Hunted and Harried by R. M. Ballantyne (the top 100 crime novels of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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About the time that these events were taking place in and around Blackâs cottage, bands of armed men with women and even children were hastening towards the same locality to attend the great âconventicle,â for which the preparations already described were being made.
The immediate occasion of the meeting was the desire of the parishioners of the Reverend John Welsh, a great-grandson of John Knox, to make public avowal, at the Communion Table, of their fidelity to Christ and their attachment to the minister who had been expelled from the church of Irongray; but strong sympathy induced many others to attend, not only from all parts of Galloway and Nithsdale, but from the distant Clyde, the shores of the Forth, and elsewhere; so that the roads were crowded with people making for the rendezvousâsome on foot, others on horseback. Many of the latter were gentlemen of means and position, who, as well as their retainers, were more or less well armed and mounted. The Reverend John Blackadder, the âauldâ minister of Troqueerâa noted hero of the Covenant, who afterwards died a prisoner on the Bass Rockâtravelled with his party all the way from Edinburgh, and a company of eighty horse proceeded to the meeting from Clydesdale.
Preliminary services, conducted by Mr Blackadder and Mr Welsh, were held near Dumfries on the Saturday, but at these the place of meeting on the Sabbath was only vaguely announced as âa hillside in Irongray,â so anxious were they to escape being disturbed by their enemies, and the secret was kept so well that when the Sabbath arrived a congregation of above three thousand had assembled round the Communion stones in the hollow of Skeoch Hill.
Sentinels were posted on all the surrounding heights. One of these sentinels was the farmer Andrew Black, with a cavalry sword belted to his waist, and a rusty musket on his shoulder. Beside him stood a tall stalwart youth in shepherdâs costume.
âYer ain mother wadna ken ye,â remarked Andrew with a twinkle in his eyes.
âI doubt that,â replied the youth; âa motherâs eyes are keen. I should not like to encounter even Glendinning in my present guise.â
As he spoke the rich melody of the opening psalm burst from the great congregation and rolled in softened cadence towards the sentinels.
The face of nature did not seem propitious to the great gathering on Skeoch Hill. Inky clouds rolled athwart the leaden sky, threatening a deluge of rain, and fitful gusts of wind seemed to indicate the approach of a tempest. Nevertheless the elements were held in check by the God of nature, so that the solemn services of the day were conducted to a close without discomfort, though not altogether without interruption.
Several of the most eminent ministers, who had been expelled from their charges, were present on this occasion. Besides John Welsh of Irongray, there were Arnot of Tongland, Blackadder of Troqueer, and Dickson of Rutherglenâgodly men who had for many years suffered persecution and imprisonment, and were ready to lay down their lives in defence of religious liberty. The price set upon the head of that ânotour traitor, Mr John Welsh,â dead or alive, was 9000 merks. Mr Arnot was valued at 3000!
These preached and assisted at different parts of the services, while the vast multitude sat on the sloping hillside, and the mounted men drew up on the outskirts of the congregation, so as to be within sound of the preachersâ voices, and, at the same time, be ready for action on the defensive if enemies should appear.
Andrew Black and his companion stood for some time listening, with bowed heads, to the slow sweet music that floated towards them. They were too far distant to hear the words of prayer that followed, yet they continued to stand in reverent silence for some time, listening to the soundâBlack with his eyes closed, his young companion gazing wistfully at the distant landscape, which, from the elevated position on which they stood, lay like a magnificent panorama spread out before them. On the left the level lands bordering the rivers Cairn and Nith stretched away to the Solway, with the Cumberland mountains in the extreme distance; in front and on the right lay the wild, romantic hill-country of which, in after years, it was so beautifully written:â
âO bonnie hills of Galloway oft have I stood to see,
At sunset hour, your shadows fall, all darkening on the lea;
While visions of the buried years came oâer me in their mightâ
As phantoms of the sepulchreâinstinct with inward light!
The years, the years when Scotland groaned beneath her tyrantâs hand!
And âtwas not for the heather she was called âthe purple land.â
And âtwas not for her loveliness her children blessed their Godâ
But for secret places of the hills, and the mountain heights
untrod.â
âWho was the old man I found in what you call your hidy-hole?â asked Wallace, turning suddenly to his companion.
âIâm noâ sure that I have a right to answer that,â said Black, regarding Will with a half-serious, half-amused look. âHooever, noo that yeâve taâen service wiâ me, and ken about my hidy-hole, I suppose I may trust ye wiâ aâ my secrets.â
âI would not press you to reveal any secrets, Mr Black, yet I think you are safe to trust me, seeing that you know enough about my own secrets to bring me to the gallows if so disposed.â
âAy, I hae ye there, lad! But Iâll trust ye on better grunds than that. I believe ye to be an honest man, and thatâs enough for me. Weel, ye maun ken, itâs saxteen year since I howkit the hidy-hole below my hoose, anâ wad ye believe it?âtheyâve no fund it oot yet! Not even had a suspeecion oât, though the sodgers hae been sair puzzled, mony a time, aboot hoo I managed to gie them the slip. Anâ monyâs the puir body, baith gentle and simple, that Iâve gien food anâ shelter to whae was very likely to hae perished oâ cauld anâ hunger, but for the hidy-hole. Among ithers Iâve often had the persecuited ministers doon there, readinâ their Bibles or sleepinâ as comfortable as ye like when the dragoons was drinkinâ, roarinâ, anâ singinâ like deevils ower their heids. My certies! if Clavers, or Sherp, or Lauderdale had an inklinâ oâ the hunderd pairt oâ the law-brekinâ that Iâve done, itâs a gallows in the Gressmarkit as high as Hamanâs wad be ereckit for me, anâ my heed anâ hauns, may be, would be bleachinâ on the Nether Bow. Humph! but theyâve noâ gotten me yet!â
âAnd I sincerely hope they never will,â remarked Wallace; âbut you have not yet told me the name of the old man.â
âI was cominâ to him,â continued Black; âbut wheniver I wander to the doinâs oâ that black-hearted Cooncil, Iâm like to lose the threed oâ my discoorse. Yon is a great man iâ the Kirk oâ Scotland. They caâ him Donald Cargill. The adventures that puir man has had in the coorse oâ mair nor quarter oâ a century wad makâ a grand story-buik. He has no fear oâ man, anâ heâs an awfuâ stickler for justice. Iâse warrant he gied ye some strang condemnations oâ the poors that be.â
âIndeed he did not,â said Wallace. âSurely you misjudge his character. His converse with me was entirely religious, and his chief anxiety seemed to be to impress on me the love of God in sending Jesus Christ to redeem a wicked world from sin. I tried to turn the conversation on the state of the times, but he gently turned it round again to the importance of being at peace with God, and giving heed to the condition of my own soul. He became at last so personal that I did not quite like it. Yet he was so earnest and kind that I could not take offence.â
âAy, ay,â said Black in a musing tone, âI see. He clearly thinks that yer heârt needs mair instruction than yer heed. Hm! maybe heâs right. Hooever, heâs a wonderfuâ man; gangs aboot the country preachinâ everywhere althoâ he kens that the sodgers are aye on the look-oot for him, anâ that if they catch him itâs certain death. He wad have been at this communion nae doot, if he hadna engaged to preach somewhere near Sanquhar this vera day.â
âThen he has left the hidy-hole by this time, I suppose?â
âYe may be sure oâ that, for when there is work to be done for the Master, Donalâ Cargill doesna let the gress grow under his feet.â
âIâm sorry that I shall not see him again,â returned the ex-trooper in a tone of regret, âfor I like him much.â
Now, while this conversation was going on, a portion of the troop of dragoons which had been out in search of Andrew Black was sent under Glendinning (now a sergeant) in quest of an aged couple named Mitchell, who were reported to have entertained intercommuned, i.e. outlawed, persons; attended conventicles in the fields; ventured to have family worship in their cottages while a few neighbours were present, and to have otherwise broken the laws of the Secret Council.
This Council, which was ruled by two monsters in human form, namely, Archbishop Sharp of Saint Andrews and the Duke of Lauderdale, having obtained full powers from King Charles the Second to put down conventicles and enforce the laws against the fanatics with the utmost possible rigour, had proceeded to carry out their mission by inviting a host of half, if not quite, savage Highlanders to assist them in quelling the people. This host, numbering, with 2000 regulars and militia, about 10,000 men, eagerly accepted the invitation, and was let loose on the south and western districts of Scotland about the beginning of the year, and for some time ravaged and pillaged the land as if it had been an enemyâs country. They were thanked by the King for so readily agreeing to assist in reducing the Covenanters to obedience to âUs and Our laws,â and were told to take up free quarters among the disaffected, to disarm such persons as they should suspect, to carry with them instruments of torture wherewith to subdue the refractory, and in short to act very much in accordance with the promptings of their own desires. Evidently the mission suited these men admirably, for they treated all parties as disaffected, with great impartiality, and plundered, tortured, and insulted to such an extent that after about three months of unresisted depredation, the shame of the thing became so obvious that Government was compelled to send them home again. They had accomplished nothing in the way of bringing the Covenanters to reason; but they had desolated a fair region of Scotland, spilt much innocent blood, ruined many families, and returned to their native hills heavily laden with booty of every kind like a victorious army. It is said that the losses caused by them in the county of Ayr alone amounted to over 11,000 pounds sterling.
The failure of this horde did not in the least check the proceedings of Sharp or Lauderdale or their like-minded colleagues. They kept the regular troops and militia moving about the land, enforcing their idiotical and wicked laws at the point of the sword. We say idiotical advisedly, for what could give stronger evidence of mental incapacity than the attempt to enforce a bond upon all landed proprietors, obliging themselves and their wives, children, and servants, as well as all their tenants and cottars, with their wives, children, and servants, to abstain from conventicles, and not to receive, assist, or even speak to, any forfeited persons, intercommuned ministers, or vagrant preachers, but to use their utmost endeavours to apprehend all such? Those who took this bond were to receive an assurance that the troops should not be quartered on their landsâa matter of considerable importanceâfor this quartering involved great expense and much destruction of property in most cases, and
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