FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER XV
An Account of the Persecutions in Scotland During
the Reign of King Henry VIII
Like as there was no place, either of
Germany, Italy, or France, wherein there were not some
branches sprung out of that most fruitful root of Luther;
so likewise was not this isle of Britain without his
fruit and branches. Amongst whom was Patrick Hamilton,
a Scotchman born of high and noble stock, and of the
king's blood, of excellent towardness, twenty-three
years of age, called abbot of Ferne. Coming out of his
country with three companions to seek godly learning,
he went to the University of Marburg in Germany, which
university was then newly erected by Philip, Landgrave
of Hesse.
During his residence here, he became intimately
acquainted with those eminent lights of the Gospel,
Martin Luther and Philip Melancthon; from whose writings
and doctrines he strongly attached himself to the Protestant
religion.
The archbishop of St. Andrews (who was
a rigid papist) learning of Mr. Hamilton's proceedings,
caused him to be seized, and being brought before him,
after a short examination relative to his religious
principles, he committed him a prisoner to the castle,
at the same time ordering him to be confined in the
most loathsome part of the prison.
The next morning Mr. Hamilton was brought
before the bishop, and several others, for examination,
when the principal articles exhibited against him were,
his publicly disapproving of pilgrimages, purgatory,
prayers to saints, for the dead, etc.
These articles Mr. Hamilton acknowledged
to be true, in consequence of which he was immediately
condemned to be burnt; and that his condemnation might
have the greater authority, they caused it to be subscribed
by all those of any note who were present, and to make
the number as considerable as possible, even admitted
the subscription of boys who were sons of the nobility.
So anxious was this bigoted and persecuting
prelate for the destruction of Mr. Hamilton, that he
ordered his sentence to be put in execution on the afternoon
of the very day it was pronounced. He was accordingly
led to the place appointed for the horrid tragedy, and
was attended by a prodigious number of spectators. The
greatest part of the multitude would not believe it
was intended he should be put to death, but that it
was only done to frighten him, and thereby bring him
over to embrace the principles of the Romish religion.
When he arrived at the stake, he kneeled
down, and, for some time prayed with great fervency.
After this he was fastened to the stake, and the fagots
placed round him. A quantity of gunpowder having been
placed under his arms was first set on fire which scorched
his left hand and one side of his face, but did no material
injury, neither did it communicate with the fagots.
In consequence of this, more powder and combustible
matter were brought, which being set on fire took effect,
and the fagots being kindled, he called out, with an
audible voice: "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit! How long
shall darkness overwhelm this realm? And how long wilt
Thou suffer the tyranny of these men?"
The fire burning slow put him to great
torment; but he bore it with Christian magnanimity.
What gave him the greatest pain was, the clamor of some
wicked men set on by the friars, who frequently cried,
"Turn, thou heretic; call upon our Lady; say, Salve
Regina, etc." To whom he replied, "Depart from me, and
trouble me not, ye messengers of Satan." One Campbell,
a friar, who was the ringleader, still continuing to
interrupt him by opprobrious language; he said to him,
"Wicked man, God forgive thee." After which, being prevented
from further speech by the violence of the smoke, and
the rapidity of the flames, he resigned up his soul
into the hands of Him who gave it.
This steadfast believer in Christ suffered
martyrdom in the year 1527.
One Henry Forest, a young inoffensive
Benedictine, being charged with speaking respectfully
of the above Patrick Hamilton, was thrown into prison;
and, in confessing himself to a friar, owned that he
thought Hamilton a good man; and that the articles for
which he was sentenced to die, might be defended. This
being revealed by the friar, it was received as evidence;
and the poor Benedictine was sentenced to be burnt.
Whilst consultation was held, with regard
to the manner of his execution, John Lindsay, one of
the archbishop's gentlemen, offered his advice, to burn
Friar Forest in some cellar; "for," said he, "the smoke
of Patrick Hamilton hath infected all those on whom
it blew."
This advice was taken, and the poor victim
was rather suffocated, than burnt.
The next who fell victims for professing
the truth of the Gospel, were David Stratton and Norman
Gourlay.
When they arrived at the fatal spot, they
both kneeled down, and prayed for some time with great
fervency. They then arose, when Stratton, addressing
himself to the spectators, exhorted them to lay aside
their superstitious and idolatrous notions, and employ
their time in seeking the true light of the Gospel.
He would have said more, but was prevented by the officers
who attended.
Their sentence was then put into execution,
and they cheerfully resigned up their souls to that
God who gave them, hoping, through the merits of the
great Redeemer, for a glorious resurrection to life
immortal. They suffered in the year 1534.
The martyrdoms of the two before-mentioned
persons, were soon followed by that of Mr. Thomas Forret,
who, for a considerable time, had been dean of the Romish
Church; Killor and Beverage, two blacksmiths; Duncan
Simson, a priest; and Robert Forrester, a gentleman.
They were all burnt together, on the Castle-hill at
Edinburgh, the last day of February, 1538.
The year following the martyrdoms of the
before-mentioned persons, viz. 1539, two others were
apprehended on a suspicion of herresy; namely, Jerome
Russell and Alexander Kennedy, a youth about eighteen
years of age.
These two persons, after being some time
confined in prison, were brought before the archbishop
for examination. In the course of which Russell, being
a very sensible man, reasoned learnedly against his
accusers; while they in return made use of very opprobrious
language.
The examination being over, and both of
them deemed heretics, the archbishop pronounced the
dreadful sentence of death, and they were immediately
delivered over to the secular power in order for execution.
The next day they were led to the place
appointed for them to suffer; in their way to which,
Russell, seeing his fellow-sufferer have the appearance
of timidity in his countenance, thus addressed him:
"Brother, fear not; greater is He that is in us, than
He that is in the world. The pain that we are to suffer
is short, and shall be light; but our joy and consolation
shall never have an end. Let us, therefore, strive to
enter into our Master and Savior's joy, by the same
straight way which He hath taken before us. Death cannot
hurt us, for it is already destroyed by Him, for whose
sake we are now going to suffer."
When they arrived at the fatal spot, they
both kneeled down and prayed for some time; after which
being fastened to the stake, and the fagots lighted,
they cheerfully resigned their souls into the hands
of Him who gave them, in full hopes of an everlasting
reward in the heavenly mansions.
An Account of the Life, Sufferings, and
Death of Mr. George Wishart, Who Was Strangled and Afterward
Burned, in Scotland, for Professing the Truth of the
Gospel
About the year of our Lord 1543, there
was, in the University of Cambridge, one Master George
Wishart, commonly called Master George of Benet's College,
a man of tall stature, polled-headed, and on the same
a round French cap of the best; judged to be of melancholy
complexion by his physiognomy, black-haired, long-bearded,
comely of personage, well spoken after his country of
Scotland, courteous, lowly, lovely, glad to teach, desirous
to learn, and well travelled; having on him for his
clothing a frieze gown to the shoes, a black millian
fustian doublet, and plain black hosen, coarse new canvas
for his shirts, and white falling bands and cuffs at
his hands.
He was a man modest, temperate, fearing
God, hating covetousness; for his charity had never
end, night, noon, nor day; he forbare one meal in three,
one day in four for the most part, except something
to comfort nature. He lay hard upon a puff of straw
and coarse, new canvas sheets, which, when he changed,
he gave away. He had commonly by his bedside a tub of
water, in the which (his people being in bed, the candle
put out and all quiet) he used to bathe himself. He
loved me tenderly, and I him. He taught with great modesty
and gravity, so that some of his people thought him
severe, and would have slain him; but the Lord was his
defence. And he, after due correction for their malice,
by good exhortation amended them and went his way. Oh,
that the Lord had left him to me, his poor boy, that
he might have finished what he had begun! for he went
into scotland with divers of the nobility, that came
for a treaty to King Henry.
In 1543, the archbishop of St. Andrews
made a visitation into various parts of his diocese,
where several persons were informed against at Perth
for heresy. Among those the following were condemned
to die, viz. William Anderson, Robert Lamb, James Finlayson,
James Hunter, James Raveleson, and Helen Stark.
The accusations laid against these respective
persons were as follow: The four first were accused
of having hung up the image of St. Francis, nailing
ram's horns on his head, and fastening a cow's tail
to his rump; but the principal matter on which they
were condemned was having regaled themselves with a
goose on fast day.
James Reveleson was accused of having
ornamented his house with the three crowned diadem of
Peter, carved in wood, which the archbishop conceived
to be done in mockery to his cardinal's cap.
Helen Stark was accused of not having
accustomed herself to pray to the Virgin Mary, more
especially during the time she was in childbed.
On these respective accusations they were
all found guilty, and immediately received sentence
of death; the four men, for eating the goose, to be
hanged; James Raveleson to be burnt; and the woman,
with her sucking infant, to be put into a sack and drowned.
The four men, with the woman and the child,
suffered at the same time, but James Raveleson was not
executed until some days after.
The martyrs were carried by a great band
of armed men (for they feared rebellion in the town
except they had their men of war) to the place of execution,
which was common to all thieves, and that to make their
cause appear more odious to the people. Every one comforting
another, and assuring themselves that they should sup
together in the Kingdom of Heaven that night, they commended
themselves to God, and died constantly in the Lord.
The woman desired earnestly to die with
her husband, but she was not suffered; yet, following
him to the place of execution, she gave him comfort,
exhorting him to perseverance and patience for Christ's
sake, and, parting from him with a kiss, said, "Husband,
rejoice, for we have lived together many joyful days;
but this day, in which we must die, ought to be most
joyful unto us both, because we must have joy forever;
therefore I will not bid you good night, for we shall
suddenly meet with joy in the Kingdom of Heaven." The
woman, after that, was taken to a place to be drowned,
and albeit she had a child sucking on her breast, yet
this moved nothing in the unmerciful hearts of the enemies.
So, after she had commended her children to the neighbors
of the town for God's sake, and the sucking bairn was
given to the nurse, she sealed up the truth by her death.
Being desirous of propagating the true
Gospel in his own country George Wishart left Cambridge
in 1544, and on his arrival in Scotland he first preached
at Montrose, and afterwards at Dundee. In this last
place he made a public exposition of the Epistle to
the Romans, which he went through with such grace and
freedom, as greatly alarmed the papists.
In consequence of this, (at the instigation
of Cardinal Beaton, the archbishop of St. Andrews) one
Robert Miln, a principal man at Dundee, went to the
church where Wishart preached, and in the middle of
his discourse publicly told him not to trouble the town
any more, for he was determined not to suffer it.
This sudden rebuff greatly surprised Wishart,
who, after a short pause, looking sorrowfully on the
speaker and the audience, said: "God is my witness,
that I never minded your trouble but your comfort; yea,
your trouble is more grievous to me than it is to yourselves:
but I am assured to refuse God's Word, and to chase
from you His messenger, shall not preserve you from
trouble, but shall bring you into it: for God shall
send you ministers that shall fear neither burning nor
banishment. I have offered you the Word of salvation.
With the hazard of my life I have remained among you;
now you yourselves refuse me; and I must leave my innocence
to be declared by my God. If it be long prosperous with
you, I am not lede by the Spirit of truth; but if unlooked-for
troubles come upon you, acknowledge the cause and turn
to God, who is gracious and merciful. But if you turn
not at the first warning, He will visit you with fire
and sword." At the close of this speech he left the
pulpit, and retired.
After this he went into the west of Scotland,
where he preached God's Word, which was gladly received
by many.
A short time after this Mr. Wishart received
intelligence that the plague had broken out in Dundee.
It began four days after he was prohibited from preaching
there, and raged so extremely that it was almost beyond
credit how many died in the space of twenty-four hours.
This being related to him, he, notwithstanding the importunity
of his friends to detain him, determined to go there,
saying: "They are now in troubles, and need comfort.
Perhaps this hand of God will make them now to magnify
and reverence the Word of God, which before they lightly
esteemed."
Here he was with joy received by the godly.
He chose the east gate for the place of his preaching;
so that the healthy were within, and the sick without
the gate. He took his text from these words, "He sent
His word and healed them," etc. In this sermon he chiefly
dwelt upon the advantage and comfort of God's Word,
the judgments that ensue upon the contempt or rejection
of it, the freedom of God's grace to all His people,
and the happiness of those of His elect, whom He takes
to Himself out of this miserable world. The hearts of
his hearers were so raised by the divine force of this
discourse, as not to regard death, but to judge them
the more happy who should then be called, not knowing
whether he should have such comfort again with them.
After this the plague abated; though,
in the midst of it, Wishart constantly visited those
that lay in the greatest extremity, and comforted them
by his exhortations.
When he took his leave of the people of
Dundee, he said that God had almost put an end to that
plague, and that he was now called to another place.
He went from thence to Montrose; where he sometimes
preached, but he spent most of his time in private meditation
and prayer.
It is said that before he left Dundee,
and while he was engaged in the labors of love to the
bodies as well as to the souls of those poor afflicted
people, Cardinal Beaton engaged a desperate popish priest,
called John Weighton, to kill him; the attempt to execute
which was as follows: one day, after Wishart had finished
his sermon, and the people departed, a priest stood
waiting at the bottom of the stairs, with a naked dagger
in his hand under his gown. But Mr. Wishart, having
a sharp, piercing eye, and seeing the priest as he came
from the pulpit, said to him, "My friend, what would
you have?" and immediately clapping his hand upon the
dagger, took it from him. The priest being terrified,
fell to his knees, confessed his intention, and craved
pardon. A noise was hereupon raised, and it coming to
the ears of those who were sick, they cried, "Deliver
the traitor to us, we will take him by force"; and they
burst in at the gate. But Wishart, taking the priest
in his arms, said, "Whatsoever hurts him shall hurt
me; for he hath done me no mischief, but much good,
by teaching more heedfulness for the time to come."
By this conduct he appeased the people and saved the
life of the wicked priest.
Soon after his return to Montrose, the
cardinal again conspired his death, causing a letter
to be sent him as if it had been from his familiar friend,
the laird of Kennier, in which it was desired with all
possible speed to come to him, as he was taken with
a sudden sickness. In the meantime the cardinal had
provided sixty men armed to lie in wait within a mile
and a half of Montrose, in order to murder him as he
passed that way.
The letter came to Wishart's hand by a
boy, who also brought him a horse for the journey. Wishart,
accompanied by some honest men, his friends, set forward;
but something particular striking his mind by the way,
he returned, which they wondering at, asked him the
cause; to whom he said, "I will not go; I am forbidden
of God; I am assured there is treason. Let some of you
go to yonder place, and tell me what you find." Which
doing, they made the discovery; and hastily returning,
they told Mr. Wishart; whereupon he said, "I know I
shall end my life by that bloodthirsty man's hands,
but it will not be in this manner."
A short time after this he left Montrose,
and proceeded to Edinburgh, in order to propagate the
Gospel in that city. By the way he lodged with a faithful
brother, called James Watson of Inner-Goury. In the
middle of the night he got up, and went into the yard,
which two men hearing they privately followed him. While
in the yard, he fell on his knees, and prayed for some
time with the greatest fervency, after which he arose,
and returned to his bed. Those who attended him, appearing
as though they were ignorant of all, came and asked
him where he had been. But he would not answer them.
The next day they importuned him to tell them, saying
"Be plain with us, for we heard your mourning, and saw
your gestures."
On this he with a dejected countenance,
said, "I had rather you had been in your beds." But
they still pressing upon him to know something, he said,
"I will tell you; I am assured that my warfare is near
at an end, and therefore pray to God with me, that I
shrink not when the battle waxeth most hot."
Soon after, Cardinal Beaton, archbishop
of St. Andrews, being informed that Mr. Wishart was
at the house of Mr. Cockburn, of Ormistohn, in East
Lothian, applied to the regent to cause him to be apprehended;
with which, after great persuasion, and much against
his will, he complied.
In consequence of this the cardinal immediately
proceeded to the trial of Wishart, against whom no less
than eighteen articles were exhibited. Mr. Wishart answered
the respective articles with great composure of mind,
and in so learned and clear a manner as greatly surprised
most of those who were present.
After the examination was finished, the
archbishop endeavored to prevail on Mr. Wishart to recant;
but he was too firmly fixed in his religious principles
and too much enlightened with the truth of the Gospel,
to be in the least moved.
On the morning of his execution there
came to him two friars from the cardinal; one of whom
put on him a black linen coat, and the other brought
several bags of gunpowder, which they tied about different
parts of his body.
As soon as he arrived at the stake, the
executioner put a rope round his neck and a chain about
his middle, upon which he fell on his knees and thus
exclaimed:
"O thou Savior of the world, have mercy
upon me! Father of heaven, I commend my spirit into
Thy holy hands."
After this he prayed for his accusers,
saying, "I beseech thee, Father of heaven, forgive them
that have, from ignorance or an evil mind, forged lies
of me: I forgive them with all my heart. I beseech Christ
to forgive them that have ignorantly condemned me."
He was then fastened to the stake, and
the fagots being lighted immediately set fire to the
powder that was tied about him, which blew into a flame
and smoke.
The governor of the castle, who stood
so near that he was singed with the flame, exhorted
the martyr, in a few words, to be of good cheer, and
to ask the pardon of God for his offences. To which
he replied, "This flame occasions trouble to my body,
indeed, but it hath in nowise broken my spirit. But
he who now so proudly looks down upon me from yonder
lofty place (pointing to the cardinal) shall, ere long,
be ignominiously thrown down, as now he proudly lolls
at his ease." Which prediction was soon after fulfilled.
The hangman, that was his tormentor, sat
down upon his knees, and said, "Sir, I pray you to forgive
me, for I am not guilty of your death." To whom he answered,
"Come hither to me." When that he was come to him, he
kissed his cheek, and said: "Lo, here is a token that
I forgive thee. My heart, do thine office." And then
he was put upon the gibbet and hanged, and burned to
powder. When that the people beheld the great tormenting,
they might not withhold from piteous mourning and complaining
of this innocent lamb's slaughter.
It was not long after the martyrdom of
this blessed man of God, Master George Wishart, who
was put to death by David Beaton, the bloody archbishop
and cardinal of Scotland, A.D. 1546, the first day of
March, that the said David Beaton, by the just revenge
of God's mighty judgment, was slain within his own castle
of St. Andrews, by the hands of one Leslie and other
gentlemen, who, by the Lord stirred up, brake in suddenly
upon him, and in his bed murdered him the said year,
the last day of May, crying out, "Alas! alas! slay me
not! I am a priest!" And so, like a butcher he lived,
and like a butcher he died, and lay seven months and
more unburied, and at last like a carrion was buried
in a dunghill.
The last who suffered martyrdom in Scotland,
for the cause of Christ, was one Walter Mill, who was
burnt at Edinburgh in the year 1558.
This person, in his younger years, had
travelled in Germany, and on his return was installed
a priest of the Church of Lunan in Angus, but, on an
information of heresy, in the time of Cardinal Beaton,
he was forced to abandon his charge and abscond. But
he was soon apprehended, and committed to prison.
Being interrogated by Sir Andrew Oliphant,
whether he would recant his opinions, he answered in
the negative, saying that he would 'sooner forfeit ten
thousand lives, than relinquish a particle of those
heavenly principles he had received from the suffrages
of his blessed Redeemer.'
In consequence of this, sentence of condemnation
was immediately passed on him, and he was conducted
to prison in order for execution the following day.
This steadfast believe in Christ was eighty-two
years of age, and exceedingly infirm; whence it was
supposed that he could scarcely be heard. However, when
he was taken to the place of execution, he expressed
his religious sentiments with such courage, and at the
same time composure of mind, as astonished even his
enemies. As soon as he was fastened to the stake and
the fagots lighted, he addressed the spectators as follows:
"The cause why I suffer this day is not for any crime,
(though I acknowledge myself a miserable sinner) but
only for the defence of the truth as it is in Jesus
Christ; and I praise God who hath called me, by His
mercy, to seal the truth with my life; which, as I received
it from Him, so I willingly and joyfully offer it up
to His glory. Therefore, as you would escape eternal
death, be no longer seduced by the lies of the seat
of Antichrist: but depend solely on Jesus Christ, and
His mercy, that you may be delivered from condemnation."
And then added that he trusted he should be the last
who would suffer death in Scotland upon a religious
account.
Thus did this pious Christian cheerfully
give up his life in defence of the truth of Christ's
Gospel, not doubting but he should be made partaker
of his heavenly Kingdom.
Chapter XVI
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