Part 1 Chapter One
The Wrath of the People
The Parish Church of the Holy Cross of St John the Baptist,
Perth, 11 May 1559
‘John Knox has come.’
The words took flight, leaping from lip to lip, echoing
round the kirk, ringing to the rafters, and striking terror into his soul. The
seething mass of humanity surged forward only to be shoved back by metal-clad
men-at-arms. Knox stood rooted to the threshold. The kirk was crammed full: he
hadn’t expected such a crowd nor such a clamour. Panic gripped his throat and
crushed his lungs.
An elbow nudged him and a voice muttered in his ear, ‘The
folk have tramped from all the airts to show their support for their preachers
and to await your guidance, master.’
Swallowing deeply, Knox steeled himself to follow in the
wake of Sir Patrick Lyndsay’s lean, lofty figure cutting a swathe through the
swarm that parted like the Red Sea before Moses. The biblical comparison
inspired him. In the midst of the throng, folk stood on tiptoe, craning their
necks to catch sight of him; those at the front stretched out their hands.
Faces rough-hewn by the unforgiving Scottish climate glowed with expectation
and excitement. His ain folk, he thought: humble hinds and herdsmen in fusty
sheepskin blankets, ploughmen and draymen in worsted tunics jostled cheek by
jowl with masons and skinners in worn leather jerkins and aprons, in stark
contrast to the docile, dutiful gentry of his Geneva brethren.
More like the Berwick horde before he’d tamed
them, Knox reminded himself. He should not fear this unruly flock but seek to
win them over.
‘Is thon the mighty preacher everyone’s talking about?’ a
voice piped up. ‘He’s gey wee.’
Lyndsay grabbed the offender by the throat. ‘Short in
stature he may be, but his voice makes the heart dirl like thunder. Afore I rip
out your blasphemous tongue, shift your fat arse and let him pass.’
Cowed, the man slunk away while the rest of the crowd fell
silent. Patrick, Master of Lyndsay, a blunt and fierce soldier, was not a man
to be crossed.
‘Never fash, Preacher Knox, my men-at-arms will guard the kirk
doors lest the priors of Perth dare to thwart your sermon. And I’ll no shrink
from turning them loose on the rabble if trouble breaks out.’
Rather than inspire confidence, the warrior’s words filled
Knox with foreboding. ‘I want no violence used on the brethren. We need to show
that we come in peace.’
Lyndsay’s hefty shoulders lifted in a non-committal shrug
before he stomped off down the nave. Knox headed for the foot of the pulpit
where he was greatly cheered to see a well-kent face amongst the group.
John Willock, the minister who had married him to his
beloved Marjory, now clasped him to his broad chest. ‘We give thanks that the
Lord has sent you here in our hour of need to stand fast with our brothers in
Christ,’ he said and introduced his fellow preachers. John Christison was
another former friar, while Paul Methven, a baker, and William Harlaw, a
tailor, were self-educated guildsmen who had taken up the cause. ‘All good men
and true.’
‘Not in the eyes of Marie de Guise who’s charged us with
sedition and heresy,’ Methven growled. ‘Her daughter’s marriage to the French
dauphin has emboldened the French sow and she’s cracking the whip.’ The
blunt-spoken baker clenched fists swollen from constant kneading. ‘The regent
has broken her promise to permit us to practise our faith. Just before Easter
she commanded everyone to attend mass, make confession in a priest’s lug and
take the sacrament on the tongue.’
‘It’s true. With an eye on the Vatican’s support, the regent
has taken to heart the papal dogma of extra ecclesiam nulla salus,’ John
Christison added.
Knox gave a nod of understanding. ‘Outside the Roman Church
there is no salvation. Paul IV is a severe and unbending prelate. Thon
Antichrist vowed that even if his own father were a heretic, he’d gather the
wood to burn him.’
Willock clasped Knox’s hand. ‘Now’s the time to break from
the fetters of Rome, brother. Scotland is on the brink of civil strife and
we’re in dire need of a skipper to take the helm.’
‘What about thon Lords of the Congregation?’ Knox asked. The
signatories to the bond had led him a merry dance over the past few years. He’d
lost count of the number of times they had called him back to Scotland,
assuring him the time was ripe to return. After several false starts and delays
in Dieppe, he’d finally arrived home and, with barely time to regain his land
legs, he’d been whisked into the midst of the maelstrom.
‘Many of the lords are biding their time, waiting to see
which way the die falls,’ Willock replied. ‘The regent still has the support of
her stepson, Lord James Stewart, the Earl of Argyll as well as the Hamiltons.
Her commander-in-chief, Châtelherault, is one of those who benefits from a
lavish French pension.’
Knox gave a contemptuous snort. ‘So, the glister of the
profit has blinded their eyes. It was ever thus.’
‘Nevertheless, the Ayrshire lords, including Glencairn and
Ochiltree, have aye stood firm.’
‘Never mind thon band of noble ne’er-do-weils,’ Methven
broke in. ‘Craftsmen and guildsmen like us champion the poor and needy who’re
clamouring for reform. It’s not only the roasting of our martyr, Pastor Milne,
that has provoked our brethren but your warning call, Mr Knox. The folk have
taken to heart your words.’
Baffled, Knox asked, ‘What do you mean?’
‘Do you no mind? The Beggars’ Summons posted on the gate of
every friary and monastery throughout the land on the first of January?’
Methven handed him a tattered scrap of paper.
Knox quickly scanned the summons. Written on behalf of the
blind, the crooked, the bedridden, widows and orphans and all other poor folk,
it ordered the flocks of friars to hand over their ill-gotten gains and quit
their religious houses by Whitsun. Or else be forced out on Flitting Friday,
the 12th day of May.
Knox looked up. ‘But
that’s tomorrow. Who’s going to evict them?’ The eyes of all gazing upon him
gave the answer.
Lyndsay stepped forward. ‘The faithful await a signal from
you, master.’
Knox felt trapped, the knot in his stomach tightened.
Everyone believed he’d written this anonymous warning and looked to him for the
next step. He should speak the truth but his thrapple felt so dry he doubted he
could utter a sound. The same fear that had seized him before his first sermon
at St Andrews now threatened to strangle him into silence. His back throbbed
from injuries sustained in the galleys, firing tentacles of pain up the back of
his neck and into the base of the skull. The words from Ezekiel came unbidden
into his mind: I will make your tongue cleave to the roof of your mouth so that
you will be dumb and unable to rebuke them, for they are a rebellious people.
Knox had come home expecting to head a religious reformation
not lead troops into battle.
This is such a wonderful excerpt! Thank you, Mary Ann, for hosting today's blog tour stop!
ReplyDelete