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

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which they performed with such care and diligence that within less than Forty days all of them are Apprehended Arraigned Condemned and Hanged only the Earl himself his Grand-child Robert and his Cousin Graham are more severely proceeded against to the terror of all Traitors the Executioners were to spend some part of three days in the Execution of Athol himself being the Contriver of the whole Villany The first day he was drawn in a Cart to the place of Execution a Crane was set up and his Body hailed up by a Pully to a great height is suddenly let fall almost to the Ground most of his Members at once miserably disjoynted then is he set on a Pillar in the view of the People a Crown of burning Iron set on his Head with this Inscription Here stands the King of all Traitors whereby came to pass the Delusion of a Sooth-sayer who told him which withal was a spur to his Ambition that in a publick place he should be Crowned King The second day he is tied on an Hurdle and dragged by Horse through the Great Street in Edenburgh The thrid day he was brought again to the place of Execution and laid along a Plank his Bowels are pulled out and cast into Fire prepared for them his Traiterous Heart is likewise pulled out and cast into the same Fire his Head cut off and set upon a Pole in a publick place of the City as a Spectacle to all Men his Body divided into four Quarters is sent out to four other chief Cities in the Kingdom and in publick places hanged up to the terror of all Traitors His Grand-child Robert being a Youth only and Seduced by the wicked Counsel of his Grand-father is more mildly dealt withall being first Strangled to death and then Quartered his Quarters are set as Spectacles in certain publick places of the Kingdom Grahan is more roughly used being though not the chief Contriver the grand Executioner of that dreadful Murther he was first dragged through the City in a Cart backward then his Hands being fastned in Iron Hooks fixed in the same Cart his Flesh all his Body over is Seared with hot Irons even to the very Bones this done his Body is cut in Quarters and disposed on as were the former A severe piece of Justice and well deserved What could recompence the loss of that Good King worthy to be reckoned amongst the best of Kings a Man of a low Stature but of a marvellous strength of Body far exceeding all his Contemporaries of such a vigorous Wit that he was eminently learned in all the liberal Sciences in Poetry and Musick he far exceeded the decorum of a King a prudent Lawgiver a singular Justiciary a Merciful Prince an incomparable Maecenas to all Learning in all his Relations and their respective duties no King no Man ever better and yet for all these it pleased God to suffer him to fall under the Cruel hands of wicked and bloody Men for what cause whether his own or his Peoples Sins is best known to him from whom no Secret thing is hid His Murther hapened to the inexpressible Grief of all good Men the 20th day of February 1437. the 18th Year of his Reign and the 44th of his Age. THE LIFE OF JAMES II. JAMES the Second only Son to James the First was Crowned at Halyrude-House in the 7th Year of his Age at the same time Sir Alexander Leviston is chosen Vice-Roy and Sir William Chrichton continued Chancellor The Nobility are no sooner returned home to the places of their ordinary Residence when behold all things fall into a most Pernicious Confusion Archibald Earl of Dowglas conceiving himself neglected in the publick Administration refuseth notwithstanding the Letters both of the Vice-Roy and Chancellor directed to him to that effect to Restrain the Insolent Robberies committed by his own Vassals all Anandale over commanding them withal to deny Obedience to the Edicts and Proclamations of the Chancellor or Vice-Roy pretending a Regal Power Legally invested in himself over all those who lived within the Confines of his peculiar Jurisdiction The same Divel of Division playeth his Prancks between the Vice-Roy and Chancellor the Vice-Roy dischargeth by publick Proclamation all Obedience to the Chancellor and the Chancellor by the like Proclamation all Obedience to the Vice-Roy The People thus perplexed between contrary Commands are reduced by their Opposite Powers in cases of necessary Disobedience to the one or other into a most woful Plight The Vice-Roy and the Queen stay at Sterlin The King the Tuition of the Chancellor abideth at Edenburgh Castle the Queen with a design to rescue the King out of the hands of the Chancellor repaireth to Edenburgh pretending a desire only to see her Royal Son the young King The Chancellor Entertaineth her Majesty civily and Princely which civil Entertainment the Queen very Graciously accepteth and by her fair and plausible Discourses concerning the State of publick Affairs the happy Education of the young King her Son and the earnest desire she had of an happy Union between the two grand Ministers of State She so far Insinuateth her self into the good opinion of the Chancellor that at all times she hath free access to the King's Person Her Retinue being such too as it was so small and of such mean Persons that no matter or Jealousie could arise from them In the mean while she secretly persuadeth the Child to suffer himself to be conveyed away by her and finding her opportunity overnight she very civilly and in a Courteous fashion taketh her leave of the Chancellor pretending a Journey early next day morning to Whit-Kirk to perform some Vows and Religious-Offices by break of Day she taketh her Journey and with her the young King her Son locked up in the Trunk in which her own Linnen lay both take Shipping at Leith and safely Arrive that Afternoon at Sterlin where they were received with much Joy The Chancellor amazed and ashamed to see himself so handsomly cheated perplexeth himself to little purpose The Vice-Roy forthwith advanceth with an Army to Besiege the Castle of Edenburgh where the Chancellor lay who immediately dispatcheth a Messenger to Earl Dowglas to crave Aid and Relief who returneth Answer with as little Wit as Fear saying That he knew they were both Knaves contending not for Publick Good but their own private Interests so that wherever the Blow fell it was not lost and should they both Perish it were the more happy for the whole Kingdom as to himself he should not be sorry to see the Ruine of them both This Indiscreet Answer proveth as so much Soder to Cement the two grand Contenders either by perceiving the Earl his common Enmity against both resolve to make Peace one with another which after a private and personal Conference was accordingly done both remaining in their respective places of Government Being thus Reconciled they bear a keen Edge towards Dowglas but Death struck more sharp than their Sword cutteth
the thread of his Life in a Fit of a burning Feaver which notwithstanding cutteth not off the current of their Malice which unhappily found a more advantageous passage by the imprudent Deportment of William the young Earl his Son a Youth not exceeding fourteen Years of Age who living in a Princely garb creating Knights Counsellors and other Officers and always guarded with a Guard of Two Thousand Horse is suspected and feared of all and as an addition to his Envy as well as Greatness he sendeth to France and craveth the Title of his Grand-father which was forthwith granted to him and is immediately declared Duke of Tyron and which added more to all Mens fear and jealousie the Queen and the Lord James Stuart her Husband and his Brother William are suspected to be Engaged in Dowglas his Faction The Vice-Roy glad to snatch any opportunity against the Queen whom now he Suspected to be none of his Friend secureth her Person and not contented to secure her Husband and his Brother in a strong Prison he layeth them both fast in Iron Fetters where they remained until they found sufficient Sureties for the Peace engaging withal that they should not bear any publick Office without consent of the Vice-Roy The Vice-Roy now not a little puft up ruleth all things at pleasure contemning the Chancellor and all other Officers of State the Chancellor not able to bear this Insolence withdraweth from Court then at Sterlin and retireth himself to the Castle of Edenburgh the Government whereof he had Confirmed to him at their last Agreement who meditating with himself what might be done to give Check to the Vice-Roy resolveth to surprize the Person of the King who he knew used to follow his sport in Hunting with a small Retinue to which end he marcheth out in the Night and lodgeth himself and a Band of his most trusty Friends amongst Thickets in a Wood whither the King came next day morning in course the Chancellor forthwith Surprizeth him beseeching his Majesty to be of good Chear and to rest assured that no other thing save his Highness Service and Safety was intended by him telling him that it was now high time for him to take the Government upon himself in order whereunto he came to Rescue him out of the hands of the Vice-Roy in which he lived not much on this side Slavery and withal with great shews of Respect and Duty he tendereth to his Highness a Guard of Four Thousand Horse The King seemeth not much displeased putteth on a chearful Counrenance and guarded with those Four Thousand Horse he cometh along with the Chancellor to the City of Edenburgh where he was received with extraordinary Acclamations of Joy The Vice-Roy no less confounded at this Surprisal than was the Chancellor at the Queen 's lately mentioned is extremely perplexed In Council after many Self-debates he resolveth at last not daring to trust himself to the Earl Dowglas upon all hazards to hast to Edenburgh with a small Retinue to try whether by stooping so low the Storm might pass over him to Edenburgh he repaireth and by mediation of the Bishops of Aberdeen and Murray Men Learned Pious and Prudent a Personal Conference is obtained with the Chancellor The Vice-Roy with a sad Countenance deploreth their unhappy Divisions declaimeth against them as Dangerous to the Publick and Destructive to their own private Interests he imploreth an happy Union between them without which they must both Perish promising on his part an Oblivion of all things past and all fair Respect in time to come The Chancellor well knowing that Destruction to both must needs be the Issue of the Divisions between them chearfully hearkneth to the proposition of Peace they presently accord and an Union is now the second time concluded between them and notwithstanding Distress enough to the People and Danger more than enough to the young King flowing from their divided Government these two cunning Catchers accord to continue still in their respective Trusts and places in Government upon this agreement a Parliament is called at Edenburgh for the better setling of the miserable distracted Conditon of the Kingdom To this Parliament Dowglas is Invited and by the advice of the Vice-Roy and Chancellor his inveterate Enemies now contriving his Ruine publick Letters are sent him Sealed by the King and divers of the prime Nobility inviting him with many Arguments of Love and Respect to assist in Parliament and in the publick Administration assuring him not only of Safety but tendering to him what Place he should desire in the management of publick Affairs The Earl moved by the publick Faith thus ingaged and by the specious Promises so Solemnly made repaireth to Edenburgh without Fear or Jealousie The Chancellor meeteth him before he came within ten Miles of the City and inviteth him to his Castle at Chrichton where he Entertaineth him magnificently in all his Discourse so highly commending the Noble Family of the Dowglasses their worthy Acts and high Deserts both of King and Country and so fully declaring the great hopes himself conceived of the young Earl himself that the Wiser of Dowglas his Retainers began to suspect some Mischief to lurk under the covert of those specious Words which they knew were no less unusual in him than unbeseeming his Place and Authority They dissuade their Lord with all Earnestness from his Journey towards the City intreating his return to his own House as he loved himself and if he must needs go they adjure him by all the love he bear to his Family and by all that reverence and obedience he owed to the Commands of his Wise Father who charged him on his Death-bed never to trust his whole Family under the hazard of one Blow that he would not carry along with him his dear and only Brother but all in vain his Destiny drives him no faster than he is willing to run to his own Ruine he entereth the City and is by the Chancellor attended to the Castle whither the Vice-Roy likewise repaireth and entertaineth him with all Civility yea and to Honour him the more he is admitted to the King 's own Table and feasted with no small Solemnity But behold amidst all their Chear and great Mirth a Band of Armed Men enters the Dining Chamber and a Bull 's Head is clap'd on the Table a certain Token in those days of an appointed and approaching Death the Earl is too late stricken with Fear and endeavouring to rise the Armed Men lay hold on him drag him down Stairs and without Doors immediately cut off his Head his Brother David and Malcombe Fleming his dearest Friend are at the same time and in the same manner Cut off The young King no less amazed than abused and stricken with immediate Sorrow weepeth as a Child though now grown well upward towards the years of a Man the Chancellor perceiving him Chides him very sharply for his unseasonable Tears as he was pleased to call them for the Death
Family of the Guise Widdow of the late Duke of Longoville in Marriage to King James the Marriage is agreed to the Year following she arriveth in Scotland and the Marriage solemnized at St. Andrews 1538. This Year exemplary Justice was done upon divers Persons of Quality conspiring the Death of the King some the Year following were Burnt some Banished for embracing the Protestant Doctrine Preached in Germany by Luther and others James Hammilton the Bastard accused of High-Treason is sentenced to Death his Head and Quarters affixed to publick places in Edenburgh the King soon after thought in his Dream that Hammilton cut off first his right and then his left Arm threatning withal to appear again to take his own Life the King awaking is very much troubled with thoughts of this Dream and revolving with himself what might be the meaning of it a Messenger comes to him with the sad News of the Death of both his Sons at the same time the one at Sterlin the other at St. Andrews King Henry of England sendeth the second time to invite King James to a Conference at York the Scotch Clergy still oppose it and the Conference again refused King Henry in great Indignation against his Nephew for refusal of Conference with him resolveth to talk with him in harder Terms and to that end he raiseth an Army and sendeth it into Scotland and under the Command of the Duke of Norfolk The Scottish Ambassadors in vain intreating a Cessation King James prepares a considerable Army for defence the English enter into Scotland and after some mischief done at the approach of the Scotch Army they retreat the Lord Gordon marcheth before the main body with Ten thousand Men doing much hurt and annoyance to the Rear of the English Army King James with all earnestness presseth an Engagement with the English the Nobility peremptorily oppose him in it the King enraged upbraideth them with Cowardise unworthy to be owned as Sons of their Noble Ancestors vowing that though they should all desert him himself and his own Family alone should give the Enemy Battel The Lord Maxwell to pacify the King tendereth his Service to lead into Cumberland Ten thousand Men thereby to divert the Enemy The King accepteth his Service but being enraged against the whole Nobility he resolves that none of them should have the Honour of any thing done in that Expedition and for the cause giveth a Dormant Commission to Oliver Sinclare Brother to the Lord Roslin Having entred Cumberland and now in view of Five hundred English Horse Sinclare produceth his Commission it is read at the head of the Army Maxwell is thereby inraged the whole Army falleth in Mutiny and in such a confusion that they become a Prey to the Five hundred English Horse divers of the Nobility and the new General Sinclare are sent Prisoners to the Tower of London this dishonourable Disaster which hapned at Solway strikes the Valorous King with such grief and sorrow that he never after joyed but soon after departed this Life having first made Peace with King Henry at whose request he recalled Archibald Earl of Angus Thus dyed King James the Fifth a Prince of singular Endowments most patient of Cold Hunger and Travel sometimes setting on Horseback Twenty Four hours when the necessity of his affairs required it a great Justitiary and a person of singular Foresight and Wisdom THE LIFE OF QUEEN MARY QUeen Mary was the only Child James the Fifth her Father left to Inherit the Crown born to him not above eight days before his death James Hammilton Earl of Aran is therefore chosen Vice-Roy to whom King Henry of England sent his Ambassador Sir Radolph Sadler to procure Peace between the two Kingdoms and to demand Mary in Marriage to his Son by the influence of the late Prisoners in England especially the Exiled Dowglasses whom King Henry had wrought much to his Service by his Royal Favours whose Counsels were now very prevalent in the management of publick affairs both were assented the Contract of Marriage Signed and Pledges promised for better performance of all Conditions agreed upon notwithstanding of the Opposition of the Queen and Cardinal who fearing the Subversion of Popery still established in that Kingdom by this agreement endeavour what they can to cross all Tumults are stirred against the English Ambassador and daily Affronts put upon his Attendants in the Streets the Ambassador complaineth and demandeth the Pledges promised for confirmation of the Agreement lately made exemplary Justice is executed upon the chief movers in the Tumults in answer to this Complaint but the Cardinal by the influence of his power had so obstructed the matter of his demand that not one of the Nobility would yield up himself voluntarily a Pledge to the English and to such a business none could be compelled King Henry hereby provoked seiseth all the Scottish Ships in the English Havens and Harbours and proclaimeth War against the Scots in the mean while the Queen Mother sendeth to France to entreat the French King to send home Matthew Earl of Lennox to strengthen her against the English Faction otherwise Religion and the French League were like to come to nothing Lennox is sent home and forthwith levieth Four Thousand men and with this strong guard cometh to the Queen the Vice-Roy inferior in Power sends Commissions to treat for Peace by agreement the young Queen is committed to the Education of Four Indifferent Noble Men ingaged in neither Faction viz. the Lords Graham Areskin Lindsay and Leviston and accordingly they take charge of her at Sterlin where all the Nobility do Homage to her The Vice-Roy joyneth himself wholly to the Cardinal which Conjunction so inrageth Lennox that immediately he flyeth to Arms raiseth an Army marcheth to Leith and provoketh the Cardinal to Fight the Cardinal keeps himself close in Edenburgh Castle Lennox through want of Provisions is forced to withdraw and to put himself in a posture of Defence in and about Glascow King Henry hearing of these Stirs sends into Scotland to demand the custody of the young Queen until she came to years fit for Marriage The French Faction now prevailing his Demands are refused An Army is therefore forthwith sent into Scotland under the Conduct of the Earl of Hereford and a great Navy of Two hundred Sail under the Command of Viscount Lisle as Admiral The English enter the City of Edenburgh without resistance first they Pillage and then they Fire it and divers other Towns and Villages about it the like fate befel the Town of Leith and forthwith they return to England laden with Spoil The Queen Mother writeth to the French King and layeth all these mischiefs at Lennox his door as the only enemy of their Peace and Union by reason of his private Feud against the Vice-Roy for the death of his Father At her Request Lennox is recalled to France but finding the French King provoked against him he still keeps to his posture of Defence
whatever Spoils were taken from the Enemy to be converted to the Queen's use the Scots to receive and exercise the same Religion professed and used in the Church of England and to send Pledges into England to remain there as Hostages during the Marriage of the French King and the Scots Queen and one Year after All Sealed and Ratified at Barwick the 27th of February 1560. Six thousand Foot and Two thousand Horse Auxiliaries are sent down under the Command of the Lord Grey unto whom the Lords of the Congregation joyn their Army at Hadington and in this conjunction they march towards Leith lay Siege to it both by Sea and Land an English Navy lying then in the Road many bloody Skirmishes there were on both sides The French Bishop cometh into the Scots Camp and from thence he went to the Castle at Edenburgh to speak with the Queen Regent retired thither for her safety and protection and earnestly endeavours a Peace but all in vain the Scots not hearkning to any unless the French were all in the first place sent home which could not be yielded to at this time a great Fire happened in Lieth which put the Besieged into a great Consternation the English likewise fired the two Mills belonging to the Garrison and assault the Town by Storm but are repulsed with loss the French quickly repairing the Breaches the English made who at length begin to think the work tedious and full of trouble they send to Queen Elizabeth to know her pleasure the Duke of Norfolk encourageth them much by sending them new Supplies no less than Two thousand well appointed men Assuring them that neither Men nor Money should be wanting so long as it was in his power to supply them promising if need were his own presence in the mean time he sendeth his Tent and adviseth them to set it up in the view of the Town This gives Life to the business again the Siege is renewed and the Queen of England sends Sir William Cecil one of the Privy Counsellors and Secretary of State and Doctor Wootton Dean of York one also of the Council to treat with the French in order to a Peace a meeting is appointed in July following but in the interim the Queen Regent wasted with care and grief dyeth at Edenburgh Castle a Woman of singular wisdom and vertue honoured by most of the worst of her enemies and her Death much lamented by all after her death Commissioners are appointed and meet to treat of an Accommodation which had then been agreed upon but that the French insisted upon a freedom to carry home whatsoever Booty Bag or Paggage they had got whereof they had store by their Winters plundering of Fife which would not be granted by the Scots and therefore Acts of Hostility Sallies and Onsets are made with various fortune and success At last both Parties sufficiently weary and straitned in Provisions the Treaty is renewed and Articles agreed on viz. That neither the French King nor his Queen of Scotland should thenceforth use the Arms or Titles of England and all Letters Sealed with those Arms should be called in within six Months space that the French transport themselves with their Booties Bag and Baggage within twenty days and that the English supply them with such Ships as they should want they leaving Pledges with the English until the safe return of their Ships That Leith be delivered up to the Scots and Dismantled That the Forts built by the French at Dunbar be demolished That the English immediately after the performance of Articles do return into England That the French should still keep a Garrison at Inch-Keeth and Dunbar Castle That an Act of Oblivion first past by the Queen and the French King her Husband be afterwards Confirmed by their Authority in the ensuing Parliament to be held in August On these Terms Peace was Proclaimed Soon after the French King Francis dyeth the Queen heavily afflicted with grief for the death of her Husband and much perplexed by the turbulent condition of the state of France resolveth to return into Scotland and fearing the English Navy by reason of an Offence given to Queen Elizabeth by placing the English Arms in the Scots Coat she privately goes aboard a small Vessel which none would suspect to be Fraught with so rich a Cargo and safely arriveth in Scotland immediately before her arrival her base Brother James procured a Commission from her to hold a Parliament which was accordingly done The French Ambassador moveth That the French League may be renewed and that which the English lately made may be broke off and that the Revenues of Ecclesiastick Persons may be restored to them But the Scots Parliament now wholly constituted of such as pretend to the Reformation of Religion answered That the French League should be continued but that with the English could not be broken without the greatest Dishonour and Ingratitude in the world The Restauration of the Revenue of the Ecclesiasticks was wholly rejected and an Act passed for the demolishing all the Abbies and Priories in the Kingdom which was immediately put in execution The sorrowful Queen being arrived had no better remedy than Silence and Convenience and was forced to condescend That the state of Religion as it was lately renewed and established by the Lords of the Congregation should not by her nor her Authority suffer any Change or Alteration no Mass to be said publiquely any where except in her Majesty's Chappel which was all the indulgence the Lords would afford her The Ministers moved both by their own Zeal and the Instigation of the Earl of Arran Cry out and Thunder in their Pulpits against this Permission and Admonish the Lords of their Duty to reduce her to order a submission to and a susception of the Directory for publick Worshin The Nobility notwithstanding all these over-loud Clamours encroach not upon the Queen's privilege for which the Ministers turn the edge of their Tongues as sharp as Swords against them crying out of their Apostacy and lukewarmness in the Cause of God William Mettelane is sent Ambassadour to England to tender to Queen Elizabeth the great Respects of the Scottish Queen towards her and with this Message the Lords sent also their Letters to the Queen humbly thanking her for her late Seasonable Assistance and requesting her to continue her Princely Favour towards their Queen and a firmer establishment of Union between both Kingdoms as an Expedient thereunto they propound to her Majesty That she would be pleased to pass an Act of Parliament Declaring That in case her self should dye without Issue the Queen of Scots to be her rightful Heir and lawful Successor to her Crown This last motion highly displeased Queen Elizabeth saying That it was most unreasonable to require her to Sew her Winding-Sheet with her own hands and to expose it every day to her own view After much Debate it was at last agreed upon First That the Scots Queen should forbear
the English Arms and Title of the Queen of England and Ireland during the Life of Queen Elizabeth Secondly That the Queen of England or her Heirs of her Body if such should happen should not do any thing to the prejudice of the Queen of Scotlands Title to the Crown of England Thirdly That a mutual Care may be had to preserve the Peace and Union of both Kingdoms These things happily concluded there was a fair prospect of a flourishing State had not the heart-burnings and emulations of the Religioso's of Scotland fermented and by the restless Tongues of their Preachers discomposed all their Settlement they who swell the least punctilio's that are disgustful to them into Enormous Crimes did not whisper but cry aloud that the Queens designs were all to reinduce Idolatry and Superstition the Earl of Arran contriving withal to get the Queens Person into his Power and Disposal the safety of her Person being the only rub in his way to the Crown But the Queen having timely Notice of all these Projects appointed a good Guard to Attend her Person which was maliciously intercepted by Adversaries as a Foundation preparatory to a Tyrannical and Arbitrary Government The Winter following the Queen knowing what influence her Base-Brother James had in the Affections of the People and Popular Ministers whose grand Patron he was and not Ignorant of his own Ambition is soon moved to Create him Earl of Marr and soon after Earl of Murray which highly displeased the Earl of Huntley the greatest Peer in the North conceiving himself and his Jurisdiction thereby prejudiced and proved the grounds of a great and lasting feud between them Moreover Anne Keith the Earl Martials Daughter is given him in Marriage his Greatness is not only Envied by the Gourdons but also by the Hamiltons who look upon him as a dangerous Competitor to the Crown mutual contrivances there are to Ruin each other the Hamiltons as it was suggested Conspiring the Death of Murray by the Wisdom of the Queen their Feuds are kept from breaking out into open Hostility only in the North a Skirmish hapned between Huntley and Murray in which Huntley himself was taken Prisoner and immediately dyed not so much with the Wounds in his Body as in his Mind his two Sons John and Adan are likewise taken Prisoners and carryed to Aberdeen John is there beheaded whose untimely death was much bewailed by the Queen Adam being very young is pardoned the Eldest Son George flies to Hamilton his Father in Law for Sanctuary who begs his Pardon of the Queen but by the prevailing Power of Murray who then over-ruled all young Huntley must be delivered up and is sent Prisoner to Dunbar from thence he is called to Edenburgh and there Condemned for Treason and returned a Prisoner to Dunbar In May following the Queen is Crowned in great State at Edenburgh and about Michaelmas after by the Queens favour and approbation Matthew Stuart Duke of Lennox after 22. Years absence returns to Scotland and hath his whole Estate restored to him to the great content of the Queen the next Spring his Son Henry the Lord Darnly also arrives a man of a very comely and proper Person and behaves himself in the Court with such Civility and Prudence that the Queen with small Arguments was induced to cast her Affections upon him and to accept him for her Husband in order whereunto he is first Created Duke of Rothesay and Earl of Ross and at last in despight of all the opposition that Murray could make by the instigation of Queen Elizabeth against it who to prevent the Marriage sent Sir Nicholas Throgmorten to Require Lennox and Darnly to return to England upon pain of Confiscation of their Estates the Marriage is Solemnized at Edenburgh July 28. with consent of most of the Nobility and by the publick Herauld Henry and Mary are Proclaimed King and Queen of Scotland this Marriage uniteth Hamilton and Murray who with Arguile Glencarne Rothes and others Combine against the present Proceeding and upon the Summons to return to their former Obedience they all refuse and are Proclaimed Traitors the King and Queen advance to Glascow with an Army of 4000 men and upwards the Rebels stay at Paisley not wholly Unanimous in their Counsels Hamilton's Advice tending to no less than the destruction of the King and Queen ever inculcating in the Ears of his Complices ' That howsoever private Feuds might be otherwise compromised yet the Enmity of Kings could not any other way be extinguished but by their Death the rest of the Nobility knowing this to be an Hellish Design of his own out of the Ruin of the Queen to raise himself to the Throne of Scotland divide from Hamilton and retire towards Dumfreis and from thence they Fly into England About this time some Discontents unhappily arise between the King and the Queen and by the occasion of the ambitious and malitious surmises of ill disposed men the King is Enraged 〈…〉 Seigneur David a French man the Secreta●● as an Instrument of Mischief between him and the Queen their Wicked Design to make the Breach greater between them not being discerned by the King he as being naturally too flexible and credulous is wrought upon to joyn with them in the Destruction of the Secretary On the Night appointed for that horrid work of darkness the King took with him the Earls of Morton Linsay and Ruthen besides five or six more Armed Men himself first entring the Queens Chamber and Ruthen following him he finds the Secretary set at Supper with the Queen and spying them he arose and the Queen offering to interpose he clasps fast hold about her wast who not knowing the Design cryes out but the King forcing David from his hold pacified her assuring her That there was no hurt intended her only the destruction of one Villain that was about her whom he runs through with his Sword and then they all drag his wounded Body into an outward Room and striving who should give him most wounds they cut his Body all to pieces The City of Edenburgh hearing of a Tumult at Court but altogether Ignorant what the matter might be put themselves suddenly into Arms and forthwith march to Holy-rood-house the Kings Pallace and the Guard being full of Armed men the King calleth to them out of a Window that there was no danger attending them himself and the Queen being in health and safety he thanked them for their Care and Readiness and advised them for the present to return home peaceably to their Houses The Day following the Noble men who lately fled into England appear according to a late Summons they had received to Answer what should be objected against them no Judge Accuser nor Witness appearing against them they there protest their readiness judicially to Answer all things chargeable upon them every one returns in Peace to his own Lodging The Queen Accompanied with the King retireth to Dunbar and admitteth Murray and Arguile
into her Favour and Consult the raising of some Forces to avenge the Death of the Secretary Murther'd in her own presence the chief of the Murderers were fled into England others into the Mountains and of the meaner sort some were Fined some Imprisoned and some Executed Her Majesty soon after upon the 29th of June is brought to bed of a Young Son our Second Solomon James the Sixth and great State and Solemnity there was at the Christning where were present Three Ambassadors One from England and another from France and a Third from the Duke of Savoy but the King being out of the Queens Favour was not admitted to the Solemnity but repairing to his Fathers house fell Sick on the way not without suspition of Poyson there he continued languishing until the January following when the Queen went to visit him and all differences being made up he resolved though not well to return with her to Edenburgh where Lodgings remote from the Noise of the Pallace for Quiet Privacy and such like Convenience as it was said were provided for him but he had not stayed here above a Formight before his Lodgings were blown up with Cun-powder though it was supposed that he was Murther'd before in his Bed his Body being found in a little Garden by his Lodging in the Kirk-field within the City of Edenburgh Cloathed with nothing but his Shirt his other Cloaths and Slippers laid by him but not a Bone of him broken no bruise nor blackness was seen upon him nor any alteration of that kind appeared in his Body which was also free from all smell of Fire or Powder The News of this Murther amazed all and astonished the Afflicted Queen almost to Death then lying at Holy-rood-house and there was nothing but Sadness to be seen in the Faces of all men every one crying out upon Murray and Morton as the Contrivers of this Horrid Murther which Murray perceiving cunningly endeavoureth to transfer the Guilt upon Bothwell by the secret surmises of some whereof there were a great many of his Emissaries and causeth Papers to be scattered about the City for that purpose not without some Reflections on the Queen Bothwell sensible of the weight of this Burden thrown upon him earnestly Laboureth with Arguile the Justice-General of the Kingdom to Discover if it were possible both the Contrivers and Actors of the Horrible Murder all imaginable Enquity was made but nothing found Lennox at the instigation of Murray presseth the Queen to bring Bothwell to Tryal Bothwell receives Commands from the Queens Majesty to appear before the Justice General and a Jury of his Peers are appointed in Order to his Tryal upon the Twelfth of April the High Court of Justice meets and all Persons concern'd have due and timely Notice given them Bothwell is Empannelled and notwithstanding Lennox his Protestation against the hasty Proceedings of the Court alledging he had not time to prepare his Evidence Bothwell is Acquitted by his Peers but this Acquittance did not so much disburden him of the King's Murther as it loaded him with his Enemies Malice His Ruin and the Queens too are still contriving and as a more Politick Method than that of Slander Bothwell is Advanced in his Reputation and cryed up not so much by his Friends as his Enemies for a man of the greatest Gallantry in the Nation and in the Court he is Exalted to the Skies though amongst the Popularity by the same Authors debased to Hell The Queen her self made sensible of his Worth and the many Extraordinary Services he had done her begins to shew him more than ordinary Favour Murray tells the Queen That there was a Necessity for her to Marry and that to some Peer of the Realm of Worth and Valour Times being so Tumultuous and Stubborn that they could not bear the Government of a Woman far less of a Stranger and therefore she must not think of a Foreigner nay some Report that Murray himself whispers her in the Ear That Bothwell was the fittest the only Man indeed to make her an Husband Bothwell in the mean time put on by perfidious perswasions on all hands to attempt this Royal Match is much perplexed between Ambition and Fear durst not listen to it most of the Nobility subscribe an Instrument in which they declare their Desires and Assent to the Marriage with the Queen Protesting that they would maintain him in it with their Lives and Estares in despight of all who should oppose it and assuring him that the Queen her self would approve of what they had done This Instrument gave more Spirit to his Pride and his Ambition suggested to him that the Queen designed her Favours as Indications of her Love and Invitations to his belief of it whereupon he resolves with himself being now Divorced from his Lady to Attempt the Marriage of the Queen to that end he Seiseth on her Person in her return from Sterling to Edenburgh and with a Guard of 500 Horse carrieth her to Dunbar the Queen Enraged with his Rudeness Check'd him with all the Favours Conferred on him chargeth him with the highest Ingratitude and Disloyalty Bothwell with all Submission acknowledgeth his Offence beseeching her that nothing could have moved him to forget that Obedience and Reverence due to her Sacred Majesty save the Force and Impulse of Love not lightly begun but kindled and kindly Cherished by Sage Counsels and Desires of most of the Loyal Nobility The Queen more suddenly now surprized than before Expresseth her dislike of the Motion though with some abatement of her Wrath she being now under his Power from whence she knew not how to be delivered at present the Earl produceth the Instrument subscribed by the Noblemen declaring their desires and assents to the Marriage then the Queen thirsting after her Liberty with a more serene Aspect told him that nothing could be done in a matter of that Concernment unless she had her wonted Freedom and the Nobility Liberty of Access to her Bothwell perceiving that this was all that could be obtained of her takes off his Guard and honourably attends her to Edenburgh and the Queen peaceably resorts with a very Noble Train to the Council Chamber where most of the Nobility Advise her to listen to Bothwell whereunto when she had given her Consent by vertue of their Counsels and fastned her Affections upon him every where by the underhand dealings of its Contrivers the People are suborned and encouraged to Cry out against the Match but notwithstanding the Clamors of the People and the forwardness of John Craig Minister of the Parish who refused to publish the Banns and Protested against the Marriage it was Celebrated upon the Fifteenth of May in the Pallace of Holy-rood-house by Adam Bishop of Orkney after the manner of the Reformed Church And now their Enemies begin to appear more open Fac'd for the prevention of their designed Mischiefs the Queen desired the Nobility to renew their Engagement which they had formerly
Scepter neither would it have been denyed her by any Christian Prince That the Crime committed was done by her Secretaries and not by her and therefore Injustice not to be Charged upon her but them That if this Sentence were Executed all Christian Kings would believe all their Honours and Rights wounded in that blow and would accordingly resent it and Avenge it That her only Son King James could never in Honour or Duty set down quiet under such an Affront And in fine That Heaven it self must needs Arm against so Bloody a Design and therefore they adjure her by all the Love she bears unto her self by all the Respects she bears to her own People the Nation of England that she forbear the Execution And if she feared any Evil by her Life to preserve her under the Power of strong Guards of which she could not want plenty in England if she would not accept of their Security for her Peaceable behaviour But as an over-pressing Argument to all these the Enemies of Queen Mary that were continually present with Queen Elizabeth beat it into her Ears that the Lives of Elizabeth and Mary were things incompatible and for the Safety of one it was necessary to take away the other which otherwise would be a perpetual Sting to her Sed mortua non mordet the Grave was the securest Prison she could be committed unto Queen Elizabeth at last Signs the Warrant for Execution which being past the Broad-Seal She next day sends Killigrew to Davison to forbid the Command of Execution telling him she would go another way to work but the Lords of the Council being Acquainted with it they without the Consent of the Queen wrested it from Davison and sent Beale their Clark with the Mandate and Letters to the Earls of Shrewsbury Kent Derby and Cumberland to see the same performed which was the only thing that Queen Elizabeth had to offer in her own Excuse to King James Protesting that it was done without her Knowledge and quite contrary to her Intent having as she said told Davison her Secretary her Resolution of taking New Measures and that the Warrant was to have remained in his hand without Execution unless a Foreign Invasion or Domestick broyls which Queen Mary's Enemies always suggested were daily designed should render it necessary Davison for his Disobedience was Committed and cast out of Favour * Vpon the News of Signing the Warrant for Execution King James Commanded the Ministers to remember the Queen Mother in their Prayers which they generally refused to do tho' the Form prescribed them was Pious and Christian being after this manner That it may please God to illuminate Her with the Light of his Truth and to Save her from the apparent danger wherein she was cast No sooner came the Order to the hands of the Noblemen than they repaired to Fotheringham Castle the Prison where the Queen lay and raising her out of her Bed in the Morning they read their Commission to her Advertising her That next day Morning she was to Dye which Order she receiv'd without any discomposure of Mind or change of Countenance saying She did not think that her Sister Queen Elizabeth would have brought her to that Extremity but seeing it was her pleasure she was willing to submit Appealing to Heaven and Earth to witness her Innocence adding that it was her Comfort that she dyed for and in the Religion of her Fore-fathers beseeching God to increase her Constancy and Courage to the Measure of her Afflictions After these words she besought the Commissioners that she might be permitted to Confer with her Confessor which was denied her tendring unto her in his stead the Bishop or Dean of Peterborough whom she refused saying God shall be my Comforter One of the Commissioners the Earl of Kent told her your life will be the death and your death the life of our Religion I thank you said she that I am thought worthy to dye for my Religion After that the Commissioners were rerired she commanded her servants that Supper should be dispatched and according to her usual custom she Supped soberly and discoursed to such as were about her with a marvellous calmness and tranquillity of mind at the end of Supper she drank to all her servants with a grave and modest chearfulness at which they all fell upon their knees mingling floods of Tears with their Wine so soon as they were able to speak having a little digested their sorrow they craved her pardon for their remissness in those duties and services her Majesty had deserved at their hands and she desired them likewise to forget all her defects and failings towards them comforting them with an invincible courage and commanded them to wipe away their Tears and to rejoyce with her for that she was now to be delivered from an abyss of misery After Supper she wrote three Letters one to the King of France another to the Duke of Guise and a third to her Confessor this done she took a review of her Last Will which she had before committed to writing and caused an Inventory of her Goods to be Read and wrote down the names of those to whom she had bestowed her Wardrobe she also distributed mony to some with her own hand afterwards she retired herself and being refreshed with a little sleep she spent the rest of the night in Watching and Prayer The next morning being the eighth of February she drest and adorned herself with such of Apparel and Ornaments as she usually wore on Festival days and having again assembled her servants she caused her Will again to be Read to them desiring them to take in good part those poor Legacies she had bequeathed to them the condition of her Estate not permitting her to give them any greater She took her last farewel of them to fear God to love one another and to be stedfast in the Faith and to Pray for her Soul she kissed the women and permitted the men to kiss her hand and then returned to her Oratory where she continued to Prayer until Thomas Andrews the Lieutenant of the County signified unto her that her hour was come and it was time to come forth which she soon obeyed and in a posture full of Majesty and a Countenance very joyful the Commissioners received her in a Gallery where they did attend her there likewise Melvin her Steward did present himself before her and weeping fell on his knees to receive her last commands Melvin said she weep not but rather rejoyce for this day you shall see Mary Stuart delivered from all her sorrows and I adjure you to tell my Son that I have always lived and now I dye a Catholick and that I exhort him to preserve the Faith of his Ancestors to love Justice and to maintain his people in Peace and to Enterprize nothing against the Queen of England I have committed nothing against the Kingdom of Scotland and I always loved France God forgive
them who have thirsted after my blood then turning to the Lords she requested that her servants after her death might be civily used suffered to attend her person in the time of her death and then to enjoy peaceably those poor Legacies she had bequeathed them the Earl of Kent opposed her servants Attendance yet the passionate desires of the poor Queen prevailed with the rest of the Lords to permit six of them to wait on her to the Scaffold with this train came she into the Hall hung with black and ascended the Scaffold covered with black also and sat her down in a Chair prepared for her Beal read the Warrant for Execution which she heard very Patiently the Dean of Peterborough endeavoured to persuade her at last to relinquish the Roman and embrace the Reformed Religion for the Eternal good of her Soul She besought him to forbear being Resolved to Dye in the Faith of the Roman Church Then turning to the People she Protested before God that she had not Attempted any thing against the Life of Queen Elizabeth nor any other thing deserving Death after some sew words more touching Religion her Eyes gushed full of Tears which were sympathetically Answer'd with Tears by all that beheld the Tragedy Three or Four only in all that Concourse that could be Excepted The Executioner desired her Pardon I Pardon thee said she and all my Persecutors after she had kneeled down and Prayed with extream fervency concluding her Devotions in these words As thy Arms Lord Jesus were stretched out upon the Gross so receive me O Jesus into the stretched forth Arms of thy Mercy And after this she disposed her self for the Block her Maids having undressed her she laid open the most Beautiful Neck that ever received so merciless a Blow then she signed her Attendants with the Sign of the Cross and having kissed them all she smilingly bids them farewell at which they poor Souls weep most bitterly with Sighs and Tears inexpressible for which she meekly reproved them saying Nay what do you mean do you suffer your selves to be Transported with Grief notwithstanding you know I am going to Exchange a Temporal Kingdom full of Misery for an Everlasting Empire filled with all Felicity After this she covered her Face and laid her Neck on the Block saying in te Domine speravi and having repeated once and again in manus tuas Domine The Executioner gave a Blow and with it made a dreadful wound in the hinder part of her head and at two more the Inhuman Butcher severed her head from her Shoulders saying Long Live Queen Elizabeth and so let the Enemies of the Gospel perish Her poor Heart-broken Servants drew nigh to do their last Office for her in divesting her Body and disposing of it for Burial But the Earl of Kent commanded them to be gone and ordered her Body to be conveyed to a Chamber in the Castle where it was locked up After Nineteen Years Imprisonment thus Unfortunately Dyed the most Beautiful the most Magnanimous the most Wise and most Religious Queen Mary Her Body was first Buried in the Cathedral Church in Peterborough and after many Years in the Reign of her Son taken up and buried amongst her Ancestors in Westminster and by an unknown Author had this Inscription set upon her Tomb in Peterborough MARIA Scotorum Regina regis Filia regis Gallorum vidua reginae Angliae agnata heres proxima vertutibus regiis animo regio ornata Jure regio frustra saepius Implorato barbara tyrannica crudelitate ornamentum nostri seculi lumen vere regium extinguitur eodemque nefario Judicio Maria Scotorum Regina morte naturali omnes superstites reges plebeii facti morte mulctantur hic extat Cum Sacris enim vive Mariae cineribus omnium Regum atque principium violatam atque prostratam Majestatem hic jacere scito quia tacitum regale satis super que reges sui officii monet plura non addo viater Translated thus Mary Queen of Scotland the Daughter of a King the Widow of the King of France the near Kinswoman and next Heir to the Queen of England endued with Princely Vertues and a Royal Mind having often but in vain implor'd her Regal Right at length the great Ornament of our Age and the most Sovereign Light of the World is Extinguish'd by a most Barbarous and Tyrannical Cruelty and by the same pernicious Sentence Mary the Queen of Scotland is punish'd with a Natural Death and all surviving Monarchs made common Persons and render'd lyable to the punishment of a Civil Death a very strange and unaccountable kind of Grave in which the Living lye Interr'd with the Dead for with the Ashes of this Blessed Mary know thou that the Majesty of all Crowned Heads lies here depressed and basely violated But because the Reasons of State do admonish all Kings what is best to do O Traveller I say no more FINIS