishop of Dumblane, who at this tyme was enacted with others to be deposed and excommunicate. LXXXIX. And now ther remained nothing but that thes arrestes of the Assembly should be solemnly pronounced ; which, after some debate about the circumstances therof, was concluded in ende to be delayed no longer then the next daye: The reason by some was aUeadged, because it was to be feared that the privy councell should sende some new man date prohibiting the pronouncing of the sentence of excommunicatione against the bishopps ; but it is lycke that the Assembly would have little regarded any such warrant. To this pourpose, therfor, it was ordained that the moderator, the very next day, in the great church of Glasgow (which was the house wher the synode sate), should solemnly pronounce the severall sentences against the fourteen bishopps as they wer respectivly voted. In the ende of this sessione Mr. Andrew RoUocke, minister at Dunse, came in and renounced his subscription of the bishopps declinator, protest ing that he did it out of Ignorance, having been bredd upp in England, and had not been sufficiently Informed of the constitution of the Church of Scottland till now. The Earle of Hume stood upp and pleaded for him, and shewed he had been but two yeares in Scottlande ; wherupon he was, without furder censure, admitted to macke a publicke recantatione in his owne churche befor some of his compresbyters. Though it was drawing towards night, yet the clerke, by warrant of the * Sammedoose. [Now commonly written St. Madoes. It is situated within the nresbv- tery of Perth.] ^ ^ Ch. XC] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 147 Assembly, did reade over all the sentences that wer to be solemnly pro- A. D. 1638. nounced against the bishopps the next daye. Nothing mor was done that night save only ane act past for the trans- plantatlone of a minister called Mr. James Cunninghame, upon his owne pressing desyre. XC. Acording to yesterdayes ordinance, the members mett be eight Ceremony of aclocke in the morning, in the High Churche of Glasgow, wher the moder- the"entences ator was to pronounce the sentence of excomunicatione solemnly against the of cxcommu- bishopps, and to preache. Befor the sermone begunne, one James Sanders, ""^^'''o"- church townes reader and precentor, readde some pairt of the Scripture ; jf^^^l ^^jo and being left to his owne choise, did read the sixteenth chapter of Johne, Tursdaye. which beglnnes thus : " Thes thinges have I spockne unto yow, that ye should not be offended. They shall put you out of the Synagogues : yea, N. B. the time commeth, that whosoever killeth yow, will thinke that he doeth God service," etc. This was constered as done pourposely to afiront the Assem blye ; and probably, the reader being episcopall. Mr. Andrew Ramsey had not the patience to lett the reader proceede, but will needs have him reade other chapters of the dewtyes of bishopps and pastors, and of the power of excomunicatione ; which the reader with some grumbling obeyed. When they came to the psalme, he caused singe the fifty-first psalm, which in the old translatione of the psalmes (then used) beglnnes, " O Lord, considder my distresse. And now with speede some pittie tacke." This was interpreted as sunge in favours of the distressed bishops ; yet the psalme was sung without Interruptione ; but when afterwarde the reader was chaUendged in common discourse for so doing, he excused himself that what he did was ignorantlye done. However the Assembly did lett It passe with out challendge. The churche was crowded with people who came together to be specta tors of this unuswall fulmlnatione ; yet the Assembly did provyde that the Earle of Weems, the Lord Burleyh, and Lord Sinclaire should keepe that place of the churche (wher the Assembly sate) for the members themselves, who sate altogether, and heard sermone which was made by the moderator, who beganne with a conceved prayer, first confessing sinne, and then peti tioned for a blessing on the ensewing actione. Prayer being ended, he told, by way of preface, the actione which he was to goe about, and shewed what the miserable unhappiness was of Impenitent sinners (the bishopps) ; that 148 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. the church last remedy against such was that which he was now to use, in name and by authoritye of the Assemblye against thes wretches (the bishopps) who had endeavoured to destroy the crowne and kyngdome of Chryste, and yet for all that remained contumaciouse and impenitente ; and, therfor, he exhorted all men to pray with him for them that this censure might be for the weaUe of ther soules, as it was a punishment to ther bodyes : And then he feU againe to praye most earnestly for that effecte, and with great zeale. The text of his sermoneC) he tooke out of the hundreth and tenth psalme, verse first, " The Lord said unto my Lord, Sitt thow at my right hande, untili I macke thine enemyes thy footestoole," etc. After divisione of his texte, and muche spockne concerning Gods decree of Chrystes victory, and consequentlye how infalUble it was, which I omitte as tediouse to be men- tiond heer ; in ende, he came to tell the hearers that ther was a subordina- tione betuixt God and us, God the upper ende of the lyne, and we the lower, and the middle tye Chryst, represented ther by David our superior ; that from God, by Chryste, aU graces lineally doe descende upon us ; that no grace flowes downe upon thoise who are not within that lyne perpendicu- larlye : Then he exorted aU to keep the lyne, and looke to the heade of the lyne, and not to looke to them (the bishopps) who wer out of the lyne. Some may thinke that this applicatione was strained ; but if the bishopps wer out of the lyne, as he did putt them out of the churche, he would have done weall at that tyme to have cleared In what pairt of the lyne, in the waye of subordinatione to God, did the churche comissione judicatorye stande, which at this Assembly beganne to be projected, and in few yeares overpowred synods, and grewe dreadfuU to Generall Assemblys, who mo- delized it as ther oune lasting delegatione. How soone his sermon was ended, which continowd but about one howre, he related to the hearers the historye of the bussnesse in hande, and then caused Mr. Archbald Johnstone reade the actes of Assembly contaning the severaU censures of the bishopps, which wer drawne upp in five particular actes. The first acte* bore a sentence of depositione and summaire excommuni catione (very summair, indeed, for it was without any citatione,) of the (1) [It will be found in the Records ofthe Kirk, pp. 174 — 178.] * See print Actes of the Asembly of Glasgow, pag. 14, et seqq. [Records of the Ku-k, pp. 26—28.] Ch. XC] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 149 bishopps of Saint Andrewes, Glasgow, Edinburghe, Galloway, Rosse, and A. D. 1638. Brechen. The narrative was. That whereas the Assembly had heard the ' lybells and complaintes, givne in against thes saide bishopps to the presbytry of Edinburgh, and sundry other presbytryes within ther diocesses, and by the saides presbytryes referred to be tryed by the Assembly : [The said bishopps] being laufuUy citted, oftne called, and ther procutor. Dr. Robert Hamiltoune, not compeering, but declynlnge the Assemblye, which is a thing censurable by actes of Assemblye with summaire excommunicatione : The Assembly having considdered ther Declinator and founde it irrelevaunt, a displayd banner against the churche, full of insolent speeches, lyes, and comtumelyes against this Assemblye, proceeded to the tryall of the saides complaintes and lybells ; and fynding them guUty of the breache of the cau tions of the Assembly at Montrosse, 1600, etc. for receiving of episcopall consecratione, for usurping power of the High Comissione, pressing the church with novationes, and for sundrye other haynouse offences and enor- mityes, at lenth expressed and clearly provne In ther processe ; and for ther refoosing to underlye the reigning slander of sundrye other grosse trans gressions and crymes laid to ther charge : Therfor the Assembly, moved with zeale to Gods glory, etc. ordaines them to be deposed, and by thir presentes deposes them, not only of the office of comissionarye to vote in parliament, councell, or convention, in name of the kirke, but also of aU functiones of ther pretended episcopall or ministeriall callinge ; declareth them Infamouse ; and lyckwayes ordaineth the saides pretended bishopps to be excommuni cated, and to be holdne as hethnlckes, etc. ; and the sentence of excom municatione to be pronounced by Mr. Alexander Hendersone, moderator, in face of the Assemblye in the High Kirke of Glasgow, and the execu tione of the sentence to be Intimate in all the kirkes of Scottlande, by the pastors of evry particular congregatione, as they will be ansuerable to pres bytryes, or synodes, or the next Generall Assembly, in caise of the negli gence of presbytryes and synods. The second acte contained a sentence of depositione and of excommuni catione of the bishopps of Aberdeen and Dumblane. The narrative is almost the same with the former, so needs not to be repeated. The third acte containes a sentence of depositione against the bishopps of Murrey, Orkney, Argylle, and of the Isles. It differed nothing from the former, but that they are appoynted to be excommunicate. In caise they macke not ther repentaunce and submitte to the decrees of the Assemblye. 150 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. The fourth acte has the depositione of the bishop of Dunkeld, who, in caise he submitte, Is only suspended, and, upon his repentaunce, continowd in the ministrye of the churche of Saint Madoze ; otherwayes to be excom municated. The fyfth acte, containing the depositione of Mr. John Abernethy, bishop of Catnesse, is the same with the fourth, only It names not a particular benefice to him, but declares him conditionaUy capable of one. After the reading of thes sentences, the moderator made a discourse(0 for half ane bower, concerning the necessitye and power of the sentence of ex communicatione, specially at that present tyme ; and then he exhorted all to pray with him, that that which he did bynde on earth might be bounde in heaven, etc. : And then the sentence of delyvering six of the bishopps Into the handes of the deviUe was thundered out, tUl they repent ; then he prayed againe to the forsaide pourpose ; then ther was a psalme sunge, which was the texte : After the blessinge, he exhorted all men not to frequent the company of thes excommunicat bishopps as they had done befor. This sentence, although pronounced with great zeale and solemnitye, yet few or non did or would be seen to show any recentment therof amongst the beholders, for ought that could be remarked, except some of the mor Ignorant sorte, who are amazed at noveltyes ; and many wer present who wer much rejoyced at It, as the most gloriouse solemnitye that ever they had seene. Upon this ther procedure against the bishopps, sundry have since that tyme past ther censure, that the Assembly proceeded most strlcklye against such of the bishopps as had acted most episcopally, and for others of them who had nothing of bishopp in them bot the title and the revenue, they wer most gently handled. The King complaines that they have printed the sentence of the bishopps, which beare not the particular crymes which wer provedC^) ; yet he might have knowne that it was needlesse, for it was cryme eneuche to have been bishopps ; other thinges wer givne in against them ex superabundanti, specially against thoise of the number who wer most hatefuU to the Covenanters. Earl of Wig- XCI. The Assembly sate down about two aclocke afternoone, which was *°"' opned with a prayer of thanksgiving to God, for the good that the churche (1) [See Records ofthe Ku'k, pp. 179, 180.] (2) [See the King's Large Declaration, p. 317.] Ch. XCL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 151 had that daye receaved. The first thing that was done was the presenting of a letter from the* Earl of Wigtoune, shewing the reasone why he could not waite sooner upon the Assembly, and that he was coming to sitt with them ; which he did acordinglye the next daye. A complaint therafter was givne in against one Mr. William Annane, minister at Aire. Its contents wer. That he taught erroneouse doctrine ; that he kept sainctes dayes and holy dayes ; that he railed on such as op posed the Service Booke, and compared the author therof to the author of Job ; that he had deserted his flocke eight moneths ; that he taught that dea cons and elders wer not laufull. If they did not continow ad vitam ; that it was laufull to heare the devill preache ; that he was a common drunkard, a swearer, and had sworne that the communione gesture was only kneeling, that we wer not to sitt cheeke for cheeke with Chryste ; that he wished to God that the popish orders wer in this churche ; that he invelghd on ex- temporarean prayer, and, in presence of a whole provinciall synode, had praised the Service Booke ; finally (which was a capitall guilt), that he had subscrybed the bishopps Declinator. For this he was by vote deposed from his minlstrye.C'^ Mr. Robert Hamiltoune, minister at Lesmahago, and one Mr. Henrye Scrimgeor, ane minister also, wer calld upon, and a number of articles readde of ther guilte; but It was affirmed that they wer both penitent (id est, had subscrybed the Covenante) ; therfor both wer pardoned. The coming in to the Assembly of the first was daylye expected; and Mr. Henry Scrim geor was present, whom the laird of KeillorC^) did persecute so hottly to be ridde of him out of ther paroshin, that Mr. Henrye was contented to be de posed at the closure of the Assembly, and not to be admitted againe till the ministrye see relevaunt signes of his repentaunce and amendment. Mr. Robert Hamiltons sentence was delayd till his awne coming to the Assem blye. Dr. Robert HamUtoune,* minister at Glassford, was next caUd upon. A. D. 1638. Mr. William Annane. Mr. Robert Ha milton; and Mr. Henry Scrimgeor. Dr. Robert Hamilton, at Glassford. Mr. Thomas Mackenzie, archdeacon of Ross. Dr. George Wisheart, of St. Andrews. * He declared in his letter that he had subscrybed the Covenant in the sence of 1 580, and did submitt to the A.ssemblye. [Records of the Kirk, p. 180.] Spang [Historia Motuura, p. 275] sayes that his letter was presented, session twenty-first, die Veneris, Decembris fourteenth. (1) [Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 141 ; Historia Motuum, p. 274.] (2) [According to Baillie, the \&-aA oi " Newton, Rothes's uncle." Letters, vol. i. p. 142. See also Records of the Kirk, p. 182.] * See Dr. Hamilton his accusation, session thirteenth, [above, p. 56 ] 152 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. and his crymes wer readde over againe, which had before been once hearde ; for which he was appoynted to be deposed, and if he doe not macke his re pentaunce, to be excommunicate by his presbytrye ; but it was eneuch that he had presented the bishopps Declinator ; ther needed no mor. Mr. Thomas Mackenzie, archdeacon of Rosse, whoise comissione had been rejected, sessione quinta, was now calld upon as a delinquent, who thought to have sittne as a member. Sir Johne Mackeinzie of Tarbott was his ac- The lybeU bore that he was of ane insolent dissolute lyfe ; had cuser. Mr. Andrew Shepheard. Committees at Jedburgh, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. Sessio 2 1 . Decembris 14, Frydaye. fallne in' fornicatione ; a drunkard ; a swearer ; a merchant, not a minister ; a maltman and a multerer to Sir Johne Makeinzie, his accuser ; that he was pairtner of a little shipp or barke; that he pleaded other mens causes in Edinburgh, and neglected his charge ; that at his transplantatione, he did carrye with him the byble and other bookes belonging to the churche from whence he removed ; that he had marryd two persones without proclama tione of bandes, who had four childeren begottne in adulterye ; that he stoode much for all innovationes in the churche ; finally, that he had pre sented a protestatione against ruling elders unto the Assembly. For thes crymes he was deposed from his ministrye, and ordained to be excommuni cate, except he macke his repentaunce. Dr. George Wishart of St. AndrewsC'^ his accusatione closed this sessione ; but because he had not been formally citted to compeer befor the Assem bly, therfor the tryall therof was remitted to a commissione which was to sitte at St. Andrews, ther to purge outt such as the Assembly had not lei sour for : And this was the ende of that sessione. XCII. Upon the fourteenth of December, Frydaye, the Assembly sate againe, whiche was the twenty-first sessione therof; to which sessione came Mr. Johne Smart, minister at WIke, and presented a comissione from Cat nesse, who was admitted a member of the Assemblye, though he was lonf a comming. Next came in one Mr. Andrew Shepheard, a minister who had sub scrybed the bishopps Declinator, protesting with teares that he did it ignor antly, and begging to be licenced to blott out his name affixed therunto, which was graunted readily ; and since no bodye accused him for any other guUt, upon his promise of amendment, all bygones wer pardond. And because severall bills wer givne in from presbytryes, which the As- (0 [Afterwards bishop of Edinburgh, the faithful companion and accomplished biographer of Montrose.] Ch. XCIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 153 sembly had no leisour for to examine, therfore it was ordained that all thes complaintes should be tryed befor comittyes, which wer then constituted for that pourpose. To this ende, a comittye of ministers and ruling elders was ordained to sitt at Jedburgh and at Kirkubrlght ; one lyckwayes at Glasgow, and another at EdInburgh.W They had each of them ther limitts defyned to them, and they wer to trye such thinges as the Assembly, for want of lelsoure, could not. The power of the Generall Assembly was putt into eache of ther handes for the matters that they wer to judge upon, with this proviso, to be ansuerable for ther actings to the next Generall Assembly. The ende of ther sittlnge was mostly to cast out Anti- Covenanter ministers, specially such as wer active that way, who at this tyme wer only founde faultye. XCIIL All this whyle past the Assembly was busyd pulling downe the frame of episcopacye, and whatever they had sett upp ; as also in dryving out the bishopps and such ministers as adheared to them. Now, they thought it high tyme to laye the foundationes of the presbyterlane aedlfice, that It might appeare they had puUd doune one aedlfice for to build another upon its ruins. To which pourpose ther was a motione made for restoring provinciall synods to ther power and limitts, which they enjoyed befor episcopacye was sett upp. For bringing this overture to a poynte, ther was a choise made of the eldest members, who wer to joyne with the comittye for overturs, and informe what they knew of the ancient bownds of provincialls. Meane whyle they passe ane acte* restoring kirke sessiones, provinciaU, and nationall assemblyes unto ther fuU integrity e in ther members, preive leidges, libertyes, powers, and jurisdictiones, as they wer constitute by the Booke of Policye. The print acte mackes no mentione of presbytryes, which is either ane omissione of him who extracted the actes, otherwayes they are not mentioned, because. In the bishopps tymes, the presbytryes had mor freedom then the rest. And to the effect that they might all beginne to acte againe with ther ancient power and force, severall blUes, which wer presented to the Assembly, wer reade and referred backe to the respective presbytryes or provincialls. A. D. 1638. ProvincialSynods, Kirk Sessions, and National As semblies re stored. (1) [Records of the Kirk, p. 45.] * See print actes, pag. 30. [Records ofthe Kirk, p. 34.] Spang [Historia Motuum, p. 275] referres this to session twenty-second, but amisse. U 154 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. III. A. D. 1638. Dr. Patrick Panter. Town of Edinburgh. Mr. John Lundie- Bishop Patrick Forbes vindi cated. Bishop Elphingston's foundation. Sessio 22. Decembris 15. Saturdaye. Little mor was done in this session, except ane acte past for the presby trye of Achterardowrs sitting at Aber Ruthven. XCIV. The twenty-second sessione was held, Saturday, Decembris [fifteenth.] Little of consequence was done, except references of bUles to presbytryes or comittyes. Ane actione that related to Dr. Patrick Panter of Saint Andrews, was referred to the comittye which was to meet at Dundee. Therafter the towne of Edinburgh gave in, by ther commissioners, a de syre for to have a preiveleidge graunted to them for to macke choise of mi nisters out of any place of Scottlande, because they wer the cittye of great est resorte, also nominating Mr. Alexander Henderson, moderator, to be ther minister, who did declyn it. Ther desyre was referred to a comittye to heare ther reasones, and report them to the Assemblye. The townes of Brunt Island and Kinghorne gave in supplications for helpers to ther aged ministers, which wer graunted. Last of all, Mr. Johne Lundye, who was owned as comissioner for the Universitye of Aberdeene (though he hadno warrant but to be ther agent), (0 gave In a supplicatione in name of the Universitye, from which he had no such comissione ; (but thes practises of supplicating for suche as knew not grew common afterwardes, nay, and In name of such as wer opposite to the supplicantes and judicatoryes to which they applied themselves). He desyred, in name of the Universitye, that ther might be comissionairs appoynted for to visite it ; his reasones wer, because that Universitye was miserably op pressed by the bishops, who had tackne the rentes dwe to the regents and the professor of humanitye, (that was himselfe,) and employd them upon professors of the superstitiouse canon lawe.(^) (0^[See above, vol. i. pp. 154, 155.] (2) [" Mr John Lundie, professor of Humanity, gave in a supplication for a visitation of the Old college of Aberdeen, that whileas the parliament 1597, and assembly preceding, had granted them power to rectify their old foundation ; yet their bishop had destroyed that new rectification, and urged on them for consuming their rents, chantries, prebendaries, pro fessions of the Canon law, according to their old Popish foundation, by virtue of his place of Chancellor. Lord Balmerino protested for his interest. That Bishop Elphinston's first foundation should not be altered -. when Lundie, the University's comraissioner, replied, That they required no other alteration than of Popish offices opposed to the Reformed re ligion, which their bishop of new had posed on thera. But Balmerino and all consented to that petitioned visitation." Baillie's Letters, vol. i., p. 143. " Mr. John Lundie, as ye have befor, without warrand, desired the bishop of Aberdein as alleadged chancellor, Mr. James Sandielands canonist, and Doctor William Gordon medi- cinar, to be removed, as unnecessary members, frae the said Colledge, and unlawfully brought Ch. xciv.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 155 Ther could be no mor arrant lye then that supplicatione Its narrative ; for A. D. 1638. bishop Patricke Forbesse, laird of Corse, whom he reflected upon, who dyed but anno 1 635 befor, a gentleman of great worthe and Integritye, was knowne to be so farr from oppressing that Universitye, that, upon the contrarye, he freed it from oppressione, and erected a professour of divinitye ther, and made up a yearly revenewe to him by contributione, who yet standes to this daye. And, because its a great questione whither Mr. Johne Lundye or Mr. WUliam Spange, who has ingrost this In his Historia Motuum,(i) have done greatest woronge to bishop Patricke Forbesse his memorye, who deserved a better rewarde, I shall begge the readers patience to vindicate the fame and reputatione of that eminent and wyse bishopp, upon my certaine knowledge, having both seene oftne and lyckwayes perused the authenticke instruments of the foundatione of that Universitye, and relating what followes upon certaine Information. Bishopp William Elphinstone, by the Uberal contributione of King James the Fourth, besyde what he largly spent that way of his owne privat revenew, laide the foundatione of that Universitye, anno 1500 ; and what he could not (being preveend by death) bringe to a periode, he recommended by tes tament to be done by his successor, bishopp Gavin Dumbarr, to whom he left the expence for that pourpose. But befor he dyed, he sett downe the institutione of that Univer sity e(^) In a large Instruraent, which tackes up a in and established by umquhile Patrick bishop of Aberdein against the foundation set down be umquhile King James, takeing up the rents without any lawfull service, whilk rather be longed to the raasters and inward members of the said Colledge, who cairfully attended their callings for upbringing of the youth. The forsaid petition was given in befor the generall Assemblie without warrand of the Colledge raerabers, yet was weill heard by the Asserablie, who ordained ane comraittee to come and visite the said Colledge. The which comeing to the masters ears, directly accused the said Mr. John Lundie for passing by his commission, and giveing in such ane petition befor the said Asserablie, and accused hira befor the bishop Bellenden and other outward members of the said Colledge, alleadging he had wronged the liberties of the house, by drawing them under censure of ane comraittee of the assembly, who were only answerable to the king and his councell for any offence or over sight ; but the said Mr. John Lundie pleaded guiltie and confessed his error, and by ane act, not subscrived with his hand, confessed he had no warrand nor commission to the effect forsaid." Spalding's Hist, of Troub., vol. i., pp. 95, 96.] (1) [" Designati etiam qui Academiam Abredonensem visitarent, ejus ad synodum legato instante, ac querente, tantum non oppressam fuisse miseram illam Academiara usurpatione Episcopi, qui reditus artiura liberalium ac scientiarum professoribus destinatos transtulerit in Canonicos, prebendaries, juris Canonici Professores, & id genus damnatas a reformatis ecclesiis functiones." Historia Motuum, p. 276.] (2) [CoUegii Regalis Universitatis Aberdonensis Erectio, per Reverendum in Christo 156 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A D. 1638. booke of veleim parchement yet extant, subscrybed and sealed. He did obtaine from Pope Alexander sixth, and Julius second (as the fashion then was), and from the Kinge, that it should enjoye as ample preveleidges as the Universityes of Parise or Bononia ; that it should be ane Universitye for all sciences, etc. : Amongst the rest he instituted a professor for the civiU law, and another for the canon law. After the reformatione of the reUigione, the then members of the Universitye beganne to thinke upon a new modell of the institution of the Universitye ; to which pourpose one Mr. David Raite,(') ther principell, drew a draught of a foundatione, wherin all the old Institutione was tumd up syde downe. This they presented to James the Sixth, then King of Scottlande ; and it went neer to be ratifyd in parliament, (2) had it not been opposed by secretair Elphinstonne, a great statesman, who, in favours of bishopp William Elphlnstouns memorye (both of them being cadetts of the familye Shelms), said it was no reason for to perverte the founders meaning, as farr as it could stand with the reformed reUigione. So the new draught was stifled in the birth ; and that paper coming afterwards into the handes of bishopp Patricke Forbesse, with a soUicItatione for him to sett it anew on foote, hee threw it into the fyre, wher it endedC^) ; and instantly, being chancellor of the Universitye, caused sett the old institution on foote, as farr as it could subsist with the protestant relllgioneC'') : The two professiones of the civUl and canon lawe he united into one, or rather commanded the civili law to be taught in place of the other. The rentes that belonged to severall professors, by the avarice of such as had been members of the Universitye, wer fewed or lett out for payment of so little as could not mantaine them, and ther verye dwelling houses improprlat ; which, being thus squandard, bishopp [Patricke] Forbesse could hardly recover all his lyfe tyme, and was forced, as I have already Patrem ac Dominum, Gulielmum Elphinstoun, dictorum CoUegii et Universitatis Erectorem et Fundatorem, denuoque per Reverendum in Christo Patrem, Gavinum Aberdonensem Episcopum, restituta, &c., quae intuentibus pateri possit. Anno 1530. This has been more than once printed. See Kennedy's Annals of Aberdeen, vol. ii., pp. 410 — 435. Lond. 1818 ; Evidence taken by the Coramissioners on the Universities of Scotland, vol. iv., pp. 141 — 151. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by command of His Majesty. Lond. 1837.] (1) [Principal from 1593 to 1632.] (2) [See Kennedy's Annals of Aberdeen, vol. ii., p. 442.] (3) IJbid., vol. ii., p. 440.] W [Report made to His Majesty by a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the state of the Universities of Scotland, p. 307. Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be Printed, 7th October, 1831.] Ch. XCVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 157 tould, for to sett upp the professione of theologye by waye of contributione : So farr was it from truthe that he had either oppressd them or missapplyd thes rentes, ther having not been so much left undUapidate at his entrye as to mantaine all the professors acording to ther institutione.(0 Bishop Adam BaUendyn, who succeeded to bishopp Forbesse, could not be the oppressor, for the short tyme that he sate ther he twoched nor did innovate nothinge. So great treuth ther was in the reasone of that comissione. XCV. But any thing was good eneuch to be a colour and pretext for to give them ane errand thither ; the mystery is, that Mr. Johne Lundye was suborned to supplicate .(^) But ther ende of comming ther was pairtlye for to dryve out (as they afterwards did) some of the learned members of that Universitye, who had vexed them with ther querees concerning ther Cove nant. This was alta mente repostum ; they wer ther only considerable anta- gonistes, and downe they must with ther coUeagues, the learned and illus triouse Doctors of Aberdeen. This gave them another fair pretexte for to raise armes for to suppresse the Marquesse of Huntlye, who was ther declared and most considerable enemye In the north of Scottlande. For, this Universitye lying within his reache (and himself some tymes chancellor therof) and protectione, in the foUowng spring they made ther manifesto of carrying armes to the north to bee, only to be a gwarde to them against Huntlye his supposd disturbing as sault, whUst they should goe about the visitatione of the Universitye of Aberdeene : But what ther intentions wer will be best knowne in its awne place, when the actings of ther pairtye shall come (God willing) to be spockne and faithfuUy related. But it is high tyme to close this digressioune, and this session of the Assembly. XCVI. Upon the seventeenth of December, Moonday, the twenty-third sessione of the Assembly conveened, to which one Johne Gordon of Crosse- irne(^) presented a supplicatione for provyding a new church, built in ther bowndes, with a steepend. The Assembly appoynted to collect a stocke from all charitable people besouth Taye, and thes collectiones to be sent from sessions to presbytryes, thence to provincialls, and thence to the newe A. D. 1638. Intention of sending visi tors, to fur nish a pretext for sending arms to sup press Huntly. John Gordon of Crosseirne. Mr. John Bell, Glas gow. Mr. John Moyle. Acts of As sembly read (1) [Kennedy's Annals of Aberdeen, vol. ii., pp. 373 — 375.] (2) [See his Oratio Evcharistica & Encomiastica, Inbenevolos Vniversitatis Aberdonensis Benefactores, Fautores, & Patronos, Aberd. 1631, throughout, but particularly in regard to his charges against Bishop Patrick Forbes, pp. 9 — 11.] (3) [Or Carsphairn, in the presbytery of Kirkcudbright.] 158 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. erected paroshe to be mortlfyd ther. This project was foUowd by the ad- — ~ — vyce of the Lords Lawdian, Burleigh, and Sir William Dowglasse, to whom renewed. it was comitted tUl the next daye.W Sessio 23, Yow have heard alreadye the project for transplantatione of Mr. Alexander De^mJms 11 . Hendersone to Edinburgh : this was seconded by another supplicatione by Mr. Johne BeU, elder, minister at Glasgow, for ane helper to himselfe, by reasone of his age, whome he named Mr. David Dicksone, another of the great instruments of the reformatione. The Earle of Eglintoune strove to crosse Mr. Davids removall from Irwin ; and shewd, that Mr. David had been the instrument to reclame him from poperye ; that if he wer removed, himself would leave the Assemblye ; he said furder, that Glasgow had tackne three of ther ministers alreadye. Mr. David Dicksone his transplantatione, at that instant, was wavd a little till the Earle of Eglintownes consent should be gained, the want wherof was the only remora of disposing this great watchman into that qwarter of the kyngdome. The Dundee men complained upon one Mr. Johne MoyU, who had re ceaved the order of deacon and no mor, and under that notione did reseede amongst them, desyring to remove him : This was putt over to the comittie which was appoynted to meete at Dundee. Therafter the whole actes of the Assembly wer reade over de novo, and aU of them ratifyd with a new plaOet. Such as wer designed, session seventeenth, for to considder upon the greivances of the churche, as also what old actes of Assembly It was neces saire for to revelve, gave in ther diligence. They shewed, first, that ther wer few or no actes to be made which had not been enacted befor, but since they wer forgottne by the iniqultye of the tymes, it was ther humble opinion that they should be enacted anew in this Assembly. The Ust of them wer reade and approved, which wer as foUowesW : N. B. First, That presbytrles erected since the yeare 1586 be approved, and (0 [In this session of the Assembly, " The Commissioners from the Presbitrie of Turrey [Turreff'] gave in a Supplication, declairing. That whereas Alexr Andersone and Robert Davidsone, in Turrey, having fallen in ane delinquencie at a mercat in Aberdeine, and for that were conveined before the Bishop, and payed 522 merks of penaltie, which should have been bestowed in mending the high wayes betwixt Turrey and Aberdeine, notwithstanding they deUvered it to the Bishop, whilk he detaines, and the parties are not called for to make their repentance. " The Assemblie ordaines the delinquents to make their repentance in Turray and Aber deine, and the penaltie to be restored." Records of the Kirk, p. 184.] (2) [Records of the Kkk, pp. 34—38 ; Historia Motuum, pp. 276—278.] Ch. XCVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 159 new presbytryes in Argylle ; (which questionlesse was needfuU, if Argylle A. D. 1638. might be moved to pairt with the benefices of eight parosh churches of Lochaber and the adjacent places, which benefices pertained of old to the pryory of Ardchattan, now improprlat in the handes of the said reUigiouse lorde.) Second, That presbyteriaU meetings be once a weeke in summer and win ter, otherwayes once a fortnight in winter, at which tymes one of the minis trye shall exercise, and another adde : that once in the moneth ther be a controversye of relligione disputed amongst them. Third, That presbytryes visite paroch churches within their bowndes once evry yeare, and enqwyre how familyes are ordered and catechised. Fourth, That masters of coUedges and scooles be tryed concerning the sowndnesse of ther judgement, ther abilityes, and conversatione. Fifth, That ministers be obleidged to dwell and reside at ther oune manses in ther paroshins. Sixth, That scooles be planted in the countrey, that publicke reading, and singing of the psalme, and catechising, may thus be promoved lyckwayes. Seventh, That presbytryes shall have power to choose ther oune modera tors and admitte ministers. Eighth, That a course be tackne for acomodating the boundes and the scituatione of presbytryes and paroshins. Ninth, Concerning the entrye and conversatione of ministers, that the acte of Assembly at Edinburgh,* March twenty-four, 1595, session seventh, be renewed in all its particulars, as to the waye of ther entrye and ende therof, ther learning, ther conversatione, be renewd and putt in practise. Tenth, That ther be a course thought upon for defraying the expences of thes who are to goe comissioners to generall Assemblyes. Eleventh, That all papistes names, and names of Jesuittes and preests, bee enqwyred after ; aU such as keepe not the churche ; and, finaUy, that all be commanded to sweare to the Confession of Faithe, and communicate; and that papists chUderen be not sent abroade without licence of presbytryes or provincialls. Tioelfth, That the Lords supper be frequently celebrated, and ministers to have aUowance for furnishing elements oftner then once a yeare. * See the acte at lenth in the print .actes, pagg. 33, 34, 35, 36. [Records of the Kirk, pp. 34— 36; Booke of the UniversaU Kirk, pp. 426— 429 ; Calderwood, pp. 314— 317.] 160 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Thirteenth, That none enter into the ministrye befor twenty-five yeares, except such as are rarely quallfyd. Fourteenth, That course be tackne for chaunging weekly mercatts from Moonday and Saturdaye. Fifteenth, That sermon may [be had] upon the Lords day afternoon as weall as befornoone. Sixteenth, That such as wUl not forbeare the company of excommunicate persones, after admonition, be excommunicate themselves. N. B. Seventeenth, That aU who shaU speacke against the Covenant, or thes who wrytte against it, or speacke or wrytte against the actes of this As sembly, be censured by the churche. Eighteenth, That ministers usurpe no negative voice in churche sessiones, except the session vote against actes of the churche ; and that collegiate mi nisters doe all thinges by mutwall advice and consente. Nineteenth, That the titles of chapters, abbots, pryors, deanes, arch- deacones, preaching deacons, chanters, subchanters, which flow aU from the N. B. pope and canon law (although the King, in his Large Declaratione,(0 af firmes that thes offices wer in the churche long befor popery was knowne of in the world), be not usurped nor used, under paine of churche censures. Twentieth, That no minister nor reader be intruded upon a paroshe con trary to the wUl of the congregatione. Twenty-first, That no marriadge be solemnised without proclamatione of banes, except the presbytrye see jirgent reasones for it. Twenty-second, That it may be thought upon how burialls in churches maye be restrained ; as also they discharge funeraU sermons. Twenty-third, That expectants, befor ther entrye to the ministrye, be tryed in ther learning, skill of langwages, lyfe, and conversatione. Twenty-fourth, That the presbytrles and boundes of provinciaU synods,* (1) [P. 322.] ' See the roUe of them in the print actes, pagg. 39 et 40. [Records of the Kirk, pp. 37, 38. So much of the roll as relates to the provincial Synods of Angus and the Mearns, of Aberdeen, and of Murray, is subjoined : " The Provinciall Synod qf Angus and Mekns. ¦ Meegle.Dundie. -| C The Shyref- "J To meet the first The Pres- ^ Arbroth. g 3 domes of (time at Dundie, byteries of ' Forfair. -=> "j Forfair and f" the third Twesday Brechen. .$ {_ Merns. J of April. . Merns. ^ Ch. XCVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 161 and the tymes of ther meetings, once in the half-yeare, be fixed anew, and that roUe to be registred in the bookes of the Assemblye. Twenty-fifth, That the minister of the place wher the provinciall meets, doe preache the first daye of the meeting, and that the neerest provinciaUs, by ther comissioners, keepe mutwall correspondence. XCVII. In the ende of this sessioune, Dr. Guild, comissioner from Aberdeene presbytrye, gave in a supplicatione against salmon fishing upon the Lords daye, desyring it might be restrained. He had some yeares befor wryttne a two penny pamflett against It, and published it ;(') but, by reasone that his colleagues the Doctors of Aberdeene, abler then he, did not medle in that controversye, his dispute against it was sleighted by the Aberdeens men(2) : he was now, therfor, resolute for to plye his refractarye parishoners with actes of Assemblye. It did not wante such as disputed for It ther in the midst of the reformatione. In ende, the Assembly, by ther acte, dis charged it, as also the going of mUles upon the Sabbath, under paine of church censures to the contraveeners, acording to the acte of the Assembly at Halyrood house, anno 1602.(3) A. D. 1638. Dr. Guild's supplication about salmon fishing on Sunday. Visitation of Glasgow College. The Pres-_ byteries of The Provinciall Synod of Aberdene. Aberdene. Kincairdin.All-foord. Gairioch. Elian. Deer. Turreffe.Fordyce. The Provinciall Synod of Murray {The Shyref- ^ domes of f Aberdene C and Bamfe. ) To meet the first time at new Aber dene, the 3 Twes day of April. The Pres byteries of Innernes.Forresse. Elgin. Strabogie. Abernethie. Aberlower. f .a H The Shyref- domes of In- T To meet the first I time at Forresse, the last Twesday of April."] nernes in part, Nairn in part, Murray, Baraf in part, Aber den in part. (1) [In the lists of Dr. Guild's works is mentioned a " Treatise against Profanation ofthe Lords Day, especially by Salmon fishing. Aberdene, 1637."] (2) [But see the dedication to him of the Theses maintained in The King's College in 1638, printed at Aberdeen in that year, by Edward Raban.] (3) [Records of the Kirk, p. 38 ; Historia Motuum, p. 279. " Dr Guild was commended for his pains in helping much to put down the Sunday's fishing in the north ; yet the modera tor was scrupulous to make a new act for the simple discharging of it : but when Mr John Robertson, who, among us all, was more skilled in our assembly-acts, had found out an old act of the assembly at Holyroodhouse, anno 1602, for abolishing simply all sorts of fishing 162 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Finally, Ther wer visitours in the closure of this sessione appoynted to tacke inspectione of the colledge of Glasgow, as weall as of Aberdeen ; for ther wer sundrye unsownde members ther, who had shewd but smaU afiiectione to the Covenant. This was the eigthe delegatione ; seven wer before. This sessione was very remarkable for ther sympathy in vote agreable to the comittye of overturs propositiones, not so few as sixty canons being heer voted, if the ninth acte concerning ministers be considdered. Deposed mi- XCVIII. The Assembly wer now macking quicke dispatche ; therfor nisters to be j.|jgy (j^g meete againe pro vicesimo quarto, upon Tewsdaye ; wher it was cated, if they first enacted that all ministers who wer deposed by this Assembly, if they did not ac- (jj^ not acquiesce in ther censurs, should be excommunicated by ther pres- Places of do- hytryes, in caise they exercise any pairt of the ministeriaU functione. ing penance Then ther was ane acte past designing the places wher suche of the rthev^ mav'be ^^ishopps as gott Ucence to repent should doe pennance, viz. The bishop of and milling on Sunday, he applauded gladly to the renewing of it." Baillie's Letters, vol. i., p. 146. " Doctor Wm Guild presented a supplication to the Assembly — That, whereas there was great fisching of salmond neir Aberdene upon the Sabbath, which occasioned great profana tion of that holy day, by peoples continuall resorting to see that fisching, even in tyme of divine service ; and likewayes declaired how he had prevailed much, throw the blessing of God upon his labours, to restraine that abuse, so that divers worthie religious persones who have speciall interest in that fisching, had bein moved to draw up a bond and covenant among them to forbeare that sinfull practice in all tyme comeing ; therefore supplicats that the As sembly may be pleased to make ane Act against the said profanation, that upon that ground he might proceed against them, after his return from the Assembly. " The Assembly, after much disputation of this question too and fro, in respect they could find no Act of Assembly against salmond fisching for the present, and not willing to make ane new Act, they appoynted Doctor Guild, Mr John Robertsone, with sorae uthers, to thinke upon sorae overture for it against the morrow." Records of the Kirk, p. 186. " Sess. ultima. [December 20, 1638.] After in calling upon the name of God, Doctor Guild said — There is a motion made, as ye all hard the other day, concerning salmond fisch ing, and proffanation of the Sabbath thereby, and it was not thought expedient to make new Acts, but to search for old ones, and to revive them. In Gods providence, there is heir found ane Act, in the year 1602, of the Assembly holden at Holyrudhouse, 12 Nov. 5 Session, where salmond fisching is expresslie inhibite and ordained to be punished by the censures of the Kirk ; and I requyre that the Clerk may read it ; which accordinglie was done, and the whole Assembly, in ane voit, renewed the same." Ibid. p. 189. " This assembly act," says Spalding, " raade sorae obedience with great difficultie, for it was thought no sin to fish upon the Sabbath day before." History of Troubles, vol. i., p. 306. There is preserved an authentic copy ofa Bull, dated at Rome ou the 26th March, 1451, by which the Pope (Nicholas V.) grants to the clergy and laity of the city and diocese of Aberdeen, full freedom to fish for salmon on Sundays and holy days, during five raonths of each year, " diebus dominicis et aliis festivis in quinque mensibus anni in quibus magis dicti salmones ad terram confluere dinoscuntur." Registrum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Aberdonensis.] Ch. xcix.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 163 Murrey in Edmburgh; bishop of Orkney in KirkwaU; bishop of Catnesse A. D. 1638. in Jedburghe (very farr distant from Catnesse, as being the other extreme j.g]~^ ^y. of Scottlande); bishop of Dunkeld in Sammedoose; bishop of Argyle and ticulo mortis. bishop of Isles in any church within ther respective dioceses. S^?™™.. *'''®^V ^ ¦' . ^ . . „ Visitations oi Therafter an acte was past, empowering any neerest minister for to Colleges. relaxe ane excommunicate bishopp from that sentence, in articulo mortis, in Edinburgh 1 n • T • 1 .1 11 • p . J gets the Mo- caise the dying bishop in extremis shew reall signes ot repentaunce, and derator. subcrybe his desyre to be relaxed. I know not what trust the minister gott Sessio 24. by this generaU acte, in caise the dyinge bishopp cannot subscrybe, for Decembris 18. T . T Tewsdaye. weacknesse or sicknesse. •' In the next place, the members names of the severall committys wer reade, and the tyme and place wher eache of them wer to meet, etc. The places [wer], Jedburgh, Kirkcubrlght, Irwing, Edinburgh, Saint Andrewes, Dundee, Forresse, Chanrye of Rosse; besyde the visitationes of the Uni versityes of St. Andrewes, Aberdeen, and Glasgow colledge. Thus the Assemblye, by its delegatlones, spredd itself over all the kyngdome, for perfyting of the worke. Edinburgh had petitioned already for the moderator ; St. Andrews will not be behynd with them. To this pourpose, James Sworde, (who after ward for his little capacitye was oftne putt upon publicke employments, as fittest to concurre with ane implicite vote,) a little bailye, once a pedler in St. Andrews, putts in lyckwayes for the moderator to be ther minister. The Lord Lindsey seconded this Sworde. Earleshall, for Lewchars, wer resolute to keepe him, and he wiUing to stay, as he declared ; but withaU he will submitte to the Assembly. The Edinburgh comissioners grew im patient to be denyd. The moderator, who could not moderate in his owne cause, is removed. Mr. James Bonnar tackes the chaire for that vice ; and, after ane hotte dispute by three partyes, Edinburghe carryes him by pluralitye of votes, which was prophecyd befor the Assembly sate downe. XCIX. The twenty-fifth sessione was upon the nineteenth of December, Churchmen Wedingsday; wher it was agitated. Whither ministers might sitt as justices no* to take of peace, or vote in parliament, or sitt in privy councell, or sessione, or ^' ° *'^^" exchequer. In relatione to this propositione, it was enacted, that it was Decembris 19 unlaufull from henceforth, by the Confessione of Faith, for any church man Wedingsdaye. to tacke a *civUl power or place upon him, ether ordinar or extraordlnare ; * Mr. Spang, in his Historia Motuum, [pp. 280-285], addes a number of reasones for this determination, which he calles the reasones of the Assembly ; as. First, Luck xii. 14, 164 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. ¦ [B. III. A. D. 1638. albeit they did not deney but It was laufull for church men to advyse king or councell in aU thinges wherin the churche or ther consciences wer con cerned. And as for the concessione of the Assembly at Montross, anno 1600, it was declared that the church was compelled to acquiesce to a minister to vote In parliament, for peace cause, and with many cautiones, which wer all broke by the bishopps. compard with John xx. 21. ; alsoJohn viii.. His refoosing to sentence the adulteresse, and His oftne declaring that His Kyngdome was not of this world. Second, Matthew xx. 25, 26, lordshipp forbiddne : Hence Bernard, lib. 2. de consideratione ad Eugenium : " I ergo tu & tibi usurpare aude aut Dominans Apostolatum, aut Apostolicus dominatum." Third, That such as doe betacke themselves to a sacred warfair should not involve theraselves in the thinges of this lyfe, 2d Timothy ii. 4, except in poynt of necessitye, 1st Corinthians iv. 12. Fourth, Because they are not able for to wait upon bothe, 2d Corinthians ii. 16; they are to be constant labourers, which gives no vacance to other alFaires. Fifth, The apostles wer not able to undergoe two ecclesiasticall functiones, Actes vi. 2 ; erant tamen utraque haec munia Ecclesiastica ; et Gregorius I. citante Gratiano in decreto dist. 89. from Romans xii. 6, 7, argues a minori ad majus ; hence two church offices incompatible, ergo, much raor a church one and a civUl one. Sixth, He instanceth Can. Apost. can. 6, et can. 81 et 83 ; et Cyprian, lib., i. epist. 9 ; et Clemens Rom. in epist. ad Jac. fratrem Domini ; et Syne- sius, bishop of Ptoleraais, telling us, " Illicitum esse jungere civilera virtutera cum sacer- dotio" ; Hilarius Pictaviensis ad Auxentium, " Anne aliquara sibi a palatio dignitatem sumpserunt ApostoU?"; also Gratian, Decret. part. i. dist. 88, 89; Bernard, de consid. ad Eugen. lib. 2: " Clericus qui secularibus negotiis se iramiscet est irregularis." He ansuers Augustin, in Psalra 118. cone. 24. complaining that he was vexed with law decisiones, grounded on 1st Corinthians vi. 4: That Augustine mistooke the text, 1st Cor. vi. 4. ; that Paule meanes that causes ought to be referred to the most conteraptible amongst the Christians rather then the chiefe amongst the Heathen, and that thes most contemptible wer not churche men. He addes, that the civilians tell us that churche raen grew not judges till corrupt times, and that. First, It was in civili thinges ; Second, It was with con sent of pairtye ; Third, It was by way of decreet arbitrall ; Finally, He referres us to Hist. Concil. Trident, lib. 4, to reade ther how church raen grew civili judges. But Mr. Spang, or his informer, is too confusd in his arguments, for we ought heer to distinguish betuixt the legislative and executive power of the lawe : Secondly, Betuixt councell and advyce, or expresst consente, to a law raackinge : Thirdly, Distinguish be twixt lawes civili and crirainall. His arguments may happily imply that churchmen ought not to be judges in crirainaU causes, which is tackne pro confesso ; or that they ought not to be ordinar judges in civili causes, as in a sessione ; which would prove a great abstractione to them from their call inge. This is for the executive pairt of the law. But it will uot be denyd that in macking of lawes ther advyce ought to be had ; this is graunted by all (because they oftne understande cases of conscience beste). And next, to deney them a vote of explicite consent, by ther representatives, in macking thes lawes, which they must be subject too, is against all sence and reason, quia, quod omnes tangit, ab omni bus tractari debet ; if this be not graunted, they are made slaves to all the states of a launde. Finally, I doe not see how Mr. Spange his argumentes wUl debarre them from the Kinges councell, by his oune concession, that they ought to remonstrate and be advysed with in matters of weight ; to which I adde, that a prince cannot be hindred to consult in matters of weight with the ablest men in his kyngdome, nay, as himself shall macke choise of, and no church man can be a good subjecte and refoose his best advyce to his prince as oftne as it is called for by the magistrate. Ch. C] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 165 Nevertheless, befor the sessione ended, ther was a comissione of minis- A. D. 1638. ters appoynted to waite upon the parUament, which was to meete In Maye ' foUowinge, who wer to represent to that parliament all the grievaunces of the churche.(i> To thes warrant was given to have a speciall care, ne quid detrimenti caperet ecclesia.(^^ Thus was the foundatione laide of that extravagant churche judicatorye, which wantes all precedent in all antiqwitye ; which, in the following yeares, grew so troublesome to the state, that by ther meanes the churche, which befor had but fourteen votes in parliament, did usurpe a negative vote upon the parliament, as was cleare in the matter of the Engadgement, anno 1648. We will see this judicatory, which heer appeared but lycke a cloude of the bignesse of ones hande, in end. In the yeares following, covering the whole heavene, and growne formidable to thoise who, without &ny jus divinum, for promovall of selfish Interests, had created It : The Comissione of the Churche, I meane, which In following Assemblyes was lickd into a shape, mid- wyfed by politltians, and its power added to It by peece meale, in a surreptl- tlouse waye ; not all at once, for that would have startled the creators of it of the ministrye, who did beginne to qwarell with its usurpatione too late, when by Its meanes they wer thrust out by dosens and scores from the ministrye, for serving and promovall of the endes of thes noblemen and churchmen, whos actiones In ende proved the destructione of ther Ulustriouse and reUi giouse prince ; the lawes and libertyes of the kyngdome ; the churche go vernment and ministrye, and for a conclusion, either did malecontent the cheife actors, or made them sclaves or beggers, or bothe, and the countrey a feeld of bloode, rapine, and oppressione. C. It is not to be forgottne, that in the ende of this Assemblye Mr. An- Mr. Andrew drew Cante,(3' who, from very obscure beginnings, had been a teacher of the (1) [Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 148.] (2) [Historia Motuum, p. 286.] (3) [This person, from whose name it has been said that the word cant is derived, was born in the year 1584, probably of obscure parents. He was educated in The King's Col lege of Aberdeen, where he became Humanist or teacher of Latin, in 1614. He was soon afterwards appointed to the benefice of Alford ; whence he was translated to the church of Pitsligo. He was removed to Newbottle in 1639, and to Aberdeen in 1640. He remained there until the Restoration, when, retiring to the south, he deserted his charge, from which he was soon afterwards formally deposed. He died on the 30th April, 1663, in the seventy-ninth year of his age, and in the forty-ninth of his ministry. He was interred beside the west wall of the churchyard of St. Nicholas, in Aberdeen, where his tombstone yet remains. His grandson, of the same name, was, in 1722, consecrated a bishop of the Scotish Episcopal Church ; he died in 1728, leaving, among other works, some sermons upon the Festival of the Nativity, and on the Martyrdom of King Charles L] 166 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. Index and Acts of As sembly. Acts, etc. to be read in pulpits. Mr. Archibald Johnston and Mr. Robert Dalgleish to license the press. Yearly Assemblies.Mr. Robert Blair trans ported to St. Andrews. Lex Rex. Procurator's place. Rati fication ap plied for. grammer, first in Old Aberdeen Universitye ; then minister of Afoord in Marre ; afterwarde brought to Pittsllgo church in Buchan ; beganne now, for his zeale to the Covenant, to be as much in request, as, for his none conformitye, he had been out of fashion whUst the bishopps swayd. Bishop Patrick Forbesse did toUerate him ; and his want of learning to mantane his opinions, made him contemptible to the learned Doctors of Aberdeen, who tooke no notice of him. This last yeare he grew mor eminent by his zeale to the promovaU of the Covenant ; and in order to a furder stepp to his pre- ferrment, this Assembly transplanted him to Newbottle,(0 hard at theportes of Edinburgh, wher some daye, it was thought, he might enter the pulpitt as ther minister. But his insociable temper qwelld the citty and ministrye of Edinburgh towards him ; and therfor, after not long stay at Newbottle, he was, by the Covenanting factione of Aberdeen, some yeares after, thrust upon that towne ; and, in compensatione of that service done to him, in anno 1648 he was the maine persecutor of Sir Patrick Lesly, provost, who had the cheife hande in bringing him thither. During the power of the Cove nanters, he was dreadfuU to that miserable towne ; after the English grew maisters of Scottlande, neither lovd, nor feard, but mockd. Another acte was paste, ordaining the commissioners from presbytrys and burroughs presently to gett under the clerkes handes an index of the actes of the Assembly, till theye be printed, and therafter to extracte them and to carrye them home and registrate them in presbytrye and sessione bookes, the generall actes viz. This was the first acte that was past in the last sessione of the Assembly, December twentieth, die Jovis. Then was ther a new article drawne upp, to be added to the Covenant, and all who had formerly subscrybed it ordained for to subscrybe it de (1) [" Wednesday the 19th was the twenty-fifth session. In it a nuraber of supplications for ministers to transport, and of people to have ministers transported to them ; but not one of these required transportation. Mr Andrew Cant was too easily (we thought) induced to be transported frora Pitsligo to Newbottle." Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 146. " My Lord Lowthian presented ane supplication to the Assemblie, anent the transporta tion of Mr Androw Cant from Pitsligo to Newbotle, in the Presbitrie of Dalkeith. " Moderatour said — It would seeme reasonable your Lordship should get a favourable answer, considering your diligence and zeale in this cause above many uthers, and I know this not to be a new motion, but to be concludit by the Patron, Presbitrie, and Paroche. " The Comraissioner of Edini^ alleadged that they had raade an election of him ^4 yeares since. (1) " Then the matter was put to voiting — Whether Mr Andro Cant should be transported frora Pitsligo to Edinburgh ? And the most pairt of the Assembly voited to his transplan tation to Newbotle; and so the Moderatour declaired him to be Minister at Newbotle." Records ofthe Kirk, p. 187-] (1) [See Calderwood, pp. 766, 788, 802.] Ch. C] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 167 novo, with the foUowing additione, wherby the sence of it, which was so A. D. 1638. much controverted betuixt them and the Kings comissionair, was putt out of questione : And withall they did ordaine that the Covenant, with that ad ditionall declaration, ad perpetuam rei memoriam, should be Insert in all church registers. The declaratione was this : " The article of this Covenant which was at the first subscriptione re ferred to the determinatione of the Generall Assemblye, being now determind at Glasgow, in December 1638; and therby the Fyve Articles of Pearthe, and the governement of the kirke by bishopps, being declared to be abjured and removed, the civili places and power of kirkmen declared to be un laufull ; We subscrybe acording to this determinatione of the said free and laufull GeneraU Assembly holdne at Glasgow."(0 This acte not only explicitly ownd ther determinatione In that particular, but heerby subscribents wer tyd to ratifie ther Assemblye as free and laufull ; and whither such an oath could be tackne knowingly by all subscribents, since it depended upon matter of facte as weall as right, lett the reader judge. But this was not aU ; for It was seconded with ane acte appoynting all ministers [to intymate] In ther pulpitts ther explanatione of the Confessione of Faithe ; the acte against episcopacye ; the acte against the Five Arti cles ; the acte against the Service Booke, Canons, Ordination, High Comis sione ; and the actes of the respective excommunications and depositions of the prelatts.<2) And because severall papers the yeares past had been printed against the Covenant, therfor the Keyes of all printing presses wer putt Into the handes of Mr. Archbald Johnstone, clerke, (who in one of the former sessiones was appoynted to be church advocate, as Mr. Robert Dalgleish was ordained church agent). The ordinance bore that nothing that concerned the actes of this Assembly, nor any treatise which concerned the churche, should be printed without Mr. Archibald Johnstons warrant and approbation, under paine of aU ecclesiasticall censure ; and this lyckwayes to be intimated with other actes.(3) (0 [Records ofthe Ku-k, p. 40.] (2) [Ibid. p. 47.] (3) [Records of the Kirk, p. 39 ; Historia Motuum, p. 286. " Our meaning," says Baillie, " in the act of printing is, to give to our clerk the inspection alone of such treatises as con cerns the church-registers. However, some words of the act sounds farther ; yet I think the youth understands no more ; and if he took an universal superintendency of our presses, it would soon be remedied." Letters, vol. i. p. 149.] 168 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. The King animadvertes upon it. That it was a prettye acte, that he might print nothing concerning ecclesiasticall polity and governement, except John stoune should give him leave.O Next it was ordained, because the Marquesse of Hamiltoune had alreadye printed a declaratione contrare to ther sence of the Covenant, that the Kings Majesty should be supplicate to cause all subscrybe it in ther sence. But in the Interim they discharge all from subscrybinge the Covenant, so far wrested from Its right meaning as the Kings comissioner had done, under paine of all ecclesiasticaU censure ; but that they subscrybe it acording to ther declaratione. (') This acte the King called a most traiterouse acte, because the very termes and wordes of it containe high treasone.(^) It was lyckwayes enacted, that all presbytryes should keep a solemne thankesgiving in aU paroshuss for Gods blessing and good successe in this Assembly, upon the first convenient Sabbathe ; whioh was seconded (as has been said befor) with ane acte against all such as are malitlouse against this churche, declyners or disobeyers of the actes of the Assemblye. And because for want of summonds under the clerkes hand against the bishopps, they had been latelye put to ther wittes ende how to summond the bishopps to answer the Assemblye, therfor they would be sure to preveen the lycke in tymes comming. To which pourpose ane acte was past, war ranting the moderator and clerke to give out summonds, upon relevant complaintes, against pairties, to compeer befor the next Assemblye.(0 And least they should be at the paines to supplicate the Kinge any mor for Generall Assemblyes, they passed an acteC^^ declarlnge. First, That by divine, ecclesiasticall, and civili warrants, the church of Scott land has power and libertye to assemble and conveen in her yearly Ge neraU Assemblyes, and oftner, pro re nata, as occasione and necessitye shaU requyre. Second, They ordaine, by vertwe of this (intrlnsicke) power, the next GeneraU Assemblye to conveene and meete at Edinburgh (which thence fordward for its vicinity to parliaments and comittyes of state, was made (I) [The King's Large Declaration, p. 323.] (2) [Records ofthe Kirk, p. 40.] (3) [The King's Large Declaration, p. 323.] (4) [Records ofthe Kirk, p. 47.] (S) [Ibid. p. 40.] Ch. C] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 1^9 the seatt of Assemblyes), upon the thirde Wedingsdaye of July 1639, warn- A. D. 1638. ing all interest, for to send ther comissioners thither. Third, They give power to the presbytrye of Edinburgh, pro re nata, and upon any urgent extraordinarye occasione (if any happne befor the dyet appoynted in July), to caU ane occasionall Assemblye : A preiveleidge which the patrlarche of Rome, in the purest tymes of the churche, never had nor durst seeke from the Empperor of Rome, over the empyre and churches therof. Fourth, And that the members might be all sownde, it was enacted that none be capable to voice in GeneraU Assemblyes, but such as shall be knowne to be subscrybers of the Covenant, in the sence that it is now in terpreted by the Assembly ; as also all suche as shall acknowledge the con stitutione of this Assembly (0 : Which acte was for to obviate doubtfuU comissiones or contrary votes in posterum. It was lyckwayes at this sessione that Mr. Robert Blaire (of whom I spocke befor) was ordained to be transplanted from Aire to Saint Andrewes, as a man fitte to promove the endes of the Covenant in this universitye towne, as Mr. Alexander Henderson at Edinburgh, Mr. David Dickson at Glasgow, and Mr. Andrew Cant at Aberdeene. Thes four pUlers of the Covenant wer to be sett inspectors over the four universitye cittyes, which, for that or otherwayes, are the most considerable pairtes of the kyngdome. The King, in his Large Declaratione,* putts his note to this acte, that Mr. Robert Blaire had been expelled out of the Universitye of Glasgow by the professors ther not many yeares befor, for teaching his scoUars, In his lectures upon Aristotle, that monarchicaU government was unlaufull. Now, for such a man to be made by them professor of divinitye In the pryme uni versitye of Scottland, whether he could endure it, he leaves to all to judge. Yet he was forced to endure it, and much worse ; and few yeares after the publishing of his Majestys Large Declaratione, did lett the world see that ther was as little or lesse reasone for the Kinge, or any orthodoxe pro- testante, for to endure, his coUeague Mr. SamueU Rutherfoords booke, called Lex Rex,(^) printed at London (with parliamentary preiveleidge, if I (1) [Records ofthe Kirk, p. 47.] • Pag. 324. (2) [Lex, Rex : The Law and the Prince. A Dispute for the just Prerogative of King and People. Containing the Reasons and Causes of the raost necessary Defensive Wars of the Kingdom of Scotland, and of their Expedition for the ayd and help of their dear Brethren of England. In which their Innocency is asserted, and a full Answer is given to a Seditious Pamphlet, Intituled, Sacra-sancta Regum Majestas, or The Sacred and RoyaU 170 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. Ill A. D. 1638. rightly remember), in which booke he comes nothing short of Buchanan De jure Regni, and Henricus Stephanus his Junius Brutus,0) and others of that gauge. One thing Mr. SamueU Retorfortis transcendes such as worotte befor him on that subjecte, that (as in his other bookes), he soars with sub lime distlnctiones, et caput intra nubila condit ; most pairt wherof are not to be understoode by ordinar capacityes ; for many of which he is beholding to Gregory de Valentia, a Jesuite ; which is but to robbe the Egyptians for a better ende. Another acte was past, for representing to the parliament the necessitye of the standing of the procurators place for the kirke. The last acte and conclusione of the Assemblye, was an ordinance for ane humble supplicatione to be sent to the Kinge his Majestye, for gaining the ratificatione of the ensewng parliament to ther actings in this Assemblye, and withall to thanke the Kinge for graunting to them a free laufull As semblye. This supplication was contryved in forme of a synodicke epistle, and is long, acording to ther uswaU straine. The summe of it was to this pourpose :(2) That they wer thankefuU and sencible of his Majestyes favour in graunt ing to them a free Assemblye ; that aU alonge they had sought a blessing upon the Kings government ; that they had carryd with such moderatione as became loyall and dutlfuU subjectes ; that had the King been present he would have approved aU ther actinges ; that it was ther sorrow that his Ma jestyes commissioner had, all the whyle he sate, runn so crosse to ther actings, Prerogative of Christian Kings ; Under the Name of J. A. But penned by Jo : Maxwell the Excommunicate P. Prelat. With a Scripturall Confutation of the ruinous Grounds of W. Barclay, H. Grotius, H. ArnisEeus, Ant. de Domi. P. Bishop of Spalato, and of other late Anti-Magistratical Royalists ; as. The Author of Ossorianum, D. Fern, E. Symmons, the Doctors of Aberdeen, &c. In XLIV. Questions. Published by Authority. 1 Sam. 12. 25. But if you shall still do wickedly, ye shall be consumed, both ye and your King. London : Printed for lohn Field, and are to be sold at his house upon Addle-hill, neer Bay- nards-Castle. Octob. 7. 1644. At the Restoration this work was condemned as seditious and treasonable, and its circulation prohibited, by the Committee of Estates, by whose orders probably it was afterwards burned at Edinburgh and St. Andrews, by the hands of the hangman. Wodrow's Hist, of Ch. of Scot. vol. i., pp. 76, 84. edit. 1829. Kirkton's Hist. of Ch. of Scot. p. 121.] (p [The author refers to the celebrated work, Vindicis contra Tyrannos : sive de Princi pis in Populum, Populique in Principem, Legitima Potestate, Stephano Junio Bruto Celta auctore, Edinburgi, 1579, commonly ascribed to Hubert Languet, the correspondent of Buch anan and the friend of Sir Philip Sydney. Gordon is not the only one who has mistaken the name of the author for the title of the book. See the Dissertation concernant le livre D'Etienne Junius Brutus, which Bayle has appended to his Dictionnaire.] (2) [Records of the Kirk, pp. 40 — 42.] Ch. CL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 171 and, finally, had commanded them to ryse, for no just cause but unwilling- nesse to sitt longer ; that his commande to them to ryse may endure a tryaU of his Majestyes parliament, or of the Kings owne judgement, if it wer lawfully done ; that they choosed rather to sitt still then obey, because of the great trouble in church and state that would have followed if they had risne ; that heerin they doubted not of his Majestyes approbatione, having doubled ther circumspectione in straight walking after the comlsslonaire left them ; that they had proceeded acording to Gods worde, and former actes of the churche, and Confessione of Faithe ; that they had rather revolved old actes then approved innovations brought in without order ; that all wer heerin so cleare, that if they had done otherwayes, it would have been to have fought against God; that best men are worst spocke of; that even Ba laam was misreported ; that truth was the daughter of tyme ; that they hoped the King would keep ane eare opne for them ; that they wer content to be thought the worst of all men, if in all ther actiones they had not aimed at Gods glory, reformatione, and the Kings honour ; that they had keept within ther owne limitts, without debording or reflecting upon the constitu tions of other reformed churches, to all whom they wishd weall, and by whom they hoped to be approvne ; that if they had failed, it was by lenitye ; that If they had failed in any of ther actings, contrarye to ther intentiones, they begged that his anger for ther errors should be chaunged into a calme ; and, finally, that what they had done might be ratifyd in Maye next, in the ensewing parliament, etc. CI. The moderator concluded the Assembly with thankes to God for ther good successe, to the Kinge, for graunting them ane free Assemblye ; and then he gave thankes to each one present, for ther assistaunce, acording to ther deservings, and particularly, with a speeche, to Argylle, whom he thanked for his presence and his councell, which had proved so strenthning and comfortable to them. Argylle ansuered with a long speeche ;* first entreating all present not to misconstrue his too late declaring himselfe for them, protesting that he was alwayes sett ther waye, but had delayd to professe it, so long as he fownde his close carriadge might be advantageouse to ther cause ; but now of late, matters had come to such ane height, that he founde it behoved him to adjoyne himself openly to ther societye, except he should prove a knave : Then he exhorted them aU to unitye, wishing aU, but A. D. 1638. N.B. Moderator concludes the Assembly. Argyle's speech. King's excep tions to Ar gyle's speech. See Large Declaration, pag. 325. [Balfour's Annales, vol. ii., p. 315.] 172 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. speciaUy ruling elders and ministers, to keep a good correspondence ; he intreated aU the ministers to considder what had brought bishopps to mine, viz. pryde and avarice ; and therfor wiUed them to shunne thes two rockes, if they would escape shippwracke. The King, in his declaratione,* exceptes against ArgyUes speech. First, That he delyvered the true sence of the covenanters concerninge the bishopps ; because it was neither (sayes the King) the bishopps bringing in of novationes, nor the crymes alledged against them, that incensed the covenanter nobilitye against the bishopps, but ther feare of the bishopps rysing in dignitye and place, which is calld pryde, and that the bishopps might recover the church laundes from them, which is called avarice by Argylle. And whether it bee pryde to envy any mans rysing in churche and commonwealthe, acording to that worth and sufficiencye that his prince shall fynde in him, or whether it be avarice for any man legally to seeke to recover ther owne, he leaves to the reader to judge. As for Argylle, who made that speeche, the King ansuers. That at his . last being with the King in England, befor the synod of Glasgow (at which tyme, sayes the King, he had, which no body can deneye, good reasone to misdoubte him), he gave him assuraunce that he would rest fuUy satisfeed, if the King would performe thes thinges which his Majestie had made good by his last declaratione, wherin (sayes the King) he graunted mor then at that tyme he did promise, so that, his Majesty sayes, he had little reasone for to expecte Argylle his adjoyning himself to them, he having givne such assuraunce to him of the contrarye, besyde the assuraunce which. he gave to the Marquis of Hamiltoune when he was in Scottlande : Whence the King concludes, that if It wer true that, by his oune confessione, he carryd thinges clossely all the whyle for the Covenanters advauntage, he being then one of the lords of the Kings privye councell, and that, In ende, he must openly joyne with them or be a knave ; what he hath proved himself to bee by this closse and false carriadge, lett the world judge : So farr the King his com- mentair upon ArgyUs declaratione. This is plaine English ; and the Kings downe right langwage heer con cerning Argylles honestye may be thought none of the least causes why this his Declaratione in the following Assemblyes,(0 and speciaUy in the • Large Declaration, iMd. [p. 326.] (0 [See Records of the Kirk, pp. 265—268, 206.] Ch. CII..] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 178 parliament 1641, was so hottly persecuted, and Dr. Balcanqwell as author A. D. 1638. therof (though it be better knowne then to be deneyed that Balcanqwell penned no pairt of it but by the Kings oversight and speciall directione, who revised it aU), that nothing would satisfee till, by acte of parliament. It was condemnd and cryd downe as ane infamouse lybell, containing I cannot tell how many hundereths of lyes in it, albeit to this hower they durst never macke ther challendge goode. But, as the tymes did rule then, ane acte of parliament was ansuer eneuch to It. When Argylle had ended his speeche, the one hundreth and thirty-third psalme was sunge ; and then, after prayer, the Assemblye was brockne upp after a moneths sitting at Glasgow.CO CII. Besyde such exceptiones as are already spokne of against the His exceptions freedome and laufuUnesse of this Assembly, I have heer added, by way of |? Assera- appendlx, the exceptiones that the King tooke against It, as they are to bee seene in his Large Declaratione, pag. 311, et seqq. First, Wheras they did refoose to treate befor the hande with the com missioner for right ordering of thinges befor the Assembly, alledging that all thinges must be treated upon the place, ther table did prepare all thinges both by publicke and private Instructiones : vide supra.(^) Second, Some presbytryes choosed comissioners befor the Indictione of the Assemblye, which made the electione null. Third, At the choise of thes comissioners, ther wer mor laye elders then ministers who voted, which practise is contrare to the appoyntement of ther bookes of policye ; and thes bookes, then not ratifyd by parliament, and ruling elders prescrybed by forty yeares desswetude, therfor ought to have been first revolved by a new law, ere they gott any voice. Fourth, In several presbytryes, the laye elders disagreed from the ministers in the electione of a commissionaire, and carryd it by vote, though ministers better knew who was fittest be a commlssionair. Fifth, Some laye elders wer but newly chosne, so that, never having been elders befor, they wer most unfitt to sitt In a Generall Assem- bly. Sixth, RuUng elders, by ther institutione, are to watche over the people (1) [" The assembly being thus happily concluded, Mr. Henderson said. We have now cast dovm the walls qf Jericho : Let him that rebuildeth them beware of the curse of Kiel the BetheUte." Stevenson's Hist, of Ch. of Scot., vol. ii., p. 676.] (2) [Vol. i., pp. 183—187.] 174 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1038. in the presbytryes wher they live ; but some wer chosne elders for paroshins wher they had no residence actwally. Seventh, The ruling elders had assessors chosne and sent with them, by whoise consent they voiced; which is contrary to all law and practise. Eighth, Many presbytryes protested against ruling elders, and did sup plicate against them. Ninth, Many fittest to be" comissioners wer cast, and few chosne who had ever been at ane Assembly befor ; some wer chosne who wer under church censures, some who wer expeUed out of Universities for teaching ther scoUars against monarchicaU governement, some who had been banishd for seditiouse behaviour, others banished out of Irelande, some under the sen tence of excommunicatione, some who wanted ordinatione, some ministers elected and admitted contrarye to standing canons, all chosne by lay-elders. Tenth, Diverse members of the Assembly were at the home ; and so wer uncapable of voice. Eleventh, Three oathes wer to be tackne by every member of the Assemblye : First, The oath of Confession of Faithe ; Second, The oath of supremacye ; Third, The oath of aUeadgance : Any of thes three oathes who does refoose, cannot sitt as a judge in any court of that kyngdome. Twelfth, That church men wanted ther habite, not a gowne but two ; noblemen and gentlemen, in colourd clothes and swordes, etc.(^) ; lay elders, (1) [" At Glasgow the Marquis found the greatest confluence of People, that perhaps ever met in these parts of Europe at an Asserably. The Marquis judged it was a sad sight to see such an Assembly, for not a Gown was among them all, but many had Swords and Daggers about them." Burnet's Memoires of the Hamiltons, p. 93. " With much ado could we throng into our places The magistrates, with their town-guard, the nobleraen, with the assistance of the gentry, could not get us entry to our rooras, use what force, what policy they could, without such delay of time and thrusting through, as grieved and offended us. Whether this evil be common to all nations at all public confluences, or if it be proper to the rudeness of our nation alone, or whether in thir late times, and admiration of this new reformation, have at all publick meetings stirred up a greater than ordinary zeal in the multitude to be present for hearing and seeing, or what is the special cause of this irremediable evil, I do not know ; only I know my special off'ence for it, and wish it remeided above any evil that ever I knew in the service of God among us. As yet no appearance of redress. It is here alone, I think, we plight learn from Can terbury, yea from the Pope, yea from the Turks or Pagans, modesty and manners ; at least their deep reverence in the house they call God's ceases not till it have led them to the adoration of the timber and stones of the place. We are here so far the other way, that our rascals, without shame, in great nurabers, makes such din and clamour in the house of the true God, that if they minted to use the like behaviour in my chamber, I would not be content till they were down the stairs," Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 96.] Ch. CIV.] HISTORY OP SCOTS AFFAIRS. 175 one or two, speacking almost aU thinges ; ministers speaking seldome ; and A. D. 1638. so great a lycklyhood that all was made worke and praeagreement, * that seldome or never was ther a contradictory vote, so that the calling of the list was tediouse, after the firste voter, Mr. Alexander Carse gave his voice, which proved the leading voice of the Assembly ; the lycke never heard of in any Grieke nor Latine CounceU that any fathers judgement was so absolutlye followed, et eet. CIII. I have heard It constantly affiirmed (severall yeares after that As- Many rainis- sembly sate,) by knowing men, that It was certaine that a very considerable ^^^.\^ uJ-^ number of the ministrye came thither with intentione to have voted farr fluence. otherwayes in many thinges then they afterwards did ; but that, after ther coming ther, ther wer many of them laide off by the influence of half a dosen of leading men, pairtly through feare, and pairtly out of despaire that ther votes would doe any good ; and therfor resolved for to serve the tymes, and runne with the streame rather than with ther consciences ; which (if it wer true) coulde not be commendable in the actors, though they had voted right upon the matter. Whether this wer truth or not, I shall not peremptorly determine ; albeit It is a great presumption therof that, not many yeares afterwarde, severall ministers and rulinge elders, who had sittne comissioners in the Assembly of Glasgow, fell off so far from ther principalis that It cost sundrye of thes ministers ther places ; to whom, upon the chaunge of ther opinions, the rest of the confederacye tumd implacable enemyes ; and, having throwne them out of ther benefices, wold never suffer them to reenter ther, and scarcly (some of them), after a pros titute humiliatione, to any place within the church of Scottland againe. And it is weaU knowne that some of ther eminent ruling elders, who had been heer active and voters for them, wer sacrificed to the indignatione of the rest upon scaffolds and gibbetts ; in bringing of whom to justice or exe cutione, the cheife leading men of the ministrye of the confederacye wer the most active of anye ; or at least not behynde with thoise whom nothing but ther blood could satisfee for their apostacye. CIV. The members of the Assembly are dismissed.: It is high tyme to King's De. foUow the Kings comissioner, who, since his leaving the Assembly, pub- claration lished ane interpretatione of the Covenantee) about the tyme of his coming Assembly. * Vide supra, pag. [39.] (1) [It is printed in the King's Large Declaration, pp. 327 — 337.] 176 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. to Edinburgh; but, during the tyme of the Assemblyes sitting, having ad- vertished the King of all that past (who wanted not advertishment besyde), and that ther wer many informations spreade thorough Edinburgh and other places which wer nothing to the Kinges advauntage, but, on the contrare, that the King had made little or nothing good of all that was contained in his last declaratione, dated, Edinburgh, September twenty-second : The King thought it needfuU, by a speedy dispatche, for to ordaine the comis sioner, by a new Declaratione once mor to undeceave the people, befor the comissioner should returne to Londone. It was dated at Whytehall, De cember eighth, 1638, and publickly proclaimed at the mercatt crosse of Edinburgh, December eighteenth, in that same yeare, Tewsday, which day was the twenty-fourth sessione of the Assembly of Glasgow, much to the pourpose foUowinge^) : First, He shewes all his concessiones by former proclamationes ; howbeit, they had blocked up the castle of Edinburgh, and would suffer no ammuni tione to be Imported to any of his castells (ane unparaleUd acte) : Second, Wer keeping up a judicatorye contrare to civili authoritye, directing orders from thence to all pairtes of the natione, and reqwyring obedience therunto ; that they had chosne Ulegalle members, and in ane illegall way, to sitt In ther Assemblye, had thrust in laick elders, and thrust out many moderators, and had sent privat instructiones for bringing up of comissioners ; wherby the Assembly was praelimited. Yet he had suffered all, hoping upon his conces sions that they would have returned to ther obedience ; but that, upon the contrarye, they had resorted to the Assembly in great troopes and in armes, contrarye to his proclamation, November sixteenth ; had refoosed his Co missioner assessors, or to read the bishopps reasones, till a moderator wer chosne. Howbeit, he had caused his Comissioner, by his declaratione to be registred In ther Assembly bookes, to discharge all thes thinges, viz.. Service Booke, Pearth Articles, etc., which theye looked upon as greiv aunces ; yet he founde that nothing will content them except they may be Ucenced to overturne episcopacye and standing lawes. He was forced for that reasone, and diverse others, importing true monarchicaU governement, for to dissolve ther Assemblye, yet In a calme waye, and to command them to ryse under paine of treasone ; yet that they had sittne still in ther pre tended Assembly, etc. Therfor his Majesty thought It necessar to forwarne (0 [See the King's Large Declaration, pp. 366—374.] Ch. cv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 177 all his good subjectes that they be not insnared by thes ther unlaufull pro- A. D. 1638. cedurs, and prohibites them to obey ther actes, and frees them from all the penaltyes or dainger they may incurre for disobedience to them, and for bidds all ministers or judicatoryes of the churche to justlfie or to execute the actes of ther unlaufull meating at Glasgow, and commands all lords, barrons, etc., to tacke notice of all such ministers, etc., as doe otherwayes ; and furder prohibitts all judges, clerks, wrytters, etc., not to passe anye bill, summonds, etc.. In order to the exeecutione of any of ther Assembly actes. And since he has declared the true sence of the Confession of Faith, sub scribed anno 1580, not to be destructive to episcopacye, heerfor he dis charges and inhibltts all good subjectes from subscrybing it In any contrare sence. And, finally, he promises to protect all his good subjectes who shaU disowne that pretended Assembly and ther actinges. C V. This proclamatione was answered that same very day, by a very long The Assem- protestatione, at the merkatt crosse of Edinburgh, which was afterward en- ^'/^ Protes- larged and revised by Mr. [Archibald] Johnstone, and printed in January g^er. foUowinge; wherof I shall only give yow the short summe, with the Kings animadversiones therupon, for It would be very tediouse to the reader for to peruse it all, for It containes no lesse than seven sheet of paper In folio.* First, They call themselves comissioners from presbytryes, brughes, and from universityes, sitting in a full and free Generall Assemblye. The King exceptes, and sayes. Its false ; for, sayes he, ther was not, after his comissioner left the Assemblye, any one comissioner from any universitye in Scottland which did not desert them. Against the narrative In the preface of ther protestatione, the Kinge sayes. It is false that he did indicte ane Assembly, with praelimitations de structive therunto. Secondly, That it Is as false that this was made cleare to his commissioner. Thirdly, He sayes. It is false that his commissioner left them, either without just reasone, or unexpectedly ; and the proofe of this he referres to the very history of ther actings. Fourthly, He sayes. It Is as false that his commissioner dissolved the Assembly without any warrant of the councell, being that the proclamation was subscrybed by the handes of the councellers. For ther gwarding the castell of Edinburgh, they answer. They are war ranted not to lett any ammunition be imported ther by the law of nature, • See Large Declaration, pag. 375. z 178 history of scots affairs. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. and by the municipall lawes of Scottlande. They say that the ammunitione was to have been secrettly conveyed in thither for to terrific them, Edin burgh being one of the cheefe places of ther meetings ; therfor they pre veend it, quia salus populi suprema lex, The safety of the public is the end of laufull power. The King replyes, That is true ; but that he, and the councell, and his judges, and the rest of his loyall subjectes are the publicke ; wheras mutineers and rebells are but a private and schismaticall pairte, though never so manye. Next, they say. That in parliament 2, act 3, Jacobi IL, it is ordaind that wher ther is any violent presumptione of spoyling the countrey, the lievtenant is to raise the countrey, and to passe to such castells wher unruly men are, and tacke soverty of ther persones within thes houses. The King replyes, But not without or against the Kinges commande ; his generaU (much lesse any llevetenant of his) cannot doe that. Secondly, They saye. That though thes castells be the Kinges property, yet they are annexed, first for the poverty ofthe Crowne, James IL, parliament 11, acte 41, and are to be disposed by advyce of full parliament. Thirdly, 9 acte, 9 parliament, James VL, the casteU of Edinburgh is acknowledged to be one of the four strenthes which ought to be kept to the Kings behoofe and weallfare of the realme : Therfor the most loyall pairt of the realme (Which, the King notes upon the margent, the Covenanters are not) have a maine interest to looke that this castell be not employed to the hurte of the realme. Fourthly, 125 acte, 7 parliament, James VL, calles thes casteUsthe keyes of the realme : And, therfor, the collective body of the realme have good right to see ther oune keyes weaU kept, for ther owne behoofe, etc. Heer the King moves a questione. Whither the King or the subjectes should keepe the keyes of his aune kyngdome? Fifthly, They saye. That since such as possesse that castell are hindered by the best pairte of the bodye of the realme from hurting the realme, therfor they deserve approbatione and thankes from' his Majesty in due tyme, for keeping his evUl councellers and badd patrlotts from putting hande unto his best subjectes. The King replyes. First, But the Covenanters are the worst pairt : Secondly, That he tackes them not for such fooles for to expect thankes from him for ther proceedings ; if they doe it, they are lycke enough to goe with out them. Ch. cv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 179 Sixthly, They saye, That the best and most loyaU pairt of his subjectes A. D. 1638. (since the King is not in the castle himselfe) cannot be challendged for barring such as are within it from putting in practise ther violence and ter- rificationes from out of that castell upon the states, who are shortly to conveene. Heer the King telles them. They are the worst and most disloyaU pairt of his subjectes. Seventhly, They say. That the cronlckles declares that the castle of Edin burgh was givne to the house of Erskin, hac lege expressa et conditione, ut nulli nisi conventui ordinum reposcenti traderent. Eighthly, They saye. That they have many examples in the Christian world, and in historyes of other churches and kyngdomes, and of ther owne, for to punish rebelUouse subjectes, and to preserve the faithfuU. To ther seventh defence the King replyes, and asks. In what historye be thes wordes? is it not Regi as well as conventui ordinum ? or can ther bee a convention of the three estates caUed without the King or his authoritye ? But withall he gives one generall ansuer. That whatever they say concerning the gwarding of his castells and fortes, and keeping himself out of them, containeth no lesse then treasone, and is not to be answered with a penne. To the objectione of ther meetings at ther Tables, they answer. That any letters sent from thence wer but only advyce, not commandes, for promovall of Assembly and Parliament, and supplicating the King. The King replyes. That the tenour of many of ther letters wer reqwyring such as they worot too 'to doe such things as they would answer the con trarye to the Tables. Next, they averre. That such meetings are agreable to the dutye of good subjectes, and want not warrant of fundamentaU lawe, being made up of such members who have place to vote in parliaments, acte 113, pari. 11, James VI. which ratifies ane acte of parliament, James I. [anno 1427] that such votings reqwyre previouse meetings : Quia aliquo concesso, omnia concessa videntur, sine quibus concessum expediri nequit. Lastly, They say that ther meetings wer allowed by the councell first, then by the comis sioner. The King replyes shortly. That previous meetings wer never without the calling and authority of the King. Second, He sayes. It is most false that either councell or commissioner allowed them. To the objectione that some members of ther Assembly wer under cen- 180 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. sure, they ansuer, That none such could they fynd who wer censured either ' in Scottlande or Irelande for laufuU causes, or by a laufull judicatorye : And for the horning, First, It was suddenly done, after some wer chosne members, and suspentipnes refoosed, though consignatione was offered, and horning in itself tackes not away a ministers place from him : And, finally. This was not objected by the comissioner when the severaU comissions wer examined. The Kings replye is, That it is a peece of presumptione to them for to judge the actings of other judicatoryes, specially of Irelande. Secondly, That many members of ther Assembly wer denounced to the home befor the Assembly was thought upon. To the objectione of the private instructiones sent from ther Tables, First, They deney that they wer a publicke deede, or sent to ther know ledge. Second, That the phrase of ther Christian liberty is warrantably spockne, in opposition to ther bondage under the prelatts. As for the other paper, they offered to the commissioner to purge themselves upon oathe', and knew no article therof but the fourth and eighth, concerning chaptermen and chapellmen, whom, they saye, they had reason to eschew, as being de clard for Innovationes. As for the eighth article, de episcopatu, de seniori- bus, de potestate Magistratus in synodis convocandis, they say, Ther was reason for to call such as could dispute thes poyntes, because they had been proposd by the Doctors of Aberdeene, etc. : That heerby they wer study ing to give Cesar his own. To all this the King replyes. First, That ther Instructiones wer not from the publicke meeting, but from a cablnett councell, who ledd the rest by the nose, whoise names he knew, etc. Secondly, If it was forged, it was forged by none but by Covenanters, who from many severaU shyres of the kyngdome did send coppyes of the same, wryttne in the same wordes, to his commissioner and others, and yet thes Covenanters did not know one of anothers sendinge. Thirdly, He deneyes that any man in the Assembly offered any suche oathe. Yet he doubtes not but ther wer many members of the Assembly who might have tackne that oath safelye, because indeed they wer never acqwaynted with thes papers ; but his commissioner, he sayes, if he had been putt to it by the Assemblye, could have named many, specially some of the nobUitye, gentry, and ministrye, who could not have tackne that oathe without perjurye. Lastly, Concerning chappell men, he sayes, First, that neither that article nor the eighth wer published in ther pubUcke Ch. cv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 181 instructions (for it would have offended many Covenanters, who wer both A. D. 1638. chapter men and chappell men) ; and therfor they acknowledging it to be one of ther instructiones, must needs confesse it to bee amongst ther private ones. But (he sayes) it is a wounder that men should not be ashamed in print to avow this ther false and partiaU dealinge ; for this instructione con cerninge chapter men and chappell men was only givne to barre some mo derate Covenanting ministers from being chosne comissioners ; for, notwith standing this Instructione, Mr. Andrew Ramsey, who both was one of the chapter of Edinburgh and subdeane of the chapell royall, and Mr. Henry RoUocke, who was prebend of the same chapter, and one of our chappel- lans, who dwly preached his turnes in our chappell, and some others, fierce and fyrye revoulted chapter men and chappell men, were chosne comis sioners, though the reasone heer exprest was as strong against them as against the rest. To the objection that they went to Glasgow armed, they ansuer. That it was to gwarde them from the Clan Gregor, then in rebellion, banting thes feelds. Second, That the comissioners convey was lyckways armed. This last, the King sayes, is most false. To the objectione that they refoosed to admitte the bishopps Declinator, or to graunt assessors to the Kings commissioner, they ansuer as has beene related at lenth befor('); and withall deney that King James or his commis sioner had ever assessors graunted to them at laufull Assemblyes, till they grew corrupt in the latter tymes. The King replyes to this. That it is a bold and impudent speeche to affirme that his royaU father kept unlaufuU Assemblyes, speciaUy when some of them are confirmed by parliament. To the objectione that the Kinges declaratione, givne in by Hamiltoun to the Assembly, might have been satisfactorye, they ansuer. It was not sa tisfactorye, as not being a legall securltye for settling peace, nor for purging out corruptlone ; that they wer forced to use the power that God had putt into ther handes for removing innovationes, since the commissioner would not stay with them ; for thes thinges which wer established by law, if they wer only tackne downe by proclamations, and not by lawes, then another pro clamation might re-establish them ; and who mor meet to abrogate thes thinges then GeneraU Assemblyes, who hath the only power to determine (0 [See above, vol. i. pp. 141-145 ; vol. ii. pp. 7-26.] 182 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. concerning matters of Gods publicke worshipp ; and that a legall expulsion of thes innovations was necessaire, because the prelatts had imposed sundry of thes innovations by actes of councell ; and then for the matter, it is cer taine that sundry popish errors wer a bringing in; and for the High Comissione, it was necessaire that both Parliament and Assembly should abrogate it by ther several sentences, because it had incroatched upon both, and wanted the consent of either to its establishment. For Pearth Articles, they saye that a declaratione is not eneuch to repeale actes of Assembly and of ParUament ; and if the Assembly should have meddled no furder with them, then it was praelimited, as if it might not judge in matters meerlye ecclesiasticke, without a licence from the Kings Majestye, wheras N. B. the Generall Assembly Is supreme and independent in matters ecclesiasticaU as the parliament in civil ; and the parliament ratificatione of actes of As semblye, its only for adjoyning a civili sanctione, for the greater terror off transgressors. Concerning the oath to be givne to intrants, that it shall be only acording to actes of parliament, they ansuer. That this implyes that the bishopps shall give oathes to ministers, as if bishopps wer unalter able. As for freedome to keep Assemblyes, as oftne as they need, they ansuer. That the act of parliament, 1592, gives them the freedom of yearly Generall Assemblyes, or oftner, pro re nata, which this offer refooteth. Sixthly, Concerninge bishopps to be tryed by Generall Assemblyes, they ansuer. That implyes that they must not trye ther office ; secondly, they say, They have been tyed to the lycke befor, but befor and now againe have de clyned censure. Seventhly, As to the subscriptione of the Confession of Faith, in the sence of 1680, they adde to what was said befor, That the commissioner has declared that the subscriptione of it, in that sence, might subsist with the Innovations since introduced, albeit some of the lords of the Sessione thought it could not subsist with that sence of 1580 to admitte innovations since. For the rest, they say. It belonges to the Assembly to give the true sence of it. To all this the King replyes. First, That God putt never that power in ther handes which they speacke of, but the devill, who is author of all seditlone and rebeUione. Second, That Generall Assemblyes have not power to determine matters of worshipp, without the authoritye of him or his successors. Third, That if any thing was practised by authoritye from the lordes of the counceU, it was not strainge, since the Confessione of Faith, and band annexed, upon which ther Covenant is grownded, wer Ch. cv.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 183 enjoyned at first only by his fathers authoritye and his councell, so that A. D. 1638. the bookes (viz. of Service and Canons) wer commanded by as good authority as thes. Fourth, Ther tenent that they may judge and deter mine in matters meerlye ecclesiasticall, without bis licence, he sayes, is a false and JesuiticaU positione. Fifth, Concerning episcopall governement, its being controverted, he ansuers, by way of jeere. That it is a fearfuU proposition, forsooth, for to hould episcopall governement to be an un- controverted governement, which hath continowd in the churche ever since the tyme of Chryst and his Apostles, without the least suspitione of controversye, untili within thes few yeares. Sixth, To ther asser tione of the lords of Sessions declaration of the sence of the Confes sione, he sayes. They doe not declare all the truthe ; for of twenty Lords of the Sessione, only four did it, but the rest who wer present did the con trarye. To the objectione that nothing would satisfie them except they gotte licence to abrogate episcopall governement, and consequently publick stand ing lawes, and one of the three estates, they ansuer, referring themselves to the acte of Assembly for abolitione of it. That the reasones may bee seen ther. Which reasones, contained in that acte, the King sayes, are infalliblye false. They say furder, that, after the commissioner dissolved the Assembly, yet willing to have returned the next morning, which is alledged in the proclamatione, they ansuer. They desyred him to returne, but that he re foosed. This, the King sayes, is most false. Wher it is objected that they sate still after the Assembly was dissolved, they ansuer. They had reasone. First, Because a comissioner constitute it, and sate seven dayes with them, and desyred to insert his declaratione in ther registers. Second, For the reasones in former protestationes. Third, The Confession of Faith obleidges them to it, which Confession implyes that it is unlaufull for to breacke upp Assemblyes. Fourth, No law for the N. B. King to dissolve them, and much lesse for his comissioner so to doe, who hath ordained it to be kept secundum legem et praxin. It is contrary to the Kings coronotlon oathe, who sweares to observe the church preive leidges, wherof this is one. Fifth, The Assembly, 1582, sate still, though charged with horning for to ryse up. Sixth, To dissolve, after so much meanes, and fastes, and preparationes, and expectationes, of a Generall Assembly, wer to offend God, and cast all thinges loosse. Seventh It Is 184 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A D. 1638. necessau-e to sitt stiU, to determine the true sense of the two Covenants which are subscrybed lately. The King replyes no mor heer, but, That ther instance of the Assembly, 1582, is but one instance, and very reprovable ; that the ministers of the pretended Assembly of Aberdeen, anno 1606, did the same, and wer se verly reproved and punished for it. To the objectione that they have citted the Kings councellers, in ther protestatione, to ansuer a parliament, they ansuer, That it is acording to lawe, twelfth acte, parliament second Jacobi IV., et act sixth, parliament first Jacobi IV. ; which actes warrant evUl councellers misgwyding the King should be conveend, and made countable. To that pairt of the Kings proclamation which dischargethe all men from obedience to the actes of ther Assemblye, etc. they ansuer. First, That such a command Is contrare to Gods law and mans law, and they cannot beleeve that ever the King did give warrant for the lycke ; which is proved by Matth. xvui., 1st Cor. v., et Revelat. ii. ; all which places shew that the power of the keyes are so intrinsecall to the kirke as that they can not be tackne from her. And for the apostles, they practised otherwayes, rather obeying God then man. Thirdly, It is contrare to the civUl lawe, si contra jus vel utilitatem publicam, vel per mendacium fuerit aliquid pos- tulatum vel impetratum ab Imperatore. Et titulo de diversis rescriptis et pragmaticis sanctionibus. Fourthly, To the canon law also, decret. decretal. extravagan. titulo de rescriptis. Fifthly, Contrare to the customs of all nationes, who are to doe justice, though princes prohibite ; cleared by Con- varnvia in Spaine, Pappon in Fraunce, Suedwyne in Germanye, upon that title de rescriptis aut constitutionibus principum. Sixthly, To actes of Ge nerall Assemblyes, as of Saint Andrews, twentieth AprU, 1582 ; Mon tross, in July, 1597 ; Edinburgh, twenty-seventh June, 1582, session seventh; wher it was complained that his Majesty strove to erect a popedome in the churche. Seventhly, It Is contrare to actes of parliament, which give Assemblyes the same freedom that the parliaments have, parliament twelfth, Jacobi VI. ; parliament first, Charles ; twelfth parUament, one hundred and fourteenth act, Jacobi VI. ; act ninety-second, parliament sixth, Ja cobi VI. ; et act forty-seventh, parliament eleventh, Jacobi VI. ; et one hundred and sixth act, parliament Jacobi VL Ninthly, It wer contrare to the trwe reUigione, sworne to by the King, for to stopp administratione of discipline, which is one of the three markes of the trwe churche. Ch. cv.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 185 Tenthly, By the Confession of Faith, 1580, King and people are bounde A. D. 1638. to obey discipline, and to doe ther best to defende it ; which Confession Is now subscrybed by the greatest and best pairt of the kyngdome ; and first cap. lib. 2. of the Booke of Discipline sayes that the power of the sworde may not impede the power of the keyes, etc. Therfor they cannot expect that his Majesty will now (after he has ordained by his proclamation, Sep tember twenty-second, all to be ansuerable to the Assembly) goe about to stopp the laufull and grave sentences of the nationall kirke. To all this long defence the King replyes shortly. First, Wheras they remitte ther readers to a speciaU answer made to the comissioner his decla ratione. That they would doe weall to answer that declaration and the Querees of Aberdeen better ; the common opinion being that neither of the two was as yet weall ansuered, no not ansuered at all. Second, For ther passages of scripture, he sayes. They are prophaned and abused ; for no such thing can be possibly or probably inferred from them. Third, To ther cit tatione of the canon law, he sayes. That it is weall that they will cite the pope his law, whom they call Antechriste ; for (sayes he) when any thing is objected against them out of the canon law, it is wswall with them to reject it, as popish and Antichristiane. Fourth, To ther Assembly its remonstrance? that King James was erecting a popedome, he ansuers. That the pretended Assembly [hath] erected a popedome, and for ther authoritye goe upon the same growndes, and use the very same arguments, and abuse the very same places of Scripture which the pope and the learndest patrons of the pope doe, for robbing princes of ther authoritye over all ecclesiasticall persons and causes in ther several dominions : As for the actes of parliament which they cite and applye, the King calles them a meer babling. Fifth, He sayes ther confessione is subscrybed. By the greatest, but worst pairt of the kyngdome. Sixth, He tells them. That the sentences of ther pretended Assemblye wer most unlaufuU, light, and madd sentences. Then they goe on, and conclude from that clowde of wittnesses, of veighty reasons, I should have saide, that they, the members of the Assemblye, have not thoughtes gwUtye of any thing which is not incumbent to them, as good Christians towards God, and loyaU subjects towards ther soveraigne : This they protest, in the first place, and that all ther actes of Assembly are acording to Gods worde, knowne lawes, with sincerity of hearte, without any passione ; and to all this they caU God solemnlye to wittnesse. Second, That it was and is laufuU for them to sit stiU, tiU they ryse up by mutwaU 2a 186 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IIL A. D. 1638. The Marquis of Hamilton returns to court. Minis ters turned out by the committees. [The Cove nanters] think of levy ing an army and taxes. The King de clares the Scots rebels in the beginning of 1639. consent. Third, That this Assembly is to be held for a free laufull Gene raU Assembly ; and aU its actes to be executed and obeyed ; and aU dis obeyers or speackers against it to be censured. Fourth, That all the members of the churche, in ther severall statlones, joyne to mantaine it to the outmost. Fifth, They protest against all challendges laide against them In that proclamatione, and that ther ansuers are true, and eneuch to vindicate them. And they againe cyte and summond all councellers, or others, who have had any hande in this proclamatione, to ansuer to King and parliament. Sixth, That they will mantaine each other, and the actes of Assembly, against all outwarde and inwarde Invasiones, with blood and meanes, etc. Seventh, That all inconveniences that falls out by ther pro movall of this Assembly, In its constitutiones, may lye upon the score of all opposers, and speciaUy upon the prelatts ; and they desyre the King and his comissioners asistance thertoo. Eighth, That none subscrybe the Co venant, in the sence that the comissioner reqwyres it to be subscrybed. Ninth, They protest, as they doe adheare to all and evry of ther former protestationes, so that they may have the Kings approbatione to all the actes and proceedings of ther Assembly, and ther behaviour during the tyme therof. Upon all which they tooke instruments at the mercatt crosse of Edinburgh, etc. To all this the King replyes only. First, That ther reasones seemed to bee wrapped upp In a cloude, for both they are so darke as they cannot be dis cerned, and they doe portende a storme, but have no weight in them at all : Second, That the particular protestationes are the very same formerly made by them, and so oftne repeated evne unto tedlousnesse ; and, therefor, the reader needs no mor to be troubled with them. CVI. Not long after this proclamatione, the Marquesse of Hamiltoune did retwrne to courte. And how soone the Assembly ended, such comittyes and delegates as wer appoynted by the Assembly of Glasgow fell rowndlye to worke to turne out such ministers as refoosed to obey Its decrees ; and caused publish its actes through all the kyngdome, and presently did turne out the bishopps and all thes rytes and innovationes which they had brought in. And because they forsaw that it was lycke to come to a warre betuixt the King and them, therfor they beganne in the winter to thinke upon levy ing of ane armye, and raising taxtes amongst themselves for the mantenance of that armye. Also, they begune to macke some fortes of defence, and to bring in mor armes ; and because they wer loath that England should be Ch. CVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 187 mistackne, they send in ther manifestos thither. Meane whyle, severall of the A. D. 1638. bishopps and ministers who wer turned out, as also others who affected the King, came running to courte giving the alarum as hottly as ever they could, which Hamiltoune could hardly any longer extenuate. The conclu sione of all was, that the King in end founde himself necessitate for to put on his cuirasse, and to tacke armes, and to declare the Scottishe rebells in the beginning of the yeare 1639, albeit the English did not fancye the warre against the Scottish muche. The beginnings and progresse of that warre reqwyres a narratione by itself. It is tyme to draw to ane ende of this Assembly, and thes warres betuixt the King and Covenanters, which wer foughne with penns, paper, proclamations, and petitions, and protesta tions : I have insisted so much the longer upon this Assemblye, because by it was the frame of the presbyterian government either reedlfyde, cor rected, or enlarged, acording to the fancye of the workmen, who, for some foUowing yeares, wer stUl Innovating some what in that waye of churche policye. HISTOEY SCOTS AFFAIRS. THE FOURTH BOOKE. HISTOEY OF SCOTS AFFAIES. A. D. 1639. King incensed. THE FOURTH BOOKE. I. Howbeit the Kings Majestye was alreadye unsatisfeed eneuch with the Scottishe, who would acquiesce In none of his concessiones, layinge hold upon all his actes of grace as lesse then ther dwe, so farr as that In the Assembly they wer begunne to be ther owne carvers, and to speacke out in bigge langwage of protestationes, that ther was a coordlnatione and ane in- dependencye betuixt Church and State : Yet he wanted not such about him who strove to kindle him furder, specially the bishopps and sorae of the Scottish officers of State, who saw that themselves, by thes revolutions, wer lycke to be the first sufferers. Thoise and ther factione strove by all meanes possible to alarum England with the rumor that the Scottishe intended to invade them, knowing that the Commons of England at that tyme stoode so dissaffected to the King that they wer glade to heare of the Scottish tumults ; so that themselves should not therwith bee affected. II. Nor wer the Covenanters Ignorant of the goodwill that was borne Proceedings to them by many in England s And, therfor, how soone the Assembly of °^ *'^® Cove- Glasgow ended, after they had made applicatione to the Councell of Scott- their own vin- land, and bv ther supplicatione had striven to vindicate the clearnesse of dication. ... . . Their Mani- ther intentiones, they founde it necessarye in the next place for to publish a festo. Manifesto to all good Christians within the Kyngdome of Englande, from the January 13. Noblemen, Barrons, Burrows, Ministers, and Commons of the Kyngdome of Scottland (thus they name themselves in the title), for Vindicating ther In tentions and Actions from the Unjust Calumneys of ther Enemyes^'. This declaratione was dated February fourth, 1639 : It spocke to the pourpose February 4. following : That ther adversaryes, not being able to beate downe the walles of Jeru- (1) [It wUl be found in Rushworth 's Historical Collections; and in Historia Motuum, pp. 296—306.] 192 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. salem, they wer fallne now to undermyne them with a calumniare audacter semper aliquid hcerebit ; opposing Ezra and Nehemia, lycke Tobias and San baUat, saying to the King Why is the rebelUouse cittye buUded ? And, ther for, wer whispering to the King, and proclaiming in Englande, besyde all that they wer charged with by the proclamatione, December eighteenth, that ther intentiones wer to shacke off the laufuU yocke of authoritye ; to chaunge the forme of civili governement ; to invade ther neighbour countrey of Eng land, and to Inrich themselves with the spoyles therof. Then they declare and doe protest. In the presence of God, . that they had never the least thought against his gratiouse Majestyes persone or government ; that he is ther laufull King ; that they will never deface his lyne, to whom it belonges of right to rule over them ; that they will hazard lyves and fortunes for the mantenance of his persone and authoritye. As to ther intentione to invade England : They declare, and attest the ever living God, that they never had any such designe to offend or worong them in the smallest measure. Only they regrate, with ther deer Christian breth eren of that natione, that the church men of greatest power in England should sett on foote dangerouse plotts, for Introducing novations in relligione, by corrupting doctrine, chaunging discipline, innovating the outward wor shipp, preaching and mantaining heades of Arminianisme and poperye, ad- vauncing professors, and allowing bookes of that judgement, banishing all who oppose the kirke of Rome, incroatching upon the Kings prerogative, tyrannising over the consciences and goods and estates of persons of all qwalitye within that kyngdome : That, furder, they had encouraged the pre tended bishopps of Scottlande for to presse Scottland not only to ane unl- formitye with ther actinges in matter of ceremoney, but also with the churche of Rome ; as appeares bye the Bookes of Common Prayer and Canons, corrected and enterlyned in Englande, and then sent downe heer to be printed, and pressed upon all : That they had caused the King prohibit the lawfuU meetings of bis subjects, as treasone ; and to discharge the sittino- of ther Assemblye ; to threatne and prepare for ane invasive warre, and to entruste papistes with places of cheifest charge in his armys a preparing : And are stryving to raise jealousyes betuixte the two kyngdomes, and comitte them; that therby the reformed relligion may be extinguished, a warre kindled, and popery introduced, which alreadye is stronge in Englande. Next, they regrate that thes calumneyes are better trusted then ther pro testationes, or supplicationes, or covenant with God : therfor they desyre them to suspend ther beleefe till better informatione. Then they regrate that Ch. IIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 193 any should thinke the standing of episcopacye in Scottlande to be a just A. D. 1639. grownde for England to invade Scottland; seing that episcopacye is contrare to ther lawes and church constitutions, and ever was so : Therfor they desyre them to advyse whither such a warre will be just on the part of the invaders ; or if the setting upp of bishops will qwytte the cost of so much Christian bloode. They declare that, except they would deney knowne light and ther Covenant, they could doe no lesse then they have done : And that, albeit they be a free nation, yet they are wlUinge to satisfee all men of the sincerity of ther intentiones, and putts no questione but, if ther wer a parliament sitting in England, that parliament would pleade for them at the Kinges handes : That they have at ther frequent meetings cleared the sinceritye of ther Intentiones one to another, upon ther greete oathes: That if they did obtaine ther desyres, the Englishes one day would reape the fruicte therof, N. B. and who knew how soone : That they should be only defencive, and though Englande invaded, yet they should not conster that warre as proceeding from the bodye of the kyngdome, but from persons ill affected to both kyng domes : That they wer sensible of the English ther sufferinges and bur thens, by the tyrrany of that hierarchye and Romishe suggestions : That ther mane aime is to enjoye ther reUigione In puritye, and ther lawes and libertyes acording to ther fundamentall constitutions ; the which could be no ground for ther deer bretheren to qwarell with them : That they founde themselves obleidged to declare no lesse for confirming ther bretherens good opinion of them, and arming them against the slaunders of such as endea vour the final overthrow and exterminione of the kyngdome of Jesus Chryst from this whole illande, which God avert ; and that for procuring ther ends they will employ no other armes (except they be enforced) but fasting and prayer to God, and supplications to ther gratiouse Soveraigne. III. It was not hard to discerne that Canterburye (though not named) Its reception was chelfly reflected upon in this Declaratione: Nor did it wante the enter- ™vourable in . T-> 1 ¦ England. tamement m England and acceptaunce, that the penners and publishers wished unto it ; for It was snatched upp and readd, with a greedy delectatlone, by many who wer tyred with a long peace, and to whom, upon several ac compts, the episcopaU greatnesse seemed either formidable, or ther order superstitiouse. But the King did his best (though in vaine) for to smother this Declara tione (which he esteemed no better then a seditiouse panphlet), by his publicke proclamationes against aU divulgers therof, or others who kept it ; 2b 194 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. and withaU caused another Declaratione of a contrare strane, to be pub- lished, (of which I shall speake afterwardes). Albeit, the Scottish wer better beleeved and favoured at that tyme then the King was in Englande. The King IV. It was not to be expected that the King could any way promove his counter^^De- designes by a parliament, as thinges ruled. Scarcely, in ane affaire of so claration ; great concemement, could he macke use of all his counceU of Englande ; yet r "taTe^arms ^^ fownde himselfe necessitate to tacke armes, and to declare the Cove- and declare nanters to be rebeUs ; albeit, his court (who for the most pairt wer mor for the Covenant- ygjj^g games then martiall sportes at this tyme) had little stomacke for the ers endeavours to feelde. Such as favored the Covenanters lycked not to see the King victo- raise money, riouse In a warre which would encrease ther bondage. However, the Contributions i- r i /~i i i i ¦ from the Eng- generautye ot the Commons wer weall content to see that by this meanes lish clergy and the Kinge would be necessitated to caU a parliament, though he had brockne upp severall parliaments befor ; and wer hopefuU that, if a parliament wer once mette, they would keep the matter from turning to a warre, and lyck wayes would punish such as they supposed to be the fomenters of thes divisions.^) The King thought that he had long eneuche foUowd the Covenanters with faimesse, and that it was to little pourpose to lett them have gottne the starte upon him, (who aU the last yeare had beene provyding themselves with necessaryes for a warre, and to his face hindering him from macking use of his owne strenthes in Scottlande) : Therfor he bethlnkes himselfe wher money, the nerve of the warre, was to be had. None was to be expected from a parliament; and his owne revenew cowld not serve the turne.,(2) It was needfuU for to hastne his levyes, but that reqwyred moneye ; and who should mor properly contribute for that effecte then the bishopps of Englande ; for they fownde themselves much concerned in the qwareU : the myters of Scottland wer strucke downe, and they saw thers levelld at. Therfor orders wer isswed from the lordes of the counceU of Englande to the archbishopp of Canterburye (who was very urgent to hastne the levyes), and to the archbishopp of Yorke, commanding them to sende forth dlrec- (1) [Monteth's History of the Troubles, p. 45.] (2) [Burnet's Memoires of the Hamiltons, p. 114. On the other hand. Clarendon says that, " the revenue had been so well improved, and so warily managed, that there was money in the exchequer proportionable for the undertaking any noble enterprise." History of the Rebellion, vol. i. p. 200. edit. Oxford, 1826. 8vo.] Ch. v.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 195 tiones to aU the bishopps under them to conveen the clergye of ther A. D. 1639. dioceses, and to invite them to a llberall contributione.^' Seing it was no lesse then the Bishopps WarreC^) in the esteeme of the people, the bishopps could doe no lesse ; but what the totall summe of that contributione did amount unto was not known. It may be supposed that It was considerable ; being that the Kinge, by that meanes, and the contributiones of severall of the nobilitye and gentrye of England,(') was enabled to put a considerable armye into the feelds, and his fleete to sea ; with a land army not altogether con temptible, if advantageously employed. V. It is affirmed* by some that the King caused give ane oathe to all The King the EngUsh and Scottish noblemen who bore offices about or did foUow the o^'ders his do- ° _ _ mesticks, with courte, wherby they did abjure the Covenant and synod of Glasgow, and their vassals, promisd for to contribute all ther strenth for the Kinges asistaunce when- ^° '"^^' h,™ ever the King calld for It ; which he was not long a doing, whither he York, on the gave them an oathe or not : For all of them who were his domestlckes, either twenty-sixth ordinar or extraordlnare, wer commanded to follow him in armes, with all ^iso letters' ther vassalls. And ther wer letters, of the date January twenty-sixth, sent written to the to all the English nobilitye, commanding them to meete the King at Yorke, "ame purpose^. wher his army was to rendevouse in the begining of Apryle following, that Earl of Arun- from thence they might with him marche to the borders of Englande for to ngraT other" oppose the Scottishe. Many volontiers offered ther service to the King, officers. and helped to macke upp his armye : Lyckwayes severall experimented! old officers, t whoise trade had alwayes been to live by the sworde, very wil lingly undertooke to follow him. The Earle of Arundell, a nobleman of old extracte and greate worthe and loyaltye to his prince (but a profest (1) [Heylyn's Life of Archbishop Laud, pp. 380—382.] (2) [Whitelock's Memorialls, p. 30., edit. 1732 ; Sanderson's Hist, of Charles L, p. 248.] (3) [See lists of those who contributed, and of those who failed to contribute, in Nalson's Impartial Collection of the Great Affairs of State, pp. 202 — 206. Lond. 1682. fol.] * Spang, Historia Motuum, pag. 295. The Covenanters, in ther Ansuer to the Kings Declaration (of the date February twenty-seven) alledge that the Scottish about court wer made to subscrybe the Kings covenant, with this addition, That they should not acknowledge the generall Assembly ; that they should not adheare to the late band and covenant sworne to by the Scottishe ; and that they should oppose the Covenanters with ther best power, etc. [Historia Motuum, p. 347-] t Earle of Essex, lieutenant general to foote ; Earle of Holland, to horse and pairt of the fleete. 196 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. papist to his* relligione), was appoynted generall,^') and Yorke the rende- vouse, Apryle first. The Marquesse of Hamiltoune f was appoynted generall of the sea forces and commander of the fleete. Thes forces are said to have been about fyve thousand In number : His order was to sale unto the coast of Scottland, unto the Firth of Forthe. The Earle of Strafforde, deputye of Irelande, was ordered, and also voluntarly undertooke, to macke either ane impressione or a diversion upon the westerne pairtes of Scottland neerest Irelande, but specially upon Ar gyUes countreye; and Earl Antrum and Donald GorumC^) promised to asiste him. The Marquesse of Douglasse, the Earle of NIthsdale, and the Lord Herrlse, wer comissionate to raise all they could towards the border and southe pairtes of Scottlande : And the middle pairtes of the kyngdome wer put under the commande of the Earle of Airlye. Huntly's ^I- Rnt aU the north of Scottland, beyond the Mearnes, was the divi- ^i?*"^^"* ' sione of the Marquesse of Huntlye ; who appeared at that tyme, both for tified; Hunt- his greatnesse and foUownge, and associats all resolute for the Kings in- ly's proceed- terest, most formidable of anye to the Covenanters. His statione, about deen. this tyme, Huntly fixed at Aberdeene ; both for the loyaltye of the cittlzens, as also for the fittnesse of the place and the sea port, which (in vaine) he * The King seems to deney this in his Declaratione, February twenty-seventh. [Arundel's creed seems to have been very doubtful. Clarendon says, " he was rather thought to be without religion." Hist, of Rebell. vol. i., p. 100.] (1) [" The King chose to make the earl of Arundel his general, a man who had nothing martial about him but his presence and his looks, and therefore was thought to be made choice of for his negative qualities : he did not love the Scots ; he did not love the puri tans ; which good qualifications were allayed by another negative, he did love nobody else : but he was fit to keep the state of it ; and his rank was such, that no man would decline the serving under him." Clarendon, Hist, of Rebell. vol. i., p. 201.] t Scottish Remonstrance, March twenty-second, [Historia Motuum, p. 348.] sayes that Hamiltoune was appoynted to joyne with forraigne forces who wer to attend the Kings Majestye : But who thes forreigne forces wer it is hard to tell to this daye, if it wer not Irishes. Furder, they affirme that the Earle of Lindsey was appoynted for the sea, with seventeen of the Kings great shipps, furnished with three thousand souldiours, to come into such places of Scottland as ther commission, when it was unsealed, appoynted them : But neither he nor they ever came. Finally, they saye that six hundred horses wer appoynted ,for to infeste the borders of Scottlande : But it is sure that much of thes preparations vanished into smooke ; and mor was spockne then was trwe. (2) [Sir Donald Macdonald of Sleat, surnamed Gorme Oig, ancestor of Lord Macdonald. He was created a baronet in 1625, and died in 1643.] Ch. VIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 197 thought should be verye commodiouse to him for landing of forces. Lyck- A. D. 1639. wayes, the townsmen, by his perswasione and ther oune inclinatione, feU to worke for to raise some defence about ther towne ; albeit that nature has not made the place wher Aberdeen standeth capable of any considerable de fence, acording to the rules of moderne fortificatione : Thes rampers of thers wer no better then trenches ; nor did ther ingeneers ther dutye In the drawing of ther lynes, either for want of skill or willlngnesse to that worke, which afterward proved qwytte uselesse. W VII. Huntly had reqwyred from the King the assistance of two or three Assistance thousand men, and armes for five thousand mor, and a comissione for a ^P®S'®4 ^^ lievtenantcye in the north, which had been oftne graunted to the heades of the Kmg to his family in former tymes. The comission he receaved, the aide of men was ^-berdeen. 11 !• i'/iij> -Xl Scots ships promised ; but nothing came to him (and that atter much expectatione), but seased ; posts armes for three thousand foote and ane hundreth horses ; which came not to stopped and SG3.ron Pf] him tiU that yeare in Marche, and wer sent upon the charges of Dr. Mor- King's coun- toune, bishopp of Durhame. As for the souldiours who should have landed eels betrayed at Aberdene or elsevpher. It is trwe that the King had promised Huntly nanters asistaunce of men ; but the Marquesse of Hamiltoune (who alwayes looked upon Huntlye with ane evill eye, as the aemulator of his greatnesse, and withall was a secret freend all the whyle to the Covenanters) disswaded the King from sending men ; alledging for his reasone, that, if the King did so, it would turne all the burthen of the warre upon the Kinge. How truly this was saide, I leave to the readers : One thing certanly is true, that by this councell the Kings hopes that he conceived from his freends in Scottland wer blasted ; for the noblemen and Highlanders, who stoode for the King In Scottland, promisd ther concurrence upon that expresse conditione, that they might have a considerable number of trained souldours to joyne with; who never appearing, some of thes who had undertackne to doe much for the King, either could not, or made that ther pretext why they would not, stirre. It was by this meanes that Huntly was engadged In a manner alone, and (2) [" The toun of Aberdein upon the first day of March [1639], fell to work, and cast deep ditches frae the Gallowget port, down the north syde of the toun towards the Castlehill, and about the hill, and upon the south syde of the toune. They raised up timber sconses anent the loch, cled with dailies, whereby the toune's musketiers might safely stand and molest the enemy. They had the like sconses at the Gallowget port upon the hill. They had eleven peice of ordinance, which was planted most commodiously upon the toun streitts, ilk peice haveing ane timber sconse sett up for souldiers to defend the samen. And thus wer they busied, man and woman, making gryte expenssis to hold them out, who ' would not be holden out for them." Spalding, Hist, of Troubles, vol. i., p. 97.] 198 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Berwick and Carlisle gar risoned. King's pro clamation, twenty-seventh of February. February 27. necessitated for to lay downe his armes and render himself in Marche foUowinge. Besyde thes praeparations, the King caused arrest such of the Scottishe merchant shippes as wer in England, and forbade them aU trade ther, and, as far as he could, caused his fleete stopp ther trading to other places. liyckwayes, the packett and intelUgence betuixt England and Scottland was stopped, and order givne for to searche the poastes and aU passengers for letters, that Scottland might no mor know his praeparationes : Which was all to no pourpose ; for the most pairt of his cabinett counceUs wer constantly reveald to the Covenanters by such of his courteours who privatly favourd them, specially some of the *gromes of his bedd chamber, who made it ther ordinar trade, at night, when the King was a bedde, for to steale out of his pocketts such letters as any who stoode for the King in Scottlande had wryttne to the King ; which they coppyd out and sent the- just doubles to the cheife of the Covenanters ; and oftne tymes gave secrett notice to the Covenanters of the tyme that anye of the Kings letters wer directed to any of his trustees in Scottland, who, by this meanes, had opportunitye to in tercept such of the King his letters as they thought most expedient to know the contents off. Amongst others they f intercepted a packett sent from the King unto the Marquesse of Huntlye. VIIL Finally, the King tooke care to putt in garrisones in Bervicke and Carlisle, which are the frontier townes of Scottland. And because the Covenanters had spreade a declaratione in England, the King secondes his preparationes, and confrontes ther declaratione with a proclamatione, of the date February twenty-seventh, which he caused be reade in all the parosh churches of Englande, when the people wer conveened to divyne service : The title and contents wherof wer as foUowes. W It was superscrybed by the * I tould in the second booke, that the cheife of thes wer James Maxwell of Innerwicke, Mr. Maule of Panmure, and William Murrey, nephew to Mr. Robert Murrey, minister at Methven. f Spang, Historia Motuum, pag. 314. [" Ab iis interceptae erant tum literas ad Mar- chionem Huntilmum, nobilem, clientelse numerosissimae, cujus in Borealibus Scotiae pro- vinciis ultra montem Grampium formidabilis olim consuevit esse potentia ; & hisce literis in- telligunt foederati, HunHUeo cum summa authoritate istarum provinciarum praefecturam a rege demandatam fuisse : quam sciebant cupide amplexurum, & nihil reliqui ad summam diligentiam facturum, quo regis desiderio satisfaceret, & familiae suae Gordonianae existima- tionem augeret."] (0 [This Declaration will be found in the Historia Motuum, pp. 307 — 314, and in Rushworth's Historical Collections.] Ch. VIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 199 King ; its title was, " A proclamation and declaratione to enforme our loving A. D. 1639. subjectes of our kyngdome of Englande of the seditiouse practices of some in Scottland, seeking to overthrow our regall power, under false pretences of relUglone." Then he declares, that as by faire meanes he had for a long tyme now endeavoured to appease the disorders and tumultuary carriadge of some evill affected men in Scottlande, but in vaine, that he now founde it necessary to informe all his good subjectes of England of the truth of his proceedings ; what his gentlenesse had been towards them ; and how per verse ther returnes, howbeit they did inslnwate much with the Inglishes ther odiouse cause : That the Scottish disorders wer fomented by factiouse spirltts, under the clocke of relligione, but in effect to shacke of monarchy and vilifie regaU power ; that they had labourd to seduce thes of Ingland into that rebellione, poysoning them by ther subtlU wayes ; that, albeit he was confident of the loyalty of the Englishes, who had testified it in pairt by ther readye asistaunce, yet he could not but holde It requisite to give them tymlye notice of ther treacherouse intentiones, which did appeare to him very many wayes : First, By ther multitude of printe pamphletts or lybells, stuffed full of calumnyes against his royaU authoritye and just proceedings, and spreading them through this kyngdome of Englande. Second, By sending ther letters to privat persones to incite them against us, and sendinge some of ther fellow Covenanters to be at privat meetings in London and elswhare, to perverte good people from ther dutye : that some of ther meetings he knew, and some of thes letters, lewde eneuch, he had seene. ' Third, By a publicke contemning his just commands, and ther moutinouse protesting against them ; a course not fitt to be endured in any weall ordered kyngdome. Fourth, By rejecting the Covenant commanded by authoritye, because it was commanded by the King ; wheras no such bande can be warrantable in Scottland without the Kinges consent and authoritye : for Instance, ther Covenant was condiscended unto (at the Generall Assemblyes desyre) by King James. He sayes againe, that they had rejected his, because, for matters of reUigione, Itagreed in all thinges with thers; by which Covenant of thers they had treacherously induced many of the people to sweare to a bande against him ; which bande and covenant (or rather conspiracye) could not be with God, heing against him, the Lords anoynted : But it is pretended 200 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. to be with God, that, with the better countenance, they may doe the works of the devill, such as are all treasones and rebelliones. Fifth, Lastly, By ther hostile preparationes ; which can be supposed to no ende If not to invade the kyngdome of Englande, if he be not ready to resist them ; being that many of ther heades wer men of unqwyett spiritts and brockne fortunes, who will labour to macke them better on other mens estates, under a clocke of reUigione : That he hoped the Englishes would not share ther fortunes with such desperat hypocryttes, who sought to be better, but could not be much worse : Otherwayes, he asketh, what ther in tentions wer for to arme, since he sayes that he had assurd them that he would not innovate any thing : That he had graunted ther petitions all in a manner, yet no better effects had his grauntes produced but ther insolent daringe to dishonour him both at home and abroade. AU which (he sayes) he did pass by till they wer begunne to stricke at the roote of princely governement, assuming the princely power : First, By printing what they please, though he forbidd, and to prohibite what they please, though he bidd ; Second, Had dismissed his printer* whom he established : Third, Had conveend the subjects : Fourth, Raised armes : Fifth, To blocke upp his castells : Sixth, Had layd imposltlones and taxes upon the peo ple : Seventh, Threatned such with force and violence as continowd loyall to him : Eighth, Had slighted the directions of the Councell in that kyngdome, and sett upp a Table of ther owne, and sitt ther under the name of comittyes from ther late pretended generall Assemblye ; that they did meet when or wher they pleased, concluded what they pleased, without his or his Commissioners knowledge ; contrare to many standing lawes of the kyngdome yet in force ; wheras they did pretende the violatione of ther lawes as the cause of ther brainsicke distempers. Therfor that he tooke God and the world to wittnesse, that he was forced for to arme for to sett his aune kingly authority a foote agane In that kyngdome, as also for to preserve Englande against the rage and furye of thes men and ther Covenant : That the questione was not now about the Service Booke nor episcopacye, but whither he should be ther king or not ; for though in some of ther lybeUs they give him good wordes, as in that of February fourth, 1639, yet that some of them did refoose the oath of al ledgance and supremacye, and did publickly mantaine that they wer not * Robert Younge, who had printed the Service Booke. Ch. VIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 201 now obleidged unto it to tacke that oathe : which was a tenent contrary to A. D. 1639. loyalltye, and the doctrine of protestant divynes, concerning the supreme magistrate. That others of ther countrey men are infected with this venome ; three Scottish men being presently prisoners In Wales for refoosing the oath of supremacye, ther reason being because they had subscrybed the Covenant : That, albeit he had suffered with myldnesse, yet that he would not permitte episcopaU governement, which Is most Christian itself, and agreable to Christianitye and to monarchicaU governement, not to be established : That, withaU, he desyres his subjectes ther to considder what will become of the third estate in parliament If episcopacye be abrogated : That by establish ing the Service Booke ther he never intended innovatlone, but uniformity of worshippe in both kyngdomes ; though some 111 mynded men had wrested some things in it to ane ill sence. That ere long he was to publish a Large Declaratione of all ther actes ; but, that people should not be praeposeste, he thought fitt for to publishe this short one, for to obviate ther calumneyes : For Instance, that In ther last Declaratione they affirmed that he had putt papistes In places of greatest truste ; which, as It was dishonorable to him and them, so it was false In It selfe. Secondly, That some of the hierarchy of Englande have been the cause of his tacking armes to Invade his native kyngdome and medling with ther relligione ; wheras It Is certaine that whatever they have done It Is done by his oune princely directione ; and, as for armes, that it is weall knowne to his councell that thoise have perswaded him to peace and mo deratione. That he would know, whUst they saye that they Intende no acte of hostility against Englande, unlesse they shall be necessitated In their aune defence, he would faine know. Defence of what? Is it of disobedience? De fence against whom? Is it not against him ther trew and laufull soveraigne? If they wUl defende against him, he sayes it ought to bee by lawe and not by armes ; that defence he shaU never deney, but this defence he will never permitte, though his lawes are not by them regarded, and his judges so awed that they dare not proceede acording to lawe. That he desyres his good subjectes be not Infected by them, and, withaU, that they may by thoise know the necessitye he has to arme ; which is for no other ende then the safety and securitye of Englande, and the reestablish ment of his authority in Scottland, and the suppressing of such as have 3 c 202 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Preparations ofthe Cove nanters in their own defence. Information for Defensive Arms to be read in pulpits, circulated in write, but not printed. missledd his subjectes ther, and would, if not prevented, doe the lycke in Englande ; but not to innovate ther relligione, nor infringe ther libertyes, which are acording to lawe. Therfor he willes and commandes aU his loving subjectes not to receave any mor of ther seditiouse panphletts, sent from Scottland or else whair, concerninge this affaire, which can serve for no use but to draw others Into rebeUion ; and, withall, that such as had receaved them should send them to the next justice of peace, from them to be transmitted to his secretary, as they and his secretary would answer the contrare at ther perill. And, withaU, he ordaines that his Declaratione and proclamatione may be readde in all the parosh churches of Englande in the tyme of divyne service, that all, evne to the meanest of the people, might see the notoriouse carriadge of thes men, as also the justice and mercye of all the Kings proceedings. Dated, February seventh, fourteenth year of his reigne, at Whytehalle. God save the Kinge.* This is the summe of that Declaratione which the King did oppose to the Scottish remonstraunce, which, in the ende of this, hee commandes to be suppressed. But, doe what he could, ther Informationes wer divulged ; and, saye what he pleased, the most pairt believed him lesse then they did the Scottish, who had many favourers in England, specially amongst the com mons and presbyterian pairtye, or aU that wer antiepiscopalle. IX. Whilst the King was preparing for warre (which now he proclaimed by his Declaratione) the Covenanters stoode not looking on. Therfor ther heads conveen at Edinburgh, and ther doe laye downe ther conclusiones, presentlye to be putt In executione, for ther owne securitye. AU which was praefacd with solemne fastes, kept through such parosh churches as they had the command over, praying God to move the Kinges heart to inclyne to ther humble petitions, etc. And because the King would give no anser unto ther letter sent from the Assembly, interpreting aU their actiones rebel lione, least that name should sturre some, therfor they publish a booke in wrytte, which they called an Informatione for Defencive Armes.W The • Printed at London, by Robert Barker, and the Assigney of John Bell, anno 163|-. (0 [It is printed in Stevenson's History of the Church of Scotland, vol. ii., pp. 686—695. It was vvritten, says Baillie, by Mr. Alexander Henderson. " He didit somewhat agamst the hair, and more quickly than his custom is ; so that it was not so satisfactory as his other writs : for this cause, though read out of many pulpits, yet he would not let it go to the press." Letters, vol. i. p. 152. Bishop Guthrie says the paper was " contrived by Bal merino, Hope, and Henderson." Memoirs, p. 51. edit. Glasg. 1747.] Ch. X.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 203 these which they mantained* therin was. That they had just reason and ne- A. D. 1639. cessity for to defende themselves from the armed power of the supreme ma- gistrate ; and that it was laufuU to the greater and most uncorrupt pairt of the nobiUtye, with the collective bodye of the kyngdome, for to mantaine rel ligione established by pubUcke lawes, as also the preveleidges and libertyes of the kyngdome, by force of armes, against a King, who, living without the kyngdome, and seduced by the evill counceU of the enemyes of relligione, was preparing to invade the natione by force of armes ; although they, being his subjects, wer not convinced that they had transgressed any divyne or humane lawe. The argument of this tractate looked so suspitiouse that the Covenanters founde It not expedient to print it ; although that had bene to as good pour pose as to scatter the wryttne coppyes, which grew so pubUcke that presently they wer fallne upon, and many passages qwarelld with, as resembling the JesuiticaU doctrine so neer that they wer hardly distinguishable. Yet the authors of that booke strove for to distinguish betuixt ther doctrine and the JesuiticaU tenents, by giving in the instances of 'such practises as farr upp as the dayes of the apocryphall King Fergus ; and from thes historicall (and some fabolouse) Instances of rebeUione and kiUing of Scottish kinges (for that was the result of many such sturres, if ther historyes speacke truthe) they argued a facto ad jus, or, at least, custome and praescrip- tlone : Yet heerin they saide no mor then Junius Brutus, and Buchanan, in his ridicolouse tractate Dejure regni, and others of that stampe saide be for them. X. Ther was one (I suppose Mr. Johne Corbitt by name), a minister, Corbet's Re- who fell upon that booke pourposly, and printed the refutatione therof in a f"tation. tractate called The Ungirding of the Scottish Armourf ; wherby he did man taine that upon no accompt it was laufull for subjectes to tacke upp armes ? See Spang, pa^. 316, Historia Motuum. The Tables ordained that this Informatione for Defencive Arraes should be readd in pulpitts and pressed in privat conference for justi- . fying tacking up armes against the Kinge. f The ansuer called The Ungirding of the Scottish Armour is wryttne by Mr. Johne Corbett, minister at Bonyl, in Scottland, which was of old one of the colledgiate churches of the provestry of Dumbarton. It is printed at Dublin, anno 1639, and dedicated to the Earle of Strafford, lord deputye of Ireland. The author was deposed by the presbytry of Dumbarton, Apryle sixteenth, 1639, and forced to flye to Irelande. The causes of his depo sition wer. First, Subscrybing the bishopps ther Declinator. Second, Frequent absence and contumacye from the presbytrye. Third, His preaching that tacking upp armes against the Kinge was a doctrine of unrighteousnesse. Fourth, His not subscrybing the Covenante. Fifth, A seditiouse letter sent to the moderator. [See above, vol. i. p. 8. note.] 204 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A D. 1639. The Cove nanters levy men. Colonel Ro bert Munro. Marquis of Argyle.Montrose op posed to Huntly. General Sir Alexander Lesly.Clan Cameron join the Cove nanters, in op position to Huntly. Meeting at Perth. Taxes. against ther laufuU princes : Which refutatione the Covenanters, themselves profest,(0 disdaind to reply too, as being absurde in itself; albeit his positione be none other but the very tenent and practise of primitive Christians ; and, since the tyme that Mr. Corbitt worot that tractate, the these is agane as serted by the ablest pennes in Europe of the reformed divynes. This booke of the Plea for Defensive Armes is lyckwayes oftne tossed by Lysimachus Nicanor in his Congratulatory Epistle to the Covenanters. Al though it be true that Corbitt and Lysimachus be aeqwally hateful! to them, yet Mr. Robert BaiUy thought that Lysimachus deserved ane ansuer ; either because it was a bishop (Lesly of Downe) who was the author,W or because Lysimachus his paraleU stucke ane odium upon the Covenanters. But such as with indifferencye have compared Leslyes learned satyr e with Mr. BalUys reply thertoo, (which reply is annexed to Laudensium Autokata- crisis) have thought that BaiUy had better lettne it alone, his superficiaU answer being little better then a rendring upp his armes to his enemye. But mor of this, God wUlIng, in Its owne place. XI. The Covenanters for mor then a yeare past had been provyding armes. They fall now to levy men and to provyde for opposing the King ; to which pourpose they listed severall regiments, one wherof was putt under the command of CoUonel Robert Munroe (a north countrey gentleman, who had been bredd upp under Gustavus Adolphus, the martiall King of Sweden). His order was with his regiment for to lye neer the border of Englande, and to have ane eye to any who from Englande upon the Kings accompt should offer to macke any incursione or cavalcad upon Scottlande ; as also to waite upon the motiones of the Earle of NIthsdale and his associattes who, upon the south border and south west of Scottland, declared for the Kinge. This regiment of his was disposed of into the safest and fittest qwarters for that ende. The Marquesse of ArgyUe undertooke for to gwarde the westerne coaste of Scottland and the Firth of Clyde, and to keepe ane eye over the motiones of the Earle of Strafford, lord deputy of Ireland, as also upon the Clan Doneel, or any other Highlanders who should offer to joyne with the de puty. And to this pourpose he caused levy ane regiment of his owne High landers of Ardgylle and Lorne, to whom other neighbour Covenanters wer (I) [Historia Motuum, p. 317; Baillie's Letters, vol. i. p. 153.] (2) [See above, vol. i. p. 8, rtote; vol. ii. p. 81, note.] Ch. XL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 205 to joyne as they saw cause or necessitye, in case the configuratlone of Straf- A. D. l639. ford, the Earl of Antrim, and Mackdonel, should threatne them with danger upon that hande. ArgyUes pairty are saide to have been about one thou sand in all. And because HamUtons castell, in the isle of Arran (which isle is scitu- ated in the entrye of the Firth of Clyd and does belonge heritablye to the familye of Hamiltoune,) was founde commodiouse for to gwarde that firthe from the launding of forces from Irelande, therfor Argylle causes surpryse that casteU without bloode (for It was but slenderly gwarded), and therin planteth a garrisone. The Earle of Montrose was ordered for to waite upon Huntly, in caise he should offer to goe to ane heade ; and some regiments of foote and troopes of horse, consisting chelfly of volunteer gentlemen of the shyres be north the Firth of Forthe, wer putt under his commande ; aU thes of ther verye best men, who, upon occasione, wer to joyne with the northerne Covenanters, the Forbesses, Frazers, Creightons, and such of Murrey as wer of that pairtye. And to Montrose was conjoined, as ane adjutante. Sir Alexander Lesly (afterwards so weall knowne for being generall of the Scottish expedi- tiones). Although the comissione of generaU was at that tyme givne to Montrose, yet all thinges wer to be done by General Leslyes directione and advyce. Ther partye was givne out to be three thousande, though after warde they appeared not to be so manye. Montrose had order for to faU upon Huntly befor he should joyne with forces which wer promisd to be sent to him from Englande, which Huntlye was expectinge day by day ; as also that they should sleight all the trenches that Huntly and the cittlzens of Aberdeen had made at Aberdeen for to gwarde the towne from inrodes ; and to disarme the towne. Finally, they had warrant for to lye so closse to him as that he should be disenabled for to oppresse anye of the Covenanters his neighbours. AU these thinges wer concluded about this tyme, at a great meeting of the Covenanters in Sainct Johnstone ; to which meeting, lyckewayes, Argylle did Invite and bringe some of the cheife of the Clan Camerone ; specially Donald Cameron (seconde sonne to Allan Cameron Mack na ToIche(O), knowne commonlye under the name of Donald Gulrke, for having (1) [ Allan Cameron of Lochiel, chief of the Clan Cameron, grandfather of the famous Sir Ewen Dubh Cameron of Lochiel, and great-great-grandfather of the gallant Donald 206 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. in his younger yeares (as the fame goes) stabbed a countrey neighbour upon some small disobleidgement ; for the which barbarouse acte he is said to have been highly commended by his father AUan, as ane hopefuU youth ; Allan himself being too weall knowne for to have drivne that traide of throate cuttinge amongst his neighbours in Lochaber, and a knowne sorcerer (0 and avowed. That which engadged the Clan Cameron to ArdgyUe was not anye anti pathy that they had to bishopps or Service Booke, etc., mor then ther neighbours, the Ardgylle men ; being that most of the people in thes places are barbarouse, or, if they inclyne to any professione, it is mostly to pop erye : But the Clan Cameron joyned with the Covenanters in oppositione to Huntlyes familye, to whom most of them are vassalls in Lochaber, and had been severall tymes befor crubbed by the Earles of Huntly by force of armes ;^^'> which made them now glade for to laye holde upon any occasione of re venge. Besyde this, Ardgylle had ane eye to thes places, either to weackne Huntly, as seing much of his greattnesse did consiste in his Highland fol- lowinge ; or, if he could get a pretext, for to gripp to Huntlyes Highland laundes himself, as afterward he did. But all such at that tyme wer welcome to the Covenant ; albeit, afterward, about the tyme of Charles IL his Incoming, anno 1650, they chaunged ther principalis, and Argylle was acessory to the purging out as knowlnge and civili men out of the Kings army, as either the Argylle men or the Lochaber men wer. Yet, lett it be remembered, that a pairt of the Clan Cameron, at this tyme and long after ward, owned the Kings qwarreU ; for most of the Highlanders are inclyned, Cameron of Lochiel, so celebrated in the history of the rising of 1745. He died about the year 1650. Lord Hailes has preserved a characteristic letter, written by him in 1645, to Sir James Grant of Freuchie : " I have received your honour's letter concerning this misfortunate accident that never fell out, betwixt our houses, the like before, in no man's days ; but, praised be God, I am innocent of the same and my friends, both in respect that they gi't [went] not within your honour's bounds, but [only] to Murray-land, where all men take their prey ; nor knew not that Moynes was a Grant, but thought that he was a Murray-man." Memorials of the Reign of Charles I. p. 156.] (1) [Patrick Gordon, in his Short Abridgement of Britanes Distemper from the yeare of God 1639 to 1649, MS. alludes to the chief of the Clan Cameron as a reputed seer. " Allan M'CoUduie [MacConnel Duy, or MacDonald Dubh, the peculiar patronymic of Cameron of Lochiel,] ane old fox, and who was thought to be a seer, had told that there should be a battell lost there [Inverlochy] by them that came first to seike battell."] (2) [Particularly in 1544, in 1614, and in 1626, See Sir Robert Gordon's Hist, of Earld. of Sutherland, pp. 109, 294, 357.] Ch. XIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 207 being left to themselves, to he RoyaUistes ; happy at least, though they have A. D. 1639. little learning, that they have not learnd to distinguish themselves out of ther loyaltye, by notions unknowne tUl the latter ages. Lyckewayes, such as laye amongst the Covenanters in thes provinces of Scottland, which stoode for the Covenant ; such, I say, as wer for the Kinge, whom they could be masters of, they dissarmed with as little tumult as they could, doing them no furder harme ; although some preveened them, and be tymes reteered with their horses and arraes : Others lyckwayes fledd, after ther arraes wer seised upon. The taxtes for mantenance of ther armyes wer, at this tyme and after ward for a whyle, imposed upon theraselves and ther associatts, by rau- twall consent. The Tables wer they who did determine the summa totalis, as also did divyde it by ane aeqwall proportione. Ther wer not a few whom they drew into the strearae, and compelled, by reasone of their neighbourhood, for to contribute and tacke upp armes, and goe along with them, glade to give thera outward obedience, for to shunne ther feare and hazard of present hurt ; of whom not a few, afterwards when they saw pairty to joyne too, proved more active against the Covenanters then ever they had been for them. Finally, ther was no diligence left unused, no meanes unassayed, wherby such as might prove usefuU to ther partye, raight either by allurraents be drawne over to ther syde, or, by terrors and the discommodltye laide out, laide off frora owning the Kinges interest, or standing at least neutralls till such tyme as they, being masters, beganne in ende to commande suche whom, at first, they made ther addresses too by way of requeste. XII. Ther next care was for to fortifie such places upon the two sydes of Covenanters the Firth of Forthe as lay most opne to the algarads of sea forces, if any °^ ' ^ proper should enter the firthe. To this pourpose some slender workes wer raised Leith. at Kinghorne and Bruntislande, and such canon as they could gett, mostly Colonel Alex- course iron peeces, tackne off of shippes, planted upon them. ton their And because it concerned them much for to secure Edinburghe, therfor ""aster of with aU expeditione they fall to fortifie the port towne of Leith (which is Dalkeiwi. about a myle distant from Edinburgh) with strong fortifications, acording to RegaUa. the moderne fashione. Leith had been fortlfyd befor, in the tyrae of Qween casUe smed Mary of Scottland, by the Frenches ; and had stoode out a seidge, and the also Dumbar- assault both of the Lord Grey, sent thither by Queen Elisabeth with con- *°°' 208 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. siderable forces, and of the lordes of the congregatione, till it was rendred by La Brosse, anno 1560. The workes which the Frenches raised wer not so farr demolished but that the printes of them wer to be discerned after wardes ; yet did not Collonel Alexander Hamlltone, ingeneer to the Co venanters, and maister of ther arteUlerye, thinke meete to follow the French lynes, but did worke upon a new plane, which the levell scituatione of Leethe gave licence to vary, acording to artists inventione. The first basketts full of earthe wer carryd by the noblemen, the cheife leaders of the Covenante ; whoise example was foUowd with great alacritye by people of all rankes, specially the cittlzens of Edinburghe, men, women, and childeren ; who travelled at that worke so laboriously that in short space it was brought to great perfectione, though it consisted of a considerable number of great bastions, reared upp a la moderne. I have hearde It affirraed, at that tyme, that the Covenanters wer once resolved for to have marrd and rendred uselesse the haven of Mon trosse, by sinking some vessels full of stones in it. If it wer true or not, I cannot determine, since it was not done at aU, but the barbery left as befor. The castell of Dalkeith, which lyes within a six myles of Edinburghe, was at this tyme standing without any gwarde, as being to no pourpose to have garrisone ther, and the place being rather for pleasure then strenthe. In it ther wer some qwantitye of ammunitione, lying since the last yeare : It was carryd asyde thither, because the Covenanters would not permitt it to be carryd in to the castell of Edinburghe, yet had ane eye still tothe ammunitione, which was left ther as a prey to them. They thought it therfor high tyme now to macke use of that which was laid up ther furth coming for ther use ; and to that pourpose enter the paUace of Dalkeithe by a scalladoe, not one being to resiste, and seise upon all the armes that wer founde ther, and transport thera thence.C) In searching that pallace, they alighted upon a trunke, which they made opne ; wher they founde (as some thought not by chaunce) the crowne and scepter and sworde of the kyngdome of Scottlande, the ensignes of ma jestye ; aU which they caused transport into the casteU of Edinburgh, (it (1) [" The Earl of Traquair's Relation of the Surrender of Dalkeith to the Covenanters, deUvered to His Majesty at York, in April, 1639," will be found in Nalson's Impartial Collection, vol. i. pp. 212-:-214.] Ch. XIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 209 being tackne at this tyme, as yow shall heare), with great solemnitye, con- A. D. 1639. veying all* with no meaner attendants then the cheife noblemen Cove- nanters : That castell being the place appoynted, as they affirmed, for keep ing thes badges of royaltye. Edinburgh castell I should have spocke first off, for it was seized upon befor the castell of Dalkeithe ; the day of Its seizure Marche nlne- teenth(i), or very neer it. It cost little powder, and no bloode. Blocked upp it had been a long tyme befor, as has been tould. When the daye came that it must be thers, generall Lesly caused the muster maisters of Edin burgh caU out some choice companyes that morning, who wer drawn upp into the outwarde court yard of the abbey of Haliroode house, (for it is to be remerabered that all this spring, not only in and about Edinburgh, but through the whole countrey, ther wer daylye musters ; and young souldiours, who lately had been accustorad with the pleuch, wer now calld out, and taught everye wher to handle ther arraes, with no Uttle noyse and qwarter keepinge.) Thes companys arraed, wer ledd along the high street, and drawne upp in covert of the neerest buildings to the casteU, a companye or two drawne closse to the outwarde gate, (which opned then in the south syde of a sumptouse outworke of ashler worke, called the Spurre, although It wer both troublesorae and uselesse to the casteU, and therfor demolishd some yeares afterwardes, when the English gott it into ther possessione). Upon the gate they did hang a pittard, and therwith blew upp the outwarde gate of the castell, without any resistance of the captane of the castelle, a gentle man caUed [Archibald] Haddin ; who, as he resolved not to render that which he kept but by ther permissione all the whyle, so he was but In ane ill con ditione, as not able to mantane it, for want of all necessaires, longer then the Covenanters wer pleased to permitte him so to doe. He and his few souldiours stoode looking on amongst the canon, upon the high batterye, whilste Lesly coraraanded to pettarde the gate. The gentleraan and soul diours they dissraist, without harme done to them. It is affirmed that the gentleman keeper shedde teares when they entred the castell, either for * Leading the crowne and scepter captive, withe a triumphant processione, sales a late wrytter. (1) [On the twenty-first of March, according to Bishop Guthrie and Sir James Balfour. Guthrie says Dalkeith was taken on the twenty-third, Balfour, on the twenty-second of March. Bishop Burnet gives the twenty-third o'i March as the date of the capture of Edinburgh castle. The MS. Diary of Sir Thomas Hope states that Edinburgh was taken on the twenty-first, Dalkeith on the twentyJ,hird of March. Napier's Life and Times of Montrose, p. 91.] 2d 210 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. greefe of the efiront, or that he fownde himself In no better capacitye to doe the King, his maister, service.CO It may be disputed whether his bygone confynment within the castell, or this way of releasment, was most trouble some to him. If he was reaU In his trust.* Howsoone they wer maisters of it, they tooke care to repaire the breach of the gate, and to furnish it with men and ammunitione necessarye. The lycke fortune did the castle of Dunbrltton runne with Edinburgh ; for by famineC^) they made themselves maisters of that otherwayes Impreg nable strenthe. If ther be any such in Brittaine. Marquis of XIII. The castell of Edinburgh was surprysed that same very day that Huntly s ^j^g Marquesse of Huntlye kept his second rendevouze, at Innerowrye;^^) for at Turreff. he had kept one befor, at Turreff,^*^ of which I have delayd to give ane ac- (I) [Burnet imputes blame to the garrison- " It is true, much resistance could not be made : but that could not wipe off their stain, who yielded that impregnable and important Place so faintly. The occasion of their negligence was, that a Gentlewoman of good Quality was sent in under pretence of visiting the Captain of the Castle, to keep him in discourse : she dined with him, and engaged him to play at Cards, so that they were about his ears, before he was apprehensive of danger." Memoires of the Hamiltons, p. 117.] • Insere loco opportuno. Martij ZO, 1639 yeares, Ther was a petition givne into the lords of the session, for some remeade for the absence of the signett. The lords ordaned that all wryttes which should have past by the signet should be presented to one Georo-e Had din, a wrytter, and the ordinary pryce dwe to the signet consigned in his handes, and to be made forthe coming to the lord secretarye, and his keepers. Wherupon the said George Haddin should marke the date of the saide offer, besyde the waxe, at the place customablye bering the date of the signett, and wrytte therupon thes wordes, " marked by me, acording to acte and warrant of the lords of sessione, and ordained to be ane warrant for execution heerof, or passing through the seales, albeit it be not signetted" ; which wordes he was to subscrybe withe his signe and subscriptione mannwall. [See Spalding, Hist, of Troub, vol. i., p. 84.] (2) [The castle of Dunbarton was taken not hy famine, as our author supposes, but by stratagem. " Durabrettoun the king's house was taken in be tho covenanters by ane prettie shght, which was thus ; the captain thereof called Stewart, a religious gentleman, trew to the king, happened upon ane Sunday to goe hear devotion at ane church without the cas tell, fearing no evill nor danger ; but he is suddenly taken by the covenanters, who was laid for him ; he is compelled to cast off his cloathes, which were shortly putt upon ane other gentleman of his shape and quantitie, and he pat on his cloathes upon him againe. Thus apparrell interchanged, they commanded this captain, under paine of death, to tell the watch word, which, for fear of his life, he truely told. Then they goe on the night quietly, on- sein be the castileans, and had this counterfeit captain with them, who cryed and called by the watch word ; which being heard, yeitts are cassen open, in goes the covenanters with greater power nor was within to defend it, and takes in this strong strength, and mans and fortifies the samen to their mind." Hist, of Troub., vol. i., pp. UO, 111. Compare Bail- lie's Letters, vol. i., p. 158 ; Sir James Balfour's Annales, vol. ii., pp. 322, 323.] (3) [On the twenty-fifth of March, according to Spalding, vol. i., p. 101.] (4) [On the fourteenth of February.] Ch. XIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 211 compt till now, least I should mixe the actiones of severall places. The occasione of that rendevouze was an advertishment that Huntly had by Sir George Ogilvye of Banfe, knycht (afterwards lord), at that tyme one who profest to doe much for the Kinge. His inteUigence bore that ther was a great meeting to be (at Turreff, a merkatt towne, about eleven or twelve myle eastward from Strabogye, Huntlyes castell, but only a myle distant from Forglen, wher Sir George Ogilvye then remalnede) of the northerne Covenanters, Forbeses, Frazers, Keithes, Creightones, and ther vassalls, about sorae seriouse consultatione, which questionlesse tended to the oppos ing of ther forraidable neighbour, the Marquess of Huntlye. It was Sir George Ogilvyes opinion that If Huntly would but keepe rendevouze at Turreff that daye, that either the other partye would not appeare, or, If they did, that for plane feare they would acte nothing, but evanishe, without any conclusione tackne. Huntly readUy foUowd that advyce, which was dis pleasing to many of his freendes, who thought they had reasone to be jealouse of the Lord Banfe, as one that bore not so much inwarde good wille to Huntlys familye as he outwardly profest : And ther constructione of it [was], that Banfe drew on that rendevouze, either for to engadge Huntly actwally against the Covenanters, caring little how it shoulde ende ; or if the service prospered, that hiraself might gett the thankes from the King, as being very instruraentall (If not the only projector) to sette the Kings partye for to acte. And heer I shall not trouble my reader with the narratione of thes goldne hopes, and castells built In the aire, and expectationes of for- faltryes, that severaU of thoise who profest theraselves for the Kinge did laye ther compt upon for a whyle after this tyme ; some of them, who had mor courage then soUde wisdome, this yeare proceeding to that height of folly as to qwareU with other about the Covenanters laundes, publickly, in ther cuppes. But Huntlyes intentiones for a rendevouze at Turreff, which he appoynt ed to bee upon that sarae verye daye with that of the northerne Covenanters, could farr lesse be conceald frora thera then thers from hira ; for the many publicke dispatches that he sent for that pourpose to all qwarters (wrytting to his freends to corae thither without extraordinar arraes, and ther follow ers), gave his neighbours the Covenanters the alarum, who as quickly did certifie Montrosse therof, who was ready upon a caU. And, being desyrouse to shew himself as active in his charge (as he had been remarkable for coun tenancing protestationes, and the Generall Asserably of Glasgow, and puU- A. D. 1639. James Ogil vie, Earl of Findlater.The Earl Marischal declares for the Cove nanters. 212 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. ing downe the organs of the chappell royall of Holie Rood house, the Kings pallace, the summer and winter past,) with such of the cavalrye of the Mearnes and Angusse gentrie as wer neerest, or readyest, or most zealouse to the service, he flyes over the Grangbean hills with all speed possible, scarce ever sleeping or resting tUl he gott to Turreffe, accom- panyd with the number of neer two hundereth gallant gentlemen ; having first not neglected to bidde the Forbesses, and Frazers, and all suche as the shortnesse of the tyme could permitte then to conveene, for to be ther tymously, upon the daye appoynted, which they failed not to doe. And, befor any considerable number of Huntlyes people appeared, they wer come to Tureffe; and it being an opne markett towne, they planted the church yard of Turreff with musketeers and harquebuziers, wher it was supposed that Huntly would meet with his friendes, if they wer to have any consulta tione that daye. The place for Its scitwatlone was advantagiouse for the defenders, being high grounde and uneasye to bee approached except on the east syde, neerest the street of the towne, wher the entrye to the church yard is. Huntlye and his freendes and followers beganne to appeare and con veen apace (after the Covenanters wer possest with Turreff,) from severall quarters. Severall companyes of them entring Turriff and fynding the Co venanters ther, scarcely knew at first wher to seeke Huntlye. However, they saw that it was not convenient for them to tacke upp ther stande in a place alreadye fiUed with others ; therfor, such as entred the vlUage, with out any aboade ther, roade fordwards and drew out to the feelds southwarde therof, at some distance over against it ; and all this without any violence offered to any of Huntlyes foUowers, either in worde or deede, by such of the Covenanters who wer come to Turreffe that day to be defencive and to stande ther grownde onlye, fynding it befor tyme to ingadge, and, though it had been tyme, very doubtfuU of the event, as not knowing Huntly his strenthe nor nurabers. How soone Huntly himselfe came neer the place, he had advertishment that it was poseste and tackne upp by Montrose and his foUowers. Therfor, dissembling his dissatisfactlone, he rode another waye towards the plane, whither the rest of his company wer begunne to move, as supposing it would be the most convenient place for them to halt upon tiU they knew Huntlye his intentiones. The place is knowne by the name of the Broadefoord of Towy, not so neer Turreff' as a myle Scottishe : Thither in ende came aU Ch. XIIL.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 213 whom he had sent for; who, for gentlemen and yeomans, made upp twenty A. D. 1639. and fyve hundereth all on horse backe, though not all the horses nor the men for service upon horse. Severall who wer present urged Huntly to fall on and dryve awaye the Covenanters ; which, they saide, as he might be ansuerable to doe, being the Kings lievtenant for the northe, so he had power to doe it; that it was good to resiste the beginlngs ; that if he dismissed so manye gallant men without acting any thing, who wer come resolute to serve the Kinge that day, they would be discouraged, and not so readily conveene, at another tyme, upon his next call ; that It would encourage the other partye to bearde him, and contemne him, upon all occasions : besyde, they shewd hira that It was ane afii-ont to him to be kept out of Turreff. Thoise who thus argwed wer some of the hottest headed, but not of the wysest. To all ther argwings, Huntly ansuered, That he had no warrant from the King to engadge in bloode with the Covenanters ; but, upon the contrare, to lett them first show themselves.(0 Thisbe cleared to sorae of the princi paU noblemen and gentlemen who wer present, tacking them asyde and lett ing them see some of the Kings expresses, wrytte to him, to that pour pose : For the rest, he thanked them for ther ready conveening, and ex horted them to continow In ther begunne loyaltye. Amongst other men of qwalitye who did keep rendevouze with Huntly, ther came thither, with the best of his followers, James Ogilvye, Earle of FIndlater(2) (who shortly afterward fell in to the Covenant). His waye com ming through Turreff, he tooke occasione to have some commoning with Montrose and his pairtye ; and being a man of a peaceable temper, and one who was knowne to have no stomacke for warre, he tooke occasione to mediate peace betwixt Huntly and Montrose, upon his owne feare and sus pitione, or uncertainty of the event, or the designes of either pairtye. The ansuer and comissione , sent from Montrose to Huntlye was. That they In tended not to molest any, and would be as loath to sitt downe under any (O [This is corroborated by Burnet. " A Commission forthe Lieutenantry ofthe North of Scotland was sent to the Marquis of Huntley; but he was ordered to keep it up as long as was possible, and carefully to observe two things. One was, not to be the first Agressor, except he were highly provoked, or His Majesties Authority signally affronted ; the other was, that he should keep oif with long Weapons, till His Majesty were on the Borders ; lest if he should begin sooner, the Covenanters might overwhelm him with their whole Force, and either mine him, or force him to lay down his arms." Memoires ofthe Hamiltons, p. 113.] (2) [James, second Lord Ogilvy of Deskford, created Earl of Findlater in 1638.] 214 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. injurye if they could shunne it; that If the Marquesse of Huntlye had any bussinesse with his freendes he might tacke him to any other pairt of the toune of Turreffe, and they named the Earle of ErroUs house in Turreff, which they saide his lordshipp and some of his select freendes should be welcome to macke use of. Of all the rest who were with him, they neither spoke, nor meant they to admitte, lett be to invite them.* This was a propositione somewhat ridiculouse, to invite Huntly for to leave his rendevouze and come in amongst them with some few of his freendes ; therfor it mett with such acceptance upon Huntlyes pairt as it deserved, which was to sUght It qwytte ; which made Findlater use manye wordes to Huntlye, exhorting him to peaceable resolutions, who had no warrant to doe otherwayes. Some tyme befor sunnesett, Huntly breake upp his rendevouze, and sent the most pairt of his owne men backe to Strabogye, with his second sonne Jaraes, Viscounte of Aboyne, under whoise conducte they had come thither that day in a brigadde together. A considerable number of gentlemen con veyed Huntly towards Forglane, the lairde of Banfes house, keeping the straight way under the village of Turreff, and rydinge hard under the dyckes of the churcheyarde, westward, within two picke lenth to Montrose company without salutatlone or worde speaking on either syde. The next day Montrose disbanded and returned southwards againe. W * Nota. This commission that was sent to Huntly was sent by the Earle of Kinghorne, who offered to Huntly a pairt of the toune of Turreff, and the Earle of Errolls lodginge, for him and such as should come to attende him ; but Montrose was unseen in it. The com mission was sent by one of Montrose syde, a Covenanter gentleman ; and the ansuer return ed by one of Huntlys syde. Whither that commissioner who came from Kinghorne did come in Findlater's company or not, it is uncertaine, nor doe I remember it. (I) [The narrative of Spalding supplies several details of this First Raid of Turreff. " The Table had appointed ane committee to be holden at Turreff, for stenting of the countrie and numbering of men. And to this effect, ther conveined the earle of Montrose, the earle of Kinghorne, the lord Coupar, with sundrie other barrons and gentlemen, about nyne score, Weill horsed, and weill armed gallants, haveing buff coats, carabins, swords, pistolls, and the like armes. They came not be Aberdein, but, upon Wednesday the 13th of February, they lodged with the lord Fraser, at his place of Muchallis, and in the countrie about. And upon the morne being the 14th of Februar, they rode from Muchallis to Turreff, haveing the lord Fraser, one of the committee, with them, and his freinds ; where there mett them the master of Forbes, with his freinds and followers, another of the said committee ; the earle of Marischall himselfe was not there, but his men, tennents, and servants, of Buchan and Marr, wer ther ; and likewayes, the young earle of Erroll, his men, tennents, and servants of Buchan wer ther, albeit himselfe was but ane young bairne ; about the number of 800, weill horsed, weill armed gentlemen, and on foot together, with buff coats, swords, corslets, jackis, pistolls, carrabines, hagbutts, and other wapinis. Thus, they took in the toun of Turreff, and busked very advantageously their muskets round about the dykes of the kirk Ch. XIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 215 This is that meeting which afterwards was knowne under the name of A. D. 1639. The First Roade of Turreff, for to distinguish it from a rencounter that fell out ther in May following, that yeare, betwixt Huntlys foUowers and ther neighbours, the Covenanters of the shyres of Aberdeen and Banfe. It was looked upon as ane actione upon Huntlyes pairt whoise deepe and raystery few or none could dyve unto. Yet, Fame, that is no niggard in her reportes, befor It came the lenth of Parise, made it passe ther in the Parisian Gazzett, under no lesse notione then the seidge and tacking of the great towne of Turreff, in Scottland, bythe Marquesse of Huntlye; whom Fraunce knew yeard, and sat down within the kirk therof, such as was of the committee, viz. Montrose, Kinghorne, Coupar, Fraser, and Forbes ; as is befor noted. " Now, the marquess of Huntly, being at the buriall of his aunt the lady Foveran, and daughter to the laird of Geight, short whyle befor this time ; and hearing of this committee to be holden at Turreff, and taikeing ofthe samen, some evil disposed persons informed his lordship that he durst not come ther that day. The marquess incensed therwith, came frae the buriall to his house in Aberdein, and shortly wrytes to his freinds, to meit hira without any armes, except swords and shotts ; and, upon the said Wednesday the 13th of February, he lap on in Aberdein, haveing his two sones the lord Gordon and the lord Aboyne with him, the earle of Findlater, the master of Rae who by accident was then in Aberdein, the laird Drura, the laird Banflf, the laird Geight, the laird of Haddoch, the laird of Pitfoddels, the laird of Foveran, the laird of Newtoun, the laird of Udny, with many others that mett hira. Allwayes, he lap on in Aberdein, about 60 horse with swords, pistolls, and hagbutts allenariy ; and, upon Wednesday, he came to Kellie, the laird of Haddoch's house, at night. Upon the morne being Thursday and the 14th of February, he lap on, and at the Broad Foord of Towie, two miles distant from Turreflf, the marquesse himselfe begane to rank and putt his men in order, and to take up the number of them, which was estimate to be about 2000 brave weill horsed gentlemen and brave footmen, albeit wanting armes, except sword and shott, as I have said. Thus, the marquess carae forward, in order of battell, up the northwest syde of Turreff, in sight of the other companyes, ilk ane looking to others, but any kind of offence or injurious word. The marquess, haveing thus peaceablie past by, dis solved his company, ilk man to go home, and himselfe, that night, went to Forglan, pertain ing to the laird of Banff. The covenanters heard indeed of the marquess' comeing, and therefore they took in the toun, and busked the yeard dykes very commodiously, as I have said ; and seeing ther was nothing but peace, they held their committee within the kirk of Turreff, stented, taxed, and numbered the men, ordaining them to be in readiness, with their armes, to attend the Table. It was reported, ther came to assist this committee out of Murray, the laird of Innes, the sherriff of Murray, the lairds of Pluscardyne, Tarbett, Brodie, and others, about 12 score brave weill horsed gentlemen. Allwayes, upon the said 14th of February, this committee dissolved in peace, and the lords returned back to Muchalles ; the rest were lodged, that night, at Inverurie and Kintoir. Upon the morne, they rode to Dunnotter, wher they wer mede weillcome, and Marischall ther declared him selfe clearlie to be ane covenanter, whilk was doubtfuU before ; and suae furth ilk man home. The marquess of Huntly came from Forglan to Kellie, upon Fryday at even ; and, upon Saturday, he returned to his own lodgeing in New Aberdein. This bussieness did no good to the marquess, but was evill devysed and councelled to raake a show of his strength and power, without doeing any other service ; for the whilk and others his doeings, he was with his freinds pitifully born down and oppressed; as ye may hereafter see." Hist, of Troub. vol. i. pp. 93, 94.] 216 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. better then they knew Turreffe, having seen him some few yeares befor amongst the armyes of the Most Christian King, commander of the Com pany of the Scottish Gendarmes, (which company is the second of Fraunce) in the service against Lorraine and Alsatia ; wher lyckwayes his two eldest sonnes George, Lord Gordone, and James, Viscount of Aboyne, past ther apprenteshipp in the scoole of Mars. This Interview, at Turreff, betuixt Huntly and Montrosse pairtyes, did Irritate both alycke to tacke armes. Montrosse, by what he had sene, un derstood that he had a considerable pairty to deale withall ; and Huntly saw that his enemy was resolute and watchfuU. Therfor Huntly resolves no mor now to lye idle. To this pourpose, therfor, he falls instantly to arme his followers with such armes as the King had sent to him (which wer brought about, in a pinnace, by Sir Alexander Gordon of Clunye,(0 together with a comissione, from the King, of a lievtenantcye over the north,* which was the dignitye his predecessors had) ; and for to cause traine the young soul diours, and list them in companyes and in horse troopes, who consisted mostly of volunteers. And, least he should lye opne to a surpryse, he drawes in gwards about him to Aberdeene ; which the townesmen, at his request, and for ther owne securitye, fell to fortifie with such trenches as the shortnesse of the tyme, and the present necessitye, would permitt them to cast and macke upp; which worke they beganne too in the beglnlnge of Marche. His house of Strabogye, which he was then repairing, was not in conditione to be made tenible ; nor was the Boge of Gulght in much better posture for defence, being builded rather for beauty and accomodatione then for strenthe. Ther remained one castell, seven myles west from Strabogye, near Balveny, called Achindowne castell (built, as Is affirmed, by Cochrain, who was minion to King James the Third), which was the only strenth he coulde confyde (1) [" Sir Alexander Gordon of Cluny, knight barronet, being sent be the marquess to goe to the king be land, returned to Aberdein be sea in one of the king's pinnages upon the nynth of March. This pinnage guarded and convoyed ane other merchant ship, to the port of the said burgh, wherein there was 2000 musketts, bandiliers, and musket staves ; 1000 pikes with harness and armes both for footmen and horsemen; and carrabins, horse picks, pistolls, powder, lead, and match. Thir armes were brought on shoar, and delivered to the marquess upon the 17th of March." Spalding, Hist, of "Troub., vol. i., p. 99.] • March sixteenth. His commission to be levtennnet was publicklye proclaimed at the crosse of Aberdeen, with sounde of trumpett, and therafter warrant directed out to all cheife men within the precincte, for to tacke armes. Particularly warrants wer sent to the Forbesses and Frasers, reqwyring them to follow him in the Kings service, but they sleighted his orders, and quickly joined with ther oune pairtye. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., pp. 100, 101, where a copy of the proclamation is preserved.] Ch. XIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 217 in yet, because of its scitwatione amongst barren hills, and neer the High- A. D. 1639, lands, rather meet to be a prisone and a retreate than a gwarde to the coun- trey, being unfitt for sallyes upon ane enemye. Nor had he any money furder then his owne revenew (a pairt wherof was morgadged), for to wadge this warre ; nor was he to expect contributions frora his freendes or asso- tiatts, who behoved to mantane themselves ; the power of the Marquesses of Huntly, consisting cheiflye in the great number of his owne vassalls, both In the Highlands and Lowlands, who posesse great laundes belonging to him, and doe therfor pay to him ther personall service with ther followers, either upon horse or foote, upon ther owne charges within Scottland when ever they are reqwyred, and little mor of any thinge. Besyde this all his fol lowers being as much inclynd to the King as hiraself, and most of them with ane implicit obedience, all this coulde macke him confident to doe that which want of money would have raade appeare Irapossible to others or him. This I intimate, once for all, that it may be understoode what was the reason why he was so hardly brockne afterwarde ; as also how it came to passe that his followers, and vassals, and freendes, a few yeares afterward, wer so in struraentall to carry on such considerable atcheivraents as made the Cove nanters power reele and stagger in Scottland at that very time that they wer gainers In Englande. Yow see the case Is soone resolved ; such as wer Huntlyes foUowers wer obleidged to serve him upon ther oun charge ; and they, and aU that joyned with them, founde themselves as muche concerned in the Kings qwarell and interest as ther leaders themselves. Though I have, in my younger yeares, oftne had occasione to see both partyes at that tyme, yet I cannot peremptorly determine the numbers of thoise who then and afterward bore armes under Huntlyes coramande. Yet, I suppose, I am not farr frora the truthe if I say that his foUowers and freends wer about three thousand, most pairte foote, and horse the rest. If they wer not some mor or sorae feuer, it was with a number not many fewer that Huntlye did keep his next rendevouse at Innerourye, in the ende of Marche ; of which mor presently. XIV. Montrosse, upon the other pairt, was no slower then Huntly for to putt himself in a posture offensive ; for he was resolved to be no longer defensive, as he had been at Turreff.* Therfor, that he might macke sure Montrose puts himself in a state of offence: in- • Nota. Another reasone that made Montrosse so hastye for to discusse Huntlye was the necessitye that the Covenanters saw for to have the countrey qwyett, and no consider able bosome enemye ; seing that they forsaw that they behoved for to turne ther maine 2 E 218 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. timates the the time of his return to the north. Arglye ap pointed to take care of Airly, and prevent his joining Huntly ; also to fall upon Badenoch, etc. in a certain event. Montrose's following. worke with Huntly, he intimates the time of his backe coming to the north, unto the Covenanter pairtye of the Forbesses and Frazers, etc., and others in the shyres of Aberdene and Banfe. Lyckwayes, he advertishes the Covenanters be north the river of Spey, such as belonged unto Murrey, Rosse, Sutherland, Catnesse, for to be readye, with aU theye could macke, for to marche over Spey, and joyne with him if need should bee. Nor wer most of them slow to corresponde with Montross ; Huntly and his familye being dreadfuU for his neer neighbourhoode, and therfor hatefuU, as also envyd for his greatnesse by his over Speye neighbours, who could gladly wished befor then, at the least, for to have had his winges clipped and his naUes pared. XV. And because ther was correspondence betuixt Huntly and the Earle of Airlye, whom the vicinitye of the hills gave faire occasione to joyne with Huntlye at his pleasure; therfor Argylle, with about a thousand of his Highlanders, was appoynted to fynde worke to Airlye at home ; it being knowne to the Covenanters that none wold goe about that service mor faith fully then ArgyUe, being that the Earle of Airly was hated be Argylle up on privatt concernement, as the Ogilvyes of Airlye and ther familye did beare a reclprocall iU wille to the Campells of ArdgyUe many yeares befor the Covenant. This was not all Argylles instructiones ; for he was lyck wayes for to fall upon the countreys of Badzenache, and Lochaber or Stra- dawin, in caise the Marquesse of Huntly should have offered to have made use of the Inhabitants of thes places for to draw them downe to the low countreye for strenthning his oune pairtye. XVI. Montrosse himself was foUowed by the cavalrye of Mearnes, Angusse, and some pairt of Pearth shyre, and others, mostly be north the river Forthe ; as also with foote levyd out of thes places, trained and regi mented, and putt under skillfull officers, brought from abroade for that pourpose, and kept under paye some tyme befor. Such as speacke of his numbers to the greatest advauntage call them but three thowsand horse and power against the King, who was macking ready considerable forces for to marche towards the border of Scottland. Had Huntly and his associats been standing unbrokne when the Kings army came unto Bervicke, it would have provne very hurtfuU to the Covenanters, and rendered ther army very inconsiderable, and probably made ther conditions at the Kings handes lesse advantageous for them. But the maine reasone was a privat letter sent by Hamiltone to the Covenanters (which was enclosed in a pistoll, with another letter, which desyred them to receave a pistoll and draw the charge) ; which privat advice was for to crubbe ther northerne enemyes, or to expecte no qwarter from the Kinge. Ch. XVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFF^^I^S. 219 foote ;* others saye not above half as manye ; which is as neer the truthe as A. D. 1639. the tother relatione of his numbers ; for I suppose they wer about two thow- sand att moste. XVII. Huntly was not ignorant of the storme that was gathering above Huntly's awk- his heade ; but he was to acte only by order frora the Kinge ; and betuixt ward situation. •'•' 7.., Commissioners them ther was such a large space, and the Covenanters, interjected, who gent by him to carefuUy strove to stoppe his intelligence, which (as I have told) easily they *J^at with might doe, that it fared with him as in the tyme of the civili warres betuixt Montrose re- Vespasian and Vltelllus. Vespasians pairtye, under Mutianus conduct, solves to visit wer scuffling with the VitteUianists in Italye, whos orders wer sent them ^ ^^ Aber- from Asia out of Jurye ; by which meanes either the actione, or the oppor- deen. Second tunitye to acte, was past befor the orders carae from Vespasian. M^'^t '°" But ther was worse then the distaunce of place, and the Covenanters answer and ther intercepting Huntlyes intelligence and orders ; for all Huntlyes direc- ^''^yj?"^ tions wer sent by Harailtounes advyce, who heerin directed the King, among the Huntlys director. They all tended to peace and delayes, and to stand de- Covenanters. fencive, and, finally, to doe nothing against them. This made Huntlye at Montrose. essaye by treatye what could be effectwate at Montrosse hande ; to which Prodigy ; pourpose, about the fifteenthe of Marche,(') two comraissioners wer directed, vvitnessT/it. in Huntlyes name, to Montrosse. The comissioners wer Robert Gordone of Strathloche, and Dr. William Gordone, medicinar to Huntlye, and pro- * " Tria millia militum festinato delectu ex Transforthanis provinciis, quibus se adjunxere qui in .^ng'ttsfa & iH/erm'a foederatarum partium erant." Spang, Historia Motuum, pagr. 319. (1) [On the twentieth of March, as we learn from the following entry in the Council Register of the City of Aberdeen : " Coramissionares directt to the Nobilitie of the Covenant. " Vigesimo die mensis Martij 1639, " The samen day doctour Williame Johnstoune and George Moresoun ar chosin coramis sionares to pas to the nobilitie of the Covenant conveinit at Montrois, and to capitulat with thame vpoun sic articles as shalbe gewin in commissioun to the saids commissionares anent the repairinge of thair armie to this brughe ; As lyikwayes to confer be the way with the erll Marshall wpoun the same busienes, that his lordship wald be pleased to contribute his assistance to the saids commissionares for the peace and quyett of this toune ; and George Jamesoun is appoyntit to accumpanie and assist thame in the said commissioun, quhilk is gewin to the effect following, viz. To petition and desyre the nobilitie that they send in a peace- abill maner ane hundreth men at the most for holding of thair committie in the auld colledge, and publicatioun of the actes of the generall Assemblie in the cathedrall kirk of this diocie ; and, if the college and cathedrall kirk be not made patent to thame for that effect, to declair wnto thame that thay sal have oure paroche kirk patent for the said intimatioun ; the nobi litie alwayes keipand thamselfis and thair forces als far distant frome this burghe, as the Marqueis of Huntlie sail do with his forces." Aberdeen Council Register, vol. lii. p. 452.] 220 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. fessor in the University of Aberdene: To thes, lyckwayes, the cittye of Aberdene conjoyned two of ther townesmen. Dr. WUliam Johnstone, me diciner, and professor of the mathematickes in the New CoUedge of Aber dene, who had subscrybed the Covenant ; and George Morrisone, bailUe of Aberdene. Thes four comissioners founde Montrosse at his owne house of Old Montrosse, the first tyme that they went to treate with him, befor his souldiours wer rendevouzde. Ther proposaUs wer to him, in name of Huntly and Aberdene, That he would be pleased for to keepe himself be south the hills of the Grangbeen, which doe divyde the north from the Mearnes and Angusse and the rest of the southe ; and that, tUl it should bee seene whither ther might be any hopes of treatye as yet betuixt the King and the Covenanters ; which, iff Montrosse wold consent to, Huntly pro misd to give assurance that neither he nor any of his pairtye should trouble or molest any of the Covenanters his neighbours, and that he should keepe himself within the boundes of his lievtenantrye be northe the hUls. But, al beit the commissioners pressed this propositione as much as they could, yet they could obtaine no ansuer else from Montrosse but. That, in obedience to the acte of the Assembly of Glasgow, they behoved to visite the Old CoUedge of Aberdeene, and behoved to keepe the tyme appoynted ; that they should trouble no man ; they should pay aU that they gott ; and, finaUye, that they should doe no mor violence to any man then they should be necessitate to doe : Which wordes he oftne very peremptorly repeated, and kept himself in thes generaU termes. For the rest he professed a great deale of good wiU to Huntly, and to his foUowers, and wished a better understanding amongst them ; and so, after a generaU complimentaU ansuer, with much appearance of outwarde cIvUitye, dissmissed the commissioners. How soone they returned from Montrosse to Aberdene, and related ther ansuer, which was nothing pleasing to manye, Huntly beganne to rendevouz March 18. his men ; and, against the elghteenthCD of Marche, had about two thousand and two hundreth foote and horse weaU armed at Innerourye ; but aU of them countrey people, and though none wanted good wiU, yet few or none wer amongst them who had skiU to commande, or had ever been upon any considerable service. (0 [As the commissioners were not dispatched until the twentieth, Gordon is obviouslv mistaken in supposing that Huntly's rendevous was on the eighteenth. It is placed bv Spalding, apparently with accuracy, on the twenty-fifth. Gordon was probably misled bv the terms of Huntly's proclamation. See Spalding, Hist, of Troub., pp. 100, 101 1 Ch. XVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 221 Huntly, who neither had orders to fight, nor great confidence in the skiU A. D. 1639. of his commanders, resolves, at least, to putt a good face upon the raatter, and to keepe his men together till he might see the utmost of it : To which pourpose, he dIspatchesCO the former comraissioners towards Montrose from the rendevouz at Innerourye, once mor to trye if his former offer of cessa tione would be accepted, or at least to gane tyme tiU he raight have new advertishraent from the King, from whom he howerly expected it, either to ingadge or retteere ; or, if non of that wold be aceptable, at least to lett him know what the Covenanters pretences wer, and what they desyred of him. The commissioners tooke little rest tiU they came wher the Earle of Mon tross was. They founde him in the towne of New Monrosse (which is two myles eastwarde of Montrose his castell. Old Montrose, and both standing upon the river of Sowtheske), with generaU Leslye In his companye, and a considerable number of cavaleers and souldiours macking his rendevouze for his expeditione thither. Lyckwayes had he caused bring two peeces of brasse demicanon, with som other lesser peeces (strainge ingredients for the visi tatione of ane Universitye), as supposing he should be drivne to make a breache in the new walls of Aberdene befor he should gett entrye. But when the comissioners beganne againe to urge the former propositiones in behalf (1) [On the twenty-fifth of March, according to the Aberdeen Council Register : " Commissionares direct of new againe to the Nobilitie. " Vigesimo quinto die mensis Martij 1639, " The quhilk day. In respect that doctour Willeame Johnstoun and George Moresoun, who wer directed commissionares from this burghe to the erle of Montrois, vpoun the twentie day of Marche instant, with Mr Robert Gordoun of Straloch and doctour Willeame Gor doun comraissionares lyikwayes to his lordship from the Marquis of Huntly, did receave a delaying anser at that tyme frome the said erle of Montrois to such propositions as thay did remonstrat to his lordship : Thairfoir the prowest baillies and counsall thinkis it expedient to direct the same comraissionaris of new againe to the said erle of Montrois, and to propone to his lordship and otheris of the nobilitie there present with him, the articles following, and to craive thair anser thairwpoun. Off the quhilkis articles the tenor followes. " It is desyred be the toune of Aberdeine, That they may hawe assurance that no hostilitie be vsed againes thame ; nor nane of thair magistrattes, ministers, nor vtheris thair inhabitantes, be forced in thair consciences, nor wranged in their bodies, nor gudes : And that thair toune be left in peace, as thay are content to geive a peaceable entrie to the nobilitie and thair armie. " Item, If any particular persones geive any offence. That it be repared in privat, but re flecting vpoun the publict peace. " Item, That the toune be not vrgit to receave nor harbor mair people nor they may con- venenientlie ease. " And the toune premissis a peaceable entrie and issue, and sic accommodatioun as they can affoord, during the abod of the nobilitie there. Subscrywed be the prowest and baillies, and be the Marquis of Huntly, as consentar, the 25 day of Marche 1639." Aberdeen Coun cil Register, vol. Iii. p. 453.] 222 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. of Huntlye, they could draw nothing from Montrosse but faire and generaU answers, which either signifyd little or wer flatt refusalls, or wer sUghtings of all ther proposaUs. They tould the commissioners, by way of derision, that they behoved to come to Aberdeene to proclaime the General Assem blye, which was to be holdne that yeare at Edinburgh, and some such ne- glective undervaluing ansuers, and that they behoved to proclame the As sembly of Glasgow, 1638. Nor did they insiste muche ; for at ther returne they sawe Montrosse his motione towards the northe not lycke to be retarded by what they had to saye ; being that he had tackne so little notice of ther last comraing, as that he did not pause nor delay his rendevouze one hower, nor his marche any whyle upon that accompte, Great was the trepidatione that was amongst them ; and whatever might be the generall Montrose his confidence, yet the mixed multitude, his fol lowers, either wanted stomacke to the service or wer fearefuU of the event; and, albeit, they saw no enemye as yet, yet they went not about ther bussnesse with confidence eneuche. Hithertoo they had asisted the reading of protesta tiones, or sittne in assemblyes, or tackne In some empty or disarmed castells: Now they supposd they wer to dispute it withe ther enemyes in the feelds ; and whatever meanes was used by the nobilitye or ther ministrye to per swade the vulgar sorte of the justnesse of ther qwarreU, yet the most pairt of them, who had been borne and bredd upp under a long peace, could hardly distinguish it frora rebellione against ther Kinge. This abstracted confi dence from manye of the meaner sort, and bredd a trepidatione in them at the hearing of their owne drurames, trumpetts, and shotte. At this tirae, lyckwayes, the Covenanters beganne to weare and tacke for ther colours blew ribbons, which they carryd aboute them scarffwyse, or as some orders of knythoode weare ther ribbonds. This was Montrosse whimsle. To thes ribbons, ordinarly the cavalrie did appende ther spanners for ther fyre lockes, and the foote had them stucke upp in bushes in ther blew capps ; which devyce seemed so plausible, that when the army marched towards the border, sorae shorte tyme afterwards, many of the gentrye threw away ther hattes and would carry nothing but bonnetts and bushes of blew ribbons, or pannashes, therin, in contempt of the EngUshes, who disdainfully called them blew cappes and jockyes. Ane instance of the feare that was amongst them was visible eneuch to Huntlyes comissioners, the first tyme that they came for to speacke with Montrosse. For that night the townesmen of Montrosse espying some fyre Ch. XVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 223 in the night tyme in the hills, towards Innermarke and Edgell castell, fell A. D. 1639. upon a strong concept that it was Huntlye and his forces who wer already come within two or three myles of ther towne, macking havocke of aU be for him with fyre and sworde. This imaginatione, fostred by ther feares, moved them to beatte drummes, and ring the alarum bell ; and, albeit it was after ten a clocke at night, yet to armes they wold needs goe, half in a rage, half in a feare. Great was the noyse that they made ; and although the comissioners from Huntly, who were ther lodged that night, assurd them there was no dainger, and that none who belonged to Huntlye was neerer them than Aberdeen, yet all that could not qwyett them. Nor wer they farr from faUing in upon the commissioners to affront, or doe by them as ther feare and fury should prompt them, had It not been for the master of the house wher they wer lodged, who, being provost of Monrosse at that tyme, interposed his authoritye to pacific the multitude, and caused shutt his gates against them. But heer It rested not ; for needs must they runne out, they knew not whither, nor against whome, remaning at some distance all night in ther armes, till breack of day discovered ther error, and made them know that ther supposed enemyes wer nothing else but heather kindled in the billes, the which, about that tyme of yeare, the countrey people use to doe in thes places when the heather growes olde ; which burninge, the comissioners sent from Huntly saw burning all the day befor, hard by them, whilst they wer on ther journey to Old Montrosse. But the commissioners sent from Huntly, in ther returne towards Aber deen, after ther second journey to Montrosse, saw that which deserves to be putt upon recorde to the posteritye ; and which, at that tyme, they looked upon as a certane presage of the warre and bloodshedd which quickly ensued in the yeares foUowinge. For, having tackne horse at Montrosse (wher they left the Earle of Montrosse and his foUowers), a Uttle after suiine ry singe, as they wer going towards the mouth of the North Water, which is some two myle distant from the towne of Monrosse, they and ther waiters did espye the sunne shyning ofa perfect bloode colour; yet coulde they discerne no vapours which could phisically occasione the chainge of her colour, for she shyned at some distaunce above the sea, and they wer hard by the shore. The difference betwixt her and other tymes when her colour is obfuscated by vapours, was that, at other tymes at her ryse and sett, her reed colour is dreggye and enclynes to browne; but that day her colour looked lycke to fresh blood, wherof a little qwantitye is powred into a brighte sUver basone, or 224 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Huntly dis bands, and retires from Inverury to Strathbogie. lycke a reed rose, or lycke that bloode in the cheke which phisitions call sanquis flor idus. A second great difference was in the duratione and con- tinwance of that extraordinar colour; for wheras, at other tymes, the vapors tacke or keep awaye the sunnes bright colour but for some short space after her ryse or befor her sett, it was evident eneuch, that this day she keeped that colour most pairt of the fomoone ; and, befor she did parte therwith, cloudes arysing, about eleven a clocke in the fomoone, tooke the sunne out of ther sight. I would have been loathe to have related this prodigie so confidentlye and particularly, upon any raan's asertlon or informatione, being that It is uswall to macke thes thinges greater then they are, had I not at that tyme been my self in company with the commissioners from Huntlye, and ane eye wittnesse therunto. Nor should I at that tyme have trusted my owne skill to distin guish betuixt what was naturaU or what prodigiouse, had I not heard the commissioners, three of whom wer weall knowne to have been able scoUers and philosophes, conclude at that tyme that nether that colour of the sunne which they wer beholding at that tyme, nor the long continwance therof, did or could flow from any discernible naturell cause. But the event since has putt it out of doubte that it was as prodigiouse as thes gentlemen at that tyme did unanimouslye prognosticke it would bee. But its tyme to leave thes digressiones (which possibly may recreate the reader), and to resume the threed of my narratione. XVIII. The commissioners, at ther returne, had newes that Huntlye was disbanded and had reteerd himself to Strabogye.(') Whether it wer that (1) [The commissioners seem to have returned on the twenty -seventh or twenty-eighth of March. " The erle of Montrois ansser to our commissionares propositiones. " Vigesimo octauo die mensis Martij 1639, " The quhilk day, the haill towne both frie and wnfrie being conveinit in the Tolbuith be the drura, Mr Alexander Jaffray prowest schew and declaired to thame the articles men tioned in the act immediatlie befoir written, quhilk the magistrattes and counsall had send with thair commissionares to the erle of Montrois and remanent nobilitie of the Covenant approching towards this burght with thair armies ; And withall the prowest shew the ansser quilk oure commissionares had receaved in wreitt to the saids articles ; of the quhilk the tenor followes : The erle of Montrois did expres that his intendit woyage for Aberdeine is onlie for performing the appointment of the late generall Assemblie, according as it hath bene done in other places ; and in no way to do the smallest wrong or injurie to any (as per haps is supposed), nor vse the raeanest violence except in so far as his lordship and his lord ships followeris salbe necessitat for thair awin saiftie and thair caus. In respect of the quhilk diligence vsed be the magistrattes and counsell in directing commissioners to the said erle of Montrois, and of the said erll his ansser forsaid gewin to the saides commissionares. The Ch. XIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 225 he chaunged his resolutione, after he sent away the commissioners towards A. D. 1639. Montrosse ; or that befor ther returne, which was but two nightes, that he had some advertishment from the King so to doe ; I cannot nor ever could afterward certanlye learne. The last I dare not confidently affirrae ; beinge that about that very tyme and day which was his rendevouze at Inverourye, March eighteenth, the Kings houshold entred ther journey towards Yorke, and the King himself tooke not journey towards Yorke tlU March twenty- seventh, which was after Huntlyes disbandage some dayes. XIX. The commissioners, at ther returne to Aberdeen, proved no other Commissioners but harbingers to Montrose his pairtye, to assure the townesmen that the '"f?"'"'! *" Covenanters pairty was at ther heeles marching northe, and as fast as they The Loyalists could ; and, therfor, that now, in steade of keeping watche and warde, they %• Bishop would doe weall to provyde good qwarter for them : which shortly afterward fljeg. Bishop's they wer glade to doe to the most pairt of Montrose foUowers. However, house demo- the Marquesse his disbanding, and the comissioners ther coming befor Mon trose, was a sufficient warning for all who had shewed themselves most de- clardly for the King and against the Covenant for to reteer, uncertane how they should be used or looked upon by ane armd multitude.* Amongst thoise who fledd away, was the bishopp of Aberdeen, Adam BeUendin ; who, though he wer ouncle to the Maister of Forbesse, a pryme Cove nanter, yet he was glade to reteer, in a disgwyse, to his friends in the countrey .f Dr. Barron, and some others of the ministry of Aberdeen, fledd be sea to Bervicke; severall countrey ministers followed ther ex ample ; and not a few of the cittlzens of Aberdeen afr^first reteered,(i^ till towne declared that thay ar content to receave the nobillmen and thair followeris, and to har bor thame efter the most commodious maner they can ; And desyres the magistrattes to geive ordour, ilk baillie throw his awin quarter, for that efi'ect, and for furnishing competent ludginges wnto tharae sic as the toune can affoord." Aberd. Counc. Regist. vol. lii. p. 454. According to Spalding, Huntly broke up his gathering on the twenty-sixth of March.] * Martii twenty-second. All the members of the Kings Colledge of Old Aberdeen fledd and abandoned the Colledge. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 102.] f Whence shortly after he lyckwayes fledd unto England. His dwellinge house at Aber deen was rifled by the Covenanters souldiours, and, in liew of them, by some ofthe inhabit- tants, qwyte demolished, as the dwelling houses of sundry others of the bishopps wer used about thes tymes ; following the maxime of the first reformers. That the nestes being cast downe, the crowes would build no mor ther. The abbey and cathedralis for the raost pairt had been demolished befor ; and now the ruinating of most of the bishopps houses made way to a through reformatione. (1) [" Ilk man begane to look to his own particular weill. Some reraoved their best goods out of the way ; other some fled to the toun with their wiffes and bairnes. Amongst others, there fled be sea about 60 of the bravest raen and youths of Aberdein, weill armed 2r 226 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. Montrose marches for Aberdeen ; seizes cannon, arms, etc. A. D. 1639. afterwards, fynding the Covenanters to carrye qwyetter then they expected (for what else could they doe, raeeting with no oppositione), they beganne to dropp in againe to ther houses. XX. No sooner was Huntly disbanded, but Montrose had certane advyse therof from the Covenanters in the north, about Aberdeen. And now Montrose beganne to march not as to a warr but as to a triumph ; all ther former feares wer turned to joye, and all was imputed to the good nesse of the cause, to which God beganne to shew himselfe so favourable, that ther enemyes had fledd whUst none persewed them, and that now the curse was alighting upon Meroz (so they termed Aberdeen in ther ser raons), which came not to helpe the Lord,(') etc. Ther was a minister at that tyme who did ascrybe the faimesse of the three last dayes of Marche (commonly called Borrowing Dayes)('^) that tyme to a miracle, in a sermon preached befor many wittnesses. Montrose and generaU Lesly entred Aberdeen* upon Palme Sun- with sword, musket, and bandilier, as excellent cavalliers ; they took one of the Toun's colours, and John Poak their drummer with them, and resolve to goe to the king. Others againe bade within the toun, such as Mr. Alexander Jaffray provost, the baillies, and others, covenanters. Allwayes, about the 28th of March, shipps at Torry our toune's cavilliers in ane ship attending their service. With whom shipped also Doctor Lesslie principali of the King's Colledge, Dr. Barron professor of divinitie, (for Barron was not an ordinar rainister then in Aberdein, but preached once in the 20 dayes, because he was professor and teached divinitie). Dr. Sibbald one of the ministers of Aberdein, Dr. Ross, and Dr. Guild, other two ofthe toune's ministers ; but Dr. Ross might not flie, because he was lying sore sick at that time. Thus, all fled to England, except Guild who fled to Holland. There also shipped with thera the lairds of Drum, Pitfoddels, young Foverane, Balgouny, Mr. Alex ander Irvine, Robert Irvine, and some others ; and upon the said 28th of March, hoyse up sail, and to the king goe they. Doctor Forbes of Corse, Doctor Scroggie minister at Old Aberdein, and Mr. Gilbert Ross reader, fled all their houses, and throw the countrie goe they. Mr. Alexander Middleton, Mr. Alexander Gairden, and Mr. Alexander Scroggie regents, with Mr. Robert Ogilvie sub-principall of the King's College of Old Aberdein, cast up the colledge yeitts and sett the students at liberty, and fled throw the countrey themselves : this was done upon the 22d of March. The bishop of Aberdein flyes out of Aberdein, upon 27th March, with John Bellenden his sone, Mr. John Bellenden his brother sone, and John Blaccater his servitor ; and quietly throw the country goes he." Spalding, Hist, of Troub. vol. i. p. 105.] (1) [Judges V. 23.] (2) [« Borrowing Days, the three last days of March, Old Stile. Those days being generally stormy, our forefathers have endeavoured to account for this circumstance, by pretending that March borrowed thera frora April, that he might extend his power so much longer." Jamieson.] * Montrose and his armye marched downe Dee syde, and entred Aberdeen, Marche thirtieth. [" They carae in order of battell weill armed both on horse and foot, ilk horse man haveing five shot at the least, with ane carabine in his hand, two pistols by his sydes, and other two at his saddell toir ; the pikemen in their ranks, with pike and sword ; the Ch. XX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 227 dayeW with a veni, vidi, vid, wher they lay some dayes and qwartered. The A. D. 1639. first thing they did was to cause the cittlzens fiU upp ther trenshes, and sleight aU the workes which they had made upp some dayes befor. Next, they cause macke searche for armes, and, by proclamatione (which gott but Uttle obedience), command aU cittlzens to delyver upp ther armes. Some yeares befor, when the English had warre with Spaine, King Charles had sent musketiers in their ranks, with musket, musket staffe, bandeUer, sword, powder, ball, and match ; ilk corapany both on horse and foot had their captains, lieutenants, ensignes, ser geants, and other oflBcers and commanders, all for the most part in buff coats, and in goodly order. They had five colours or ensignes ; whereof the earl of Montrose had one, haveing this motto, FOB religion, the covenant, and the countrie, the earle of Marischall had one, the earle of Kinghorne had one, and the town of Dundie had two. They had trumpeters to ilk company of horsemen, and drummers to ilk company of footmen ; they had their meat, drink and other provision, bag and baggage, carryed with thera, all done be advyse of his excellence Felt Marischal Lesslie, whose councell, generall Montrose followed in this bussieness. Now, in seimly order and good array, this army carae forward, and entered the burgh of Aberdein, about ten hours in the morning, at the Over Kirkgate Port, syne came down throw the Broadgate, throw the Castlegate, out at the Justice Port, to the Quein's Links directly. Here it is to be netted, that few or none of this haill army wanted ane blew ribbin hung about his craig doun under his left arme, which they called The Covenanter's Ribbin. But the lord Gordon, and some others of the marquess' bairnes and familie, had ane ribbin, when he was dwelling in the toun, of ane reid flesh cuUor, which they wore in their hatts, and called it The Royal Ribbin, as a signe of their love and loyaltie to the King. In despyte and derision thereof this blew ribbin was worne, and called The Covenanter's Ribbin be the haill souldiers of the army, and would not hear of the royal ribbin ; such was their pryde and raalice. . . . Muster being made, all raen were coraraanded, be sound of trurapet, in generall Montrose' name, to goe to breakfast, either in the Links or in the toun. The generall hiraselfe, the nobles, captains and coraraanders, for the most part, and souldiers, sat doun on the Links, and of their own provision, with ane servitt on their knee, took their breakfast." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 108. " Entrie of the first arraie. " Memorandum : On Saturday the penult day of Marche 1639, " The erll of Montrois, generall of the arraie, accumpanied with the erll Marshall, the erll of Kingorne, generall Leslie, the lord Coupar, the lord Elcho, the lord Fraser, the maister of Forbes, and many barons of Angus Mearnes Mar and Buchan, carae to the Toune of Aberdeine, with thair armie of horss and fute, whair thay entered and marched throughe the toune to the linkis, and there they pitched their carap, being accompted sex thowsand men, satt at thair counsell of warr ; And thaireftir the erles of Marshall and Montrois, generall Leslie and the greatest pairt of the armie, marched that day frorae the linkes to Invervrie, leaving behind thame the erll of Kingorne, with aughteine hundreth raen, to ly in the toune till thair bak cuming. And befoir thay marched out of the linkes, the nobillmen send for oure prouest and baillies, and chairgit thame to fill vp and cast in oure trinshes in all possible diligence, and to enter to work for that effect on Mononday nixt and to continew thairat till all the trinshes were filled wp againe vnder the paine of plundering and rasing oure toune; quhilk wes accordinglie obeyit." Aberdeen Council Register, vol. lii. p. 455.] (0 [There is here an error in the date. Palm Sunday in 1639 fell upon the seventh of April ; but, as we learn from Spalding, from the Aberdeen Council Register, and indeed from Gordon himself, Montrose and general Lesly entered Aberdeen on Saturday the thirtieth of March.] 228 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D, 1639. twelve peece of Iron canon to Aberdeen of about sixteen pounds baU ; thes the Covenanters seized upon and caused carry away by sea with ther furnitur, and disposed of them in other places ; but to this daye they were never mor restored. And now the Covenanter ministers enter the pulpitts of Aberdeen triumphantly, which had been deneyd to them the yeare befor ; ther they crye victorie, and begine to sing a song to the townesmen of a farr other tune then they had learnd from ther owne ministers and doctors, crying downe that doctrine which the townes doctors (they knew) wer not now In eqwall termes with them to mantane any mor without afirontes to ther persons.* Whether Aberdeen at that tyme payd any contribution of money to themf I will neither affirme nor deney. Some few prosUitts, by flattery or terrour, at that tyme wer drawne to subscrybe ther Covenant. Montrose XXI. After some few dayes staye in Aberdeen, Lesly constitutes the affaSisr Earle of Kingorne governour of Aberdeen ; and then Montrose and his Huntly, partye raarched for Innerourye, (0 with resolutione to disscusse and fynde leaving King- ^^^^ Huntlye. They did lye dovme at Innerowryl in opne leaguer,(2) having nour of Aber- drawne alonge with thera some short feeld peeces, of three foot longe or deen; encamps therby, which, for aU that, were of ane indifferent wydnesse, and did shoote ane indifferent great ball. Thes peeces (coraraonly nicknaraed Deer Sandyes stoups, as being the inventione, or so thought, of CoUonel Alexander Ha miltoune, master of ther artUlerye, who himself was nicknamed Deer Sandy,) wer the ordnar feeld peeces that afterwards for some tyme wer made use of, for the most pairt, by the Covenanters. Their severity XXII. The last yeare the Covenanters had sent ther ministers north upon the Loy- for to galne proselytes to the Covenant, or Good Cause, as it was commonly termed. But now the Covenant beganne to be propagated by an other sort * Apryle second. The comittye appoynted by the Assembly of Glasgow sitt downe in the Old Toune Colledge, and citte the merabers to ansuer them ; but all refoose to compeer ex cept Mr. John Lundy, a Covenanter. t They did pay ; mde postea, (1) [On Saturday the thirtieth of March. Spalding, Hist of Troub., vol. i., p. 109.] (2) [On Monday the first of April. Ibid, vol, i., p. 110.] % In ther absence at Inneroury, the gwarde of the comittye sitting at the Old Toune Colledge, being mostly country souldiours belonging to Forbesses and Frazers, fall upon the bishop of Aberdeen his house, and begin for to plunder it. But at that tyme the laird of Oldbarr, brother unto Kingorne, did beatt them off with little harme done. [« In the mean time, some of his rascally souldiers began (which none did before) to abuse the bishop's staitly palace, and spulzie the samen, against Auldbarr's will and commandment." Spalding, Hist of Troub., vol. i., pp. 112, 113.] Ch. XXIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 229 of apostles ; for no sooner was Montrose come to Innerowrye, but his men A. D. 1639. must be biUetted most pairt upon free qwarter, a langwage that tiU then was not understood in thes places, though afterwardes evry body came to know weall eneuch what it meand, to ther charges and expence. Nor was this aU ; for being that most pairt of the countrey next adjacent to ther qwarter wer Anticovenanters, the souldiours wer connlvd at for to carry rudly in ther qwarters, and had underhand warrant for to rifle the houses of sorae gentlemen who wer fledde: This they called for to plunder them. Such a kynde of deportment looked very iU favoured ; and so much the worse be cause, albeit few felt this new kynde of discipline, yet all thought them selves obnoxiouse who wer within the reache of ther qwarter. The alarura of plundering brought many convertes to the Covenant ; for the countrey people, fynding no hopes of protectione by Huntlyes meanes, and perceiv ing that they wer lying under the feete of ane armed power, began for to come in apace and subscrybe the Covenant, which was the pryce of ther securitye : For to none was ther a safegwarde or protection graunted, sub scrybed by Montrosse, but to such as first subscrybed the Covenante. And not a few, after they had been terifyd by the souldiours, and ther houses rifled or plundered, wer glade to subscrybe the Covenant for ther after se curitye, though they intended not to stande to it.W XXIII. In the interim, Huntly being at his owne house of Boig of interview be- Gight, not* many myles distant from ther qwarter, either behoved now to twixt Huntly flee and leave his countrey and followers as a prey, or to come to a parley at Lowess. with them ; which they wer desyrouse of, and was accorded to by Huntlye. The place for the entervlew, betwixt Huntly and Montrosse, was, by mu twaU agreement, appoynted to be Lowess,t a countreye village^^) (upon (1) [" Dureing the space the army was lying at Inverurie, they plundered frae Thomas Crombie of Kemnay, out of his ground, as ane ante-covenanter, about 22 score bolls of victuall, which he had laid up in stoir within his girnells in Kemnay. The earle of Mar shall's men of Skeyne and Kintoir were busie about this plundering with the rest of the souldiers ; and it was sold very cheap, at 6s. 8d. the boll, because they could not carry it with them. The lord Erskine caused plunder, frae Mr. Alexander Reid, six score bolls of victuall, out of the lands of Kildrummy. The lah-d of Pitmedden's ground of Barrach, and sundrie other pairts in this countrey, about this time, was pitifully spuilzied and plundered ; whilk made them all to come in and subscrive the covenant, albeit they had subscrived the king's covenant before, and were glaid to obtaine the generall's protection to save their ground from any farder molestation." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 114.] * Twenty-seven myles Scottish, wher he stayd not, but reteerd to Balveney castell. f It was altered ; vide infra. (2) [Now called Lewes of Fyvie, on the highway from Aberdeen to Banff.] 230 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. the rode waye betwixt Aberdeen and Straboggye), lyinge neer a myle south west of the parosh churche of Raine. Ten myles distant from Strabogye castell, or therby. It Is, and about four from Innerowrye, then Montrosse heade qwarter ; for Huntly was not in posture now for to gett a meeting midd waye. Ther wer appoynted twelle gentlemen upon eache syde, twenty-four In aU, to be present at that interviewe.* When the tyrae appoynted for the meeting came, neither of the partyes faUed to be present ; but befor they parlie, ther was a gentilman directed off from either syde, to searche the counter partye for hiddne armes, which was acordingly done. And then Huntly and Montrose did respectfully salute one another ; and, after some little generaU conference, they two stept asyde and had a long privat discourse together, leaving the gentlemen (who came hope- full to be wittnesses to ther conference), now to be only spectators to ther meeting; whairwith sorae of Huntlyes syde wer not weall satisfeede. What wer the particulars of ther conference I could never learne, nor was ther mor knowne, but by the effectes and event therof; for after some howers stay at Lowesse, Huntlye tackes horse, and with the twelve gentlmen, his freendes (without ever acqwaynting any of them upon what accompt he did it), rydes fordwards with Montrosse to the heade qwarter at Innerowrye, wher he was receaved with much respect and joye to the Covenanters ; his ' The manner of the drawinge on of that parley was by the mediatione of the laird of Strathloche, who befor had been twyce commissioner betwixt Huntly and Montrose. To him did Huntly wrytte frora Boig of Gight, desyring hira for to trye if the Covenanters woulde come to a peirley, but not to lett it be knowne that he had anye warrant from Huntly. Strathloch, upon the receipt of Huntlyes letter, went iraraediatly to Montrosse qwarter, at Kintor, being in his waye towards Innerowrye ; and, being corae ther, desyrd for to speacke with Montrose and others of the cheife men ; and, having gottne audience, he urged a treatye. They enqwyred if he had any warrant to propose a personalle treaty from Huntlye. He an suered. That he had such power with Huntlye, that, if they wer willinge, he would under tacke for to macke Huntly corae and speacke with them in any indiflferent place. This they wer very weall content of, and agreed that Lowesse should be the place, and twall on the syde : this was upon Sundaye [the thirty-first of March ;] the day of meetinge to be Tews day therafter, or Wedynsday. Montrose desyred Strathloche to macke haiste to draw on the meeting ; who carae the next daye to Boige, upon Munday, and at his alighting, worot to Huntlye (who was reteered to Balvenye castell, towards the hills). Upon the sight of his letter, Huntly came to Boige upon Munday, at night. He saide he would embrace the oflFer and speacke with Montrosse, because they wer not yet fallne in bloode, and therfor the lesse danger to goe, etc. The meeting was once appoynted to be at Lowesse; but when Huntly carae ther, he chaunged his resolution, and rode fordwards to Innerowrye ; and the treaty was holdne ther twixt him and Montrose, hard by the Covenanters qwarter. At first, they fell to grow hott in ther discourse ; but whilst the laird of Strathloch made a motion that they should parley by midd men, Huntly and Montrose, of ther owne accorde, went asyde to a privat conference. Cjh. XXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 231 comming having been alyke wished and unexpected by them. The gentle men, his freendes, wer also very civilly welcomd, and wer left to ther free- dome to goe away whither they pleased, without urging them furder then discreetly with the subscriptione of the Covenant, which at that tyme they delayed. XXIV. Although it was supposed that Huntly at that tyme subscrybed the Covenant, yet the result of ther conference and his capitulation did all come to this. That Huntly should subscrybe a paper to the Covenanters, wherin he obleidged himself for to mantaine the Kinges authoritye, together with the libertyes both of Church and State, of reUigione and lawes ; which was accordingly done by hlm.c^ But whatever obUgatlone that paper raight implye, it seemes the rest of the Covenanters thought it not so satisfactorye as Montrosse did; for (as shall be told), they feU to presse him to subscrybe the Covenant, after they had tackne hira south prisoner, contrare to ther paroUe after that meetinge. Some assuraunce lyckwayes he purchassed to his freendes and foUowers. They wer of severall predicaments ; some of them wer launded gentlraen, of his name, or his associatts, but not his vassalls ; others wer his owne fol lowers and tenents, and, amongst thes, some wer protestants and others papistes. Assuraunce was givne for all of them, in the generalle, that they should not be harmed, nor any thing that belonged to them, they carrying themselves peaceablye; and such of them as would subscrybe the Covenant, (1) [« Ye heard before, of ane meiting drawen on betuixt the marquess of Huntly and generall Montrose. The 4th of Aprile being Thursday, the raarquess carae, eleven and hira selfe, with only swords be their sydes, wherof the lord Oliphant, and his son Jaraes the lord Aboyne were two. The generall, in like raanner, raett hira at the place appointed, with eleven and himselfe, in like armes, whereof the lord Elcho and lord Coupar were two. After salutation, they lighted frae their horses, and upon foot fell to conference, but nothing was ended ; yet both took to be advysed till the morne. They parted, the raarquess rode, that night, two miles frae the carap to Legatsden, where he soupped and went all night to Pit caple to his bed, without whom he could doe nothing,, and so had their advyce ; and the generall retumed back to the camp. " Upon the morne being Fryday and Sth of Aprile, the saids lords mett againe, in the samen place and forme forsaid ; wher, it was said, the marquess past some conditions in write, obleidgeing him to stand to the Confession of Faith, raade in anno 1580 and anno 1581, and that he would defend the king, the religion, lawes, and liberties of the kingdome to his power ; that he would doe his best to cause his freinds, men, tennents, and servants, subscrive the covenant, otherwayes to behold them. Thir were the conditions, as was alleadged, which the marquess subscrived and delivered to the generall. Thereafter they parted in peace, without dissimulation, as was thought. The marquess went not near the camp, but straight to Strabogie ; and the generall rode close to the camp, where after consultation they were weill pleased, and he praised for his paines." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., pp. 112, 113.] A. D. 1639. Huntly re turns with Montrose to Inverury, where he sub scribes a pa per, but not the Covenant. Terras which Huntly ob tained for his friends. N. B. 232 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. as they wer invitted to it, so they wer content to lett them advyse upon it, and not to be hasty with them ; and Huntly was content to restrane none who wer willing to tacke the oath of Covenante. The difficultye only re mained for such as wer papistes, and so not lycke to subscrybe the Cove nant, how they should be securd, as also what assuraunce might be expected from them. To this pourpose, ther was a middse fallne upon with all such, that they should be tackne under protectione, they subscrybing a declara tione of ther wUlIngnesse for to concurre with the Covenanters of maintain ing the lawes and libertyes of the kyngdome. And that the papistes might be encouraged unto the subsigning of such ane obligatione and bounde, ther was a declaration emitted by Montrosse to that pourpose, signed by such noblemen as wer present with him at that tyme at Innerowrye, and by Huntlye amongst the rest. The principaU coppye of that declaration having fallne into my handes some short tyme therafter, and being as yet by me, I have sett it downe worde for worde, it being but very short : And it is as foUowethe : " Forasmeekle as thes who by profession are of a contrarye reUigione, and therfor cannot condiscende to the subscrybing of the Covenante, yet are willing to concurre with us In the comraon course of mantaining the lawes and libertyes of the kyngdome : Thes are therfor reqwyring that none of thes who being papistes by professloune, and willing to subscrybe the bande of mantenance of the lawes and libertyes forsaide, shall be in any wayes molested in ther goodes or meanes, nor sustaine any praejudice mor then thes who have subscrybed the Covenant." Et sic subscribitur, " Huntly, Montrose, Kingorne, J. Couper, J. Erskyne." This syncretisrae was quickly after neglected, by reasone of the chaunge of the face of affaires ; nor did the givers nor the receavers therof intende that It should be long lastinge. Designsof XXV. When Huntly came to Innerowrye, he perceaved many of the Forbesses and principaU of the Forbesses ther, as also of the Frazers and others ther, r rfisprs to QP-" -*¦ ¦* ' tain Huntly ^'^^^ whom he was in no good termes ; and suspecting (as afterwards it fell at Inverury. out) that they would doe ther best against him, and informe Montrosse as rauch as they could to his disadvauntage, therfor, to obviate ther attempts that waye, he sondes Robert Gordon of Strathloch (who had been one of the twelve gentleraen who had attended the conference at Lowesse, and had come along to Innerowrye with Huntlye,) with a secrett commissione to Ch. XXV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 233 Montrosse, bidding teU Montrose from hira. That he should not credite aU A. D. 16S9. the informationes that the Forbesses and Frazers would suggest to him ; and that he should not foUow such counceU and advyse as they would give Montrose against him, specially If they should suggest the detentione of hira : For, he saide, that it was weaU knowne that thes people wer his enerayes, and would study all the disadvauntages against him that they could, under colour of the Covenant ; and, next, if they should offer to tacke him alonge, they would be muche deceaved in ther expectatione, for it would be founde that the countreye would not be so qwyett, nor his foUowers so peacable, as they imagind, or as ther informers promisd it should be. The laird of Strath- loQh faUed not to waite for ane opportunitye for to Imparte Huntlyes mes sage to •Montrosse, which he did privattly to Montrosse in his tente. Mon trose answer was, That It was probable thes people bore Huntly no good will, and that he knew it in some measure, by what he had learnd of them selves, to be trwe ; that, for his pairte, he was willinge to doe for Huntly all the good offices that he could, and should faile to him in nothing that he had promised : Only, he said, all his difficultye was in this, that ther bussi nesse was transacted by votes, and by a coraittye, and that he could not gett thinges done be himselfe. Strathloch ansuered him. That since he had done a pairte be hiraself alreadye, why not the rest ? that if he wer as willing as he promisd (of which he doubted not), that, being generall, and the maine man amongst them for the tyme, if he stoode to his poynte, thoise whom Huntly took for his enemyes would not be presslnge. Montrose replyd. He should doe his outmost for Huntlyes satisfaction ; and, with this ansuer, dissmissed the messenger. Nor faUed he of the performance of his pro mise ; for that night, after Huntly had subscrybed the paper agreed upon, Montrosse was content that he should returne peacably to his owne house ; which he did accordingly, not without the great miscontentraent of thoise who would have had him detained.* * Apryle eleventh, Argylle men entred Aberdeene, having qwartered upon and plundered the lairds of Drumm and Pittfoddells laundes. [" Upon Thursday the 11 of Aprile, the earle of Argyll's hielandmen (at comraand of generall Montrose) came in to Aberdein (from out of the bounds of Drum, and Pitfoddell's ground, and the country thereabout, where they wanted not abundance of beasts, mutton, and good fare, for little pay,) in order of battell, with bagpipes and hieland armes, about 500 men. They went about the croce in rank, and being viewed, the generall commanded them to goe to their lodgeings, which were prepared within the toune for them ; and that they should do no wrong, whilk they carefully obeyed, and for which the toune gave them 500 merks in money, when they removed with the foot army." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., voL i. p. lis.] 2 G 234 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Montrose marches back to Aberdeen. Argyle falls upon Airly. N. B. Solemn Com mittee at Aberdeen ; [they] send for Huntly. XXVI. After Huntlye had made his capltulatione with Montrose, ther partye marched backe agane to Aberdeene, wher they made no longer staye than the Earle of ArgyUe, upon the heade of his ArgyUe regments, did come and meete them ther. Argylle was appoynted to marche by the heights of Angusse, and to fynde worke to the Earle of Airly and his freendes, least they should offer to assiste Huntlye. He (as Airly lyckwayes was) getting sure notice that Huntly had left the feelds, faUs upon Airly with the greater boldnesse, who alone was not able to stande his ground with him ; and, having overrunne the Earle of Airlyes boundes and plundered his men, he was not forgettfuU for to demolish Forthar, ane dwelling belonging to the Lorde OgUvye ;* and for to put fyre to the house of Airlye, and to demolish it,t upon a pretext that it raight prove disadvantageouse to the Covenanters, by reasone of its scitwatione, and, therfor, that It was necessaire that it should be sleighted : but It was consterd as done upon a privatt accompt,t as I have told befor. In this acte It was observed generally by all that Argylle was the first who raised fyre in Scottland, by burning Airlyes house ; as gene rall Lesly had first begunne plundering at Innerowrye. XXVII. When all wer mett together at Aberdeene,§ ther was a solemne comittye kept for some dayes, which was made upp both of southe and north * Nota. This was done the next year, 1640, or only one house, Forther tackne. [See below, book iv., ch. cv.] \ In which worke he shewed such eagernesse that Argylle himself was observed for to have wrought with his oune handes till he did sweate, knocking downe the doore postes and head stone of Airly castell. X Viz. It was too neer the Cambells laundes to be lettne stande ; for the Ogilvyes have laundes upon one syde of Isla river, and the Cambells upon the other syde. Nota. Argylle was so violent against Ogilvy, that he did destroy his house, and expelld his lady (daughter to the Lord Banfe), who knew not what way to goe. Her graimd mother. Dame Marrian Duglasse, old Lady Drumme, sent to Argylle, and demanded licence of him for to tacke in her grand chyld, the Lady Ogilvye, to ly in at her house of Kelly ; but the Earle of Argylle, though ther blood freend, did forbid it ; so that the Lady Drumm, without his licence, tooke her into her house in all hazard. § Lesly returnd to Aberdeen, Apryle sixth. [Spalding, Hist of Troub. vol. i., p. 114.] Apryle ninth. Earl of Murrey, Seafort, Lovat, Inis, with three hundred, come to Aberdeen, unto Lesly, and stay with him till Apryle thirteenth ; then they returne. [Ibid. p. 116.] Apryle twelfth, generall Lesly marched out of Aberdeen southward, compelling the town to pay him ten thousand merkes, as a great courtesy to them. [Ibid. pp. 118, 119.] Then Kingorne, governour, stayd some whyle behynd, with some country fellows belong ing to Forbesse and to Frazer. He seised the armes of the toune, and restors them to all who subscrybe the Covenant ; the lycke he does in the Old Toune ; then he inventares Huntlys goods in Pittfoddells house. [Ibid. p. 112.] Nota. Kingorne carryd bothe simply and insolently in his goverment, which he little knew how to raanage. Ch. XXVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 235 Covenanters, of whom severaU of note had come to Montrose, as farr as A. D. 1639. from the farrest partes of Murrey, and beyond that lyckwayes. The great matter of ther debate was to tacke a finaUe course for settleraent of the northe. And because it could not be weaUe effectwate without the advyce and presence of Huntly, as they pretended, therfor they sent Oliphant to Huntly, who was then at Straboggye, desyring hira against a sett day (being to morrow after OUphant came to hira), for to come to Aberdeen, for the publicke businesse, wherin they were to proceede, in so far as concernd the northe, by his Lordshipps advyce. Huntly, who was fairly gott off, and smelled the matter that it was not unlycke that his unfreendes had sett on foote ther former designe to macke him prisoner, sent them worde that he was both readye and willing to attend them any whair, upon conditione that they should not macke him prisoner ; (for at his coming to Innerury, he had so much free tyme graunted to hira to come and returne back to his owne house, whither he agreed with the Covenanters or not ; and it was upon that ac compt that he had at first went off, though Montrosse shewed himself not unwUUng however it had beene.) XXVIII. Huntlyes desyre was graunted, and ane assurance sent him Assurance under the chiefe mens handes (specially Montrosses), that he shoulde be C'^®/* , ^' free to retwrne. Therfor, trusting to ther second assuraunce, he comes to Erasers press Aberdeen,* wher he had not long stayed, but the Forbesses and Frazers, to detain hira, ° ¦' and particu larly Fren- * Nota Bene. WTien Huntly came in to Aberdeen, [on the tenth of April], he lodged draught. in Pittfoddells house ; wher, by generall Leslys directione, his lodging was gwarded both at the forgate and posterne, which Huntlye did not know of till the next daye, and was much troubled at it. The pretext of tacking him southe was proposed to hira by generall Leslye putting him to it for to perforrae sorae articles, as, First, That he would contribute with them for tho expence of the warre. Second, That he would obleidge to raake the Highlands peacable. Third, That he would bring in John Dow and Jaraes Grant prisoners, etc. This he did refoose to doe, wherupon Lesly told him himself must then goe along with them ; but befor he would give them an ansuer, he desyred to restor his band that he had subscrybed to, etc. Some say that Lesly did so, and so the agreeraent being discharged, tooke him prisoner ; but if cer tainly it wer restored, I cannot affirme it. [" Upon the forsaid 10th of Aprile, the marquess of Huntlye, with his two sones, the lord Gordon, and the lord Aboyne, came frae Strabogie with about 40 horse, sore against his freinds' will, to New Aberdein, and lodged in the laird of Pitfoddells' house. But whether it was communed upon betuixt him and generall Montrose attheir conferences, that he should come into the toun and visite him, or that he was written for be the generall, to come in, I know not ; but it was most constantly reported, he would not have come, but upon the ge neral's letter. Howsoever it was, he came as is said before. Upon the morne, being Thurs day, there was ane council holden amongst the nobles, barrons and others, who also sent for the marquess, who came ; and after some consultations, this councill dissolved shortly, and the marquess returned to his own lodgeing." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 1 17. 236 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV- A. D. 1639. and all such as they had suggested, fell anew to presse the detainlnge of hira. And heerin none shewed hiraself mor violent then James Creigh- tone, laird of Frendrecht, who was knowne to be a bitter enemye to " Now, orders put to Aberdein, the foot army dispatched, and all things settled, the generall and nobles began to think, how to captivate and treacherously take the marquess of Huntly with them south, as doubtless they had orders so to doe before they came north, as many men thought. Allwayes, upon this same Good Fryday at even, the generall and nobles invited the marquess and his two sones to supper in their own lodging in skipper Anderson's house, where they supped altogether, and made mirrie. After supper, they travell with the marquess, (as was said,) saying, it was good to him to quyte his lieutenandrie, and to send the samen back againe to the king ; shewing, that it was stopped at the sealls, and therfore none would give obedience to the saraen, in thir dangerous tiraes ; as also to wryte to his raajestic favourablie and freindly of the covenanters, as his good and loyall subjects ; and to direct, upon the morne, with the laird of Clunie, thir letters and lieutenandrie to the king. The marquess understanding, that his lieutenandrie was not, nor could be gotten throw the sealls, as they said, and that the samen being past he would gett litle obedience when he happened to have adoe, re solved shortly to doe as they desired, because he had pairtly reason, and wrote his letters, and in their presence directed the laird of Cluny the samen Friday at night, to take journey upon the morne being Saturday, towards the king. Thus all being ended, the marquess with his two sones took their leaves frae the generall and nobles, and peaceably carae over to Pitfod dell's house, his own lodgeing, and presently directed ane boy to go to Leggitsden upon the morne, and to have his dinner ready ; but he was deceived. The lords finding the marquess raost noblie to yield to their desyres, which they never thought he would doe, looking upon ane refuiseall to have made ane ground and quarell to have taken him south, resolved upon ane other course to draw him under wrak, which with reasone they could nowayes bring to pass. And first, (the marquess haveing raind of no evill) the generall causes sett straitt watches at the foir and back yeitts of his lodgeing, and at the stable doors where his horses stood, with muskatteirs, to the end the marquess might not ryde, (as he intended,) upon the morne, home to Strathboggie ; whereof the marquess had no knowledge, whyle upon the raorne. " Allwayes, the generall and the nobles, upon Saturday the 13th of Aprile in the morn ing, sent in two noblemen to the marquess' lodgeing, desireing him with his two sones to come into the earle Marshall's house and speak with the generall. The raarquess won dering at the watching of his lodgeing, and now sending for hira after he had taken his leave in a freindly forrae the night before frora thera, and told he was to ryde home upon the morne, as 1 have saide ; allwayes, he with his two sones goes into the earle Marishall's lodgeing, meitts with the generall, and, after freindly salutations, the generall begins to make up a new ground of ane quarrell, and sayes to the marquess, ' My lord, I would desire you to contribute to pay William Dick 200,000 merks, which is borrowed frae him for lifting of this army to come north.' The raarquess answered, he was not obleidged to pay any part thereof, because it was borrowed, waired and employed but his advyce or consent, and that he had spent as meikle in this bussienes for his own part, as any nobleman in the land had done, out of his own purse. 2do, He desyred him to take James Grant, John Dugar, and their accomplices, rebells, bloodshedders and murtherers, and great troublers and oppressors of the countrey people. The marquess answered, he bore no publict oflSce nor had comraission to that effect ; whilk albeit he had, Jaraes Grant had gotten the king's remission, and so could not take hira ; and as for John Dugar, he would concurr with the rest of the countrie to take him, as he was employed. 3tio, He desired the marquess to agrie with the laird of Frendraught, and take him by the hand ; because the Covenant admitted of no hatred nor feid to stand unreconceiled. He answered, what he had subscrived to the generall on no wayes obleidged him to take Frendraught be the Ch. XXIX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 237 Huntlyes familye, and most of his surname ; the cause of which enimitye I A. D. 1639. gave accounte of in the first booke, to which I doe referre the reader. XXIX. Whither Montrose was content to be overborne by votes, that Montrose al so it might be his greater glorye to leade Huntly to Edinburgh as a trophee '"^^ himself to J.,. .•-.•! 1 T»,r , , . . , be overruled. 01 tiis conquest, or it indeed Montrosse wer overpowred and constrained Huntly carried for to yeeld to the clamors of the northerne Covenanters (who had drawne *o Edinburgh ; the south country men ther waye,) it is uncertaine : But, however, it was gented Mon- concluded that Huntly must goe alonge with them to Edinburghe, under a trose's behavi- gwarde, though not disarmed or a prisoner ; which was accordingly per formed. So Montrosse and his pairty, within lesse than a fourtnight after ther comming, marched southwards againe, establishing a comittye of the Forbesses and Frazers, and ther associats, for to gwarde the countrey, which they easily undertooke, Huntly being now out of the waye ; who hand, nor would he take him be the hand upon no condition. The generall haveing used and proponed thir frivolous petitions and demands, and getting such reasonable answers as he could not weill eschew, he then broke up the thing he most earnestly would have bein at, (which was the marquess himselfe), and changeing his purpose, sayes, ' My lord, seeing we are all now freinds, will ye goe south to Edinburgh with us ?' He answered, he was not of such mind, nor was he prepaired to goe south at this tyrae, because he was goeing home to Strathbogie. The general said, 'Your lordshipp will do weill to go with us.' The marquess seeing his purpose, answered quickly, ' My lord, I came here to this toune upon assureance that I should come and goe at my own pleasure but molestation or inquietation ; and now I see by condition my lodgeing was guarded, that I could not come out nor in, and now, by my expectation, ye would take rayselfe (who is here, and bidden here with your lordship in quiet maner, mirrie and glaid,) and carrie me to Edinburgh, whither I would or not; this in ray sight seiras not fair nor honourable.' Allwayes, sayes he, 'my lord, give me ray bond whilk I gave you at Inverurie, and ye shall have ane answer.' Whilk the generall obeyed, and delivered to the raarquess. Then he said, ' whither will ye take me with yow south as ane captive, or willingly of ray own raind ?' The generall answered, ' Make your choice.' Then said he, ' I will not goe as ane captive, but as ane volunteir.' Whereupon he comes to the door, and haistiely goes to his own lodgeing, where he finds the saraen straitly guairded with rausketeirs. Allwayes he goes in and sitts down to break fast, sends post after the laird of Cluny to staj- his journey, as ye have heard, so that he went no farder nor Edinburgh. Sorae of the raarquess' freinds thought hardly of his goeing south, without some hostage left behind for his saife returne, but the generall being spoken to refuised to grant any hostage. Thus, is this great and mightie marquess, great and egregious earle, lord Heutennent of tho north be his majestie's authoritie, a man of singular spirit and courage, of great freindship, and faire commandment, brought under thir straittes and hard conditiones by his neighbour subjects for being ane loyall subject to his master the king ; which otherwayes I hope they durst not have hazard to enterpryse be their own strength and following in thir quarters. Allwayes he was first forced to tryst and give his bond at Inverurie, then intysed to come quietly to Aberdein, his lodgeing guarded, himselfe under trust taken, as ye have heard. All this he was driven to suffer, and behold most patiently, for the love he carried to the king his master, his kine and freinds. Cheifly his dear childrein were greivously offended thereat, to see him taken frae his freinds, and had to Edinburgh amongst his enemies, who never liked his house nor standing. What should moTer—llid. pp. 119—122.] 238 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. went to Edinburgh foote for foote with Montrose, accompanyd with his two " eldest sonnes, Georg Lord Gordon and James Viscount of Obyne,* who voluntarly went along with ther father. His third sonne. Lord Ludovicke Gordone, heing but a young boye, at scoole in Boige, with his graund mother ; the other two, Lord Charles and Harye, young chUderen, the last of the two in Fraunce, wher he was borne ; so none of the three wer in capacitye to be tackne notice of. True it is that for that tyme that Huntly, contrare to paroUe, was made prisoner (for I can give It no better name), few or none of the Cove nanters recented that deaUng, but rather aUowed it ; yet it did avaUe them nothing who wer the mane abettors therof, being exposed to greater afirontes by his foUowers Immediatly therafter (as we shall tell), then if he had stayd at home, who would have undoubtedly, acordinge to assur aunce givne, kept in his followers. And for Montrosse going along with that actione, it is most certane, to the best of my knowledge (for I wrytte this knowingly), that it bredde such a distaste in Huntly against Montrosse, that afterwardes when Montrosse feU off to the Kinge, and forsooke the Covenanters, and was glade to gett the assistaunce of Huntly and his fol lowers, the Marquesse of Huntly could never be gained to joyne cordiaUy with him, nor to swallow that indlgnitye. This bred jarres betwixt them in the carrying on of the warre, and that which was pleasing to the one was seldome pleasing to the other ; whence It came to passe that such as wer aeqwally enerayes to bothe (who knew it weall eneuch), wer secured, and in ende prevaUed so farr as to ruinate and destroye both of them, and the Kinge by a consequent. Huntly com- XXX. When Huntly came to Edinburgh, he was comitted to the casteU rastf f°Edin- °^ Edinburgh prisoner, but very honorably used. His eldest sonne did stay burgh. His with his father wUlingly, to beare him company ; but his second sonne, the Ah ^""i Viscount of Aboyne, after a short staye,t by the advyce of his freendes, lowed to re- craved licence of his father to be gone, which could not be refoosed by turn; goes to ^he Covenanters, who gladly would have kept him too. Therfor, upon pre- of Huntly's texte of dispatching his fathers private bussinesse, he shiftes for himself, as daughters little fancying a voluntare imprisonement, which he was not resolved to betake himself too, if he could otherwayes choose ; and befor he rested * Nota. James Viscount of Aboyne was sent backe from Aberdeen to Strabogye, by his father. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 122.] t At Aberdeene, not Edinburgh. Ch. XXX.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 239 much he gott be sea to Bervicke, wher we shaU lett him rest for some few A. D. 1639. dayes. The Marquesse of Huntly, when he came over to Edinburgh, befor his being comitted to prisone into the casteU, was much solUcited by the pryme Covenanters for to subscrybe the Covenant and come over to ther syde ; and very honorable tearmes wer offered to him. But he gave them a resolute ansuer negativly, which I have heer inserte, tackne off of the printe coppye, as himself caused afterwards pubUshe it, with this title of The Marquesse of Huntlye his Replye to Certame Noblemen.CO It is dated Apryle twen- April 20. tieth : " To be your prisoner is hy much the lesse displeasing to mee, that my accusatione is for nothing else but loyaltye, and that I have been brought into this estate by such unfaire meanes, as can never be made to appeare honorable in thoise who used them. " Wheras yow offer liberty upon conditione of my entring into your Co venant, I am not so badd a merchant as to buye it with the losse of my con science, fidelitye, and honour ; which, in so doinge, I should account to be wholly perisht. " I have already givne my faith to my prince, upon whoise heade this crowne, hy aU law of nature and nationes, is justly fallne ; and wiU not fal- sifie that faith, by joyning with any in a praetence of reUigione, which my awne judgeraent cannot excuse from rebellione ; for it is weaU knowne, that in the primitive churche, no armes wer held laufuU, being lifted by subjectes against ther laufuU prince, though the whole frame of Christianitye was then in questione." Wheras yow would encouradge me to bee a partacker with yow, by your hopes of supply from Fraunce and other forreigne nationes, together with your so good intelligence in Englande, as that no dainger wIU come from thence, lett me teU yow that, in my opinion, thes reasons are but vaine ; the Frenshe being now mor strickly tyed then befor, to upholde the autho ritye of our [sacred] soveraigne, [by a new cemented league of marriage,] wherby ther interest in his majestyes progenye wIU overbaUance yow, though (1) fSnalding gives the title at length : The marquess of Huntly's Reply tocertaine noble men eentlemen, and ministers, covenanters of Scotland, sent from their associates to signifie to him, that it behoved him either to assist their designes, or be carried to prison m the castle of Edinburgh ; the 20th of Aprill 1639. Now published, because of a false copie thereof lately printed without authoritie or his own consent. London, printed by Robert Young, his majestie's printer for Scotland, 1640.] 240 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. your cause wer better. Other forraigners are meerly unable by ther aune distractiones, and the Englishe have ever been strong eneuch for us, when only ther owne King, and not ours too, did leade them. " For my oune pairt, I am in your power ; and resolved not to leave that foule title of traitor as ane Inheritance upon my posteritye. Yow may tacke my heade from my shoulders, but not my heart from my soveraigne." Upon this ansuer, the Tables thought it was to no pourpose for to soUicite Huntly any mor ; therfor they coramanded to incarcerate him Into the castell of Edinburgh, whence we are not to expect him out agane at libertye till the pacificatlone of Bervicke be past. We shall leave him, therfor, a whyle, and give leisour to the Lord Seaton, eldest sonne to the Earle of Wenton, and the Earle of Hadingtoune, for to suite his second and third daughters, the ladyes Henriett and Jane Gordones, whom not long after they marryde. Ansvvertothe XXXI. The Covenanters now having settled the north, and gottne fes"^ whiX" Hnntly into ther power, beganne to thinke how to beare upp the King, who was dated by this tyme was at Yorke. But, befor aU thinges, they resolve for to keepe seventii Fe- England in a good conceite of them and ther actinges ; and because the bruary. Kinge had caused publish and proclaime a Declaratione against them and Apryle 1. ther actinges, which was dated February twenty-seventh (the contents wherof I have already mentioned), which was readde in all parosh churches in Eng lande : Therfor they founde it necessarye for to publish and disperse through England ane ansuer to the forsaide manifesto ; wherin they stryve to vindi cate themselves and ther actiones from all the ill constructione that the King did putt upon them, as also to ansuer all his objectiones. This apologye of thers was, for substaunce, as foUowethe :(0 They affirme, in ther preface. That they suppose the Lord is about some greate worke, because the cupp that has been filled to other reformed churches is now putt into ther hande : That albeit they had used aU meanes for to informe the King, and supplicate to him, yet that, by ther enemyes meanes, his eares wer stUl closed, speciaUy by the prelatts, who wer attempt ing to fish in troubled waters : That the Kinges warath was increasing, they saye. It is manifest by his declaratione February twenty-seventh : That, how beit, they wer confident that the gates of heU should not prevaile against ther cause. Yet they wer sorry to be aspersed and lye under them, or then for to appeare, in contradictory termes to thes proclamationes, as ther adversaryes (1) [Historia Motuum, pp. 332—350.] Ch. XXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 241 doe lybeU, and prevaUe with the King to send out against them. That albeit A. D. 1639. all that is said be ansuered befor by them, yet, least Gods cause and ther innocencye should bee woronged by ther silence, they are therfor necessitate for to answer, once mor, in few wordes, that which forraerly is wryttne at large. First, For the title directed to the loving subjectes of England, they are wiUing that aU English subjectes be rightly Inforraed ; but are sorry that any should be thought mor loving or loyall then themselves. Second, That wheras it chargeth them " as seekers to overthrow his majestyes power by seditiouse practises, under pretence of relligione," they ansuer, That none of ther actiones is mor charged with seditione then ther Covenant ; wherein they are so farre from overturning regall authoritye, that In It they attest God that they have not the least intentione or desyre to attempt any thing that might turne to the diminutione of the Kings greatnesse and anthorltye. That they could not suspect that rejecting of episcopacye and Service Booke wer the overturning of regaU power, whoise pillars are reUigione and righteousnesse, which they shall stryve to support as they have sworne to doe. They complaine upon the epithetts givne to them, and ther practises of " seditiouse, turaultouse, froward, perverse, traiterouse, doers of the devill his workes, as treasones and rebeUions, hostile preparationes to invade Eng lande, daring Insolencyes to macke whole ther brockne fortunes, brainesicke distempers, traiterously affected persones, turbulent spiritts " : To all this they ansuer with the wordes of 2 Samuel xvi. 12, et Matthew v. 11; and that thes raUIng accusationes proceed from the raging prelatts. Yet shall it not macke them, in one worde, reflecte on the Kings majestye. That they have insert the image of the hierarchye into the Kings pourtfalcte, that such as doe reverence to the one may be forced to doe the lycke to the other ; yet that they can distinguish betwixt honoring the King and the prelatts. That the prelatts evUl langwage speackes neither against them nor ther cause ; that the prelatts stryve to engadge the King irrevocably, but shall be mistackne ; for they trust the King wiU never doe so ; that he is mor then a common parent, and if he turne pairty, by unaeqwaU weight the passengers and such a one as sittes at the helme should both be drownd; which the prelatts rather choose then that themselves should be the Jonas to be cast into the sea. That the maxime is olde which theye foUow, When we are deade, lett the earth be burnt up with fyre.* • 'Efuiv S^ativTos yxTx fux'^iiu *»{'. Suetonius in vita Neronis. 2 H 242 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. That they are glade in the narrative that ther actiones ar judged, and by them ther intentiones. Ther actiones they justifie, First, To be full of long suffering of the prelatts insolencyes over church, state, relligione and worshipp, and lawes and judicatoryes. Second, By ther peacable proceed inges ever since they beganne to appeare in publicke against the Service Booke, though imposed by way of horning by the prelatts, which was op posed only by suppUcationes. Third, By ther entring in Covenant with God, when they founde ther supplicationes gett no ansuer but terrible pro clamationes, which they cleared against all objectiones. Fourth, When they were coraraanded to ryse at the assembly of Glasgow, they choosed that pairt which is most warranted by Chryste, and agreable to the Kings will, formerly manifested ; had done nothing but supplicated the King, and being threatnd with armyes, had studyd only upon ther owne necessair defence, without intentiones to invade any man. To the particular evidences of ther traiterouse intentiones, exprest in the proclaraatione, which are instanced, first, to be " multitudes of infamouse lybeUs, stuffed fuU of calumneys, against the Kings authoritye," they an suer. That ther straine is contrarye, and they desyre that any such should he instanced. To the second, of letters sent to privatt persons and private meetings in London, they ansuer. That they deney any such thing by them to be done ; if others, under ther name, publish thinges which they never saw, they thinke that the. best way to suppresse thera is to neglecte thera. To the third, viz. ther publicke contemning and neglecting his majestyes commandes, they answer, Ther protestationes against unjust commandes are faire and legall, not moutinouse ; and at some tymes, for preservatione of right, unavoydable. To the fourth, that no Covenant or band is warrantable, without civUl authoritye. That they have wryttne so much for ther vindication therin al ready, that they hope all men except the prelatts are satisfeed. To the objectione, that they rejected the Covenant commanded by authoritye, they answer by referring all men to ther print protestatione, September twenty-second et December eighteenth, and to ther actes of Assemblye. To the third, that ther Covenant is a conspiracye against the King, etc. they answer, It is a blasphemy, which they are sure neither the King nor any fearing God wUl be accessory too ; and that it is ane evidence that they are Ch. XXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 243 not doing the workes of the deviU may appeare, because God has givne a A.D. 1639. testimony from heaven unto ther actings against the prelatts. To the objectioune, that they intende to invade Englande, they answer. That ther late declaratione may satisfee any man therin ; and that it wUl prove nothing to saye " that the cheefest amongst them are men of brockne fortunes and unqwyett spiritts," since it is knowne that the cheefest have wealth answerable to the conditione of ther natione, and that aU others are content with with ther owne estates ; and that, on the contrary, it is knowne that the chiefest (setting asyde some few states men and such as draw ther breath from courte) are either atheistes, papistes, or drownd in debte, and under captiones for debtte ; and are devyding the laundes of others in ther owne fancye. Furder, they say. That ther innocencye is cleared by the councells letter, which they are informed was, with ther supplicatione, exhibited to the councell of England, February twenty-second et twenty-eighth, with ther supplicatione ; which the councell of England had so farr tackne to heart as to joyne ther supplicatione therwith to the King, requesting him not easily to be moved for to thinke upon harder courses against bis ancient native kyngdome, but to thinke how to settle thera without force of armes. To the dismissing of the printer, they ansuer by deneying it to be true ; and for inhibiting to print without ther warrant, they ansuer. They forbidd only, without warrant of the churche, to printe thinges that concerne the kirke, which, they say. Is no new practise. To ther raising armyes, and beseeging and blocking up the Kings cas tells, they ansuer by referring to ther protestatione, Deceraber eighteenth. To the challendge, that they affirmed that the conducte of the Kinges army was in the handes of papistes, they ansuer. They wer informed It was so ; and why should not designes smelUng of Rome and poprye be borne upp by papistes ? To the second, that some in power in the churche of England have beene the cause of tacking upp armes against thera, they ansuer. They wIU verlfye it by wrytte, and by depositione of the pryrae statesraen and councellors, against Canterbury by name, that he did negotiate with Rome about the frame of our Service Booke, and with his owne hand did alter and Interllne- at that booke, tending to conformitye with Rome ; and that his reprinted Conference with Fisher will not vindicate him. Therfor they attest aU true patrlotts to supplicate the King for a parliament, that such a mystery of 244 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. iniqwitye may be fully detected, which tended to the envolving of two kyngdoms in a warre, and building upp of Rome. To that objectione that the lawes are oppressed, and subjects dare not acte as judges, they ansuer. That the pryme judges may remember how oftne justice was refoosed to them be way of missives sent to the judges, for feare to offende ; that horning, conforme to actes of parliament, was denyde to them against the excommunicate prelatts, by reason of the Kings letter, March second, prohibiting to graunte : Which shewes that the judges are for them, but not awed by them. To the objectione that some of them refoose the oath of alledgance and supremacye, etc. they answer, They know not who is tackne in Wales, but It would seera ther Is ane hotte inqwisltione ther. Yet for themselves, albeit ther be a difference betuixt the oathe of alledgeance and supremacye, and that they cannot tacke the oath of supremacy, as it is extended and glossed by the prelatts flatteryes, yet they render all to the King that sownde re formed divynes doe. To that which is affirmed that the Service Booke was not for innova^ tione but for conformitye, they replye. They are urged to conforme with other kyngdoms, as if they had not ane established worshipp of ther owne, but wer tabula rasa. [To] that assertione that tacking away episcopacye would destroy the third estate of parliament, they reply, Ther is no acte for it. Secondly, Parlia ments raay bee and are complete without such ane excrescens. And if ther Covenant must not be endured, because the King will not consent, albeit It be with God, then Covenanters raust either renounce God or be punishd lycke rebeUs and traitors. To the fourth, that the questione Is if the King shall be King or not, and \ke fifth, that the King Is forced to tacke armes to lett them see that he must both establish his kingly authoritye, and endure no such Covenant as thers wes, they answer. That in this case they are to resolve if they will lye under foule aspersiones ; recaU Service Booke and prelatts ; opne a door for poperye ; hinder the queens conversione, etc. ; Interrupt the marche of the Lord of Hostes upon the earth'; wrest his displeyd banner out of his handes ; pull the N. B. crowne from the heade of Chryst ther judge ; resiste the Holy Gohste ; pull downe the goldne candlestlcke ; bring all the plagues of the booke of God upon them ; rather then defende themselves against armed violence and un just invaslone. Therfor, to the queree of the proclamatione, " What will Ch. XXXL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 245 we defende ?" they ansuer, Ther relUglone, libertys, and lives. To the second A. D. 1639. querie, " Against whom we wiU defende it ?" they ansuer, That they distin- guishe, Fir,it, betwixt a King resident in his kyngdome, and rightly informed ; and a King distant in another kyngdome, hearing only one pairtye, and mis informed by ther adversaryes. Second, betwixt a King, as King, proceed ing acording to law against rebeUs ; and a King, as a man, coming from his throne (at the foote whairof the humble suppUcationes of his subjectes lyes unansuered), and marching furiously against his humble and weall meaninge people. Third, betwixt a King, a straunger to reUigione, and tyed no furder but acording to his owne pleasure ; and a King, professing the same reUigione with his subjectes, and obleidged, by his fathers deede, and by his oune oathe, to defende his subjectes, ther lawes, libertyes, relligione, etc. Next, they distinguish betwixt some few privatte persones tacking arraes N. B. for resistaunce; andthe whole body ofthe kyngdome (except some courteours statesmen, papistes, or popishly affected, and ther adherents), standing to ther owne defence. Second, betwixt subjects rysing and standing out against law and reasone, intending to shacke off the yoke of obedience ; and a people holding fast ther alledgiance, in all humllltye supplicating for rel ligione and justice. Third, betwixt a people labouring, by armes, to Intro duce novationes in relligione, contrary to lawes ; and a people seeking to have reUigione ratifyd against all novationes, as it has been sworne by King and people. Fourth, betwixt a people pleading for ther oune fancyes and fool- ryes ; and a people suspending ther judgement in thinges controverted, till they be determined in a free Assemblye, and therafter standing to the As semblyes determinatione. And then they apply the distlnctiones to ther owne advauntage, by shewing that this is ther present case, whairin they are warranted to be de fensive evne by thoise who pleade most contra monarchomachos ; that, finally, mutwall contracte betuixt King and people, at his coronatione, does warrant them. Then they desyre the Englishes not to be hasty to beleeve aU that is saide acainst them ; nor ready to engadge in a warre wher so Uttle is to be gained, which would prove so harmefuU to both nationes ; and that hearing of ther necessarye defence, . they will judge charitably,, and suppose the case ther owne ; and that the EngUshes would praye to God for them, and suppUcate the King for them ; and, if need be, defend them against wicked men of BeliaU, because they are brethren under one roofe, etc. 246 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A D. 1639. And then they declare what remonstrances, proclamationes, preparationes, have been emitted, and made, and are macking against them ; and this they say was the cause why they wer forced, to seise thes castells, so much ob jected : that either they behoved to doe or dye. Finally, they conclude that by the law of nature they may prevent blowes as weall as strike ; and that ad defensionem sufficit quod -praecedat offensa vel Justus timor offensae, nec debet quis exspectare primum ictum : melius enim jura intacta servare, quam post vulneratam causam remedium quaerere. Quando praecedunt signa et actus manifestae offensionis, et quando aliter nosmet tueri non possumus, tum inculpata ac necessaria dicitur tutela, ac in dubio insulta- tus quicquid facit in incontinenti, praesumitur ad sui defensionem facere. And then they conclude that France and HoUand did the lycke : finaUy, that they will hold ther supplicationes in one hand, and ther swordes in the other ; that how soone ther supplicationes are graunted, themselves and the peace of the kirke and kyngdome settled, they would suffer ther swordes to fall from them ; and should leave nothing in ther power unperformed for perfect pacificatlone ; and should vow to live and dye in obedience to his Majestys lawes, and the mantenance of his royall persone and authoritye, etc. And then it Is subscrybed. Revised according to the ordinance of the Generall Assembly, by Mr. Archibald Johnstone, clerk therto. Edinburgh, twenty- second March, 1639. King's Procla- XXXII. This is the sumine of that long Remonstrance which the Cove nanters published in ansuer to the Kings Declaratione, February twenty- seventh ; to which the Kinge gave no replye. For now they wer preparing to dispute the cause with swordes, and no longer with wordes ; for by the Apryle 1. first of Apryle, the Kinge was at Yorke, at his rendevouze, wher he re mained for some weekes till his army should be fully at a heade. Upon the Apryle 25. twenty-fifth of Apryle,* the Kinge caused publish a proclamatione or decla^ ratione at the merkatt crosse of Yorke, which he lyckwayes commanded (but aU in vaine) for to be proclaimed at all the merkatt crosses of the burroughs of Scottlande : The contents whairof wer to this pourpose foUowingeCO : First, The King shewes that whairas he had used all faire meanes to reclame his subjectes, who wer blyndly runne into seditiouse courses, and * Kingorne leaves Aberdeen and his gouvernement, and Apryl twenty-five, Earle of Mar shall and Master of Forbesse come in to Aberdeen with about a thousand followers ; and they quarter in the towne, and the Earl of Marshall is made governour. [Spald. Hist of Troub., vol. i., p. 125.] (1) [Historia Motuum, pp. 352—356.] mation. Ch. XXXIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 247 had laboured (but in vaine) to settle his owne authoritye and governement ; A. D. 1639. that all his clemencye had proved a meanes to encrease ther insolencye, as for to seize his fortes, his crowne, magazins, etc. : which (though now in armes) he declares for all this shaU not be employed to Innovate reUigione, or for to infringe the civiU lawes and libertyes therof; his tender affectiones both to reUigione and his subjectes being aeqwaU, speciaUy such as have re mained faithfuU. Therfor, with sinceritye of heart, he promiseth that he will macke goode all his former proclaraations, or whatever his comis sioner in his name had promised at the last pretended GeneraU Assembly of Glasgow. That though it be not necessaire alwayes to be declaring the sinceritye of his professione in the reformed protestant reUigione, yet that by such false reportes, whairby they have givne out that he was popishly affected, they had no other ende who raised it but to steale away the heartes of the people from him, therby the better for to compasse ther treacherouse designes for the overthrow of monarchicaU governement: That he tackes God to witnesse that he was a defender of the trwe protes tant relUglone, which he promiseth and hopes to continow In ; and that he wiU mantaine it against Innovationes, as it Is established by the lawes of the severall kyngdomes respectlvlye. That (whatever anye treacherously disposed saye to the contrarye) he does obleidge himself most punctwally to performe this promise, for preservatione of relligione, and evrye pairt therof. That he hopes to be beleeved that he meaneth no otherwayes then he speakes, whatever people treacherously disposed, to gett followers to themselves, will saye to the contrarye. That the seductione of many is the worste of crymes ; that albeit many be seduced, yet he Is willing to shew mercye to all who wIU accept his offer, and from that tyme fordwards live qwyettly and obedient to his commandes : to which pourpose, he Intended to hould parliament ther how soone he saw the countrye in such peacable posture as it was fitt for hira, with honour and with safetye, to come per sonally amongst them. Therfor he commandes all his houses, fortes, crowne, etc. to be restored to him within eight dayes after the publlcatlone of his proclamatione ; fortes to be demolished, and the laundes, houses, and goods of his loving subjectes, tackne from them, to be restored also within the saide space, and that as they tendered ther alledgaunce. And he commandes all subjectes to lay downe armes, and to disband ther forces, aU to goe to ther owne homes, and to dissolve ther conventicles and meetings within the space forsaide, after the pubUcatione heerof. That for ther securitye, he 248 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D: 1639. was wiUing to graunte ane acte of oblivione for all that was past ; and that — — since he was wUling to deale so gratiously with them, he was confident that his gratiouse offer should be heartily embraced. That if any refoosed his offer, within the saide space, he would be forced to have recourse to a sharpe cure of justice. Therfor he does proclaime suche to be opne rebells and traitors ; that he would dispose of ther laundes and estates to other better deserving subjectes adhering to him and obeying his commandements : To which pourpose, he dischargeth ail ther vassals and tenents for to pay any thing that they owe to suche, but to reserve the one halfe for the Kings use, and the other half for ther oune use : and he pro- misethe to such as would leave ther maisters and adhere to him, good termes of years of ther possessiones, and a diminutione of a third of the rentall at least that they payed to ther maisters presentlye ; and to the vassals of such also he promiseth to give them immediate holding of himselfe, and the dimi nutione of a third of the dutye which ther charters obleidgeth them to pay to ther superiors. And for superiors adhering to him, who have any rebel- House vassals, he declares that it shall be laufull to expell suche vassals, and that he freely resignes his right to such superiours for to possesse themselves the laundes of such vassals, or whatever should belong to him by forfaltrye, with this provisione still that such superiours asiste him. Fur der, he dischargeth all indetted to such in sowmes of money for to macke payment to them ; and assures his good subjectes that they shall have retri- butione out of the saide moneye, as he shaU see them to deserve. And all burghs and cittyes who shall accept his offer, he promiseth to tacke into his protectione, with all ther libertyes and privUeldges ; other wayes he does seclude them from any such hopes in any tyme thereafter. Lastly, he de clares that the forfailture of any rebell shall not praejudice any good sub jecte to whom they are indetted, but that all such shall have payment befor that the King macke any use of ther forfaltrye. Lastly, he orders that this may be proclaimed at all the heade buroughs of Scottlande, at the merkatt crosses and other places needfuU, that none pretende ignorance, etc. Date therof is at York, Apryle twenty-five, 1639. Printed by Robert Younge. Hamilton XXXIII. Ther was a coppy of this Declaratione delyvered to Marquesse comes to the of HamUtoune, with warrant to cause pubUsh it at his arry vail into Scott- gggt land. Hamiltoune came into the Firth of Forth, May first day, with a fleete Mav 1- ^^ about twenty-eight shippes ; wherin wer saide, besyde the marriners, to have been fyve thousand foot souldiours, EngUshes, together with money Ch. XXXIV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 249 and ammunitione for levyinge and arming souldiours at Hamiltounes land- A. D. 1639. inge. Sundrye noblemen of Scottlande, who stoode for the King, and some officers of fortune (as they terme them), who came alonge with Hamiltoune, wer appoynted for to commande thes levyes. Hamiltoune, at his comming into the Firthe,* anchored betuixt the two little isles or inshes, caUed Insh Keithe and Inshe Columbe ; ryding in the very place wher the passage boates betuixt Leeth and Bruntisland macke ther ordinarye and neerest passage and course at all tymes. His comraing thither begott a great alarum amongst the commons, and such as wer not acqwaynted with the mysteryes of bussinesse ; who, upon both sydes of the Firthe, beganne to runne to armes and to gwarde the coastes, that Hamil toune and his souldiours might bee keept from laundinge. And ther trepida tion was no whytte diminished by the Covenanter noblemen, who kept a greate deale of sturre and qwarter with rendevousing and drawing upp horse and foote to keep off HamUtoune, who made no greate haste to come ashore ; for all he did was to sett his souldiours by turnes a shore upon Insh Keithe and Insh Columbe, for to refreshe them. And it was affirmed that beinge ther they caused macke some fyre workes, which made a noyse lycke unto a voUy of musketts shott off ; and all this to macke the Ignorant people be leeve that his nurabers wer greater then indeed they wer. The rest of the tyme they lay ther was spent in macking excursions upon passage boates or fishermen, without offering to corae a lande, tiU his victwalls beganne either to consurae or spoyle, or the launde souldiours to sickne and severall of them to dye : Otherwayes this fleet did mor hurt to the King, who sent them, then to the enemye. XXXIV. For, during the tyme that he laye in the Firthe commander Keeps corres- of the fleet, HamUtoune had dayly correspondence, by letter or message, po"dence with under the pretexte of that which shall be presently tolde, with the pryme ers. His mo- Covenanter noblemen ; who sometymes would come aboarde of the shipp tier's beha- wher HamUtoune was, sometymes one, soraetyraes another of them.O) Thus wer matters carryd under hande, whUst great noyse was made about the hindering of his launding, in a comicaU waye : And, amongst other zealotts, none bussyer to barre his launding then HamUtouns owne mother ; who came * May third, Obyne, who had been macking some preparationes in the northe, leaves his men, and privattly shippes upon the coast of the Enzie, upon advertishment of Hamiltounes coming to the Firthe. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., voL i., p. 130.] (I) [See Bishop Guthrie's Memoirs, p. 56.] 2 I 250 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. ryding towards Leethe, upon the heade of some armed troopes, with two case pistolls at her saddle, protesting, (as It is affirmed,) that she would kUl her Sonne with her owne handes if he should offer to come a launde in ane hostUe waye : And some affirme that she had balle of gold, insteade of leade, to klU him withall. This laste reporte I shall not asserte for ane undoubted truthe ; howbeit it appears to be true which was reported of that ladyes romance lycke caprice in this particular, by the testimonye of such as having wryttne a manifesto* for the Covenanters, doe not glorye a little in the old ladye Marquise of HamUtoune her valour and resolutione against her Sonne. The first thing that Harailtoune did In this mocke warre was to wrytte to the provost of Edinburgh, desyring him to macke patent harbyre for the fleete royall, and for to cause proclaime at the crosse of Edinburgh the Kings declaratione (at Yorke, Apryle twenty-five). To this the provost of Edinburgh did macke answer, beseeching Hamiltoune not to put that upon him ; since it was mor then he durst performe without the advyce and con sente of the nobilitye and the cheife trustees amongst the Covenanters, who behoved first to conveene and resolve : Or rather he Intreated Hamiltoune to waite till the parliament wer mette, whoise doune sitting, since it did now approache, it was ther dutye of course to tell him what he might ex pecte in answer to his proposalle. Those elected XXXV. And iraraediatly therafter. May fifteenth, thes who wer elected to parUament to sitt in the parliaraent, which was Indicted the last yeare, did conveene at last year con- t-, ,.,,,,„, , . . „ , ,. veen; answer Edinburgh; who, beior the downe sitting ot the parliament, mett at ther Hamilton. Tables, and, by common consent, answered HamUtoune,^) shewing him that, for manye reasons, they neither could nor ought give waye to the publishing the Kings declaratione, except they would violate the lawes and proclaime the nationes disgrace, confesse themselves perjurd, and, finally, tacke the guUt upon theraselves of all the crymes whalrwithe ther adversaryes so unjustly branded them. Next, they affirmed that such a proclamatione was unlaufull bothe for the forme therof, because it was made without the kyngdome, and without the * Spang, Historia Motuum, pag. 351. [" Prsetereunda certe non est illustrissima Heroina Hammiltonia Marchionissa, quse supra sexum, virilis animi pro tuenda vindicura libertatis & religionis causa, egregia indicia edidit, ac posthabito orani materno affectu in illustrissimum filium Marohionem Hammiltonium, quem tamen unice diligebat, se & sua foederatis labor- antibus benigne obtulit."] (1) [Their letter is printed in Burnet's Memoires of the Hamiltons, p. 125.] Ch. xxxv.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 251 counceUs consente ; which is both contrare to knowne lawes and practise : A. D. 1639. And for the matter, lyckwayes, they ansuered, that it was never heard of befor, that aU the nobUitye and almost the whole body of the kyngdome should bee declared rebeUs and traitors, and aU ther goods to be confiscate, without any tryall of ther guUt or sentence of parliament, albeit it be only judge competent in suche cases: That such a procedure and punishment could not be usd nor inflicted against the meanest subjecte tiU he wer first citted, and his guilt proved, in foro contradictor io : Finally, they said that by this proclamatione all ther former actings wer condemned as treacher ouse, albeit they could both prove them just and necessary also. They said that such a proclamatione was praejudiciall to the King his honour, as being against law ; wheras the King oftne befor, and evne In this selfe same declaratione, promiseth to observe aU the lawes and preiveleidges of the kyngdome ; and that the counceU and sessione had oftne pronounced such a proclamatione unlaufuU : That certalnlye not the King, but ther enemyes, wer the authors therof, who, by this meanes, wer seeking to macke the rupture betuixt King and people altogether Incurable : That to obey such a commande wold be a breache of ther Covenante, which would draw Gods wrath upon them and ther posteritye : That they had tryed all meanes in vaine for to informe the Kinge; but as yet they requested Hamil toune that hee would doe and interceede for them at the Kings handes : Finally, they shewed that if Hamiltoune would joyne with them In parUa ment, they should undertacke to macke it apparent to the King, and to all the world, that ther enemyes wer the church and kyngdoms enemyes, and guiltye of treasone, but themselves humble and loyall subjectes. Meane whyle, the King sent ane expresse wherby he declared both the necessitye as weall as expediencye to prorogate the parliament to a fitter occasion. This was consterd by the Covenanters as done to trye them, if they wold enter a parliament against the Kings commande, as they had continowd to sitt In ther Assemblye. Yet the wysest of them thought not so, and befor hande saw little appearance, as things stoode betuixt them, that the King would lett the parliament sitte at that tyme : nor could any rationall man thinke otherwayes. The heades of the Covenanters founde it not expedient at that tyme to hold a parliament, whUst the King was upon his march with ane armye leading towards Scottland, and the north of Scottlande beginning againe for to grow unqwyett, as afterward shaU be told. Otherwayes, they would not faile to have sittne by vertwe of the King 252 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. his proclamatione, as weaU as ther predecessors did in the dayes of Queen Marye. Yet it was givne out that all was done in obedience to the Kinges commande ; but withall they declared that it was no pairt of the Kings praerogative for to adjourne a parliament without the consent of the states of the kyngdome.C) Army set on XXXVI. Leaving therfor the thoughtes of a parliament for that tyme, on foot against ^^^j ^^g beginne to put ther army on foote ; having long befor made aU General Lesly things readye for that ende ; putting Sir Alexander Leslye (commonly gets the caUed GeneraU Leslye), upon the heade of ther army, as generaUssimo, ties the com- both for his skill in militarye conducte, as also for to remove aemulatione mand and dis- amongst themselves, (for hardly would the rest of the nobUitye have foUowd the forces left ^^J °^^ o^ ^ber owne number) ; to have aU of them swore to be faithfuU and for the de- obedient; and he lyckewayes tooke an oathe of fidelitye in the discharge of fence of the i • j , j j .i kingdom. ^^^ dutye and commande over them. GeneraU Lesly rendevouzd the Covenanters army upon the Linkes of Leethe, and ther proclaimed the articles of warre which himself, with advyce and consent of the Tables, had caused draw upp, following In many thinges Gustavus Adolphus his modelle. Thes articles of warre he caused lyckwayes be printed for the use of the officers and souldiours under his commande. And because himselfe, with the maine body of the army, behoved to marche towards the border, therfor he leaves considerable forces within the kyngdome both for keeping downe inward combustions and repeUing forraigne Invasione. The Earle of Argylle was coraraanded by him for to tacke up his post neer Strivlinge with his men ; that hee might both keepe ane eye over the westerne coastes, in caise the Earle of Strafforde should send over any forces from Irelande, as also over the north pairtes, in caise any infaU should be ther. To the Lord Johnstone (afterwards Earle of Hartfell), was givne the oversight of the borders betuixt Scottland and Englande ; that he, with his vassals and such as wer joynd with them, might beare up such troopes of English or Irish horses as wer sent to macke incursions upon the borders, as also for to keepe downe [Robert] Maxwell the Earle of NIthsdale (a Roman Catholicke in professione), one who stoode for the King, and considerable for followers in thes places : And for effectwating all this the better, ther was a garrisone putt into Drumfreese, ane opne towne upon the south west border of Scottlande, not farr from (1) [Historia Motuum, pp. 358, 359.] Ch. XXXVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 253 Carleile, wher the Kings fore party laye. To the Earles of CassUs and A. D. 1639. Eglintoune was comitted the charge of GaUowaye, Carricke, Kyle, and Konninghame, and the reste of the weste. The Fyrth of Forthe was gwarded so on evrye syde, by the countrey men neerest Inhabitants to the two sydes therof in Fyfe and Lauthlan, that, betuixt ther wil llngnesse to defende, and Hamiltounes unwIlUngnesse to persew, little daunger was to be feard from any attacke that Hamiltounes fleete was lycke to give. XXXVII. About this tyme, the troubles in the north wer againe be- Troubles in gunne. Therfor, for quyetting thes places for the present and foUowing ^ewed'^^Lesi tymes, Montrose, who befor had marched thither, was of new putt upon encaraps at that service. To him was conjoyned the Earle of MarishaU, with his i^™^® ^^'^ ' followers, as also the vassaUs of the Earles of ErroUe, Dumferleralyn, and Berks,^near Glammes, ane reglraent of the Athole men, and two foote companyes of Berwick. the townesmen of Dundee, who wer to be raade use of by Montrosse as near the Scot- he saw necessetye, or could gett occasione to call thera out. All thes t'sh carap dis- thinges being putt in order, Generall Leslye tackes his marche for the st°oMs^fit"for border of Scottlande, towards Bervicke ; and encamped at Dunse HIU balls. (commonly called Dunse Law), which Is scitwated in the Merse, about four myles distant from Bervicke, and about fourtye Scottish myles from Edinburgh. Upon the twenty-eighth daye of Maye, the King encamped at two myles May 28. distaunce from Bervicke, at a place called Birks, and within view of the Scottish armye. The Kings campe was within the fronteer of Englande, Leslys witbin Scottishe bounds ; wher I must leave both armyes looking upon another for some tyme till the treatye beganne and closed ; for nothing else was done ther, all the actione in the interira, such as it was, being in the north of Scottlande ; towards which I must for a whyle steppe back- wardes. And heer, by the waye, I shall remember upon that whiche fell out neer Dunse Law about thes tymes. It was the falllnge of a pairt of a banke upon the steepe syde of ane hill neer by to the Scottish campe, which of its owne accorde had shuffled downewarde, and by its fall discovered innumerable stones, rownde for the raost pairte in shape, and perfectly sphericall, some of them ovall shapne. They wer of a darke gray colour, some of them yellowishe, and for qwantitye they looked lycke ball of all syzes, from a pistoll to feeld peeces, such as sakers or robinetts, or bat- 254 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. tering peeces upwards : smoothe they wer, and polished without, but lighter ~~~~ then leade by many degrees, so that they wer only for shew but not for use. Many of them wer carryd about In mens pocketts to be seene for the raritye. Nor wanted ther a few who did interprete this stone maga zine at Dunse Hill as a miracle, as if God had sent this by ane hidde providence for the use of the Covenanters ; for at this tyme all thinges wer interpreted for the advauntage of the Covenante. Others looked upon thes peebles stones as prodigiouse, and the wyser sorte tooke little notice of them at all. I suppose that at this present the qwarrye is extant, wher they are yet to be seen, no mor a miracle ; but whither the event has deter mind them to be a prodigee or not, I shall not tacke it upon me to defyne either pro or con. Huntly's XXXVIII. The imprisonement of Huntly, as it was troublesome to hlm- friends con- ggjf g^ j^ ^ yj tackue by his freends and foUowers, and others who did veen at Strath- ' •' i r i bogy, to repair stande for the King In the north of Scottlande, that upon the rumor ol the their breach Marquesse Hamiltounes comming to the Firth with the fleet, and of the ot promise to „. , . , , ",„_,,,, , , him ; their Kinges raarching towards the north oi Lnglande, they doe tacke courage a vain hopes. freshe, and beginne to bethinke themselves bothe how to repaire the breache insurgents at °^ promise to Huntlye, as also how to doe the King service. Towards which Strathbogy : pourpose a considerable number flew together about Strabogye, Huntlyes in motbn ^™ casteU.* They had armes and horses, and courage and affectione eneuche to Covenanters the Kinges cause, and the very common souldiours running to service of ther a urreff. oune accorde ; but aU that raight macke ther service usefull or considerable was wantinge ; for leader they had none whom they would consent to follow but as they pleased, and under officiers wer lyckwayes scarce amongst them. Money they had not for to keep up souldiours ; and for ther counceUs, as many heads, as manye wittes. Nothing did they tesolutly prosecute ; the Kinges service was the common pretexte ; but most of thes who did animate them wer drivne on with hopes of the Kings victorye, and that for ther services he could give them no lesse, acording to his late proclamatione, then ther next neighbours estates, who wer Covenanters ; severaU of which they had already swallowd up in hopes and conceite. Little or no correspond ence had they with the King. True it Is, that from prisone Huntly did send them some privatt inteUigence, which was secretlye conveyd to some of the pryme of them who wer in armes, or to tacke armes, giving them assuraunce • Nota. May third, Obyne he left them and shipped. Ch. XXXVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 255 that the Kings bussnesse would goe weaUe; but his informers either spocke A. D. 1639. to him as they wished, or wer willfully mistackne, to the ende that Huntlyes followers might be Instigatted for to tacke armes to no pourpose, and so beinge brockne for wante of conducte, the King might see how Uttle he could repose in ther service, as it feU out. Thes who made upp this associatione wer a number of gentlemen of the surname of Gordone with ther foUowers, besyde such Gordones as wer vas salls to Huntlye, who ledd his Lowland or Highland men of severall surnames. With thes wer joyned severaU other gentlemen of the shyres of Aberdene and Banfe, with ther vassals ; such as Sir Alexander Irvine of Drumme and his foUowers, Sir Gilbert Menezies of PItfodeUs, and severaU of the sur name of Settone and Wrqhwards, with others ; finally, some of the sur name of Ogilvye, the chiefest of whom was Sir George Ogilvye of Banfe, with ane inconsiderable number of his vassalls, scarce surpassing the num ber of his dayly traine. The impulsive cause which sett thoise a worke was ther neighbours, the Forbeses, and Crelghtounes, and Frazers ; who, after that Genrall Lesly and Montrose wer gone southe, having gottne the comraand of the shyres of Aberdeen and Banfe from Montrosse, with assuraunce of asistaunce. If they stoode In neede of it, wer now begunne to looke upon Huntlyes partye as lesse considerable then formerlye ; and to the ende that they might qwytte reduce them, beganne to keepe meetings, and consulte both how to gwarde themselves and restraine the Gordones (for so they wer termed). This could not be'secrettly done, by reasone that they wer all intermixed in one countrey, and neer neighbours. Therfor Huntlye his freendes and followers, who did esteeme that ther was no just victorye gott over them by Montrose, and who disdained that ther neighbours should command them, grew jealouse of the meetings and consultations of the Forbesses, Frazers, and ther associatts ; specially, fynding that the effecte of all ther consultes was for to tacke armes, and goe to ane heade. They resolve therfor not to be behynde with thera; and whilst ther neighbours the Covenanters wer conveening frora all qwarters to Turreff, (wher Montrose had lately opposd Huntly), the gentlemen of the Gordones and Huntlyes followers wer as bussy running to ane heade about Strabogye. Thes thinges wer a doinge about the eleventh, twelfth, and threteenth dayes of Maye ; by which tyme the number of such as wer conveend at Strabogye of the Gordones, and of the Forbesses at Turreff, was growne to some number. 256 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Gordons re solve to drive them away. Sir George Ogilvie of Banfe. Gor dons dispute who should commandthera, also, what corarais sion they had to fight. XXXIX. They fall next to consult what they should doe ; and having gottne sure intelligence of the Covenanters rendevouze, pretended for keep ing of a comitty at Turreffe, they resolve, aU with one vniforme consent, to fall upon them, and chase them awaye. He who was mainly instrumentall heerin was Sir George Ogilvye of Banfe, who loved not to see the Co venanters so near himselfe in armes, ther being but six short myles betuixt Turreffe and Banfes house. Besyde, if the bussnesse carryd, he would be sure to ascrybe the praise to himselfe ; if otherwayes, the losse that should be sustained should alight amongst the Gordones, and not on him, who had but few ther to lose ; or, if he wer called to ane accoumpt for it after wardes, he could easUy lurke amongst the multitude, and passe with the rest, as having but one vote and no commande ther ; so that, goe the world as it pleased, he did thinke, himself a gainer, or no loser. Ther wer many handes, but few heades ; and Banfe had a number of gentlemen of his acqwayntance ther, whom he used as adjutators, to sett on the multitude to call for that which he projected. Ther projecte for to beate upp the Covenanters qwarters at Turreff, in the night tyme, it being but eleven myles distant from Strabogye, was lycke to have stuckne ; for when it came to that, that they wer in readinesse to marche, they coulde not agree who should be commander in cheefe. Sorae did narae Lord Adame Gordone of Achndowne, younger brother to the Marquese of Huntlye ; but that motione was quickly stiffled, be reasone that the gentleman had no skiU in military matters, and his parents had sequesterd him to a retreate, as not usefull for to goe about matters of any consequence. After sorae dispute, it was in ende concluded that Sir George Ogilvye of Banfe, and Sir John Gordone of Hadda, should be generaUs conjunctly ; bothe of them of khowne courage, but Banfe the wittier of the two, and Hadda supposd to be plyable to Banfs counceUs and advyce. But the greatest questione was behynde, What commissione they had for to fight, and what should be ther manifesto and qwarell ? For the first, it was praesumed the King would allow it, and that it tended only unto defence. At last, Alexander Gordone of Carneborrow suggestes ane overture, that ther should be a bande of associatione drawne upp, the which should de clare that ther engadgement was for the mantenance of the Kings preroga tive, next for the dutye, service, and honour and safetye of Huntly and his familye, and for ther owne mutwaU preservatione. This pleased aU, and was subscrybed by all the gentlemen present. Ch. XL.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 257 XL. Now they wer in a readinesse to marche, and night was comming A. D. 1639. on ; at which tyme they tacke waye for Turreffe, being about two horse Marchto" troopes, mostly gentlemen, about five or six foote companyes of the Stra- TurrefiF; come bogye regment, aU new levyd souldiours, whom Huntly had caused to ^•*^'" musket traine. The van was givne to lievtenant coUonel William Johnston, nanters flyT (sonne unto Robert Johnstone of Crimond, provost of Aberdeen,) the "»* pursued ; only man of note in aU ther company, who had been bredd upp at the warre, derable"""" and wanted neither gaUantrye nor resolutione. They lyckwayes drew along with them four brasse feeld peeces, which belonged to Huntlye. They came within muskett shotte of Turreff, undiscryed ; for the Cove nanters, who were ther In proportionable numbers, kept slacke gwardes, most pairt a bedd, and little dreamd of ane InfaU that tyme of the night. But whUst the Gordons were over against the towne, the carriadge of one of ther feeld pieces bracke": this tooke upp some tyme to helpe it, and was lycke for to have marred aU ther project; yet, having patched It up as weaU as the time wold permitte, they come hard to the toune as the daye beganne to appeare, being so neer ere they wer discovered that ther centre pairtye had scarce leisour to draw upp. Ther marche was along a valley which lyes east and west under the vil lage of Turreff; which standes upon highe and steepe grounde upon the north syde of the valleye. They could not enter it In aeqwalle termes upon any syde but either on the north or upon the easte, but best upon the east syde, though it wer the ende of the village farrest reraoved from them, who wer come from the west that night. Ther marche about the village, as It gave leisour to ther enemyes to draw upp within the large street of the village, which runnes from the east to the west, so it gave the Gordons a great advauntage for to macke ane InfaU ; the east ende of the street being opne, without any gate or porte, and It capable to receave a number of horse or foote a breaste ; besyde, the feeld hard by the streete levell, and usefull for drawing upp a greate number of men for reserve, to second the persewers. The Covenanters made a fashione for to barlcade that ende of the street, as the short tyme and few materialls, which wer Ul to be founde, but most of all ther confusione and trepidatione, would per mitte ; for within the viUage all was in a confusione ; and, though ther wanted not many gentlemen of courage and gaUantrye, yet It was to small pourpose, whilst none was ther to commande, and nobody knew whom to obeye ; and meane whyle, as it befalls in such cases, all commanded, and no bodye obeyd. 2 K 258 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. The Gordons faU on, and beginne to remove the slender barricadds that "^ wer in ther waye ; and withall let flee a salvo of ther musketts alonge the streete, which they seconded with three or four shotte of ther feelde peeces. This increased the feare that was befor amongst the Covenanters ; and al beit Sir WiUiam Keith of Ludwharne, a resolute gentleman, and Sir William Haye of Delgatye, a gentleman bredd at the warre, called to the most resolute of ther syde, and did all that laye in them for to breath courage in ther coraerads, and to keep off the Gordones, who wer pressing hard for to enter ; yet all was in vaine ; for in this very tyme the most of ther partye, without commlnge to strockes, or fyring pistolls, wer begunne to runne evry wher out of the opne vUladge, specially by the way that goes southwarde thorough the valleye. The greater pairte flying, drew awaye such as wer resolute to have stoode to It, who not being seconded, wer forced lyckwayes for to shift for themselves. And now the Gordons wer maisters of the streete; but livten- nent collonel Johnstone, supposing ther soddane flight and retreate had been done out of policye, restraint the persuite, so that little or no hurt was done. Ther fell only two gentlemen upon the Covenanters syde ; one Mr. James Stacker, a servant to the Lord MuchoUes ; and one Alexander For besse, servante to Forbesse of Tolqhwone : upon the Gordons syde, one comraon foote souldiour killed, (by the unsklUfuUnesse of his owne come- rades fyring ther musketts, as was thoughte,) whom the Gordons caused burye solemnly, that day, out of ane Idle vante, in the buriall place of Walter Barcley of Towey, within the church of Turreffe ; not without great terror to the minister of the place, Mr. Thomas Michell, who all the whyle with his sonne, disgwysd In a womans habite, had gott upp and was lurkinge above the syllng of the churche, whilst the souldiours wer discharging voUeyes of shotte within the churche, and pelrcing the syling with ther buUetts, in severaU places. Gordons fall XLI. The Gordones being maisters of the vlUadge, ther common soul- to plundering; ^igyrs, who had marched aU night, feU to rifle and plunder the townesmens C8LUS6 xn© IU" ^ /» i t i habitants sub- houses for meale, and tooke away what they pleased from such of them as they ^ribe the thought Covenanters. Heer the minister, whom they looked upon as ther nant. This enemye, sustaned the greatest losse, although farr shorte of four thousand affair called merke Scottishe, which he gotte at the parliament, 1640, for to sett upp The Trott of , . , • '¦' Turreff. bis losses agame. Ther next worke was for to conveen aU the inhabitants of Turreffe, whom they could fynde out, and to cause them solemlye sweare and subscrybe Ch. XLL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 259 to the Kings Covenant. But that was to little pourpose ; for a few weekes A. D. 1639. therafter tbe minister of the place conveened all the inhabitants who had subscrybed and sworne to it ; and, in presence of all his congregatione having caused eache of them give a solemne declaratione that they wer compeUed so to doe, he caused them kneel down and crave publicke par- N. B. done for ther breatche of Covenante ; and then gave them a solemne abso lutione from ther oathe and subscriptione of the Kings Covenante, declar ing them all free from the obligation therof. This infall (knowne after ward commonly by the narae of The Trott of Turreffe, in derisione), fell out May fourteenth, 1639, earlye In the morning .(0 (1) [" Ye heard how the committee to be holden at Turreff was adjourned to the 20th of May. Now, there begane to gather, to keep this committee, the earle Marischall's men tennents and servants of Buchane, himselfe being absent ; the infant earle of ErroH's men tennents and servants ; the minor lord of Pitsligoe's men, with their captains and leaders ; the lord Fraser, the raaster of Forbes, the lairds of Delgettie, Towie Barclay, Ludquheu-ne, Craigievarr, Echt, Skene, Tolquhone and Watertoun being present, and diverse others their kine, freinds, men tennents, and servants ; and were estiraate to be about 1200 horse and foot. Aud upon Munday the 13th of May, they came forward to Turreff, thinking there to abyde whyle the 20th of May, that more forces might gather, to hold their comraittee ; and thereafter to goe in feir of warr upon the laird of Banff and such others as had assisted the lord Aboyne, to plunder their goods, and take their persones, and to abuse them at their pleasure. But howsoon the barrons who had assested the Lord Aboyne, heard of this meit ing, they resolved shortly to wait upon the samen ; and convein the lairds of Banff, Aber geldie, Haddo, young Cromartie, Craig, Auchmedden, Foverane, Cromie, Geight, New toun, Harthill, Udney, and lieutenant crowner Johnston, with diverse others brave gentell raen, about the number of 800 horse and foot, with some good coraraanders, such as Arthur Forbes of Blacktoun ; and quickly brought out of Strathbogie four brasen feild peices , and understanding the covenanters' forces to encrease daily, therfor they stoutly resolve to take thera in time, and to goe on with all diligence ; for their committee was to be holden at Turreff' the 20th of May, as ye have heard. And the covenanters came to Turreff', upon the Munday before, being the 13th of May, thinking to abyde ther whyle the twenty day of May to hold ther comraittee : but the barrons quickly followed, and that self saraen Munday at night about ten hours they begane to raarch in very quiet and sober manner, and be the peip of day they came by an unexpected way (wherof the covenanters' watches could have no knowledge) to the toun of Turreff; the trurapets shortly begane to sound, and the drums to touck. The covenanters, wherof some were sleiping in their beds, other some drinking and smoaking tobacco, other some walking and moving up and doun, hearing this fearful noise of drums and trumpets, ran to their arms and confusedly to array, and re collect theraselves. And be now both the covenanters and anti-covenanters are standing in others sights, in order of battell. There were two shotts shott out of the earle of ErroH's house against the barrons, whilk they quickly answered with two field pieces. Then the covenanters begane on hott service, and the barrons both, and shott many rauskatt shott. Then the barrons shott ane feild piece in amongst them, which did no skaith, but feared the coraraons. Both pairties played on others. At last there was another feild peice againe shott the fear wherof made thera all clearly to take the fiight. Followed the chace. The lord Fraser was said to have foull fauldings, but wan away. The lairds of Echt and Skene, and some others, were taken prisoners. There were some hurt, some slain. The barrons 260 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Gordons re turn to Strath bogy, and from thence to Aberdeen ; their debates. Strathloch ad vises thera against being on the offen sive; mediates between them and Marshal. Barrens'Reign ; go to Durris in order to join Donald Far quharson and Huntly's Highlanders. After the beating upp of this qwarter, they made but little stay at Turreffe ; whence they dismissed two gentlemen of the Covenanter syde, James Skeen, laird of Skeene, and Arthur Forbesse of Eyght, who had been made prisoners that morning flying from Turreff; not by anye of thes who made the infall, but by ane old cavallier. Sir George Gordone of Gight, who, comming that morning with his servaintes towards Turreff, mett them in tbe way unexpectedly, and made them prisoners for some short space, without doing them furder harme. XLII. Being come to Strabogye, and encouraged by ther happy be ginnings, thes gentleraen Gordones and ther associatts beganne to thinke of furder projectes, and ther nurabers to encrease. And now they send advertishment to Huntlyes Highlanders, desyring tbem to joyne with them in armes. Meane whyle, tbe cheife of them, with as many as they could gather together, march towards Aberdeen,* billeting ther foote upon free qwarter ; and, befor they could conclude any thing ther, they spent some few dayes in carrousing ; the townesmen fynding them all the whyle but heavy freendes. In ende, because they hearde that the Earle of Marishall was gathering forces to oppose them, they resolve that either they will have assurance of him, otherwayes they will waste his laundes and disable him. Ther debates wer not privatt, and ther consultationes lightlye in the afternoone, and wer divulgd befor they wer thoroughly concluded; and com ming to the eares of Robert Gordon of Strathloch, (who lately befor was one of thes who wer commissionat from Huntly), it troubled him so muche that some few should leade aboute a number for ther owne endes, without warrant from the King, that the very daye that they wer to marche towards the Mearns, from Aberdeene, Strathloche comes to them and desyres to speack with them together. He desyred to know how they could be ansuerable for what they wer doing, since they wanted the Kings warrant. He added, furder, that it was ane unjust thing to fall upon MarishaU upon a supposaU that he would persew tbem. Furder, he saide that the King was mor sparing to engadge then they, and it was reported that thinges wer lycke to close in a treatye ; and, finally, prayd them for to be defensive at least, if sounds the retreat, and comes immediately back to Turreff, takes meat and drink at their pleasure, and fears Mr. Thomas Mitchell minister at Turreff very evill. And so this com mittee was after this manner discharged at this time." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i. pp. 133, 134.] * May fifteenth. They marched to Aberdeen, the cheife of them called the Barrons [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 134.] Ch. XLIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 261 they will needs stande still in armes. But all that he spocke was hearde A, D. 1639. with impatience of the most pairt, and by many he was esteemed no better then ther enemye, and by some be was entertaind with scomefuU langwage ; particularlye by Sir George Ogilvye of Banfe, a maine stickler at that tyme In aU thes extravagantes : Who ansuered Straloche, (whUst he profered to goe and deale withe MarishaU for assuraunce not to molest them, and shewed them that it was unjust to fall upon Marishall without discharging witb him ; and if they would doe so, he would goe betuixt them, though he should be first killed,) " Goe," sayes Banfe, " since yow are desyrouse so to doe, and bee our qwarter master and harbinger, and lett Marishall know we ar commlnge." Thus, undesyrd by them (who at this tyme wer called the Barrons, and ther actings, by way of derisione. The Barrons Raigne), Strathloch tooke jour ney towards Dunnoter; and they, in the afternoone, horse and foote, crosse the bridge of Dee in great haiste. But that night they turnde westward some ten myles, marching upp Dee syde towards Doorrs.* This was that they might joyne with Donald Farquharson of Monaltrye, one of Huntlyes vassalls, who had brought with him some hundereths of the Highlanders of Stradee, Braeraarr, Strathawine, and Glenlivett, etc. ; and to give the raatter a bet ter face, had with him, in companye, Lord Lwdovicke Gordone, Huntlyes third sonne, who had brocke away from his grandmother at the Boige of Gight, and had forsackne the scoole and his tutor, leaping over the waUes so hazardously, as he went neer to breacke one of his armes. He (I saye) in Highland habite, being as yet a young boye, had the name of leader to thoise Highlanders who in the morning joynde witb thes who having come out of Aberdeen, had lyne all night in the opne feeldes. XLIIL That night that the Barrons with their forces marched frora Meantime Aberdeen, Strathloche went before them towards Stonehyve, wher Marishalle |^gf^^°p„n. laye, gwarded with some few foote and horse hard by Dunnoter ; and having notter to made MarishaU acqwaynte with ther proposaUe, it was ansuered him that, for ^^''^1;^^"^^. his pairt he was Huntlyes freende, and intended for to worong none of bis Gordons dis- foUowers furder then necessitye and the obligatione of Covenant, wherunto band. he was sworne, should tye bim ; telling thera withaU that if he gott orders from the Tables he wold marche against them, but if otherwayes, not ; for the reste, if they would persew bim, he behoved to see to his oune de- fence.(i) * May twentieth. They goe to Dooers. (1) [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., voL i., p. 136.] 262 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. A number of the Barons re turn to Aber deen, where Marshal beats up their quar ters. Gordons re turn to Strath bogie ; cross the Spey. Agreement between Banff and Innes. With this ansuer, Straloche returned to the Barrons qwarter, not farr from Doorrs, in the morning betymes ; wher, after a course supper and lying on the grounde all night, he founde them a greate deale mor tractable then they wer the afternoone befor in Aberdeen. In company with Strathloche was James Burnett of Cragmyle, brother to Sir Thomas Burnett of Lyes (a gentleman of great wisdome, and one who favoured the King, though he dwelt amongst the Covenanters, yet loved and respected by all), whom the Earle Marishall sent comissioner to the Barrons with his answer. The event was beyond expectatione, for thes who wer so high and ex orbitant the last daye, grew wearyd in a nights staye : Yet tbey spocke the old langwage, studying upon nothing but a faire retreate. James Burnett of Cragmyle delyvered Marishalls commissione in faire termes to them ; but, after much idle raunting and jangling, when they could scarce tell what they would be at, Straloche in ende asked of them. Who amongst them aU durst be answerable to the Marquesse of Huntly, for to leade his men against the Earle of Marishall, without ane warrant from Huntlye, or any injurye done by Marishall ? To this ther was none that could give a re plye ; so that now, perceiving ther error, they disbanded, and marched awaye from the place as confusdly as they had come thither unadvysedlye ; reteiring to ther owne homes, doing nothing, except that the Highlanders plundered the countrey coming or goinge, a thing verye vswall with them. XLIV. A number of the Bai-rons and ther followers returnd to Aber deen ; whairof Marishall being advysed by sure intelligence, gathers all that he could macke, with resolutione to crye qwyttance with them, and for to surpryse them : But they gott tymouse advertishment, and made ther retreate In Marishalls sight, who, with his men, foote and horse, did enter tbe towne. This is that ridicolouse actione which was calld afterwardes commonly the Reade of Dorres, scarce worth the recording, except to lett see how easily the most gallant men bafle themselves for wante of leaders and resolutione.* XLV. Frora Aberdeen the Barrons tacke journey to Strabogye; whither they are no sooner come, and falling to new consultationes, but instantly theye are advertished that all the Covenanters beyond Speye, Seafort, and Lovltte, the Dumbarres and Inneses of Murrey, the Grauntes of Stra^ spey, wer rysing to ane heade against them. And withall they gott worde • May twenty-fourth. The Covenanters souldiours, being the Forbeses and Frazers men, fall upon the bishop of Aberdeens house, which they had attempted befor, and doe spoyle it outright, and demolishe it. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 139.] Ch. XLV.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS 263 that Montrose was macking readye against thera lyckwayes, with intentione A. D. 1639. to come from Angusse as quickly as he coulde for to crubb ther furder In- ^^^r^^. solencye. Wherupon they soddainly resolve for to crosse Spey, and breacke scHber Innes thes northerne forces, least they should be environed on all qwarters ; and gains Banff acordingly, to the number of about ane thousande foote, and betuixt two SerTco- and three hundred horses, they marche towards the Boige of Gight, wher aU venanters dis- of them having been entertaind and supped at the coste of the Marquesse ''^"'*' of Huntlyes mother, they crosse Spey aboute sunne sette ; and, under the conducte of Banfe, befor the sunne they wer come within two English myle of Elgyne, neer Longbryde, wher they lay upone ane high grownde. The numbers of the northerne men who wer gathered together exceeded them by farr, being mor then two thousand foote and horse ther (sorae have calld them three thousandO). Yet ther unexpected comming, and the diverse inclinationes and Interestes of thes northerne raen, besyde that they wer all but countreymen and not trained souldiours, and the farae of the Gordons ther victory at Turreff, qweUd the stomaches of such as wer In Elgyne. Wherupon they resolve upon a parlee; to which pourpose, by common consent. Sir Robert Innesse of Innesse (who was esteemed as wyse and gallant a gentlman as any within Murrey) was designed commissioner. He gave them faire langwaidge, and shewed them that the only reasone why they armed was to gwarde ther oune countrey ; but meand for to molest none that belonged to the Marquess of Huntly, ther neighboure. After some overturs proposed, Banfe fell to an agreement with Innes, as cora missioner, in the termes following, viz. : That such as dwelt beyonde Spey should not crosse the river Spey at any tyme ; and that they shoulde not acte any thing praejudiciall to Huntlye nor his familye, nor joyne with ther enemyes. This was drawne upp in articles, and appoynted for to be sub scrybed by all the cheefe of the Covenanters, conveend at Elgyne, and it was undertackne that It should be so done ; and to this pourpose, Walter Wrqhward of Crombye was sent to see the capltulatione subscrybed by aU. But the Uppshotte of all was Innesse his drawing Banfe to a private con ference ; after which tyme Banfe was never mor cordiaU in the Kings service. True it is, some whyle after he temporised and went along with them ; and after tbe pacificatlone came to courte, wher the King caused give him, in (1) [Spalding says they were about four thousand in number. Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 140.] 264 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. anno 1641, ten thousand merkes in gold; but after thes tymes he never did engadge any mor. And then for the subscriptione of the paper, it was delayed by Seafort to be subscrybed tUl the Gordons pairty disbanded, who stayed no longer then the agreeraent was past, but crossed Spey homewardes ; so aU that expeditione, lycke the former at Dorrs, vanished in smoake, and proved to no pourpose ; except only that the northerne Covenanters wer so afrighted therwith, that for that tyme they disbanded, and troubled not Huntlyes fol lowers any mor that yeare. Montrose col- XLVL WhUst thes things are a doing, Montrose mackes aU tbe haiste ects IS army ; ^^ ^^,^ f^^. ^^ rather such as wer under his commande ; the Forbesses and comes through ° Aberdeen to Frazers, after ther being frighted from Turreffe, having sent severall the kirk of desyres to him to macke haiste. He came iust about the tyme that tbe Udny. Barons -^ . ^ • ' e ^ disband. Mon- Barrons came backe from Murrey. He had in his companye most of the trose lays siege cavallrye of Mearnes and Angusse, and some hundereths of foote ; but the most considerable wer a regiment of Athole men, had they been willing to the service, which most of them distasted, yet for that tyme wer forced to complye. Montrose having past by Aberdeene,* came the next night to the kirke of Udnye, which was made use of by the souldiours for a qwarter N. B. not only for men but for horses ; and the morrow, at ther marching, the churche was left spoyld with horses dunge : a practise then unuswall, though afterward it grew to be mor in fashione to turne churches to stables; specially after Oliver Cromwell, by the treachery of unnaturall countrey men, garrlsond Scottland with the English souldiours, whom he had cor rupted for his oune vlUanouse and lewde designes. His intentione was to beseldge the houses of the gentlemen of the Gor dones; for, upon his appearance, tbe Barrons wer disbanded, and evry one * May twenty-fifth, Montrose enters Aberdeen agane, and the next day his men fell to kill all the dogs about the towne, because it was reported that in derisione, some tyme befor, ther hadbeen a blew ribbon tyed about a dogges necke. [" The haill house dogs, raessens and whelps within Aberdein wer killed and slaine upon the gate, so that neither hound nor messen or other dog was left alive that they could see. The reason was, when the first army came here, ilk captain, commander, servand and souldier had ane blew ribbin about his craig ; in dispyte and derision wherof, when they removed from Aberdein, some woraen of Aberdein (as was alleadged) knitt blew ribbins about their raessens' craigs ; whereat thir souldiers took oflfence, and killed all their dogs for this very cause." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i. p. 141.] May twenty-seventh, Montrosse causeth Aberdeen pay ten thousand merkes to his souldiours. [Ibid.] Ch. XLVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 265 runne a severaU waye, so that Montrose could hardlye teU wher to fynde A. D. 1639. ane enemye. The first house that he did resolve to sett upon was the casteU of Gight, belonging to Sir George Gordone of Gight, younger, who had provyded for a seidge, as others of the Barrons had done, who had been upon the former actions, as he was. Himself was within his house, and with him Uvtenant collonel Johnstone, of whora I spocke befor. Montrosse lay downe at some smaU distance frora Gights casteU, planting sorae feeld peeces against it ; for battering peeces be had not brought alonge with him. After two nights staye and summonding Gight for to render, who refoosed so to doe, Montrose was necessitate for to Uft his carape and marche southward as qwickly as he coulde ; without doinge any thing furder then destroying some cornes neer Gight by ther horses, who did eate the green corne for grasse. XLVII. The occasione of Montrose bis speedy returne was an alarum Raises the tbat he receaved, that James Viscount of Aboynde was come with a pairt of fiege speedily, tbe Kings fleet, and souldiours, and officers. Into the roade befor Aber- ed of Aboyne's deene.* Therfor, fearing tbat his retreate should be stopped by his laund- arrival in the ing, and that the Gordones, encouraged by his coraing with helpe, should ,^^^^ aryse anew to ane heade, and, withall, not altogether confyding in aU thoise Aboyne's who foUowd him, Montrosse saw necessitye to be gone betymes. Howbeit, s*'""y- . ® ' . . supply given afterwards it appeared that fame, which enlarges evry thing, spocke mor him by Hamil- broadly concerning Aboynd his awxlliaryes then it deserved. '?"•, ^^' ^ '" *' ° •' •' . . cholas Monk I told befor how Aboynd, about the tyme of his father Huntly his im- came to visit prisonement, reteered, and afterwards gott to the Kinge ; to whom having ^^^ Aberdeen gottne accesse, and having shewed how his father was wsed, the King gave a new warrant and patent of lievtenantrye unto Aboynd in place of his father, and ane order to Hamiltoune, who was then lying in the Firth of Forthe, for to delyver to Aboynd two thousand of the land souldiours ; whom he commanded Harailtoune for to cause transport and launde safe at Aberdeene. But Hamiltoune, who had quicke Intelligence of all that past about the Kings hande, being advertished heerof, upon praetext of scarcity of victwalls and sicknesse, sendes backe thes two thousand men for England befor Aboynde came to him with the Kings order ; so that, when Aboynd came to the Firth to Hamiltoune, he was heartUy welcomd and feasted, its * June second, Obyne comes to Aberdeen roade. [Spalding, Hist, of, Troub., vol. i., p. 145. 2 L 266 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. true, and many voUeyS shott off at drinking the Kings healtbe ; but it was ¦ shewd him that the men wer gone, and all that Aboynd could procure was four brasse feeld peeces, and some feeld officerSj and some small qwantitye of ammunitione. And, above all thinges, Hamiltoune gives to him one coUonel William Gunne, a Catnesse man by birthe,('^ whom he recommends to Aboynd as a trustee and experiencd souldiour, advysing him in all thinges to be directed by Gunne. Meane whyle (as appeared by the event) Hamil toune gave secrett instructions to collonel Gunne how to acte, as to this howre it is constantly affirmed. With this retinew, about twelve or thirteen feeld under officers, and one *Mr. Monke, ane English minister, (brother to generall George Monke, so famouse in the after yeares,) who came from Hamiltoun to visite the Aberdeene Doctors, and made little mor stay; as also accompanyd witb the Lord TuUibardine elder, and two of his sonnes ; came Aboynd into Aberdeens roade, with three Shippes, two of tbem men of warre of the fleete royaU, of about sixteen gunnes, and the third a Newcastell coUier ; in view of whom Montrosse reteered south wards. Montrose XLVIII. Aboynd, at his coming befor Aberdeen, knew not of Montrose A^b '^ d^** th ™°t^°^^ ' ^°d though he had knowne It, durst not have attempted to stopp day preceding his retreate, not being ane hundereth in all for the number of his attendants. Aboyn^ com- ^jj,j Montrose, who saw no mor (for Montrose marched from Aberdeen the comes on daye immediatly preceedinge Aboynes coming into the roade, who came shore ; is met that very evning after Montrose was gone), yet doubtefuU who wer coming his father's after, had as little designe to hinder Aboynes laundinge ; so that, as if both friends ; goes had agreed upon it, the one marched southward, and the other immediatly boeie "^^ therafter launded without any interruptione. And thes thinges bring us James Grant, unto the beginninge of the monethe of June, which was tbe tyme that a son of Car- j|\^boyne arryved at Aberdeene. ron ; John •' •' Dow Gare; (0 [According to Gordon of Sallagh, colonel Gun was born at Westergarthie in Suther land. He was the son of John Gun Robson, and of kin to the Earl of Sutherland. He distinguished himself in the German wars, particularly at the battles of Norlingen and Witstock. In 1639 he was, along with Gilbert Menzies of Pitfoddels, knighted at Berwick by Charles I., and was subsequently appointed a gentleman of the King's bed-chamber. Not long afterwards he returned to Germany, where he married " a rich and noble lady, besyde the imperiali citie of Ulne, vpon the Danube ;" rose to the rank of major-general in the imperial army ; and, in 1648, was advanced to the dignity of a baron of the empire. Geneal. Hist, of Earld. of Sutherland.] * Afterwards called Doctor Nicolas Monke, provost of Eaton, made bishop of Hereford, January sixth, 1661, by Charles the Second his mandate. [He died in December following.] Ch. XLVIIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 267 After Aboyne came a shore, he was mett at Aberdeene by severaU of his A. D. 1639. fathers freends and foUowers. Ther he stayed but few dayes, and having caused proclaime his Uvtenantrye, with sownde of trumpett, at the merkatt ^^°^\^^^' crosse of Aberdeene, he tooke waye for Strabogye,* wher he presentlye taking them beglnnes to isswe orders for conveening all that stoode for the King. Nor '"*° ^'^ pa^'^- was he deceived of his expectatione ; for, in few dayes space, besyde the Low Countrey gentlemen, aU his fathers followers, both Highlanders (the most pairt of Lochaber only excepted, whom ArgyUe either tamperd with or forced to keepe home), and Lowland foote conveend and rendevouzd at Strabogye. Witb them lyckwayes joyned James Graunt,(') a sonne of tbe famUy of Carron on Spey syde, with some twenty of his foUowers. This gentleman had been an out law severaU yeares befor, upon a privat accompt : Which was that his nephew, Johne Grant of Carron, had been killed by a neer neighbour gentleman, Johne Grant of Bellandallache ; which slaughter was so recented by James Graunt, tbat for to prosecute the revenge therof, be wUlfuUy tumd outlaw, and had been prisoner in Edinburgh casteU not long befor, and had made his escape thence ; but, being weall descended, and cousin to Huntly on his mother syde, he was protected in the countrey, all being his freends almost, and at this tyme owned by Aboyne, although the Covenanters tooke occasione thence to traduce Aboyne and that partye, for tacking such associatts by the hande.f They gott greater grounde to speacke against him, by Aboyne his tacking under his protectione one Johne Mackgrigour, a Rennache man borne, (knowne by the Irish nickname of Johne Dow Geare,(2)) and a notoriouse robber ; yet was he and his followers, about twenty-four arrant theeves and cutthroates, tackne in to the partye. The additione of aU thes, as it con tributed little to the service, so it gave great occasione to the Covenanters to upbraide Abyne ; who, being young and inexperiencd, was perswaded thertoo by such as either looked not to his honor, or wUlfuUy strove to afiront him ; and the wyser and most sober of his freendes wer very ill satisfeed * June tenth, Aboyne marcheth from Aberdene to Keintor, wher he rendevouseth his followers. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 151.] (1) [The daring exploits of this bold outlaw are described at length by Spalding, and the historians of the Earldom of Sutherland.] + " Et a facinorosissirais latronibus, (qui pacatis etiam temporibus Borealem illam Scotiae plagam latrociniis infestam habuerunt) suppetias lubentes acciperent," etc. Spang, Historia Motuum, pag. 360. (2) [See Spalding, and the Geneal. Hist, of Earl, of Sutherland, passim.] 268 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. therwith : And so much tbe rather that thes two bandits, though bothe of them wer wiUing to serve Obyne, yet they could not agree together ; hut, wher ever they mett, they wer lycke to fall to blowes with ther companyes, and could hardly be kept asunder. The reasone wherof was, because James Graunte had killed one Patricke Magregore, brother to the laird of Mack gregor, who bad undertackne (by warrant from the privy councell) for to kiU or retacke James Graunt. This slaughter was as muche resented by the Clangregor (according to ther Highland forme) as Carrons slaughter was resented by Jaraes Graunte. Ho returns to XLIX. Aboyne having gathered considerable forces of foote and horse, Aberdeen re- ^^ ^j^g number of about tbree thousand foote or mor, and about five hundred miorced; pub lishes a band horsesW (though I am not ignorant that ther numbers are saide by some to of abjuration, jj^yg jjeene five thousand foote and horse), marches for Aberdeene, after he had halted some dayes at Keantor till his reer should come upp; Wher, in op position of the Covenant, he caused publish a bande of abjuratione of the Covenant, and of all correspondence with the Covenanters, with a solemne oathe thertoo adjoyned.C^) This oathe was tackne by suche who, for to sett over the present storme and to shunne the plundering of ther goodes, in a simulate waye joyned with him and rendered. Nor wer ther many of them, sorae two or three ministers, and some countrey men, who offered willingly to tacke tbat oathe, and subscrybe for to putt ther realitye out of suspitione ; but, howsoone Aboyne was brockne, and the pacificatlone had made some short settlement, thes new convertes fell in againe with the Covenant, some of them mor violently then ever, therby for to attone ther former apostacye. He was now come to Aberdeen, wher he laye in free qwarter for the most pairt for some dayes, befor they could conclude what to doe. Yet tbis mea sure that Aberdeen was served with was easye in comparisone of ther marching through the countrey, wher such as wer supposed to be Cove nanters wer plundered at random, without order, by privat souldiours. All wer volunteers, none wer payed ; therfor Aboyne his partye, wer rather his comerads to be requested then souldiours to be commanded ; collonel (1) [Monteth's Hist, of the Troubles, p. 48. Spalding estimates Aboyne's forces at " about 2500 men, horse and foot, hieland and lowland men." Hist, of 'Troub. voL i., p. 152. Guthrie says " they were reckoned to be 2000 foot, and 300 horse." Memoirs, p. 57. Patrick Gordon, in his MS. Abridgement of Britanes Distemper, says they were " aboue fyue thousand horse and foote"] (2) [A copy of the oath will be found in Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 14*.] Ch. L.] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 269 Gunne, in the meane tyme, who had the charge under Aboyne, conniving A. D. 1639, at thes thinges. L. Being now at Aberdeen, and getting advertishment that MarishaU, in Read of the absence of Montrose, was putting such as he could upon foote; first, col- 9?^'®' lonel Gunne directes, under tbe conducte of lievtenant coUonel Johnstone, Gun^march to a pairtye, in tbe night tyme, tweU myles sowthwards from Aberdeen to Stonehaven ; Stanehyve (or Stoneheaven rather), ane viUage with ane sea port, hard by cannon'ship- Dunnoter, who plunderd some countrey houses as they went thither; and ped- without doing any thing but pistoUIng one centinell at Stonhyve, returned to Aberdeen, and tould that they saw few or no souldiours ther : For no body would staye to give them intelUgence, the countrey people running evry wher out of ther waye, and some of them flying out of ther bedds nacked in their shirts, who runne to the neerest rockes on tbe sea syde ; so formidable was ther very name. And that nights worke for distinctione, or out of deri sione, was termed the Reade of Cowye. At last. In Aberdeen, It was concluded by Obyne and Gunne and his freendes and followers, that they would march sowthwardes towards the Angusse ; sup posing that such as wer the Kings freendes in thes places would joyne with them, speciaUy the Ogilvyes ; and tbat ther nurabers would grow as they marched alonge ; and that they would mantane ther army upon ther enemyes, the Covenanters, by free qwarter and plunder, or force all to joyne with them ; and if any wer in the countrey of standing forces, they did putt no questione but they would break them : Finally, if the Covenanters should drawe off a pairt of ther armye (which was lying at Dunce Law, that tyme confrontlnge the Kinge,) for to beare upp or fight Obyne, then they tooke it for graunted that they durst not draw off so many as would over power them who foUowd Obyne ; or if they did It, the rest of ther army would be so Inconsiderable that the King would have a fair occasione, with little adoe, to fight and breacke them ; and after that, tbat it would be hard for the Covenanters to recrulte ; for themselves did resolve to fight or draw off towards the hills and stronge grounds, as they saw occasione or advaun tage. I could never learne mor of ther projecte ; and if this was fezable or not, I leave it to the reader to judge. However, with this resolutione, they marche from Aberdeen upon the fourteenth daye of June, Frydaye, giving order for the shippes, which had June 14. come alonge with Aboyne, for to saile alonge the coast and attende ther motiones. And, for to save them the labour of carriadge, coUonel Gunne 270 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. commanded the four brasse feeld peeces and the spare ammunitione which Harailtoune had givne them, for to be shipped into ane shipp belonging to the Kinge ; tacking with tbem, by launde, four other feeld peeces which be longed to Huntlye, and as muche amraunitione as they could transporte. That night that they came from Aberdeene, being Frydaye, they quartered all night about the castell of Muchalls, In Mearnes (belonging to Sir Tho mas Burnett of Leyes, a Covenanter), within eight myles of Aberdeen, which house was rifled by them the next day in ther returne ; ahd the night that they laye ther the cornes abused, and any thing else, as ther humors served them, wherupon they could laye ther handes ; for manye of the coun trey people wer fledde, and ther best goods transported into the stronge holde of Dunnoter, not far distant. Lie at Muchals LI. The reasone of ther lying all night at Muchalls was intelligence sent dl night ; them tbat Montrosse, witb some forces of horse and foote, was upon his marches to- marche towards them, and that night come the lenthe of Stanehyve ; which wards Fetter- .^g^g tj-we ; but his forces wer no mor then about eight hundred foote and 6SS0» horse, aU countrey levyes, considerable for nothing (as unable to persew) but for the strenth of tbe place that they lay into, or tbat tbey had Dunnoter hard by for their retreate ; and Montrosse, a gallant gentleman, and Ma rishall, who wanted not courage, for to leade them, with two brasse batter ing pieces, half canone, which served them afterwards to great pourpose, and some feeld peeces tackne out of Dunnoter. From MuchoUs ther was a considerable forparty of horses sent off at night, who wer to lye hard by the eneray aU night, as they did ; going within lesse then two myles of the enemyes qwarter, then at Stanehyve, little mor then five myles distant from Obyne his qwarter. Montross and his pairtye kept theraselves closse within ther workes at Stane hyve all night, without any noyse, not offering to macke any disturbance or outfalle upon Aboynes fore pairty ; nor did Aboynes for pairtye offer to molest them, but returned to the rest, early befor tbe sune rysinge. June 15. Upon Saturdaye, June fifteenth, Aboyne marched, soone after sunne rysing, towards Fetter essok church, keeping the roade waye tUl, being within a two myle of Stonehyve or lesse, collonel Gunne gave order for all men to marche towards the left hande ; wher upon ane heathe (or moor of bather) both foote and horse were drawne upp in battaylia, almost in sight of Stanehyve, which lay low beneath them. Tbe van was givne to a troope of volunteer gentlemen curassiers, about ane hundereth in number, who for Oh. LIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 271 the colours caryd ane handkerciffe upon a launce. Thes wanted nothing to A. D. 1639. have made tbem servicable but some officer to leade thera, who- had had mor honesty then collonel Gunne. The cittlzens of Aberdeen gott the first place of aU the foote, who had ther a foote regiment of gallant fyre raen, weaU ap poynted, to the number of about four hundred. The Highlanders had the reere, and other troopes of horses wer putt to tbe wings of tbe foote. LII. There was something happned whUst the souldiours wer fiUinge ther Aboyn's pow- handeleers, which, though it wer accidentall, yet it suffered ane IU construe- der blown up -, , , ^ accidentally. tione, and was looked on as ominous : That was ane hundereth pounds of Ships that had muskett poulder soddanly blowne upp amongst the foote, by tbe rashnesse Aboyn's can- of ane unskUlfuU foote souldiour ; who, for haist to lift up his handes fuU of der on board powder, thrust in a burning matche reclessly amongst the whole heape of driven to sea. jowlder, to his owne great hurt, and of many of the bystanders, who wer vances to' therby miserably scortched, faces and clothes : some bad ther eyes neer Meagre hHl. lost, but none kiUed. SkirmTsh'^Se! This omen was seconded by another, as hurtfuU, if not mor ; for the wynde cond party tumd immediatly therafter to ther faces, wherby ther shippes, that wer j[°™jj °"''' going alonge and appoynted to waite upon them, wer forced to beare off to Aboyn'shorse- sea wards, and could not come neer them ; nor did theye ever see them againe nt^Hi'^hrnd to this hower, so that canon and ammunitione, and the tbree shippes, all ers run away vanyshd together. i" confusion ; trip rpst rppl Whilst Aboyne is standing with his men drawne upp, Montrosse sent and mutiny him a *letter, by way of a compleraentary challendge. It was sent to galne against Gun ; aV j i- j- X u- .f I,- ^ ¦ r^^ aH drop off in tyme upon Aboyne, and to diverte him trom his begunne journey till mor companies. aides should come to Montrosse, for he was expecting raor from the southe. Not that Montrosse thought that Stanehyve was tenible ; for whatever his thoughtes wer befor Aboynes men came in view, yet afterwardes he and Marishall despaird to keepe Stonehyve ; and wer resolute, after some canon shott, for to reteer to Dunnotyre, a strong hold belonging to MarishaU hard by ; and to this pourpose sent a raessenger to Dunnotyre, commanding to keepe the gates opne for to receave them befor ther enemyes did cutt of ther retreate. The recepte of this letter seeminglye inflaimmed Obyne, and much • Wliither such a letter wer really sent or not, I could never learne ; onlye this much I am sure of that Aboynde (when his party had gott orders for to marche towards Stonehyve) came himself and told that Montrose had sent them a letter ; which he tould very cheerfully, and desyred all to tacke courage. 272 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. pleased Gunne. Therfor, in all haist, foote and horse marche towards Stone- hyve, and come in view therof at mor then half a Scottish myles distaunce ; and ther wer drawne upp in battaile ranke, upon the browe of ane hill called the hUl of Meagre, wher such as wer in Stonehyve had full levell of them with ther canone, which tbe Covenanters failed not to macke use of howsoone they came into ther view ; for they made two canon shott at the horse troope of volunteers, who wer in tbe vann, which fell short of ther horse counters some yards onlye, without mor hurt done. Foote and horse being drawne upp within canon shott, collonel Gunne reteered off a little to his breackefast, drawing Obyne with him, and the most pairt of his officers, without giving order whither any man should fall on or march off; a thing that aU grumbled at, and smelld ranke of treachery to tbe mor intelligent ; for they thought it straunge, If he intended south wards, that he should stepp asyde for to disscuss a pettye village, such as Stonehyve was, not worth the gaininge and not tenible being wonne, and of so little consequence ; that heerby he did fight att oddes with the enemye, who either would mantane it or else macke a tymouse retreate to Dunnotyre castell, which was not to be gaind by all Aboynes power. And, next, evry one thought it a very odde pranke for to draw a number of raw souldiours, speclallye Highlanders, within the mercye of tbe enemyes canon and reach of ther shotte, to no pourpose In the world ; and so much the worse that most pairt of them had never seen nor heard canon shott in all ther lyves ; yet, for a whyle, shame kept most in ther ranks till feare prevailed ; and gaUantrye and disdaine made others to stande it out to the last. Long tbey had not stoode in this posture till a considerable nuraber of cavaliers, under the conduct of Johnstone, desyred that they might ryde neerer Stonehyve and engadge the enemye, if they would be engadged at aU. They said that they wer not come ther to looke on ; and, if the enemy would keep in, they desyred that tbe foote raight be ledd off, and the ad vauntage of the high grounde tackne which hanges over Stonehyve, and is in cover safe from Dunnotyre, that from thence they might both at once tacke out ther enemyes out of Stonehyve and barre ther retreate to Dun notyre at ther backes. This was the wholsoraest councell, if it had been followed ; except ther marching fordwards and neglecting Stonehyve, whicb the Aberdeens men scarce lycked, fearing Montrosse might doe mischeefe in ther toun, now left voide and at ther backes. Ch. LILJ HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 273 Gunne was, with difficultye, drawne to permitte a twenty-four cavaleers or A. D. 1639. therby venture. Thes wer not farr marched towards Stonehyve, neer a brooke syde that runnes in at Stonehyve, but tbey wer rencountered with about ane aeqwaU number of the Covenanters horsemen, aU gaUant gentl men, who came out of Stonehyve to meete tbem ; and this was the first tyme that ever tbe Covenanters stoode ther ground at the distaunce of shott. Many pistoll shott wer exchanged, but at too great distaunce on both sydes most shottes ; otherwayes the continwall motione of ther horses preveend all hurt. Some, by the restivnesse of ther owne horses wnused to service, wer throwne to the grounde. All the losse that was sustained at ther first rencounter was the kUling of WUliam Seaton of Shethinn his horse, not by tbe Covenanters horse, but by ane hardye fellow, ane Aber deens traidesmane, who had fledd to the Covenanters as fancying them most ; who, tacking the advauntage of a plott of high grounde that over looked the place wher both partyes piched, did lett flee about a dosen of muskett shott amongst Abynes cavaliers and then gott of : any hurt tbat was done was by him. The Covenanter horse, after a why les stay, be ganne to fall backe to Stonehyve, bard by them ; but ther they wer seconded with a fresh pairtye, by whoise asistaunce Aboynes cavalliers wer forced to give grounde, till such tyme as the rest of that troop to which they belonged. Impatient to see ther freends reteer, fell In to ther rescwe, with out order ; such as pleased falling in, and such as wanted courage keeping off. But no sooner did tbe Covenanter horseraen fynde a mor consider able number of horse drawing neer, but instantly they tacke thera to ther heels and runne towards Stonehyve ; not for want of courage but for to draw the Anti-Covenanter horsemen fully under ther shott, as it fell out. For most pairt of them, upon a mistacke, did persew them so eagerly that, ere they wer aware they wer under the muskett shott of Stonehyve ; Johnstone only being sensible of ther error, and calling to thera to reteere ; but that was in vaine, till Montrosse pairty beganne to lett flee at them both witb his two half canon and with severall feeld peeces tackne off of Dunotyre for that purpose, as also with muskett shott after that he had seen his owne horsemen safely under cover ; so that now they who but immediatly befor wer so eager in ther persuite wer glade to runne of In disorder, not having any enemy to cope withall but canon and muskett shott : Which retreate did put ane end to. that dayes actione. After Aboynes horsemen wer come off againe, Montrose beganne to 2 M 274 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Aboyn sends to Aberdeen, ordering his raen to re turn. This called The Read of Stone haven. macke some canon shotte araongst Obynes foote brigades ; who all this whyle had stoode at ther owne leisour looking upon the horsemen ther hloodlesse skirmishinge, with collonel Gunne as unconcerned as anye. Some few shottes did alight araongst them, wherby two or tbree wer either maimed or killed ; whiche so afirigbted the Highlanders wbo stoode farrest off, that without expecting any worde of commande, tbey did runne of, all in a con fusione, never looking behynde tbem, till they wer gott into a mosse, or fast grounde, neer half a myle distaunte from the hiU of Meager. Nor could they be withheld from running, by any meanes or perswasione of such as Aboyne caused for to ryde upp and downe amongst tbem, for to reclaime them, albeit, all In vaine. The example of the Highland foote made the rest of the foote for to reele, for the most pairt ; who beganne now to mutinee against Gunne, so tbat in the ende he gave order to draw them In covert backwards from tbe sight of Montrose bis two so formidable halfe carthawes : And there was a necessity for him so to doe, for otherwayes they would have gone off of ther owne accorde. This tooke upp all tbe fornoone of the daye. And now the Highlanders beganne to dropp awaye and marche off in whole companyes ; and such of the foote as pleased beganne by twentyes and threttyes to goe backe to Aberdeene ; whilst a pairty of horse stood still, in the mercye of Montrose canon, to maske the retreate of ther foote, and to conceale ther unorderly retreate, whilst no body persewd them, and none of the enemye so neer as half a Scottish myle. All thes passages wer unknowne to Montrose syde, who still stood in doubte of the event, and therfor made no shotte at tbe horsemen, after tbe foote wer reteered ; suspecting belycke that the foote wer circumveening them, and going about some other waye. LIII. Aboyne, being advertished of the retreate of the Highlanders, and tbat many without licence wer going backe for Aberdeen, sent speedily two gentleraen thither, who, in the afternoone, caused beatt drummes, ordering all who wer come off to come backe to Aboynes qwarter, under all highest paines. But scarce was this proclamation made, when Aboyne and all who wer with him came backe to Aberdeen against Saturday at night : And ther was reasone for it ; for, befor eeven, so many foote and horse wer shrunke from him, that the Mearns would have been too hotte for him to have stayed in it a night longer, so neer Montrose qwarter. Most pairt loosd ther heartes, and saw Aboyne gwyded only by coUonel Ch. liv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 275 Gunne, and his actions palpably grosse ; so that many never did returne A. D. 1639. againe at aUe, though otherwayes gallant gentlemen, and considerable for attendents. But aU tbe foote in a manner shrunke awaye, so that the very next daye Aboyne was necessitated for to send orders towards Strabogye launde, and other places, to fetche tbem back againe. This is that actione knowne so weaU afterwardes under the name of The Reade of Stonehyve, so ridicoulously and grossly managed tbat in aU the warre nothing can be recounted lycke it. Ther wer about four thousand foote and horse, as gaUant and resolute and weaU appoynted men as wer to be found in Scott lande, yet aU scattered, by evIU and treacherouse conducte of collonel Gunne. When Montrosse afterward came over to the Kings pairtye, he carryd great actiones and victory es, with farr fewer numbers ; and most of thes who wer the actors (If yow except about thirteen hundred Irishes) wer thes very foote and horse, who at the tyrae wer so easily brockne, and ren dered contemptibly ridicolouse. LIV. Montrose being instantly advertished both of Obynes retreate and Montrose fol- his forces ther disbanding, resolves that he wiU turne persewer, and stand q^,^ t^"/'^' no longer defencive. And to this pourpose he advanceth upon Mundaye, skirmish. June sixteenth, towards Cowye, within a myle of Stonehyve; drawing along Aboyn pos- with him his victoriouse demicannon and some feeld peeces, and with hira bridge of Dee. Marishall. His forces beganne to grow, by the accessione of some foote Resistance by , . , ¦ n -rwii 1 r » the Aberdeen's companyes sent to him trom Dundee, and some mor horseraen from Angusse men; Dundee's and the neerest places, about three hunderethe in all. ™cn repulsed. jMontrosp'^ Aboyne, who had yet about him a number of the best of his cavallry, gott cannon as quickly advertishment of Montrose motione ; and, to be sure of it, a brought up ; pairty was directed from Aberdeen towards Stonehyve. Thes cominge the ^^i/t(f cros lenth of Elslcke, within six myles of Aberdeene, a forpairtye of aeqwall at Banchory ; number of Montrosse cavallry rencounter ther forpairtye, being about seven j^! ™"owed by on the syde. Some wer hurt on either syde, and the result was the beating Gun's advice. of Montrosse seven horsemen, two of them tackne prisoners ; Thomas Fo- Johnston dringhame of Dunoen, by Johne Gordone of FechiU,(i? and [ ] Ogilvy fendants dis- of Powery, younger, by Nathaneele Gordone. Powry had sorae hurts, but couraged re- not deadly. Both of them wer carryed along to Aberdeen, that same jegn. (}„„ night, prisoners, and putt in safe but free and honourabUl custodye. and Arradoul At night ther was another partye directed from Aberdeen, for to disturbe ^^^°^ °"-^ '^ (I) [The author's brother.] 276 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. and attend Montrosse motione. Thes did coUonel Gunne rather permitte then order for to goe out. Johnston, who bad been that day upon the first Covenanters pairtye, desyred licence for to macke an infalle upon Montrosse qwarter, march straight r j ^ j , . , , i t j? -li / -i to Aberdeen, offering to beate upp ther qwarter, which he shwd was very taecible, (as it June 16. was indeede) ; but collonel Gunne by no meanes would consent that it should be so. However, the pairtye that went out upon Munday, at night; brought backe worde to Aberdeen that Montrosse was marching closse at ther heeles. June 18. Wherupon, a Uttle befor sunne rysing, drummes beate, trumpetts did sownde to horse, and the Aberdeens men wer coramanded to arme. Such Strabogye foote as had not disbanded with the rest wer ordered for to marche instantly out of the towne, towards the bridge of Dee, two myles distant south-west from Aberdeen, for to macke good the passe of the bridge till tbe rest should corae upp. Thes faUed not to doe as tbey wer commanded, casting trwffes and earth, as much as the shortnesse of the tyme would per mitte, behynde the gate of the bridge, which standes upon the south ende therof. This was to some pourpose, for Obyne had not numbers to fight Montrose ; and, besyde that, the ranes which wer fallne had sweUed tbe river Dee, so that it could not be crossed by horses. Iraraediately after, followed such horsemen as Aboyne had, who came upon tbe spurre to the bridge of Dee ; but they wer no sooner come ther then they could espye Montrosse forces, upon the high grounde beyond the bridge, at a qwarter rayle of distaunce ; who, seing Aboynes pairtye pos- essed of tbe bridge, made a stande, and fyred ther two peece of half can non upon Aboynes cavallrye, which feU short of the formost ranke. They had gotte closse to the bridge out of curiositye to gett a fuller sight of the enemye ; therfor tbey wer coraraanded to reteer to safer grownde, since ther standing ther was uselesse at that tyme. Ther retreate gave the enemy a fuUer view of them, who heerupon discharged upon them sixteen shott of feeld peeces, besyde ther two half canone. After the horsemen wer gott upp from the bridge, Montrosse pairty made some canon shot at ther bodye, but without any hurt done. And by this tyme the Aberdeens companyes, about four colours, wer com upp to the bridge, and the horsemen drew under covert. Befor ever tbey could approache, Montrose caused discharge some cannon shot amongst them, without hurt doing to anye all this whyle ; and howsoone ther com manded partye took upp ther poste upon the long bridge, of seven arches. Ch. liv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 277 the Covenanters beganne to discharge ther battering peeces against the A. D. 1639. ravelings of the bridge, and to faU on with partyes of commanded raen, musketeers. The Aberdeens men stoode to it gaUantlye, and aU that daye continowd giving fyre ; Johnston, ther townesman, stille asisting and en couraging them. Nor losed they any man that daye, save one Johne For besse, a burgesse of Aberdeen, who was shotte deade thorough the heade, having been levelled at by a gentlman of the other partye, [ ] of DunsmiU. And now ther women and servants wer become so couragiouse, that, after two or three houres service, they, misregarding canon and muskett shotte, went and came to the bridge, with provisione and neces- sairs for ther freendes and relationes who wer upon service. After noone, the companyes of Dundee, aemulouse of the Aberdeen cit tlzens, desyred to be lettne storme the bridge, which Montrose readily yeelded too. Two companyes fell on, under the commande of one captain Bonner, but they founde so hotte a welcome from the Aberdeens men that they made a quicke retreate ; which was seconded with the whooping and hallowing of such as wer looking on who mocked ther poor bravado. The service continowd till the night came, both sydes rather being wearye, then it falllnge darke, for ther is no sky sett then in the north of Scottland. Both sydes intromitted tlU the morninge of the next daye, June nineteenth ; June 19. and then, in the fornoone, they beganne afreshe. Montrosse, who thought '^ '"^* ^^' such a delaye little better then to be beatne, caused draw his two half canon within neerer distaunce to the bridge in the night tyme ; and, by helpe of the daye light comraing, did cause leveUe them against the port of the bridge of Dee, that both they might brashe the gates of the porte and secure the bridge all alonge. For, the day befor, most of the canon shott wer made against one of the corners of the porte which looked to the south west ; wherby one of the two small watche turretts upon the sydes of the porte was much shattered in the topp of It, being all hewed stone, as all that bridge is, being one of the gallantest in Scottlande, if not the state- lyest itselfe. But tbe defendants could not thus be drivne to leave It, albeit tbe canon shotte had brockne the porte its gates, and scoured the way of the bridge all alonge. Aboynes horsemen lyckwayes drew near for to second the foote ; wbich, Montrosse espying, raade a feint with a pairt of his horse men, causing them ryde uppwards, along tbe syde of the river, as if they meand to have crossed it neer Bancborye. CoUonel Gunne, who could espy no occasione befor to draw off the horsemen, cryes to martche up tbe 278 history of scots affairs. [B. iv. A. D. 1639. river syde and stopp Montrosse his crossing. It was told him ther was no daunger, tbat but lately the foordes bad been tryed and founde unpassable. But no assurance could serve his turne who would not beleeve that which be knew to be true : therfor, fordwards upp the river he goes ; and now his horsemen being in full view of the enemyes canon, and at neer distaunce, the Covenanters beganne againe to lett fiee some shott at them. It was with one of thes tbat a gallant gentleman, Johne Setton of Pettmedden, was shott deade, most pairt of his body above the saddel being carryd away and qwashed by ane half canon shott. This following upon Gunnes wiUfuU re treate, discouragd the cavalree a little, who beganne to speacke out that collonel Gunne was betrayng them.* * Nota. Spang, in his Historia Motuum, teHs us that at the bridge of Dee two wer killed only upon the Covenanters syde (which is truth) ; but, upon the other syde, " desiderati plus minus quinquaginta," id est, fiftye or therby wer killed and many wounded. Yet ther wer never mor heard of or seen but two kiHed(i) only, and one or two Aberdeens men wounded, collonel Johnston and one captain James Gordone shott through the legge. As truly he tells us, that in all the rest of the troubles in the north that no bloode was drawne. Thes untruthes of his I tacke notice off, because I know the contrare to be true, by as sure proofe as could be had of matters of facte, if many wittnesses can be beleeved, and if mens eyes can be trusted. Spange is ane arrant Iyer, and his informer lyckwayes, who did wryt over such a lye to Holland to him. [The passage in Spang here referred to is the following : " Dura hsec ad limites & confinia regnorum agerentur, in Borealibus Scotiae provinciis vice-coraes Boinius, adeptus post secundam fugam peritos aliquot belli duces, & apparatura bellicum Berwico cura navibus transmissum, captata Montis Rosarum & Mares- challi absentia, magnas turbas movet, & ducem se faction! exhibet ; ad quem convolarunt omnes regiarum partium, ex quibus speciem quandam exercitus confecit, praesertim si numerus & copiarum ductores soli nuraerarentur : Et horura quidam cum omnem spem suam in celeri- tate ponerent, raagnis itineribus in Australiores Mernise & Angusiae ac Taithise provincias contendendum esse suadebant, ut fcederatos sub ductu Montes Rosarum & cset. vel incautos & nihil sinistri metuentes ex improvise opprimerent, aut apparatura saltem bellicum in vicinis oppidis interciperent : Quod factu sibi haud diflBcile judicabant ; Nisi magno animo prsedicti Comites cum suis obviara eis venissent, quorura adventu usque adeo terrebantur Boinise vice coraes cura suis, ut, rautato priori consilio, ingenti terrore cogerentur ad antiquas latebras confugere, & ut tutius laterent, cum ad Dese fluminis, (quod Abredoniara praeterlabitur,) pontem venissent, eundem obstruunt ; & dispositis in ripa cohortibus, transitum foederatis prohi- bere conantur : sed frustra, quippe foederati post paucorum horarum raoram, pontem obstructum admotis majoribus machinis intercipiunt, & qui non ita pridera triuraphum ante victoriam canebant, ad latebras & tutam fugam, quanta celeritate possent, circumspiciunt, & Abredo niara, foederatorum arbitrio denuo exponunt, qui eam statim interceperunt ; Commodum certe Abredonensibus tum fuit, quod celeri nuncio, Montis Rosarum & Mareschalli Comites de icta pace certiores facti sunt, nam alioqui verendum fuisset, ne dementia Hia quam, toties experti fuerant, & qua se toties indignos reddiderunt cives quidam Abredonenses (nam om nibus omnino civibus instabilis hsec mutabilitas imputari non potuit ; quippe quod eorum (1) [According to Spalding, there were^ue slain on the part of the Royalists. Hist, of Troub., vol. i. p. 155. Gordon of Sallagh says that "fourteen of Aboyne's foot, and of the inhabitants of Aberdeen were slayn; as many wer killed on the other syde.'' Gen. Hist, of Earld. of Sutherland, p. 494.] Ch. liv.] history OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 279 This misfortune was foUowd by ane other, for Montrose his pairty grew A. D. 1639. still mor and mor impatient. Lievtennant collonel John MidletouneW (afterwards better knowne) cryed out that ther canon would macke them aU arrant poultrons, since all ther confidence was in ther canon shott at a dis taunce, and no body durst sett on ; being somewhat discouraged by tbe slaughter of one Captain Andrew Ramseye (brother to the laird of Bal- maine), a gentleman of Montrose partye ; whora one Johne Gordone of Inshstoraacke, a Strabogye man, had kiUed the day befor with a marked shott, out of indignatione that they had killed John Forbesse, a burgesse of quidam, licet cum manifesto vitae & fortunarura periculo, reliquis foederatis serio se olira adjunxerant ; neque fidera datara corruperunt) in justam iram verteretur, quandoquidem, ne ignem in tecta ipsa conjicerent, difficulter detinebantur milites foederati ; sed ductorum au thoritate, & pacis certo nuncio asperiora ilia consHia & conatus impediebantur. In omnibus illis motibus nihil humani sanguinis effundebatur, praeterquam in hoc ad DcEe pontem con- flictu, ubi duo foederati desiderati sunt, sed ex altera parte plus minus quinquaginta, & com plures vulnerati, inter quos lonstonus quidam tribunus, vir acris & expediti ingenii." Histo ria Motuum, pp. 390 — 392. " So soon" says Baillie "as Montrose had turned homeward to the Merns, atonee Aboyne and Banff, with Crowner Gun, and some other ofliicers, gathered great forces. Aberdeen joined heartHy to the party. They spoiled Marischal's lands, and all our friends there. They had devoured Dundee and all Angus in the throat of their hope. But at once Mon trose and Marischal, most valorous and happy noblemen, gave them some other raatter to do, though much inferior in number. They came to seek them. Sorae great ordinance we had, which moved our partyto hold off when they were coming on hoping to have clean defeat us ; for their highlanders avowed they could not abide the musquett's raother, and so fled in troops at the first voHey The eneray had fortified the bridge of Dee, and lay on the other shore under sconces, with their musquets and horseraen. We resolved to have the bridge on all hazards. It was a desperate piece of service. None more stout, and full of good directions at it, than Jesuit Abernethy, by the playing of the great ordnance on the bridge : and much ado ; for the perverse citizens of Aberdeen did fight very manfully that day. At last with some slaughter on both sides, we won the bridge. We put our enemy to rout, goes forward that same night to Aberdeen, lodges without in the fields, being resol ved to-morrow to have sacked it orderly, that hereafter that town should have done our nation no more cumber. But as it pleased God to keep us frora all marks of the least al ledged cruelty frora the first taking up of our arras, so there the preventing mercies of God did kythe in a special manner ; for that same night, by sea, the King's letters of pacification at Dunse were brought to the town ; which to-morrow early being presented to our nobles, made them glad they had got that blessed cord to bind up their soldiers hands from doing of mischief, whereto that wicked town's just deservings had raade them very bent. For all our sparing, yet that country's malicious disloyalty seems not to be remeided. In the miHtary burial of Balmain's brother, some traitor with a musquet of moe bullets than one, did kill outright a gentleman very near Montrose and Marischal ; as at the first expedition a knave was taken in that town, who was mightily suspected to have had a design to have kUled Lesly." Baillie's Letters, vol. i., pp. 186, 187-] (I) [Created Earl of Middleton at the Restoration. After he left their party, he was occasionally taunted by the Covenanters for the zeal and gallantry which he displayed on this occasion in behalf of the Covenant. See Kirkton's Hist, of Ch. of Scot., p. 118; Wodrow's Hist, of Ch. of Scot., vol. i. p. 89.] 280 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. Aberdeene. For this cause Midletoune resolved to storme himselfe ; hut " whilst he was macking readye, a pairt of one of the turretts of the bridge, hard by the porte, being strucke downe by a canon shotte, overthrew John stone, who stoode all the whyle wher the greatest dainger was ; and being half buryd in the mine, it so qwashed one of his leggs to peeces that he could no longer stande. Johnstons legge being brockne, he was instantly carryd of; but bis departure discouraged the defendants, so that shortly after, befor the enemy perswed, ther captain losed and the horse reteered they could not tell whither, they forsooke the bridge of ther oune accorde and left it emptye, evrye one tacking a sundrye waye. The newes of Johnstons hurt being brought to collonel Gunne, who was but ridd upp tbe river syde a Uttle, bis next order that he gave was this : " Gentleraen," sayes he, " raacke yow for tbe towne ! lievtenant collonel Johnstone is kiUd, and the bridge is wonne !" But his wordes gott slender obedience : Therfor Obyne and the rest with him, and hee in companye, rode off for Strabogye, leaving Aberdeen for to shift for itselfe. Whilst they wer thinking of a retreate, William Gordon of Arradowle, a resolute gentleman, desyred collonel Gunne to stande and waite upon the Covenanters forpartye crossing the bridge, and shwed that as yet they had advauntage : He tould him it was not the fashione of Huntlyes familye to leave the feelds without fighting ther enemye. But ther was no hearing, for it was Gunnes fashion alwayes to crye out that If they would not obey his orders, he .vould laye downe his charge and complaine to the Kinge. This refusall of his to charge was so 111 tackne, that the company beganne for to tell Aboyne that Gunne had betrayd him ; and AradouUe, in a great chafe, told him to his face he was a villaine, and ane arrant traitor : all which coUonel Gunne swallowd quyettlye. Covenanters LV. Half ane hower after the foote had left the bridge, the Covenanters enter Aber- forpairtye entred the porte, and marched alongest it, keepinge ther journey choler; im- towards Aberdeene, for it was far afternoon, without offering to persew prison; hM'dly any of Aboynes partye, who had gottne tyme to reteere.* When they from setting entred Aberdeene they came with great choUer, seizing upon all such as fire to the had not made hast to gett out of the towne(0 ; and upon such of the town; Mar- ° ^ shal and Mu- * June nineteenth. Bridge wone and the toune entred : Forty-eight cittizens made pri- chols save it. soners, and bounde with cordes : Toune fyned to six thousand merkes. [Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., pp. 155, 156.] (1) [" The confederat lords comes to Aberdein with sound of trumpetts, displayed coHours, and touking of drums. As the army marched, the haill covenanters was blyth, and the Ch. LVL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 281 townesmen as they could gett tryall of to have beene upon tbe service, A. D. 1639. casting them Into prisone, and using them very rudlye(0: And hardly could the souldiours be restrained from plundering and putting fyre unto the towne.* LVI. But whilst the poor cittye was fearing the worst, that sarae very News arrives night came ther a pinnasse from Bervicke with letters bothe frora the Kinge of the pacifica- ,,.„„,_. , . ° tion of Ber- and cheite ot the Covenanters, orderinge aU actes of hostUItye to cease wick, on the upon both sydes, and Intiraatlnge that the treaty was closed ; so that to twentieth of morrow all the prisoners wer released, tbe peace proclairaed, and evry man it was signed who had fledd beganne to come backe to Aberdeene to ther houses.W Yet °"ly °° the eighteenth. royalists alse sorrowfull at this sight, who for plaine fear fled the toun, with their wiffes, and childrein in their armes and carried on their backs, weiping and mourning raost pitiefully, straying here and there, not knowing wher to goe." Spalding, Hist, of 'Troub., vol. i., p. 155.] (1) [" After quartering in both Aberdeins, the soldiers immediately made search for sic musketeirs as served against them at the Brig of Dee ; and found about 48 cavilliers, brave fyreraen, whom they caused bind be the gardies with towes, in disgraceful manner, and brought to the tolbuith, wher that night they gott neither raeat, drink, fyre nor candle, nor bed ; and watched the tolbuith for that effect." Spalding, Hist, of Troub., vol. i., p. 155.] * Nota et insere. When Montrosse entred Aberdeene, the Earle Marishall and Lord Mucholl pressed him to burne the toune, and urged him with the comittye of estates war rant for that effecte. He ansuered. That it wer best to advyse a night upon it, since Aber deene was the London of the north, and wold praejudice theraselves by want of it, et eet. So it was tackne to consideration for that night, and next day the Earle Marishall and Lord Mucholl came protesting he would spare it. He ansuered, He was desyrouse so to doe, but durst not except they wold be his warrant. Wherupon they drew upp a paper, signed with bothe ther handes, declaring that they had hindred it, and proraising to interpone with the comittye of the estates for him. Yet the next yeare, when he was made prisoner, and accused, this was objected to Montrosse, That he had not burned Aberdeene, as he had orders frora the comittye of estates. Then he produced Marishall and MuchoHs paper, which hardly satisfeed the exasperat comittye. [" Alioqui verendum fuisset, ne dementia Ula quam, toties experti fuerant, & qua se toties indignos reddiderunt cives quidam Abredonen ses, in justam iram verteretur, quandoquidem, ne ignem in tecta ipsa conjicerent, difficulter detinebantur milites foederati." Historia Motuum, p. 391. ' " Sorae," says Gordon of Sallagh, " did perswade to rase the toun, and to burn it, least it should prejudge them afterward ; but that raotion was hindred and crushed by the Earl of Montrois." Gen. Hist, of Earld. of Sutherland, p. 494. Bishop Guthrie relates that on the occasion of Montrose's first expedition to Aberdeen in March 1639, "some fiery rainis ters that attended hira urged no less, than that he should burn the town, and the soldiers pressed for liberty to plunder it ; but he was more noble than to hearken to such cruel mo tions, and so drew his army away without harming them in the least." Memoirs, p. 53. " The discretion of that generous and noble youth was but too great," says Baillie ; " a little time did try that we had been too great fools not to disarm that country altogether, and use some severity for example araong them." Letters, vol. i., pp. 159, 160. Elsewhere he speaks of " Montrose's too great lenity in sparing the enemies houses." vol. i., p. 169.] (f) [" Upon Thursday the 20th of June, the nobles went and took up the corps of Pit medden and Ramsay both ; and ilk raan was buried in the kirk of Aberdein, be their own 2n 282 HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. [B. IV. A. D. 1639. could not Montrosse souldiours be gottne away out of the towne of Aber- Hostilities deene tlU the towne payed fyve thousand merkes Scottish of a taxation to cease on both them ; so ill wer tbey satisfeed bothe witb the want of the plunder of Aber deene and the hastye newes of the peace, which Montrose suspected would come befor he entred tbe towne. The next day captain Ramsey and tbe laird of Pittmedden wer solemnly interred at Aberdeene. But at Pittmeddens buriaU ther hapned ane accident which was lycke to have bredd a new sturre ; for, whUst the Covenanter souldiours and cittizens of Aberdeene wer drawne upp about the churche, 'giving a volley to tbe burialls, one William Erskyne (brother to Thomas Erskyne of Pittodry), ane hotte Covenanter, was shott thorough tbe heade ; and this made way for a third burialle. It was observed that tbis gentleraan, William Erskyne, then living in Aberdeene, had carryd himself very proudly and insolentlye, and that the very night befgr no man had carryde mor malltiouslye to the cittizens then hee. One of the cittizens, whom befor he had Ul Intreated, WilUam Anderson, a golde- sraythe, was afterward accusd for his slaughter, but was acqwytted as being innocent. It was ane accidentall shott, and no body could ever tell to this daye who did it. Aboyn goes LVII. Shortly after the pacificatlone, Obyne went to Berwicke to the *t B^ ^'k^ Kinge ; and in Edinburgh, had lycke, by the rascaUy multitude, to have been kiUed in his coatche. Thither went collonel Gunne also ; but shortly afterwards Johnstone coming to court, his legge being cured, accusd him as a traitour, and challendged him to single corabatt ; but Hamiltoune con veyd Gunne away to Holland, who, the whyle that he stayd at court, traduced Huntleyes followers as boldly as they confidently accused him ; so that hardly knew the King whome to beleeve amongst them. It is not to be oraitted that during thes actiones ther was one expresse freinds, with lamentation. There was ane dead voHie shott be the souldiers for their own man Ramsay at the Old Kirk door, where William Erskine, brother to the laird of Pit todrie, was suddenly shot dead throw the head, standing amongst the rest ; wherof never word nor tryall was gotten, whilk was thought marvellous, but indeid he was a willful malicious covenanter. " Therafter the nobles goes to ane councell of warr, (hearing certainly of a treatie past betuixt the king and his subjects at Berwick, wherof they had knowledge before the in- takeing of the Brig, as was said,) fynes Aberdein in 6000 merks, which was presently payed, louses the toun's raen's gardies, who were knit two and two togither, and sets them to libertie upon the same Thursday. The town was saved, unplundered, by payment of this soume." Spalding, Hist, of "Troub., vol. i., p. 156.] Ch. LVIL] HISTORY OF SCOTS AFFAIRS. 283 sent to Huntleyes foUowers from the King, by Mr. Alexander Innes, mi- A. D. 1639. nister at Rothemaye ; wherin the King advysed them for to gwarde them- selves as weall as they could, and tacke suche advauntage as they raight of ther enemyes : for the rest, he thanked them, but gave them no hopes of asis taunce. This was all that ever I could learne that came to them, and. If I remember aright, it was not delyvered till either a few dayes befor, or a few dayes immediatly after the pacificatlone ; wherof it Is now high tyme to come and speacke. THE END OF THE SECOND VOLUME. PRINTED AT THE ABERDEEN CONSTITUTIONAL OFFICE, BT WILLIAM BENNETT. '"¦¦mm ffW-i. Mv^ i^-*:. £^. m 4SLS «*v* ¦4