From him I learned the story many years
before he was either a publican, or a guide, except to moorfowl
shooters.—It was evening (to resume the story), and the Duke was
pressing on to lodge his prisoner, so long sought after in vain, in
some place of security, when, in crossing the Teith or Forth, I
forget which, MacGregor took an opportunity to conjure Stewart, by
all the ties of old acquaintance and good neighbourhood, to give
him some chance of an escape from an assured doom. Stewart was
moved with compassion, perhaps with fear. He slipt the
girth-buckle, and Rob, dropping down from behind the horse's
croupe, dived, swam, and escaped, pretty much as described in the
Novel. When James Stewart came on shore, the Duke hastily demanded
where his prisoner was; and as no distinct answer was returned,
instantly suspected Stewart's connivance at the escape of the
Outlaw; and, drawing a steel pistol from his belt, struck him down
with a blow on the head, from the effects of which, his descendant
said, he never completely recovered.
In the success of his repeated escapes from the pursuit of his
powerful enemy, Rob Roy at length became wanton and facetious. He
wrote a mock challenge to the Duke, which he circulated among his
friends to amuse them over a bottle. The reader will find this
document in the Appendix.* It is written in a good hand, and not
particularly deficient in grammar or spelling.
* Appendix, No. III.
Our Southern readers must be given to understand that it was a
piece of humour,—a quiz, in short,—on the part of the
Outlaw, who was too sagacious to propose such a rencontre in
reality. This letter was written in the year 1719.
In the following year Rob Roy composed another epistle, very
little to his own reputation, as he therein confesses having played
booty during the civil war of 1715. It is addressed to General
Wade, at that time engaged in disarming the Highland clans, and
making military roads through the country. The letter is a singular
composition. It sets out the writer's real and unfeigned desire to
have offered his service to King George, but for his liability to
be thrown into jail for a civil debt, at the instance of the Duke
of Montrose. Being thus debarred from taking the right side, he
acknowledged he embraced the wrong one, upon Falstaff's principle,
that since the King wanted men and the rebels soldiers, it were
worse shame to be idle in such a stirring world, than to embrace
the worst side, were it as black as rebellion could make it. The
impossibility of his being neutral in such a debate, Rob seems to
lay down as an undeniable proposition. At the same time, while he
acknowledges having been forced into an unnatural rebellion against
King George, he pleads that he not only avoided acting offensively
against his Majesty's forces on all occasions, but, on the
contrary, sent to them what intelligence he could collect from time
to time; for the truth of which he refers to his Grace the Duke of
Argyle. What influence this plea had on General Wade, we have no
means of knowing.
Rob Roy appears to have continued to live very much as usual.
His fame, in the meanwhile, passed beyond the narrow limits of the
country in which he resided. A pretended history of him appeared in
London during his lifetime, under the title of the Highland Rogue.
It is a catch-penny publication, bearing in front the effigy of a
species of ogre, with a beard of a foot in length; and his actions
are as much exaggerated as his personal appearance. Some few of the
best known adventures of the hero are told, though with little
accuracy; but the greater part of the pamphlet is entirely
fictitious. It is great pity so excellent a theme for a narrative
of the kind had not fallen into the hands of De Foe, who was
engaged at the time on subjects somewhat similar, though inferior
in dignity and interest.
As Rob Roy advanced in years, he became more peaceable in his
habits, and his nephew Ghlune Dhu, with most of his tribe,
renounced those peculiar quarrels with the Duke of Montrose, by
which his uncle had been distinguished. The policy of that great
family had latterly been rather to attach this wild tribe by
kindness than to follow the mode of violence which had been
hitherto ineffectually resorted to. Leases at a low rent were
granted to many of the MacGregors, who had heretofore held
possessions in the Duke's Highland property merely by occupancy;
and Glengyle (or Black-knee), who continued to act as collector of
black-mail, managed his police, as a commander of the Highland
watch arrayed at the charge of Government. He is said to have
strictly abstained from the open and lawless depredations which his
kinsman had practised.
It was probably after this state of temporary quiet had been
obtained, that Rob Roy began to think of the concerns of his future
state. He had been bred, and long professed himself, a Protestant;
but in his later years he embraced the Roman Catholic
faith,—perhaps on Mrs. Cole's principle, that it was a comfortable
religion for one of his calling. He is said to have alleged as the
cause of his conversion, a desire to gratify the noble family of
Perth, who were then strict Catholics. Having, as he observed,
assumed the name of the Duke of Argyle, his first protector, he
could pay no compliment worth the Earl of Perth's acceptance save
complying with his mode of religion. Rob did not pretend, when
pressed closely on the subject, to justify all the tenets of
Catholicism, and acknowledged that extreme unction always appeared
to him a great waste of ulzie, or oil.*
* Such an admission is ascribed to the robber Donald Bean Lean in
Waverley, chap. lxii,
In the last years of Rob Roy's life, his clan was involved in a dispute
with one more powerful than themselves. Stewart of Appin, a chief of the
tribe so named, was proprietor of a hill-farm in the Braes of
Balquhidder, called Invernenty. The MacGregors of Rob Roy's tribe claimed
a right to it by ancient occupancy, and declared they would oppose to the
uttermost the settlement of any person upon the farm not being of their
own name. The Stewarts came down with two hundred men, well armed, to do
themselves justice by main force.
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