Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 08.djvu/249

 of his charge, confined first in the prison of St. Andrews and then of Edinburgh, and finally ordered to leave the country.

Calderwood betook himself to Holland, where he remained till the death of James in 1625. Here he had a severe attack of illness, and a rumour of his death was published along with a pretended recantation of his views, and an invitation to all to accept the ‘uniformity of the kirk.’ A very substantial proof was given that Calderwood was alive and in full vigour by the publication of a work entitled ‘Altare Damascenum,’ which, though appearing under the anagram of ‘Edwardus Didoclavius,’ was at once recognised as the production of Calderwood. ‘It was,’ says Mr. Thomson, in his life of Calderwood, prefixed to the Wodrow Society's edition of his history, ‘the great storehouse from which the prelatic arguments were subverted, and conversions to presbyterianism effected during the period of the second Scottish reformation. … It will only be from a correct translation of the “Altare Damascenum” that the public can derive a full idea of the eloquence, learning, and acute dialectic power of its author.’

After Calderwood's return in 1625 to Scotland from Holland, he remained for some time without a charge. Powerful as a controversialist, he does not seem to have been either attractive as a speaker or of winning manner. It was not till 1640 that he obtained the charge of Pencaitland in East Lothian. He was employed, along with David Dickson and Alexander Henderson, in the drawing up of the ‘Directory for Public Worship,’ which continued to be the recognised document for regulating the service in the church of Scotland. But the great work of Calderwood was the compilation of his ‘History of the Kirk of Scotland.’ When he had reached his seventy-third year, the general assembly, for the purpose of enabling him to perfect his work, granted him an annual pension of eight hundred pounds Scots. The history which he compiled was thrown into three different forms. The first and largest extended to 3,136 pages; less than a half of this work is now among the manuscripts of the British Museum. The second was a digest of the first, ‘in better order and wanting nothing of the substance;’ this was published by the Wodrow Society in 8 vols. 8vo, 1842–9. The third, another abbreviation, was first published in a folio volume in 1678, twenty-eight years after his death. Though little attractive in a literary sense, Calderwood's history is the great quarry for information on the ecclesiastical history of Scotland ‘beginning at Mr. Patrick Hamilton, and ending with the death of James the Sixth.’

Calderwood does not appear ever to have been married. His papers were bequeathed to a brother's family, a member of which, Sir William Calderwood of Polton (a judge in the supreme courts, under the title of Lord Polton), presented the manuscripts of his history to the British Museum on 29 Jan. 1765. Other collections of papers were given to Wodrow, in whose possession they were at the time of his death; these papers were purchased by the Faculty of Advocates in 1792.

The following list of Calderwood's published writings is extracted from the life prefixed to the Wodrow Society's edition of his history, having been inserted there ‘from the appendix to the Life of Henderson in the miscellaneous writings of Dr. McCrie:’


 * 1) ‘Perth Assembly,’ 1619.
 * 2) ‘Parasynagma Perthense,’ 1620.
 * 3) ‘Defence of our Arguments against kneeling in the act of receiving the sacramental elements of bread and wine, impugned by Mr. Michelsone,’ 1620.
 * 4) ‘A Dialogue betwixt Cosmophilus and Theophilus anent the urging of new Ceremonies upon the Kirk of Scotland,’ 1620.
 * 5) ‘The Speech of the Kirk of Scotland to her beloved children,’ 1620.
 * 6) ‘The Solution of Dr. Resolutus, his Resolutions.’
 * 7) ‘The Altar of Damascus,’ 1621.
 * 8) ‘The Course of Conformitie,’ 1622.
 * 9) ‘Altare Damascenum: seu Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ Politia,’ 1623 (the Latin work is much fuller than the English).
 * 10) ‘A Reply to Dr. Morton's general Defence of Three Nocent Ceremonies,’ 1623.
 * 11) ‘A Reply to Dr. Morton's particular Defence of Three Nocent Ceremonies,’ 1623.
 * 12) ‘An Exhortation of the particular Kirks of Christ in Scotland to their sister Kirk in Edinburgh,’ 1624.
 * 13) ‘An Epistle of a Christian Brother,’ 1624.
 * 14) ‘A Dispute upon Communicating at our confused Communions,’ 1624.
 * 15) ‘The Pastor and the Prelate,’ 1628.
 * 16) ‘A Re-examination of the Five Articles enacted at Perth,’ 1636.
 * 17) ‘The Re-examination abridged,’ 1636. 18. ‘An Answer to Mr. J. Forbes of Corse, his Peaceable Warning,’ 1638.

[Life of David Calderwood, by Rev. Thomas Thomson, F.S.A. Scot., in Wodrow edition of his History 1849; Preface to vol. viii. of History, with genealogical table and notices of the family of Calderwood, by David Laing, 1849; Letters and Journals of Robert Baillie, A.M., edited by David Laing, 1842; Correspondence of the Rev. Robert Wodrow, 1843; Grub's Ecclesiastical History of Scotland, vols. ii. and iii. 1861; Walker's Scottish Theology and Theologians, 1872. Walker says of the Altare Damascenum: