<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND<br/> FROM THE ACCESSION OF JAMES II, </h1>
<h3> VOLUME 1</h3>
<h2> by Thomas Babington Macaulay. </h2>
<hr />
<h2> CHAPTER V. </h2>
<p>TOWARDS the close of the reign of Charles the Second, some Whigs who had
been deeply implicated in the plot so fatal to their party, and who knew
themselves to be marked out for destruction, had sought an asylum in the
Low Countries.</p>
<p>These refugees were in general men of fiery temper and weak judgment. They
were also under the influence of that peculiar illusion which seems to
belong to their situation. A politician driven into banishment by a
hostile faction generally sees the society which he has quitted through a
false medium. Every object is distorted and discoloured by his regrets,
his longings, and his resentments. Every little discontent appears to him
to portend a revolution. Every riot is a rebellion. He cannot be convinced
that his country does not pine for him as much as he pines for his
country. He imagines that all his old associates, who still dwell at their
homes and enjoy their estates, are tormented by the same feelings which
make life a burden to himself. The longer his expatriation, the greater
does this hallucination become. The lapse of time, which cools the ardour
of the friends whom he has left behind, inflames his. Every month his
impatience to revisit his native land increases; and every month his
native land remembers and misses him less. This delusion becomes almost a
madness when many exiles who suffer in the same cause herd together in a
foreign country. Their chief employment is to talk of what they once were,
and of what they may yet be, to goad each other into animosity against the
common enemy, to feed each other with extravagant hopes of victory and
revenge. Thus they become ripe for enterprises which would at once be
pronounced hopeless by any man whose passions had not deprived him of the
power of calculating chances.</p>
<p>In this mood were many of the outlaws who had assembled on the Continent.
The correspondence which they kept up with England was, for the most part,
such as tended to excite their feelings and to mislead their judgment.
Their information concerning the temper of the public mind was chiefly
derived from the worst members of the Whig party, from men who were
plotters and libellers by profession, who were pursued by the officers of
justice, who were forced to skulk in disguise through back streets, and
who sometimes lay hid for weeks together in cocklofts and cellars. The
statesmen who had formerly been the ornaments of the Country Party, the
statesmen who afterwards guided the councils of the Convention, would have
given advice very different from that which was given by such men as John
Wildman and Henry Danvers.</p>
<p>Wildman had served forty years before in the parliamentary army, but had
been more distinguished there as an agitator than as a soldier, and had
early quitted the profession of arms for pursuits better suited to his
temper. His hatred of monarchy had induced him to engage in a long series
of conspiracies, first against the Protector, and then against the
Stuarts. But with Wildman's fanaticism was joined a tender care for his
own safety. He had a wonderful skill in grazing the edge of treason. No
man understood better how to instigate others to desperate enterprises by
words which, when repeated to a jury, might seem innocent, or, at worst,
ambiguous. Such was his cunning that, though always plotting, though
always known to be plotting, and though long malignantly watched by a
vindictive government, he eluded every danger, and died in his bed, after
having seen two generations of his accomplices die on the gallows. <SPAN href="#linknote-319" name="linknoteref-319" id="linknoteref-319"><small>319</small></SPAN>
Danvers was a man of the same class, hotheaded, but fainthearted,
constantly urged to the brink of danger by enthusiasm, and constantly
stopped on that brink by cowardice. He had considerable influence among a
portion of the Baptists, had written largely in defence of their peculiar
opinions, and had drawn down on himself the severe censure of the most
respectable Puritans by attempting to palliate the crimes of Matthias and
John of Leyden. It is probable that, had he possessed a little courage, he
would have trodden in the footsteps of the wretches whom he defended. He
was, at this time, concealing himself from the officers of justice; for
warrants were out against him on account of a grossly calumnious paper of
which the government had discovered him to be the author. <SPAN href="#linknote-320" name="linknoteref-320" id="linknoteref-320"><small>320</small></SPAN></p>
<p>It is easy to imagine what kind of intelligence and counsel men, such as
have been described, were likely to send to the outlaws in the
Netherlands. Of the general character of those outlaws an estimate may be
formed from a few samples.</p>
<p>One of the most conspicuous among them was John Ayloffe, a lawyer
connected by affinity with the Hydes, and through the Hydes, with James.
Ayloffe had early made himself remarkable by offering a whimsical insult
to the government. At a time when the ascendancy of the court of
Versailles had excited general uneasiness, he had contrived to put a
wooden shoe, the established type, among the English, of French tyranny,
into the chair of the House of Commons. He had subsequently been concerned
in the Whig plot; but there is no reason to believe that he was a party to
the design of assassinating the royal brothers. He was a man of parts and
courage; but his moral character did not stand high. The Puritan divines
whispered that he was a careless Gallio or something worse, and that,
whatever zeal he might profess for civil liberty, the Saints would do well
to avoid all connection with him. <SPAN href="#linknote-321"
name="linknoteref-321" id="linknoteref-321"><small>321</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Nathaniel Wade was, like Ayloffe, a lawyer. He had long resided at
Bristol, and had been celebrated in his own neighbourhood as a vehement
republican. At one time he had formed a project of emigrating to New
Jersey, where he expected to find institutions better suited to his taste
than those of England. His activity in electioneering had introduced him
to the notice of some Whig nobles. They had employed him professionally,
and had, at length, admitted him to their most secret counsels. He had
been deeply concerned in the scheme of insurrection, and had undertaken to
head a rising in his own city. He had also been privy to the more odious
plot against the lives of Charles and James. But he always declared that,
though privy to it, he had abhorred it, and had attempted to dissuade his
associates from carrying their design into effect. For a man bred to civil
pursuits, Wade seems to have had, in an unusual degree, that sort of
ability and that sort of nerve which make a good soldier. Unhappily his
principles and his courage proved to be not of sufficient force to support
him when the fight was over, and when in a prison, he had to choose
between death and infamy. <SPAN href="#linknote-322" name="linknoteref-322" id="linknoteref-322"><small>322</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Another fugitive was Richard Goodenough, who had formerly been Under
Sheriff of London. On this man his party had long relied for services of
no honourable kind, and especially for the selection of jurymen not likely
to be troubled with scruples in political cases. He had been deeply
concerned in those dark and atrocious parts of the Whig plot which had
been carefully concealed from the most respectable Whigs. Nor is it
possible to plead, in extenuation of his guilt, that he was misled by
inordinate zeal for the public good. For it will be seen that after having
disgraced a noble cause by his crimes, he betrayed it in order to escape
from his well merited punishment. <SPAN href="#linknote-323"
name="linknoteref-323" id="linknoteref-323"><small>323</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Very different was the character of Richard Rumbold. He had held a
commission in Cromwell's own regiment, had guarded the scaffold before the
Banqueting House on the day of the great execution, had fought at Dunbar
and Worcester, and had always shown in the highest degree the qualities
which distinguished the invincible army in which he served, courage of the
truest temper, fiery enthusiasm, both political and religious, and with
that enthusiasm, all the power of selfgovernment which is characteristic
of men trained in well disciplined camps to command and to obey. When the
Republican troops were disbanded, Rumbold became a maltster, and carried
on his trade near Hoddesdon, in that building from which the Rye House
plot derives its name. It had been suggested, though not absolutely
determined, in the conferences of the most violent and unscrupulous of the
malecontents, that armed men should be stationed in the Rye House to
attack the Guards who were to escort Charles and James from Newmarket to
London. In these conferences Rumbold had borne a part from which he would
have shrunk with horror, if his clear understanding had not been
overclouded, and his manly heart corrupted, by party spirit. <SPAN href="#linknote-324" name="linknoteref-324" id="linknoteref-324"><small>324</small></SPAN></p>
<p>A more important exile was Ford Grey, Lord Grey of Wark. He had been a
zealous Exclusionist, had concurred in the design of insurrection, and had
been committed to the Tower, but had succeeded in making his keepers
drunk, and in effecting his escape to the Continent. His parliamentary
abilities were great, and his manners pleasing: but his life had been
sullied by a great domestic crime. His wife was a daughter of the noble
house of Berkeley. Her sister, the Lady Henrietta Berkeley, was allowed to
associate and correspond with him as with a brother by blood. A fatal
attachment sprang up. The high spirit and strong passions of Lady
Henrietta broke through all restraints of virtue and decorum. A scandalous
elopement disclosed to the whole kingdom the shame of two illustrious
families. Grey and some of the agents who had served him in his amour were
brought to trial on a charge of conspiracy. A scene unparalleled in our
legal history was exhibited in the Court of King's Bench. The seducer
appeared with dauntless front, accompanied by his paramour. Nor did the
great Whig lords flinch from their friend's side even in that extremity.
Those whom he had wronged stood over against him, and were moved to
transports of rage by the sight of him. The old Earl of Berkeley poured
forth reproaches and curses on the wretched Henrietta. The Countess gave
evidence broken by many sobs, and at length fell down in a swoon. The jury
found a verdict of Guilty. When the court rose Lord Berkeley called on all
his friends to help him to seize his daughter. The partisans of Grey
rallied round her. Swords were drawn on both sides; a skirmish took place
in Westminster Hall; and it was with difficulty that the Judges and
tipstaves parted the combatants. In our time such a trial would be fatal
to the character of a public man; but in that age the standard of morality
among the great was so low, and party spirit was so violent, that Grey
still continued to have considerable influence, though the Puritans, who
formed a strong section of the Whig party, looked somewhat coldly on him.
<SPAN href="#linknote-325" name="linknoteref-325" id="linknoteref-325"><small>325</small></SPAN></p>
<p>One part of the character, or rather, it may be, of the fortune, of Grey
deserves notice. It was admitted that everywhere, except on the field of
battle, he showed a high degree of courage. More than once, in
embarrassing circumstances, when his life and liberty were at stake, the
dignity of his deportment and his perfect command of all his faculties
extorted praise from those who neither loved nor esteemed him. But as a
soldier he incurred, less perhaps by his fault than by mischance, the
degrading imputation of personal cowardice.</p>
<p>In this respect he differed widely from his friend the Duke of Monmouth.
Ardent and intrepid on the field of battle, Monmouth was everywhere else
effeminate and irresolute. The accident of his birth, his personal
courage, and his superficial graces, had placed him in a post for which he
was altogether unfitted. After witnessing the ruin of the party of which
he had been the nominal head, he had retired to Holland. The Prince and
Princess of Orange had now ceased to regard him as a rival. They received
him most hospitably; for they hoped that, by treating, him with kindness,
they should establish a claim to the gratitude of his father. They knew
that paternal affection was not yet wearied out, that letters and supplies
of money still came secretly from Whitehall to Monmouth's retreat, and
that Charles frowned on those who sought to pay their court to him by
speaking ill of his banished son. The Duke had been encouraged to expect
that, in a very short time, if he gave no new cause of displeasure, he
would be recalled to his native land, and restored to all his high honours
and commands. Animated by such expectations he had been the life of the
Hague during the late winter. He had been the most conspicuous figure at a
succession of balls in that splendid Orange Hall, which blazes on every
side with the most ostentatious colouring of Jordæns and Hondthorst. <SPAN href="#linknote-326" name="linknoteref-326" id="linknoteref-326"><small>326</small></SPAN>
He had taught the English country dance to the Dutch ladies, and had in
his turn learned from them to skate on the canals. The Princess had
accompanied him in his expeditions on the ice; and the figure which she
made there, poised on one leg, and clad in petticoats shorter than are
generally worn by ladies so strictly decorous, had caused some wonder and
mirth to the foreign ministers. The sullen gravity which had been
characteristic of the Stadtholder's court seemed to have vanished before
the influence of the fascinating Englishman. Even the stern and pensive
William relaxed into good humour when his brilliant guest appeared. <SPAN href="#linknote-327" name="linknoteref-327" id="linknoteref-327"><small>327</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Monmouth meanwhile carefully avoided all that could give offence in the
quarter to which he looked for protection. He saw little of any Whigs, and
nothing of those violent men who had been concerned in the worst part of
the Whig plot. He was therefore loudly accused, by his old associates, of
fickleness and ingratitude. <SPAN href="#linknote-328" name="linknoteref-328" id="linknoteref-328"><small>328</small></SPAN></p>
<p>By none of the exiles was this accusation urged with more vehemence and
bitterness than by Robert Ferguson, the Judas of Dryden's great satire.
Ferguson was by birth a Scot; but England had long been his residence. At
the time of the Restoration, indeed, he had held a living in Kent. He had
been bred a Presbyterian; but the Presbyterians had cast him out, and he
had become an Independent. He had been master of an academy which the
Dissenters had set up at Islington as a rival to Westminster School and
the Charter House; and he had preached to large congregations at a meeting
house in Moorfields. He had also published some theological treatises
which may still be found in the dusty recesses of a few old libraries;
but, though texts of Scripture were always on his lips, those who had
pecuniary transactions with him soon found him to be a mere swindler.</p>
<p>At length he turned his attention almost entirely from theology to the
worst part of politics. He belonged to the class whose office it is to
render in troubled times to exasperated parties those services from which
honest men shrink in disgust and prudent men in fear, the class of
fanatical knaves. Violent, malignant, regardless of truth, insensible to
shame, insatiable of notoriety, delighting in intrigue, in tumult, in
mischief for its own sake, he toiled during many years in the darkest
mines of faction. He lived among libellers and false witnesses. He was the
keeper of a secret purse from which agents too vile to be acknowledged
received hire, and the director of a secret press whence pamphlets,
bearing no name, were daily issued. He boasted that he had contrived to
scatter lampoons about the terrace of Windsor, and even to lay them under
the royal pillow. In this way of life he was put to many shifts, was
forced to assume many names, and at one time had four different lodgings
in different corners of London. He was deeply engaged in the Rye House
plot. There is, indeed, reason to believe that he was the original author
of those sanguinary schemes which brought so much discredit on the whole
Whig party. When the conspiracy was detected and his associates were in
dismay, he bade them farewell with a laugh, and told them that they were
novices, that he had been used to flight, concealment and disguise, and
that he should never leave off plotting while he lived. He escaped to the
Continent. But it seemed that even on the Continent he was not secure. The
English envoys at foreign courts were directed to be on the watch for him.
The French government offered a reward of five hundred pistoles to any who
would seize him. Nor was it easy for him to escape notice; for his broad
Scotch accent, his tall and lean figure, his lantern jaws, the gleam of
his sharp eyes which were always overhung by his wig, his cheeks inflamed
by an eruption, his shoulders deformed by a stoop, and his gait
distinguished from that of other men by a peculiar shuffle, made him
remarkable wherever he appeared. But, though he was, as it seemed, pursued
with peculiar animosity, it was whispered that this animosity was feigned,
and that the officers of justice had secret orders not to see him. That he
was really a bitter malecontent can scarcely be doubted. But there is
strong reason to believe that he provided for his own safety by pretending
at Whitehall to be a spy on the Whigs, and by furnishing the government
with just so much information as sufficed to keep up his credit. This
hypothesis furnishes a simple explanation of what seemed to his associates
to be his unnatural recklessness and audacity. Being himself out of
danger, he always gave his vote for the most violent and perilous course,
and sneered very complacently at the pusillanimity of men who, not having
taken the infamous precautions on which he relied, were disposed to think
twice before they placed life, and objects dearer than life, on a single
hazard. <SPAN href="#linknote-329" name="linknoteref-329" id="linknoteref-329"><small>329</small></SPAN></p>
<p>As soon as he was in the Low Countries he began to form new projects
against the English government, and found among his fellow emigrants men
ready to listen to his evil counsels. Monmouth, however, stood obstinately
aloof; and, without the help of Monmouth's immense popularity, it was
impossible to effect anything. Yet such was the impatience and rashness of
the exiles that they tried to find another leader. They sent an embassy to
that solitary retreat on the shores of Lake Leman where Edmund Ludlow,
once conspicuous among the chiefs of the parliamentary army and among the
members of the High Court of Justice, had, during many years, hidden
himself from the vengeance of the restored Stuarts. The stern old
regicide, however, refused to quit his hermitage. His work, he said, was
done. If England was still to be saved, she must be saved by younger men.
<SPAN href="#linknote-330" name="linknoteref-330" id="linknoteref-330"><small>330</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The unexpected demise of the crown changed the whole aspect of affairs.
Any hope which the proscribed Whigs might have cherished of returning
peaceably to their native land was extinguished by the death of a careless
and goodnatured prince, and by the accession of a prince obstinate in all
things, and especially obstinate in revenge. Ferguson was in his element.
Destitute of the talents both of a writer and of a statesman, he had in a
high degree the unenviable qualifications of a tempter; and now, with the
malevolent activity and dexterity of an evil spirit, he ran from outlaw to
outlaw, chattered in every ear, and stirred up in every bosom savage
animosities and wild desires.</p>
<p>He no longer despaired of being able to seduce Monmouth. The situation of
that unhappy young man was completely changed. While he was dancing and
skating at the Hague, and expecting every day a summons to London, he was
overwhelmed with misery by the tidings of his father's death and of his
uncle's accession. During the night which followed the arrival of the
news, those who lodged near him could distinctly hear his sobs and his
piercing cries. He quitted the Hague the next day, having solemnly pledged
his word both to the Prince and to the Princess of Orange not to attempt
anything against the government of England, and having been supplied by
them with money to meet immediate demands. <SPAN href="#linknote-331"
name="linknoteref-331" id="linknoteref-331"><small>331</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The prospect which lay before Monmouth was not a bright one. There was now
no probability that he would be recalled from banishment. On the Continent
his life could no longer be passed amidst the splendour and festivity of a
court. His cousins at the Hague seem to have really regarded him with
kindness; but they could no longer countenance him openly without serious
risk of producing a rupture between England and Holland. William offered a
kind and judicious suggestion. The war which was then raging in Hungary,
between the Emperor and the Turks, was watched by all Europe with interest
almost as great as that which the Crusades had excited five hundred years
earlier. Many gallant gentlemen, both Protestant and Catholic, were
fighting as volunteers in the common cause of Christendom. The Prince
advised Monmouth to repair to the Imperial camp, and assured him that, if
he would do so, he should not want the means of making an appearance
befitting an English nobleman. <SPAN href="#linknote-332"
name="linknoteref-332" id="linknoteref-332"><small>332</small></SPAN> This
counsel was excellent: but the Duke could not make up his mind. He retired
to Brussels accompanied by Henrietta Wentworth, Baroness Wentworth of
Nettlestede, a damsel of high rank and ample fortune, who loved him
passionately, who had sacrificed for his sake her maiden honour and the
hope of a splendid alliance, who had followed him into exile, and whom he
believed to be his wife in the sight of heaven. Under the soothing
influence of female friendship, his lacerated mind healed fast. He seemed
to have found happiness in obscurity and repose, and to have forgotten
that he had been the ornament of a splendid court and the head of a great
party, that he had commanded armies, and that he had aspired to a throne.</p>
<p>But he was not suffered to remain quiet. Ferguson employed all his powers
of temptation. Grey, who knew not where to turn for a pistole, and was
ready for any undertaking, however desperate, lent his aid. No art was
spared which could draw Monmouth from retreat. To the first invitations
which he received from his old associates he returned unfavourable
answers. He pronounced the difficulties of a descent on England
insuperable, protested that he was sick of public life, and begged to be
left in the enjoyment of his newly found happiness. But he was little in
the habit of resisting skilful and urgent importunity. It is said, too,
that he was induced to quit his retirement by the same powerful influence
which had made that retirement delightful. Lady Wentworth wished to see
him a King. Her rents, her diamonds, her credit were put at his disposal.
Monmouth's judgment was not convinced; but he had not the firmness to
resist such solicitations. <SPAN href="#linknote-333" name="linknoteref-333" id="linknoteref-333"><small>333</small></SPAN></p>
<p>By the English exiles he was joyfully welcomed, and unanimously
acknowledged as their head. But there was another class of emigrants who
were not disposed to recognise his supremacy. Misgovernment, such as had
never been known in the southern part of our island, had driven from
Scotland to the Continent many fugitives, the intemperance of whose
political and religious zeal was proportioned to the oppression which they
had undergone. These men were not willing to follow an English leader.
Even in destitution and exile they retained their punctilious national
pride, and would not consent that their country should be, in their
persons, degraded into a province. They had a captain of their own,
Archibald, ninth Earl of Argyle, who, as chief of the great tribe of
Campbell, was known among the population of the Highlands by the proud
name of Mac Callum More. His father, the Marquess of Argyle, had been the
head of the Scotch Covenanters, had greatly contributed to the ruin of
Charles the First, and was not thought by the Royalists to have atoned for
this offence by consenting to bestow the empty title of King, and a state
prison in a palace, on Charles the Second. After the return of the royal
family the Marquess was put to death. His marquisate became extinct; but
his son was permitted to inherit the ancient earldom, and was still among
the greatest if not the greatest, of the nobles of Scotland. The Earl's
conduct during the twenty years which followed the Restoration had been,
as he afterwards thought, criminally moderate. He had, on some occasions,
opposed the administration which afflicted his country: but his opposition
had been languid and cautious. His compliances in ecclesiastical matters
had given scandal to rigid Presbyterians: and so far had he been from
showing any inclination to resistance that, when the Covenanters had been
persecuted into insurrection, he had brought into the field a large body
of his dependents to support the government.</p>
<p>Such had been his political course until the Duke of York came down to
Edinburgh armed with the whole regal authority The despotic viceroy soon
found that he could not expect entire support from Argyle. Since the most
powerful chief in the kingdom could not be gained, it was thought
necessary that he should be destroyed. On grounds so frivolous that even
the spirit of party and the spirit of chicane were ashamed of them, he was
brought to trial for treason, convicted, and sentenced to death. The
partisans of the Stuarts afterwards asserted that it was never meant to
carry this sentence into effect, and that the only object of the
prosecution was to frighten him into ceding his extensive jurisdiction in
the Highlands. Whether James designed, as his enemies suspected, to commit
murder, or only, as his friends affirmed, to commit extortion by
threatening to commit murder, cannot now be ascertained. "I know nothing
of the Scotch law," said Halifax to King Charles; "but this I know, that
we should not hang a dog here on the grounds on which my Lord Argyle has
been sentenced." <SPAN href="#linknote-334" name="linknoteref-334" id="linknoteref-334"><small>334</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Argyle escaped in disguise to England, and thence passed over to
Friesland. In that secluded province his father had bought a small estate,
as a place of refuge for the family in civil troubles. It was said, among
the Scots that this purchase had been made in consequence of the
predictions of a Celtic seer, to whom it had been revealed that Mac Callum
More would one day be driven forth from the ancient mansion of his race at
Inverary. <SPAN href="#linknote-335" name="linknoteref-335" id="linknoteref-335"><small>335</small></SPAN> But it is probable that the
politic Marquess had been warned rather by the signs of the times than by
the visions of any prophet. In Friesland Earl Archibald resided during
some time so quietly that it was not generally known whither he had fled.
From his retreat he carried on a correspondence with his friends in Great
Britain, was a party to the Whig conspiracy, and concerted with the chiefs
of that conspiracy a plan for invading Scotland. <SPAN href="#linknote-336"
name="linknoteref-336" id="linknoteref-336"><small>336</small></SPAN> This
plan had been dropped upon the detection of the Rye House plot, but became
again the Subject of his thoughts after the demise of the crown.</p>
<p>He had, during his residence on the Continent, reflected much more deeply
on religious questions than in the preceding years of his life. In one
respect the effect of these reflections on his mind had been pernicious.
His partiality for the synodical form of church government now amounted to
bigotry. When he remembered how long he had conformed to the established
worship, he was overwhelmed with shame and remorse, and showed too many
signs of a disposition to atone for his defection by violence and
intolerance. He had however, in no long time, an opportunity of proving
that the fear and love of a higher Power had nerved him for the most
formidable conflicts by which human nature can be tried.</p>
<p>To his companions in adversity his assistance was of the highest moment.
Though proscribed and a fugitive, he was still, in some sense, the most
powerful subject in the British dominions. In wealth, even before his
attainder, he was probably inferior, not only to the great English nobles,
but to some of the opulent esquires of Kent and Norfolk. But his
patriarchal authority, an authority which no wealth could give and which
no attainder could take away, made him, as a leader of an insurrection,
truly formidable. No southern lord could feel any confidence that, if he
ventured to resist the government, even his own gamekeepers and huntsmen
would stand by him. An Earl of Bedford, an Earl of Devonshire, could not
engage to bring ten men into the field. Mac Callum More, penniless and
deprived of his earldom, might at any moment, raise a serious civil war.
He bad only to show himself on the coast of Lorn; and an army would, in a
few days, gather round him. The force which, in favourable circumstances,
he could bring into the field, amounted to five thousand fighting, men,
devoted to his service accustomed to the use of target and broadsword, not
afraid to encounter regular troops even in the open plain, and perhaps
superior to regular troops in the qualifications requisite for the defence
of wild mountain passes, hidden in mist, and torn by headlong torrents.
What such a force, well directed, could effect, even against veteran
regiments and skilful commanders, was proved, a few years later, at
Killiecrankie.</p>
<p>But, strong as was the claim of Argyle to the confidence of the exiled
Scots, there was a faction among them which regarded him with no friendly
feeling, and which wished to make use of his name and influence, without
entrusting to him any real power. The chief of this faction was a lowland
gentleman, who had been implicated in the Whig plot, and had with
difficulty eluded the vengeance of the court, Sir Patrick Hume, of
Polwarth, in Berwickshire. Great doubt has been thrown on his integrity,
but without sufficient reason. It must, however, be admitted that he
injured his cause by perverseness as much as he could have done by
treachery. He was a man incapable alike of leading and of following,
conceited, captious, and wrongheaded, an endless talker, a sluggard in
action against the enemy and active only against his own allies. With Hume
was closely connected another Scottish exile of great note, who had many,
of the same faults, Sir John Cochrane, second son of the Earl of
Dundonald.</p>
<p>A far higher character belonged to Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, a man
distinguished by learning and eloquence, distinguished also by courage,
disinterestedness, and public spirit but of an irritable and impracticable
temper. Like many of his most illustrious contemporaries, Milton for
example, Harrington, Marvel, and Sidney, Fletcher had, from the
misgovernment of several successive princes, conceived a strong aversion
to hereditary monarchy. Yet he was no democrat. He was the head of an
ancient Norman house, and was proud of his descent. He was a fine speaker
and a fine writer, and was proud of his intellectual superiority. Both in
his character of gentleman, and in his character of scholar, he looked
down with disdain on the common people, and was so little disposed to
entrust them with political power that he thought them unfit even to enjoy
personal freedom. It is a curious circumstance that this man, the most
honest, fearless, and uncompromising republican of his time, should have
been the author of a plan for reducing a large part of the working classes
of Scotland to slavery. He bore, in truth, a lively resemblance to those
Roman Senators who, while they hated the name of King, guarded the
privileges of their order with inflexible pride against the encroachments
of the multitude, and governed their bondmen and bondwomen by means of the
stocks and the scourge.</p>
<p>Amsterdam was the place where the leading emigrants, Scotch and English,
assembled. Argyle repaired thither from Friesland, Monmouth from Brabant.
It soon appeared that the fugitives had scarcely anything in common except
hatred of James and impatience to return from banishment. The Scots were
jealous of the English, the English of the Scots. Monmouth's high
pretensions were offensive to Argyle, who, proud of ancient nobility and
of a legitimate descent from kings, was by no means inclined to do homage
to the offspring of a vagrant and ignoble love. But of all the dissensions
by which the little band of outlaws was distracted the most serious was
that which arose between Argyle and a portion of his own followers. Some
of the Scottish exiles had, in a long course of opposition to tyranny,
been excited into a morbid state of understanding and temper, which made
the most just and necessary restraint insupportable to them. They knew
that without Argyle they could do nothing. They ought to have known that,
unless they wished to run headlong to ruin, they must either repose full
confidence in their leader, or relinquish all thoughts of military
enterprise. Experience has fully proved that in war every operation, from
the greatest to the smallest, ought to be under the absolute direction of
one mind, and that every subordinate agent, in his degree, ought to obey
implicitly, strenuously, and with the show of cheerfulness, orders which
he disapproves, or of which the reasons are kept secret from him.
Representative assemblies, public discussions, and all the other checks by
which, in civil affairs, rulers are restrained from abusing power, are out
of place in a camp. Machiavel justly imputed many of the disasters of
Venice and Florence to the jealousy which led those republics to interfere
with every one of their generals. <SPAN href="#linknote-337"
name="linknoteref-337" id="linknoteref-337"><small>337</small></SPAN> The
Dutch practice of sending to an army deputies, without whose consent no
great blow could be struck, was almost equally pernicious. It is
undoubtedly by no means certain that a captain, who has been entrusted
with dictatorial power in the hour of peril, will quietly surrender that
power in the hour of triumph; and this is one of the many considerations
which ought to make men hesitate long before they resolve to vindicate
public liberty by the sword. But, if they determine to try the chance of
war, they will, if they are wise, entrust to their chief that plenary
authority without which war cannot be well conducted. It is possible that,
if they give him that authority, he may turn out a Cromwell or a Napoleon.
But it is almost certain that, if they withhold from him that authority,
their enterprises will end like the enterprise of Argyle.</p>
<p>Some of the Scottish emigrants, heated with republican enthusiasm, and
utterly destitute of the skill necessary to the conduct of great affairs,
employed all their industry and ingenuity, not in collecting means for the
attack which they were about to make on a formidable enemy, but in
devising restraints on their leader's power and securities against his
ambition. The selfcomplacent stupidity with which they insisted on
Organising an army as if they had been organising a commonwealth would be
incredible if it had not been frankly and even boastfully recorded by one
of themselves. <SPAN href="#linknote-338" name="linknoteref-338" id="linknoteref-338"><small>338</small></SPAN></p>
<p>At length all differences were compromised. It was determined that an
attempt should be forthwith made on the western coast of Scotland, and
that it should be promptly followed by a descent on England.</p>
<p>Argyle was to hold the nominal command in Scotland: but he was placed
under the control of a Committee which reserved to itself all the most
important parts of the military administration. This committee was
empowered to determine where the expedition should land, to appoint
officers, to superintend the levying of troops, to dole out provisions and
ammunition. All that was left to the general was to direct the evolutions
of the army in the field, and he was forced to promise that even in the
field, except in the case of a surprise, he would do nothing without the
assent of a council of war.</p>
<p>Monmouth was to command in England. His soft mind had as usual, taken an
impress from the society which surrounded him. Ambitious hopes, which had
seemed to be extinguished, revived in his bosom. He remembered the
affection with which he had been constantly greeted by the common people
in town and country, and expected that they would now rise by hundreds of
thousands to welcome him. He remembered the good will which the soldiers
had always borne him, and flattered himself that they would come over to
him by regiments. Encouraging messages reached him in quick succession
from London. He was assured that the violence and injustice with which the
elections had been carried on had driven the nation mad, that the prudence
of the leading Whigs had with difficulty prevented a sanguinary outbreak
on the day of the coronation, and that all the great Lords who had
supported the Exclusion Bill were impatient to rally round him. Wildman,
who loved to talk treason in parables, sent to say that the Earl of
Richmond, just two hundred years before, had landed in England with a
handful of men, and had a few days later been crowned, on the field of
Bosworth, with the diadem taken from the head of Richard. Danvers
undertook to raise the City. The Duke was deceived into the belief that,
as soon as he set up his standard, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire,
Hampshire, Cheshire would rise in arms. <SPAN href="#linknote-339"
name="linknoteref-339" id="linknoteref-339"><small>339</small></SPAN> He
consequently became eager for the enterprise from which a few weeks before
he had shrunk. His countrymen did not impose on him restrictions so
elaborately absurd as those which the Scotch emigrants had devised. All
that was required of him was to promise that he would not assume the regal
title till his pretensions has been submitted to the judgment of a free
Parliament.</p>
<p>It was determined that two Englishmen, Ayloffe and Rumbold, should
accompany Argyle to Scotland, and that Fletcher should go with Monmouth to
England. Fletcher, from the beginning, had augured ill of the enterprise:
but his chivalrous spirit would not suffer him to decline a risk which his
friends seemed eager to encounter. When Grey repeated with approbation
what Wildman had said about Richmond and Richard, the well read and
thoughtful Scot justly remarked that there was a great difference between
the fifteenth century and the seventeenth. Richmond was assured of the
support of barons, each of whom could bring an army of feudal retainers
into the field; and Richard had not one regiment of regular soldiers. <SPAN href="#linknote-340" name="linknoteref-340" id="linknoteref-340"><small>340</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The exiles were able to raise, partly from their own resources and partly
from the contributions of well wishers in Holland, a sum sufficient for
the two expeditions. Very little was obtained from London. Six thousand
pounds had been expected thence. But instead of the money came excuses
from Wildman, which ought to have opened the eyes of all who were not
wilfully blind. The Duke made up the deficiency by pawning his own jewels
and those of Lady Wentworth. Arms, ammunition, and provisions were bought,
and several ships which lay at Amsterdam were freighted. <SPAN href="#linknote-341" name="linknoteref-341" id="linknoteref-341"><small>341</small></SPAN></p>
<p>It is remarkable that the most illustrious and the most grossly injured
man among the British exiles stood far aloof from these rash counsels.
John Locke hated tyranny and persecution as a philosopher; but his
intellect and his temper preserved him from the violence of a partisan. He
had lived on confidential terms with Shaftesbury, and had thus incurred
the displeasure of the court. Locke's prudence had, however, been such
that it would have been to little purpose to bring him even before the
corrupt and partial tribunals of that age. In one point, however, he was
vulnerable. He was a student of Christ Church in the University of Oxford.
It was determined to drive from that celebrated college the greatest man
of whom it could ever boast. But this was not easy. Locke had, at Oxford,
abstained from expressing any opinion on the politics of the day. Spies
had been set about him. Doctors of Divinity and Masters of Arts had not
been ashamed to perform the vilest of all offices, that of watching the
lips of a companion in order to report his words to his ruin. The
conversation in the hall had been purposely turned to irritating topics,
to the Exclusion Bill, and to the character of the Earl of Shaftesbury,
but in vain. Locke neither broke out nor dissembled, but maintained such
steady silence and composure as forced the tools of power to own with
vexation that never man was so complete a master of his tongue and of his
passions. When it was found that treachery could do nothing, arbitrary
power was used. After vainly trying to inveigle Locke into a fault, the
government resolved to punish him without one. Orders came from Whitehall
that he should be ejected; and those orders the Dean and Canons made haste
to obey.</p>
<p>Locke was travelling on the Continent for his health when he learned that
he had been deprived of his home and of his bread without a trial or even
a notice. The injustice with which he had been treated would have excused
him if he had resorted to violent methods of redress. But he was not to be
blinded by personal resentment he augured no good from the schemes of
those who had assembled at Amsterdam; and he quietly repaired to Utrecht,
where, while his partners in misfortune were planning their own
destruction, he employed himself in writing his celebrated letter on
Toleration. <SPAN href="#linknote-342" name="linknoteref-342" id="linknoteref-342"><small>342</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The English government was early apprised that something was in agitation
among the outlaws. An invasion of England seems not to have been at first
expected; but it was apprehended that Argyle would shortly appear in arms
among his clansmen. A proclamation was accordingly issued directing that
Scotland should be put into a state of defence. The militia was ordered to
be in readiness. All the clans hostile to the name of Campbell were set in
motion. John Murray, Marquess of Athol, was appointed Lord Lieutenant of
Argyleshire, and, at the head of a great body of his followers, occupied
the castle of Inverary. Some suspected persons were arrested. Others were
compelled to give hostages. Ships of war were sent to cruise near the isle
of Bute; and part of the army of Ireland was moved to the coast of Ulster.
<SPAN href="#linknote-343" name="linknoteref-343" id="linknoteref-343"><small>343</small></SPAN></p>
<p>While these preparations were making in Scotland, James called into his
closet Arnold Van Citters, who had long resided in England as Ambassador
from the United Provinces, and Everard Van Dykvelt, who, after the death
of Charles, had been sent by the State General on a special mission of
condolence and congratulation. The King said that he had received from
unquestionable sources intelligence of designs which were forming against
the throne by his banished subjects in Holland. Some of the exiles were
cutthroats, whom nothing but the special providence of God had prevented
from committing a foul murder; and among them was the owner of the spot
which had been fixed for the butchery. "Of all men living," said the King,
"Argyle has the greatest means of annoying me; and of all places Holland
is that whence a blow may be best aimed against me." The Dutch envoys
assured his Majesty that what he had said should instantly be communicated
to the government which they represented, and expressed their full
confidence that every exertion would be made to satisfy him. <SPAN href="#linknote-344" name="linknoteref-344" id="linknoteref-344"><small>344</small></SPAN></p>
<p>They were justified in expressing this confidence. Both the Prince of
Orange and the States General, were, at this time, most desirous that the
hospitality of their country should not be abused for purposes of which
the English government could justly complain. James had lately held
language which encouraged the hope that he would not patiently submit to
the ascendancy of France. It seemed probable that he would consent to form
a close alliance with the United Provinces and the House of Austria. There
was, therefore, at the Hague, an extreme anxiety to avoid all that could
give him offence. The personal interest of William was also on this
occasion identical with the interest of his father in law.</p>
<p>But the case was one which required rapid and vigorous action; and the
nature of the Batavian institutions made such action almost impossible.
The Union of Utrecht, rudely formed, amidst the agonies of a revolution,
for the purpose of meeting immediate exigencies, had never been
deliberately revised and perfected in a time of tranquillity. Every one of
the seven commonwealths which that Union had bound together retained
almost all the rights of sovereignty, and asserted those rights
punctiliously against the central government. As the federal authorities
had not the means of exacting prompt obedience from the provincial
authorities, so the provincial authorities had not the means of exacting
prompt obedience from the municipal authorities. Holland alone contained
eighteen cities, each of which was, for many purposes, an independent
state, jealous of all interference from without. If the rulers of such a
city received from the Hague an order which was unpleasing to them, they
either neglected it altogether, or executed it languidly and tardily. In
some town councils, indeed, the influence of the Prince of Orange was all
powerful. But unfortunately the place where the British exiles had
congregated, and where their ships had been fitted out, was the rich and
populous Amsterdam; and the magistrates of Amsterdam were the heads of the
faction hostile to the federal government and to the House of Nassau. The
naval administration of the United Provinces was conducted by five
distinct boards of Admiralty. One of those boards sate at Amsterdam, was
partly nominated by the authorities of that city, and seems to have been
entirely animated by their spirit.</p>
<p>All the endeavours of the federal government to effect what James desired
were frustrated by the evasions of the functionaries of Amsterdam, and by
the blunders of Colonel Bevil Skelton, who had just arrived at the Hague
as envoy from England. Skelton had been born in Holland during the English
troubles, and was therefore supposed to be peculiarly qualified for his
post; <SPAN href="#linknote-345" name="linknoteref-345" id="linknoteref-345"><small>345</small></SPAN>
but he was, in truth, unfit for that and for every other diplomatic
situation. Excellent judges of character pronounced him to be the most
shallow, fickle, passionate, presumptuous, and garrulous of men. <SPAN href="#linknote-346" name="linknoteref-346" id="linknoteref-346"><small>346</small></SPAN>
He took no serious notice of the proceedings of the refugees till three
vessels which had been equipped for the expedition to Scotland were safe
out of the Zuyder Zee, till the arms, ammunition, and provisions were on
board, and till the passengers had embarked. Then, instead of applying, as
he should have done, to the States General, who sate close to his own
door, he sent a messenger to the magistrates of Amsterdam, with a request
that the suspected ships might be detained. The magistrates of Amsterdam
answered that the entrance of the Zuyder Zee was out of their
jurisdiction, and referred him to the federal government. It was notorious
that this was a mere excuse, and that, if there had been any real wish at
the Stadthouse of Amsterdam to prevent Argyle from sailing, no
difficulties would have been made. Skelton now addressed himself to the
States General. They showed every disposition to comply with his demand,
and, as the case was urgent, departed from the course which they
ordinarily observed in the transaction of business. On the same day on
which he made his application to them, an order, drawn in exact conformity
with his request, was despatched to the Admiralty of Amsterdam. But this
order, in consequence of some misinformation, did not correctly describe
the situation of the ships. They were said to be in the Texel. They were
in the Vlie. The Admiralty of Amsterdam made this error a plea for doing
nothing; and, before the error could be rectified, the three ships had
sailed. <SPAN href="#linknote-347" name="linknoteref-347" id="linknoteref-347"><small>347</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The last hours which Argyle passed on the coast of Holland were hours of
great anxiety. Near him lay a Dutch man of war whose broadside would in a
moment have put an end to his expedition. Round his little fleet a boat
was rowing, in which were some persons with telescopes whom he suspected
to be spies. But no effectual step was taken for the purpose of detaining
him; and on the afternoon of the second of May he stood out to sea before
a favourable breeze.</p>
<p>The voyage was prosperous. On the sixth the Orkneys were in sight. Argyle
very unwisely anchored off Kirkwall, and allowed two of his followers to
go on shore there. The Bishop ordered them to be arrested. The refugees
proceeded to hold a long and animated debate on this misadventure: for,
from the beginning to the end of their expedition, however languid and
irresolute their conduct might be, they never in debate wanted spirit or
perseverance. Some were for an attack on Kirkwall. Some were for
proceeding without delay to Argyleshire. At last the Earl seized some
gentlemen who lived near the coast of the island, and proposed to the
Bishop an exchange of prisoners. The Bishop returned no answer; and the
fleet, after losing three days, sailed away.</p>
<p>This delay was full of danger. It was speedily known at Edinburgh that the
rebel squadron had touched at the Orkneys. Troops were instantly put in
motion. When the Earl reached his own province, he found that preparations
had been made to repel him. At Dunstaffnage he sent his second son Charles
on Shore to call the Campbells to arms. But Charles returned with gloomy
tidings. The herdsmen and fishermen were indeed ready to rally round Mac
Callum More; but, of the heads of the clan, some were in confinement, and
others had fled. Those gentlemen who remained at their homes were either
well affected to the government or afraid of moving, and refused even to
see the son of their chief. From Dunstaffnage the small armament proceeded
to Campbelltown, near the southern extremity of the peninsula of Kintyre.
Here the Earl published a manifesto, drawn up in Holland, under the
direction of the Committee, by James Stewart, a Scotch advocate, whose pen
was, a few months later, employed in a very different way. In this paper
were set forth, with a strength of language sometimes approaching to
scurrility, many real and some imaginary grievances. It was hinted that
the late King had died by poison. A chief object of the expedition was
declared to be the entire suppression, not only of Popery, but of Prelacy,
which was termed the most bitter root and offspring of Popery; and all
good Scotchmen were exhorted to do valiantly for the cause of their
country and of their God.</p>
<p>Zealous as Argyle was for what he considered as pure religion, he did not
scruple to practice one rite half Popish and half Pagan. The mysterious
cross of yew, first set on fire, and then quenched in the blood of a goat,
was sent forth to summon all the Campbells, from sixteen to sixty. The
isthmus of Tarbet was appointed for the place of gathering. The muster,
though small indeed when compared with what it would have been if the
spirit and strength of the clan had been unbroken, was still formidable.
The whole force assembled amounted to about eighteen hundred men. Argyle
divided his mountaineers into three regiments, and proceeded to appoint
officers.</p>
<p>The bickerings which had begun in Holland had never been intermitted
during the whole course of the expedition; but at Tarbet they became more
violent than ever. The Committee wished to interfere even with the
patriarchal dominion of the Earl over the Campbells, and would not allow
him to settle the military rank of his kinsmen by his own authority. While
these disputatious meddlers tried to wrest from him his power over the
Highlands, they carried on their own correspondence with the Lowlands, and
received and sent letters which were never communicated to the nominal
General. Hume and his confederates had reserved to themselves the
superintendence of the Stores, and conducted this important part of the
administration of war with a laxity hardly to be distinguished from
dishonesty, suffered the arms to be spoiled, wasted the provisions, and
lived riotously at a time when they ought to have set to all beneath them
an example of abstemiousness.</p>
<p>The great question was whether the Highlands or the Lowlands should be the
seat of war. The Earl's first object was to establish his authority over
his own domains, to drive out the invading clans which had been poured
from Perthshire into Argyleshire, and to take possession of the ancient
seat of his family at Inverary. He might then hope to have four or five
thousand claymores at his command. With such a force he would be able to
defend that wild country against the whole power of the kingdom of
Scotland, and would also have secured an excellent base for offensive
operations. This seems to have been the wisest course open to him.
Rumbold, who had been trained in an excellent military school, and who, as
an Englishman, might be supposed to be an impartial umpire between the
Scottish factions, did all in his power to strengthen the Earl's hands.
But Hume and Cochrane were utterly impracticable. Their jealousy of Argyle
was, in truth, stronger than their wish for the success of the expedition.
They saw that, among his own mountains and lakes, and at the head of an
army chiefly composed of his own tribe, he would be able to bear down
their opposition, and to exercise the full authority of a General. They
muttered that the only men who had the good cause at heart were the
Lowlanders, and that the Campbells took up arms neither for liberty nor
for the Church of God, but for Mac Callum More alone.</p>
<p>Cochrane declared that he would go to Ayrshire if he went by himself, and
with nothing but a pitchfork in his hand. Argyle, after long resistance,
consented, against his better judgment, to divide his little army. He
remained with Rumbold in the Highlands. Cochrane and Hume were at the head
of the force which sailed to invade the Lowlands.</p>
<p>Ayrshire was Cochrane's object: but the coast of Ayrshire was guarded by
English frigates; and the adventurers were under the necessity of running
up the estuary of the Clyde to Greenock, then a small fishing village
consisting of a single row of thatched hovels, now a great and flourishing
port, of which the customs amount to more than five times the whole
revenue which the Stuarts derived from the kingdom of Scotland. A party of
militia lay at Greenock: but Cochrane, who wanted provisions, was
determined to land. Hume objected. Cochrane was peremptory, and ordered an
officer, named Elphinstone, to take twenty men in a boat to the shore. But
the wrangling spirit of the leaders had infected all ranks. Elphinstone
answered that he was bound to obey only reasonable commands, that he
considered this command as unreasonable, and, in short, that he would not
go. Major Fullarton, a brave man, esteemed by all parties, but peculiarly
attached to Argyle, undertook to land with only twelve men, and did so in
spite of a fire from the coast. A slight skirmish followed. The militia
fell back. Cochrane entered Greenock and procured a supply of meal, but
found no disposition to insurrection among the people.</p>
<p>In fact, the state of public feeling in Scotland was not such as the
exiles, misled by the infatuation common in all ages to exiles, had
supposed it to be. The government was, indeed, hateful and hated. But the
malecontents were divided into parties which were almost as hostile to one
another as to their rulers; nor was any of those parties eager to join the
invaders. Many thought that the insurrection had no chance of success. The
spirit of many had been effectually broken by long and cruel oppression.
There was, indeed, a class of enthusiasts who were little in the habit of
calculating chances, and whom oppression had not tamed but maddened. But
these men saw little difference between Argyle and James. Their wrath had
been heated to such a temperature that what everybody else would have
called boiling zeal seemed to them Laodicean lukewarmness. The Earl's past
life had been stained by what they regarded as the vilest apostasy. The
very Highlanders whom he now summoned to extirpate Prelacy he had a few
years before summoned to defend it. And were slaves who knew nothing and
cared nothing about religion, who were ready to fight for synodical
government, for Episcopacy, for Popery, just as Mac Callum More might be
pleased to command, fit allies for the people of God? The manifesto,
indecent and intolerant as was its tone, was, in the view of these
fanatics, a cowardly and worldly performance. A settlement such as Argyle
would have made, such as was afterwards made by a mightier and happier
deliverer, seemed to them not worth a struggle. They wanted not only
freedom of conscience for themselves, but absolute dominion over the
consciences of others; not only the Presbyterian doctrine, polity, and
worship, but the Covenant in its utmost rigour. Nothing would content them
but that every end for which civil society exists should be sacrificed to
the ascendency of a theological system. One who believed no form of church
government to be worth a breach of Christian charity, and who recommended
comprehension and toleration, was in their phrase, halting between Jehovah
and Baal. One who condemned such acts as the murder of Cardinal Beatoun
and Archbishop Sharpe fell into the same sin for which Saul had been
rejected from being King over Israel. All the rules, by which, among
civilised and Christian men, the horrors of war are mitigated, were
abominations in the sight of the Lord. Quarter was to be neither taken nor
given. A Malay running a muck, a mad dog pursued by a crowd, were the
models to be imitated by warriors fighting in just self-defence. To
reasons such as guide the conduct of statesmen and generals the minds of
these zealots were absolutely impervious. That a man should venture to
urge such reasons was sufficient evidence that he was not one of the
faithful. If the divine blessing were withheld, little would be effected
by crafty politicians, by veteran captains, by cases of arms from Holland,
or by regiments of unregenerate Celts from the mountains of Lorn. If, on
the other hand, the Lord's time were indeed come, he could still, as of
old, cause the foolish things of the world to confound the wise, and could
save alike by many and by few. The broadswords of Athol and the bayonets
of Claverhouse would be put to rout by weapons as insignificant as the
sling of David or the pitcher of Gideon. <SPAN href="#linknote-348"
name="linknoteref-348" id="linknoteref-348"><small>348</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Cochrane, having found it impossible to raise the population on the south
of the Clyde, rejoined Argyle, who was in the island of Bute. The Earl now
again proposed to make an attempt upon Inverary. Again he encountered a
pertinacious opposition. The seamen sided with Hume and Cochrane. The
Highlanders were absolutely at the command of their chieftain. There was
reason to fear that the two parties would come to blows; and the dread of
such a disaster induced the Committee to make some concession. The castle
of Ealan Ghierig, situated at the mouth of Loch Riddan, was selected to be
the chief place of arms. The military stores were disembarked there. The
squadron was moored close to the walls in a place where it was protected
by rocks and shallows such as, it was thought, no frigate could pass.
Outworks were thrown up. A battery was planted with some small guns taken
from the ships. The command of the fort was most unwisely given to
Elphinstone, who had already proved himself much more disposed to argue
with his commanders than to fight the enemy.</p>
<p>And now, during a few hours, there was some show of vigour. Rumbold took
the castle of Ardkinglass. The Earl skirmished successfully with Athol's
troops, and was about to advance on Inverary, when alarming news from the
ships and factions in the Committee forced him to turn back. The King's
frigates had come nearer to Ealan Ghierig than had been thought possible.
The Lowland gentlemen positively refused to advance further into the
Highlands. Argyle hastened back to Ealan Ghierig. There he proposed to
make an attack on the frigates. His ships, indeed, were ill fitted for
such an encounter. But they would have been supported by a flotilla of
thirty large fishing boats, each well manned with armed Highlanders. The
Committee, however, refused to listen to this plan, and effectually
counteracted it by raising a mutiny among the sailors.</p>
<p>All was now confusion and despondency. The provisions had been so ill
managed by the Committee that there was no longer food for the troops. The
Highlanders consequently deserted by hundreds; and the Earl, brokenhearted
by his misfortunes, yielded to the urgency of those who still
pertinaciously insisted that he should march into the Lowlands.</p>
<p>The little army therefore hastened to the shore of Loch Long, passed that
inlet by night in boats, and landed in Dumbartonshire. Hither, on the
following morning, came news that the frigates had forced a passage, that
all the Earl's ships had been taken, and that Elphinstone had fled from
Ealan Ghierig without a blow, leaving the castle and stores to the enemy.</p>
<p>All that remained was to invade the Lowlands under every disadvantage.
Argyle resolved to make a bold push for Glasgow. But, as soon as this
resolution was announced, the very men, who had, up to that moment, been
urging him to hasten into the low country, took fright, argued,
remonstrated, and when argument and remonstrance proved vain, laid a
scheme for seizing the boats, making their own escape, and leaving their
General and his clansmen to conquer or perish unaided. This scheme failed;
and the poltroons who had formed it were compelled to share with braver
men the risks of the last venture.</p>
<p>During the march through the country which lies between Loch Long and Loch
Lomond, the insurgents were constantly infested by parties of militia.
Some skirmishes took place, in which the Earl had the advantage; but the
bands which he repelled, falling back before him, spread the tidings of
his approach, and, soon after he had crossed the river Leven, he found a
strong body of regular and irregular troops prepared to encounter him.</p>
<p>He was for giving battle. Ayloffe was of the same opinion. Hume, on the
other hand, declared that to fight would be madness. He saw one regiment
in scarlet. More might be behind. To attack such a force was to rush on
certain death The best course was to remain quiet till night, and then to
give the enemy the slip.</p>
<p>A sharp altercation followed, which was with difficulty quieted by the
mediation of Rumbold. It was now evening. The hostile armies encamped at
no great distance from each other. The Earl ventured to propose a night
attack, and was again overruled.</p>
<p>Since it was determined not to fight, nothing was left but to take the
step which Hume had recommended. There was a chance that, by decamping
secretly, and hastening all night across heaths and morasses, the Earl
might gain many miles on the enemy, and might reach Glasgow without
further obstruction. The watch fires were left burning; and the march
began. And now disaster followed disaster fast. The guides mistook the
track across the moors, and led the army into boggy ground. Military order
could not be preserved by undisciplined and disheartened soldiers under a
dark sky, and on a treacherous and uneven soil. Panic after panic spread
through the broken ranks. Every sight and sound was thought to indicate
the approach of pursuers. Some of the officers contributed to spread the
terror which it was their duty to calm. The army had become a mob; and the
mob melted fast away. Great numbers fled under cover of the night. Rumbold
and a few other brave men whom no danger could have scared lost their way,
and were unable to rejoin the main body. When the day broke, only five
hundred fugitives, wearied and dispirited, assembled at Kilpatrick.</p>
<p>All thought of prosecuting the war was at an end: and it was plain that
the chiefs of the expedition would have sufficient difficulty in escaping
with their lives. They fled in different directions. Hume reached the
Continent in safety. Cochrane was taken and sent up to London. Argyle
hoped to find a secure asylum under the roof of one of his old servants
who lived near Kilpatrick. But this hope was disappointed; and he was
forced to cross the Clyde. He assumed the dress of a peasant and pretended
to be the guide of Major Fullarton, whose courageous fidelity was proof to
all danger. The friends journeyed together through Renfrewshire as far as
Inchinnan. At that place the Black Cart and the White Cart, two streams
which now flow through prosperous towns, and turn the wheels of many
factories, but which then held their quiet course through moors and
sheepwalks, mingle before they join the Clyde. The only ford by which the
travellers could cross was guarded by a party of militia. Some questions
were asked. Fullarton tried to draw suspicion on himself, in order that
his companion might escape unnoticed. But the minds of the questioners
misgave them that the guide was not the rude clown that he seemed. They
laid hands on him. He broke loose and sprang into the water, but was
instantly chased. He stood at bay for a short time against five
assailants. But he had no arms except his pocket pistols, and they were so
wet, in consequence of his plunge, that they would not go off. He was
struck to the ground with a broadsword, and secured.</p>
<p>He owned himself to be the Earl of Argyle, probably in the hope that his
great name would excite the awe and pity of those who had seized him. And
indeed they were much moved. For they were plain Scotchmen of humble rank,
and, though in arms for the crown, probably cherished a preference for the
Calvinistic church government and worship, and had been accustomed to
reverence their captive as the head of an illustrious house and as a
champion of the Protestant religion But, though they were evidently
touched, and though some of them even wept, they were not disposed to
relinquish a large reward and to incur the vengeance of an implacable
government. They therefore conveyed their prisoner to Renfrew. The man who
bore the chief part in the arrest was named Riddell. On this account the
whole race of Riddells was, during more than a century, held in abhorrence
by the great tribe of Campbell. Within living memory, when a Riddell
visited a fair in Argyleshire, he found it necessary to assume a false
name.</p>
<p>And now commenced the brightest part of Argyle's career. His enterprise
had hitherto brought on him nothing but reproach and derision. His great
error was that he did not resolutely refuse to accept the name without the
power of a general. Had he remained quietly at his retreat in Friesland,
he would in a few years have been recalled with honour to his country, and
would have been conspicuous among the ornaments and the props of
constitutional monarchy. Had he conducted his expedition according to his
own views, and carried with him no followers but such as were prepared
implicitly to obey all his orders, he might possibly have effected
something great. For what he wanted as a captain seems to have been, not
courage, nor activity, nor skill, but simply authority. He should have
known that of all wants this is the most fatal. Armies have triumphed
under leaders who possessed no very eminent qualifications. But what army
commanded by a debating club ever escaped discomfiture and disgrace?</p>
<p>The great calamity which had fallen on Argyle had this advantage, that it
enabled him to show, by proofs not to be mistaken, what manner of man he
was. From the day when he quitted. Friesland to the day when his followers
separated at Kilpatrick, he had never been a free agent. He had borne the
responsibility of a long series of measures which his judgment
disapproved. Now at length he stood alone. Captivity had restored to him
the noblest kind of liberty, the liberty of governing himself in all his
words and actions according to his own sense of the right and of the
becoming. From that moment he became as one inspired with new wisdom and
virtue. His intellect seemed to be strengthened and concentrated, his
moral character to be at once elevated and softened. The insolence of the
conquerors spared nothing that could try the temper of a man proud of
ancient nobility and of patriarchal dominion. The prisoner was dragged
through Edinburgh in triumph. He walked on foot, bareheaded, up the whole
length of that stately street which, overshadowed by dark and gigantic
piles of stone, leads from Holyrood House to the Castle. Before him
marched the hangman, bearing the ghastly instrument which was to be used
at the quartering block. The victorious party had not forgotten that,
thirty-five years before this time, the father of Argyle had been at the
head of the faction which put Montrose to death. Before that event the
houses of Graham and Campbell had borne no love to each other; and they
had ever since been at deadly feud. Care was taken that the prisoner
should pass through the same gate and the same streets through which
Montrose had been led to the same doom. <SPAN href="#linknote-349"
name="linknoteref-349" id="linknoteref-349"><small>349</small></SPAN> When
the Earl reached the Castle his legs were put in irons, and he was
informed that he had but a few days to live. It had been determined not to
bring him to trial for his recent offence, but to put him to death under
the sentence pronounced against him several years before, a sentence so
flagitiously unjust that the most servile and obdurate lawyers of that bad
age could not speak of it without shame.</p>
<p>But neither the ignominious procession up the High Street, nor the near
view of death, had power to disturb the gentle and majestic patience of
Argyle. His fortitude was tried by a still more severe test. A paper of
interrogatories was laid before him by order of the Privy Council. He
replied to those questions to which he could reply without danger to any
of his friends, and refused to say more. He was told that unless he
returned fuller answers he should be put to the torture. James, who was
doubtless sorry that he could not feast his own eyes with the sight of
Argyle in the boots, sent down to Edinburgh positive orders that nothing
should be omitted which could wring out of the traitor information against
all who had been concerned in the treason. But menaces were vain. With
torments and death in immediate prospect Mac Callum More thought far less
of himself than of his poor clansmen. "I was busy this day," he wrote from
his cell, "treating for them, and in some hopes. But this evening orders
came that I must die upon Monday or Tuesday; and I am to be put to the
torture if I answer not all questions upon oath. Yet I hope God shall
support me."</p>
<p>The torture was not inflicted. Perhaps the magnanimity of the victim had
moved the conquerors to unwonted compassion. He himself remarked that at
first they had been very harsh to him, but that they soon began to treat
him with respect and kindness. God, he said, had melted their hearts. It
is certain that he did not, to save himself from the utmost cruelty of his
enemies, betray any of his friends. On the last morning of his life he
wrote these words: "I have named none to their disadvantage. I thank God
he hath supported me wonderfully!"</p>
<p>He composed his own epitaph, a short poem, full of meaning and spirit,
simple and forcible in style, and not contemptible in versification. In
this little piece he complained that, though his enemies had repeatedly
decreed his death, his friends had been still more cruel. A comment on
these expressions is to be found in a letter which he addressed to a lady
residing in Holland. She had furnished him with a large sum of money for
his expedition, and he thought her entitled to a full explanation of the
causes which had led to his failure. He acquitted his coadjutors of
treachery, but described their folly, their ignorance, and their factious
perverseness, in terms which their own testimony has since proved to have
been richly deserved. He afterwards doubted whether he had not used
language too severe to become a dying Christian, and, in a separate paper,
begged his friend to suppress what he had said of these men "Only this I
must acknowledge," he mildly added; "they were not governable."</p>
<p>Most of his few remaining hours were passed in devotion, and in
affectionate intercourse with some members of his family. He professed no
repentance on account of his last enterprise, but bewailed, with great
emotion, his former compliance in spiritual things with the pleasure of
the government He had, he said, been justly punished. One who had so long
been guilty of cowardice and dissimulation was not worthy to be the
instrument of salvation to the State and Church. Yet the cause, he
frequently repeated, was the cause of God, and would assuredly triumph. "I
do not," he said, "take on myself to be a prophet. But I have a strong
impression on my spirit, that deliverance will come very suddenly." It is
not strange that some zealous Presbyterians should have laid up his saying
in their hearts, and should, at a later period, have attributed it to
divine inspiration.</p>
<p>So effectually had religious faith and hope, co-operating with natural
courage and equanimity, composed his spirits, that, on the very day on
which he was to die, he dined with appetite, conversed with gaiety at
table, and, after his last meal, lay down, as he was wont, to take a short
slumber, in order that his body and mind might be in full vigour when he
should mount the scaffold. At this time one of the Lords of the Council,
who had probably been bred a Presbyterian, and had been seduced by
interest to join in oppressing the Church of which he had once been a
member, came to the Castle with a message from his brethren, and demanded
admittance to the Earl. It was answered that the Earl was asleep. The
Privy Councillor thought that this was a subterfuge, and insisted on
entering. The door of the cell was softly opened; and there lay Argyle, on
the bed, sleeping, in his irons, the placid sleep of infancy. The
conscience of the renegade smote him. He turned away sick at heart, ran
out of the Castle, and took refuge in the dwelling of a lady of his family
who lived hard by. There he flung himself on a couch, and gave himself up
to an agony of remorse and shame. His kinswoman, alarmed by his looks and
groans, thought that he had been taken with sudden illness, and begged him
to drink a cup of sack. "No, no," he said; "that will do me no good." She
prayed him to tell her what had disturbed him. "I have been," he said, "in
Argyle's prison. I have seen him within an hour of eternity, sleeping as
sweetly as ever man did. But as for me ———-"</p>
<p>And now the Earl had risen from his bed, and had prepared himself for what
was yet to be endured. He was first brought down the High Street to the
Council House, where he was to remain during the short interval which was
still to elapse before the execution. During that interval he asked for
pen and ink, and wrote to his wife: "Dear heart, God is unchangeable: He
hath always been good and gracious to me: and no place alters it. Forgive
me all my faults; and now comfort thyself in Him, in whom only true
comfort is to be found. The Lord be with thee, bless and comfort thee, my
dearest. Adieu."</p>
<p>It was now time to leave the Council House. The divines who attended the
prisoner were not of his own persuasion; but he listened to them with
civility, and exhorted them to caution their flocks against those
doctrines which all Protestant churches unite in condemning. He mounted
the scaffold, where the rude old guillotine of Scotland, called the
Maiden, awaited him, and addressed the people in a speech, tinctured with
the peculiar phraseology of his sect, but breathing the spirit of serene
piety. His enemies, he said, he forgave, as he hoped to be forgiven. Only
a single acrimonious expression escaped him. One of the episcopal
clergymen who attended him went to the edge of the scaffold, and called
out in a loud voice, "My Lord dies a Protestant." "Yes," said the Earl,
stepping forward, "and not only a Protestant, but with a heart hatred of
Popery, of Prelacy, and of all superstition." He then embraced his
friends, put into their hands some tokens of remembrance for his wife and
children, kneeled down, laid his head on the block, prayed during a few
minutes, and gave the signal to the executioner. His head was fixed on the
top of the Tolbooth, where the head of Montrose had formerly decayed. <SPAN href="#linknote-350" name="linknoteref-350" id="linknoteref-350"><small>350</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The head of the brave and sincere, though not blameless Rumbold, was
already on the West Port of Edinburgh. Surrounded by factious and cowardly
associates, he had, through the whole campaign, behaved himself like a
soldier trained in the school of the great Protector, had in council
strenuously supported the authority of Argyle, and had in the field been
distinguished by tranquil intrepidity. After the dispersion of the army he
was set upon by a party of militia. He defended himself desperately, and
would have cut his way through them, had they not hamstringed his horse.
He was brought to Edinburgh mortally wounded. The wish of the government
was that he should be executed in England. But he was so near death, that,
if he was not hanged in Scotland, he could not be hanged at all; and the
pleasure of hanging him was one which the conquerors could not bear to
forego. It was indeed not to be expected that they would show much lenity
to one who was regarded as the chief of the Rye House plot, and who was
the owner of the building from which that plot took its name: but the
insolence with which they treated the dying man seems to our more humane
age almost incredible. One of the Scotch Privy Councillors told him that
he was a confounded villain. "I am at peace with God," answered Rumbold,
calmly; "how then can I be confounded?"</p>
<p>He was hastily tried, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged and quartered
within a few hours, near the City Cross in the High Street. Though unable
to stand without the support of two men, he maintained his fortitude to
the last, and under the gibbet raised his feeble voice against Popery and
tyranny with such vehemence that the officers ordered the drums to strike
up, lest the people should hear him. He was a friend, he said, to limited
monarchy. But he never would believe that Providence had sent a few men
into the world ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready
saddled and bridled to be ridden. "I desire," he cried, "to bless and
magnify God's holy name for this, that I stand here, not for any wrong
that I have done, but for adhering to his cause in an evil day. If every
hair of my head were a man, in this quarrel I would venture them all."</p>
<p>Both at his trial and at his execution he spoke of assassination with the
abhorrence which became a good Christian and a brave soldier. He had
never, he protested, on the faith of a dying man, harboured the thought of
committing such villany. But he frankly owned that, in conversation with
his fellow conspirators, he had mentioned his own house as a place where
Charles and James might with advantage be attacked, and that much had been
said on the subject, though nothing had been determined. It may at first
sight seem that this acknowledgment is inconsistent with his declaration
that he had always regarded assassination with horror. But the truth
appears to be that he was imposed upon by a distinction which deluded many
of his contemporaries. Nothing would have induced him to put poison into
the food of the two princes, or to poinard them in their sleep. But to
make an unexpected onset on the troop of Life Guards which surrounded the
royal coach, to exchange sword cuts and pistol shots, and to take the
chance of slaying or of being slain, was, in his view, a lawful military
operation. Ambuscades and surprises were among the ordinary incidents of
war. Every old soldier, Cavalier or Roundhead, had been engaged in such
enterprises. If in the skirmish the King should fall, he would fall by
fair fighting and not by murder. Precisely the same reasoning was
employed, after the Revolution, by James himself and by some of his most
devoted followers, to justify a wicked attempt on the life of William the
Third. A band of Jacobites was commissioned to attack the Prince of Orange
in his winter quarters. The meaning latent under this specious phrase was
that the Prince's throat was to be cut as he went in his coach from
Richmond to Kensington. It may seem strange that such fallacies, the dregs
of the Jesuitical casuistry, should have had power to seduce men of heroic
spirit, both Whigs and Tories, into a crime on which divine and human laws
have justly set a peculiar note of infamy. But no sophism is too gross to
delude minds distempered by party spirit. <SPAN href="#linknote-351"
name="linknoteref-351" id="linknoteref-351"><small>351</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Argyle, who survived Rumbold a few hours, left a dying testimony to the
virtues of the gallant Englishman. "Poor Rumbold was a great support to
me, and a brave man, and died Christianly." <SPAN href="#linknote-352"
name="linknoteref-352" id="linknoteref-352"><small>352</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Ayloffe showed as much contempt of death as either Argyle or Rumbold: but
his end did not, like theirs, edify pious minds. Though political sympathy
had drawn him towards the Puritans, he had no religious sympathy with
them, and was indeed regarded by them as little better than an atheist. He
belonged to that section of the Whigs which sought for models rather among
the patriots of Greece and Rome than among the prophets and judges of
Israel. He was taken prisoner, and carried to Glasgow. There he attempted
to destroy himself with a small penknife: but though he gave himself
several wounds, none of them proved mortal, and he had strength enough
left to bear a journey to London. He was brought before the Privy Council,
and interrogated by the King, but had too much elevation of mind to save
himself by informing against others. A story was current among the Whigs
that the King said, "You had better be frank with me, Mr. Ayloffe. You
know that it is in my power to pardon you." Then, it was rumoured, the
captive broke his sullen silence, and answered, "It may be in your power;
but it is not in your nature." He was executed under his old outlawry
before the gate of the Temple, and died with stoical composure. <SPAN href="#linknote-353" name="linknoteref-353" id="linknoteref-353"><small>353</small></SPAN></p>
<p>In the meantime the vengeance of the conquerors was mercilessly wreaked on
the people of Argyleshire. Many of the Campbells were hanged by Athol
without a trial; and he was with difficulty restrained by the Privy
Council from taking more lives. The country to the extent of thirty miles
round Inverary was wasted. Houses were burned: the stones of mills were
broken to pieces: fruit trees were cut down, and the very roots seared
with fire. The nets and fishing boats, the sole means by which many
inhabitants of the coast subsisted, were destroyed. More than three
hundred rebels and malecontents were transported to the colonies. Many of
them were also Sentenced to mutilation. On a single day the hangman of
Edinburgh cut off the ears of thirty-five prisoners. Several women were
sent across the Atlantic after being first branded in the cheek with a hot
iron. It was even in contemplation to obtain an act of Parliament
proscribing the name of Campbell, as the name of Macgregor had been
proscribed eighty years before. <SPAN href="#linknote-354"
name="linknoteref-354" id="linknoteref-354"><small>354</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Argyle's expedition appears to have produced little sensation in the south
of the island. The tidings of his landing reached London just before the
English Parliament met. The King mentioned the news from the throne; and
the Houses assured him that they would stand by him against every enemy.
Nothing more was required of them. Over Scotland they had no authority;
and a war of which the theatre was so distant, and of which the event
might, almost from the first, be easily foreseen, excited only a languid
interest in London.</p>
<p>But, a week before the final dispersion of Argyle's army England was
agitated by the news that a more formidable invader had landed on her own
shores. It had been agreed among the refugees that Monmouth should sail
from Holland six days after the departure of the Scots. He had deferred
his expedition a short time, probably in the hope that most of the troops
in the south of the island would be moved to the north as soon as war
broke out in the Highlands, and that he should find no force ready to
oppose him. When at length he was desirous to proceed, the wind had become
adverse and violent.</p>
<p>While his small fleet lay tossing in the Texel, a contest was going on
among the Dutch authorities. The States General and the Prince of Orange
were on one side, the Town Council and Admiralty of Amsterdam on the
other.</p>
<p>Skelton had delivered to the States General a list of the refugees whose
residence in the United Provinces caused uneasiness to his master. The
States General, anxious to grant every reasonable request which James
could make, sent copies of the list to the provincial authorities. The
provincial authorities sent copies to the municipal authorities. The
magistrates of all the towns were directed to take such measures as might
prevent the proscribed Whigs from molesting the English government. In
general those directions were obeyed. At Rotterdam in particular, where
the influence of William was all powerful, such activity was shown as
called forth warm acknowledgments from James. But Amsterdam was the chief
seat of the emigrants; and the governing body of Amsterdam would see
nothing, hear nothing, know of nothing. The High Bailiff of the city, who
was himself in daily communication with Ferguson, reported to the Hague
that he did not know where to find a single one of the refugees; and with
this excuse the federal government was forced to be content. The truth was
that the English exiles were as well known at Amsterdam, and as much
stared at in the streets, as if they had been Chinese. <SPAN href="#linknote-355" name="linknoteref-355" id="linknoteref-355"><small>355</small></SPAN></p>
<p>A few days later, Skelton received orders from his Court to request that,
in consequence of the dangers which threatened his master's throne, the
three Scotch regiments in the service of the United Provinces might be
sent to Great Britain without delay. He applied to the Prince of Orange;
and the prince undertook to manage the matter, but predicted that
Amsterdam would raise some difficulty. The prediction proved correct. The
deputies of Amsterdam refused to consent, and succeeded in causing some
delay. But the question was not one of those on which, by the constitution
of the republic, a single city could prevent the wish of the majority from
being carried into effect. The influence of William prevailed; and the
troops were embarked with great expedition. <SPAN href="#linknote-356"
name="linknoteref-356" id="linknoteref-356"><small>356</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Skelton was at the same time exerting himself, not indeed very judiciously
or temperately, to stop the ships which the English refugees had fitted
out. He expostulated in warm terms with the Admiralty of Amsterdam. The
negligence of that board, he said, had already enabled one band of rebels
to invade Britain. For a second error of the same kind there could be no
excuse. He peremptorily demanded that a large vessel, named the
Helderenbergh, might be detained. It was pretended that this vessel was
bound for the Canaries. But in truth, she had been freighted by Monmouth,
carried twenty-six guns, and was loaded with arms and ammunition. The
Admiralty of Amsterdam replied that the liberty of trade and navigation
was not to be restrained for light reasons, and that the Helderenbergh
could not be stopped without an order from the States General. Skelton,
whose uniform practice seems to have been to begin at the wrong end, now
had recourse to the States General. The States General gave the necessary
orders. Then the Admiralty of Amsterdam pretended that there was not a
sufficient naval force in the Texel to seize so large a ship as the
Helderenbergh, and suffered Monmouth to sail unmolested. <SPAN href="#linknote-357" name="linknoteref-357" id="linknoteref-357"><small>357</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The weather was bad: the voyage was long; and several English men-of-war
were cruising in the channel. But Monmouth escaped both the sea and the
enemy. As he passed by the cliffs of Dorsetshire, it was thought desirable
to send a boat to the beach with one of the refugees named Thomas Dare.
This man, though of low mind and manners, had great influence at Taunton.
He was directed to hasten thither across the country, and to apprise his
friends that Monmouth would soon be on English ground. <SPAN href="#linknote-358" name="linknoteref-358" id="linknoteref-358"><small>358</small></SPAN></p>
<p>On the morning of the eleventh of June the Helderenbergh, accompanied by
two smaller vessels, appeared off the port of Lyme. That town is a small
knot of steep and narrow alleys, lying on a coast wild, rocky, and beaten
by a stormy sea. The place was then chiefly remarkable for a pier which,
in the days of the Plantagenets, had been constructed of stones, unhewn
and uncemented. This ancient work, known by the name of the Cob, enclosed
the only haven where, in a space of many miles, the fishermen could take
refuge from the tempests of the Channel.</p>
<p>The appearance of the three ships, foreign built and without colours,
perplexed the inhabitants of Lyme; and the uneasiness increased when it
was found that the Customhouse officers, who had gone on board according
to usage, did not return. The town's people repaired to the cliffs, and
gazed long and anxiously, but could find no solution of the mystery. At
length seven boats put off from the largest of the strange vessels, and
rowed to the shore. From these boats landed about eighty men, well armed
and appointed. Among them were Monmouth, Grey, Fletcher, Ferguson, Wade,
and Anthony Buyse, an officer who had been in the service of the Elector
of Brandenburg. <SPAN href="#linknote-359" name="linknoteref-359" id="linknoteref-359"><small>359</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Monmouth commanded silence, kneeled down on the shore, thanked God for
having preserved the friends of liberty and pure religion from the perils
of the sea, and implored the divine blessing on what was yet to be done by
land. He then drew his sword, and led his men over the cliffs into the
town.</p>
<p>As soon as it was known under what leader and for what purpose the
expedition came, the enthusiasm of the populace burst through all
restraints. The little town was in an uproar with men running to and fro,
and shouting "A Monmouth! a Monmouth! the Protestant religion!" Meanwhile
the ensign of the adventurers, a blue flag, was set up in the marketplace.
The military stores were deposited in the town hall; and a Declaration
setting forth the objects of the expedition was read from the Cross. <SPAN href="#linknote-360" name="linknoteref-360" id="linknoteref-360"><small>360</small></SPAN></p>
<p>This Declaration, the masterpiece of Ferguson's genius, was not a grave
manifesto such as ought to be put forth by a leader drawing the sword for
a great public cause, but a libel of the lowest class, both in sentiment
and language. <SPAN href="#linknote-361" name="linknoteref-361" id="linknoteref-361"><small>361</small></SPAN> It contained undoubtedly many
just charges against the government. But these charges were set forth in
the prolix and inflated style of a bad pamphlet; and the paper contained
other charges of which the whole disgrace falls on those who made them.
The Duke of York, it was positively affirmed, had burned down London, had
strangled Godfrey, had cut the throat of Essex, and had poisoned the late
King. On account of those villanous and unnatural crimes, but chiefly of
that execrable fact, the late horrible and barbarous parricide,—such
was the copiousness and such the felicity of Ferguson's diction,—James
was declared a mortal and bloody enemy, a tyrant, a murderer, and an
usurper. No treaty should be made with him. The sword should not be
sheathed till he had been brought to condign punishment as a traitor. The
government should be settled on principles favourable to liberty. All
Protestant sects should be tolerated. The forfeited charters should be
restored. Parliament should be held annually, and should no longer be
prorogued or dissolved by royal caprice. The only standing force should be
the militia: the militia should be commanded by the Sheriffs; and the
Sheriffs should be chosen by the freeholders. Finally Monmouth declared
that he could prove himself to have been born in lawful wedlock, and to
be, by right of blood, King of England, but that, for the present, he
waived his claims, that he would leave them to the judgment of a free
Parliament, and that, in the meantime, he desired to be considered only as
the Captain General of the English Protestants, who were in arms against
tyranny and Popery.</p>
<p>Disgraceful as this manifesto was to those who put it forth, it was not
unskilfully framed for the purpose of stimulating the passions of the
vulgar. In the West the effect was great. The gentry and clergy of that
part of England were indeed, with few exceptions, Tories. But the yeomen,
the traders of the towns, the peasants, and the artisans were generally
animated by the old Roundhead spirit. Many of them were Dissenters, and
had been goaded by petty persecution into a temper fit for desperate
enterprise. The great mass of the population abhorred Popery and adored
Monmouth. He was no stranger to them. His progress through Somersetshire
and Devonshire in the summer of 1680 was still fresh in the memory of all
men.</p>
<p>He was on that occasion sumptuously entertained by Thomas Thynne at
Longleat Hall, then, and perhaps still, the most magnificent country house
in England. From Longleat to Exeter the hedges were lined with shouting
spectators. The roads were strewn with boughs and flowers. The multitude,
in their eagerness to see and touch their favourite, broke down the
palings of parks, and besieged the mansions where he was feasted. When he
reached Chard his escort consisted of five thousand horsemen. At Exeter
all Devonshire had been gathered together to welcome him. One striking
part of the show was a company of nine hundred young men who, clad in a
white uniform, marched before him into the city. <SPAN href="#linknote-362"
name="linknoteref-362" id="linknoteref-362"><small>362</small></SPAN> The
turn of fortune which had alienated the gentry from his cause had produced
no effect on the common people. To them he was still the good Duke, the
Protestant Duke, the rightful heir whom a vile conspiracy kept out of his
own. They came to his standard in crowds. All the clerks whom he could
employ were too few to take down the names of the recruits. Before he had
been twenty-four hours on English ground he was at the head of fifteen
hundred men. Dare arrived from Taunton with forty horsemen of no very
martial appearance, and brought encouraging intelligence as to the state
of public feeling in Somersetshire. As Yet all seemed to promise well. <SPAN href="#linknote-363" name="linknoteref-363" id="linknoteref-363"><small>363</small></SPAN></p>
<p>But a force was collecting at Bridport to oppose the insurgents. On the
thirteenth of June the red regiment of Dorsetshire militia came pouring
into that town. The Somersetshire, or yellow regiment, of which Sir
William Portman, a Tory gentleman of great note, was Colonel, was expected
to arrive on the following day. <SPAN href="#linknote-364"
name="linknoteref-364" id="linknoteref-364"><small>364</small></SPAN> The
Duke determined to strike an immediate blow. A detachment of his troops
was preparing to march to Bridport when a disastrous event threw the whole
camp into confusion.</p>
<p>Fletcher of Saltoun had been appointed to command the cavalry under Grey.
Fletcher was ill mounted; and indeed there were few chargers in the camp
which had not been taken from the plough. When he was ordered to Bridport,
he thought that the exigency of the case warranted him in borrowing,
without asking permission, a fine horse belonging to Dare. Dare resented
this liberty, and assailed Fletcher with gross abuse. Fletcher kept his
temper better than any one who knew him expected. At last Dare, presuming
on the patience with which his insolence had been endured, ventured to
shake a switch at the high born and high spirited Scot Fletcher's blood
boiled. He drew a pistol and shot Dare dead. Such sudden and violent
revenge would not have been thought strange in Scotland, where the law had
always been weak, where he who did not right himself by the strong hand
was not likely to be righted at all, and where, consequently, human life
was held almost as cheap as in the worst governed provinces of Italy. But
the people of the southern part of the island were not accustomed to see
deadly weapons used and blood spilled on account of a rude word or
gesture, except in duel between gentlemen with equal arms. There was a
general cry for vengeance on the foreigner who had murdered an Englishman.
Monmouth could not resist the clamour. Fletcher, who, when his first burst
of rage had spent itself, was overwhelmed with remorse and sorrow, took
refuge on board of the Helderenbergh, escaped to the Continent, and
repaired to Hungary, where he fought bravely against the common enemy of
Christendom. <SPAN href="#linknote-365" name="linknoteref-365" id="linknoteref-365"><small>365</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Situated as the insurgents were, the loss of a man of parts and energy was
not easily to be repaired. Early on the morning of the following day, the
fourteenth of June, Grey, accompanied by Wade, marched with about five
hundred men to attack Bridport. A confused and indecisive action took
place, such as was to be expected when two bands of ploughmen, officered
by country gentlemen and barristers, were opposed to each other. For a
time Monmouth's men drove the militia before them. Then the militia made a
stand, and Monmouth's men retreated in some confusion. Grey and his
cavalry never stopped till they were safe at Lyme again: but Wade rallied
the infantry and brought them off in good order. <SPAN href="#linknote-366"
name="linknoteref-366" id="linknoteref-366"><small>366</small></SPAN></p>
<p>There was a violent outcry against Grey; and some of the adventurers
pressed Monmouth to take a severe course. Monmouth, however, would not
listen to this advice. His lenity has been attributed by some writers to
his good nature, which undoubtedly often amounted to weakness. Others have
supposed that he was unwilling to deal harshly with the only peer who
served in his army. It is probable, however, that the Duke, who, though
not a general of the highest order, understood war very much better than
the preachers and lawyers who were always obtruding their advice on him,
made allowances which people altogether inexpert in military affairs never
thought of making. In justice to a man who has had few defenders, it must
be observed that the task, which, throughout this campaign, was assigned
to Grey, was one which, if he had been the boldest and most skilful of
soldiers, he would scarcely have performed in such a manner as to gain
credit. He was at the head of the cavalry. It is notorious that a horse
soldier requires a longer training than a foot soldier, and that the war
horse requires a longer training than his rider. Something may be done
with a raw infantry which has enthusiasm and animal courage: but nothing
can be more helpless than a raw cavalry, consisting of yeomen and
tradesmen mounted on cart horses and post horses; and such was the cavalry
which Grey commanded. The wonder is, not that his men did not stand fire
with resolution, not that they did not use their weapons with vigour, but
that they were able to keep their seats.</p>
<p>Still recruits came in by hundreds. Arming and drilling went on all day.
Meantime the news of the insurrection had spread fast and wide. On the
evening on which the Duke landed, Gregory Alford, Mayor of Lyme, a zealous
Tory, and a bitter persecutor of Nonconformists, sent off his servants to
give the alarm to the gentry of Somersetshire and Dorsetshire, and himself
took horse for the West. Late at night he stopped at Honiton, and thence
despatched a few hurried lines to London with the ill tidings. <SPAN href="#linknote-367" name="linknoteref-367" id="linknoteref-367"><small>367</small></SPAN>
He then pushed on to Exeter, where he found Christopher Monk, Duke of
Albemarle. This nobleman, the son and heir of George Monk, the restorer of
the Stuarts, was Lord Lieutenant of Devonshire, and was then holding a
muster of militia. Four thousand men of the trainbands were actually
assembled under his command. He seems to have thought that, with this
force, he should be able at once to crush the rebellion. He therefore
marched towards Lyme.</p>
<p>But when, on the afternoon of Monday the fifteenth of June, he reached
Axminster, he found the insurgents drawn up there to encounter him. They
presented a resolute front. Four field pieces were pointed against the
royal troops. The thick hedges, which on each side overhung the narrow
lanes, were lined with musketeers. Albemarle, however, was less alarmed by
the preparations of the enemy than by the spirit which appeared in his own
ranks. Such was Monmouth's popularity among the common people of
Devonshire that, if once the trainbands had caught sight of his well known
face and figure, they would have probably gone over to him in a body.</p>
<p>Albemarle, therefore, though he had a great superiority of force, thought
it advisable to retreat. The retreat soon became a rout. The whole country
was strewn with the arms and uniforms which the fugitives had thrown away;
and, had Monmouth urged the pursuit with vigour, he would probably have
taken Exeter without a blow. But he was satisfied with the advantage which
he had gained, and thought it desirable that his recruits should be better
trained before they were employed in any hazardous service. He therefore
marched towards Taunton, where he arrived on the eighteenth of June,
exactly a week after his landing. <SPAN href="#linknote-368"
name="linknoteref-368" id="linknoteref-368"><small>368</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The Court and the Parliament had been greatly moved by the news from the
West. At five in the morning of Saturday the thirteenth of June, the King
had received the letter which the Mayor of Lyme had despatched from
Honiton. The Privy Council was instantly called together. Orders were
given that the strength of every company of infantry and of every troop of
cavalry should be increased. Commissions were issued for the levying of
new regiments. Alford's communication was laid before the Lords; and its
substance was communicated to the Commons by a message. The Commons
examined the couriers who had arrived from the West, and instantly ordered
a bill to be brought in for attainting Monmouth of high treason. Addresses
were voted assuring the King that both his peers and his people were
determined to stand by him with life and fortune against all his enemies.
At the next meeting of the Houses they ordered the Declaration of the
rebels to be burned by the hangman, and passed the bill of attainder
through all its stages. That bill received the royal assent on the same
day; and a reward of five thousand pounds was promised for the
apprehension of Monmouth. <SPAN href="#linknote-369" name="linknoteref-369" id="linknoteref-369"><small>369</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The fact that Monmouth was in arms against the government was so notorious
that the bill of attainder became a law with only a faint show of
opposition from one or two peers, and has seldom been severely censured
even by Whig historians. Yet, when we consider how important it is that
legislative and judicial functions should be kept distinct, how important
it is that common fame, however strong and general, should not be received
as a legal proof of guilt, how important it is to maintain the rule that
no man shall be condemned to death without an opportunity of defending
himself, and how easily and speedily breaches in great principles, when
once made, are widened, we shall probably be disposed to think that the
course taken by the Parliament was open to some objection. Neither House
had before it anything which even so corrupt a judge as Jeffreys could
have directed a jury to consider as proof of Monmouth's crime. The
messengers examined by the Commons were not on oath, and might therefore
have related mere fictions without incurring the penalties of perjury. The
Lords, who might have administered an oath, appeared not to have examined
any witness, and to have had no evidence before them except the letter of
the Mayor of Lyme, which, in the eye of the law, was no evidence at all.
Extreme danger, it is true, justifies extreme remedies. But the Act of
Attainder was a remedy which could not operate till all danger was over,
and which would become superfluous at the very moment at which it ceased
to be null. While Monmouth was in arms it was impossible to execute him.
If he should be vanquished and taken, there would be no hazard and no
difficulty in trying him. It was afterwards remembered as a curious
circumstance that, among zealous Tories who went up with the bill from the
House of Commons to the bar of the Lords, was Sir John Fenwick, member for
Northumberland. This gentleman, a few years later, had occasion to
reconsider the whole subject, and then came to the conclusion that acts of
attainder are altogether unjustifiable. <SPAN href="#linknote-370"
name="linknoteref-370" id="linknoteref-370"><small>370</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The Parliament gave other proofs of loyalty in this hour of peril. The
Commons authorised the King to raise an extraordinary sum of four hundred
thousand pounds for his present necessities, and that he might have no
difficulty in finding the money, proceeded to devise new imposts. The
scheme of taxing houses lately built in the capital was revived and
strenuously supported by the country gentlemen. It was resolved not only
that such houses should be taxed, but that a bill should be brought in
prohibiting the laying of any new foundations within the bills of
mortality. The resolution, however, was not carried into effect. Powerful
men who had land in the suburbs and who hoped to see new streets and
squares rise on their estates, exerted all their influence against the
project. It was found that to adjust the details would be a work of time;
and the King's wants were so pressing that he thought it necessary to
quicken the movements of the House by a gentle exhortation to speed. The
plan of taxing buildings was therefore relinquished; and new duties were
imposed for a term of five years on foreign silks, linens, and spirits. <SPAN href="#linknote-371" name="linknoteref-371" id="linknoteref-371"><small>371</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The Tories of the Lower House proceeded to introduce what they called a
bill for the preservation of the King's person and government. They
proposed that it should be high treason to say that Monmouth was
legitimate, to utter any words tending to bring the person or government
of the sovereign into hatred or contempt, or to make any motion in
Parliament for changing the order of succession. Some of these provisions
excited general disgust and alarm. The Whigs, few and weak as they were,
attempted to rally, and found themselves reinforced by a considerable
number of moderate and sensible Cavaliers. Words, it was said, may easily
be misunderstood by a dull man. They may be easily misconstrued by a
knave. What was spoken metaphorically may be apprehended literally. What
was spoken ludicrously may be apprehended seriously. A particle, a tense,
a mood, an emphasis, may make the whole difference between guilt and
innocence. The Saviour of mankind himself, in whose blameless life malice
could find no acts to impeach, had been called in question for words
spoken. False witnesses had suppressed a syllable which would have made it
clear that those words were figurative, and had thus furnished the
Sanhedrim with a pretext under which the foulest of all judicial murders
had been perpetrated. With such an example on record, who could affirm
that, if mere talk were made a substantive treason, the most loyal subject
would be safe? These arguments produced so great an effect that in the
committee amendments were introduced which greatly mitigated the severity
of the bill. But the clause which made it high treason in a member of
Parliament to propose the exclusion of a prince of the blood seems to have
raised no debate, and was retained. That clause was indeed altogether
unimportant, except as a proof of the ignorance and inexperience of the
hotheaded Royalists who thronged the House of Commons. Had they learned
the first rudiments of legislation, they would have known that the
enactment to which they attached so much value would be superfluous while
the Parliament was disposed to maintain the order of succession, and would
be repealed as soon as there was a Parliament bent on changing the order
of succession. <SPAN href="#linknote-372" name="linknoteref-372" id="linknoteref-372"><small>372</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The bill, as amended, was passed and carried up to the Lords, but did not
become law. The King had obtained from the Parliament all the pecuniary
assistance that he could expect; and he conceived that, while rebellion
was actually raging, the loyal nobility and gentry would be of more use in
their counties than at Westminster. He therefore hurried their
deliberations to a close, and, on the second of July, dismissed them. On
the same day the royal assent was given to a law reviving that censorship
of the press which had terminated in 1679. This object was affected by a
few words at the end of a miscellaneous statute which continued several
expiring acts. The courtiers did not think that they had gained a triumph.
The Whigs did not utter a murmur. Neither in the Lords nor in the Commons
was there any division, or even, as far as can now be learned, any debate
on a question which would, in our age, convulse the whole frame of
society. In truth, the change was slight and almost imperceptible; for,
since the detection of the Rye House plot, the liberty of unlicensed
printing had existed only in name. During many months scarcely one Whig
pamphlet had been published except by stealth; and by stealth such
pamphlets might be published still. <SPAN href="#linknote-373"
name="linknoteref-373" id="linknoteref-373"><small>373</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The Houses then rose. They were not prorogued, but only adjourned, in
order that, when they should reassemble, they might take up their business
in the exact state in which they had left it. <SPAN href="#linknote-374"
name="linknoteref-374" id="linknoteref-374"><small>374</small></SPAN></p>
<p>While the Parliament was devising sharp laws against Monmouth and his
partisans, he found at Taunton a reception which might well encourage him
to hope that his enterprise would have a prosperous issue. Taunton, like
most other towns in the south of England, was, in that age, more important
than at present. Those towns have not indeed declined. On the contrary,
they are, with very few exceptions, larger and richer, better built and
better peopled, than in the seventeenth century. But, though they have
positively advanced, they have relatively gone back. They have been far
outstripped in wealth and population by the great manufacturing and
commercial cities of the north, cities which, in the time of the Stuarts,
were but beginning to be known as seats of industry. When Monmouth marched
into Taunton it was an eminently prosperous place. Its markets were
plentifully supplied. It was a celebrated seat of the woollen manufacture.
The people boasted that they lived in a land flowing with milk and honey.
Nor was this language held only by partial natives; for every stranger who
climbed the graceful tower of St. Mary Magdalene owned that he saw beneath
him the most fertile of English valleys. It was a country rich with
orchards and green pastures, among which were scattered, in gay abundance,
manor houses, cottages, and village spires. The townsmen had long leaned
towards Presbyterian divinity and Whig politics. In the great civil war
Taunton had, through all vicissitudes, adhered to the Parliament, had been
twice closely besieged by Goring, and had been twice defended with heroic
valour by Robert Blake, afterwards the renowned Admiral of the
Commonwealth. Whole streets had been burned down by the mortars and
grenades of the Cavaliers. Food had been so scarce that the resolute
governor had announced his intention of putting the garrison on rations of
horse flesh. But the spirit of the town had never been subdued either by
fire or by hunger. <SPAN href="#linknote-375" name="linknoteref-375" id="linknoteref-375"><small>375</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The Restoration had produced no effect on the temper of the Taunton men.
They had still continued to celebrate the anniversary of the happy day on
which the siege laid to their town by the royal army had been raised; and
their stubborn attachment to the old cause had excited so much fear and
resentment at Whitehall that, by a royal order, their moat had been filled
up, and their wall demolished to the foundation. <SPAN href="#linknote-376"
name="linknoteref-376" id="linknoteref-376"><small>376</small></SPAN> The
puritanical spirit had been kept up to the height among them by the
precepts and example of one of the most celebrated of the dissenting
clergy, Joseph Alleine. Alleine was the author of a tract, entitled, An
Alarm to the Unconverted, which is still popular both in England and in
America. From the gaol to which he was consigned by the victorious
Cavaliers, he addressed to his loving friends at Taunton many epistles
breathing the spirit of a truly heroic piety. His frame soon sank under
the effects of study, toil, and persecution: but his memory was long
cherished with exceeding love and reverence by those whom he had exhorted
and catechised. <SPAN href="#linknote-377" name="linknoteref-377" id="linknoteref-377"><small>377</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The children of the men who, forty years before, had manned the ramparts
of Taunton against the Royalists, now welcomed Monmouth with transports of
joy and affection. Every door and window was adorned with wreaths of
flowers. No man appeared in the streets without wearing in his hat a green
bough, the badge of the popular cause. Damsels of the best families in the
town wove colours for the insurgents. One flag in particular was
embroidered gorgeously with emblems of royal dignity, and was offered to
Monmouth by a train of young girls. He received the gift with the winning
courtesy which distinguished him. The lady who headed the procession
presented him also with a small Bible of great price. He took it with a
show of reverence. "I come," he said, "to defend the truths contained in
this book, and to seal them, if it must be so, with my blood." <SPAN href="#linknote-378" name="linknoteref-378" id="linknoteref-378"><small>378</small></SPAN></p>
<p>But while Monmouth enjoyed the applause of the multitude, he could not but
perceive, with concern and apprehension, that the higher classes were,
with scarcely an exception, hostile to his undertaking, and that no rising
had taken place except in the counties where he had himself appeared. He
had been assured by agents, who professed to have derived their
information from Wildman, that the whole Whig aristocracy was eager to
take arms. Nevertheless more than a week had now elapsed since the blue
standard had been set up at Lyme. Day labourers, small farmers,
shopkeepers, apprentices, dissenting preachers, had flocked to the rebel
camp: but not a single peer, baronet, or knight, not a single member of
the House of Commons, and scarcely any esquire of sufficient note to have
ever been in the commission of the peace, had joined the invaders.
Ferguson, who, ever since the death of Charles, had been Monmouth's evil
angel, had a suggestion ready. The Duke had put himself into a false
position by declining the royal title. Had he declared himself sovereign
of England, his cause would have worn a show of legality. At present it
was impossible to reconcile his Declaration with the principles of the
constitution. It was clear that either Monmouth or his uncle was rightful
King. Monmouth did not venture to pronounce himself the rightful King, and
yet denied that his uncle was so. Those who fought for James fought for
the only person who ventured to claim the throne, and were therefore
clearly in their duty, according to the laws of the realm. Those who
fought for Monmouth fought for some unknown polity, which was to be set up
by a convention not yet in existence. None could wonder that men of high
rank and ample fortune stood aloof from an enterprise which threatened
with destruction that system in the permanence of which they were deeply
interested. If the Duke would assert his legitimacy and assume the crown,
he would at once remove this objection. The question would cease to be a
question between the old constitution and a new constitution. It would be
merely a question of hereditary right between two princes.</p>
<p>On such grounds as these Ferguson, almost immediately after the landing,
had earnestly pressed the Duke to proclaim himself King; and Grey had
seconded Ferguson. Monmouth had been very willing to take this advice; but
Wade and other republicans had been refractory; and their chief, with his
usual pliability, had yielded to their arguments. At Taunton the subject
was revived. Monmouth talked in private with the dissentients, assured
them that he saw no other way of obtaining the support of any portion of
the aristocracy, and succeeded in extorting their reluctant consent. On
the morning of the twentieth of June he was proclaimed in the market place
of Taunton. His followers repeated his new title with affectionate
delight. But, as some confusion might have arisen if he had been called
King James the Second, they commonly used the strange appellation of King
Monmouth: and by this name their unhappy favourite was often mentioned in
the western counties, within the memory of persons still living. <SPAN href="#linknote-379" name="linknoteref-379" id="linknoteref-379"><small>379</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Within twenty-four hours after he had assumed the regal title, he put
forth several proclamations headed with his sign manual. By one of these
he set a price on the head of his rival. Another declared the Parliament
then sitting at Westminster an unlawful assembly, and commanded the
members to disperse. A third forbade the people to pay taxes to the
usurper. A fourth pronounced Albemarle a traitor. <SPAN href="#linknote-380"
name="linknoteref-380" id="linknoteref-380"><small>380</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Albemarle transmitted these proclamations to London merely as specimens of
folly and impertinence. They produced no effect, except wonder and
contempt; nor had Monmouth any reason to think that the assumption of
royalty had improved his position. Only a week had elapsed since he had
solemnly bound himself not to take the crown till a free Parliament should
have acknowledged his rights. By breaking that engagement he had incurred
the imputation of levity, if not of perfidy. The class which he had hoped
to conciliate still stood aloof. The reasons which prevented the great
Whig lords and gentlemen from recognising him as their King were at least
as strong as those which had prevented them from rallying round him as
their Captain General. They disliked indeed the person, the religion, and
the politics of James. But James was no longer young. His eldest daughter
was justly popular. She was attached to the reformed faith. She was
married to a prince who was the hereditary chief of the Protestants of the
Continent, to a prince who had been bred in a republic, and whose
sentiments were supposed to be such as became a constitutional King. Was
it wise to incur the horrors of civil war, for the mere chance of being
able to effect immediately what nature would, without bloodshed, without
any violation of law, effect, in all probability, before many years should
have expired? Perhaps there might be reasons for pulling down James. But
what reason could be given for setting up Monmouth? To exclude a prince
from the throne on account of unfitness was a course agreeable to Whig
principles. But on no principle could it be proper to exclude rightful
heirs, who were admitted to be, not only blameless, but eminently
qualified for the highest public trust. That Monmouth was legitimate, nay,
that he thought himself legitimate, intelligent men could not believe. He
was therefore not merely an usurper, but an usurper of the worst sort, an
impostor. If he made out any semblance of a case, he could do so only by
means of forgery and perjury. All honest and sensible persons were
unwilling to see a fraud which, if practiced to obtain an estate, would
have been punished with the scourge and the pillory, rewarded with the
English crown. To the old nobility of the realm it seemed insupportable
that the bastard of Lucy Walters should be set up high above the lawful
descendants of the Fitzalans and De Veres. Those who were capable of
looking forward must have seen that, if Monmouth should succeed in
overpowering the existing government, there would still remain a war
between him and the House of Orange, a war which might last longer and
produce more misery than the war of the Roses, a war which might probably
break up the Protestants of Europe into hostile parties, might arm England
and Holland against each other, and might make both those countries an
easy prey to France. The opinion, therefore, of almost all the leading
Whigs seems to have been that Monmouth's enterprise could not fail to end
in some great disaster to the nation, but that, on the whole, his defeat
would be a less disaster than his victory.</p>
<p>It was not only by the inaction of the Whig aristocracy that the invaders
were disappointed. The wealth and power of London had sufficed in the
preceding generation, and might again suffice, to turn the scale in a
civil conflict. The Londoners had formerly given many proofs of their
hatred of Popery and of their affection for the Protestant Duke. He had
too readily believed that, as soon as he landed, there would be a rising
in the capital. But, though advices came down to him that many thousands
of the citizens had been enrolled as volunteers for the good cause,
nothing was done. The plain truth was that the agitators who had urged him
to invade England, who had promised to rise on the first signal, and who
had perhaps imagined, while the danger was remote, that they should have
the courage to keep their promise, lost heart when the critical time drew
near. Wildman's fright was such that he seemed to have lost his
understanding. The craven Danvers at first excused his inaction by saying
that he would not take up arms till Monmouth was proclaimed King, and when
Monmouth had been proclaimed King, turned round and declared that good
republicans were absolved from all engagements to a leader who had so
shamefully broken faith. In every age the vilest specimens of human nature
are to be found among demagogues. <SPAN href="#linknote-381"
name="linknoteref-381" id="linknoteref-381"><small>381</small></SPAN></p>
<p>On the day following that on which Monmouth had assumed the regal title he
marched from Taunton to Bridgewater. His own spirits, it was remarked,
were not high. The acclamations of the devoted thousands who surrounded
him wherever he turned could not dispel the gloom which sate on his brow.
Those who had seen him during his progress through Somersetshire five
years before could not now observe without pity the traces of distress and
anxiety on those soft and pleasing features which had won so many hearts.
<SPAN href="#linknote-382" name="linknoteref-382" id="linknoteref-382"><small>382</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Ferguson was in a very different temper. With this man's knavery was
strangely mingled an eccentric vanity which resembled madness. The thought
that he had raised a rebellion and bestowed a crown had turned his head.
He swaggered about, brandishing his naked sword, and crying to the crowd
of spectators who had assembled to see the army march out of Taunton,
"Look at me! You have heard of me. I am Ferguson, the famous Ferguson, the
Ferguson for whose head so many hundred pounds have been offered." And
this man, at once unprincipled and brainsick, had in his keeping the
understanding and the conscience of the unhappy Monmouth. <SPAN href="#linknote-383" name="linknoteref-383" id="linknoteref-383"><small>383</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Bridgewater was one of the few towns which still had some Whig
magistrates. The Mayor and Aldermen came in their robes to welcome the
Duke, walked before him in procession to the high cross, and there
proclaimed him King. His troops found excellent quarters, and were
furnished with necessaries at little or no cost by the people of the town
and neighbourhood. He took up his residence in the Castle, a building
which had been honoured by several royal visits. In the Castle Field his
army was encamped. It now consisted of about six thousand men, and might
easily have been increased to double the number, but for the want of arms.
The Duke had brought with him from the Continent but a scanty supply of
pikes and muskets. Many of his followers had, therefore, no other weapons
than such as could be fashioned out of the tools which they had used in
husbandry or mining. Of these rude implements of war the most formidable
was made by fastening the blade of a scythe erect on a strong pole. <SPAN href="#linknote-384" name="linknoteref-384" id="linknoteref-384"><small>384</small></SPAN>
The tithing men of the country round Taunton and Bridgewater received
orders to search everywhere for scythes and to bring all that could be
found to the camp. It was impossible, however, even with the help of these
contrivances, to supply the demand; and great numbers who were desirous to
enlist were sent away. <SPAN href="#linknote-385" name="linknoteref-385" id="linknoteref-385"><small>385</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The foot were divided into six regiments. Many of the men had been in the
militia, and still wore their uniforms, red and yellow. The cavalry were
about a thousand in number; but most of them had only large colts, such as
were then bred in great herds on the marshes of Somersetshire for the
purpose of supplying London with coach horses and cart horses. These
animals were so far from being fit for any military purpose that they had
not yet learned to obey the bridle, and became ungovernable as soon as
they heard a gun fired or a drum beaten. A small body guard of forty young
men, well armed, and mounted at their own charge, attended Monmouth. The
people of Bridgewater, who were enriched by a thriving coast trade,
furnished him with a small sum of money. <SPAN href="#linknote-386"
name="linknoteref-386" id="linknoteref-386"><small>386</small></SPAN></p>
<p>All this time the forces of the government were fast assembling. On the
west of the rebel army, Albemarle still kept together a large body of
Devonshire militia. On the east, the trainbands of Wiltshire had mustered
under the command of Thomas Herbert, Earl of Pembroke. On the north east,
Henry Somerset, Duke of Beaufort, was in arms. The power of Beaufort bore
some faint resemblance to that of the great barons of the fifteenth
century. He was President of Wales and Lord Lieutenant of four English
counties. His official tours through the extensive region in which he
represented the majesty of the throne were scarcely inferior in pomp to
royal progresses. His household at Badminton was regulated after the
fashion of an earlier generation. The land to a great extent round his
pleasure grounds was in his own hands; and the labourers who cultivated it
formed part of his family. Nine tables were every day spread under his
roof for two hundred persons. A crowd of gentlemen and pages were under
the orders of the steward. A whole troop of cavalry obeyed the master of
the horse. The fame of the kitchen, the cellar, the kennel, and the
stables was spread over all England. The gentry, many miles round, were
proud of the magnificence of their great neighbour, and were at the same
time charmed by his affability and good nature. He was a zealous Cavalier
of the old school. At this crisis, therefore, he used his whole influence
and authority in support of the crown, and occupied Bristol with the
trainbands of Gloucestershire, who seem to have been better disciplined
than most other troops of that description. <SPAN href="#linknote-387"
name="linknoteref-387" id="linknoteref-387"><small>387</small></SPAN></p>
<p>In the counties more remote from Somersetshire the supporters of the
throne were on the alert. The militia of Sussex began to march westward,
under the command of Richard, Lord Lumley, who, though he had lately been
converted from the Roman Catholic religion, was still firm in his
allegiance to a Roman Catholic King. James Bertie, Earl of Abingdon,
called out the array of Oxfordshire. John Fell, Bishop of Oxford, who was
also Dean of Christchurch, summoned the undergraduates of his University
to take arms for the crown. The gownsmen crowded to give in their names.
Christchurch alone furnished near a hundred pikemen and musketeers. Young
noblemen and gentlemen commoners acted as officers; and the eldest son of
the Lord Lieutenant was Colonel. <SPAN href="#linknote-388"
name="linknoteref-388" id="linknoteref-388"><small>388</small></SPAN></p>
<p>But it was chiefly on the regular troops that the King relied. Churchill
had been sent westward with the Blues; and Feversham was following with
all the forces that could be spared from the neighbourhood of London. A
courier had started for Holland with a letter directing Skelton instantly
to request that the three English regiments in the Dutch service might be
sent to the Thames. When the request was made, the party hostile to the
House of Orange, headed by the deputies of Amsterdam, again tried to cause
delay. But the energy of William, who had almost as much at stake as
James, and who saw Monmouth's progress with serious uneasiness, bore down
opposition, and in a few days the troops sailed. <SPAN href="#linknote-389"
name="linknoteref-389" id="linknoteref-389"><small>389</small></SPAN> The
three Scotch regiments were already in England. They had arrived at
Gravesend in excellent condition, and James had reviewed them on
Blackheath. He repeatedly declared to the Dutch Ambassador that he had
never in his life seen finer or better disciplined soldiers, and expressed
the warmest gratitude to the Prince of Orange and the States for so
valuable and seasonable a reinforcement This satisfaction, however, was
not unmixed. Excellently as the men went through their drill, they were
not untainted with Dutch politics and Dutch divinity. One of them was shot
and another flogged for drinking the Duke of Monmouth's health. It was
therefore not thought advisable to place them in the post of danger. They
were kept in the neighbourhood of London till the end of the campaign. But
their arrival enabled the King to send to the West some infantry which
would otherwise have been wanted in the capital. <SPAN href="#linknote-390"
name="linknoteref-390" id="linknoteref-390"><small>390</small></SPAN></p>
<p>While the government was thus preparing for a conflict with the rebels in
the field, precautions of a different kind were not neglected. In London
alone two hundred of those persons who were thought most likely to be at
the head of a Whig movement were arrested. Among the prisoners were some
merchants of great note. Every man who was obnoxious to the Court went in
fear. A general gloom overhung the capital. Business languished on the
Exchange; and the theatres were so generally deserted that a new opera,
written by Dryden, and set off by decorations of unprecedented
magnificence, was withdrawn, because the receipts would not cover the
expenses of the performance. <SPAN href="#linknote-391" name="linknoteref-391" id="linknoteref-391"><small>391</small></SPAN> The magistrates and clergy
were everywhere active, the Dissenters were everywhere closely observed.
In Cheshire and Shropshire a fierce persecution raged; in Northamptonshire
arrests were numerous; and the gaol of Oxford was crowded with prisoners.
No Puritan divine, however moderate his opinions, however guarded his
conduct, could feel any confidence that he should not be torn from his
family and flung into a dungeon. <SPAN href="#linknote-392"
name="linknoteref-392" id="linknoteref-392"><small>392</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Meanwhile Monmouth advanced from Bridgewater harassed through the whole
march by Churchill, who appears to have done all that, with a handful of
men, it was possible for a brave and skilful officer to effect. The rebel
army, much annoyed, both by the enemy and by a heavy fall of rain, halted
in the evening of the twenty-second of June at Glastonbury. The houses of
the little town did not afford shelter for so large a force. Some of the
troops were therefore quartered in the churches, and others lighted their
fires among the venerable ruins of the Abbey, once the wealthiest
religious house in our island. From Glastonbury the Duke marched to Wells,
and from Wells to Shepton Mallet. <SPAN href="#linknote-393"
name="linknoteref-393" id="linknoteref-393"><small>393</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Hitherto he seems to have wandered from place to place with no other
object than that of collecting troops. It was now necessary for him to
form some plan of military operations. His first scheme was to seize
Bristol. Many of the chief inhabitants of that important place were Whigs.
One of the ramifications of the Whig plot had extended thither. The
garrison consisted only of the Gloucestershire trainbands. If Beaufort and
his rustic followers could be overpowered before the regular troops
arrived, the rebels would at once find themselves possessed of ample
pecuniary resources; the credit of Monmouth's arms would be raised; and
his friends throughout the kingdom would be encouraged to declare
themselves. Bristol had fortifications which, on the north of the Avon
towards Gloucestershire, were weak, but on the south towards Somersetshire
were much stronger. It was therefore determined that the attack should be
made on the Gloucestershire side. But for this purpose it was necessary to
take a circuitous route, and to cross the Avon at Keynsham. The bridge at
Keynsham had been partly demolished by the militia, and was at present
impassable. A detachment was therefore sent forward to make the necessary
repairs. The other troops followed more slowly, and on the evening of the
twenty-fourth of June halted for repose at Pensford. At Pensford they were
only five miles from the Somersetshire side of Bristol; but the
Gloucestershire side, which could be reached only by going round through
Keynsham, was distant a long day's march. <SPAN href="#linknote-394"
name="linknoteref-394" id="linknoteref-394"><small>394</small></SPAN></p>
<p>That night was one of great tumult and expectation in Bristol. The
partisans of Monmouth knew that he was almost within sight of their city,
and imagined that he would be among them before daybreak. About an hour
after sunset a merchantman lying at the quay took fire. Such an
occurrence, in a port crowded with shipping, could not but excite great
alarm. The whole river was in commotion. The streets were crowded.
Seditious cries were heard amidst the darkness and confusion. It was
afterwards asserted, both by Whigs and by Tories, that the fire had been
kindled by the friends of Monmouth, in the hope that the trainbands would
be busied in preventing the conflagration from spreading, and that in the
meantime the rebel army would make a bold push, and would enter the city
on the Somersetshire side. If such was the design of the incendiaries, it
completely failed. Beaufort, instead of sending his men to the quay, kept
them all night drawn up under arms round the beautiful church of Saint
Mary Redcliff, on the south of the Avon. He would see Bristol burnt down,
he said, nay, he would burn it down himself, rather than that it should be
occupied by traitors. He was able, with the help of some regular cavalry
which had joined him from Chippenham a few hours before, to prevent an
insurrection. It might perhaps have been beyond his power at once to
overawe the malecontents within the walls and to repel an attack from
without: but no such attack was made. The fire, which caused so much
commotion at Bristol, was distinctly seen at Pensford. Monmouth, however,
did not think it expedient to change his plan. He remained quiet till
sunrise, and then marched to Keynsham. There he found the bridge repaired.
He determined to let his army rest during the afternoon, and, as soon as
night came, to proceed to Bristol. <SPAN href="#linknote-395"
name="linknoteref-395" id="linknoteref-395"><small>395</small></SPAN></p>
<p>But it was too late. The King's forces were now near at hand. Colonel
Oglethorpe, at the head of about a hundred men of the Life Guards, dashed
into Keynsham, scattered two troops of rebel horse which ventured to
oppose him, and retired after inflicting much injury and suffering little.
In these circumstances it was thought necessary to relinquish the design
on Bristol. <SPAN href="#linknote-396" name="linknoteref-396" id="linknoteref-396"><small>396</small></SPAN></p>
<p>But what was to be done? Several schemes were proposed and discussed. It
was suggested that Monmouth might hasten to Gloucester, might cross the
Severn there, might break down the bridge behind him, and, with his right
flank protected by the river, might march through Worcestershire into
Shropshire and Cheshire. He had formerly made a progress through those
counties, and had been received there with as much enthusiasm as in
Somersetshire and Devonshire. His presence might revive the zeal of his
old friends; and his army might in a few days be swollen to double its
present numbers.</p>
<p>On full consideration, however, it appeared that this plan, though
specious, was impracticable. The rebels were ill shod for such work as
they had lately undergone, and were exhausted by toiling, day after day,
through deep mud under heavy rain. Harassed and impeded as they would be
at every stage by the enemy's cavalry, they could not hope to reach
Gloucester without being overtaken by the main body of the royal troops,
and forced to a general action under every disadvantage.</p>
<p>Then it was proposed to enter Wiltshire. Persons who professed to know
that county well assured the Duke that he would be joined there by such
strong reinforcements as would make it safe for him to give battle. <SPAN href="#linknote-397" name="linknoteref-397" id="linknoteref-397"><small>397</small></SPAN></p>
<p>He took this advice, and turned towards Wiltshire. He first summoned Bath.
But Bath was strongly garrisoned for the King; and Feversham was fast
approaching. The rebels, therefore made no attempt on the walls, but
hastened to Philip's Norton, where they halted on the evening of the
twenty-sixth of June.</p>
<p>Feversham followed them thither. Early on the morning of the
twenty-seventh they were alarmed by tidings that he was close at hand.
They got into order, and lined the hedges leading to the town.</p>
<p>The advanced guard of the royal army soon appeared. It consisted of about
five hundred men, commanded by the Duke of Grafton, a youth of bold spirit
and rough manners, who was probably eager to show that he had no share in
the disloyal schemes of his half brother. Grafton soon found himself in a
deep lane with fences on both sides of him, from which a galling fire of
musketry was kept up. Still he pushed boldly on till he came to the
entrance of Philip's Norton. There his way was crossed by a barricade,
from which a third fire met him full in front. His men now lost heart, and
made the best of their way back. Before they got out of the lane more than
a hundred of them had been killed or wounded. Grafton's retreat was
intercepted by some of the rebel cavalry: but he cut his way gallantly
through them, and came off safe. <SPAN href="#linknote-398"
name="linknoteref-398" id="linknoteref-398"><small>398</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The advanced guard, thus repulsed, fell back on the main body of the royal
forces. The two armies were now face to face; and a few shots were
exchanged that did little or no execution. Neither side was impatient to
come to action. Feversham did not wish to fight till his artillery came
up, and fell back to Bradford. Monmouth, as soon as the night closed in,
quitted his position, marched southward, and by daybreak arrived at Frome,
where he hoped to find reinforcements.</p>
<p>Frome was as zealous in his cause as either Taunton or Bridgewater, but
could do nothing to serve him. There had been a rising a few days before;
and Monmouth's declaration had been posted up in the market place. But the
news of this movement had been carried to the Earl of Pembroke, who lay at
no great distance with the Wiltshire militia. He had instantly marched to
Frome, had routed a mob of rustics who, with scythes and pitchforks,
attempted to oppose him, had entered the town and had disarmed the
inhabitants. No weapons, therefore, were left there; nor was Monmouth able
to furnish any. <SPAN href="#linknote-399" name="linknoteref-399" id="linknoteref-399"><small>399</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The rebel army was in evil case. The march of the preceding night had been
wearisome. The rain had fallen in torrents; and the roads had become mere
quagmires. Nothing was heard of the promised succours from Wiltshire. One
messenger brought news that Argyle's forces had been dispersed in
Scotland. Another reported that Feversham, having been joined by his
artillery, was about to advance. Monmouth understood war too well not to
know that his followers, with all their courage and all their zeal, were
no match for regular soldiers. He had till lately flattered himself with
the hope that some of those regiments which he had formerly commanded
would pass over to his standard: but that hope he was now compelled to
relinquish. His heart failed him. He could scarcely muster firmness enough
to give orders. In his misery he complained bitterly of the evil
counsellors who had induced him to quit his happy retreat in Brabant.
Against Wildman in particular he broke forth into violent imprecations. <SPAN href="#linknote-400" name="linknoteref-400" id="linknoteref-400"><small>400</small></SPAN>
And now an ignominious thought rose in his weak and agitated mind. He
would leave to the mercy of the government the thousands who had, at his
call and for his sake, abandoned their quiet fields and dwellings. He
would steal away with his chief officers, would gain some seaport before
his flight was suspected, would escape to the Continent, and would forget
his ambition and his shame in the arms of Lady Wentworth. He seriously
discussed this scheme with his leading advisers. Some of them, trembling
for their necks, listened to it with approbation; but Grey, who, by the
admission of his detractors, was intrepid everywhere except where swords
were clashing and guns going off around him, opposed the dastardly
proposition with great ardour, and implored the Duke to face every danger
rather than requite with ingratitude and treachery the devoted attachment
of the Western peasantry. <SPAN href="#linknote-401" name="linknoteref-401" id="linknoteref-401"><small>401</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The scheme of flight was abandoned: but it was not now easy to form any
plan for a campaign. To advance towards London would have been madness;
for the road lay right across Salisbury Plain; and on that vast open space
regular troops, and above all regular cavalry, would have acted with every
advantage against undisciplined men. At this juncture a report reached the
camp that the rustics of the marshes near Axbridge had risen in defence of
the Protestant religion, had armed themselves with flails, bludgeons, and
pitchforks, and were assembling by thousands at Bridgewater. Monmouth
determined to return thither, and to strengthen himself with these new
allies. <SPAN href="#linknote-402" name="linknoteref-402" id="linknoteref-402"><small>402</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The rebels accordingly proceeded to Wells, and arrived there in no amiable
temper. They were, with few exceptions, hostile to Prelacy; and they
showed their hostility in a way very little to their honour. They not only
tore the lead from the roof of the magnificent Cathedral to make bullets,
an act for which they might fairly plead the necessities of war, but
wantonly defaced the ornaments of the building. Grey with difficulty
preserved the altar from the insults of some ruffians who wished to
carouse round it, by taking his stand before it with his sword drawn. <SPAN href="#linknote-403" name="linknoteref-403" id="linknoteref-403"><small>403</small></SPAN></p>
<p>On Thursday, the second of July, Monmouth again entered Bridgewater, In
circumstances far less cheering than those in which he had marched thence
ten days before. The reinforcement which he found there was
inconsiderable. The royal army was close upon him. At one moment he
thought of fortifying the town; and hundreds of labourers were summoned to
dig trenches and throw up mounds. Then his mind recurred to the plan of
marching into Cheshire, a plan which he had rejected as impracticable when
he was at Keynsham, and which assuredly was not more practicable now that
he was at Bridgewater. <SPAN href="#linknote-404" name="linknoteref-404" id="linknoteref-404"><small>404</small></SPAN></p>
<p>While he was thus wavering between projects equally hopeless, the King's
forces came in sight. They consisted of about two thousand five hundred
regular troops, and of about fifteen hundred of the Wiltshire militia.
Early on the morning of Sunday, the fifth of July, they left Somerton, and
pitched their tents that day about three miles from Bridgewater, on the
plain of Sedgemoor.</p>
<p>Dr. Peter Mew, Bishop of Winchester, accompanied them. This prelate had in
his youth borne arms for Charles the First against the Parliament. Neither
his years nor his profession had wholly extinguished his martial ardour;
and he probably thought that the appearance of a father of the Protestant
Church in the King's camp might confirm the loyalty of some honest men who
were wavering between their horror of Popery and their horror of
rebellion.</p>
<p>The steeple of the parish church of Bridgewater is said to be the loftiest
of Somersetshire, and commands a wide view over the surrounding country.
Monmouth, accompanied by some of his officers, went up to the top of the
square tower from which the spire ascends, and observed through a
telescope the position of the enemy. Beneath him lay a flat expanse, now
rich with cornfields and apple trees, but then, as its name imports, for
the most part a dreary morass. When the rains were heavy, and the Parret
and its tributary streams rose above their banks, this tract was often
flooded. It was indeed anciently part of that great swamp which is
renowned in our early chronicles as having arrested the progress of two
successive races of invaders, which long protected the Celts against the
aggressions of the kings of Wessex, and which sheltered Alfred from the
pursuit of the Danes. In those remote times this region could be traversed
only in boats. It was a vast pool, wherein were scattered many islets of
shifting and treacherous soil, overhung with rank jungle, and swarming
with deer and wild swine. Even in the days of the Tudors, the traveller
whose journey lay from Ilchester to Bridgewater was forced to make a
circuit of several miles in order to avoid the waters. When Monmouth
looked upon Sedgemoor, it had been partially reclaimed by art, and was
intersected by many deep and wide trenches which, in that country, are
called rhines. In the midst of the moor rose, clustering round the towers
of churches, a few villages of which the names seem to indicate that they
once were surrounded by waves. In one of these villages, called Weston
Zoyland, the royal cavalry lay; and Feversham had fixed his headquarters
there. Many persons still living have seen the daughter of the servant
girl who waited on him that day at table; and a large dish of Persian
ware, which was set before him, is still carefully preserved in the
neighbourhood. It is to be observed that the population of Somersetshire
does not, like that of the manufacturing districts, consist of emigrants
from distant places. It is by no means unusual to find farmers who
cultivate the same land which their ancestors cultivated when the
Plantagenets reigned in England. The Somersetshire traditions are
therefore, of no small value to a historian. <SPAN href="#linknote-405"
name="linknoteref-405" id="linknoteref-405"><small>405</small></SPAN></p>
<p>At a greater distance from Bridgewater lies the village of Middlezoy. In
that village and its neighbourhood, the Wiltshire militia were quartered,
under the command of Pembroke. On the open moor, not far from Chedzoy,
were encamped several battalions of regular infantry. Monmouth looked
gloomily on them. He could not but remember how, a few years before, he
had, at the head of a column composed of some of those very men, driven
before him in confusion the fierce enthusiasts who defended Bothwell
Bridge He could distinguish among the hostile ranks that gallant band
which was then called from the name of its Colonel, Dumbarton's regiment,
but which has long been known as the first of the line, and which, in all
the four quarters of the world, has nobly supported its early reputation.
"I know those men," said Monmouth; "they will fight. If I had but them,
all would go well." <SPAN href="#linknote-406" name="linknoteref-406" id="linknoteref-406"><small>406</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Yet the aspect of the enemy was not altogether discouraging. The three
divisions of the royal army lay far apart from one another. There was all
appearance of negligence and of relaxed discipline in all their movements.
It was reported that they were drinking themselves drunk with the Zoyland
cider. The incapacity of Feversham, who commanded in chief, was notorious.
Even at this momentous crisis he thought only of eating and sleeping.
Churchill was indeed a captain equal to tasks far more arduous than that
of scattering a crowd of ill armed and ill trained peasants. But the
genius, which, at a later period, humbled six Marshals of France, was not
now in its proper place. Feversham told Churchill little, and gave him no
encouragement to offer any suggestion. The lieutenant, conscious of
superior abilities and science, impatient of the control of a chief whom
he despised, and trembling for the fate of the army, nevertheless
preserved his characteristic self-command, and dissembled his feelings so
well that Feversham praised his submissive alacrity, and promised to
report it to the King. <SPAN href="#linknote-407" name="linknoteref-407" id="linknoteref-407"><small>407</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Monmouth, having observed the disposition of the royal forces, and having
been apprised of the state in which they were, conceived that a night
attack might be attended with success. He resolved to run the hazard; and
preparations were instantly made.</p>
<p>It was Sunday; and his followers, who had, for the most part, been brought
up after the Puritan fashion, passed a great part of the day in religious
exercises. The Castle Field, in which the army was encamped, presented a
spectacle such as, since the disbanding of Cromwell's soldiers, England
had never seen. The dissenting preachers who had taken arms against
Popery, and some of whom had probably fought in the great civil war,
prayed and preached in red coats and huge jackboots, with swords by their
sides. Ferguson was one of those who harangued. He took for his text the
awful imprecation by which the Israelites who dwelt beyond Jordan cleared
themselves from the charge ignorantly brought against them by their
brethren on the other side of the river. "The Lord God of Gods, the Lord
God of Gods, he knoweth; and Israel he shall know. If it be in rebellion,
or if in transgression against the Lord, save us not this day." <SPAN href="#linknote-408" name="linknoteref-408" id="linknoteref-408"><small>408</small></SPAN></p>
<p>That an attack was to be made under cover of the night was no secret in
Bridgewater. The town was full of women, who had repaired thither by
hundreds from the surrounding region, to see their husbands, sons, lovers,
and brothers once more. There were many sad partings that day; and many
parted never to meet again. <SPAN href="#linknote-409" name="linknoteref-409" id="linknoteref-409"><small>409</small></SPAN> The report of the intended
attack came to the ears of a young girl who was zealous for the King.
Though of modest character, she had the courage to resolve that she would
herself bear the intelligence to Feversham. She stole out of Bridgewater,
and made her way to the royal camp. But that camp was not a place where
female innocence could be safe. Even the officers, despising alike the
irregular force to which they were opposed, and the negligent general who
commanded them, had indulged largely in wine, and were ready for any
excess of licentiousness and cruelty. One of them seized the unhappy
maiden, refused to listen to her errand, and brutally outraged her. She
fled in agonies of rage and shame, leaving the wicked army to its doom. <SPAN href="#linknote-410" name="linknoteref-410" id="linknoteref-410"><small>410</small></SPAN></p>
<p>And now the time for the great hazard drew near. The night was not ill
suited for such an enterprise. The moon was indeed at the full, and the
northern streamers were shining brilliantly. But the marsh fog lay so
thick on Sedgemoor that no object could be discerned there at the distance
of fifty paces. <SPAN href="#linknote-411" name="linknoteref-411" id="linknoteref-411"><small>411</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The clock struck eleven; and the Duke with his body guard rode out of the
Castle. He was not in the frame of mind which befits one who is about to
strike a decisive blow. The very children who pressed to see him pass
observed, and long remembered, that his look was sad and full of evil
augury. His army marched by a circuitous path, near six miles in length,
towards the royal encampment on Sedgemoor. Part of the route is to this
day called War Lane. The foot were led by Monmouth himself. The horse were
confided to Grey, in spite of the remonstrances of some who remembered the
mishap at Bridport. Orders were given that strict silence should be
preserved, that no drum should be beaten, and no shot fired. The word by
which the insurgents were to recognise one another in the darkness was
Soho. It had doubtless been selected in allusion to Soho Fields in London,
where their leader's palace stood. <SPAN href="#linknote-412"
name="linknoteref-412" id="linknoteref-412"><small>412</small></SPAN></p>
<p>At about one in the morning of Monday the sixth of July, the rebels were
on the open moor. But between them and the enemy lay three broad rhines
filled with water and soft mud. Two of these, called the Black Ditch and
the Langmoor Rhine, Monmouth knew that he must pass. But, strange to say,
the existence of a trench, called the Bussex Rhine, which immediately
covered the royal encampment, had not been mentioned to him by any of his
scouts.</p>
<p>The wains which carried the ammunition remained at the entrance of the
moor. The horse and foot, in a long narrow column, passed the Black Ditch
by a causeway. There was a similar causeway across the Langmoor Rhine: but
the guide, in the fog, missed his way. There was some delay and some
tumult before the error could be rectified. At length the passage was
effected: but, in the confusion, a pistol went off. Some men of the Horse
Guards, who were on watch, heard the report, and perceived that a great
multitude was advancing through the mist. They fired their carbines, and
galloped off in different directions to give the alarm. Some hastened to
Weston Zoyland, where the cavalry lay. One trooper spurred to the
encampment of the infantry, and cried out vehemently that the enemy was at
hand. The drums of Dumbarton's regiment beat to arms; and the men got fast
into their ranks. It was time; for Monmouth was already drawing up his
army for action. He ordered Grey to lead the way with the cavalry, and
followed himself at the head of the infantry. Grey pushed on till his
progress was unexpectedly arrested by the Bussex Rhine. On the opposite
side of the ditch the King's foot were hastily forming in order of battle.</p>
<p>"For whom are you?" called out an officer of the Foot Guards. "For the
King," replied a voice from the ranks of the rebel cavalry. "For which
King?" was then demanded. The answer was a shout of "King Monmouth,"
mingled with the war cry, which forty years before had been inscribed on
the colours of the parliamentary regiments, "God with us." The royal
troops instantly fired such a volley of musketry as sent the rebel horse
flying in all directions. The world agreed to ascribe this ignominious
rout to Grey's pusillanimity. Yet it is by no means clear that Churchill
would have succeeded better at the head of men who had never before
handled arms on horseback, and whose horses were unused, not only to stand
fire, but to obey the rein.</p>
<p>A few minutes after the Duke's horse had dispersed themselves over the
moor, his infantry came up running fast, and guided through the gloom by
the lighted matches of Dumbarton's regiment.</p>
<p>Monmouth was startled by finding that a broad and profound trench lay
between him and the camp which he had hoped to surprise. The insurgents
halted on the edge of the rhine, and fired. Part of the royal infantry on
the opposite bank returned the fire. During three quarters of an hour the
roar of the musketry was incessant. The Somersetshire peasants behaved
themselves as if they had been veteran soldiers, save only that they
levelled their pieces too high.</p>
<p>But now the other divisions of the royal army were in motion. The Life
Guards and Blues came pricking fast from Weston Zoyland, and scattered in
an instant some of Grey's horse, who had attempted to rally. The fugitives
spread a panic among their comrades in the rear, who had charge of the
ammunition. The waggoners drove off at full speed, and never stopped till
they were many miles from the field of battle. Monmouth had hitherto done
his part like a stout and able warrior. He had been seen on foot, pike in
hand, encouraging his infantry by voice and by example. But he was too
well acquainted with military affairs not to know that all was over. His
men had lost the advantage which surprise and darkness had given them.
They were deserted by the horse and by the ammunition waggons. The King's
forces were now united and in good order. Feversham had been awakened by
the firing, had got out of bed, had adjusted his cravat, had looked at
himself well in the glass, and had come to see what his men were doing.
Meanwhile, what was of much more importance, Churchill had rapidly made an
entirely new disposition of the royal infantry. The day was about to
break. The event of a conflict on an open plain, by broad sunlight, could
not be doubtful. Yet Monmouth should have felt that it was not for him to
fly, while thousands whom affection for him had hurried to destruction
were still fighting manfully in his cause. But vain hopes and the intense
love of life prevailed. He saw that if he tarried the royal cavalry would
soon intercept his retreat. He mounted and rode from the field.</p>
<p>Yet his foot, though deserted, made a gallant stand. The Life Guards
attacked them on the right, the Blues on the left; but the Somersetshire
clowns, with their scythes and the butt ends of their muskets, faced the
royal horse like old soldiers. Oglethorpe made a vigorous attempt to break
them and was manfully repulsed. Sarsfield, a brave Irish officer, whose
name afterwards obtained a melancholy celebrity, charged on the other
flank. His men were beaten back. He was himself struck to the ground, and
lay for a time as one dead. But the struggle of the hardy rustics could
not last. Their powder and ball were spent. Cries were heard of
"Ammunition! For God's sake ammunition!" But no ammunition was at hand.
And now the King's artillery came up. It had been posted half a mile off,
on the high road from Weston Zoyland to Bridgewater. So defective were
then the appointments of an English army that there would have been much
difficulty in dragging the great guns to the place where the battle was
raging, had not the Bishop of Winchester offered his coach horses and
traces for the purpose. This interference of a Christian prelate in a
matter of blood has, with strange inconsistency, been condemned by some
Whig writers who can see nothing criminal in the conduct of the numerous
Puritan ministers then in arms against the government. Even when the guns
had arrived, there was such a want of gunners that a serjeant of
Dumbarton's regiment was forced to take on himself the management of
several pieces. <SPAN href="#linknote-413" name="linknoteref-413" id="linknoteref-413"><small>413</small></SPAN> The cannon, however, though
ill served, brought the engagement to a speedy close. The pikes of the
rebel battalions began to shake: the ranks broke; the King's cavalry
charged again, and bore down everything before them; the King's infantry
came pouring across the ditch. Even in that extremity the Mendip miners
stood bravely to their arms, and sold their lives dearly. But the rout was
in a few minutes complete. Three hundred of the soldiers had been killed
or wounded. Of the rebels more than a thousand lay dead on the moor. <SPAN href="#linknote-414" name="linknoteref-414" id="linknoteref-414"><small>414</small></SPAN></p>
<p>So ended the last fight deserving the name of battle, that has been fought
on English ground. The impression left on the simple inhabitants of the
neighbourhood was deep and lasting. That impression, indeed, has been
frequently renewed. For even in our own time the plough and the spade have
not seldom turned up ghastly memorials of the slaughter, skulls, and thigh
bones, and strange weapons made out of implements of husbandry. Old
peasants related very recently that, in their childhood, they were
accustomed to play on the moor at the fight between King James's men and
King Monmouth's men, and that King Monmouth's men always raised the cry of
Soho. <SPAN href="#linknote-415" name="linknoteref-415" id="linknoteref-415"><small>415</small></SPAN></p>
<p>What seems most extraordinary in the battle of Sedgemoor is that the event
should have been for a moment doubtful, and that the rebels should have
resisted so long. That five or six thousand colliers and ploughmen should
contend during an hour with half that number of regular cavalry and
infantry would now be thought a miracle. Our wonder will, perhaps, be
diminished when we remember that, in the time of James the Second, the
discipline of the regular army was extremely lax, and that, on the other
hand, the peasantry were accustomed to serve in the militia. The
difference, therefore, between a regiment of the Foot Guards and a
regiment of clowns just enrolled, though doubtless considerable, was by no
means what it now is. Monmouth did not lead a mere mob to attack good
soldiers. For his followers were not altogether without a tincture of
soldiership; and Feversham's troops, when compared with English troops of
our time, might almost be called a mob.</p>
<p>It was four o'clock: the sun was rising; and the routed army came pouring
into the streets of Bridgewater. The uproar, the blood, the gashes, the
ghastly figures which sank down and never rose again, spread horror and
dismay through the town. The pursuers, too, were close behind. Those
inhabitants who had favoured the insurrection expected sack and massacre,
and implored the protection of their neighbours who professed the Roman
Catholic religion, or had made themselves conspicuous by Tory politics;
and it is acknowledged by the bitterest of Whig historians that this
protection was kindly and generously given. <SPAN href="#linknote-416"
name="linknoteref-416" id="linknoteref-416"><small>416</small></SPAN></p>
<p>During that day the conquerors continued to chase the fugitives. The
neighbouring villagers long remembered with what a clatter of horsehoofs
and what a storm of curses the whirlwind of cavalry swept by. Before
evening five hundred prisoners had been crowded into the parish church of
Weston Zoyland. Eighty of them were wounded; and five expired within the
consecrated walls. Great numbers of labourers were impressed for the
purpose of burying the slain. A few, who were notoriously partial to the
vanquished side, were set apart for the hideous office of quartering the
captives. The tithing men of the neighbouring parishes were busied in
setting up gibbets and providing chains. All this while the bells of
Weston Zoyland and Chedzoy rang joyously; and the soldiers sang and rioted
on the moor amidst the corpses. For the farmers of the neighbourhood had
made haste, as soon as the event of the fight was known to send hogsheads
of their best cider as peace offerings to the victors. <SPAN href="#linknote-417" name="linknoteref-417" id="linknoteref-417"><small>417</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Feversham passed for a goodnatured man: but he was a foreigner, ignorant
of the laws and careless of the feelings of the English. He was accustomed
to the military license of France, and had learned from his great kinsman,
the conqueror and devastator of the Palatinate, not indeed how to conquer,
but how to devastate. A considerable number of prisoners were immediately
selected for execution. Among them was a youth famous for his speed. Hopes
were held out to him that his life would be spared If he could run a race
with one of the colts of the marsh. The space through which the man kept
up with the horse is still marked by well known bounds on the moor, and is
about three quarters of a mile. Feversham was not ashamed, after seeing
the performance, to send the wretched performer to the gallows. The next
day a long line of gibbets appeared on the road leading from Bridgewater
to Weston Zoyland. On each gibbet a prisoner was suspended. Four of the
sufferers were left to rot in irons. <SPAN href="#linknote-418"
name="linknoteref-418" id="linknoteref-418"><small>418</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Meanwhile Monmouth, accompanied by Grey, by Buyse, and by a few other
friends, was flying from the field of battle. At Chedzoy he stopped a
moment to mount a fresh horse and to hide his blue riband and his George.
He then hastened towards the Bristol Channel. From the rising ground on
the north of the field of battle he saw the flash and the smoke of the
last volley fired by his deserted followers. Before six o'clock he was
twenty miles from Sedgemoor. Some of his companions advised him to cross
the water, and seek refuge in Wales; and this would undoubtedly have been
his wisest course. He would have been in Wales many hours before the news
of his defeat was known there; and in a country so wild and so remote from
the seat of government, he might have remained long undiscovered. He
determined, however, to push for Hampshire, in the hope that he might lurk
in the cabins of deerstealers among the oaks of the New Forest, till means
of conveyance to the Continent could be procured. He therefore, with Grey
and the German, turned to the southeast. But the way was beset with
dangers. The three fugitives had to traverse a country in which every one
already knew the event of the battle, and in which no traveller of
suspicious appearance could escape a close scrutiny. They rode on all day,
shunning towns and villages. Nor was this so difficult as it may now
appear. For men then living could remember the time when the wild deer
ranged freely through a succession of forests from the banks of the Avon
in Wiltshire to the southern coast of Hampshire. <SPAN href="#linknote-419"
name="linknoteref-419" id="linknoteref-419"><small>419</small></SPAN> At
length, on Cranbourne Chase, the strength of the horses failed. They were
therefore turned loose. The bridles and saddles were concealed. Monmouth
and his friends procured rustic attire, disguised themselves, and
proceeded on foot towards the New Forest. They passed the night in the
open air: but before morning they were Surrounded on every side by toils.
Lord Lumley, who lay at Ringwood with a strong body of the Sussex militia,
had sent forth parties in every direction. Sir William Portman, with the
Somerset militia, had formed a chain of posts from the sea to the northern
extremity of Dorset. At five in the morning of the seventh, Grey, who had
wandered from his friends, was seized by two of the Sussex scouts. He
submitted to his fate with the calmness of one to whom suspense was more
intolerable than despair. "Since we landed," he said, "I have not had one
comfortable meal or one quiet night." It could hardly be doubted that the
chief rebel was not far off. The pursuers redoubled their vigilance and
activity. The cottages scattered over the heathy country on the boundaries
of Dorsetshire and Hampshire were strictly examined by Lumley; and the
clown with whom Monmouth had changed clothes was discovered. Portman came
with a strong body of horse and foot to assist in the search. Attention
was soon drawn to a place well fitted to shelter fugitives. It was an
extensive tract of land separated by an enclosure from the open country,
and divided by numerous hedges into small fields. In some of these fields
the rye, the pease, and the oats were high enough to conceal a man. Others
were overgrown with fern and brambles. A poor woman reported that she had
seen two strangers lurking in this covert. The near prospect of reward
animated the zeal of the troops. It was agreed that every man who did his
duty in the search should have a share of the promised five thousand
pounds. The outer fence was strictly guarded: the space within was
examined with indefatigable diligence; and several dogs of quick scent
were turned out among the bushes. The day closed before the work could be
completed: but careful watch was kept all night. Thirty times the
fugitives ventured to look through the outer hedge: but everywhere they
found a sentinel on the alert: once they were seen and fired at; they then
separated and concealed themselves in different hiding places.</p>
<p>At sunrise the next morning the search recommenced, and Buyse was found.
He owned that he had parted from the Duke only a few hours before. The
corn and copsewood were now beaten with more care than ever. At length a
gaunt figure was discovered hidden in a ditch. The pursuers sprang on
their prey. Some of them were about to fire: but Portman forbade all
violence. The prisoner's dress was that of a shepherd; his beard,
prematurely grey, was of several days' growth. He trembled greatly, and
was unable to speak. Even those who had often seen him were at first in
doubt whether this were truly the brilliant and graceful Monmouth. His
pockets were searched by Portman, and in them were found, among some raw
pease gathered in the rage of hunger, a watch, a purse of gold, a small
treatise on fortification, an album filled with songs, receipts, prayers,
and charms, and the George with which, many years before, King Charles the
Second had decorated his favourite son. Messengers were instantly
despatched to Whitehall with the good news, and with the George as a token
that the news was true. The prisoner was conveyed under a strong guard to
Ringwood. <SPAN href="#linknote-420" name="linknoteref-420" id="linknoteref-420"><small>420</small></SPAN></p>
<p>And all was lost; and nothing remained but that he should prepare to meet
death as became one who had thought himself not unworthy to wear the crown
of William the Conqueror and of Richard the Lionhearted, of the hero of
Cressy and of the hero of Agincourt. The captive might easily have called
to mind other domestic examples, still better suited to his condition.
Within a hundred years, two sovereigns whose blood ran in his veins, one
of them a delicate woman, had been placed in the same situation in which
he now stood. They had shown, in the prison and on the scaffold, virtue of
which, in the season of prosperity, they had seemed incapable, and had
half redeemed great crimes and errors by enduring with Christian meekness
and princely dignity all that victorious enemies could inflict. Of
cowardice Monmouth had never been accused; and, even had he been wanting
in constitutional courage, it might have been expected that the defect
would be supplied by pride and by despair. The eyes of the whole world
were upon him. The latest generations would know how, in that extremity,
he had borne himself. To the brave peasants of the West he owed it to show
that they had not poured forth their blood for a leader unworthy of their
attachment. To her who had sacrificed everything for his sake he owed it
so to bear himself that, though she might weep for him, she should not
blush for him. It was not for him to lament and supplicate. His reason,
too, should have told him that lamentation and supplication would be
unavailing. He had done that which could never be forgiven. He was in the
grasp of one who never forgave.</p>
<p>But the fortitude of Monmouth was not that highest sort of fortitude which
is derived from reflection and from selfrespect; nor had nature given him
one of those stout hearts from which neither adversity nor peril can
extort any sign of weakness. His courage rose and fell with his animal
spirits. It was sustained on the field of battle by the excitement of
action. By the hope of victory, by the strange influence of sympathy. All
such aids were now taken away. The spoiled darling of the court and of the
populace, accustomed to be loved and worshipped wherever he appeared, was
now surrounded by stern gaolers in whose eyes he read his doom. Yet a few
hours of gloomy seclusion, and he must die a violent and shameful death.
His heart sank within him. Life seemed worth purchasing by any
humiliation; nor could his mind, always feeble, and now distracted by
terror, perceive that humiliation must degrade, but could not save him.</p>
<p>As soon as he reached Ringwood he wrote to the King. The letter was that
of a man whom a craven fear had made insensible to shame. He professed in
vehement terms his remorse for his treason. He affirmed that, when he
promised his cousins at the Hague not to raise troubles in England, he had
fully meant to keep his word. Unhappily he had afterwards been seduced
from his allegiance by some horrid people who had heated his mind by
calumnies and misled him by sophistry; but now he abhorred them: he
abhorred himself. He begged in piteous terms that he might be admitted to
the royal presence. There was a secret which he could not trust to paper,
a secret which lay in a single word, and which, if he spoke that word,
would secure the throne against all danger. On the following day he
despatched letters, imploring the Queen Dowager and the Lord Treasurer to
intercede in his behalf. <SPAN href="#linknote-421" name="linknoteref-421" id="linknoteref-421"><small>421</small></SPAN></p>
<p>When it was known in London how he had abased himself the general surprise
was great; and no man was more amazed than Barillon, who had resided in
England during two bloody proscriptions, and had seen numerous victims,
both of the Opposition and of the Court, submit to their fate without
womanish entreaties and lamentations. <SPAN href="#linknote-422"
name="linknoteref-422" id="linknoteref-422"><small>422</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Monmouth and Grey remained at Ringwood two days. They were then carried up
to London, under the guard of a large body of regular troops and militia.
In the coach with the Duke was an officer whose orders were to stab the
prisoner if a rescue were attempted. At every town along the road the
trainbands of the neighbourhood had been mustered under the command of the
principal gentry. The march lasted three days, and terminated at Vauxhall,
where a regiment, commanded by George Legge, Lord Dartmouth, was in
readiness to receive the prisoners. They were put on board of a state
barge, and carried down the river to Whitehall Stairs. Lumley and Portman
had alternately watched the Duke day and night till they had brought him
within the walls of the palace. <SPAN href="#linknote-423"
name="linknoteref-423" id="linknoteref-423"><small>423</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Both the demeanour of Monmouth and that of Grey, during the journey,
filled all observers with surprise. Monmouth was altogether unnerved. Grey
was not only calm but cheerful, talked pleasantly of horses, dogs, and
field sports, and even made jocose allusions to the perilous situation in
which he stood.</p>
<p>The King cannot be blamed for determining that Monmouth should suffer
death. Every man who heads a rebellion against an established government
stakes his life on the event; and rebellion was the smallest part of
Monmouth's crime. He had declared against his uncle a war without quarter.
In the manifesto put forth at Lyme, James had been held up to execration
as an incendiary, as an assassin who had strangled one innocent man and
cut the throat of another, and, lastly, as the poisoner of his own
brother. To spare an enemy who had not scrupled to resort to such
extremities would have been an act of rare, perhaps of blamable
generosity. But to see him and not to spare him was an outrage on humanity
and decency. <SPAN href="#linknote-424" name="linknoteref-424" id="linknoteref-424"><small>424</small></SPAN> This outrage the King resolved
to commit. The arms of the prisoner were bound behind him with a silken
cord; and, thus secured, he was ushered into the presence of the
implacable kinsman whom he had wronged.</p>
<p>Then Monmouth threw himself on the ground, and crawled to the King's feet.
He wept. He tried to embrace his uncle's knees with his pinioned arms. He
begged for life, only life, life at any price. He owned that he had been
guilty of a great crime, but tried to throw the blame on others,
particularly on Argyle, who would rather have put his legs into the boots
than have saved his own life by such baseness. By the ties of kindred, by
the memory of the late King, who had been the best and truest of brothers,
the unhappy man adjured James to show some mercy. James gravely replied
that this repentance was of the latest, that he was sorry for the misery
which the prisoner had brought on himself, but that the case was not one
for lenity. A Declaration, filled with atrocious calumnies, had been put
forth. The regal title had been assumed. For treasons so aggravated there
could be no pardon on this side of the grave. The poor terrified Duke
vowed that he had never wished to take the crown, but had been led into
that fatal error by others. As to the Declaration, he had not written it:
he had not read it: he had signed it without looking at it: it was all the
work of Ferguson, that bloody villain Ferguson. "Do you expect me to
believe," said James, with contempt but too well merited, "that you set
your hand to a paper of such moment without knowing what it contained?"
One depth of infamy only remained; and even to that the prisoner
descended. He was preeminently the champion of the Protestant religion.
The interest of that religion had been his plea for conspiring against the
government of his father, and for bringing on his country the miseries of
civil war; yet he was not ashamed to hint that he was inclined to be
reconciled to the Church of Rome. The King eagerly offered him spiritual
assistance, but said nothing of pardon or respite. "Is there then no
hope?" asked Monmouth. James turned away in silence. Then Monmouth strove
to rally his courage, rose from his knees, and retired with a firmness
which he had not shown since his overthrow. <SPAN href="#linknote-425"
name="linknoteref-425" id="linknoteref-425"><small>425</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Grey was introduced next. He behaved with a propriety and fortitude which
moved even the stern and resentful King, frankly owned himself guilty,
made no excuses, and did not once stoop to ask his life. Both the
prisoners were sent to the Tower by water. There was no tumult; but many
thousands of people, with anxiety and sorrow in their faces, tried to
catch a glimpse of the captives. The Duke's resolution failed as soon as
he had left the royal presence. On his way to his prison he bemoaned
himself, accused his followers, and abjectly implored the intercession of
Dartmouth. "I know, my Lord, that you loved my father. For his sake, for
God's sake, try if there be any room for mercy." Dartmouth replied that
the King had spoken the truth, and that a subject who assumed the regal
title excluded himself from all hope of pardon. <SPAN href="#linknote-426"
name="linknoteref-426" id="linknoteref-426"><small>426</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Soon after Monmouth had been lodged in the Tower, he was informed that his
wife had, by the royal command, been sent to see him. She was accompanied
by the Earl of Clarendon, Keeper of the Privy Seal. Her husband received
her very coldly, and addressed almost all his discourse to Clarendon whose
intercession he earnestly implored. Clarendon held out no hopes; and that
same evening two prelates, Turner, Bishop of Ely, and Ken, Bishop of Bath
and Wells, arrived at the Tower with a solemn message from the King. It
was Monday night. On Wednesday morning Monmouth was to die.</p>
<p>He was greatly agitated. The blood left his cheeks; and it was some time
before he could speak. Most of the short time which remained to him he
wasted in vain attempts to obtain, if not a pardon, at least a respite. He
wrote piteous letters to the King and to several courtiers, but in vain.
Some Roman Catholic divines were sent to him from Whitehall. But they soon
discovered that, though he would gladly have purchased his life by
renouncing the religion of which he had professed himself in an especial
manner the defender, yet, if he was to die, he would as soon die without
their absolution as with it. <SPAN href="#linknote-427" name="linknoteref-427" id="linknoteref-427"><small>427</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Nor were Ken and Turner much better pleased with his frame of mind. The
doctrine of nonresistance was, in their view, as in the view of most of
their brethren, the distinguishing badge of the Anglican Church. The two
Bishops insisted on Monmouth's owning that, in drawing the sword against
the government, he had committed a great sin; and, on this point, they
found him obstinately heterodox. Nor was this his only heresy. He
maintained that his connection with Lady Wentworth was blameless in the
sight of God. He had been married, he said, when a child. He had never
cared for his Duchess. The happiness which he had not found at home he had
sought in a round of loose amours, condemned by religion and morality.
Henrietta had reclaimed him from a life of vice. To her he had been
strictly constant. They had, by common consent, offered up fervent prayers
for the divine guidance. After those prayers they had found their
affection for each other strengthened; and they could then no longer doubt
that, in the sight of God, they were a wedded pair. The Bishops were so
much scandalised by this view of the conjugal relation that they refused
to administer the sacrament to the prisoner. All that they could obtain
from him was a promise that, during the single night which still remained
to him, he would pray to be enlightened if he were in error.</p>
<p>On the Wednesday morning, at his particular request, Doctor Thomas
Tenison, who then held the vicarage of Saint Martin's, and, in that
important cure, had obtained the high esteem of the public, came to the
Tower. From Tenison, whose opinions were known to be moderate, the Duke
expected more indulgence than Ken and Turner were disposed to show. But
Tenison, whatever might be his sentiments concerning nonresistance in the
abstract, thought the late rebellion rash and wicked, and considered
Monmouth's notion respecting marriage as a most dangerous delusion.
Monmouth was obstinate. He had prayed, he said, for the divine direction.
His sentiments remained unchanged; and he could not doubt that they were
correct. Tenison's exhortations were in milder tone than those of the
Bishops. But he, like them, thought that he should not be justified in
administering the Eucharist to one whose penitence was of so
unsatisfactory a nature. <SPAN href="#linknote-428" name="linknoteref-428" id="linknoteref-428"><small>428</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The hour drew near: all hope was over; and Monmouth had passed from
pusillanimous fear to the apathy of despair. His children were brought to
his room that he might take leave of them, and were followed by his wife.
He spoke to her kindly, but without emotion. Though she was a woman of
great strength of mind, and had little cause to love him, her misery was
such that none of the bystanders could refrain from weeping. He alone was
unmoved. <SPAN href="#linknote-429" name="linknoteref-429" id="linknoteref-429"><small>429</small></SPAN></p>
<p>It was ten o'clock. The coach of the Lieutenant of the Tower was ready.
Monmouth requested his spiritual advisers to accompany him to the place of
execution; and they consented: but they told him that, in their judgment,
he was about to die in a perilous state of mind, and that, if they
attended him it would be their duty to exhort him to the last. As he
passed along the ranks of the guards he saluted them with a smile; and he
mounted the scaffold with a firm tread. Tower Hill was covered up to the
chimney tops with an innumerable multitude of gazers, who, in awful
silence, broken only by sighs and the noise of weeping, listened for the
last accents of the darling of the people. "I shall say little," he began.
"I come here, not to speak, but to die. I die a Protestant of the Church
of England." The Bishops interrupted him, and told him that, unless he
acknowledged resistance to be sinful, he was no member of their church He
went on to speak of his Henrietta. She was, he said, a young lady of
virtue and honour. He loved her to the last, and he could not die without
giving utterance to his feelings The Bishops again interfered, and begged
him not to use such language. Some altercation followed. The divines have
been accused of dealing harshly with the dying man. But they appear to
have only discharged what, in their view, was a sacred duty. Monmouth knew
their principles, and, if he wished to avoid their importunity, should
have dispensed with their attendance. Their general arguments against
resistance had no effect on him. But when they reminded him of the ruin
which he had brought on his brave and loving followers, of the blood which
had been shed, of the souls which had been sent unprepared to the great
account, he was touched, and said, in a softened voice, "I do own that. I
am sorry that it ever happened." They prayed with him long and fervently;
and he joined in their petitions till they invoked a blessing on the King.
He remained silent. "Sir," said one of the Bishops, "do you not pray for
the King with us?" Monmouth paused some time, and, after an internal
struggle, exclaimed "Amen." But it was in vain that the prelates implored
him to address to the soldiers and to the people a few words on the duty
of obedience to the government. "I will make no speeches," he exclaimed.
"Only ten words, my Lord." He turned away, called his servant, and put
into the man's hand a toothpick case, the last token of ill starred love.
"Give it," he said, "to that person." He then accosted John Ketch the
executioner, a wretch who had butchered many brave and noble victims, and
whose name has, during a century and a half, been vulgarly given to all
who have succeeded him in his odious office. <SPAN href="#linknote-430"
name="linknoteref-430" id="linknoteref-430"><small>430</small></SPAN> "Here,"
said the Duke, "are six guineas for you. Do not hack me as you did my Lord
Russell. I have heard that you struck him three or four times. My servant
will give you some more gold if you do the work well." He then undressed,
felt the edge of the axe, expressed some fear that it was not sharp
enough, and laid his head on the block. The divines in the meantime
continued to ejaculate with great energy: "God accept your repentance! God
accept your imperfect repentance!"</p>
<p>The hangman addressed himself to his office. But he had been disconcerted
by what the Duke had said. The first blow inflicted only a slight wound.
The Duke struggled, rose from the block, and looked reproachfully at the
executioner. The head sunk down once more. The stroke was repeated again
and again; but still the neck was not severed, and the body continued to
move. Yells of rage and horror rose from the crowd. Ketch flung down the
axe with a curse. "I cannot do it," he said; "my heart fails me." "Take up
the axe, man," cried the sheriff. "Fling him over the rails," roared the
mob. At length the axe was taken up. Two more blows extinguished the last
remains of life; but a knife was used to separate the head from the
shoulders. The crowd was wrought up to such an ecstasy of rage that the
executioner was in danger of being torn in pieces, and was conveyed away
under a strong guard. <SPAN href="#linknote-431" name="linknoteref-431" id="linknoteref-431"><small>431</small></SPAN></p>
<p>In the meantime many handkerchiefs were dipped in the Duke's blood; for by
a large part of the multitude he was regarded as a martyr who had died for
the Protestant religion. The head and body were placed in a coffin covered
with black velvet, and were laid privately under the communion table of
Saint Peter's Chapel in the Tower. Within four years the pavement of the
chancel was again disturbed, and hard by the remains of Monmouth were laid
the remains of Jeffreys. In truth there is no sadder spot on the earth
than that little cemetery. Death is there associated, not, as in
Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's, with genius and virtue, with public
veneration and imperishable renown; not, as in our humblest churches and
churchyards, with everything that is most endearing in social and domestic
charities; but with whatever is darkest in human nature and in human
destiny, with the savage triumph of implacable enemies, with the
inconstancy, the ingratitude, the cowardice of friends, with all the
miseries of fallen greatness and of blighted fame. Thither have been
carried, through successive ages, by the rude hands of gaolers, without
one mourner following, the bleeding relics of men who had been the
captains of armies, the leaders of parties, the oracles of senates, and
the ornaments of courts. Thither was borne, before the window where Jane
Grey was praying, the mangled corpse of Guilford Dudley. Edward Seymour,
Duke of Somerset, and Protector of the realm, reposes there by the brother
whom he murdered. There has mouldered away the headless trunk of John
Fisher, Bishop of Rochester and Cardinal of Saint Vitalis, a man worthy to
have lived in a better age and to have died in a better cause. There are
laid John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, Lord High Admiral, and Thomas
Cromwell, Earl of Essex, Lord High Treasurer. There, too, is another
Essex, on whom nature and fortune had lavished all their bounties in vain,
and whom valour, grace, genius, royal favour, popular applause, conducted
to an early and ignominious doom. Not far off sleep two chiefs of the
great house of Howard, Thomas, fourth Duke of Norfolk, and Philip,
eleventh Earl of Arundel. Here and there, among the thick graves of
unquiet and aspiring statesmen, lie more delicate sufferers; Margaret of
Salisbury, the last of the proud name of Plantagenet; and those two fair
Queens who perished by the jealous rage of Henry. Such was the dust with
which the dust of Monmouth mingled. <SPAN href="#linknote-432"
name="linknoteref-432" id="linknoteref-432"><small>432</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Yet a few months, and the quiet village of Toddington, in Bedfordshire,
witnessed a still sadder funeral. Near that village stood an ancient and
stately hall, the seat of the Wentworths. The transept of the parish
church had long been their burial place. To that burial place, in the
spring which followed the death of Monmouth, was borne the coffin of the
young Baroness Wentworth of Nettlestede. Her family reared a sumptuous
mausoleum over her remains: but a less costly memorial of her was long
contemplated with far deeper interest. Her name, carved by the hand of him
whom she loved too well, was, a few years ago, still discernible on a tree
in the adjoining park.</p>
<p>It was not by Lady Wentworth alone that the memory of Monmouth was
cherished with idolatrous fondness. His hold on the hearts of the people
lasted till the generation which had seen him had passed away. Ribands,
buckles, and other trifling articles of apparel which he had worn, were
treasured up as precious relics by those who had fought under him at
Sedgemoor. Old men who long survived him desired, when they were dying,
that these trinkets might be buried with them. One button of gold thread
which narrowly escaped this fate may still be seen at a house which
overlooks the field of battle. Nay, such was the devotion of the people to
their unhappy favourite that, in the face of the strongest evidence by
which the fact of a death was ever verified, many continued to cherish a
hope that he was still living, and that he would again appear in arms. A
person, it was said, who was remarkably like Monmouth, had sacrificed
himself to save the Protestant hero. The vulgar long continued, at every
important crisis, to whisper that the time was at hand, and that King
Monmouth would soon show himself. In 1686, a knave who had pretended to be
the Duke, and had levied contributions in several villages of Wiltshire,
was apprehended, and whipped from Newgate to Tyburn. In 1698, when England
had long enjoyed constitutional freedom under a new dynasty, the son of an
innkeeper passed himself on the yeomanry of Sussex as their beloved
Monmouth, and defrauded many who were by no means of the lowest class.
Five hundred pounds were collected for him. The farmers provided him with
a horse. Their wives sent him baskets of chickens and ducks, and were
lavish, it was said, of favours of a more tender kind; for in gallantry at
least, the counterfeit was a not unworthy representative of the original.
When this impostor was thrown into prison for his fraud, his followers
maintained him in luxury. Several of them appeared at the bar to
countenance him when he was tried at the Horsham assizes. So long did this
delusion last that, when George the Third had been some years on the
English throne, Voltaire thought it necessary gravely to confute the
hypothesis that the man in the iron mask was the Duke of Monmouth. <SPAN href="#linknote-433" name="linknoteref-433" id="linknoteref-433"><small>433</small></SPAN></p>
<p>It is, perhaps, a fact scarcely less remarkable that, to this day, the
inhabitants of some parts of the West of England, when any bill affecting
their interest is before the House of Lords, think themselves entitled to
claim the help of the Duke of Buccleuch, the descendant of the unfortunate
leader for whom their ancestors bled.</p>
<p>The history of Monmouth would alone suffice to refute the Imputation of
inconstancy which is so frequently thrown on the common people. The common
people are sometimes inconstant; for they are human beings. But that they
are inconstant as compared with the educated classes, with aristocracies,
or with princes, may be confidently denied. It would be easy to name
demagogues whose popularity has remained undiminished while sovereigns and
parliaments have withdrawn their confidence from a long succession of
statesmen. When Swift had survived his faculties many years, the Irish
populace still continued to light bonfires on his birthday, in
commemoration of the services which they fancied that he had rendered to
his country when his mind was in full vigour. While seven administrations
were raised to power and hurled from it in consequence of court intrigues
or of changes in the sentiments of the higher classes of society, the
profligate Wilkes retained his hold on the selections of a rabble whom he
pillaged and ridiculed. Politicians, who, in 1807, had sought to curry
favour with George the Third by defending Caroline of Brunswick, were not
ashamed, in 1820, to curry favour with George the Fourth by persecuting
her. But in 1820, as in 1807, the whole body of working men was
fanatically devoted to her cause. So it was with Monmouth. In 1680, he had
been adored alike by the gentry and by the peasantry of the West. In 1685
he came again. To the gentry he had become an object of aversion: but by
the peasantry he was still loved with a love strong as death, with a love
not to be extinguished by misfortunes or faults, by the flight from
Sedgemoor, by the letter from Ringwood, or by the tears and abject
supplications at Whitehall. The charge which may with justice be brought
against the common people is, not that they are inconstant, but that they
almost invariably choose their favourite so ill that their constancy is a
vice and not a virtue.</p>
<p>While the execution of Monmouth occupied the thoughts of the Londoners,
the counties which had risen against the government were enduring all that
a ferocious soldiery could inflict. Feversham had been summoned to the
court, where honours and rewards which he little deserved awaited him. He
was made a Knight of the Garter and Captain of the first and most
lucrative troop of Life Guards: but Court and City laughed at his military
exploits; and the wit of Buckingham gave forth its last feeble flash at
the expense of the general who had won a battle in bed. <SPAN href="#linknote-434" name="linknoteref-434" id="linknoteref-434"><small>434</small></SPAN>
Feversham left in command at Bridgewater Colonel Percy Kirke, a military
adventurer whose vices had been developed by the worst of all schools,
Tangier. Kirke had during some years commanded the garrison of that town,
and had been constantly employed in hostilities against tribes of foreign
barbarians, ignorant of the laws which regulate the warfare of civilized
and Christian nations. Within the ramparts of his fortress he was a
despotic prince. The only check on his tyranny was the fear of being
called to account by a distant and a careless government. He might
therefore safely proceed to the most audacious excesses of rapacity,
licentiousness, and cruelty. He lived with boundless dissoluteness, and
procured by extortion the means of indulgence. No goods could be sold till
Kirke had had the refusal of them. No question of right could be decided
till Kirke had been bribed. Once, merely from a malignant whim, he staved
all the wine in a vintner's cellar. On another occasion he drove all the
Jews from Tangier. Two of them he sent to the Spanish Inquisition, which
forthwith burned them. Under this iron domination scarce a complaint was
heard; for hatred was effectually kept down by terror. Two persons who had
been refractory were found murdered; and it was universally believed that
they had been slain by Kirke's order. When his soldiers displeased him he
flogged them with merciless severity: but he indemnified them by
permitting them to sleep on watch, to reel drunk about the streets, to
rob, beat, and insult the merchants and the labourers.</p>
<p>When Tangier was abandoned, Kirke returned to England. He still continued
to command his old soldiers, who were designated sometimes as the First
Tangier Regiment, and sometimes as Queen Catharine's Regiment. As they had
been levied for the purpose of waging war on an infidel nation, they bore
on their flag a Christian emblem, the Paschal Lamb. In allusion to this
device, and with a bitterly ironical meaning, these men, the rudest and
most ferocious in the English army, were called Kirke's Lambs. The
regiment, now the second of the line, still retains this ancient badge,
which is however thrown into the shade by decorations honourably earned in
Egypt, in Spain, and in the heart of Asia. <SPAN href="#linknote-435"
name="linknoteref-435" id="linknoteref-435"><small>435</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Such was the captain and such the soldiers who were now let loose on the
people of Somersetshire. From Bridgewater Kirke marched to Taunton. He was
accompanied by two carts filled with wounded rebels whose gashes had not
been dressed, and by a long drove of prisoners on foot, who were chained
two and two Several of these he hanged as soon as he reached Taunton,
without the form of a trial. They were not suffered even to take leave of
their nearest relations. The signpost of the White Hart Inn served for a
gallows. It is said that the work of death went on in sight of the windows
where the officers of the Tangier regiment were carousing, and that at
every health a wretch was turned off. When the legs of the dying man
quivered in the last agony, the colonel ordered the drums to strike up. He
would give the rebels, he said music to their dancing. The tradition runs
that one of the captives was not even allowed the indulgence of a speedy
death. Twice he was suspended from the signpost, and twice cut down. Twice
he was asked if he repented of his treason, and twice he replied that, if
the thing were to do again, he would do it. Then he was tied up for the
last time. So many dead bodies were quartered that the executioner stood
ankle deep in blood. He was assisted by a poor man whose loyalty was
suspected, and who was compelled to ransom his own life by seething the
remains of his friends in pitch. The peasant who had consented to perform
this hideous office afterwards returned to his plough. But a mark like
that of Cain was upon him. He was known through his village by the
horrible name of Tom Boilman. The rustics long continued to relate that,
though he had, by his sinful and shameful deed, saved himself from the
vengeance of the Lambs, he had not escaped the vengeance of a higher
power. In a great storm he fled for shelter under an oak, and was there
struck dead by lightning. <SPAN href="#linknote-436" name="linknoteref-436" id="linknoteref-436"><small>436</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The number of those who were thus butchered cannot now be ascertained.
Nine were entered in the parish registers of Taunton: but those registers
contained the names of such only as had Christian burial. Those who were
hanged in chains, and those whose heads and limbs were sent to the
neighbouring villages, must have been much more numerous. It was believed
in London, at the time, that Kirke put a hundred captives to death during
the week which followed the battle. <SPAN href="#linknote-437"
name="linknoteref-437" id="linknoteref-437"><small>437</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Cruelty, however, was not this man's only passion. He loved money; and was
no novice in the arts of extortion. A safe conduct might be bought of him
for thirty or forty pounds; and such a safe conduct, though of no value in
law, enabled the purchaser to pass the post of the Lambs without
molestation, to reach a seaport, and to fly to a foreign country. The
ships which were bound for New England were crowded at this juncture with
so many fugitives from Sedgemoor that there was great danger lest the
water and provisions should fail. <SPAN href="#linknote-438"
name="linknoteref-438" id="linknoteref-438"><small>438</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Kirke was also, in his own coarse and ferocious way, a man of pleasure;
and nothing is more probable than that he employed his power for the
purpose of gratifying his licentious appetites. It was reported that he
conquered the virtue of a beautiful woman by promising to spare the life
of one to whom she was strongly attached, and that, after she had yielded,
he showed her suspended on the gallows the lifeless remains of him for
whose sake she had sacrificed her honour. This tale an impartial judge
must reject. It is unsupported by proof. The earliest authority for it is
a poem written by Pomfret. The respectable historians of that age, while
they speak with just severity of the crimes of Kirke, either omit all
mention of this most atrocious crime, or mention it as a thing rumoured
but not proved. Those who tell the story tell it with such variations as
deprive it of all title to credit. Some lay the scene at Taunton, some at
Exeter. Some make the heroine of the tale a maiden, some a married woman.
The relation for whom the shameful ransom was paid is described by some as
her father, by some as her brother, and by some as her husband. Lastly the
story is one which, long before Kirke was born, had been told of many
other oppressors, and had become a favourite theme of novelists and
dramatists. Two politicians of the fifteenth century, Rhynsault, the
favourite of Charles the Bold of Burgundy, and Oliver le Dain, the
favourite of Lewis the Eleventh of France, had been accused of the same
crime. Cintio had taken it for the subject of a romance. Whetstone had
made out of Cintio's narrative the rude play of Promos and Cassandra; and
Shakspeare had borrowed from Whetstone the plot of the noble tragicomedy
of Measure for Measure. As Kirke was not the first so he was not the last,
to whom this excess of wickedness was popularly imputed. During the
reaction which followed the Jacobin tyranny in France, a very similar
charge was brought against Joseph Lebon, one of the most odious agents of
the Committee of Public Safety, and, after enquiry, was admitted even by
his prosecutors to be unfounded. <SPAN href="#linknote-439"
name="linknoteref-439" id="linknoteref-439"><small>439</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The government was dissatisfied with Kirke, not on account of the
barbarity with which he had treated his needy prisoners, but on account of
the interested lenity which he had shown to rich delinquents. <SPAN href="#linknote-440" name="linknoteref-440" id="linknoteref-440"><small>440</small></SPAN>
He was soon recalled from the West. A less irregular and more cruel
massacre was about to be perpetrated. The vengeance was deferred during
some weeks. It was thought desirable that the Western Circuit should not
begin till the other circuits had terminated. In the meantime the gaols of
Somersetshire and Dorsetshire were filled with thousands of captives. The
chief friend and protector of these unhappy men in their extremity was one
who abhorred their religious and political opinions, one whose order they
hated, and to whom they had done unprovoked wrong, Bishop Ken. That good
prelate used all his influence to soften the gaolers, and retrenched from
his own episcopal state that he might be able to make some addition to the
coarse and scanty fare of those who had defaced his beloved Cathedral. His
conduct on this occasion was of a piece with his whole life. His intellect
was indeed darkened by many superstitions and prejudices: but his moral
character, when impartially reviewed, sustains a comparison with any in
ecclesiastical history, and seems to approach, as near as human infirmity
permits, to the ideal perfection of Christian virtue. <SPAN href="#linknote-441" name="linknoteref-441" id="linknoteref-441"><small>441</small></SPAN></p>
<p>His labour of love was of no long duration. A rapid and effectual gaol
delivery was at hand. Early in September, Jeffreys, accompanied by four
other judges, set out on that circuit of which the memory will last as
long as our race and language. The officers who commanded the troops in
the districts through which his course lay had orders to furnish him with
whatever military aid he might require. His ferocious temper needed no
spur; yet a spur was applied. The health and spirits of the Lord Keeper
had given way. He had been deeply mortified by the coldness of the King
and by the insolence of the Chief Justice, and could find little
consolation in looking back on a life, not indeed blackened by any
atrocious crime, but sullied by cowardice, selfishness, and servility. So
deeply was the unhappy man humbled that, when he appeared for the last
time in Westminster Hall he took with him a nosegay to hide his face,
because, as he afterwards owned, he could not bear the eyes of the bar and
of the audience. The prospect of his approaching end seems to have
inspired him with unwonted courage. He determined to discharge his
conscience, requested an audience of the King, spoke earnestly of the
dangers inseparable from violent and arbitrary counsels, and condemned the
lawless cruelties which the soldiers had committed in Somersetshire. He
soon after retired from London to die. He breathed his last a few days
after the Judges set out for the West. It was immediately notified to
Jeffreys that he might expect the Great Seal as the reward of faithful and
vigorous service. <SPAN href="#linknote-442" name="linknoteref-442" id="linknoteref-442"><small>442</small></SPAN></p>
<p>At Winchester the Chief Justice first opened his commission. Hampshire had
not been the theatre of war; but many of the vanquished rebels had, like
their leader, fled thither. Two of them, John Hickes, a Nonconformist
divine, and Richard Nelthorpe, a lawyer who had been outlawed for taking
part in the Rye House plot, had sought refuge at the house of Alice, widow
of John Lisle. John Lisle had sate in the Long Parliament and in the High
Court of Justice, had been a commissioner of the Great Seal in the days of
the Commonwealth and had been created a Lord by Cromwell. The titles given
by the Protector had not been recognised by any government which had ruled
England since the downfall of his house; but they appear to have been
often used in conversation even by Royalists. John Lisle's widow was
therefore commonly known as the Lady Alice. She was related to many
respectable, and to some noble, families; and she was generally esteemed
even by the Tory gentlemen of her country. For it was well known to them
that she had deeply regretted some violent acts in which her husband had
borne a part, that she had shed bitter tears for Charles the First, and
that she had protected and relieved many Cavaliers in their distress. The
same womanly kindness, which had led her to befriend the Royalists in
their time of trouble, would not suffer her to refuse a meal and a hiding
place to the wretched men who now entreated her to protect them. She took
them into her house, set meat and drink before them, and showed them where
they might take rest. The next morning her dwelling was surrounded by
soldiers. Strict search was made. Hickes was found concealed in the
malthouse, and Nelthorpe in the chimney. If Lady Alice knew her guests to
have been concerned in the insurrection, she was undoubtedly guilty of
what in strictness was a capital crime. For the law of principal and
accessory, as respects high treason, then was, and is to this day, in a
state disgraceful to English jurisprudence. In cases of felony, a
distinction founded on justice and reason, is made between the principal
and the accessory after the fact. He who conceals from justice one whom he
knows to be a murderer is liable to punishment, but not to the punishment
of murder. He, on the other hand, who shelters one whom he knows to be a
traitor is, according to all our jurists, guilty of high treason. It is
unnecessary to point out the absurdity and cruelty of a law which includes
under the same definition, and visits with the same penalty, offences
lying at the opposite extremes of the scale of guilt. The feeling which
makes the most loyal subject shrink from the thought of giving up to a
shameful death the rebel who, vanquished, hunted down, and in mortal
agony, begs for a morsel of bread and a cup of water, may be a weakness;
but it is surely a weakness very nearly allied to virtue, a weakness
which, constituted as human beings are, we can hardly eradicate from the
mind without eradicating many noble and benevolent sentiments. A wise and
good ruler may not think it right to sanction this weakness; but he will
generally connive at it, or punish it very tenderly. In no case will he
treat it as a crime of the blackest dye. Whether Flora Macdonald was
justified in concealing the attainted heir of the Stuarts, whether a brave
soldier of our own time was justified in assisting the escape of
Lavalette, are questions on which casuists may differ: but to class such
actions with the crimes of Guy Faux and Fieschi is an outrage to humanity
and common sense. Such, however, is the classification of our law. It is
evident that nothing but a lenient administration could make such a state
of the law endurable. And it is just to say that, during many generations,
no English government, save one, has treated with rigour persons guilty
merely of harbouring defeated and flying insurgents. To women especially
has been granted, by a kind of tacit prescription, the right of indulging
in the midst of havoc and vengeance, that compassion which is the most
endearing of all their charms. Since the beginning of the great civil war,
numerous rebels, some of them far more important than Hickes or Nelthorpe,
have been protected from the severity of victorious governments by female
adroitness and generosity. But no English ruler who has been thus baffled,
the savage and implacable James alone excepted, has had the barbarity even
to think of putting a lady to a cruel and shameful death for so venial and
amiable a transgression.</p>
<p>Odious as the law was, it was strained for the purpose of destroying Alice
Lisle. She could not, according to the doctrine laid down by the highest
authority, be convicted till after the conviction of the rebels whom she
had harboured. <SPAN href="#linknote-443" name="linknoteref-443" id="linknoteref-443"><small>443</small></SPAN> She was, however, set to the
bar before either Hickes or Nelthorpe had been tried. It was no easy
matter in such a case to obtain a verdict for the crown. The witnesses
prevaricated. The jury, consisting of the principal gentlemen of
Hampshire, shrank from the thought of sending a fellow creature to the
stake for conduct which seemed deserving rather of praise than of blame.
Jeffreys was beside himself with fury. This was the first case of treason
on the circuit; and there seemed to be a strong probability that his prey
would escape him. He stormed, cursed, and swore in language which no
wellbred man would have used at a race or a cockfight. One witness named
Dunne, partly from concern for Lady Alice, and partly from fright at the
threats and maledictions of the Chief Justice, entirely lost his head, and
at last stood silent. "Oh how hard the truth is," said Jeffreys, "to come
out of a lying Presbyterian knave." The witness, after a pause of some
minutes, stammered a few unmeaning words. "Was there ever," exclaimed the
judge, with an oath, "was there ever such a villain on the face of the
earth? Dost thou believe that there is a God? Dost thou believe in hell
fire. Of all the witnesses that I ever met with I never saw thy fellow."
Still the poor man, scared out of his senses, remained mute; and again
Jeffreys burst forth. "I hope, gentlemen of the jury, that you take notice
of the horrible carriage of this fellow. How can one help abhorring both
these men and their religion? A Turk is a saint to such a fellow as this.
A Pagan would be ashamed of such villany. Oh blessed Jesus! What a
generation of vipers do we live among!" "I cannot tell what to say, my
Lord," faltered Dunne. The judge again broke forth into a volley of oaths.
"Was there ever," he cried, "such an impudent rascal? Hold the candle to
him that we may see his brazen face. You, gentlemen, that are of counsel
for the crown, see that an information for perjury be preferred against
this fellow." After the witnesses had been thus handled, the Lady Alice
was called on for her defence. She began by saying, what may possibly have
been true, that though she knew Hickes to be in trouble when she took him
in, she did not know or suspect that he had been concerned in the
rebellion. He was a divine, a man of peace. It had, therefore, never
occurred to her that he could have borne arms against the government; and
she had supposed that he wished to conceal himself because warrants were
out against him for field preaching. The Chief Justice began to storm.
"But I will tell you. There is not one of those lying, snivelling, canting
Presbyterians but, one way or another, had a hand in the rebellion.
Presbytery has all manner of villany in it. Nothing but Presbytery could
have made Dunne such a rogue. Show me a Presbyterian; and I'll show thee a
lying knave." He summed up in the same style, declaimed during an hour
against Whigs and Dissenters, and reminded the jury that the prisoner's
husband had borne a part in the death of Charles the First, a fact which
had not been proved by any testimony, and which, if it had been proved,
would have been utterly irrelevant to the issue. The jury retired, and
remained long in consultation. The judge grew impatient. He could not
conceive, he said, how, in so plain a case, they should even have left the
box. He sent a messenger to tell them that, if they did not instantly
return, he would adjourn the court and lock them up all night. Thus put to
the torture, they came, but came to say that they doubted whether the
charge had been made out. Jeffreys expostulated with them vehemently, and,
after another consultation, they gave a reluctant verdict of Guilty.</p>
<p>On the following morning sentence was pronounced. Jeffreys gave directions
that Alice Lisle should be burned alive that very afternoon. This excess
of barbarity moved the pity and indignation even of the class which was
most devoted to the crown. The clergy of Winchester Cathedral remonstrated
with the Chief Justice, who, brutal as he was, was not mad enough to risk
a quarrel on such a subject with a body so much respected by the Tory
party. He consented to put off the execution five days. During that time
the friends of the prisoner besought James to be merciful. Ladies of high
rank interceded for her. Feversham, whose recent victory had increased his
influence at court, and who, it is said, had been bribed to take the
compassionate side, spoke in her favour. Clarendon, the King's brother in
law, pleaded her cause. But all was vain. The utmost that could be
obtained was that her sentence should be commuted from burning to
beheading. She was put to death on a scaffold in the marketplace of
Winchester, and underwent her fate with serene courage. <SPAN href="#linknote-444" name="linknoteref-444" id="linknoteref-444"><small>444</small></SPAN></p>
<p>In Hampshire Alice Lisle was the only victim: but, on the day following
her execution, Jeffreys reached Dorchester, the principal town of the
county in which Monmouth had landed; and the judicial massacre began. The
court was hung, by order of the Chief Justice, with scarlet; and this
innovation seemed to the multitude to indicate a bloody purpose. It was
also rumoured that, when the clergyman who preached the assize sermon
enforced the duty of mercy, the ferocious mouth of the Judge was distorted
by an ominous grin. These things made men augur ill of what was to follow.
<SPAN href="#linknote-445" name="linknoteref-445" id="linknoteref-445"><small>445</small></SPAN></p>
<p>More than three hundred prisoners were to be tried. The work seemed heavy;
but Jeffreys had a contrivance for making it light. He let it be
understood that the only chance of obtaining pardon or respite was to
plead guilty. Twenty-nine persons, who put themselves on their country and
were convicted, were ordered to be tied up without delay. The remaining
prisoners pleaded guilty by scores. Two hundred and ninety-two received
sentence of death. The whole number hanged in Dorsetshire amounted to
seventy-four.</p>
<p>From Dorchester Jeffreys proceeded to Exeter. The civil war had barely
grazed the frontier of Devonshire. Here, therefore, comparatively few
persons were capitally punished. Somersetshire, the chief seat of the
rebellion, had been reserved for the last and most fearful vengeance. In
this county two hundred and thirty-three prisoners were in a few days
hanged, drawn, and quartered. At every spot where two roads met, on every
marketplace, on the green of every large village which had furnished
Monmouth with soldiers, ironed corpses clattering in the wind, or heads
and quarters stuck on poles, poisoned the air, and made the traveller sick
with horror. In many parishes the peasantry could not assemble in the
house of God without seeing the ghastly face of a neighbour grinning at
them over the porch. The Chief Justice was all himself. His spirits rose
higher and higher as the work went on. He laughed, shouted, joked, and
swore in such a way that many thought him drunk from morning to night. But
in him it was not easy to distinguish the madness produced by evil
passions from the madness produced by brandy. A prisoner affirmed that the
witnesses who appeared against him were not entitled to credit. One of
them, he said, was a Papist, and another a prostitute. "Thou impudent
rebel," exclaimed the Judge, "to reflect on the King's evidence! I see
thee, villain, I see thee already with the halter round thy neck." Another
produced testimony that he was a good Protestant. "Protestant!" said
Jeffreys; "you mean Presbyterian. I'll hold you a wager of it. I can smell
a Presbyterian forty miles." One wretched man moved the pity even of
bitter Tories. "My Lord," they said, "this poor creature is on the
parish." "Do not trouble yourselves," said the Judge, "I will ease the
parish of the burden." It was not only against the prisoners that his fury
broke forth. Gentlemen and noblemen of high consideration and stainless
loyalty, who ventured to bring to his notice any extenuating circumstance,
were almost sure to receive what he called, in the coarse dialect which he
had learned in the pothouses of Whitechapel, a lick with the rough side of
his tongue. Lord Stawell, a Tory peer, who could not conceal his horror at
the remorseless manner in which his poor neighbours were butchered, was
punished by having a corpse suspended in chains at his park gate. <SPAN href="#linknote-446" name="linknoteref-446" id="linknoteref-446"><small>446</small></SPAN>
In such spectacles originated many tales of terror, which were long told
over the cider by the Christmas fires of the farmers of Somersetshire.
Within the last forty years, peasants, in some districts, well knew the
accursed spots, and passed them unwillingly after sunset. <SPAN href="#linknote-447" name="linknoteref-447" id="linknoteref-447"><small>447</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Jeffreys boasted that he had hanged more traitors than all his
predecessors together since the Conquest. It is certain that the number of
persons whom he put to death in one month, and in one shire, very much
exceeded the number of all the political offenders who have been put to
death in our island since the Revolution. The rebellions of 1715 and 1745
were of longer duration, of wider extent, and of more formidable aspect
than that which was put down at Sedgemoor. It has not been generally
thought that, either after the rebellion of 1715, or after the rebellion
of 1745, the House of Hanover erred on the side of clemency. Yet all the
executions of 1715 and 1745 added together will appear to have been few
indeed when compared with those which disgraced the Bloody Assizes. The
number of the rebels whom Jeffreys hanged on this circuit was three
hundred and twenty. <SPAN href="#linknote-448" name="linknoteref-448" id="linknoteref-448"><small>448</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Such havoc must have excited disgust even if the sufferers had been
generally odious. But they were, for the most part, men of blameless life,
and of high religious profession. They were regarded by themselves, and by
a large proportion of their neighbours, not as wrongdoers, but as martyrs
who sealed with blood the truth of the Protestant religion. Very few of
the convicts professed any repentance for what they had done. Many,
animated by the old Puritan spirit, met death, not merely with fortitude,
but with exultation. It was in vain that the ministers of the Established
Church lectured them on the guilt of rebellion and on the importance of
priestly absolution. The claim of the King to unbounded authority in
things temporal, and the claim of the clergy to the spiritual power of
binding and loosing, moved the bitter scorn of the intrepid sectaries.
Some of them composed hymns in the dungeon, and chaunted them on the fatal
sledge. Christ, they sang while they were undressing for the butchery,
would soon come to rescue Zion and to make war on Babylon, would set up
his standard, would blow his trumpet, and would requite his foes tenfold
for all the evil which had been inflicted on his servants. The dying words
of these men were noted down: their farewell letters were kept as
treasures; and, in this way, with the help of some invention and
exaggeration, was formed a copious supplement to the Marian martyrology.
<SPAN href="#linknote-449" name="linknoteref-449" id="linknoteref-449"><small>449</small></SPAN></p>
<p>A few eases deserve special mention. Abraham Holmes, a retired officer of
the parliamentary army, and one of those zealots who would own no king but
King Jesus, had been taken at Sedgemoor. His arm had been frightfully
mangled and shattered in the battle; and, as no surgeon was at hand, the
stout old soldier amputated it himself. He was carried up to London, and
examined by the King in Council, but would make no submission. "I am an
aged man," he said, "and what remains to me of life is not worth a
falsehood or a baseness. I have always been a republican; and I am so
still." He was sent back to the West and hanged. The people remarked with
awe and wonder that the beasts which were to drag him to the gallows
became restive and went back. Holmes himself doubted not that the Angel of
the Lord, as in the old time, stood in the way sword in hand, invisible to
human eyes, but visible to the inferior animals. "Stop, gentlemen," he
cried: "let me go on foot. There is more in this than you think. Remember
how the ass saw him whom the prophet could not see." He walked manfully to
the gallows, harangued the people with a smile, prayed fervently that God
would hasten the downfall of Antichrist and the deliverance of England,
and went up the ladder with an apology for mounting so awkwardly. "You
see," he said, "I have but one arm." <SPAN href="#linknote-450"
name="linknoteref-450" id="linknoteref-450"><small>450</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Not less courageously died Christopher Balttiscombe, a young Templar of
good family and fortune, who, at Dorchester, an agreeable provincial town
proud of its taste and refinement, was regarded by all as the model of a
fine gentleman. Great interest was made to save him. It was believed
through the West of England that he was engaged to a young lady of gentle
blood, the sister of the Sheriff, that she threw herself at the feet of
Jeffreys to beg for mercy, and that Jeffreys drove her from him with a
jest so hideous that to repeat it would be an offence against decency and
humanity. Her lover suffered at Lyme piously and courageously. <SPAN href="#linknote-451" name="linknoteref-451" id="linknoteref-451"><small>451</small></SPAN></p>
<p>A still deeper interest was excited by the fate of two gallant brothers,
William and Benjamin Hewling. They were young, handsome, accomplished, and
well connected. Their maternal grandfather was named Kiffin. He was one of
the first merchants in London, and was generally considered as the head of
the Baptists. The Chief Justice behaved to William Hewling on the trial
with characteristic brutality. "You have a grandfather," he said, "who
deserves to be hanged as richly as you." The poor lad, who was only
nineteen, suffered death with so much meekness and fortitude, that an
officer of the army who attended the execution, and who had made himself
remarkable by rudeness and severity, was strangely melted, and said, "I do
not believe that my Lord Chief Justice himself could be proof against
this." Hopes were entertained that Benjamin would be pardoned. One victim
of tender years was surely enough for one house to furnish. Even Jeffreys
was, or pretended to be, inclined to lenity. The truth was that one of his
kinsmen, from whom he had large expectations, and whom, therefore, he
could not treat as he generally treated intercessors pleaded strongly for
the afflicted family. Time was allowed for a reference to London. The
sister of the prisoner went to Whitehall with a petition. Many courtiers
wished her success; and Churchill, among whose numerous faults cruelty had
no place, obtained admittance for her. "I wish well to your suit with all
my heart," he said, as they stood together in the antechamber; "but do not
flatter yourself with hopes. This marble,"—and he laid his hand on
the chimneypiece,—"is not harder than the King." The prediction
proved true. James was inexorable. Benjamin Hewling died with dauntless
courage, amidst lamentations in which the soldiers who kept guard round
the gallows could not refrain from joining. <SPAN href="#linknote-452"
name="linknoteref-452" id="linknoteref-452"><small>452</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Yet those rebels who were doomed to death were less to be pitied than some
of the survivors. Several prisoners to whom Jeffreys was unable to bring
home the charge of high treason were convicted of misdemeanours, and were
sentenced to scourging not less terrible than that which Oates had
undergone. A woman for some idle words, such as had been uttered by half
the women in the districts where the war had raged, was condemned to be
whipped through all the market towns in the county of Dorset. She suffered
part of her punishment before Jeffreys returned to London; but, when he
was no longer in the West, the gaolers, with the humane connivance of the
magistrates, took on themselves the responsibility of sparing her any
further torture. A still more frightful sentence was passed on a lad named
Tutchin, who was tried for seditious words. He was, as usual, interrupted
in his defence by ribaldry and scurrility from the judgment seat. "You are
a rebel; and all your family have been rebels Since Adam. They tell me
that you are a poet. I'll cap verses with you." The sentence was that the
boy should be imprisoned seven years, and should, during that period, be
flogged through every market town in Dorsetshire every year. The women in
the galleries burst into tears. The clerk of the arraigns stood up in
great disorder. "My Lord," said he, "the prisoner is very young. There are
many market towns in our county. The sentence amounts to whipping once a
fortnight for seven years." "If he is a young man," said Jeffreys, "he is
an old rogue. Ladies, you do not know the villain as well as I do. The
punishment is not half bad enough for him. All the interest in England
shall not alter it." Tutchin in his despair petitioned, and probably with
sincerity, that he might be hanged. Fortunately for him he was, just at
this conjuncture, taken ill of the smallpox and given over. As it seemed
highly improbable that the sentence would ever be executed, the Chief
Justice consented to remit it, in return for a bribe which reduced the
prisoner to poverty. The temper of Tutchin, not originally very mild, was
exasperated to madness by what he had undergone. He lived to be known as
one of the most acrimonious and pertinacious enemies of the House of
Stuart and of the Tory party. <SPAN href="#linknote-453"
name="linknoteref-453" id="linknoteref-453"><small>453</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The number of prisoners whom Jeffreys transported was eight hundred and
forty-one. These men, more wretched than their associates who suffered
death, were distributed into gangs, and bestowed on persons who enjoyed
favour at court. The conditions of the gift were that the convicts should
be carried beyond sea as slaves, that they should not be emancipated for
ten years, and that the place of their banishment should be some West
Indian island. This last article was studiously framed for the purpose of
aggravating the misery of the exiles. In New England or New Jersey they
would have found a population kindly disposed to them and a climate not
unfavourable to their health and vigour. It was therefore determined that
they should be sent to colonies where a Puritan could hope to inspire
little sympathy, and where a labourer born in the temperate zone could
hope to enjoy little health. Such was the state of the slave market that
these bondmen, long as was the passage, and sickly as they were likely to
prove, were still very valuable. It was estimated by Jeffreys that, on an
average, each of them, after all charges were paid, would be worth from
ten to fifteen pounds. There was therefore much angry competition for
grants. Some Tories in the West conceived that they had, by their
exertions and sufferings during the insurrection, earned a right to share
in the profits which had been eagerly snatched up by the sycophants of
Whitehall. The courtiers, however, were victorious. <SPAN href="#linknote-454"
name="linknoteref-454" id="linknoteref-454"><small>454</small></SPAN></p>
<p>The misery of the exiles fully equalled that of the negroes who are now
carried from Congo to Brazil. It appears from the best information which
is at present accessible that more than one fifth of those who were
shipped were flung to the sharks before the end of the voyage. The human
cargoes were stowed close in the holds of small vessels. So little space
was allowed that the wretches, many of whom were still tormented by
unhealed wounds, could not all lie down at once without lying on one
another. They were never suffered to go on deck. The hatchway was
constantly watched by sentinels armed with hangers and blunderbusses. In
the dungeon below all was darkness, stench, lamentation, disease and
death. Of ninety-nine convicts who were carried out in one vessel,
twenty-two died before they reached Jamaica, although the voyage was
performed with unusual speed. The survivors when they arrived at their
house of bondage were mere skeletons. During some weeks coarse biscuit and
fetid water had been doled out to them in such scanty measure that any one
of them could easily have consumed the ration which was assigned to five.
They were, therefore, in such a state that the merchant to whom they had
been consigned found it expedient to fatten them before selling them. <SPAN href="#linknote-455" name="linknoteref-455" id="linknoteref-455"><small>455</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Meanwhile the property both of the rebels who had suffered death, and of
those more unfortunate men who were withering under the tropical sun, was
fought for and torn in pieces by a crowd of greedy informers. By law a
subject attainted of treason forfeits all his substance; and this law was
enforced after the Bloody Assizes with a rigour at once cruel and
ludicrous. The brokenhearted widows and destitute orphans of the labouring
men whose corpses hung at the cross roads were called upon by the agents
of the Treasury to explain what had become of a basket, of a goose, of a
flitch of bacon, of a keg of cider, of a sack of beans, of a truss of hay.
<SPAN href="#linknote-456" name="linknoteref-456" id="linknoteref-456"><small>456</small></SPAN>
While the humbler retainers of the government were pillaging the families
of the slaughtered peasants, the Chief Justice was fast accumulating a
fortune out of the plunder of a higher class of Whigs. He traded largely
in pardons. His most lucrative transaction of this kind was with a
gentleman named Edmund Prideaux. It is certain that Prideaux had not been
in arms against the government; and it is probable that his only crime was
the wealth which he had inherited from his father, an eminent lawyer who
had been high in office under the Protector. No exertions were spared to
make out a case for the crown. Mercy was offered to some prisoners on
condition that they would bear evidence against Prideaux. The unfortunate
man lay long in gaol and at length, overcome by fear of the gallows,
consented to pay fifteen thousand pounds for his liberation. This great
sum was received by Jeffreys. He bought with it an estate, to which the
people gave the name of Aceldama, from that accursed field which was
purchased with the price of innocent blood. <SPAN href="#linknote-457"
name="linknoteref-457" id="linknoteref-457"><small>457</small></SPAN></p>
<p>He was ably assisted in the work of extortion by the crew of parasites who
were in the habit of drinking and laughing with him. The office of these
men was to drive hard bargains with convicts under the strong terrors of
death, and with parents trembling for the lives of children. A portion of
the spoil was abandoned by Jeffreys to his agents. To one of his boon
companions, it is said he tossed a pardon for a rich traitor across the
table during a revel. It was not safe to have recourse to any intercession
except that of his creatures, for he guarded his profitable monopoly of
mercy with jealous care. It was even suspected that he sent some persons
to the gibbet solely because they had applied for the royal clemency
through channels independent of him. <SPAN href="#linknote-458"
name="linknoteref-458" id="linknoteref-458"><small>458</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Some courtiers nevertheless contrived to obtain a small share of this
traffic. The ladies of the Queen's household distinguished themselves
preeminently by rapacity and hardheartedness. Part of the disgrace which
they incurred falls on their mistress: for it was solely on account of the
relation in which they stood to her that they were able to enrich
themselves by so odious a trade; and there can be no question that she
might with a word or a look have restrained them. But in truth she
encouraged them by her evil example, if not by her express approbation.
She seems to have been one of that large class of persons who bear
adversity better than prosperity. While her husband was a subject and an
exile, shut out from public employment, and in imminent danger of being
deprived of his birthright, the suavity and humility of her manners
conciliated the kindness even of those who most abhorred her religion. But
when her good fortune came her good nature disappeared. The meek and
affable Duchess turned out an ungracious and haughty Queen. <SPAN href="#linknote-459" name="linknoteref-459" id="linknoteref-459"><small>459</small></SPAN>
The misfortunes which she subsequently endured have made her an object of
some interest; but that interest would be not a little heightened if it
could be shown that, in the season of her greatness, she saved, or even
tried to save, one single victim from the most frightful proscription that
England has ever seen. Unhappily the only request that she is known to
have preferred touching the rebels was that a hundred of those who were
sentenced to transportation might be given to her. <SPAN href="#linknote-460"
name="linknoteref-460" id="linknoteref-460"><small>460</small></SPAN> The
profit which she cleared on the cargo, after making large allowance for
those who died of hunger and fever during the passage, cannot be estimated
at less than a thousand guineas. We cannot wonder that her attendants
should have imitated her unprincely greediness and her unwomanly cruelty.
They exacted a thousand pounds from Roger Hoare, a merchant of
Bridgewater; who had contributed to the military chest of the rebel army.
But the prey on which they pounced most eagerly was one which it might
have been thought that even the most ungentle natures would have spared.
Already some of the girls who had presented the standard to Monmouth at
Taunton had cruelly expiated their offence. One of them had been thrown
into prison where an infectious malady was raging. She had sickened and
died there. Another had presented herself at the bar before Jeffreys to
beg for mercy. "Take her, gaoler," vociferated the Judge, with one of
those frowns which had often struck terror into stouter hearts than hers.
She burst into tears, drew her hood over her face, followed the gaoler out
of the court, fell ill of fright, and in a few hours was a corpse. Most of
the young ladies, however, who had walked in the procession were still
alive. Some of them were under ten years of age. All had acted under the
orders of their schoolmistress, without knowing that they were committing
a crime. The Queen's maids of honour asked the royal permission to wring
money out of the parents of the poor children; and the permission was
granted. An order was sent down to Taunton that all these little girls
should be seized and imprisoned. Sir Francis Warre of Hestercombe, the
Tory member for Bridgewater, was requested to undertake the office of
exacting the ransom. He was charged to declare in strong language that the
maids of honour would not endure delay, that they were determined to
prosecute to outlawry, unless a reasonable sum were forthcoming, and that
by a reasonable sum was meant seven thousand pounds. Warre excused himself
from taking any part in a transaction so scandalous. The maids of honour
then requested William Penn to act for them; and Penn accepted the
commission. Yet it should seem that a little of the pertinacious
scrupulosity which he had often shown about taking off his hat would not
have been altogether out of place on this occasion. He probably silenced
the remonstrances of his conscience by repeating to himself that none of
the money which he extorted would go into his own pocket; that if he
refused to be the agent of the ladies they would find agents less humane;
that by complying he should increase his influence at the court, and that
his influence at the court had already enabled him, and still might enable
him, to render great services to his oppressed brethren. The maids of
honour were at last forced to content themselves with less than a third
part of what they had demanded. <SPAN href="#linknote-461"
name="linknoteref-461" id="linknoteref-461"><small>461</small></SPAN></p>
<p>No English sovereign has ever given stronger proof of a cruel nature than
James the Second. Yet his cruelty was not more odious than his mercy. Or
perhaps it may be more correct to say that his mercy and his cruelty were
such that each reflects infamy on the other. Our horror at the fate of the
simple clowns, the young lads, the delicate women, to whom he was
inexorably severe, is increased when we find to whom and for what
considerations he granted his pardon.</p>
<p>The rule by which a prince ought, after a rebellion, to be guided in
selecting rebels for punishment is perfectly obvious. The ringleaders, the
men of rank, fortune, and education, whose power and whose artifices have
led the multitude into error, are the proper objects of severity. The
deluded populace, when once the slaughter on the field of battle is over,
can scarcely be treated too leniently. This rule, so evidently agreeable
to justice and humanity, was not only not observed: it was inverted. While
those who ought to have been spared were slaughtered by hundreds, the few
who might with propriety have been left to the utmost rigour of the law
were spared. This eccentric clemency has perplexed some writers, and has
drawn forth ludicrous eulogies from others. It was neither at all
mysterious nor at all praiseworthy. It may be distinctly traced in every
case either to a sordid or to a malignant motive, either to thirst for
money or to thirst for blood.</p>
<p>In the case of Grey there was no mitigating circumstance. His parts and
knowledge, the rank which he had inherited in the state, and the high
command which he had borne in the rebel army, would have pointed him out
to a just government as a much fitter object of punishment than Alice
Lisle, than William Hewling, than any of the hundreds of ignorant peasants
whose skulls and quarters were exposed in Somersetshire. But Grey's estate
was large and was strictly entailed. He had only a life interest in his
property; and he could forfeit no more interest than he had. If he died,
his lands at once devolved on the next heir. If he were pardoned, he would
be able to pay a large ransom. He was therefore suffered to redeem himself
by giving a bond for forty thousand pounds to the Lord Treasurer, and
smaller sums to other courtiers. <SPAN href="#linknote-462"
name="linknoteref-462" id="linknoteref-462"><small>462</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Sir John Cochrane had held among the Scotch rebels the same rank which had
been held by Grey in the West of England. That Cochrane should be forgiven
by a prince vindictive beyond all example, seemed incredible. But Cochrane
was the younger son of a rich family; it was therefore only by sparing him
that money could be made out of him. His father, Lord Dundonald, offered a
bribe of five thousand pounds to the priests of the royal household; and a
pardon was granted. <SPAN href="#linknote-463" name="linknoteref-463" id="linknoteref-463"><small>463</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Samuel Storey, a noted sower of sedition, who had been Commissary to the
rebel army, and who had inflamed the ignorant populace of Somersetshire by
vehement harangues in which James had been described as an incendiary and
a poisoner, was admitted to mercy. For Storey was able to give important
assistance to Jeffreys in wringing fifteen thousand pounds out of
Prideaux. <SPAN href="#linknote-464" name="linknoteref-464" id="linknoteref-464"><small>464</small></SPAN></p>
<p>None of the traitors had less right to expect favour than Wade,
Goodenough, and Ferguson. These three chiefs of the rebellion had fled
together from the field of Sedgemoor, and had reached the coast in safety.
But they had found a frigate cruising near the spot where they had hoped
to embark. They had then separated. Wade and Goodenough were soon
discovered and brought up to London. Deeply as they had been implicated in
the Rye House plot, conspicuous as they had been among the chiefs of the
Western insurrection, they were suffered to live, because they had it in
their power to give information which enabled the King to slaughter and
plunder some persons whom he hated, but to whom he had never yet been able
to bring home any crime. <SPAN href="#linknote-465" name="linknoteref-465" id="linknoteref-465"><small>465</small></SPAN></p>
<p>How Ferguson escaped was, and still is, a mystery. Of all the enemies of
the government he was, without doubt, the most deeply criminal. He was the
original author of the plot for assassinating the royal brothers. He had
written that Declaration which, for insolence, malignity, and mendacity,
stands unrivalled even among the libels of those stormy times. He had
instigated Monmouth first to invade the kingdom, and then to usurp the
crown. It was reasonable to expect that a strict search would be made for
the archtraitor, as he was often called; and such a search a man of so
singular an aspect and dialect could scarcely have eluded. It was
confidently reported in the coffee houses of London that Ferguson was
taken, and this report found credit with men who had excellent
opportunities of knowing the truth. The next thing that was heard of him
was that he was safe on the Continent. It was strongly suspected that he
had been in constant communication with the government against which he
was constantly plotting, that he had, while urging his associates to every
excess of rashness sent to Whitehall just so much information about their
proceedings as might suffice to save his own neck, and that therefore
orders had been given to let him escape. <SPAN href="#linknote-466"
name="linknoteref-466" id="linknoteref-466"><small>466</small></SPAN></p>
<p>And now Jeffreys had done his work, and returned to claim his reward. He
arrived at Windsor from the West, leaving carnage, mourning, and terror
behind him. The hatred with which he was regarded by the people of
Somersetshire has no parallel in our history. It was not to be quenched by
time or by political changes, was long transmitted from generation to
generation, and raged fiercely against his innocent progeny. When he had
been many years dead, when his name and title were extinct, his
granddaughter, the Countess of Pomfret, travelling along the western road,
was insulted by the populace, and found that she could not safely venture
herself among the descendants of those who had witnessed the Bloody
Assizes. <SPAN href="#linknote-467" name="linknoteref-467" id="linknoteref-467"><small>467</small></SPAN></p>
<p>But at the Court Jeffreys was cordially welcomed. He was a judge after his
master's own heart. James had watched the circuit with interest and
delight. In his drawingroom and at his table he had frequently talked of
the havoc which was making among his disaffected subjects with a glee at
which the foreign ministers stood aghast. With his own hand he had penned
accounts of what he facetiously called his Lord Chief Justice's campaign
in the West. Some hundreds of rebels, His Majesty wrote to the Hague, had
been condemned. Some of them had been hanged: more should be hanged: and
the rest should be sent to the plantations. It was to no purpose that Ken
wrote to implore mercy for the misguided people, and described with
pathetic eloquence the frightful state of his diocese. He complained that
it was impossible to walk along the highways without seeing some terrible
spectacle, and that the whole air of Somersetshire was tainted with death.
The King read, and remained, according to the saying of Churchill, hard as
the marble chimneypieces of Whitehall. At Windsor the great seal of
England was put into the hands of Jeffreys and in the next London Gazette
it was solemnly notified that this honour was the reward of the many
eminent and faithful services which he had rendered to the crown. <SPAN href="#linknote-468" name="linknoteref-468" id="linknoteref-468"><small>468</small></SPAN></p>
<p>At a later period, when all men of all parties spoke with horror of the
Bloody Assizes, the wicked Judge and the wicked King attempted to
vindicate themselves by throwing the blame on each other. Jeffreys, in the
Tower, protested that, in his utmost cruelty, he had not gone beyond his
master's express orders, nay, that he had fallen short of them. James, at
Saint Germain's would willingly have had it believed that his own
inclinations had been on the side of clemency, and that unmerited obloquy
had been brought on him by the violence of his minister. But neither of
these hardhearted men must be absolved at the expense of the other. The
plea set up for James can be proved under his own hand to be false in
fact. The plea of Jeffreys, even if it be true in fact, is utterly
worthless.</p>
<p>The slaughter in the West was over. The slaughter in London was about to
begin. The government was peculiarly desirous to find victims among the
great Whig merchants of the City. They had, in the last reign, been a
formidable part of the strength of the opposition. They were wealthy; and
their wealth was not, like that of many noblemen and country gentlemen,
protected by entail against forfeiture. In the case of Grey and of men
situated like him, it was impossible to gratify cruelty and rapacity at
once; but a rich trader might be both hanged and plundered. The commercial
grandees, however, though in general hostile to Popery and to arbitrary
power, had yet been too scrupulous or too timid to incur the guilt of high
treason. One of the most considerable among them was Henry Cornish. He had
been an Alderman under the old charter of the City, and had filled the
office of Sheriff when the question of the Exclusion Bill occupied the
public mind. In politics he was a Whig: his religious opinions leaned
towards Presbyterianism: but his temper was cautious and moderate. It is
not proved by trustworthy evidence that he ever approached the verge of
treason. He had, indeed, when Sheriff, been very unwilling to employ as
his deputy a man so violent and unprincipled as Goodenough. When the Rye
House plot was discovered, great hopes were entertained at Whitehall that
Cornish would appear to have been concerned: but these hopes were
disappointed. One of the conspirators, indeed, John Rumsey, was ready to
swear anything: but a single witness was not sufficient; and no second
witness could be found. More than two years had since elapsed. Cornish
thought himself safe; but the eye of the tyrant was upon him. Goodenough,
terrified by the near prospect of death, and still harbouring malice on
account of the unfavourable opinion which had always been entertained of
him by his old master, consented to supply the testimony which had
hitherto been wanting. Cornish was arrested while transacting business on
the Exchange, was hurried to gaol, was kept there some days in solitary
confinement, and was brought altogether unprepared to the bar of the Old
Bailey. The case against him rested wholly on the evidence of Rumsey and
Goodenough. Both were, by their own confession accomplices in the plot
with which they charged the prisoner. Both were impelled by the strongest
pressure of hope end fear to criminate him. Evidence was produced which
proved that Goodenough was also under the influence of personal enmity.
Rumsey's story was inconsistent with the story which he had told when he
appeared as a witness against Lord Russell. But these things were urged in
vain. On the bench sate three judges who had been with Jeffreys in the
West; and it was remarked by those who watched their deportment that they
had come back from the carnage of Taunton in a fierce and excited state.
It is indeed but too true that the taste for blood is a taste which even
men not naturally cruel may, by habit, speedily acquire. The bar and the
bench united to browbeat the unfortunate Whig. The jury, named by a
courtly Sheriff, readily found a verdict of Guilty; and, in spite of the
indignant murmurs of the public, Cornish suffered death within ten days
after he had been arrested. That no circumstance of degradation might be
wanting, the gibbet was set up where King Street meets Cheapside, in sight
of the house where he had long lived in general respect, of the Exchange
where his credit had always stood high, and of the Guildhall where he had
distinguished himself as a popular leader. He died with courage and with
many pious expressions, but showed, by look and gesture, such strong
resentment at the barbarity and injustice with which he had been treated,
that his enemies spread a calumnious report concerning him. He was drunk,
they said, or out of his mind, when he was turned off. William Penn,
however, who stood near the gallows, and whose prejudice were all on the
side of the government, afterwards said that he could see in Cornish's
deportment nothing but the natural indignation of an innocent man slain
under the forms of law. The head of the murdered magistrate was placed
over the Guildhall. <SPAN href="#linknote-469" name="linknoteref-469" id="linknoteref-469"><small>469</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Black as this case was, it was not the blackest which disgraced the
sessions of that autumn at the Old Bailey. Among the persons concerned in
the Rye House plot was a man named James Burton. By his own confession he
had been present when the design of assassination was discussed by his
accomplices. When the conspiracy was detected, a reward was offered for
his apprehension. He was saved from death by an ancient matron of the
Baptist persuasion, named Elizabeth Gaunt. This woman, with the peculiar
manners and phraseology which then distinguished her sect, had a large
charity. Her life was passed in relieving the unhappy of all religious
denominations, and she was well known as a constant visitor of the gaols.
Her political and theological opinions, as well as her compassionate
disposition, led her to do everything in her power for Burton. She
procured a boat which took him to Gravesend, where he got on board of a
ship bound for Amsterdam. At the moment of parting she put into his hand a
sum of money which, for her means, was very large. Burton, after living
some time in exile, returned to England with Monmouth, fought at
Sedgemoor, fled to London, and took refuge in the house of John Fernley, a
barber in Whitechapel. Fernley was very poor. He was besieged by
creditors. He knew that a reward of a hundred pounds had been offered by
the government for the apprehension of Burton. But the honest man was
incapable of betraying one who, in extreme peril, had come under the
shadow of his roof. Unhappily it was soon noised abroad that the anger of
James was more strongly excited against those who harboured rebels than
against the rebels themselves. He had publicly declared that of all forms
of treason the hiding of traitors from his vengeance was the most
unpardonable. Burton knew this. He delivered himself up to the government;
and he gave information against Fernley and Elizabeth Gaunt. They were
brought to trial. The villain whose life they had preserved had the heart
and the forehead to appear as the principal witness against them. They
were convicted. Fernley was sentenced to the gallows, Elizabeth Gaunt to
the stake. Even after all the horrors of that year, many thought it
impossible that these judgments should be carried into execution. But the
King was without pity. Fernley was hanged. Elizabeth Gaunt was burned
alive at Tyburn on the same day on which Cornish suffered death in
Cheapside. She left a paper written, indeed, in no graceful style, yet
such as was read by many thousands with compassion and horror. "My fault,"
she said, "was one which a prince might well have forgiven. I did but
relieve a poor family; and lo! I must die for it." She complained of the
insolence of the judges, of the ferocity of the gaoler, and of the tyranny
of him, the great one of all, to whose pleasure she and so many other
victims had been sacrificed. In so far as they had injured herself, she
forgave them: but, in that they were implacable enemies of that good cause
which would yet revive and flourish, she left them to the judgment of the
King of Kings. To the last she preserved a tranquil courage, which
reminded the spectators of the most heroic deaths of which they had read
in Fox. William Penn, for whom exhibitions which humane men generally
avoid seem to have had a strong attraction, hastened from Cheapside, where
he had seen Cornish hanged, to Tyburn, in order to see Elizabeth Gaunt
burned. He afterwards related that, when she calmly disposed the straw
about her in such a manner as to shorten her sufferings, all the
bystanders burst into tears. It was much noticed that, while the foulest
judicial murder which had disgraced even those times was perpetrating, a
tempest burst forth, such as had not been known since that great hurricane
which had raged round the deathbed of Oliver. The oppressed Puritans
reckoned up, not without a gloomy satisfaction the houses which had been
blown down, and the ships which had been cast away, and derived some
consolation from thinking that heaven was bearing awful testimony against
the iniquity which afflicted the earth. Since that terrible day no woman
has suffered death in England for any political offence. <SPAN href="#linknote-470" name="linknoteref-470" id="linknoteref-470"><small>470</small></SPAN></p>
<p>It was not thought that Goodenough had yet earned his pardon. The
government was bent on destroying a victim of no high rank, a surgeon in
the City, named Bateman. He had attended Shaftesbury professionally, and
had been a zealous Exclusionist. He may possibly have been privy to the
Whig plot; but it is certain that he had not been one of the leading
conspirators; for, in the great mass of depositions published by the
government, his name occurs only once, and then not in connection with any
crime bordering on high treason. From his indictment, and from the scanty
account which remains of his trial, it seems clear that he was not even
accused of participating in the design of murdering the royal brothers.
The malignity with which so obscure a man, guilty of so slight an offence,
was hunted down, while traitors far more criminal and far more eminent
were allowed to ransom themselves by giving evidence against him, seemed
to require explanation; and a disgraceful explanation was found. When
Oates, after his scourging, was carried into Newgate insensible, and, as
all thought, in the last agony, he had been bled and his wounds had been
dressed by Bateman. This was an offence not to be forgiven. Bateman was
arrested and indicted. The witnesses against him were men of infamous
character, men, too, who were swearing for their own lives. None of them
had yet got his pardon; and it was a popular saying, that they fished for
prey, like tame cormorants, with ropes round their necks. The prisoner,
stupefied by illness, was unable to articulate, or to understand what
passed. His son and daughter stood by him at the bar. They read as well as
they could some notes which he had set down, and examined his witnesses.
It was to little purpose. He was convicted, hanged, and quartered. <SPAN href="#linknote-471" name="linknoteref-471" id="linknoteref-471"><small>471</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Never, not even under the tyranny of Laud, had the condition of the
Puritans been so deplorable as at that time. Never had spies been so
actively employed in detecting congregations. Never had magistrates, grand
jurors, rectors and churchwardens been so much on the alert. Many
Dissenters were cited before the ecclesiastical courts. Others found it
necessary to purchase the connivance of the agents of the government by
presents of hogsheads of wine, and of gloves stuffed with guineas. It was
impossible for the separatists to pray together without precautions such
as are employed by coiners and receivers of stolen goods. The places of
meeting were frequently changed. Worship was performed sometimes just
before break of day and sometimes at dead of night. Round the building
where the little flock was gathered sentinels were posted to give the
alarm if a stranger drew near. The minister in disguise was introduced
through the garden and the back yard. In some houses there were trap doors
through which, in case of danger, he might descend. Where Nonconformists
lived next door to each other, the walls were often broken open, and
secret passages were made from dwelling to dwelling. No psalm was sung;
and many contrivances were used to prevent the voice of the preacher, in
his moments of fervour, from being heard beyond the walls. Yet, with all
this care, it was often found impossible to elude the vigilance of
informers. In the suburbs of London, especially, the law was enforced with
the utmost rigour. Several opulent gentlemen were accused of holding
conventicles. Their houses were strictly searched, and distresses were
levied to the amount of many thousands of pounds. The fiercer and bolder
sectaries, thus driven from the shelter of roofs, met in the open air, and
determined to repel force by force. A Middlesex justice who had learned
that a nightly prayer meeting was held in a gravel pit about two miles
from London, took with him a strong body of constables, broke in upon the
assembly, and seized the preacher. But the congregation, which consisted
of about two hundred men, soon rescued their pastor and put the magistrate
and his officers to flight. <SPAN href="#linknote-472" name="linknoteref-472" id="linknoteref-472"><small>472</small></SPAN> This, however, was no ordinary
occurrence. In general the Puritan spirit seemed to be more effectually
cowed at this conjuncture than at any moment before or since. The Tory
pamphleteers boasted that not one fanatic dared to move tongue or pen in
defence of his religious opinions. Dissenting ministers, however blameless
in life, however eminent for learning and abilities, could not venture to
walk the streets for fear of outrages, which were not only not repressed,
but encouraged, by those whose duty it was to preserve the peace. Some
divines of great fame were in prison. Among these was Richard Baxter.
Others, who had, during a quarter of a century, borne up against
oppression, now lost heart, and quitted the kingdom. Among these was John
Howe. Great numbers of persons who had been accustomed to frequent
conventicles repaired to the parish churches. It was remarked that the
schismatics who had been terrified into this show of conformity might
easily be distinguished by the difficulty which they had in finding out
the collect, and by the awkward manner in which they bowed at the name of
Jesus. <SPAN href="#linknote-473" name="linknoteref-473" id="linknoteref-473"><small>473</small></SPAN></p>
<p>Through many years the autumn of 1685 was remembered by the Nonconformists
as a time of misery and terror. Yet in that autumn might be discerned the
first faint indications of a great turn of fortune; and before eighteen
months had elapsed, the intolerant King and the intolerant Church were
eagerly bidding against each other for the support of the party which both
had so deeply injured.</p>
<p>END OF VOL. I.</p>
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