CHAPTER XVII.
SCOTLAND FROM THE ACCESSION OF CHARLES I TO THE
RESTORATION.
BEFORE the accession of Charles I Scotland had already had experience of
an absentee King; in the twenty-two years during which James ruled the two
kingdoms he had but once visited his native country, and his visit had extended
to less than eleven weeks. But in the case of James there always remained the
closest relation between himself and his northern subjects. Of none of their
Kings had the Scots a more vivid impression than of the son of Mary Stewart an
impression partly due to his personal idiosyncrasies, and partly to the
peculiar circumstances of his reign. As the result of the Reformation, a
national consciousness had been awakened which had quickened the popular
interest in all the actions of the Government to a degree unknown at any
previous period. Nor had any former King of Scots shown such a direct and
persistent interest in every question that bore however remotely on the
relations of the Crown to the subject. Thus it was that James and his Scottish
people had come to a mutual understanding of each otherßs character and
affinities which his long absence could not wholly efface. It was James’ boast
that he knew “the stomach” of his Scottish subjects, and his subjects had an
equal knowledge of his own. In the case of his son it was wholly different. As we
follow the events of Charles’ reign, we have a difficulty in deciding whether
King or people most completely misunderstood each other. Of the peculiarities
of the Scottish intellect and temper, of the general conditions of the country
which were the net result of its previous history, Charles to the last showed
hardly a glimmering of knowledge, or even of appreciation. On the other hand,
the Scots showed an equal inability to understand the character and motives and
ends of a King whose ideals and methods of government seemed to them expressly
directed against their national traditions and aspirations. In time they came
to form a definite conception of him as their prince; but the man Charles
remained to them a mystery to the end.
The Scottish Constitution, as Charles had inherited it from his father,
made him virtually an absolute monarch. By a simple and effective process James
had converted Parliament into a “baron court”. As the business of the Scottish
Parliament was arranged, it was directed and controlled by the “Lords of the
Articles”, and since their origin the election of these officials had been a
ground of contention between the Crown and the Estates. The persistency and
astuteness of James secured their election by the Crown, with the result that
Parliament in all matters of high policy became the simple instrument of his
will. From the date of his migration to England, indeed, it was not through
Parliament but through his Privy Council that he governed Scotland, and of the
one he was as uncontrolled master as he was of the other. In previous reigns
the members of the Council had been chosen partly by the Estates and partly by
the King; but, favored by peculiar circumstances, James had succeeded in
acquiring the sole privilege of nominating every member of the body. It was no
vain boast, therefore, when James addressed his English Parliament in these
words : “This I must say for Scotland, and may truly vaunt it : here I sit and
govern it with my pen; I write and it is done; and by a Clerk of the Council I
govern Scotland now which others could not do by the sword”.
In the Church James had made
himself as supreme as in the State. It was mainly by the exercise of the royal
authority that he had imposed Episcopacy on the country; for no collective
expression of the national will had demanded it; and, as the new ecclesiastical
system was constituted, it completed his conception of an ideal State. He
nominated the Bishops on the same grounds as he nominated the Privy Councilors
and the Lords of the Articles the agreement of their views with his own on all
questions that concerned the royal prerogative. But before the close of his
reign James had been significantly reminded that there was a limit to his
interference with the national conscience. He had successfully substituted the
Episcopal for the Presbyterian form of Church government; but when, by the Five
Articles of Perth, he sought to introduce novel rites and ceremonies (kneeling
at Communion, Private Communion in cases of necessity, Private Baptism in like
cases, the observance of the great annual festivals of the Christian Church,
and Confirmation by the Bishops), he was warned alike by his ecclesiastical
advisers and by the feeling of the nation that he was venturing on a dangerous
way. Emboldened by his triumph over previous opposition, however, James through
dexterous management procured the sanction of the Articles by both General
Assembly and Parliament. But the double sanction commended them none the more
to the nation. “And for our Church matters”, wrote Archbishop Spottiswoode, who
had from the first been James’ most trusted adviser in Church affairs, “they
are gone unless another course be taken”. It was the heritage of these Five
Articles that committed Charles to the policy which in his eyes was a Divine
mission, but which in the eyes of his subjects involved the forfeiture of his
right to rule over them.
Tendencies of Charles’
government. [1625-33
The period from the accession of Charles in 1625 till his coronation in
the Chapel of Holyrood in 1633 was exempt from those civil commotions that were
to give the remainder of his reign its disastrous distinction in the national
history. Yet in Scotland as in England these years saw unmistakable symptoms of
the future revolt that was to cleave both kingdoms in twain. During these eight
years the train was effectually laid for that breach between Charles and his
Scottish subjects which involved the National Covenant, the Solemn League and
Covenant, and the collapse of the royal authority for a space of more than
twenty years. It was through the joint action of the people and the nobility
that these results were accomplished, and it was by Charles’ policy during the
opening years of his reign that the alliance between these two classes of his
subjects was prepared. By an unhappy coincidence Charles at one and the same
time alienated both his Scottish commons and nobility.
The prime concern of the people at large was the maintenance of that
form of Protestantism which was their inheritance from the Reformation, and
since Scottish Protestantism had come to birth it had been haunted by one
constant dread dread of Roman Catholicism, with which Scotland had yet more
completely broken than any other country. But by the first acts of his reign
Charles raised suspicions of the soundness of his Protestantism among his
Scottish subjects, which were never allayed and rendered a mutual understanding
impossible. His marriage with the Catholic Henrietta Maria, unpopular in
England, was incomprehensible to Scottish Protestants, to whom any compromise
with Rome was at once a menace to their faith and the abandonment of a
fundamental principle. Charles’ attitude towards the Five Articles of Perth
(always regarded as a papistical backsliding) gave further ground for alarm
regarding his future ecclesiastical policy. While he waived them in favor of
such ministers as had taken Orders before their enactment, he made it
distinctly understood that the Articles were henceforward to be the
indisputable law of the Church. As yet the widespread discontent with these
actions of the King could not express itself in open revolt; but by frequent
meetings (prohibited by law), ministers and congregations mutually encouraged
their fears and fostered the spirit which was to produce the Covenants.
Along other lines of his policy Charles equally alienated his nobles, by
whose support, it is to be noted, his father had been enabled to give effect to
his innovations in Church and State. Even under James the nobility had shown
signs of restiveness at the status and authority that had been conferred on the
Bishops. It was speedily seen, however, that Charles meant to go beyond his
father in the bestowal of place and power on ecclesiastics. In reconstituting
the Privy Council in 1626 he admitted five Bishops and the Primate
Spottiswoode, who by Charles’ express order was to take precedence of every
subject. As in subsequent reconstructions of the Council Charles still further
increased the number of ecclesiastical members, the nobles could not
misunderstand his deliberate intention of giving the first place in his
councils to churchmen, equally in affairs of Church and State. To the nobles of
every shade of religious opinion, therefore, the whole episcopal order became a
growing offence, and the overthrow of the Bishops was more than a subsidiary
motive when as a body they threw themselves into the great revolt.
But it was another action of Charles, that, apart from purely religious
motives, determined the Scottish nobles in joining the people in their uprising
against his general policy. In this action, also, they saw only a deliberate
purpose to weaken their order and to deprive them of their ancient standing in
the country. In the first year of his reign Charles announced his intention of
revoking all grants of Church and Crown lands since the beginning of the reign
of Mary. Such an Act of Revocation was no new thing in Scotland; but previous
revocations had been restricted to grants that had been made during each King’s
minority. There was hardly a family of consequence that would not in more or
less degree be injuriously affected alike in its possessions and standing by
the operation of Charles’ measure. The nobles would be the main sufferers by
the transactions, but the burghs, the Bishops, and even the lower clergy, all
of whom had profited at one time or other by grants of Church lands, regarded
the sweeping revocation with grave alarm.
In revoking the Church lands Charles might be accused of a high-handed
action, taken mainly in the interest of the Crown; but conjoined with this
measure there was another proposal which was undoubtedly in the public
interest, and which Charles held out as the great inducement to the acceptance
of his scheme. Besides the Church lands which had been so lavishly bestowed by
the Crown, there had been equally lavish grants of the teinds or tithes, which had formed a substantial proportion of the
revenue of the pre-Reformation Church. As these teinds had been promiscuously granted to persons other than the
owners of the lands on which they were levied, the consequence had been equally
disastrous to landowners and clergy. It was the intolerable grievance of the
former that they could not remove their crops, exposed to all the changes of
weather, till the “titular of the tithes”, as he was called, had laid his hands
on the proportion that accrued to him, while the clergy complained that they
received only a fraction of the teinds,
which by right should have been their exclusive property. Charles’ proposal for
remedying these evils was simple and effective : every landholder or heritor
was to have the privilege, if he chose to use it, of purchasing his own teinds from the titulars. Alluring as
this inducement must have been to many of his subjects, it was in defiance of
opposition at every step that Charles gave effect to his revolutionary measure.
At length, in a Convention of the Estates which met in 1629, Charles definitely
announced the arrangements he had adopted in the case of the Church lands and
the teinds alike. For the revoked
lands the Crown was to indemnify their owners at the rate of ten years’, purchase
nine years' purchase being fixed as the heritable value of the teinds. As the future was to show, the
Act of Revocation was at once an economical and a political fact of the first
importance. In the end it placed the stipends of the clergy on a secure basis a
happy arrangement which had been unknown since the Reformation. From the
political consequences of the Act Charles was himself to be the chief sufferer.
By the nobility in general it was regarded as a deliberate assault on their order;
and their resentment was in proportion to the sense of their diminished wealth
and authority. According to the contemporary chronicler, Sir James Balfour,
Lyon King-of-Arms, the Act of Revocation was “the ground-stone of all the
mischief that followed after, both to this King’s government and family”. The
statement is doubtless an exaggeration; but by slighting his nobles in favor of
ecclesiastics, and by reducing their estates and overriding their privileges,
Charles had supplied their order with potent motives to hold a reckoning with
the royal authority when the opportunity should come.
Policy towards Roman
Catholics. [1625-33
During the interval of eight years between Charles’ accession and his
first visit to Scotland in 1633 it was through his Privy Council that he had
directed the affairs of the country alike in Church and State. As it was at
once a legislative, an executive, and a judicial body, every interest of the
subject came more or less directly under its cognizance; but it is in two
directions of its activity during the period prior to Charles’ visit that we
find an immediate and significant bearing on the momentous events that were to
follow. Throughout the whole period there was one matter which beyond all
others preoccupied the Council the extirpation of Roman Catholicism throughout
the length and breadth of the kingdom. Not a year passed without the
proclamation of penal laws against the Catholics as a body, and without an
active prosecution of prominent individuals. In 1629 the action of the Council
culminated in a measure meant once for all to cleanse the country of the
dreaded pest. Commissioners were appointed for every part of the kingdom with
express powers to seize “all and sundry Jesuits, seminary and mass priests, and
excommunicated rebellious papists”, as well as all persons “going in pilgrimage
to chapels and wells”. The motive for this furious proceeding was not merely
religious zeal but the general conviction that the numbers and influence of
Catholics in the country were a serious menace to the stability of the kingdom.
In the subsequent national revolt against the ecclesiastical policy of Charles
it was this dread of a Catholic reaction that influenced the mind of all
classes beyond every other motive. The National Covenant was a national bond of
defence and aggression against every influence and tendency that favored the
religion of Rome.
Next to the extirpation of Popery the business which most continuously
occupied the Council was the maintenance of law and order in the Highlands,
Islands, and Borders. By its own admission the Council signally failed in this
object. During the last years of James’ reign these districts had been reduced
to a state of tranquility and order such as had been unknown at any previous
period; but his son, engrossed in the affairs of his southern kingdom, had
neither leisure nor inclination to pay the same attention to these “peccant
parts” of the country. From the beginning of his reign, therefore, there had
been a gradual slackening of discipline equally on the Borders and in the
Highlands. Due allowance must always be made for the exaggerated language of
statutes, but, after every legitimate reserve, the following sentence from a
proclamation denouncing the Marquis of Huntly and a long list of other persons,
reveals a state of things little short of anarchy. “Disorders are grown to that
height that almost nowhere in the North Country can any of his Majesty’s
subjects promise safety to their persons or means, the breach of his Majesty’s
peace in these parts being so universal and fearful as the very burghs and
towns themselves are in continual danger and fear of some sudden surprise by
fire or otherwise from these broken me”. The impotence of the Council in the
discharge of its most important function had at once a general and a particular
result in the impending contest between the Crown and the people. An impression
grew that Charles’ government was directed by a hand less firm than his father’s,
and the anarchy of the Highlands prepared a field for the future exploits of
Montrose.
Almost every year from his succession Charles had given a promise that
he would visit Scotland to receive his crown; but at length, after eight years,
he crossed the Border and entered his northern capital on June 15, 1633. The
central and public event of his visit was to be his coronation in the Chapel of
Holyrood; but, as Parliament had been specially summoned to meet during his
sojourn, it was well understood that business would be transacted of the first importance
for the country. As the affairs of the Church had been the engrossing matter of
public interest both in his own and his father’s reign, the momentous question
of the hour was how he would declare himself with regard to the Five Articles
of Perth which had been tormenting the consciences of so large a proportion of
his people. By the time his visit was completed, every doubt was removed
regarding Charles’ future ecclesiastical policy. By his own overt actions and
by the measures he imposed on his Parliament, he definitely declared his
intention to carry his father’s policy to its legitimate conclusion. In the
ceremony of the coronation the rites of the Church of England were
ostentatiously followed. To the horror of such Presbyterians as the historian
John Row, the officiating Bishops appeared in full Anglican costume; there were
candles, the semblance of an altar, and a crucifix before which the Bishops
bowed as they passed. In the church of St Giles on the following Sunday two
English chaplains, we are told by the same historian, “acted their English
service” the service being immediately followed by a noisy banquet in a neighboring
mansion.
Charles I in Scotland.
[1633
Long before Charles’ coming, steps had been taken to man the Parliament with
persons who would record their votes as desired. James VI, if he had not
invented the method by which this process was accomplished, had at least
greatly improved it. The process was a simple and effective one; in the case of
the commissioners for the burghs the Privy Council brought convincing pressure
to bear on the electing magistrates, who were dismissible at its pleasure; and
the sheriffs of the counties, appointed by the Crown, did a similar service in
the election of the representatives of the lesser barons. But, as the business
of the House was conducted, such precautions were hardly necessary. As has
already been said, the direction and control of such measures as were proposed
was entirely in the hands of the Lords of the Articles. The method of passing
bills into law had likewise been perfected in the previous reign : the Lords of
the Articles drafted the bills, and, without any special debate on each, the
vote was taken on them in the mass. The success of this ingenious arrangement
depended solely on the Lords of the Articles, and James had made sure of the
satisfactory action of these officials. The Lords of the Articles were
twenty-four in number, eight being chosen to represent each of the three
Estates, the greater barons, the Bishops, and the lesser barons and burgesses.
In reigns previous to that of James, when the powers of the Crown and the
Parliament were more equally balanced, it had been the rule that each Estate
should choose its own Lords of the Articles, but in his persistent extension of
the prerogative James had set this rule aside along with so many others. As the
arrangement for their election was settled by James and followed by Charles,
the nobles chose eight Lords from the Bishops (all, be it noted, the King’s
nominees), the eight Bishops chose eight from the nobles, and the sixteen
together chose eight from the lesser barons and burgesses. Thus the Bishops
virtually elected the whole body of the Lords of the Articles, and Parliament
was thereby reduced to the footing of a “baron court”.
Among the Acts passed by the
Parliament in the manner described, two only were of pre-eminent importance for
the future development of the reign. By the one all the Acts of James VI
touching religion that enforcing the Five Articles of Perth among them were
approved and sanctioned; by the other it was ordained that during Divine
service and sermon Bishops were to array themselves in “whites”, and the
inferior clergy in surplices. In spite of all the precautions taken to secure a
unanimous vote the House gave emphatic proof that it was not of one mind
regarding the measures it was asked to approve. A general protest was drawn up
against the method of voting, but, before all the protesters could sign, the Parliament
had risen; and in the final vote on the collective legislation the majority was
so narrow that there was a suspicion of a dishonest count. By the two Acts
regarding religion, Charles had unmistakably shown what was to be his future
ecclesiastical policy; but, if further evidence were wanting, he gave it
emphatically by refusing to look at a petition by the ministers in which they
called his attention to “the disordered estate of the Reformed Kirk”. Yet, when
on July 18, 1633, he left his northern capital, he could with justice say that
according to the letter of the law, in both Church and State, he had left
things precisely as he had found them.
It was speedily made plain that the opposition to his policy had made no
impression on the mind of Charles. The place and power assigned to the Bishops
was, as he must have known, equally distasteful to the nobility and to his
subjects in general; yet, in the September following his departure, he added to
their number by creating a diocese of Edinburgh, a diocese unknown to the
pre-Reformation Church. In October he sent down prescriptions regarding the
apparel of the clergy, and in the same month gave orders that the English
liturgy should be used in the Chapel Royal in Holyrood and in the University of
St Andrews, the abode of the metropolitan, Spottiswoode. In October, 1634, he
revived the Court of High Commission, which had been created by his father for
the punishment of ecclesiastical offences, enlarging its powers to an extent
that made it a veritable Inquisition. The appointment (January, 1635) of Spottiswoode
to the Lord Chancellorship, an office which had not been held by an
ecclesiastic since the Reformation, was a further plain hint to the nobles that
they were to give place to the Bishops in State as well as in Church. The
proceedings in the famous trial of Lord Balmerino afforded a striking example
of the extent to which Charles was prepared to strain the prerogative. The
nobles, defeated in their protest during the late meeting of the Estates, had
subsequently drawn up a remonstrance which Charles refused to receive. A copy
of the document, with mitigating alterations in Balmerino’s hand, came into the
possession of Spottiswoode, who, contrary to his usual moderate policy, sent it
to Charles and urged that Balmerino should be called to account. For more than
a year (1634-5) the trial was allowed to drag on, and on grounds so specious
and flimsy that loyalists so dissimilar as Laud and Drummond of Hawthornden
denounced its folly and injustice. By a majority of one the judges found him
guilty; but by the advice of Laud Charles eventually granted him a conditional
pardon. Yet, as affairs now stood in the country, the pardon was of as evil
effect as the trial itself. The injustice of the proceedings had roused the
indignation of all classes, and especially of the nobles who had seen their own
order menaced in the case of Balmerino; and now the ominous discovery was made
that the Government could be influenced by public opinion.
The Book of Canons.
[1635-6
The actual breach between Charles and his subjects came in the year
1636; and the Act by which it was effected was, in the opinion of Charles’ own
best friends, one of the most fatuous in the history of his reign. Throughout
all the ecclesiastical changes under James VI, Knox’ Book of Common Order and
the Second Book of Discipline had held their place as containing the
authoritative declaration of the polity and ritual of the Church. In point of
fact, however, neither of these formularies was applicable to the Church as it
now existed under the sanction of the State, and a new formulary was needed to
define its actual character and position. In the portentous Book of Canons,
which had passed the Great Seal in May, 1635, Charles now announced to his
Scottish subjects what was henceforth to be accepted as the polity and ritual
of their national Church. The contents of the book, its origin, and the method
by which it was imposed, equally offended all classes in the country. James VI
in all his ecclesiastical innovations had studiously gone through the form of
procuring the sanction of the General Assembly and the Estates, but solely by
his own fiat Charles now imposed his Book of Canons on the country. Moreover,
the implications of the book itself considerably transcended the limits of the
authority which his father had ever claimed in civil and ecclesiastical
affairs. James had never declared in so uncompromising a fashion his headship
of the Church and his sovereignty in the State. In its prescription of rites
and ceremonies it went so far beyond what had been known in Scotland since the
Reformation, that it was universally held to be a papistical much more than a
Protestant document. By a wanton defiance of public opinion, moreover, the book
even commanded the acceptance of a Liturgy which had not yet appeared, and the
contents of which were unknown except to certain of the Scottish Bishops who
were in Charles’ confidence. In Clarendon’s words, the Canons “appeared to be
so many new laws imposed upon the whole kingdom by the King’s sole authority,
and contrived by a few private men of whom they had no good opinion, and who
were strangers to the nation; so that it was thought no other than a subjection
to England by receiving laws from thence, of which they were most jealous, and
which they most passionately abhorred”. Charles had, in fact, created a
situation similar to that which Mary of Lorraine had created on the eve of the
Reformation: he had effected a bond between patriotism and religious scruples;
and the result in each case was a revolution.
On December 20, 1636, the Privy Council, which as a body had no
responsibility for the action, formally announced that the promised Liturgy
would shortly appear, and that on its appearance it would be enforced as the
only legal form of worship in the Scottish Church. Every minister was to
procure two copies, an injunction which the Council subsequently explained as
being meant only to secure the ministers’ own edification, and not the
imposition of the book on their congregations. In May of the following year the
long-dreaded volume at length made its appearance, and its contents confirmed
the liveliest fears of the nation. To a liturgy in itself there was no general
opposition, as Knox’ Book of Common Order had been in use since the Reformation;
but to this particular Liturgy there were many and insuperable objections. It
was universally believed that it was mainly the work of one man Archbishop
Laud, an Englishman, and, as was the common conviction, a papist at heart.
Tainted at its source, the book in the eyes of the great majority of all
classes bore all the marks of its origin. In its variations from the English
Service Book on which it was based it was indignantly noted that its authors
had made deliberate approximations to the usages of Rome. A “Popish-English-Scottish-Mass-Service-Book”
such was its summary characterization by Row; and the fate of the book was to
show that patriotism and religion had in equal measure been evoked to withstand
it.
By the imposition of “Laud’s Liturgy”, as the book came to be popularly
called, the issue was fairly joined between Charles and the Scottish people. As
the future was to show, the gulf that divided them was one that could not be
bridged. With a show of justice Charles could say that in all his actions he
had but followed the precedent of his father; for James had claimed and had all
but made good his claim to be “supreme governor of this kingdom over all
persons and in all causes”, and, such being the extent of his prerogative, it
seemed to his son but a cumbersome form to consult Parliament and General
Assemblies. Yet the very disregard of consequences which characterized his
action is the proof of the sincerity of his convictions. He had seen evidence
not to be mistaken that the nobility as an order were now arrayed against him,
while even among the Bishops it was only a minority of his own creation that
cordially supported the Book of Canons and the new Liturgy. To every eye that
could discern the signs of the times it was evident that only by an armed force
could Charles maintain the ground he had taken; but now as ever it seemed to
him that the rage of a people against their prince was but a temporary madness
with which they were stricken for their sins.
On July 23 the new Liturgy was introduced in the Church of St Giles,
Edinburgh, in the presence of the Archbishop of St Andrews, the Lords of the
Privy Council, and the Lords of Session. The historic tumult that ensued was
the first open defiance of the royal authority, and proved to be the beginning
of revolution. So defiant continued the opposition of the Edinburgh populace to
the book that, in spite of the threats of Charles and his Council, it could not
find a hearing in any church in the city; and in every part of the country it
encountered the same determined resistance. It was a crisis similar to that
which had preceded the overthrow of the ancient Church, and the precedents of
that time were now closely followed. It was by means of petitions that the
Protestant leaders had sought to convince Mary of Lorraine that she was acting
in opposition to the national will and the laws of the kingdom. From parishes
and Presbyteries, from nobles, barons, and burgesses, therefore, petitions now
poured in on the Privy Council, the one burden of which was the protest against
the “fearful innovation” of the Canons and the Liturgy. In September the Duke
of Lennox was commissioned by the Council to lay specimens of the petitions
before Charles and to obtain his directions for dealing with them. On October
18, amid an excited crowd which had flocked from the country on the occasion,
Charles’ reply to the petitions was read from the town cross. It took the form
of three distinct proclamations : the first announced that the Privy Council
should henceforth have nothing to do with ecclesiastical affairs, and commanded
every stranger to leave the city within twenty-four hours; the second declared
that the Council and the Law Courts were to be removed from Edinburgh; and the
third condemned a book against the Canons and the Liturgy which had been widely
circulated among the people. The demonstration that followed the proclamation,
in which the most unpopular of the Privy Councilors were somewhat roughly
handled, was a significant warning that Charles had reckoned too confidently on
the obedience of his subjects. It was, in truth, now brought home to the
Government that it had to reckon with a manifestation of public feeling which paralyzed
its own powers of action. As a means towards quieting the tumult throughout the
country, and preventing the concourse of all classes to the capital, a
suggestion was made with the approval of the Council, which, however expedient
at the time, was to be of disastrous effect to the royal authority. The
suggestion was that each of the four Classes nobles, lairds, burghers, and
ministers who had taken part in the petitions, should choose a “Table” or
Committee to represent its desires, and that a central Table, composed of four
representatives from each of the several Tables, should sit permanently in
Edinburgh. Thus a rival authority was set up in the State, which, supported by
national opinion, could deal on more than equal terms with the legitimate
Government. The Protesters, now an organized body, were emboldened to raise the
demands of their original petitions. In a “Supplication” presented to the
Council, then sitting at Dalkeith, they demanded not only the recall of the
Canons and the Liturgy, but the removal of the Bishops from the Council as the
authors of all the mischief between the King and his people. It was in
December, 1637, that this Supplication was presented; and in February of the
following year came Charles’ reply. Again couched in the form of a
proclamation, it announced that the Liturgy would not be withdrawn, that all
the petitions against it were illegal, and that such petitions would henceforth
be punished as treason. The Protesters, who had secret information regarding
the counsels of the Court, were fully aware of what would be the nature of
Charles’ reply, and had made their preparations accordingly. At Stirling, Linlithgow,
and Edinburgh, where the proclamation was successively read, it was in each
case followed by a formal protest in the name of the four Tables.
1628] The National
Covenant.
Charles’ unbending attitude towards the demands of his discontented
subjects only strengthened their worst suspicions regarding his ultimate
intentions. In the minds of such of them as were influenced by religious
motives no doubt was left that they stood face to face with the same enemy with
whom their fathers had so often done battle in the past; and it was naturally
conceived that he should now be fought with the same weapons. In their
struggles against the ancient religion, both in the reigns of Mary and James
VI, the Protestants had entered into a bond or covenant, binding themselves to
common action against all enemies of their faith, and such a covenant it was
now proposed to renew as the most effectual means of consolidating the ranks of
the petitioners and of giving unity to their action. The special form which the
covenant assumed showed that their counsels were directed by men whose zeal did
not outrun their prudence. The basis of the document was the Negative
Confession, or King’s Confession which had been drawn up in 1581 with the
sanction of James VI, and the burden of which was denunciation of the religion
of Rome. There was a double reason why this Confession should have been chosen
in preference to that which had been submitted to the Estates by Knox and his
fellow Reformers. Charles could not object to a document which his father had
approved and subscribed; and, moreover, the petitioners themselves could not
have agreed on a confession which precisely defined all the points of
Protestant doctrine. The Negative Confession, however, did not stand alone; the
additions that formed an integral part of the National Covenant, as it came to
be called, made it a revolutionary document. Following the Confession came a
list of the Acts of Parliament which had confirmed it; next an indictment of
the recent innovations; and finally, an oath for the defence of the Crown and
the true religion. The enthusiasm with which the Covenant was received proved
how completely it expressed the feeling of the hour. By every shire, by all the
burghs except Aberdeen, St Andrews, and Crail, and by every Protestant noble with
the exception of five, it was subscribed amid an exaltation of feeling to which
there is no parallel in the national history. “Now”, Archbishop Spottiswoode is
said to have exclaimed on this unmistakable expression of the national will, “now
all that we have been doing these thirty years past is thrown down at once” ;
and the flight to England of himself and all the Bishops except four, who made “solemn
recantations”, proved that for the time the reign of Episcopacy was at an end.
From this moment the conviction was forced on both the opposing parties
that the sword alone could decide the quarrel. As neither Charles nor his
subjects, however, were yet prepared for this final issue, for still another
year fruitless attempts were made towards a mutual understanding. The demand of
the Covenanters, to call them by the name they received from the supporters of
the King, was now for a free Parliament and for a free General Assembly, which
latter had not met for twenty years. In this demand the Covenanters were
influenced by politic as well as religious considerations. As they well knew,
they had in their late proceedings directly usurped the powers of the State,
and had thus incurred the very charge they had brought against the King. It was
accordingly their manifest policy to obtain the sanction of Parliament and the
Assembly for all their past action; and in the existing state of public opinion
they could securely reckon on the support of both of these bodies. Since
Charles was equally aware that both Parliament and Assembly would declare
against his policy, his one endeavor was to postpone their meeting till he
should again be in a position to control their action. The means he employed to
effect his purpose had a temporary success, but in the end only aggravated the
situation. Hitherto it had been through the Privy Council that he had held
communications with his rebellious subjects; but the Council was a divided body
in which only the Bishops had cordially given him their support. Its one lay
member, the Lord High Treasurer, the Earl of Traquair, who had sought to
further the King’s interests, and had been his principal agent, had failed to
satisfy either Charles or the insurgents, and was equally suspected by both
parties. As the most promising instrument to carry out the policy of delay,
Charles made choice of James, Marquis of Hamilton, whom he dispatched to
Scotland (June, 1638) in the capacity of Royal Commissioner. Hamilton, who was
to play such an ambiguous part in the long controversy, was in many respects
admirably fitted to give effect to his master’s temporary ends. As the premier
peer of Scotland, and a near kinsman of the King, his rank made him a fitting
representative of the Crown, while he was commended to the Covenanters by the
fact that his mother was a devotee of their cause, and his sisters were married
to Covenanting nobles. Though endowed with neither commanding ability nor force
of character, he yet possessed the suppleness and tact which were precisely the
qualities needed for the part he was charged to play. From the beginning both
Hamilton and the Covenanters were fully aware of each other’s real ends; and
they alike understood that any arrangement could only defer the final
arbitrament. “I give you leave to flatter them [the Covenanters] with what
hopes you please”, wrote Charles to Hamilton shortly after his arrival in
Scotland, “so you engage not me against my grounds, and in particular, that you
consent neither to the calling of Parliament nor General Assembly till the
Covenant be given up; your chief end being now to save time, that they may not
commit public follies until I be ready to suppress them”.
Hamilton played the game of marking time with sufficient skill, but his
demand for the abandonment of the Covenant was inflexibly refused. As his
subjects were inexorable, and he was now the weaker party, Charles fell upon
one of those specious compromises which served only to weaken his own cause.
Towards the end of September he empowered Hamilton to announce that the Court
of High Commission would be abolished, and that at dates definitely fixed a
free Parliament and a free General Assembly would be duly summoned. To these
conditions, however, a condition was attached, which, as he could not enforce
it, only strengthened the suspicion that he granted what he could no longer
withhold. Since he could not persuade the nation to abandon the Covenant, he
imposed on them a Covenant of his own to which he and they should alike be
consenting parties. The “King’s Covenant”, as it came to be called, like the
National Covenant took the Negative Confession as its basis; but, instead of
the additions which accompanied the National Covenant there was substituted the
“General Bond” of 1588 which had been drawn up in view of the approach of the
Spanish Armada. As this General Bond implied the reprobation of the National
Covenant, the subscriber of the one would have stultified himself by subscribing
the other; and the singular spectacle was seen of two Covenants competing for
the suffrage of the nation. Though the Privy Council by Charles’ order did its
best to compel subscription to the King’s Covenant, the attempt to divide the
Covenanters signally failed, and it was with unbroken ranks that the
Covenanting party took measures to make good their cause in the coming General
Assembly.
It was equally understood by Charles and by his insurgent subjects that
the impending Assembly would not settle their quarrel. Already there had been
indications on both sides that the final appeal must be to armed force. By the
King’s orders ammunition was brought to Leith for the garrison in the Castle of
Edinburgh, but the ammunition was seized and the castle subjected to a virtual
blockade. But, though the arbitrament of force might lie in the near future, it
was a prime concern for either party that it should obtain the ascendancy in
the impending Assembly. Under James VI the Assemblies had been sedulously packed
with supporters of his own policy a result which he was able to effect by his
control over the Privy Council and the various public officials in town and
country. Such powers, however, were no longer at the disposal of the Crown, and
it was with inadequate success that Charles did his utmost to secure a majority
in favor of his interests. On the other hand, in the machinery of the Tables,
and especially of their central Table, the Covenanters possessed effectual
means of securing fitting representatives which they did not hesitate to apply.
Under the direction of the Tables the various Presbyteries throughout the
country brought such pressure to bear on the elections that their result was a
triumphant majority for the Covenant. In connection with the membership of the
Assembly there were two further questions on which the [two parties were, each
in its own interest, irreconcilably opposed. In accordance with earliest
precedent the Covenanters insisted that laymen had a right to sit and vote in
the Assembly. But it was not only early precedent but present policy that
determined the Covenanters in insisting on this privilege of laymen. It was by
disjoining the laity from the ministers that James had achieved his triumph
over Presbyterianism; and in the existing crisis both ministers and laymen were
agreed that their common presence in the Assembly was an indispensable
condition for the safety of their cause. In the teeth of all the King’s
protests, therefore, it was unanimously resolved that, in agreement with an Act
of the Assembly held at Dundee in 1597, three ministers and a lay elder should
represent each Presbytery. On the other question Charles and his subjects were
equally in contradiction. It was the contention of Charles that the Bishops, in
virtue of their office, had a legal right to take part in all General
Assemblies, while, in the opinion of the Covenanters, to have admitted this
right would have nullified all their past proceedings. The ground of all their
complaints had been that Bishops were an unconstitutional innovation, and that
they had been the main cause of the misunderstanding between Charles and his
people. If, therefore, Bishops were to appear in the Assembly it should not be
as members but as culprits at the bar of the House; and the Tables gave
emphatic proof of this contention by a formal arraignment at once of the office
and of the personal character of the Bishops as a body. Beaten on both issues,
Charles had at least the consolation that he could deny the legality of an
Assembly which admitted laymen and excluded Bishops.
General Assembly at
Glasgow.
The General Assembly which met in Glasgow on November 21, 1638, has been
compared in its character and issues to the French National Assembly of 1789;
and, due allowance being made for difference of times, the comparison cannot be
regarded as inapt. The Glasgow Assembly met in virtual defiance of the Crown;
though it was nominally a religious body, ninety-eight out of its two hundred
and thirty-eight members were laymen, representing all classes in the community;
the Acts to which it gave its sanction affected the royal prerogative in its
civil not less than in its ecclesiastical jurisdiction; and, finally, its
deliberations issued in a revolution which convulsed two kingdoms and effaced
the powers of the Crown for a period of twenty-two years. And a further analogy
might be found in the fate of certain of the personages who had now assembled
in Glasgow at this crisis of the national destinies. Hamilton, who as Royal
Commissioner presided over the Assembly; the Earl of Argyll, subsequently “the
Great Marquis”, who now decisively took his side in the cause of which he was
to be the astutest champion, but which all his sagacity could not save from
eventual ruin; Johnston of Warriston, the Clerk of the Assembly, who was the
Covenant incarnate and whose legal knowledge made him an indispensable agent in
every transaction in which the Covenant was concerned; Montrose, who reminds us
of Lafayette by his picturesque personality and by his subsequent desertion of
the party of which he was now one of the extreme champions; Sir Robert
Spottiswoode, President of the Court of Session, like his father the Archbishop
a faithful supporter of his royal master all were sooner or later to perish by
the hands of the common executioner.
In the minds of all parties the
proceedings of the Assembly were a foregone conclusion, and both the
Commissioner and his opponents had arranged their general plan of action. On
November 28, a week after the Assembly had met, the anticipated crisis came.
The great stroke which the Covenanters had ever contemplated was the indictment
of the Bishops, and the consequent extinction of their order. Aware of this
intention, Charles had prepared a counter-stroke which was the only alternative
at his disposal. In accordance with his instructions the Bishops refused to recognize
the legality of the Assembly and to appear before the tribunal. The Assembly replied
that it was a legally constituted body duly summoned by his Majesty, and had an
inherent right to sit in judgment on the Bishops. This was the issue for which
the Commissioner had been duly prepared, and in the name of the King he
formally dissolved the Assembly and forbade its continuing in session under
pain of treason. To have obeyed this command would have been to stultify all
the proceedings of the last year and a half; and, three or four members only
dissenting, the Assembly resolved to carry to its logical issues the work which
it had taken in hand. Before it rose on December 20 it had effectually
completed its task. In a series of sweeping measures it abolished Episcopacy
and the Court of High Commission, abrogated the Book of Canons, the new
Liturgy, and the Five Articles of Perth, and, in fine, demolished the entire
ecclesiastical edifice which had been reared by Charles and his father. With
equal enthusiasm it completed the work of reconstruction, and restored by one
comprehensive Act the whole machinery of Presbyterianism with its Kirk
Sessions, Presbyteries, Synods, and General Assemblies, further enacting that
schools should be erected in every landward parish and maintained at the
expense of its inhabitants. “We have now cast down the walls of Jericho”, said
the Moderator, Alexander Henderson, in his closing words to the Assembly. “Let
him that rebuildeth them beware of the curse of Hiel, the Bethelite”. The
future was to supply but an ambiguous commentary on Henderson’s application of
the sacred text.
First Bishops’ War.
Pacification of Berwick. [1639
There were now two rival powers in the kingdom, and only the sword, as
it seemed, could decide between them. It was with a mutual understanding,
therefore, that Charles and the Covenanters made their respective preparations
for the inevitable trial of strength. Charles’ hope was to overawe his revolted
subjects with a force that might render bloodshed unnecessary. By his extensive
plan of invasion two contingents from Ireland were to effect a landing on the
west coast; another force was to cooperate with Huntly in the north; a fleet
was to occupy the Firth of Forth; and he was himself to cross the border at the
head of 30,000 men. For operations on this scale Charles’ resources were
totally inadequate. A fleet under Hamilton entered the Firth of Forth, but,
though it inflicted some injury on trade, it did little to determine the
contest. Instead of an army of 30,000 men, Charles with all his exertions could
muster only 18,000 foot and 3000 horse, and these neither well-disciplined nor
equipped nor enthusiastic in his cause. The Covenanters, on the other hand,
with the great majority of the nation at their back, and with the Tables to
give effect to their arrangements, carried out a general levy with an
enthusiasm which showed that they were prepared to face their King even in the
field. The numbers raised were only 20,000 men, slightly less than the army of
the King; but, according to the testimony of one of themselves, they were in a
temper to face all Europe arrayed against them. In March open hostilities
began. The castles of Edinburgh, Dalkeith, Douglas, and Dumbarton, were taken
by the Covenanters, and in the north Montrose broke the power of Huntly, whom
with his eldest son he sent as prisoner to Edinburgh Castle. On June 5 the main
armies of Charles and the Covenanters were face to face the one at the Birks,
about three miles from Berwick, the other at Dunse Law, some twelve miles
distant. Now that the decisive moment had come both parties realized the
momentous issues that hung on the stake of battle. With his half-hearted force
and with his English subjects indifferent or unsympathetic, Charles could no
longer hope to intimidate the enemy, and the chances were not in his favor that
in a trial of battle victory would be on his side. On their part, the Scots had
their own grounds for disquiet, either in the event of victory or in that of
defeat. In either case there was a prospect of permanent unsettlement which
they could not but regard with perplexity and dismay. It was with common
consent, therefore, that negotiations were opened with the object of effecting
a mutual understanding and averting civil war. The result of the negotiation
was the Pacification of Berwick (June 18, 1639), a hollow truce in the opinion
of both contracting parties, and one which but postponed the final settlement.
Formally, Charles had the advantage in the treaty, as he refused to recognize
the legality of the Glasgow Assembly; but in consenting to the summons of a
free Parliament and another free Assembly he knew that, unless a change came
over the spirit alike of the English and the Scottish people, the future could
be only a repetition of the past.
During the negotiations at Berwick Charles had announced his intention
of making a progress through the kingdom and of being present in the General
Assembly that had been arranged to meet in Edinburgh on August 12. Further
thought convinced him, however, that nothing would be gained by his appearance
in the coming Assembly; and he found a convenient pretext for withdrawing his
promise. Traquair, the Lord Treasurer, was mobbed by the Edinburgh populace, to
whom the Treaty of Berwick seemed a weak concession to the royal policy. But
the proceedings of the Assembly, when it met on the appointed day, convincingly
proved that there was no thought of concession in the minds of any of its
members : without naming the Glasgow Assembly it simply did over again the work
of that body. In accordance with a petition, signed by Montrose among others,
the Privy Council enacted that the signing of the National Covenant should be
enforced on all the lieges. They were only following the example of Charles,
who had made the subscription of the King's Covenant compulsory by an edict of
the same body; but by following that example they were making straight for the
same impasse as that into which Charles’ policy had inevitably conducted him.
What is remarkable, however, is that through Traquair, who had succeeded
Hamilton as Royal Commissioner, Charles ratified every Act of the Assembly,
including the forced subscription of the Covenant. What his motives were in
this action, he had made known to Archbishop Spottiswoode six days before the
Assembly met. “You may rest secure”, he wrote, “that though perhaps we may give
way for the present to that which will be prejudicial both to the Church and
the Government, yet we shall not leave thinking how to remedy both”. For
Charles, in truth, an Assembly, from which the Bishops had been excluded, was
an unconstitutional body to whose Acts no sanction could give the force of law.
Very different was his course of action when the Estates, which met that day
after the Assembly rose, ratified all its Acts against Episcopacy and in favor
of Presbyterianism. Not only did Traquair, in accordance with his instructions,
refuse to sanction these Acts, but he dissolved the Parliament without its own
consent “the like”, says the Lyon-King Balfour, “never being practiced in this
nation”.
The first Bishops’ War and the Pacification of Berwick had left the
contending parties precisely where they were, and once more they were face to
face with the alternative of civil conflict. Till the Acts against Episcopacy
had received the royal sanction the Covenanters could only regard all their
labors as lost, and Charles was more convinced than ever that only the display
of superior force could break the will of his refractory people. Again on both
sides preparations began for the apparently inevitable struggle. In the course
of the first Bishops’ War Charles had endeavored, though unsuccessfully, to
secure the services of a Spanish contingent, and, with the approval of
Montrose, among others of their leaders, the Covenanters, with equal want of
success, now appealed to France for assistance against their sovereign. But, as
they fully realized, it was on their own resources that they must depend if
they were to maintain the position which they refused to abandon. Without the
royal sanction a meeting of Parliament was convened the chief proceeding of
which was to appoint a Committee of Estates for the conduct of the impending
war. The appeal to the country for the means of supporting an army met with an
enthusiastic response, and by the beginning of July, 1640, General Leslie, who
had commanded during the previous rising, was at the head of a well-equipped
force of some 20,000 men. On the other hand, Charles found greater difficulty
than ever in raising a force adequate to effect his purposes. His English
subjects were now still less disposed to abet him against the Scots than they
had been in 1639; the Short Parliament refused him supplies though it had been
summoned expressly with that object; and, when on August 22 he at length
appeared at York, it was to find an army inferior in both numbers and quality
to that of the Covenanters.
The Second Bishops’ War.
[1640-1
It was a significant commentary on the altered affairs of Charles, that
in the second Bishops’ War the Scots were the invading party. Throughout in
close communication with the English Parliamentary leaders, the Covenanters
were fully aware that their appearance south of the Tweed would be welcomed as
a happy intervention in the interests of the English Commons. Crossing the
Tweed on August 20, Leslie dispersed a force that opposed him at
Newburn-on-Tyne, and, ten days after entering England, took up his quarters at
Newcastle. Again, as at Dunse Law, the Scots submitted their demands to
Charles, demands which involved the sanction of all the Acts of the Glasgow
Assembly. With the force at his disposal, Charles had no alternative but to
submit to negotiations; and he agreed that Commissioners for this purpose
should meet at Ripon on October 2 the Scots to receive 850 a day so long as the
negotiations continued. But it was not at Ripon that the treaty was to be
concluded. On November 3 the Long Parliament met, and the hopes and fears of
Charles and all England were centered in its momentous proceedings the
abolition of the Star Chamber, of the Court of High Commission, and of the
Council of the North, the death of Strafford, and the fall of Laud. Engrossed
by these events of national importance, neither Charles nor his Parliament had
leisure for the affairs of the Scots; but the final arrangement made with them
on August 10, 1641, was an adequate reward for the long delay. When they
recrossed the border, it was with every demand conceded and with the sum of
,200,000 as a compensation for all their losses and expenditure.
The recent proceedings of the
Long Parliament had convinced Charles that he had more to hope from his
Scottish than from his English subjects; and, to the dismay both of the Covenanters
and the English Parliamentary leaders, he now announced his intention of
visiting his northern kingdom. The natural fear of the latter was that Charles
by temporary concessions might persuade the Scots to make common cause with him
against themselves; and it was because of this apprehension that they
commissioned two members of the House of Lords and four (Hampden among them) of
the House of Commons, to attend upon him while he should remain in Scotland.
The Covenanters had equal reason to dread the appearance of Charles in their
midst. Besides the party known as the “Incendiaries”, who had supported him
from the beginning, a party favorable to him had appeared in the ranks of the
Covenanters themselves. This party, designated as the “Plotters”, of whom
Montrose was the most eminent, were actuated partly by jealousy of the
ascendancy of Argyll and partly by a reaction of sympathy with Charles himself.
The most overt act of the “Plotters” had been the “Bond of Cumbernauld”
(August, 1640), expressly directed against Argyll and his immediate supporters;
and so dangerous were the Plotters thought to be that in June, 1641, their
chiefs were imprisoned in the Castle of Edinburgh.
When on August 14, 1641, Charles entered Edinburgh, he could thus reckon
on a considerable body prepared to give him its material support if the
opportunity should occur. But, as his actions proved, he had come with the
intention, not of gaining over a mere party, but of winning the nation to his
side. In the Parliament which was sitting on his arrival he sanctioned with
even undue readiness the terms of the late treaty which abolished the
ecclesiastical system established by his father and himself. “After a tough
dispute” he likewise gave way on an all-important point, consenting that officers
of State, Privy Councilors, and Lords of Session should be chosen “with the
advice and approbation” of the Estates. These concessions doubtless gained new
supporters for Charles, as with a show of reason it could be maintained that he
had granted every demand which had been made on him. Between the King and the
main body of the Covenanters, however, there was a fatal bar which no
concessions could remove. That main body, headed by Argyll, was convinced that
only the pressure of circumstances had constrained Charles to concede their
demands, and that he was only biding his time to restore the régime which in his heart he desired as
a man and as a King. One advantage, however, he had gained by his presence in
Scotland : he had deepened the cleavage in the ranks of the Covenanting party,
and the results were to be seen in the immediate future. The mysterious affair,
known as the “Incident”, a conspiracy on the part of the Plotters to remove
Argyll and Hamilton, who had for the time identified himself with the
Covenanters, issued in no definite result; but it placed Argyll and Montrose
with their respective followers in irreconcilable antagonism. When, on November
18, Charles returned to London, where the news of the Irish Rebellion demanded
his presence, he left the main object of his visit unaccomplished, as before
many months was to be fatefully brought home to him.
In the Civil War which broke out (1642) between Charles and his
Parliament, the Covenanters knew that their own existence was at stake, and the
two contending parties equally recognized that the Scots might have it in their
power to decide the issue of their quarrel. It was with like eagerness,
therefore, that both Charles and the English Parliament sought to secure the
Scottish sword for their cause. The decision of the Scots gave conclusive proof
that Charles had failed to reassure the national party by his late concessions.
Supported by popular feeling, they identified themselves with the English
Parliament in the “Solemn League and Covenant” (August, 1643), which in their
intention, if not in the intention of their allies, had for its object the
imposition of the Presbyterian form of Church government on all the three
kingdoms. It was a momentous decision, and the consequences were to prove the
ruin of the Covenanters; but their past action had, in truth, left them no
alternative. If Charles should be victorious, and at the moment the chances
were in his favor, they had every reason to believe that he would seize the
first opportunity of undoing all their work since the uprising against his
authority. It had been the ground of Charles’ ecclesiastical policy that
equally in the interest of religion and the State there should be religious
uniformity throughout his three kingdoms, and it was on a similar ground that
the Solemn League and Covenant was based. As events were to prove, the one
policy was as much a dream as the other, but at the juncture when the League was
formed a Presbyterian England seemed even to the shrewdest of the Covenanting
leaders a consummation to which they could reasonably look forward. Their
Commissioners in London who conducted the Treaty of 1641 had been flattered and
caressed by the English Parliamentary leaders; Episcopacy had been abolished
with the consent of both Houses, and Presbyterianism was in the ascendant in
the national councils. What they did not foresee was that the sword of Cromwell
was the impending instrument of fate.
1646-8] The Scots army
in England. The “Engagement”.
On January 19, 1644, the Scottish army, raised for the support of the
English Parliament, entered England, where for three years it was to remain. It
appeared at a doubtful moment, and its first year’s action in large degree
determined the issue of the war. On July 2 it decisively contributed to the
victory of Marston Moor; and by the close of autumn, all England from the
Humber to the Tweed was, largely through its services, secured to the
Parliament. But from this moment, both in England and at home, may be dated the
decline of the Covenant. Within the period between the autumn of 1644 and the
autumn of 1645 Montrose’s succession of victories in the cause of Charles ended
in his disastrous defeat by David Leslie, at Philiphaugh. But it was the course
of events in England that was eventually to work the ruin of the Covenanting
party. The defeat of Charles at Naseby (June 14, 1645) rendered their further
assistance unnecessary to the Parliament, and thenceforward they were regarded
as an encumbrance to be got rid of with all convenient speed. Their dream of a
Presbyterian England was now proving a fond delusion which had lured them into
an impossible position. The ascendancy of Cromwell and the Independents had
created a new situation which every month rendered more embarrassing. Between
Charles and Cromwell they were in a dilemma from which, as 507 events were to
prove, there was no escape without disaster. When on May 5, 1646, Charles rode
into their camp at Southwell, near Newark, they were brought face to face with
an alternative of which they had little dreamed when they had originally
crossed the border. When Charles refused to be a covenanted King, it was in
consistency with all their principles and their past action that they
surrendered him to the English Parliament. To have retired with him to Scotland
would at once have occasioned civil war at home and invited invasion from
England two disasters which they temporarily avoided, but which in the end were
inevitable. From their ill-starred enterprise there had, indeed, followed one
result which makes it ever-memorable in the national history. The Westminster
Assembly had miserably deceived their hope of seeing Presbyterianism
triumphantly established in both kingdoms, but it at least gave to Scotland a
possession which may be truly called a national inheritance. The existing
Confession of Faith of all the Presbyterian Churches of Scotland, the Larger
and Shorter Catechisms, which embody that Confession, and the Version of the
Psalms, sung to this day by congregations of worshippers, have for two
centuries and a half supplied the spiritual nutriment of the great majority of
the Scottish people.
In the beginning of January, 1647, the Scottish army recrossed the
border. A profound change had manifestly passed over the spirit of the nation :
in every class which had supported the Covenants nobles, barons, and burgesses
defection had set in on a scale which proved that the Covenants were no longer
the prime concern of a united people. On one point, however, both dissentients
and Covenanters were equally agreed : that it was with Charles and not with
Cromwell that an understanding must be sought. But the hopeless fact of the
situation was that such concessions as Charles was prepared to make could not
satisfy both parties in the divided nation. By the secret treaty known as the “Engagement”,
concluded at Carisbrooke Castle in the Isle of Wight (December 27, 1647)
Charles agreed to establish Presbyterianism for three years, with the
stipulation that the Covenant should not be made compulsory, while the Scots
were to aid him with arms against his English Parliament. The publication of
the treaty revealed the irreconcilable opposition between the Scottish parties.
“Engagers” and “Anti-engagers” now divided the nation between them, but it was
conclusively shown that the upper classes of the laity were generally for the
treaty. In a meeting of the Estates, presided over by Hamilton, a commanding
majority voted for the invasion of England in the interests of the King.
Inflexibly opposed by the majority of the clergy, especially in the west,
Hamilton succeeded in raising an army, but it was an army neither in numbers
nor discipline equal to the enterprise in hand. On July 8, 1648, Hamilton led
his force across the border, and in three days 1 fighting (August 17-19)
suffered hopeless defeat at Preston, Wigan, and Warrington, himself falling
into the enemy’s hands.
Cromwell in Edinburgh.
The Act of Classes, [1648-9
As the result of Hamilton’s defeat the Anti-engagers once more resumed
their ascendancy. At the head of 6000 men drawn from the west the Chancellor
Loudon and the Earl of Eglinton marched upon Edinburgh, whose populace,
faithful to their past traditions, received them with open arms. Over the main
body of the Covenanters Argyll was now supreme; but he had to reckon with a
power with which their broken ranks were no longer in a position to contend. In
the first week of October, 1648, Cromwell appeared in Edinburgh and dictated
terms which were entirely acceptable to Argyll and his following. All the
supporters of the King -“Malignants” as he called them- were thenceforth to be
excluded from all public offices: a measure to which sweeping effect was given
by the Act of Classes, passed by the Estates in January of the following year
(1649). In this measure Cromwell and the Covenanters could find common ground,
as the Malignants were equally the enemies of both, but it was speedily to be
seen that Presbyterianism and Independency were in as hopeless antagonism as
the Covenants and the royal prerogative. On January 30, Charles was executed at
Whitehall, and by the vast majority of the Scottish people his death was
regarded as a ground for war against the party in England who were responsible
for the deed.
In the great controversy between Charles and his Scottish subjects there
had been the same constitutional difficulty as in the case of the rebellion in
England. In Scotland as in England the insurgent nation had appealed to
earlier, and the King to later, precedent in justification of their respective
actions. In the fifteenth century the English lawyer, Sir John Fortescue, wrote
that the King of Scots “may not rule his people by other laws than such as they
assent unto”, and in the sixteenth an English resident at the Court of Mary was
amazed by the “beastly liberty” of the Scottish nobility. However it might be
in theory, in point of fact throughout the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
the Kings of Scots had never been able to exercise the powers which had been
acquired by the Kings of England, France, and Spain. James III had been
dethroned for misgovernment; James V had been thwarted and finally defeated in
his policy of seeking alliance with France in preference to England, and it was
in defiance of the royal authority that the Reformation had been accomplished :
and during the first half of his reign James VI had had convincing experience
of the “beastly liberty”, not only of the nobles, but of all his Protestant
subjects. To these precedents it was that the Covenanters appealed in defence
of all their action, for even in making the Covenants compulsory they had the
example of James himself in the case of the Negative Confession. On the other
hand, Charles could maintain that the latter half of his father’s reign had
seen a constitution established which made the King supreme equally in Church
and State, and that in this constitution the nation had at least formally
acquiesced by its Parliaments and General Assemblies. What his own reign and
the immediate future proved was that he and his revolted subjects were alike
contending for a theory which was incompatible with the essential principle of
Protestantism itself. In his own case the Divine right of Kings to impose a
special form of religion on their subjects had ended in disaster, and it was
now to be seen that the same fate awaited the similar attempt of a section of
the people to impose its beliefs on a nation.
1649-50] Charles II
proclaimed King of Scots.
Never was a party in a more hopeless dilemma than the Covenanters at the
death of Charles I. With a few insignificant exceptions, they regarded monarchy
as a divinely prescribed form of government, sanctioned by Scripture and by immemorial
use in the case of their own land. But where were they to find a King who
should combine in his own person both a legal right and the necessary
consecration that should fit him to be the ruler of a covenanted people? Yet in
the existing circumstances there was but one choice possible. In previous
crises of the national history, as in the period that followed the dethronement
of Mary, a Regent had been appointed to carry on the government; but the
rightful heir of the Crown was now of full age, and the appointment of a Regent
would have been tantamount to rescinding his right. On February 5, 1649, six
days after the execution of Charles I, the Scottish Estates proclaimed his son
King of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, and by an Act passed two days later
laid down the conditions on which alone he would be allowed to ascend his
father’s throne : he must subscribe the National Covenant, the Solemn League
and Covenant, and swear to maintain the existing religious settlement. The
negotiations that followed with the youthful Prince at Breda reveal the full
irony of the mutual relations of the contracting parties. Charles agreed to
accept a compact which his whole soul loathed, and which he had the full
intention of casting to the winds at the first opportunity; and the Covenanters
received his pledge in the full knowledge that their deepest convictions were
but the idle jest of their chosen King. Even before the negotiations had closed
conclusive proof had been given that it was only as an unavoidable alternative
that Charles had signed the agreement at Breda (May 1, 1650). With the design
of subduing Scotland in the interest of his master, Montrose had landed in
Caithness at the head of some 1200 men, but on April 27 his force had been
annihilated at Carbisdale by the Kyle of Sutherland, and he was himself taken
prisoner a few days later. His enterprise had deliberately aimed at making
Charles King independently of the Covenanters, and his execution was at once an
act of policy for the future and of revenge for the past.
In accepting Charles as their
King the Scots fully understood that they threw down the gauntlet to the Commonwealth
of England. So soon as he had been established as King of Scots, both parties
knew that his immediate action would be to make himself King of England also.
It was with politic promptness, therefore, that on July 22 Cromwell entered
Scotland with an army of 16,000 men. By the skill of the Scottish general,
Leslie, the evil day was postponed, but at Dunbar on September 3 the
Covenanting host was hopelessly overthrown. The immediate result of the defeat,
however, was in the interests of Charles himself. Divided in their counsels
before, the ranks of the Covenanters were now sundered into two sections, and
henceforth ceased to be a united national party. By the one section the
acceptance of a Malignant King was regarded as a base betrayal of the
Covenants; to the other it seemed the only means of saving the Covenants and
the kingdom alike. In the unflinching “Remonstrance” submitted to the Committee
of Estates (October 30, 1650), the Remonstrants or Protesters arraigned the
whole policy of Argyll’s government, and declined thenceforth to have any
dealings with a Malignant King. Weakened by this secession, and with Cromwell
in possession of Edinburgh and Leith, the “Resolutioners”, as the party of
Argyll was designated, had no alternative but to identify themselves with the
supporters of the King. On November 26 the Estates virtually abolished the Act
of Classes, thus opening both civil and military offices to every type of
Malignant, and on January 1, 1651, Charles was crowned at Scone, Argyll placing
the crown on his head. As the force of the Remonstrants had been crushed at
Hamilton in the preceding December, Cromwell was the only enemy that had to be
faced in arms. But Cromwell was now in possession of all the country to the
south of the Forth, and an army placed under the command of the experienced
Leslie was unequal to the task of ejecting him. A movement on the part of
Cromwell at the end of July decided the issue between the two kingdoms.
Crossing the Forth to Burntisland, he marched on Perth and thus cut off Leslie’s
communication with the North. The result had been foreseen by Cromwell. On July
31 the army of Charles began its march into England in the vain hope of a
royalist rising, and on September 3 was cut to pieces at Worcester by the
forces of the Commonwealth.
With its King in exile, its armies annihilated, and its political and
religious parties devoid of a common policy, Scotland might seem to have been
rendered powerless for years to come. What many English Kings had attempted and
failed to accomplish, however, the Commonwealth now effectually took in hand the
political union of the two kingdoms. To achieve this end the military conquest
of Scotland must first be completed, and, in the existing state of parties, the
task was a sufficiently easy one. By the action of General Monck the entire
kingdom, even including the Orkney Islands, was reduced by the close of
February, 1652, the Marquis of Argyll himself being constrained to acknowledge
the authority of the Commonwealth. So thoroughly had the conquest been
accomplished, that till the Restoration of 1660 only one Royalist rising in the
Highlands, speedily suppressed, disturbed the peace of the country. The ground
being thus prepared for the union of the two kingdoms, the Commonwealth
addressed itself to the task, subsequently followed up by the Protectorate, of
providing a common government. As arranged under both systems of rule, Scotland
was represented by thirty members in the united Parliament. But a common
Parliament was only part of the plan for the amalgamation of the two peoples.
In the administration of justice, in trade, in education, in religion, Scotland
was to be admitted to all the blessings which England had to offer. In October,
1651, eight Commissioners were appointed to carry on the government of the
country a body displaced in October, 1655, by a Council of State, consisting of
eight members with a President and Secretary. For the administration of justice
a separate body of seven Commissioners was set apart, and the manner in which they
discharged their responsibilities raised the wonder of the Scots, to whom
speedy and just decisions of law were a novel experience. An equally welcome
boon was the privilege of free trade with England the loss of which after the
Restoration revealed its full importance. Nor were the higher interests of the
nation neglected by either Commonwealth or Protectorate: money was voted for
Protestantising the Highlands and Islands a work that had never been thoroughly
done before; the universities were substantially aided; and the improvement of
elementary education formed part of the duty imposed on the Council of State.
In religion the same policy was followed as in England; toleration was granted
to every sect that did not disturb the peace of the country, a condition which
involved the prohibition of General Assemblies as turbulent bodies.
The Scots could not close their eyes to the fact that under the
Commonwealth and Protectorate they enjoyed tranquility, order, and justice in a
degree never known to them under any of their native rulers; but in their eyes
these blessings were vitiated in their source. To every class in the country
the English domination was from first to last more or less distasteful. The
nobles could only regard with horror an authority which had proscribed the
great majority of their order; to the clergy, though, of course, in less degree
to the Protesters among them, the religious settlement was an incubus which
they were prepared to cast off at the first opportunity; and to the people in
general the presence of English officials was a perpetual reminder of the loss
of national independence. When, on January 1, 1660, Monck took his departure
for England, with the intention, as he assured the representatives of the
Scottish burghs and shires, of restoring the liberties of the three kingdoms,
he bore with him the good wishes of all ranks of the Scottish people; and the
enthusiasm which hailed the restoration of Charles II was the spontaneous
expression of a loyalty which had never been extinct in the heart of the
nation, even in the years when the assertion of the royal authority had seemed
most intolerable.
In the long controversy which had
sundered the throne and the people much had been said and done by both parties
which finds its only justification in the spirit of the time and in the nature
of a struggle which involved the deepest issues in the national destinies. Yet,
regarded in its true meaning and scope, the controversy was one which assuredly
did no discredit either to King or people. In the case of both the one and the
other, convictions were at stake for which they were willing to sacrifice what
they regarded as their dearest possessions. In refusing to take the Covenant, Charles
I had shown that he was prepared to forfeit his kingdom rather than retain it
on conditions which marred his idea of the kingly office. But in giving effect
to his prerogative, as he conceived it, he had, in Archbishop Spottiswoode’s
words, made himself both King and Pope, and had evoked an opposition founded on
convictions not less absolute, and, in the case of the nobler among his
adversaries, more disinterested than were his own. What the long contention had
shown was that neither Charles’ belief in his Divine right to impose his will
on his subjects, nor the Covenanters’ belief in the exclusive Divine sanction
of their creed and polity, was compatible with the rational government of a
people. Both conceptions had had their trial, and each alike had failed to find
acceptance with the nation. But the lessons of experience are slowly learned,
and the reigns of two more Stewart Kings, each faithfully following the
precedents of his predecessors, were needed to convince responsible men of all
parties that only by a prudent compromise, alike in politics and in religion,
could subject and prince meet on the common ground of mutual rights and
responsibilities.