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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. V

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I34 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Restalng. many instances, relatives and friends. With all the affected zeal of a peacemaker, this gentleman (whose house stood in Drury Lane, off the Strand in London), proposed terms which Huntly deemed satisfactory ; but the next point to be considered was, which party should first march off the field. On this, both parties were absurdly obstinate. Huntly maintained that Morton, by an aggressive display, had drawn the Queen?s troops out of the city ; while Morton, on the other hand, charged the Highland Earl with various acts of hostility and insult. Dnuy eventually got both parties to promise to quit the ground at a given signal, ?and that signal,? he arranged, ?shall be the throwing up of my hat.? This was agreed to, and before Drury was halfway between the Hawkhill and the ancient quarries, up went his plumed hat, and away wheeled Huntly?s forces, marching for the city by the road that led to the Canongate, without the least suspicion of the treachery of Drury, or Morton, whose soldiers had never left their ground, and who cow, rushing across the open fields with shouts charged with the utmost fury the queen?s men, ?? who were retiring with all the imprudent irregularity and confusion which an imaginary security and exultation at having escaped a sanguinary conflict were calculated to produce.? Thus treacherously attacked, they were put to flight, and were pursued with cruel and rancorous slaughter to the very gates of the city. The whole road was covered with dead and wounded men, while Lord Home, several gentlemen of high position, and seventy-two private soldiers, a pair of colours, several horses, and two pieces of cannon, were, amid great triumph, marched into Leith in the afternoon. This was not the only act of treachery of which Sir William Drury was guilty. He swore that he was entirely innocent, and threw the whole blame on Morton; but though an ambassador, so exas. perated were the people of Edinburgh against him, that he had afterwards to quit the city under a guard to protect him from the infuriated mob. The Laird of Restalrig was among those who surrendered with Kirkaldy of Grange, in 1573, when the Castle of Edinburgh capitulated to Morton; but he would seem to have been pardoned, as no record exists of any seventy practised upon him. In #some criminal proceedings, in I 5 76, the sheet of water here is designated as Restalrig Loch, when a woman named Bessie Dunlop was tried for witchcraft and having certain interviews with ?? ane Tam Reid,? who was killed at the battle of Pinkie. Having once ridden with her husband to Leith to bring home meal, ?ganging afield to tether her horse at Restalrig Loch, there came ane company of riders by, that made sic a din as if heaven and earth had gane together; and, incontinent they rade into the loch, with mony hideous rumble. Tarn tauld [her] it was the Gude Wights, that were riding in middle-eard.? For these and similar confessions, Bessie was consigned to the flames as a witch. During the prevalence of the pestilence, in 1585, James Melville says that on his way to join the General Assembly at Linlithgow he had to pass through Edinburgh ; that after dining at Restalrig at eleven o?clock, he rode through thecity from the Water Gate to the West Port, ? in all whilk way, we saw not three persons, sae that I mis-kenned Edinburgh, and almost forgot that I had ever seen sic a town.? In 1594 Restalrig was the scene of one of those stormy raids that the ?mad Earl of Bothwell? caused so frequently, to the torment of James VI. The earl, at the head of an armed force, was in Leith, and broke out in open rebellion, when, on the 3rd of April, the king, after sermon, summoned the people of Edinburgh in arms, and moved towards Leith, from whence Bothwell instantly issued at the head of 500 mounted men-atms, and took up a position at the Hawkhill near Restalrig. Fearing, however, the strength of the citizens, he made a detour, and galloped through Duddingstone. Lord Home with his lances followed him to ?the Woomet,? says Birrel, probably meaning Woolmet, near Dalkeith, when Bothwell faced about, and compelled him to retire in turn, but not without bloodshed. In February, 1593, at Holyrood, Robert Logan, of Restalrig, was denounced for not appearing to answer for his treasonable conspiracy and trafiicking ? with Francis, sum tyme Earl of Bothwell ; ? and in the June of the following year he was again denounced as a traitor for failing to appear and answer for the conduct of two of his vassals, Jockie Houlden and Peter Craick, who had despoiled Robert Gray, burgess in Edinburgh of Lg50. It was in this year that the remarkable indenture was formed between him and Napier of Merchiston to search for gold in Fast Castle (the ?Wolf?s Crag? of the Master of Ravenswood), a fortress which lie had acquired by his marriage with an heiress of the Home family, to whom it originally belonged. Logan joined the Earl of Gowrie in the infamous and mysterious conspiracy at Perth, in the year 1600. It was proposed to force the king into ir boat at the bottom of the garden of Gowrie House, which the river Tay bordered, and from? thence conduct him by sea to Logan?s inacces
Volume 5 Page 134
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