Chapter 15
[109] Brown's Highlands.
[110] Mar Papers.
[111] Reay, p. 309.
[112] From the MS. letter in the possession of Archibald Macdonald, Esq.
[113] The agent of the Jacobites in Edinburgh.
[114] Mar Papers, in the possession of Gibson Craig, Esq.
[115] King.
[116] Duke of Ormond.
[117] Paris.
[118] Lady Nairn.
[119] The Chevalier.
[120] The Dutch auxiliaries, to the amount of 6000, demanded by the English government, as accorded by treaty, arrived, to the number of 3000, in the Thames, on the 16th of November, expressly to a.s.sist in suppressing the rebellion, and proceeded to Scotland on the 25th. They were afterwards followed by 3000 more, who, being obliged to put in at Harwich, marched on by land. Reay, p. 327.
[121] The King.
[122] Lord Grange.
[123] The following note is annexed to this letter. It is in the hand-writing of Bishop Keith:--"Son of Sir Wm. Dougla.s.s, colonel of a regiment, and who had come over with the Prince of Orange to England, and was made Knight and Colonel by the said Prince, as says my Lady Bruce. The story Wm. Erskine, brother to the Earl of Buchan, told me, as the King and he were travelling through France at this period, they saw the Chevalier's picture set up in some of the post-houses, and they were told this was done by the desire of the English Amba.s.sador, who had promised a reward to those who should stop and apprehend the person whom the picture resembled."
[124] A concealment in the House of Kineil, near Borrostowness.
[125] The younger brother of the Marquis of Tullibardine, but a.s.suming the forfeited t.i.tle as head of the house.
[126] Henry Straiton.
[127] I have had the advantage of seeing an original crayon portrait of the Chevalier, in the possession of Kirkpatrick Sharpe, Esq., of Edinburgh; also, a miniature painted at Rome, belonging to Mr. Sharpe.
In the
[128] "A True Account of the Proceedings at Perth," by a Rebel, supposed to be the Master of Sinclair.
[129] That portion of the letter only which refers to the Chevalier appears to have been printed. I have given the entire letter from which the account was taken. A portion of this letter is published in Brown's History of the Highlands, vol. iv. p. 332.
[130] Reay, p. 352.
[131] MS. Letter in the possession of Alexander Macdonald, Esq., of the Register Office, Edinburgh.
[132] Mar Papers.
[133] Thomas Bruce, afterwards Earl of Kincardine.
[134] The loss of the s.h.i.+p from France.
[135] An allusion to the Marquis of Huntley and Lord Seaforth.
[136] Mar Papers.
[137] Reay, p. 364.
[138] Flying Post, or the Post Master, for January 28 and 31, 1716.
[139] Evening Post, Feb. 2, 1716.
[140] Auchterarder.
[141] Reay, p. 364.
[142] Mar Correspondence.
[143] Probably Wigton.
[144] Brown's Highlands, vol. iv. p. 337.
[145] Patten, p. 248.
[146] Reay, p. 367.
[147] Lord Mar's Journal.
[148] A copy is given of the Prince's letter in Dr. Brown's work on the Highlands, vol. iv. p. 340. It is a sort of expostulation with the Duke, but mildly and sensibly expressed. "I fear," he said, alluding to the British people, "they will find yet more than I the smart of preferring a foreign yoke to the obedience they owe me."
[149] Bolingbroke's Letter to Sir William Wyndham.
[150] Letter to Sir Wm. Wyndham, p. 139.
[151] Lockhart, vol. ii. p. 17.
[152] Ibid.
[153] Lockhart, vol. ii. p. 64.
[154] c.o.xe's Papers in the British Museum, MS. 9129. Plut. cx.x.xviii. II.
[155] I find that the biographers of Lord Mar, in the short lives given of him, (see Chambers's Scottish Biography, Georgian Era, &c.) have overlooked this correspondence. The letter from Sir Luke Schwaub, in French, with a translation, and the answer of Lord Carteret, in the c.o.xe Papers, although not exactly relevant to my subject, are interesting. "A thousands thanks," writes the generous Lord Carteret, in reply to Schwaub, "for your private letter, which affords me the means of obviating any calumny against the memory of a person who will always be dear to me." [That is, Lord Sunderland.] "I have shown it to the King, who is entirely satisfied with it." The anxiety on the part of Government to secure the papers of Lord Sunderland, was extreme, and affords a collateral proof of this connivance. The mysterious doc.u.ments were seized by order of the King, and inspected by Lord Townshend, and not a trace of the correspondence was left when the papers were restored to the family. The seizure occasioned a suit between the executors of the Earl of Sunderland and the two Secretaries of State.--_c.o.xe MSS._
[156] Hardwicke Papers, vol. ii. p. 252.
[157] Hardwicke Papers, vol. ii. p. 565.
[158] Hardwicke Papers, p. 586.