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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. VI

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Leith.] DEATH OF JAMES 111. 201 1488-he embarked in one of Sir Andrew?s ships then anchored in the Roads of Leith, and landed from it in Fifeshire. As the Admiral had been lying there for some time, intending to sail to Flanders, the Barons, now in arms against the Crown, spread a report that James had fled, surprised the castle of Dunbar, furnished themselves with arms and ammunition out of the royal arsenal, ? and,? says Abercrombie, ? overran the three Lothians and the Merse, rifling and plundering all honest men.? In April, 1488, the king re-crossed the Forth in the admiral?s ship, and, marching past Stirling, pitched his standard near Blackness, where his army mustered thirty thousand, and some say forty thousand, strong, but was disbanded after an indecisive skirmish. Fresh intrigues ensued that belong to general history; two other armies, in all amounting to nearly seventy thousand men, took the field James 111. had no alternative but to take flight in the ships of Wood, then cruising in the Forth, or to resort to the sword on the 11th June, 1488. His army took up a position near the Bum of Sauchie, while ?? Sir Andrew Wood, attending to the fortune of war, sailed up the silver winding of the beautiful river with the FZmw and YelZow CaraveZ, and continued during the whole of that cloudless day to cruise between dusky Alloa and the rich Carse of Stirling, then clothed im all the glory of summer.? On the right bank of the river he kept several boats ready to receive the king if defeat-as it eventually did-fell upon him, and he often landed, with his brothers John and Robert and a body of men, to yield any assistance in his power. While attempting to reach the ships James was barbarously slain, and was lying dead in a mill that still stands by the wayside, when rumour went that he had reached the YeZZow Caravd Thus Wood received a message in the name of the Duke of Rothesay (afterwards James IV.), as to the truth of this story; but Sir Andrew declared that the king was not with him, and refilsed to go on shore, when invited, without hostages for his own safety. The Lords Fleming and Seaton came on board in this capacity, and landing at Leith the admiral was conducted to the presence of the Prince, who was then a captive and tool in the hands of the rebels, and only in his sixteenth year. Wood was arrayed in handsome armour, and so dignified was he in aspect, and so much did he resemble the king his master, that the Prince, who had seen little of the latter, shed tears, and said, timidly- ?? Sir, are you my father? ? . Then this true old Scottish mariner, heedless of 123 the titled crowd which regarded him with bitter hostility, and touched to the heart by the question, also burst into tears, and said- ? I am not your father, but his faithful servant, and the enemy of all who have occasioned his downfall ! ? ? Where is the king, and who are those you took on board after the battle?? demanded several of the rebel lords. ?? As for the king, I know nothing of him. Finding our efforts to fight for or to save him vain, my brother and I returned to our ships.? He added, says Buchanan, ?that if the king were alive he would obey none but him; ,and that if slain, he would revenge him ! ? He then went off to the ships, but just in time to save the hostages, whom his impatient brothers were about to hang at the yard-arm. The lords now wanted the mariners of Leith to arm their ships, and attack Wood; but, to a man, they declined. In the early part of 1489 Henry of England, to make profit out of the still disturbed state of Scotland, sent five of his largest ships to waste and burn the sea-coast villages of Fife and the Lothians ; and the young James IV., in wrath at these proceedings, requested Sir Andrew Wood to appear before the Privy Council and take measures to curb the outrages of the English. He at once undertook to attack them ; but James, as they outnumbered him by three, advised him to equip more vessels. ?? No: he replied,? ?? I shall only take my own two-the FZower and the Jl?ellow Carard.? Accordingly, .with the first fair wind on a day in February, he dropped down the Firth, and found the plunder-laden English vessels hovering off Dunbar, and which Tytler surmises to have been pirates, as they came in time of truce. Wood at once engaged them, and after an obstinate conflict, of which no details are preserved, he brought them all prizes into Leith. He presented their captains to the young king, who now further rewarded him on the 11th March, 1490, with the lands of Balbegnoth, the superiority of Inchkeith, the lands of Dron and Newbyrn ; and by a charter under the Great Seal, 18th May, 1491, he granted to Sir Andrew Wood ? license to build a castfe at Largo with gates of iron as a reward for the great services done and losses sustained by the said Andrew, and for those services which there was no doubt he would yet render.? This castle, fragments of which yet remain, he appears to have built, with some adjacent houses, by the hands of English pirates whom he had captured at sea; and the coat
Volume 6 Page 201
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