Transcribed from the 1902 Longmans, Green, and Co. edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
JAMES VI
and
THE GOWRIE MYSTERY
by
ANDREW LANG
with gowrie’s coat of arms in colour, 2 photogravure portraits
and other illustrations
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
39 paternoster row, london
new york and bombay
1902
All rights reserved
to
THE LADY CECILY BAILLIE-HAMILTON
this inquiry
is gratefully dedicated
INTRODUCTION
An old Scottish lady, four generations ago, used to say, ‘It is a great comfort to think that, at the Day of Judgment, we shall know the whole truth about the Gowrie Conspiracy at last.’ Since the author, as a child, read ‘The Tales of a Grandfather,’ and shared King Jamie’s disappointment when there was no pot of gold, but an armed man, in the turret, he had supposed that we do know all about the Gowrie Conspiracy, that it was a plot to capture the King, carry him to Fastcastle, and ‘see how the country would take it,’ as in the case of the Gunpowder Plot. But just as Father Gerard has tried to show that the Gunpowder affair may have been Cecil’s plot, so modern historians doubt whether the Gowrie mystery was not a conspiracy by King James himself. Mr. Hume Brown appears rather to lean to this opinion, in the second volume of his ‘History of Scotland,’ and Dr. Masson, in his valuable edition of the ‘Register of the Privy Council,’ is also dubious. Mr. Louis Barbé, in his ‘Tragedy of Gowrie House,’ holds a brief against the King. Thus I have been tempted to study this