I 0 0 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH.
trates, attended by the burgesses in arms, proceeded to the Borough Muir, where the
Marquis’s body was taken up from its ignominious grave, put into a coffin, and born back
to Edinburgh, under a rich canopy of velvet, amid music and firing of guns, and every
demonstration of triumph. The procession stopped at the Tolbooth uutil the head was
taken down and placed beside the body, after which the coffin was deposited in the Abbey
Church of Ho1yrood.l
The other portions of the body ’ were afterwards collected and restored to the coffin, and
on the 11th of May following, the mutilated remains of the great Marquis were brought
back from the Abbey in solemn funeral procession, and buried in the south-east aisle of
St Giles’s Church, (( at the back of the tomb where his grandsire was buried,” and which
retained, until recently, the name of Montrose’s aisle.
Nicol furnishes a minute account of the proceedings on this occasion. The whole line
of street from the Palace to St Giles’s Church was guarded by the burghers of Edinburgh,
Canongate, Portsburgh, and Potterrow, all in armour, and with their banners displayed.
Twenty-six young boys, clad in deep mourning, bore his arms, and were followed by the
Magistrates and all the members of Parliament, in mourning habits. The pall was borne
by some of the chief nobility, and the Earl of Middleton, His Majesty’s Commissioner,
followed as chief mourner.3
The re-establishment of Episcopacy, in defiance of the most solemn engagements of the
King, put a speedy close to the rejoicings of the Scottish nation. The Magistrates of
Edinburgh, however, proved sufficiently loyal and complying. On the day of his Majesty’s
coronation, the Cross was adorned with flowers and branches of trees, and wine freely.
distributed to the people from thence, by Bacchus and his train. After dinner, the
Magistrates walked in procession to the Cross, “and there drank the King’s health
on their knees, and at sundry other prime parts of the city.”*
One of the first proceedings of the dominant party, was the trial and execution of the
Marquis of Argyle, who was condemned in defiance of every principle of justice, by judges,
each of them more deeply implicated than himself, in the acts for which he was brought
to trial. He
was beheaded by the instrument called the Maiden, the same that is said to have been
invented by the Earl of Morton, and was employed for his own execution. The head of
Argyle was exposed on the west end of the Tolbooth, on the same epike from which that of
Montrose had so recently been removed with every demonstration of honour and respect ;
a circumstance that illustrates, in a striking manner, the strange vicissitudes attendant on
civil commotions.
The most arbitrary and tyrannical enactments were now enforced, imposing exorbitant
penalties on any one found with what were styled seditious books in his dwelling; no one
He exhibited the utmost serenity and cheerfulneas after his condemnation.
Nicol’s Diary, p. 317.
Thoresby, the friend of Evelyne, in the iiccount of his Museum, sags :--“But the moat noted of all the humane
curiosities, is the hand and arm cut off at the elbow, positively asserted to he that of the celebrated Marquis of Montrom
It hath never been interred, has a severe wound in the wrist, and seems really to have been the very hand that wrote
the famous epitaph [Great, God, and Just] for King Charles I., in whose cause he auffered. Dr Pickering would not
part with it, till the descent into Spain, when, dreading it should be lost in his absence, he presented it to this Repository,
where it has more than once had the same honour that is paid to the greateet eccleiiastical prince in the world.”-
Ducatus Leodiensis, by Whitaker, p. 3.
Nicol’s Diary, p, 330-2. Ibid, p. 328.