THE ANTIQUITIES OF GAINFORD. 187
severe. The relinquishment of the treaty of Northampton, fovmdcd on an alli- ance invalid and nnconsummated, could not diminish tin; liherty or security of Scotland, which had then acknowledged itself a fief of England ; nor did the memorable appearance of its king before the English parliament produce any national or unreasonable concession. We may be both just and generous in ascribing that ajipcarance, wherein he deferred his royal dignity to what appeared a religious obligation, from a desire to conciliate and temporise, when he too well knew that treason would be in his camp, as interest was in his council. He might indeed lack that brutal spirit that impelled Bruce to imbrue his hands in his kinsman's blood before the altar of his God ; and that regal magnanimity that condemned Wallace to his dof>m : yet, courage was never wanting when its presence would have been successful ; nor ceased he to resist until all resistance was unavailing. The appellation, too, from whence his cowardice has been imputed, or more probably, sus- pected, was, with an unamiable feeling easy to understand, applied to him only after the adornments of royalty were removed from him ; and at best can be deemed but of doubtful interpretation. But, whatever was his capa- bility or his disposition, it will tax our credulity but little to believe that, in an age when the effusion of human blood was but lightly regarded, he was guiltless of the foul crimes that stain so many of his contemporaries. That, from malice to his king, and by treason to his country, he never sought, like Bruce, to wade through slaughter to a throne, nor like Edward, in the exer- cise of his sovereign authority, to shut the gates of mercy on mankind. " When the imagination w'ould invest with its aiiy forms the heroic cha- racters of the past, it may not inajjtly linger long on the last days of this ' dim, discrowned king.' Divested of the emblems of the sovereignty he had enjoyed ; defeated in his expectation of transferring his sceptre to a posterity that should maintain his name among the potentates of the earth ; separated by distance and by death from the associates of his youth, and the partners of his expectations ; oppressed by bodily suffering, and un- soothed by domestic attention — how often, in that solitary and benighted gloom, as the old man sat in the chateau of his humbler, but happier fore- fathers, how often must ' Memorits of power and pride, which lonpf ago, Like dim prnccssions of a dream, had sunk In twilight depths away' — memories of ingratitude, or contumely, or treachery, have compassed him round about; and mingled emotions of discontent, and disappointment, and despair, have bounded painfully and bitterly through his heart — a heart, that gladdened only by the light of day, might have found — in the mighty magnificence of nature — in the lone patli of the hoary forest — in the im- petuosity of the moiuitain torrent — in the declining sun, that lingered like itself o"er his far-off realm — a dignifying solace and a joy. which neither the worm within, nor the foe without, could alike diminish or destroy. It was the last scene of a sad drama, that needed but the pen of Drayton, or Mar- lowe, or Shakespeare; and now lacks but the pencil of one master hand, to excite that immortal interest and sympathy they have won for more trifling scpnes. and moir miworthv men."