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A65260 Memoires of the family of Stuarts and the remarkable providences of God towards them in an historical account of the lives of those His Majesty's progenitors of that name that were kings of Scotland. Watson, John, b. 1597? 1683 (1683) Wing W1081; ESTC R35236 83,515 202

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necessary if possible to prevent the Conjunction of Dowglas and Hammilton to that end he advanceth to Linlithquo where the Hammiltons were drawn together Dowglas then at Edenburgh marcheth with all possible expedition bringing along with him to countenance his affairs the person of the King who all along retardeth the journey accounting Lennox more his Friend than those with him pretending indisposition of Body ever and anon dismounteth making shew to pay some necessary office to Nature Dowglas frets and in vain spending many entreaties for expedition at length George Dowglas Brother to the Earl is so peremptory with him as in most Rebellious terms to tell him That rather than their Enemies should get possession of his Person they would rend him in pieces and divide him in halves between them This Traiterous word made an indelible impression on the heart of the King though at present silence was his best and only return At last the Armies joyn Lennox and his Patty are put to the rout many slain the Earl himself killed bewailed of all Hammilton and Dowglas both mourn for him above all the King is afflicted the remnant of his Party with sorrow and grief enough submit and are all forced to compound for their Treasons as was pretended in bearing Arms against the King the Earl of Cassils refusing to submit was way-laid and killed by one Hugh Campbell Lennox his Death divulged maketh a very deep impression in the hearts of most men especially his own Retainers one of his Servants resolveth with himself to avenge his Lord's death on the Person of the Bastard Hammilton by whom Lennox was killed To that end he repairs to Edenburgh and on his way meeting with one of his Fellow-servants he asked him saying Didst thou see Hammilton the Bastard Yea said he I saw him and hast thou not killed him unthankful Wretch who murthered our Dear Lord and Master said the Fellow Go and be hang'd thou art not worthy to live and with these words he pass'd on in his way and came streight to Holyrude House where in the Pallace-Yard stood Two thousand Armed men all Retainers to Dowglas and Hammilton there the Fellow walks full of Revenge and waiting the opportunity to execute the desire of his heart Hammilton unawares comes in his way without Arms the Fellow falls upon him in the Penthouse under the Porters-Lodge and wounds him in six several places of his Body the Armed men are all presently in confusion and well nigh in one anothers blood The Hammiltons suspecting this bold attempt to be done by the Dowglasses newly only reconciled to them to avenge some old Quarrels The Fellow is at last apprehended who had opportunity fair enough had he attempted it to escape with his Sword in his hand still smoaking with Hammilton's blood he is forthwith hurried to Tolbnith boldly professing that what he did was to revenge the death of his Dear Lord declaring with inexpressible confidence that he was sorry for nothing but that he was disappointed of his design so bravely begun by him he is put to Torture for the discovery of such as animated him to that bold attempt his Flesh is seared with burning Irons which he endured with such courage and resolution as no man could spy either by his words or by his countenance or otherwise any the least sense of pain in him at last his Right Hand was cut off which he endured without shrinking calling out to such as stood by That unhappy Hand well deserved this punishment which executed not the design of a Resolute mind The Dowglasses think themselves now secure enough no man daring to oppose them in any thing But in the midst of their security the King makes an escape from Faulkland to Sterlin there the Nobility from most parts of the Kingdom fly to him by whose advice his Majesty issueth out an Edict inhibiting the Dowglasses any further medling in publick Affairs discharging them or any of their retainers under pain of Death to come within Twelve Miles of the Court this Edict being served on the Earl in his Journey towards Sterlin he retreats to Edenburgh and prepareth Forces for his defence A Proclamation issueth from the King to call a Parliament to Assemble November the 3d. in the interim his Army advanceth towards the City Dowlas withdraws The King peaceably entreth the City Terms of Peace are offered to the Dowlasses viz. That the Earl himself should confine himself on the North of Tay his Brother George and his Vncle Archibald to the Castle of Edenburgh The Conditions are refused they are Summoned to appear before the Parliament they disobey the Earl himself his Brother George his Uncle Archibald and his dear Friend Alexander Drumond of Carnock all by sentence of Parliament Banished all People charged under pain of Treason not to relieve them the Dowlasses break out into open Violence Arguile is sent to reduce them to order whose advance they prevented by flight into England The King spendeth some time with great care and charge in suppressing the Depredations then very great on the Borders which Expedition over he establisheth the Court of Sessions formerly indeed set on foot by the Vice-Roy the Duke of Albany Constituted of Fifteen Judges of the most learned of the Law impowred to hear and determine all Civil Causes a very grave Court continuing in great Honour and deserved Respect in that Nation to this day About this time King Henry of England prepareth for War against the Scots irritated thereunto by the Scotch Exiles and Refuges in England King James having Constituted the Earl of Murray his Vice-Roy prepareth for Defence by Mediation of the French then a common Friend to both Peace is concluded King James sends Ambassadors to France to treat concerning his Marriage to a Daughter of France The King of England to prevent it sends the Bishop of St. Davids and William Hrward Brother to the Duke of Norfolk Ambassadors into Scotland to invite King James to a Personal Conference with himself whereunto he is soon persuaded by the great Promises they made of Marriage to Mary the King 's eldest Daughter if all other things succeeded well in the Treaty The Scotch Council especially the Clergy fearing Innovations in Religion then set on foot by King Henry are much troubled that his Majesty had consented to this Conference they ply him with continual surmises of Ruine to Himself to the State to Religion should this Conference hold the King is over-ruled and observeth not the day appointed but forthwith Saileth into France and is immediately espoused to Magdalen Daughter to Francis King of France the Marriage solemnized on New-years Day 1537 and both arrive in Scotland about the end of May following within six Weeks after the young Queen Dyeth to the inexpressible grief of all the Nobles put on Mourning Apparel not before that time in use in that Kingdom Immediately after David Beton Cardinal and Robert Maxwel are sent to France to demand Mary of the
MEMOIRES OF THE FAMILY OF THE Stuarts And the Remarkable Providences of GOD towards them IN An Historical Account OF THE LIVES Of those His MAJESTY's Progenitors of that Name that were KINGS of SCOTLAND Fallitur egregio quisquis sub principe credit Servitium Nusquam libertas gratior extat Quam sub rege pio Claudianus LONDON Printed by J. Wallis for Walter Kettleby at the Bishop's-Head in St. Paul's Church-yard 1683. THE PREFACE THough by the Providence of him by whom Kings reign the most Ancient and Unconquer'd Crown of Scotland hath continued by Succession maugre all Opposition in the Heirs of the Royal Fergus the first King of Scotland whose Inauguration was about 330 Years before the Incarnation of the Blessed Jesus Yet some Translations there have been for want of Heirs Male and by inter-marriages some later Families of their Ancient and War-like Nobility have been grafted into that Royal Stock and have thereby grown up to bear that Virgin Crown The STVARTS were the last that were Honour'd in this kind of whom there have not been many Kings yet all of them so Good so Vertuous and Wise that no History whether Sacred or Civil can paralel the Succession The Various Dispensations of God towards them especially in their Dangers and Deliverances may in a great measure be seen in this ensuing Mirrour As for the Occurrences in Political Affairs since the day of our happy Union of Crowns in James the Sixth of undying Memory though it be true we may in them be furnish'd with more Instances of signal Preservations than from former Ages and tho' God in our late miraculous Revolutions as also in those extraordinary Qualifications conferr'd upon our Kings adequate to the weight of a Prince's Crown hath evidenc'd a special regard to and approbation of Kingly Government Yet in regard our English Histories do abound with the Remarks and Memoirs of those times to supply the Defects of our Memories it would appear an over-acted Design to lanch further into other Mens Labours than what I have here offer'd to View and would rather seem to Encumber than Accommodate the Age we live in If it shall appear strange to any that these Posthumous Sheets She-Orphan-like be expos'd in the World without the Reputation or Protection of some Honourable Patron It is not for want of Persons that would willingly and could truly have Dignified the Endeavours of our Deceased Authour by suffering their Names to be prefixed hereto but because the Design having relation only to the Ancestors of our King I feared an alienation of its Dedication might look injuriously upon the Royalty of his Sacred Majesty to whom alone with his most Illustrious Brother I imagine the Right of Patronage doth belong But so little is my esteem of my Self and so great my Veneration for Royal Majesty that I dare not think my self worthy to offer any thing tho' the best I have at his Feet Which Consideration alone hath diverted me from the thoughts of a Dedication Yet I hope in recommendation of the Work I may tell the World that the Author was a Native of Scotland and so may be thought no Stranger to the History of his own Countrey His early Merits advanced him at the Age of Twenty Three to be Preacher at the Cannigate in Edenburgh about the Year 1636. that by no worse interest than that of the Learned Spotswood Here he continued not long before the Scottish Covenant so Fatal to all Loyal and Religious Men forc'd him for the security of his Life and Loyalty to retire from that Honourable and Advantageous Imployment to London whither the Storm pursued him The Presbyterian Faction so Embroiling the Affairs of that Blessed Prince Charles the First whose Memory is too great and too good to be intermixt with the common History of the Age that they soon reduc'd him from his Princely Estate wherein he was always ready and willing to afford Protection to his Friends to so Low a fortune that he the best of Kings could in his Three Kingdoms find no place of Safety or Defence for himself All that our Author could then acquire was a presentation to a small Vicarage in Norfolk as I suppose in the King's hands Sir Thomas Corbet a Young Gentleman of an Ancient and Honourable Family the Patron of it being then a Minor and his Majesty's Ward Here he lived in Repute with all good Men for his Eminency in Learning Loyalty and Religion until the exrraordinary respects and affections of the honest and loyal Gentry provok'd the malice of the Rebellious Committee against him and that place could afford him no longer security Then by the favourable Recommendation of Lieutenant-Colonel Bendish one of his Majesty's Deputy Lieutenants and Alderman of Norwich a great lover of Loyalty Religion and Learning to whom greater Acknowledgements are due he was remov'd to Kirkby Cane a Rectory in the same County in the Gift of Richard Cateline Esq a Gentleman whose Sufferings were too severe Testimonials of his Fidelity to his Prince and his whole Life a Contexture of great Prudence Piety and Charity Amongst the many blessings that attended his Life it was not his least happiness that he was the Father of the present Sir Nevil Cateline who was his Eldest Son that surviv'd the Calamity of the Civil War a Gentleman he is whose Vertues are sufficient Indications of his Birth he Inheriting not only the outward fortune but also the internal Noble and Generous Qualifications of his Parents Minds and though he may seem to have stept before some of his Ancestors in Titles of Eminency yet none that rightly knows him can think his Titles keep equal pace with his Merit Here he spent a dozen Years and upwards in a Retir'd and Pious Solitude living in great Regard and Esteem with his good Patron and is not yet dead in the memory of his Son until the happy Restauration of His Sacred MAJESTY when True Religion and Loyalty might unmask themselves and with their Primitive Confidence look into the World Then having weather'd out the Storm at the first appearance of the Long-benighted Sun he resorted to London to Congratulate the Joyful Change in National Affairs he had the Honour to kiss His Majesty's Hand and receive some further assurances of his Bounty but returning in a Pleonasm of Joy he expir'd in the Extasie without any more marks of Royal Favour upon him He left these loose and unpolish'd Papers behind him doubtless design'd tho' not perfected to be offer'd to His Majesty as a Congratulation of his Return to his Three Kingdoms But that opportunity being lost I have since thought them no better than Useless Papers until lately perusing of them and Reflecting upon the Scepticism of some Polititians and the Incredulity of all disaffected and discontented Minds not to be convinc'd of Day-light by the brightest Beams that ever darted from the Sun I was induc'd to believe that the Idiome and Exuberance of the matter and Phrase being
Cassils Rothus and Cumberland three of the Clergy the Arch-Bishop of Glascow the Bishop of Orkney the Pryor of St. Andrews two of the Commons the Provost of Edenburgh and the Provost of Montross are sent they safely arrive and are honourably entertained at the French Court the Marriage solemnized April 24. 1558. in great State in the Church of Nostra Dama in Paris the Scotch Commissioners the chief days of the Solemnity being past prepare to return to their own Countrey abundantly satisfied not so much by beholding the incredible Magnificence of the French Entertainment as by observing the admired deportment of their most Gracious and Illustrious Queen Before their departure an unhappy dash of Discontent was given the Chancellor of France is sent to them to move That the Crown of Scotland may be sent over into France for Coronation of the Dauphine after the custom and manner of the Kings of Scotland The Commissioners refuse the motion and soon after take their Leave of the Court and return home In their return the Earl of Cassils the Earl of Rothus the Bishop of Orkney and the Lord Cumberland depart this Life And now began the great Stirs touching Reformation of Religion which we shall briefly touch Certain Lords assisted by some Knights and Gentlemen who afterwards were termed the Lords of the Congregation knowing the Heart-burnings of the People occasioned by the Death of George Wisheart and Walter Mill both lately Burnt for Religion send privately their Scrolls all the Kingdom over to receive the Subscriptions of all who favoured the Reformation of Religion which being done Propositions are sent to the Queen Regent by the hands of Sir James Sandelands Lord Caulder viz. That all Popish Priests be forthwith removed and Godly Ministers chosen by the People established in their places and that all publick Prayers may be said in the Vulgar Tongue The Popish Bishops though much inraged yet make a motion and a fair offer to refer all to publick Dispute the Lords of the Congregation refuse all Dispute whilst the Popish Bishops are their Judges The Bishops make a second Tender That if the Mass Invocation of Saints Prayers for the Dead were continued in due esteem together with the belief of Purgatory that then it should de lawful for them to use the Scottish Tongue in their publick Prayers and Ministration of Baptism and the Lord's Supper This is likewise rejected by the Lords of the Congregation who peremptorily adhere to their first Proposals requiring the Queen Regent to hearken thereunto Her Majesty yields to them That it shall be lawful for them to use their Vulgar Tongue in their publick Prayers provided all other Rights be duly observed and none of their Preachers appear in the Pulpits of Edenburgh They of the Congregation finding themselves discountenanced and unsatisfied send John Ariskin of Dunne a well learned Man to Solicit the Parliament in their behalf but with no success In May following another Parliament is called at Sterlin thither Commissioners are sent viz. Alexander Cuningham Earl of Glencarne and Sir Hugh Camphell Provost of Aire to pacific the Queen Regent provok'd by some Popular Tumults and to pray that nothing might be denied through the occasion of the said Tumults which was formerly granted to them The Queen Regent in much wrath threameth the Banishment of their Ministers as main Incendiaries The Commissioners urge the remembrance and performance of her Promises which she resusing they peremptory threaten and protest to renounce all Obedience to her beseeching her in time to consider what Mischiefs were like to ensue thereupon In the interim the Ministers of the Congregation get into the Pulpits at St. John's Town A Messenger is dispatched to Patrick Ruthuen Provost of the place to Suppress them and the Stirs made by them the Provost refuseth the Service A Messenger is likewise sent to Dundee to demand the Person of Paul Messan a Popular Preacher who privately withdraweth and escapeth A General Proclamation is likewise made requiring the Celebration of Easter after the accustomed manner The whole Ministers of the Congregation disobey who are therefore cited to Sterlin May the 10th to answer their Contempt for countenancing of whom a great Confluence rush thither from all parts of the Kingdom The Queen Regent calls to her Areskin of Dunne a Popular Man and Requests him to persuade the Multitude to return peaceably to their several homes assuring him that nothing should be done against any of their Sect by his means some return more stay whereby the Queen is highly provoked such of the Ministers as were Summoned and appeared not are Banished to no purpose John Knox Preacheth at St. Johnston and inflameth all the Multitude forthwith brake down the Altar and all the Images in the Church do violence to the Person of the Priest then attending to say Mass into immediately after they rush into the Monasteries of the Franciscans and Dominioans and by assistance of the Souldiery then and there in Arms they spoil and plunder and in two days lay all those stately Buildings level to to the ground at Cowper of Fyfe they do the very like The Queen Regent being informed of all these detestable Outrages sendeth to the Earls of Arguile Hammilton and Athol to attend her with all their Retainers which they forthwith did and advance to St. Johnston May the 18. the Queen perceiving their Forces both greater and more resolute to Fight than her own dispatcheth Commissioners viz. the Earl of Arguile and James Stuart Bastard Son to the late King who remained with the Regent on purpose to discover all her Counsels and Resolutions to that Adverse Faction to the Lords of the Congregation to treat with them for Accommodation Alexander Cunningham and John Areskin above-named are appointed by the Lords to treat with them Articles are agreed upon that the Forces on both sides should be Disbanded The Queen and the Nobility with her enter the Town for their refreshment during their pleasure without Damage to be done by any the French not to approach within Three Miles of the Town all other matters of Difference referr'd to the next Parliament The Armies accordingly dismissed the Queen Regent and those of the Nobility with her are received into the Towns Arguile with James Stuart abovenamed withdraw to St. Andrews The Queen Regent jealous of them and seeing no hopes of a lasting Peace setleth new Magistrates and having restored the Mass leaves a Garrison at St. Johnston's and returns to Sterlin from thence sends threatning Letters to Arguile and James Stuart to return to her but all in vain they now both publiquely joyn with whom they were before in private ingaged to the Lords of the Congregation New Forces are levied on both sides those of the Congregation assemble in great numbers Vowing the Destruction of the Adverse Party enter St. Andrews having Defaced the Church at Carell plunder spoil and level to the ground the two Monasteries of the Dominicans and Franciscans the
whatever Spoils were taken from the Enemy to be converted to the Queen's use the Scots to receive and exercise the same Religion professed and used in the Church of England and to send Pledges into England to remain there as Hostages during the Marriage of the French King and the Scots Queen and one Year after All Sealed and Ratified at Barwick the 27th of February 1560. Six thousand Foot and Two thousand Horse Auxiliaries are sent down under the Command of the Lord Grey unto whom the Lords of the Congregation joyn their Army at Hadington and in this conjunction they march towards Leith lay Siege to it both by Sea and Land an English Navy lying then in the Road many bloody Skirmishes there were on both sides The French Bishop cometh into the Scots Camp and from thence he went to the Castle at Edenburgh to speak with the Queen Regent retired thither for her safety and protection and earnestly endeavours a Peace but all in vain the Scots not hearkning to any unless the French were all in the first place sent home which could not be yielded to at this time a great Fire happened in Lieth which put the Besieged into a great Consternation the English likewise fired the two Mills belonging to the Garrison and assault the Town by Storm but are repulsed with loss the French quickly repairing the Breaches the English made who at length begin to think the work tedious and full of trouble they send to Queen Elizabeth to know her pleasure the Duke of Norfolk encourageth them much by sending them new Supplies no less than Two thousand well appointed men Assuring them that neither Men nor Money should be wanting so long as it was in his power to supply them promising if need were his own presence in the mean time he sendeth his Tent and adviseth them to set it up in the view of the Town This gives Life to the business again the Siege is renewed and the Queen of England sends Sir William Cecil one of the Privy Counsellors and Secretary of State and Doctor Wootton Dean of York one also of the Council to treat with the French in order to a Peace a meeting is appointed in July following but in the interim the Queen Regent wasted with care and grief dyeth at Edenburgh Castle a Woman of singular wisdom and vertue honoured by most of the worst of her enemies and her Death much lamented by all after her death Commissioners are appointed and meet to treat of an Accommodation which had then been agreed upon but that the French insisted upon a freedom to carry home whatsoever Booty Bag or Paggage they had got whereof they had store by their Winters plundering of Fife which would not be granted by the Scots and therefore Acts of Hostility Sallies and Onsets are made with various fortune and success At last both Parties sufficiently weary and straitned in Provisions the Treaty is renewed and Articles agreed on viz. That neither the French King nor his Queen of Scotland should thenceforth use the Arms or Titles of England and all Letters Sealed with those Arms should be called in within six Months space that the French transport themselves with their Booties Bag and Baggage within twenty days and that the English supply them with such Ships as they should want they leaving Pledges with the English until the safe return of their Ships That Leith be delivered up to the Scots and Dismantled That the Forts built by the French at Dunbar be demolished That the English immediately after the performance of Articles do return into England That the French should still keep a Garrison at Inch-Keeth and Dunbar Castle That an Act of Oblivion first past by the Queen and the French King her Husband be afterwards Confirmed by their Authority in the ensuing Parliament to be held in August On these Terms Peace was Proclaimed Soon after the French King Francis dyeth the Queen heavily afflicted with grief for the death of her Husband and much perplexed by the turbulent condition of the state of France resolveth to return into Scotland and fearing the English Navy by reason of an Offence given to Queen Elizabeth by placing the English Arms in the Scots Coat she privately goes aboard a small Vessel which none would suspect to be Fraught with so rich a Cargo and safely arriveth in Scotland immediately before her arrival her base Brother James procured a Commission from her to hold a Parliament which was accordingly done The French Ambassador moveth That the French League may be renewed and that which the English lately made may be broke off and that the Revenues of Ecclesiastick Persons may be restored to them But the Scots Parliament now wholly constituted of such as pretend to the Reformation of Religion answered That the French League should be continued but that with the English could not be broken without the greatest Dishonour and Ingratitude in the world The Restauration of the Revenue of the Ecclesiasticks was wholly rejected and an Act passed for the demolishing all the Abbies and Priories in the Kingdom which was immediately put in execution The sorrowful Queen being arrived had no better remedy than Silence and Convenience and was forced to condescend That the state of Religion as it was lately renewed and established by the Lords of the Congregation should not by her nor her Authority suffer any Change or Alteration no Mass to be said publiquely any where except in her Majesty's Chappel which was all the indulgence the Lords would afford her The Ministers moved both by their own Zeal and the Instigation of the Earl of Arran Cry out and Thunder in their Pulpits against this Permission and Admonish the Lords of their Duty to reduce her to order a submission to and a susception of the Directory for publick Worshin The Nobility notwithstanding all these over-loud Clamours encroach not upon the Queen's privilege for which the Ministers turn the edge of their Tongues as sharp as Swords against them crying out of their Apostacy and lukewarmness in the Cause of God William Mettelane is sent Ambassadour to England to tender to Queen Elizabeth the great Respects of the Scottish Queen towards her and with this Message the Lords sent also their Letters to the Queen humbly thanking her for her late Seasonable Assistance and requesting her to continue her Princely Favour towards their Queen and a firmer establishment of Union between both Kingdoms as an Expedient thereunto they propound to her Majesty That she would be pleased to pass an Act of Parliament Declaring That in case her self should dye without Issue the Queen of Scots to be her rightful Heir and lawful Successor to her Crown This last motion highly displeased Queen Elizabeth saying That it was most unreasonable to require her to Sew her Winding-Sheet with her own hands and to expose it every day to her own view After much Debate it was at last agreed upon First That the Scots Queen should forbear