horse at the time at a pond called the Goose-Dub,
where the Laird of Urrard’s geese were wont to
disport themselves. This story is evidently part
of the old nurse’s prophecy mentioned on page
3. For these and many other anecdotes of the battle,
see the “History of the Rebellions in Scotland.”
I have taken my account of Dundee’s death from
the memoirs of Balcarres and Lochiel, and from the
depositions, printed by Napier, of certain witnesses
examined afterwards at Edinburgh, among them being
an officer of Kenmure’s regiment, who was carried
prisoner into the castle after the battle and heard
Johnstone’s story. As for the letter said
to have been written by Dundee to James after the
battle, and now among the Nairne Papers, there is
more to be said for it than some have allowed.
Macaulay, alluding to it as dated the day after the
battle, calls it as impudent a forgery as Fingal.
But in fact it bears no date at all: the handwriting
is declared on the best authority to be beyond question
contemporary; and there is no absolute proof that
Dundee did not live long enough at least to dictate
an account of his victory to James. It is tolerably
certain that he would have done so had his strength
permitted him. But in a letter written from Dublin
in the following November by James to Ballechin, there
is no mention of any letter from Dundee, and his death
is there alluded to as having occurred at the beginning
of the action. This, of course, is not conclusive;
James’s actual words are, “the loss you
had ... at your entrance into action,” which
need not imply instant death. On the whole, however,
the balance of evidence seems to me to prove that
Dundee died where he fell, and that the letter is not
genuine, though certainly no forgery of Macpherson’s.
Those who are still curious on a point which is, after
all, of no very great importance, will find it amply
discussed in a note to the edition of Dundee’s
letters published for the Bannatyne Club, and in an
appendix to Napier’s third volume. A stone
still marks the spot where Dundee is said to have fallen,
and was seen by Captain Burt less than fifty years
after the battle.
INDEX.
Abjuration oath, the, 121
Acts against the Covenanters, 35-6, 40, 45, 121
Aird’s Moss, skirmish at, 91
Annandale, Lord, 200
Argyle, Marquis of, 21, 22, 24, 25, 28,
34
Earl of (son of preceding),
45, 119, 139
Earl of (son of preceding),
171, 193
Athole, Marquis of, 44, 46, 139, 145 note,
153, 154, 159, 162, 188, 194
men of, behaviour of the,
196 note, 211 and note
Auchencloy, execution of Covenanters at, 128-31
Auchinleck, Robert, execution of, 131-2
Balcarres, Earl of, 141, 142, 143, 148,
149, 151, 155, 156, 157, 166, 189
memoirs of the Revolution
by, 144 note
Balfour, Colonel, 200, 205, 211
of Burley, John, 58, 60, 62,
65, 69, 83