could have collected together this rash assembly of misguided persons."
"I will answer unto you," said Montrose, "in the manner of your own Puritans. I have not troubled Israel, but thou and thy father's house. But let us leave an altercation, which is of little consequence but to ourselves, and hear the tidings you have brought from your chief of Argyle; for I must conclude that it is in his name that you have come to this meeting."
"It is in the name of the Marquis of Argyle," said Sir Duncan Campbell,—"in the name of the Scottish Parliament, that I demand to know the meaning of this singular convocation. If it is designed to disturb the peace of the country, it were but acting like neighbours, and men of honour, to give us some intimation to stand upon our guard."
"It is a singular, and new state of affairs in Scotland," said Montrose, turning from Sir Duncan Campbell to the assem-