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The dark year of Dundee

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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About This Book

Set during a time of plague and religious tension in Dundee, the narrative follows the ministry of George Wishart as he preaches reform, attracts followers, faces opposition from ecclesiastical authorities, and endures persecution leading to martyrdom. Interwoven are portraits of townspeople whose lives are altered by the message, scenes of everyday hardship and steadfast faith, and a secondary tale about a household’s struggle over a priory’s tithe that charts spiritual awakening. The work combines vivid local scenes, moral reflection, and historical episodes to trace the spread of reforming ideas and the personal costs borne by those who embraced them.

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Title: The dark year of Dundee

A tale of the Scottish Reformation

Author: Deborah Alcock

Release date: November 24, 2025 [eBook #77324]

Language: English

Original publication: London: T. Nelson & Sons, 1867

Credits: Richard Tonsing, Richard Hulse, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DARK YEAR OF DUNDEE ***

Transcriber’s Note:

New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.

THE
Dark Year of Dundee:
A Tale of the Scottish Reformation.

BY THE AUTHOR OF
“Sunset in Provence, and other Tales of Martyr Times,” &c.
LONDON:
T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;
EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.
1867.

PREFACE

The Dark Year of Dundee may be called a tale of Fact, since Fiction has only been employed in it as the handmaid of Truth, and for the purpose of throwing a more vivid light upon scenes and events that actually occurred. The “story,” slight as it is, may not inaptly be likened to the sheath or calyx that encloses and protects the yet unopened bud. When the flower unfolds its petals, the calyx has fulfilled its work, and, hidden from the eye, no longer attracts the thoughts and attention of the spectator. Thus it has been intended only to leave upon the reader’s mind the impression of one grand and simple character;—only to tell, plainly and briefly, the story of one who, long ago, laboured abundantly and endured nobly for Christ’s sake, “strengthened with all might according to his glorious power.” And no alloy of fiction has been admitted into what is here recorded of George Wishart; for, apart from any other consideration, such a character as his is “God’s workmanship,” and it would seem impossible to add anything to the great Artist’s design without marring its beauty and completeness.

CONTENTS

THE DARK YEAR OF DUNDEE.
  Page
I. Fanaticism 9
II. Clouded Death 21
III. God’s Messenger 31
IV. Fruits of the Message 45
V. More Fruits of the Message 57
VI. The Darkest Hour 69
VII. New Friends and Old 83
VIII. The Cardinal’s Missionary 99
IX. How the Mission Sped 111
X. What became of the Cardinal’s Missionary 129
XI. Clear shining after Rain 147
XII. The Reward of God’s Messenger 169
XIII. He giveth his beloved Sleep 189
THE PRIOR’S TITHE.
I. Tithing the Fish 219
II. The Excommunication 231
III. The First Prayer 243
IV. Dawnings of Light 257
V. The Great Change 271
VI. Entering into the Cloud 287
VII. Voices in the Cloud 301
VIII. The Cloud Breaks 315
IX. Left Alone 329

I.
Fanaticism.

“I know the dim haunts of fever,
Where the blossoms of youth decay:
I know where your free broad river
Sweeps disease on its breast away.
“Yet despite your earnest pity,
And despite its own smoke and din,
I cling to yon crowded city,
Though I shrink from its woe and sin.”
Hymns of Faith and Hope.