postern gate to the lake-side, and thence in a boat to the mainland,
where George Douglas, Lord Seton and others were awaiting
her. Thence they rode to Seton’s castle of Niddry, and
next day to Hamilton palace, round which an army of 6000 men
was soon assembled, and whither the new French ambassador
to Scotland hastened to pay his duty. The queen’s abdication
was revoked, messengers were despatched to the English and
French courts, and word was sent to Murray at Glasgow that
he must resign the regency, and should be pardoned in common
with all offenders against the queen. But on the day when
Mary arrived at Hamilton Murray had summoned to Glasgow
the feudatories of the Crown to take arms against the insurgent
enemies of the infant king. Elizabeth sent conditional offers
of help to her kinswoman, provided she would accept of English
intervention and abstain from seeking foreign assistance; but
the messenger came too late. Mary’s followers had failed to
retake Dunbar Castle from the regent, and made for Dumbarton
instead, marching two miles south of Glasgow, by the village
of Langside. Here Murray, with 4500 men, under leaders of
high distinction, met the 6000 of the queen’s army, whose ablest
man, Herries, was as much distrusted by Mary as by every one
else, while the Hamiltons could only be trusted to think of their
own interests, and were suspected of treasonable designs on all
who stood between their house and the monarchy. On the 13th
of May the battle or skirmish of Langside determined the result
of the campaign in three-quarters of an hour. Kirkaldy of
Grange, who commanded the regent’s cavalry, seized and kept
the place of vantage from the beginning, and at the first sign
of wavering on the other side shattered at a single charge the
forces of the queen with a loss of one man to three hundred.
Mary fled 60 miles from the field of her last battle before she
halted at Sanquhar, and for three days of flight, according to
her own account, had to sleep on the hard ground, live on oatmeal
and sour milk, and fare at night like the owls, in hunger,
cold and fear. On the third day from the rout of Langside she
crossed the Solway and landed at Workington in Cumberland,
May 16, 1568. On the 20th Lord Scrope and Sir Francis
Knollys were sent from court to carry messages and letters of
comfort from Elizabeth to Mary at Carlisle. On the 11th of
June Knollys wrote to Cecil at once the best description and the
noblest panegyric extant of the queen of Scots—enlarging, with
a brave man’s sympathy, on her indifference to form and ceremony,
her daring grace and openness of manner, her frank display
of a great desire to be avenged of her enemies, her readiness
to expose herself to all perils in hope of victory, her delight to hear
of hardihood and courage, commending by name all her enemies
of approved valour, sparing no cowardice in her friends, but
above all things athirst for victory by any means at any price,
so that for its sake pain and peril seemed pleasant to her, and
wealth and all things, if compared with it, contemptible and vile.
What was to be done with such a princess, whether she were to be
nourished in one’s bosom, above all whether it could be advisable
or safe to try any diplomatic tricks upon such a lady, Knollys
left for the minister to judge. It is remarkable that he should
not have discovered in her the qualities so obvious to modern
champions of her character—easiness, gullibility, incurable
innocence and invincible ignorance of evil, incapacity to suspect
or resent anything, readiness to believe and forgive all things.
On the 15th of July, after various delays interposed by her reluctance
to leave the neighbourhood of the border, where on her
arrival she had received the welcome and the homage of the
leading Catholic houses of Northumberland and Cumberland,
she was removed to Bolton Castle in North Yorkshire. During
her residence here a conference was held at York between her
own and Elizabeth’s commissioners and those appointed to
represent her son as a king of Scots. These latter, of whom
Murray himself was the chief, privately laid before the English
commissioners the contents of the famous casket. On the 24th
of October the place of the conference was shifted from York to
London, where the inquiry was to be held before Queen Elizabeth
in council. Mary was already aware that the chief of the English
commissioners, the duke of Norfolk, was secretly an aspirant to
the peril of her hand; and on the 21st of October she gave the
first sign of assent to the suggestion of a divorce from Bothwell.
On the 26th of October the charge of complicity in the murder of
Darnley was distinctly brought forward against her in spite of
Norfolk’s reluctance and Murray’s previous hesitation. Elizabeth,
by the mouth of her chief justice, formally rebuked the
audacity of the subjects who durst bring such a charge against
their sovereign, and challenged them to advance their proofs.
They complied by the production of an indictment under five
heads, supported by the necessary evidence of documents. The
number of English commissioners was increased, and they were
bound to preserve secrecy as to the matters revealed. Further
evidence was supplied by Thomas Crawford, a retainer of the
house of Lennox, tallying so exactly with the text of the casket
letters as to have been cited in proof that the latter must needs
be a forgery. Elizabeth, on the close of the evidence, invited
Mary to reply to the proofs alleged before she could be admitted
to her presence; but Mary simply desired her commissioners to
withdraw from the conference. She declined with scorn the proposal
made by Elizabeth through Knollys, that she should sign a
second abdication in favour of her son. On the 10th of January,
1569, the judgment given at the conference acquitted Murray and
his adherents of rebellion, while affirming that nothing had been
proved against Mary—a verdict accepted by Murray as equivalent
to a practical recognition of his office as regent for the infant
king. This position he was not long to hold; and the fierce
exultation of Mary at the news of his murder gave to those who
believed in her complicity with the murderer, on whom a pension
was bestowed by her unblushing gratitude, fresh reason to fear,
if her liberty of correspondence and intrigue were not restrained,
the likelihood of a similar fate for Elizabeth. On the 26th of January
1569 she had been removed from Bolton Castle to Tutbury
in Staffordshire, where proposals were conveyed to her, at the
instigation of Leicester, for a marriage with the duke of Norfolk,
to which she gave a graciously conditional assent; but the discovery
of these proposals consigned Norfolk to the Tower, and
on the outbreak of an insurrection in the north Mary, by Lord
Hunsdon’s advice, was again removed to Coventry, when a body
of her intending deliverers was within a day’s ride of Tutbury.
On the 23rd of January following Murray was assassinated; and
a second northern insurrection was crushed in a single sharp fight
by Lord Hunsdon. In October Cecil had an interview with Mary
at Chatsworth, when the conditions of her possible restoration
to the throne in compliance with French demands were debated
at length. The queen of Scots, with dauntless dignity, refused
to yield the castles of Edinburgh and Dumbarton into English
keeping, or to deliver up her fugitive English partisans then in
Scotland; upon other points they came to terms, and the articles
were signed the 16th of October. On the same day Mary wrote to
Elizabeth, requesting with graceful earnestness the favour of an
interview which might reassure her against the suggestion that
this treaty was a mere pretence. On the 28th of November she
was removed to Sheffield Castle, where she remained for the next
fourteen years in charge of the earl of Shrewsbury. The detection
of a plot, in which Norfolk was implicated, for the invasion of
England by Spain on behalf of Mary, who was then to take him
as the fourth and most contemptible of her husbands, made
necessary the reduction of her household and the stricter
confinement of her person. On the 28th of May 1572 a
demand from both houses of parliament for her execution
as well as Norfolk’s was generously rejected by Elizabeth;
but after the punishment of the traitorous pretender to
her hand, on whom she had lavished many eloquent letters
of affectionate protestation, she fell into “a passion of
sickness” which convinced her honest keeper of her genuine
grief for the ducal caitiff. A treaty projected on the news of
the massacre of St Bartholomew, by which Mary should be sent
back to Scotland for immediate execution, was broken off by the
death of the earl of Mar, who had succeeded Lennox as regent;
nor was it found possible to come to acceptable terms on a like
understanding with his successor Morton, who in 1577 sent a
proposal to Mary for her restoration, which she declined, in
Page:EB1911 - Volume 17.djvu/838
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MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
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