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A03659 The actes and life of the most victorious conquerour, Robert Bruce, King of Scotland VVherein also are contained the martiall deeds of the valiant princes, Edward Bruce, Syr Iames Dowglas, Erle Thomas Randel, Walter Stewart, and sundrie others.; Bruce Barbour, John, d. 1395. 1620 (1620) STC 1379; ESTC S114859 195,667 450

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losse more vehemently prouoked to reuenge summond the Ballioll thrise to compeare before him at Newcastle and because he compeared not at all hee sent for Bruce and promised him the Kingdome if hee would write to his friendes either to leaue their King or to flee in battell The King with all diligence past toward Barwike where finding the towne strongly garnished with men and comming small speed in his pursute hee fained a retreat and caused some of the Bruces faction sparse brutes that the Ballioll with a great Oast was euen there at hand whereupon the most notable men of the towne supponing themselues to bee free of the common enemie ran foorth for to receiue their King honourably and so both horse and foote went out of the towne confusedlie But Edward had appointed a number of horsemen to wait vpō that turne who cutted them off easilie from their companies beeing vshed so confusedly and out of order and comming to the next Port entred in the towne the King with his foot-hoste following made miserable slaughter vpon all sorts of people increasing in multitude sent a part of his armie to besiege Dumbar himselfe within few dayes receiued the Castell of Barwike which the keepers randred despairing of reliefe then joyning all his forces together at Dumbar encountred with the Scots hoste which came hither with a great battell to raise the siege the victorie enclined to the English side The chiefe men of the Nobilitie fledde to the Castell but the Captaine not hauing Viuers sufficient to sustaine such a multitude randered and all kinde of crueltie execute vppon the captiues But when the Bruce desired the Kingdome in recompense of his trauell and according to promise Edward answered him in French haue we nothing ado but to purchase Kingdomes for you Dumbar and some other Castles vppon the Border beeing randred Edinburgh and Striuiling were deliuered also from Striuiling Edward passed Forth and marched towards Forfare where the Ballioll was when without impediment hee came to Monrosse The Ballioll by perswasion of Iohn Cummine of Strabogie randred himselfe the Kingdome into King Edwards hands whom he shipped sent into England Edward returned to Barwike by sharpe edict summond all the Scottish Nobilitie to come thither such as came were compelled to sweare obedience vnto him William Dowglas a man of Noble blood and valiant refusing to sweare was cast in prison where within few yeeres he died Thus all things succeeding to his wish hee appointed Iohn Warre● Erle of Surrey Viceroy Hew Cressingham Thesaurer and leauing them behind him hee returned to London where hee warded Iohn Ballioll when hee had reigned 4. yeeres But hee within a short space at the request of the Bishop of Rome was sent to France leauing his sonne Edward in pledge for him Afterward Edward with a great army tooke shipping to passe in France The Scots in esperance of liberty hee being absent chused twelue Regents and by all their aduises Iohn Cummine Erle of Buchan with a sufficient armie was sent in England The English Garrisons left in Scotland dispersed heere and there durst not stirre so hee without impediment spoyled Cumberland and Northumberland Albeit this voyage somewhat incouraged the Scots yet did it but small help to the whole warre for all strong holds were fortified by the enemies garrisons But while as Noblemen lacked both strength and sufficient courage to enterprise greater matters VVilliam VVallace a man of Noble and ancient Family who did Actes in those Warres not only aboue all mens exspectatiō but also incredible being a man of great bodily strenght high courage He hardened his body against injuries of Fortune and confirmed his courage by perillous attempts to enterprise higher and greater euen with danger he gathered vnto him some companie of Men and herewith not only slew any Englishmen he met with but often times a●so with few foght with great numbers in sundrie places where he met with them slew them In short space his fam filled both the Realms so they that had lik causes as he had not vnlike loue to their Countrey gathering together swarmed to him from all parts and within few moneths he amassed an indifferent Army Noblemen for feare or lashnes lying still Wallace was proclaimed Gouernour and as Lieutenant for Ballioll commanded as lawfull Magistrate Hee tooke not this name of pride or of desire to Empire but only like another Sampson vpon compassion and loue of his Countrey-people After this he essayed with open force tooke many Castells either not sufficiently furnished or not weill guarded or negligently kept and razed them His Men of Warres minds were so confirmed that vnder his conduct they feared no perrill for that his hardiment lacked neuer wisdom nor his wisdome the wished euent So in short space he wan all the Forts that Englishmen possessed beyond Forth King Edward hearing these rumours and hauing all his Army with him in France he wrote to Henrie Pearsie Lord of Northumberland to William Latimer to raise quickly Forces out of the next adjacent Countrey and joyne themselues with Cressinghame to suppres the Scots Wallace in this time besieged the Castle of Cowper in Fyfe to the end his men of warre should not be idle attending the coming of the English army his enimies now cuming neare marched directly to Striuiling The Riuer of Forth hath no foords at Striuiling Yet there was a vvoodden bridge ouer the vvhich Cressinghame past vvith the great part of his a●m● the rest following so thick the bridge being ouerburthened vvith so hudge a weght brak in pieces The Scots charged these that vvere past before they could be Arayed slew their leader droue backe the rest in the water with so huge a slaughter that almost the whole were either slain by the Scots or drownd in the riuer Wallace after this so followed his fortune that he left not an Englishman in Scotland except prisoners This victory was obtained vpō the Ides of Septemb. 1297. Hereafter followed great Famine for not manuring of the ground and Pest followed Hunger wherof greater destruction was feared than of the Warre Wallace to remedy this aswell as he might charged al sensible men to come vnto him at a certain day caried them with him into England vvhere liuing in vvinter in their enemies lands they spared Viuers at home vvhere he remained from the kalends of Nouember vnto the kal. of Febr. and no man durst match him And then hauing inriched thēselfs vvith their enemies spoyls returned with great glory As this journey augmented Wallaces fame and authority among the people so it increased the Noble mens enuy against him vvhereof Edw. being priuy setting things in France in order as time would permit leauing his old souldiers beyond sea amassing a very great army vpon the sudden of nouices he marched toward Scotland but whē in the plain of Stanemure both armies stood in order of battel about half a mile from other Edw. viewing Wall hoste
his skil and order of battell albeit he had a greater number of people yet durst he not hazard returning his standerds softly retired but Wallace for feare of ambushment durst not follow This victory obtained without blood against a most potent King The enemies of Wall more sharply assaulted him raising brutes through the countrey that he openly shot at the Kingdom So they conclude by all means to subuert Wall authority These deuises not vnknown to King Edw. he raised a great army of English Scots vvho had remained constāt in their promise made to him the next Sōmer came vnto Faw-kirk vvhich village is builded vpon the very ruins of Seuerus Wall distant from Striuiling 6 myles The Scottish host abade not far from thence strong enough indeed for they were 30 thousand if the Rulers had agreed amongst themselues The Rulers were Iohn Cumming Iohn Stewart Will. Wallace the former two in blood puissance the last in Marshall glory most flourishing of al Scotland While as the 3 battels stood in redines to fight a new contention was added to the former enuy Who should lead the Vanguard neither of them giuing place to the other the Englishmen ended the strife vvho in order of battell vvith displayed Banners came vpon them with expedition Cummine with his company fled vvithout stroke Steward enuironed both behind and before vvas slaine with his hoste Wallace being sore set vpon in front and Bruce comming about a Knowle to charge him on the backe contained his men together in such order as in such state he best could and returned backe ouer CARROVN Water vvhere he defended himself hauing gathered together those that were fled and Bruce desiring to speak with him he refused not whē these two alone stood right ouer against other at a deep narrow part of the Riuer Bruce first said he wondred at him that being caried with the facile fauour of the people would hazard himself in so many perils againe a King most puissant of that age assisted also with great support of Scots that without any hope of recompence of his pains For albeit he vanquisht Edward the Scots would neuer allow of him to be King and if he were ouerthrowne he had no refuge but in the mercy of his enemy To whom Wallace answered I said he neuer tooke these paines to purchase to my self a Kingdom for that is vnagreeable with my condition and my mind couets it not but seeing my Countrey-men through your cowardice to whom the Realme rightly appertains destitute of Rulers hereby casten into their most cruel enemies hands not only in bondage and slauery but euen to the shambles I pittied their case haue enterprised the defence of their cause forsaken by you whose liberty I shall not forsake bef●●e my life forsake me And so the conferēce ended either of both returning to their owne After this vnhappy Battell Wallace returned to Perth and there skailed his army giuing place to the enuy born against him and after that day enterprised nothing for the Realm and renounced the name of Magistrat albeit he left not off the inuading of the English Nation wheresoeuer he could be their master Edward after this wasted by all warlike calamities the Lands beyond Forth euen to Perth subduing those that in respect of the present misery durst not stir so retired with his army into England The Scots that were carefull for the liberty of their Realme a little refreshed after the enemies departure made Iohn Cumming younger Regent who by the aduise of the Counsell sent Ambassadours to Philip Valloys King of France to trauell with him that by Mediation of his Sister who was then affianced to Edward they might at least obtaine Truce By her trauels they obtained Truce for seuen Moneths but not obserued bona fide for Englishmen tooke the Ambassadours that were directed to Bonifacius the eight and imprisoned them The Scots in the meane time who could not abide the tyranny of Englishmen nor culd by no punishment satiat Edwards cruell mind neither yet obtaine peace vpon just conditions prepared themselues with obstinat minds to fight it out without all hope of pardon First they droue all Edwards Captains foorth of all Towns and Fortresses and vexed the Scots of the English factiō vvith all the force they might vvhile as the stat of matters thus cōtinued almost two years Edward sent Rodolph Confrey with a puissant Army to suppresse this rebellion of the Scots and to put an end to those Warres This Army without impediment wasted all to Rosling a place in Louthian foure miles distant from Edinburgh to destroy farther within the Countrey diuided their Army in three Iohn Cummine and Iohn Fraser the most wealthy men in Tweed-dale gathering to the number of 8000 men marched towards the enemy of purpose either to keep in the enemy that he should not run at randon to spoyl the Country or if they found better occasion to follow Fortun. Better occasion was offered then they looked for For Englishmen fearing nothing lesse than the comming of their enemies so often ouerthrowne behauing themselues more losely than was expedient in their enemies ground by sudden comming of the Scots vpō the first of their Camps were ouerthrown with a great slaughter they that escaped raised great tumult in the secōd camp where th' alarm was fearfully raised euery man exhorting his Mate to support their own they prepared thēselues for reuenge The conflict was terrible as betwixt these that were fiers throgh victory these that were enraged by thirst of reuenge in end th' Englishmen discomfist chased victory albeit not vnbloody yeelded to the Scots the third host which had bin furder off affraid the Scots for many being wounded most part wearied with trauels in 2 late battels foresaw manifest danger to ensue by fighting assured destruction by flight at length the Heads commanded to slay al captiues left while they were occupied with th' enemy they shuld come vpon their backs they armed their seruants vvith slain mens armor so made shew of a greater army to their enemies the battel begun vvas keenly foghten on both sides the fight being doutfull for a while the scots by exhortatiō of their leaders calling to mind their late doble victory renewing their strēgth ran so fiercely vpō their enemies that their aray broken they gaue backs It was foghten at Rosline the 6 of the kal. of March 1320. The more notable that this victory was 3 hosts in one day ouerthrown by one the more sharply Edw. set his mind to deface this ignominy and once to put an end to their longsome Warre He amasseth a greater army than euer he did before persued Scotland both by land sea to the vtter most borders of Ros. No man in warfare durst hazard him self against so puissant an army except Wallace with his few folks somtimes behind somtims before somtims vpon their wings chopped at such as
hy That in some baittes so feill can ga For that their foes them chased sa That they ouertumbled and the men That were therein were drowned then There did an Englishman that day A well great strength as I heard say For when he chased was to the bait A Scottishman that him handled hait He hint vp by the armes twa And were he well or were he wa He euen vpon his backe him slang And with him in the bait can gang And kest him in euen magre his This was a well great strength I wis The Englishmen that went away Toward their shippes in hy went they And sailed home angry and wa That they had bene rebuted sa The hame-come of King Robert Out of Ireland fra Sir Edward WHen the Shipmen on this wise Was discomfist as I deuise The Bishop that so well him bare And had comforted all that were there Was yet into the feghting slead Where néere two hundreth wel were dead Withoutten them that drowned were And when the field was spoyled baire They went all home to their repaire To the Bishop is it fallen faire That through his praise and his bountie Enchee●ed sik a great iourney The King therefore ay fra that day Him loued and praised and honoured ay And had him into sik daintie That his owne Bishop him called he Thus they defended the Countrie On both halfes of the Scots sea While that the King out of the land UUas then as ● haue borne on hand Through all Ireland his course hes made And againe to Craigfergus rade And when his brother as he were King Had all the Irishry at bidding And haillely Vlsister alswa He busked home his way to ga And of his men that were most hardy And praised al 's of Cheualry With his brother great part left he And syne is went vnto the sea When they their lieues on ather party Had tane they went to ship in hy The Erle Thomas with him he had And raised Saile but more abade And in the land of Galloway UUithout perill arriued they The Lords of the land were fane When they wist he was come againe And to him went in full great hy And he receiued them tenderly And made them Feast gladsome cheare And then so wonder blyth they were Of his comming as man might say Great Feast to him for thy made they Where euer he rade all the Countrie Gaddered in daintie him for to sée Great gladnesse was there in the land All was then win vnto his hand Fra the red Swyre vnto Orknay Was none of Scotland fra his fay Excepting Barwike it alane That time therein winued ane That Capitane then was of the toun All Scottishmen into suspicioun He had and treated them right ill He had ay to them right ill will And held them all at vnder ay Till that it fell vpon a day That a Burgesse Sym of Spalding Thought that it was right heauie thing On sik sort to rebuted be Therefore into his heart thought he That he would slely make conuyne With the Marshall whose Cousyne He had wedded to his wife And as he thought he did belyfe Letter to him he sent in hy With a traist man full priuily And set him time to come one night With ladders and good men and wight To the Kow yet right priuily And bade hint hold his tryst truely And he sould méete them at the wall For on that night his watch sould fall When the letters the Marshall saw He vmbethought him a litle thraw For he wist by himselfe that he Might nouther of might nor power be For to encheeue so great a thing And gif he tooke to his helping One another sould wraithed be Therefore right to the King yeed he And shewed him betwixt them twa The letter and the charge alswa When the King heard that this traine UUas spoken into sik certaine That him thought therein no fantise He said him certes thou hes wrought wise That hes discouered it first to me For gif thou had discouered thée To my Neuoy the Erle Thomas Thou sould displease the Lord Dowglas And him also in the contrare But I sall wirke on sik maner That thou at thine intent sall be And haue of them no magre Thou sall take Kéepe well to thy day And with them that thou purchase may At Euen sall thou enbushed be In Dunce Parke but by priuie And I sall gar the Erle Thomas And the Lord also of Dowglas Ather with a certaine of men Be there to doe as thou sall ken The Marshall then but more delay Tooke leaue and held foorth on his way And held his spéech priuie and still Till the day that was set him till The winning of Barwicke and the feghting That was in the towne at the winning THen of the best of Lowthiane Hée with him to his trysthes tane For Shireffe then therefore was hee To Dunce Parke with his Menȝie Hée came at Euen full priuilie And syne with a good companie Soone efter came the Erle Thomas That was met with the Lord Dowglas A right faire companie there were When they were met togidder there And when the Marshall the conuine To both the Lords syne by lyne Had told they went foorth on their way Far from the towne their horse left they To make it short so wrought they then That but séeing of ony man Out Sym of Spalding allane That gart that thing bee vndertane That set their Ladders to the Wall And but perceiuing came in all And held them in a nuke priuie While that the night should passed bée And ordainde that the most partie Of their men should gang sikkerlie With their Lords and hold a staill And the remnand should all haill Skaill through the towne and take sla All the men they might ouerta But soone his ordinance brake they For al 's soone as it dawen was day The two part of their men and moe All skailled through the towne can goe So gréedie for to get the good That they ran euen as they were wood And sieged Houses and slew men And they that saw their foes then Come vpon them so suddenlie Throughout the towne they raisde the cry And shot togideer here and there And aye as they assembled were They would abide and make debate Had they béene warned well I wate They should haue sold their liues deare For they were good men and al 's they were Far moe then they were that them sought But they were skailled so that they moght On no maner assembled bee There was greit melles two or thrée That their foes all rushed were But Scottishmen so well them bare And disrayed at the last were sa That they all haill the flight can ta Some gat the Castell but not all And some were slidden ouer the wall And some were into hands tane And some were in the bargane slaine On this wise them conteened they Till it was néere noone of the day Then they that in the Castell were And
no appearance of force in anie part for the common people vpon the construing of the two former losses caused him bee forsaken of all two onely of his old friends stood constantly by him Micolum Leuin Erle of Lennox and Gilbert Hay Englishmen not saciate sufficiently with his miseries sent and apprehended his kinsemen throughout all the Countrie his wife token by William Erle of Rosse was sent into England his brother Nigell the Castle of Kildrummie betrayed by the Captaine thereof with his wife and children were randred to the enemie Thomas and Alexander his brethren also passing from Galloway to Carrik were taken at Lochrien and sent into England These three in sundrie places were beheaded the remnant of the Bruces faction were sought also and slaine their goods confiscate The King himself most often with one in companie in this time kept the vnhaunted mountaines euery day and houre changing lurking holes and while as hee thought not himselfe sure that way neither from treason of the people nor crueltie of his enemies past to the Iles to an old friend of his called Angus and lurking there certaine moneths he was supposed to bee dead and so the enemie ceased searching This brute as it was not vnprofitable for his securitie so if it had any while cōtinued it appeared to his frends to cut away all hope of recouering the Realme thinking therefore to attempt some what getting a smal company from his friend with whome hee lurked he sailed to Carrik where hee tooke a Castle of his owne inheritance at vnawares kept by a strong garison of Englishmen and slew them all least hee might bee inuironed by force of the enemie and crossing the Firth of Clyde with the like felicitie tooke the Castle of Innernesse far distant from there and so passing from place to place taking in townes Castles and strengths The Countrie-people beeing heauily opprest by the enemy flocking to him from all quarters hee gathered a reasonable armie and albeit hee had not onely the common enemy to withstand but also a number of mightie intestine enemies at home especially the Cummines faction yet from this time forth whatsoeuer hee attempted succeeded prosperously till he had expelled the enemie vtterly out of the Realme and subdued the whole Countrie to his obedience but leauing the History of his further progresse because it will appeare more particularly it selfe I remit the Reader to the perusing thereof This is he of whom it may be said that was said of that Roman Scipio unus homo nobis cunctando restituit rem Into what bondage found he his Nation To what liberty did he restore it Since the times of the old Heroes none hath more excelled in all vertues Who more couragious in warre Who more temperate in peace Who euer had a fortun more hard Who euer did more hardly lead Fortun captiue and lesse regarded her frownes a constant course of victorie still enabling all his enterprises whose mind would not bin broken much more bowed vnder such heaps of miseries whose eonstancy would not be queld to haue his wife taken captiue his foure brethren slaine his friends with all mischiefes opprest to haue himselfe not only barred of his patrimony and estat but of a Kingdome and all done against faith by a Prince the mightiest of that age Beside all these calamities thralled and brought to the extreamest of wāt he neither doubted of the recouery of his Crown nor was at any tim sene to cōmit any thing vnworthy of a kingly mind Let Rome boast of Camillus and Scipio France of her Charles Epirus of great Scandeberge Scotland shall not forget this Prince for she cannot And if hee be not so renoumed as these it is not for that he is not as worthy but for that he hath not had so braue trumpeters of his fame being born in so vnpolished an age which time the destroyer and restorer of euery thing may perhaps hereafter in these more learned dayes amend There be some who hold the opinion that the publishing of those books is hurtfull as embers of consumed discord but it is not the publishing of the simplicity of our predecessours that can diuide vs or cause any discord but rather our owne too great subtilty ambition and auarice and the turning the pages of Tacitus and of Secretar Machiauell that cā breed an ague in our state Can the reading of the warres betwixt Longcaster and Yorke separate the red and white Roses I thinke no. But I am perswaded that al men of sound minds will rather abhor discord in reading of these books seeing what miseries and horrible calamities these warres bring foorth and what great occasion we of both Nations haue to magnifie Gods goodnes that in our dayes since the Gospell hath bene in sincerity published amongst vs hath turned all these bloody broyles into a peaceable Calme especially now in the person of our dread Soueraigne So that now as the Prophet sayeth Our swords are brokē into mattocks and our speares into siths But if we would consider what meanes haue bene vsed what paines taken and plots laide by the wisest of both Nations to knit vp this vnion and yet could neuer effectate the same vntill it pleased GOD to cut downe this partitiō wall of long debate in the person of our most gracious SOVERAIGNE GOD giue vs grace to bee thankefull for it AMEN ROBERTVS BRVSSIVS Regni instaurator ac penè novus conditor in omni Fortuna invictus QVIS varios casus quis dura pericula BRVSSI Fatorumque vices commemorare queat Qui victus toties toties qui victor hostis In vacuo fixit Martia signa solo Qui domitis Fatis pugnando restituit rem Civibus patriam jusque suum patriae Cùm tot acerba virum cùm tot cumulata suorum Funera funeribus cerneret ante oculos Mens generosa animi Fortunae excelsior omni Imperio stabili perstitit usque gradu SCOTIA quae statues VICTORI justa trophaea Qui Fati ac hostis Victor ipse Sui est The same in English Who can the hazards hard the chances strāge Of Bruce report a Mark of Fortunes chāge Oft was hee thrall'd his Foes oft from him fled Oft ensignes on the purple Plaines he spred He danted Fates his natiue Soyle ou'rthrowne Her to her own to her brought backe a Crowne By fight he all restor'd and hauing seene So many funerall heapes before his cene His Mind vnquell'd reach't Fortunes wheele aboue And in the Spheare of Courage ●ixt did moue Where hast thou Scotland for his Trophees room Who Fates Foes himselfe for thee o'recome THE ACTES AND LIFE OF the most victorious Conquerour Robert Bruce King of SCOTLAND WHEREIN ALSO ARE contained the Martiall deedes of the valiant Princes Edward Bruce Syr Iames Dowglas Earle Thomas Randell Walter Stewart and sundrie others STories to read are delectable Suppose they nought containe but fable Then sould Stories the soothfast were If they bée spoken in good
there with the King But they both short while had resting For they died both soone after syne For good Sir Dauid of Breching Fled to Brechin his owne Castell And garnist it both faire and well But the Erle of Atholl Sir Dauy His sonne that was in Kildromy Came syne and him assieged there And hee that would hold wéere na mair Nor bargane with the Noble King Came syne his man with good liking Of the heirship of Buchane And how the Castle of Forfare was tane NOw goe wée to the King againe That of his victorie was fane And gart his men burne all Buchane From end to end and spared nane And heryed them on sik manéere That efter that well fiftie yéere Men méened the heirship of Buchane The King then to his peace hes tane The North Countrie all hailelie Obeyed they to his Senyeorie So that by North the Month was nane But they his men were commen ilkane The Lordship aye woxt maire and maire Toward Angous syne can hee fare And thought soone to make his all frée That were on Northside the Scots Sea The Castell of Forfare was then Stuffed all with Englishmen But Philip the Frasar of Platane Hes of his friends with him tane And with Ladder all priuilie Hee to the Castell can him by And clambe vp ouer the walles of stane And syne all that hée fand hes slaine Syne yald the Castell to the King That made him right faire rewarding And syne hee gart breake downe the wall And forded well and Castell all How the King wan Sainct Iohnstown And tumbled all the Towres down WHen that the Castell of Forfare And all the towres downe tumbled were Right to the eird as I haue I told The King that stout was stark and bold Thought that hée would make all frée Upon North halfe the Scots sea To Perth hee went with all his rout And vnbeset the towne about But vnto it hes a Siege set But while they might haue men meat It might not but greit paine be tane For all the wall were then of stane And thicke towres and high standing And that time were there in winning The Methwenes and the Olyphands They two the towne had in their hands Of Stratherne al 's the Erle was there But his Sonne and his men were Without into the Kings rout There was ilke day bikkering stout And men flaine on either partie But the good King that was wittie In all his déedes euerilkane Saw the walles so stight of stane And saw the fence that they can make And that the towne was hard to take With open assault of strength and might Therefore he thought to worke with slight And in all time that hée there lay Hée spied and slely gart assay Where at the dykes it shaldest was While at the last hée found a place That they might to their shoulders waid And when hee that place had founden had Hée gart his Menyie buske ilkane When sex Oulkes of the siege was gan● And tursed their Harnesse haillelie And left the siege all openlie And foorth with all his folke can fare As hée would doe thereat no mare And they that were into the towne When they to fare saw him all bowne They shouted him and scorning made And hée foorth on his wayes rade As hée no will had againe to turne Nor beside them to make sojourne And in aught dayes nought for thy Hee gart make Ladders priuily That might suffice to this intent And in a myrke night syne hée went Toward the towne with his Menyie And Horse and knaues leaued hée Far from the towne and syne hes tane His Ladders and on foote are gane Toward the towne all priuily They heard no Watches speake nor cry For they that were therein may fall As men that dred noght but slept all They had no dread then of the King For they of him heard no tyding All the thrée daies before or maire Therefore sikker and traist they were And when the King heard them not stéere He was right blyth in great manéere And his ladder in hand can ta Example to his men to ma. Arrayed well in all his geare Shot in the dyke and with his speare Cast till that he it ouer wade But to his throt the water stood THat time was in his companie A Knight of France wight and hardie And when he in the UUater sa Saw the King passe and with him ta His ladder vnabasedlie He saned him for the ferlie And said O Lord what shall we say Of our Lords of France that ay With good morcells fairses their panche And will but eat and drinke and dance UUhen sik a King and so worthie As this is through his Chenalrie Into sik perill hes him set To win a wretched Hamelet UUith that word to the dyke he ran And ouer after the King he wan And when the Kings Menyie saw Their Lord the King into a thraw Past to the dyke and but more let Their ladders to the wall they set And to climbe vp fast preassed they But the good King as I heard say UUas the second yéed ouer the wall And bade there while his Menyie all UUere comming vp in full great hy Yet then raise neither noise nor crie But soone efter they noyse made That of them first perceiuing had So that the cry raise through the towne But he that with his men was boune To assailyie to the towne is went And the most part of his men sent And skailled through the towne but he Held with himselfe a great Menyie So that he might be ay puruayde To defend gif he were assayde But they that he sent through the toun Put to so great confusioun Their foes that in beds were Or skailled fleeing here and there That ere the sunne raise they had tane Their foes and discomfist ilkane The Wardanes both therein were tane And Malise of Stratherne was gane To his father the Erle Malis And with strength tooke him and all his Syne for his sake the Noble King Gaue him his land in gouerning The laue that ran out through the toun Seazed to them in great fusioun Men arming and Merchandise And other good of sundrie wise While they that were both poore and bare Of their goods rich and mightie were But there was few slaine for the King Had giuen them in commanding Upon great paine they should sla nane That but great bargane might be tane For they were kinde to the Countrie He wist and had of them pietie IN this maner the towne was tane And syne the Towres euerilkane And walles great were tumbled downe He left nothing about the towne Towre standing nor stone wall But he gart haillelie destroy them all And prisoners that there tooke he He sent where they might kéeped be And to his peace tooke all the land Was none that then durst thē withstand On North halfe the Scots sea All obeyed to his Maiestie Except the Lord of Lorne and tha Of Argyle that would