The nation was crushed. Though Wallace remained at large, the hunters were on his track; of the great army he had led at Stirling, and Falkirk only a few men remained.
At last, in the early summer of 1305, Wallace was captured some say by the treachery of his servant, and delivered to Sir John Menteith, who ordered him to be taken to London.
There, in Westminster Hall, with a wreath of laurel tied round his head in mockery, he was accused of treason.
In vain he protested that he could not be a traitor, as he had never sworn fealty to Edward; he was sentenced to death, and on the same day, the 23rd of August the sentence was put into execution with every refinement of medieval torture.
The head of the patriot was hung upon London Bridge, and his limbs were placed over the gates of Newcastle, Berwick, Stirling, and Aberdeen.
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