In December, 1542, Mary Stuart, daughter
of James V. of Scotland, then seven days old, succeeded
to the throne of a kingdom rent by religious and political
factions, and suffering from the consequences of a
disastrous war with England.
The union of Scotland to England had
ever been a favorite project with English sovereigns,
and the present seemed to Henry VIII. a favorable
opportunity for peaceably effecting it. He lost
no time, therefore, in proposing a match between the
infant queen and his own son, Edward. His proposal
found little favor; the haughty nobles could not endure
to see their country become a mere province of England;
and the queen mother and her religious advisers feared
for the security of the Catholic religion. Henry
might, however, have ultimately succeeded, had he
acted with prudence. But he sought to terrify
the Scots into submission; and those who succeeded
to the government of England upon his death, which
happened soon after, persisted in the same policy.
An army was sent into Scotland, to ravage the country
and pillage the towns and villages. This mode
of wooing did not suit the temper of the Scots; and
an end was soon put to all hopes by the negotiation
of a marriage treaty between the queen and Francis,
the infant dauphin of France. In pursuance of
this treaty, Mary, then in her sixth year, was sent
to France to be educated. She was at first placed
in a convent with the king’s daughters, where
she made a rapid progress in all the accomplishments
they attempted to teach her. Here her enthusiastic
disposition was so strongly impressed with religious
feelings, and she evinced such a fondness for a cloistered
life, that it was thought proper to remove her to
the gayer scenes of the court a change which
cost her torrents of tears. The fashion for learning
prevailed at this time, and Mary profited by it.
Her instructors were the most eminent men of the time;
Buchanan taught her Latin; Pasquier instructed her
in history; Ronsard, the most famous of the early
French poets, cultivated her taste for poetry:
they found her not only a willing but an able pupil.
Other accomplishments were not neglected; she sung,
and played on the lute and the virginals; she
rode on horseback fearlessly, yet with feminine grace;
her dancing was always admired; and we are assured
that in the Spanish minuet she was equalled only by
her aunt, the beautiful Anne of Este, and no lady of
the court could eclipse her in a galliarde. Her
beauty and the charming expression of her countenance
were such, that, as a contemporary asserts, “no
one could look upon her without loving her.”
When her mother came over to visit her in 1550, she
burst into tears of joy, and congratulated herself
on her daughter’s capacity and loveliness.
Soon after Mary’s marriage to Francis, in 1558,
Elizabeth ascended the English throne; the pope, and
the French and Spanish courts, refused to acknowledge
her; and Mary, undisputably the next heir, was compelled
by the commands of her father-in-law to assume the
title and arms of queen of England a measure
of unforeseen but fatal consequences to her, as it
added fresh fuel to the fires of envy, jealousy, and
hatred, which the personal advantages of Mary had
already excited in the bosom of her vain and vindictive
rival.
In 1558, Francis and Mary were crowned
king and queen of France. Francis survived this
event but a few months. He was far inferior to
his wife, both in personal and mental accomplishments;
he was of sickly constitution, and very reserved;
but he had an affectionate and kind disposition.
He was not a man to call forth the deepest and most
passionate feelings of such a heart as Mary’s;
but she ever treated him with tenderness and most
respectful attention. She is described by an
eye-witness as a “sorrowful widow,” and
lamented her husband sincerely.
The happiness of Mary’s life
was now at an end. She was a stranger in the
land of which she had so recently been crowned queen.
In the queen mother, the ambitious Catherine de Medicis,
who now ruled France in the name of her son Charles
IX., Mary had an inveterate foe. In the reign
of Francis they had been rivals for power, when the
charms of the wife had triumphed over the authority
of the mother. There was another wound which
had long rankled in the vindictive bosom of Catherine.
In the artlessness of youth, Mary had once boasted
of her own descent from a “hundred kings,”
which was supposed to reflect on the mercantile lineage
of the daughter of the Medicis. She now took
her revenge. By the most studied slights she sought
to mortify Mary, who first retired to Rheims.
Here she was waited on by a deputation from her own
nobles, who invited her, in terms which amounted to
a command, to return to her native country.
A new cause of difficulty now occurred
between Mary and Elizabeth. The heads of the
reformed religious party in Scotland, called the “Lords
of the Congregation,” had negotiated a treaty
with Elizabeth, one of the terms of which was a renunciation,
on the part of Mary, of all claims to the crown of
England forever. This Mary refused to ratify,
and replied to the crafty ministers of her rival with
a spirit, intelligence, and firmness, extraordinary
in a girl of eighteen. At the same time, she
was courteous and gentle, and apologized for the assumption
of the title and arms of queen of England, which, at
the death of her husband, she had renounced.
Attempts had been made to excite the fears of her
Protestant subjects, which she thus set at rest:
“I will be plain with you; the religion I profess
I take to be the most acceptable to God; and indeed
I neither know nor desire any other. I have been
brought up in this religion, and who might credit
me in any thing if I should show myself light in this
case? I am none of those who change their religion
every year; but I mean to constrain none of my subjects,
though I could wish they were all as I am; and I trust
they shall have no support to constrain me.”
Having at length resolved to return
home, Mary sent to demand of Elizabeth a free passage;
it was a mere point of courtesy and etiquette, but
it was refused. The English ambassador sought
in vain to justify his mistress’s conduct; it
arose from exasperated jealousy, and was inexcusable
and mean, as well as discourteous.
It was with grief almost amounting
to despair that Mary left the scenes of her early
attachments, and of all her pleasures. Accustomed
to the refinement of the court of France, she reflected
with a degree of horror on the barbarism of her own
country, and the turbulence of the people. She
stood upon the deck of the vessel which bore her,
gazing through her tears on the receding shores.
“Farewell, France!” she would exclaim
from time to time; “farewell, beloved country,
which I shall never more behold!” When night
came on, she caused a bed to be spread on the deck,
and wept herself to sleep.
By the favor of a thick fog, Mary
escaped the fleet which Elizabeth had sent out to
intercept her, and landed at Leith. With sensations
of terror and sadness she entered her capital; and
they may well be excused. The poverty of the
country formed a striking contrast with the fertile
plains of France. The weather was wet and “dolorous;”
and a serenade of bagpipes, with which the populace
hailed her, seems to have greatly disconcerted her
polished attendants. But Mary herself took every
thing in good part, and, after a while, she so far
recovered her gayety, that the masques and dancing,
the “fiddling” and “uncomely skipping,”
gave great offence to John Knox and the rest of the
grave reformers, who inveighed against such practices
from the pulpit; and the former, with a violence and
rudeness altogether unmanly, personally upbraided
her, so as to make her weep. In one brought up
in “joyousness,” such austerity could not
fail to excite disgust, and a stronger clinging to
the more kind and genial doctrines of her own faith.
But she made no retaliation; she sought, on the contrary,
to win the affection of all her subjects, and to introduce
happiness and prosperity, as well as a more refined
civilization, into her country. Her life for
a few years was tranquil. She gave four or five
hours every day to state affairs; she was wont to have
her embroidery frame placed in the room where the
council met, and while she plied the needle, she joined
in the discussions, displaying in her own opinions
and suggestions a vigor of mind and quickness which
astonished the statesmen around her. At other
times she applied to study. She brought a great
many books with her to Scotland, and the first artificial
globes that had ever been seen there. She was
fond of music, and maintained a band of minstrels.
Her other amusements were hawking, hunting, dancing,
and walking in the open air. She was fond of
gardening; she had brought from France a little sycamore
plant, which she planted in the gardens of Holyrood,
and tended with care; and from this parent stem arose
the beautiful groves which are now met with in Scotland.
She excelled at the game of chess, and delighted in
the allegorical representations, so much in fashion
in her day, by the name of “masques.”
Though Mary could not but feel some
resentment at the injurious treatment which she received
from Elizabeth, yet she sought to conciliate her,
and there was a great exhibition of courtesy and compliment,
and “sisterly” affection, between them.
Mary even consulted Elizabeth about her marriage.
But that sovereign, with a littleness almost inconceivable,
could not bear that others should enjoy any happiness
of which she herself was debarred, and her own subjects
could in no way more surely incur her displeasure than
by marriage. She now sought to delay that of
Mary. She proposed to her a most unworthy match,
and, when this, as it was intended it should be, was
rejected, offered objections to all which were proposed
by Mary.
At length, the suggestions of a powerful
party seconding his own ambitious wishes, Henry Darnley
entered the lists to obtain her favor. He was
possessed of every external accomplishment, being remarkably
tall, handsome, agreeable, and “well instructed
in all comely exercises.” His mother, “a
very wise and discreet matron,” Rizzio, and
others, familiar with the queen’s tastes, instructed
him in the best methods of being agreeable to her.
He affected a great degree of refinement, and a fondness
for music and poetry. The queen, deceived and
captivated, made choice of him for her husband a
choice which at the time seemed most proper and eligible;
for he was a Protestant, and next heir, after herself,
to the English throne. They were married in 1565.
For a short time Mary thought herself happy. In
the first effusions of her passion, she lavished
upon her husband every mark of love, and of distinction,
even to conferring upon him the title of king of Scotland.
But her tenderness and attentions were all thrown
away, and, instead of respect and gratitude, she met
with brutality and insolence. Violent, fickle,
insolent, ungrateful, and addicted to the lowest pleasures,
he was incapable of all true sentiments of love and
tenderness. Love, for a time, blinded Mary’s
reason, and she made excuses for his faults; but,
as his true temper and character became more known
to her, she treated him with more reserve, and refused
some of his unreasonable demands. Irritated,
Darnley sought for some one in the confidence of the
queen upon whom he might wreak his vengeance.
There was at the court a young Italian,
named Rizzio, who has already been mentioned as forwarding
Darnley’s suit. He had come to Scotland
in the train of the ambassador of Savoy: the three
pages, or songsters, who used to sing trios before
Mary, wanted a bass, and Rizzio was appointed.
Being not only a scientific musician, but a good penman,
well acquainted with French and Italian, supple and
intelligent, Rizzio contrived to make himself generally
useful, and was, in 1564, appointed French secretary
to the queen. Some designing nobles, jealous
of the favor enjoyed by this foreigner, and likewise
desirous of effecting a permanent breach between Darnley
and the queen, persuaded him that Rizzio was the author
of the queen’s displeasure, and engaged him
in a plot to murder him, which was thus carried into
execution. As Mary was sitting at supper, attended
by Rizzio, and a few other of the officials of her
court, Darnley entered by a private passage which
communicated directly with his own apartments, and,
casting his arms fondly round her waist, seated himself
by her side. A minute had scarcely elapsed, when
Ruthven, in complete armor, rushed in. He had
just risen from a sick bed; his features were sunken,
his voice hollow, and his whole appearance haggard
and terrible. Mary started up in affright, and
bade him begone; but ere the words were uttered, torches
gleamed in the outer room, a confused noise of voices
and weapons was heard, and the other conspirators
rushed in. Ruthven now drew his dagger, and calling
out that their business was with Rizzio, endeavored
to seize him; while this miserable victim, springing
behind the queen, clung by her gown, and besought
her protection. All was now uproar and confusion;
the tables and lights were thrown down. Mary
earnestly entreated them to have mercy, but in vain.
Whilst one of the band held a pistol to her breast,
the victim, already wounded and bleeding, was torn
from her knees, and dragged through her bed-chamber
to the door of the presence chamber, where he was
finally despatched. Fifty-six wounds were found
in the body, and the king’s dagger was left sticking
in it, to show, as was afterwards alleged, that he
had sanctioned the murder. Ruthven, faint from
sickness, and reeking from the scene of blood, staggered
into the queen’s cabinet, where Mary still stood
distracted, and in terror of her life. Here he
threw himself upon a seat, called for a cup of wine,
and plunged a new dagger into the heart of the queen,
by declaring that her husband had advised the whole.
Mary was kept the whole night locked up, alone, in
the room in which this terrible scene had been enacted.
The next day Darnley visited her, and she, ignorant
of the extent of his guilt, employed all her eloquence
to induce him to desert the desperate men with whom
he was leagued. He consented, and they fled together
to Dunbar.
A new actor must now be brought upon
the stage the ambitious, dissolute, and
daring Bothwell. He was the head of one of the
most ancient and powerful families in the kingdom,
and, in all the plots and intrigues, he had ever remained
faithful to the interests of the queen; it was natural,
therefore, that he should stand high in her favor.
It was chiefly through his active exertions that she
now effected her escape; and she soon found herself
at the head of a body of men, chiefly his clansmen,
sufficiently powerful to bring the murderers of Rizzio
to punishment. It is a striking instance of her
clemency, that only two persons were executed for this
crime.
Three months after the murder, she
gave birth to a son, afterwards James I. of England;
at whose christening Elizabeth stood godmother, notwithstanding
her envious and repining exclamation, that “the
queen of Scots should be mother of a fair son, while
she was only a barren stock.” Even this
joyous event could not dispel the melancholy of Mary,
who now suffered so much from the conduct of Darnley
as often to be seen in tears, and was frequently heard
to wish herself dead. The lords of her council
urged a divorce, but she would not listen to this.
“I will that you do nothing,” said she,
“by which any spot may be laid on my honor or
conscience; but wait till God, of his goodness, shall
put a remedy to it.” Finding the queen immovable
on this point, Bothwell, who had now conceived the
ambitious project of succeeding to his place, resolved
to murder Darnley, who was just recovering from the
smallpox, and was lodged, for the benefit of fresh
air, at a house called the Kirk-of-field, near Edinburgh.
His illness and lonely situation touched the tender
heart of Mary. She visited him constantly, and
bestowed on him the kindest attentions. She brought
her band of musicians to amuse him. She seldom
left him during the day, and usually passed the night
in the house. But on Sunday, the 9th of February,
on taking leave of him for the night, she went to the
palace of Holyrood, to be present at the marriage of
two of her servants. While engaged in these festivities,
the house in which her husband slept was blown up,
and his lifeless body was found in a garden at some
distance. Every thing pointed to Bothwell as the
author of this crime; but he, after a trial had before
a jury composed of the first noblemen of the kingdom,
was acquitted.
Bothwell’s next object was to
marry the queen; and the steps he took for this purpose
were too extraordinary, and apparently unnecessary,
to have had her connivance. We are told that,
as she was returning to Edinburgh, she was met by
Bothwell at the head of a large body of retainers,
who forcibly dispersed her small retinue, and carried
her to Dunbar Castle. He then procured the signatures
of a large number of the most distinguished of the
nobles and ecclesiastics to a bond recommending him
to the queen as a most fit and proper husband, and
binding themselves to consider as a common enemy whoever
should oppose the marriage. Armed with this document,
strengthened by a vote of the council, Bothwell brought
the queen to Edinburgh, and there the marriage was
solemnized.
The month which Mary passed with Bothwell
after the marriage, was the most miserable of her
miserable life. He treated her with such indignity,
that a day did not pass in which “he did not
cause her to shed abundance of salt tears.”
Those very lords, who had recommended the marriage,
now made it a pretext for rebellion. Both parties
took up arms, and met at Carberry Hill. Mary
here adopted an unexpected and decisive step.
She offered to the rebels to dismiss Bothwell, and
place herself in their hands, if they would be answerable
for her safety, and return to their allegiance.
Her terms were accepted; Bothwell was persuaded by
her to leave the field. They never met again;
and thus in less than a month this union was virtually
ended.
Mary was soon committed as a prisoner
to Lochleven Castle, a fortress in the midst of a
lake, to the immediate custody of Lady Margaret Douglas,
a woman of harsh and unfeeling temper, and who had
personal motives for irritation against her. Cut
off from all intercourse with those in whom she had
confidence, and harassed by daily ill usage, her enemies
trusted that her spirit would at length be broken,
and that she would submit to any terms which should
promise relief. Accordingly, after some weeks,
she was visited by a deputation of the rebels, who
demanded her signature to a paper declaring her own
incapacity to govern, and abdicating the throne in
favor of her son. Upon her refusal to make this
humiliating declaration, Lindsay, the fiercest of
the confederates, rudely seized her hand with his
own gauntleted palm, and, with threats of instant
death in case of non-compliance, compelled her to set
her signature to the deed; she, in a paroxysm of tears,
calling on all present to witness that she did so
through her fear for her life, and therefore that
the act was not valid.
Bothwell, meanwhile, after wandering
from place to place, now lurking among his vassals,
now seeking refuge with his friends, at length fled,
with a single ship, towards Norway. Falling in
with a vessel of that country, richly laden, he attacked
it, but was himself taken, and carried to Norway,
where for ten years he languished in captivity; till,
by melancholy and despair deprived of reason, unpitied
and unassisted, he ended his wretched life in a dungeon.
A declaration addressed to the king of Denmark, in
which he gives a succinct account of all the transactions
in which he was engaged in Scotland, is yet preserved
in the library of the king of Sweden. In it he
completely exonerates Mary from having the slightest
concern in the murder of Darnley; and again, before
his death, when confessing his own share in it, he
solemnly acquits her of all pre-knowledge of the crime.
Mary now, in her distress, found assistance
from an unexpected quarter. Her misfortunes,
and gentle resignation under them, excited the pity
and sympathy of the little William Douglas,
a boy of fifteen, a son of her jailer; and he resolved
to undertake her deliverance. The first attempt
failed. The queen had succeeded in leaving the
castle in the disguise of a laundress, and was already
seated in the boat, to cross the lake, when she betrayed
herself by raising her hand. The beauty and extreme
whiteness of that hand discovered her at once, and
she was carried back to her chamber in tears and bitterness
of heart. The next attempt was more successful,
and she reached Hamilton in safety. Many nobles
of the highest distinction hastened to offer their
support, and, in three days after leaving Lochleven,
she was at the head of six thousand men, devoted to
her cause.
The other party made haste to assemble
their forces. At their head was Murray, a half-brother
of the queen a man whom she had loaded with
benefits and honors, and to whom she had twice granted
life, when condemned for treason. He now acted
as regent, in the minority of the infant prince, whom
the confederates assumed to be king. The hostile
bands met at Langside. From a neighboring hill,
Mary viewed a conflict on which her fate depended.
She beheld with what anguish of heart may
be imagined the fortune of the day turn
against her; she saw her faithful friends cut to pieces,
taken prisoners, or flying before the victorious Murray.
When all was lost, her general, Lord Herries, came
up to her, seized her bridle, and turned her horse’s
head from the dismal scene. With a few adherents
she fled southwards; nor did she repose till she reached
Dundrennan, sixty miles from the field of battle.
There Mary, trusting in Elizabeth’s recent professions
of friendship, took the fatal resolution of throwing
herself upon the compassion and protection of the
English queen. As she approached the boundary,
her resolution faltered; the coming evils seemed to
cast their shadows before; but those which awaited
her, if she remained, were certain, and she crossed
the small stream which formed the parting line.
Mary was at this time in her twenty-sixth
year; in the very prime of existence, in the full
bloom of beauty and health, when a dark pall was spread
over her life. Thenceforward her history presents
one painful picture of monotonous suffering on the
one hand, and of meanness, treachery, and cruelty,
on the other. With relentless cruelty, her rival
kept her in perpetual bonds; the only changes were
from prison to prison, and from one harsh keeper to
another; from the gleam of delusive hope to the blackness
of succeeding disappointment.
As soon as she entered England, Mary
addressed a letter to Elizabeth, in which she painted
in glowing colors the wrongs she had endured, and
implored the sympathy and assistance of her “good
sister.” A generous and magnanimous sovereign
would not have hesitated as to the answer to be made
to such an appeal. But Elizabeth deliberated;
she consulted her counsel; the object of long years
of hatred was in her power; one whose very existence
was an outrage upon her personal vanity; her malicious
feelings of envy and jealousy got the mastery, and
Mary’s detention as a prisoner was resolved
on. Still, however, a show of decency was to
be preserved. Noblemen of suitable rank were sent
to receive her, carrying with them letters from their
sovereign filled with prostituted expressions of condolence
and sympathy. At the same time, orders were given
that Mary should not be allowed to leave the kingdom.
To Mary’s demand of a formal interview, Elizabeth
replied, that the honor must, with whatever reluctance,
be denied to her, lest the imputation under which
she labored of being accessory to the murder of Darnley
should bring a stain upon her own reputation; but
that, whenever she should clear herself of this, she
should receive assistance commensurate with her distress,
and a reception suitable to her dignity. By this
pretence was Mary entangled in a treacherous snare.
Confiding in her professions of friendship, she agreed
to submit her cause to Elizabeth, and to produce to
her such proofs as would convince her of her innocence,
and of the malice and falsehood of her enemies.
Elizabeth had now accomplished her end: she became
the umpire between Mary and her rebellious subjects,
and had it wholly in her power to protract and to
involve the proceedings in endless mazes; having,
at the same time, a pretext for keeping Mary at a distance
from her court, and for withholding from her all assistance.
To save appearances, a conference
was appointed to be held at York, at which, in presence
of her representatives, the several parties should
make known their causes of complaint. Murray appeared
in person, and accused Mary of participating in the
murder of her husband, and of other monstrous crimes;
of all which were offered as testimony certain letters
purporting to have been written by her to Bothwell.
By her command, her commissioners repelled the accusation
with horror, and pronounced the letters to be base
forgeries, and, at the same time, accused Murray and
his confederates of treason and scandal against their
sovereign. As was predetermined, the conference
ended without coming to any decision; and, as Murray
was permitted to return to Scotland, Mary required
that she should be set at liberty. In answer,
it was intimated that if she would confirm the forced
abdication, and would renounce her throne and country,
she should be permitted to reside in quiet and privacy
in England. “The eyes of Europe,”
replied Mary, “are upon me; and, were I thus
tamely to yield to my adversaries, I should be pronouncing
my own condemnation. A thousand times rather
would I submit to death than inflict this stain upon
my honor. The last words I speak shall be those
of the queen of Scotland.” Refusing her
liberty upon these disgraceful terms, she remained
a captive.
Great fears were entertained of the
power of Mary’s charms over those who were suffered
to approach her. “If I might give advice,”
writes one of Elizabeth’s statesmen, when on
a visit to her, “there should very few subjects
of this land have access to a conference with this
lady; for, besides that she is a goodly personage, and
yet, in truth, not comparable to our sovereign, she
hath withal an alluring grace, a pretty Scotch speech,
and a searching wit, clouded with mildness.”
The advice contained in this letter was too acceptable
not to be followed, and every succeeding year found
Mary reduced in society, in comforts, and health.
The latter, which had heretofore caused her no anxiety,
gradually gave way before want of exercise and the
dampness of the prisons in which she was confined;
and she came to suffer from constant pain in her side,
rheumatism, and weakness of limbs a state
of suffering and disease which was aggravated by the
penuriousness of Elizabeth, which would not permit
to her even the accommodation which that comparatively
rude age afforded.
Her principal occupation was needle-work,
and her amusement reading and composition; she retained
her early love of literature, and it was now, next
to her religious feelings and hopes, her best resource.
The unvarying mildness and saint-like patience with
which Mary endured her captivity are the more remarkable,
if we remember that she was disinclined to sedentary
amusements, and by nature and habit fond of walking,
riding, gardening, and all exercises in the open air.
Her gentleness, therefore, under a restraint so heart-wearing,
is a proof of singular sweetness of temper and strength
of mind, if not of a clear and tranquil conscience.
But, if the situation of Mary was
melancholy, that of her persecutor was not to be envied.
Plot succeeded plot, having for ostensible object
the relief of Mary. In fact, while she existed,
Elizabeth was stretched on the rack of fear and suspicion.
In vain did she seek to implicate Mary in these traitorous
projects; Mary freely acknowledged that she should
seize with eagerness any means of deliverance from
a hateful captivity; but, as to being privy to any
plot against the life or throne of the queen, this
she constantly and strenuously denied. At last,
a subservient Parliament were induced to pass a most
infamous law, which declared that not only the conspirators
themselves, but those in whose cause they conspired,
however innocent, or ignorant of their purpose, should
equally suffer the penalties of treason.
Occasion was soon made for bringing
Mary to trial under this law. The arrival of
the commissioners charged with the duty was a surprise
to her; a public trial was an indignity wholly unexpected,
and she protested against it. “I came,”
said she, “into the kingdom an independent sovereign,
to ask the queen’s assistance, not to subject
myself to her authority. Nor is my spirit so broken
by past misfortunes, or intimidated by present dangers,
as to stoop to any thing unbecoming the dignity of
a crowned head, or that will disgrace the ancestors
from whom I am descended, and the son to whom I shall
leave the throne. If I must be tried, princes
only can be my peers. Since my arrival in this
country, I have been uniformly confined as a prisoner.
Its laws never afforded me any protection. Let
them not be perverted, in order to take away my life.”
But a second time was she entrapped by the plausible
argument that, by avoiding a trial, she was an enemy
to her own reputation. Solicitous for the vindication
of her honor, she submitted to an inquiry, the result
of which had been predetermined; for those who had
made the law for an express purpose, would not scruple
to apply it. Notwithstanding a defence which was
characterized by the same vigor and dignity of mind,
and the acuteness of intellect which she had displayed
when in possession of youth, health, and power, a
sentence universally acknowledged to be unjust and
iniquitous was pronounced against her.
The news of this outrage excited horror
and indignation throughout Europe, and at length roused
James to attempt something in behalf of his mother.
He sent ambassadors to the various sovereigns of Europe,
calling upon them to join with him in this the common
cause of princes. He wrote to Elizabeth, threatening
her with the vengeance which, as a sovereign and as
a son, he was bound in honor and in duty to inflict.
But Elizabeth was deaf to the reproaches and menaces
by which she was from all sides assailed. It
is true that, when a servile Parliament besought her
to have the sentence executed, she, with an affectation
of clemency, besought them to spare her the pain of
imbruing her hands in the blood of a queen and near
kinswoman, and to consider if the public safety might
not otherwise be provided for. But her real meaning
was well understood, and the lords and commons repeated
the request, without fear of offending by their importunity.
By her own command, Davison, the secretary,
brought to her the death-warrant, and she subscribed
it with no relenting symptoms. She was still,
however, solicitous to preserve appearances, and let
fall intimations which might stimulate some of her
officers to extricate her from her dilemma. It
was an honor to the nation that no assassin could
be found. Paulet, though harsh in temper, and
brutal, at times, in the discharge of what he conceived
to be his duty, rejected with disdain a proposal of
this nature; declaring that, though the queen might
dispose of his life at her pleasure, he would not stain
his honor, or cover his memory with infamy. Upon
which Elizabeth called him a dainty and precise
fellow, who promised much, but performed nothing.
At length the privy council determined
to take upon themselves the responsibility of sending
off the warrant for the execution. On the 7th
of February, 1587, the Earls of Kent and Shrewsbury,
being admitted to Mary’s presence, informed
her that their mistress, Elizabeth, being overcome
by the importunity of her subjects, had given orders
for her execution. She listened unmoved to the
reading of the warrant, and on its conclusion she
bowed her head, and, making the sign of the cross,
thanked her gracious God that this welcome news had
at last come; declaring how happy she should be to
leave a world where she could be of no use, and had
suffered such continued affliction. After expressing
her delight and her gratitude to God for the privilege
of sealing, by her death, the testimony she had so
often borne in behalf of her church, she went on to
speak of her past suffering. Born a queen, the
daughter of a king, the cousin of the queen of England,
the granddaughter of Henry VII., once queen of France,
and now queen-dowager of that kingdom, and
yet what had all this availed her? She then spoke
of her love for England; of the desire she had ever
felt to obtain the friendship of its queen; of the
ignominy and injustice with which she had, notwithstanding,
been treated; imprisoned contrary to all faith and
treaties; kept a captive for nineteen years; and “at
last,” said she, laying her hand on the New
Testament, “condemned by a tribunal which had
no power over me, for a crime of which I here solemnly
declare I am innocent. I have neither invented,
nor consented to, nor pursued, any conspiracy for
the death of the queen of England.” The
Earl of Kent here hastily interrupted her, declaring
that the Scriptures on which she had sworn were false,
and the Roman Catholic version. “It is the
translation which I believe,” answered Mary.
“Does your lordship think my oath would be better,
if I swore on your translation, which I disbelieve?”
She then requested to be allowed the services of her
chaplain, whom she had not for some time been permitted
to see. But the request was denied; the Earl
of Kent, however, an intolerant bigot, after a long
theological discourse, offered her the services of
his own Protestant chaplain. Mary bore this stroke
of cruelty with meekness, but declined the proffered
services. She inquired at what time she was to
die. “To-morrow, at eight,” was the
reply; and the earls then left the room. On their
departure, Mary called her women, and bade them hasten
supper, that she might have time to arrange her affairs.
“Come, come, Jane Kennedy,” said she,
“cease your weeping, and be busy. Did I
not warn you, my children, that it would come to this?
and now, blessed be God, it has come, and fear and
sorrow are at an end. Weep not, but rejoice rather
that your poor mistress is so near the end of her
troubles. Dry your tears, then, and let us pray
together.” Some time was spent in her devotions;
she then supped with cheerfulness. She next distributed
various articles from her wardrobe among her attendants,
with a kind expression for each. She then wrote
her last will, which is still extant, and consists
of four pages, closely written, in a neat, firm hand.
Not one person was forgotten who had any claims on
her gratitude or her remembrance. She also wrote
several letters; but these, it is said, are blotted
with her tears. It was her custom to have her
women read to her, at night, a portion of the “Lives
of the Saints;” and this last night she would
not omit it, but made Jane Kennedy select a portion.
She chose the life entitled the “Good Thief,”
which treats of that beautiful and affecting example
of dying faith and divine compassion. “Alas!”
said Mary, “he was indeed a very great sinner,
but not so great as I am. May my Savior, in memory
of His passion, have mercy on me, as he had on him!”
At the hour appointed, the sheriff
entered her room, and proceeding to the altar, where
the queen was kneeling, informed her that all was
ready. She rose, and saying simply, “Let
us go,” proceeded towards the door, on reaching
which, her attendants were informed that they were
not to accompany her. A scene of the most distressing
character now took place; but they were at last torn
from her, and locked up in the apartment. Mary
proceeded alone down the great staircase, at the foot
of which she was received by the two earls, who were
struck with the perfect tranquillity and unaffected
grace with which she met them. She was dressed
in black satin, matronly but richly, and with more
studied care than she was commonly accustomed to bestow.
At the bottom of the staircase she was also met by
her old servant, Sir Andrew Melvil, waiting to take
his last farewell. Flinging himself on his knees,
he bitterly lamented it should have fallen to him
to carry this heart-rending news to Scotland.
“Weep not,” said she, “but rather
rejoice, my good Melvil. Carry this news with
thee, that I die firm in my religion, true to Scotland,
true to France. May God, who can alone judge the
thoughts and actions of men, forgive those who have
thirsted for my blood. Remember me to my son;
tell him I have done nothing that may prejudice his
kingdom.” She then earnestly entreated that
her women might be permitted to be with her at her
death; but the Earl of Kent refused it, saying that
they might be guilty of something scandalous and superstitious,
even to dipping their handkerchiefs in her blood.
But Mary plighted her word they should not offend in
any wise: “Surely, surely you will not
deny me this last little request; my poor girls wish
only to see me die.” As she said this,
a few tears were observed to fall, for the first time;
and, after some consultation, she was permitted to
have two ladies and four gentlemen beside her.
Followed by these, she entered the great hall, and
seated herself on the raised platform, prepared for
a scaffold, with the same easy grace and dignity with
which she would have occupied her throne. The
death-warrant was then read; but those who were near
could see, by the sweet and absent expression of her
countenance, that her thoughts were afar off.
The Earl of Kent next solicited her
to join with him and the Protestant chaplain in their
devotions. But she declined, and, kneeling apart,
repeated a part of the penitential Psalms, and afterwards
continued her prayers aloud in English. By this
time, the chaplain had concluded; there was a deep
silence, so that every word was heard. It was
impossible for any one to behold her at this moment
without being deeply affected on her knees,
her hands clasped and raised to heaven, an expression
of adoration and divine serenity lighting up her features,
and upon her lips the words of forgiveness to her
persecutors. Having finished, she cheerfully suffered
herself to be undressed by her women, gently admonishing
them not to distress her by their lamentations; putting
her finger on her lips, and bidding them remember
that she had promised for them. On seeing the
executioner approach to offer his assistance, she smiled,
and playfully said, “that she had neither been
used to such grooms of the chamber, nor to undress
before so many people.” When all was ready,
she kissed her women, and, giving them her last blessing,
she knelt down and groped her way to the block, for
her eyes were bound, and laid her neck
upon it without the slightest mark of trembling or
hesitation. Her last words were, “Into thy
hands I commend my spirit, for thou hast redeemed
me, O Lord God of truth.” At two strokes,
her head was severed from her body, and the executioner,
holding it up, called aloud, “God save the queen!”
“So let all Queen Elizabeth’s enemies
perish!” was the prayer of the chaplain; but
the spectators were dissolved in tears, and one deep
voice alone answered, “Amen!” It came
from the Earl of Kent. On removing the body, and
the clothes and mantle which lay beside it, Mary’s
favorite little dog, which had followed its mistress
unperceived, was found nestling under them. No
entreaty could prevail on it to quit the spot; and
it remained lying beside the corpse, and stained in
the blood, till forcibly carried away by the attendants.
Elizabeth affected to receive the
news of the death of her rival with surprise and grief;
she even carried her artifice to so barbarous a length,
as to render Davison, the secretary, and the innocent
instrument of her cruelty and dissimulation, the victim
of her perfidy. Under pretence that he had orders
not to let the warrant go out of his office, he was
degraded, fined, imprisoned, and utterly ruined.
By this sacrifice, she hoped to appease the king of
Scots, whom the death of his mother had filled with
grief and resentment, which yielded, however, at length,
to the necessities of his situation. Having affected
to admit the excuses of Elizabeth, and to be satisfied
with the sacrifice of Davison, he stifled his indignation,
and continued the semblance of amity with the English
court. Thus the death and sufferings of Mary remained
unavenged, while Elizabeth was suffered to reap the
advantages of her malignity.