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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The Life of Mansie Wauch</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Life of Mansie Wauch, by D. M. Moir</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Life of Mansie Wauch, by D. M. Moir,
+Illustrated by Charles Martin Hardie
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Life of Mansie Wauch
+ tailor in Dalkeith
+
+
+Author: D. M. Moir
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 5, 2007 [eBook #23739]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF MANSIE WAUCH***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1911 T. N. Foulis edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p0b.jpg">
+<img alt="One of the Duke&rsquo;s huntsmen" src="images/p0s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h1>THE LIFE OF<br />
+MANSIE WAUCH<br />
+<span class="smcap">tailor in dalkeith written</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">by himself and edited by</span><br />
+D. M. MOIR<br />
+<span class="smcap">illustrated in colour by</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">charles martin hardie</span>, <span
+class="smcap">r.s.a.</span></h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">t.n.foulis</span><br />
+London &amp; Edinburgh<br />
+1 9 1 1</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page iv--><a name="pageiv"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. iv</span><i>October</i> 1911</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Turnbull &amp; Spears</i>,
+<i>Printers</i>, <i>Edinburgh</i></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page v--><a name="pagev"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. v</span><span class="smcap">to</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">JOHN GALT</span>, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span>,<br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">author of</span> &ldquo;<span class="smcap">annals of
+the parish</span>,&rdquo; &ldquo;<span class="smcap">the
+provost</span>,&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">ayrshire legatees</span>,&rdquo; <span
+class="smcap">etc.</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the following
+sketches</span>,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">principally of humble
+scottish character</span>,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">are dedicated</span>,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by his sincere friend and
+admirer</span>,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the editor</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p1b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mansie&rsquo;s shop door" src="images/p1s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h2><!-- page vii--><a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vii</span>PRELIMINARIES TO THIS VOLUME</h2>
+<p>Having, within myself, made observation of late years, that all notable
+characters, whatsoever line of life they may have pursued, and to whatever
+business they might belong, have made a trade of committing to paper all
+the surprising occurrences and remarkable events that chanced to happen to
+them in the course of Providence, during their journey through
+life&mdash;that such as come after them might take warning and be
+benefited&mdash;I have found it incumbent on me, following a right example,
+to do the same thing; and have set down, in black and white, a good few
+uncos, that I should reckon will not soon be forgotten, provided they make
+as deep an impression on the world as they have done on me.&nbsp; To this
+decision I have been urged by the elbowing on of not a few judicious
+friends, among whom I would particularly remark James Batter, who has been
+most earnest in his request, and than whom a truer judge on anything
+connected with book-lear, or a better neighbour, does not breathe the
+breath of life: both of which positions will, I doubt not, appear as clear
+as daylight to the reader, in the course of the work: to say nothing of the
+approval the scheme met with from the pious Maister Wiggie, who has now
+gone to his account, and divers other advisers, that wished either the
+general good of the world, or studied their own particular profit.</p>
+<p>Had the course of my pilgrimage lain just on the beaten track, I would
+not&mdash;at least I think so&mdash;have <!-- page viii--><a
+name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>been o&rsquo;ercome
+by ony perswasions to do what I have done; but as will be seen, in the
+twinkling of half-an-eye, by the judicious reader, I am a man that has
+witnessed much, and come through a great deal, both in regard to the times
+wherein I have lived, and the out-o&rsquo;-the-way adventures in which it
+has been my fortune to be engaged.&nbsp; Indeed, though I say it myself,
+who might as well be silent, I that have never stirred, in a manner so to
+speak, from home, have witnessed more of the world we live in, and the
+doings of men, than many who have sailed the salt seas from the East Indies
+to the West; or, in the course of nature, visited Greenland, Jamaica, or
+Van Diemen&rsquo;s Land.&nbsp; The cream of the matter, and to which we
+would solicit the attention of old and young, rich and poor, is just this,
+that, unless unco doure indeed to learn, the inexperienced may gleam from
+my pages sundry grand lessons, concerning what they have a chance to expect
+in the course of an active life; and the unsteady may take a hint
+concerning what it is possible for one of a clear head and a stout heart to
+go through with.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding, however, these plain and evident conclusions, even
+after writing the whole out, I thought I felt a kind of a qualm of
+conscience about submitting an account of my actions and transactions to
+the world during my lifetime; and I had almost determined, for
+decency&rsquo;s sake, not to let the papers be printed till after I had
+been gathered to my <!-- page ix--><a name="pageix"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. ix</span>fathers; but I took into consideration the duty
+that one man owes to another; and that my keeping back, and withholding
+these curious documents, would be in a great measure hindering the
+improvement of society, so far as I was myself personally concerned.&nbsp;
+Now this is a business, which James Batter agrees with me in thinking is
+carried on, furthered, and brought about, by every one furnishing his share
+of experience to the general stock.&nbsp; Let-a-be this plain truth,
+another point of argument for my bringing out my bit book at the present
+time is, that I am here to the fore bodily, with the use of my seven
+senses, to give day and date to all such as venture to put on the
+misbelieving front of Sadducees, with regard to any of the accidents,
+mischances, marvellous escapes, and extraordinary businesses therein
+related; and to show them, as plain as the bool of a pint stoup, that each
+and everything set down by me within its boards is just as true, as that a
+blind man needs not spectacles, or that my name is Mansie Wauch.</p>
+<p>Perhaps as a person willing and anxious to give every man his due, it is
+necessary for me explicitly to mention, that, in the course of this book, I
+am indebted to my friend James Batter, for his able help in assisting me to
+spell the kittle words, and in rummaging out scraps of poem-books for
+headpieces to my different chapters which appear in the table of
+contents.</p>
+<h2><!-- page xi--><a name="pagexi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xi</span>LIST OF CONTENTS</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Preliminaries</span></p>
+<p>I.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Our Old Grandfather</span>,</p>
+<p>II.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">My Own Father</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>The weaver he gied up the stair,<br />
+&nbsp; Dancing and singing;<br />
+A bunch o&rsquo; bobbins at his back,<br />
+&nbsp; Rattling and ringing.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Old Song</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>III.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Coming Into The World</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&mdash;At first the babe<br />
+Was sickly; and a smile was seen to pass<br />
+Across the midwife&rsquo;s cheek, when, holding up<br />
+The feeble wretch, she to the father said,<br />
+&ldquo;A fine man-child!&rdquo;&nbsp; What else could they expect?<br />
+The father being, as I said before,<br />
+A weaver.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Hogg&rsquo;s</span>
+<i>Poetic Mirror</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>IV.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Calf-Love</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Bonny lassie, will ye go, will ye go, will ye go,<br />
+Bonny lassie, will ye go to the Birks of Aberfeldy?</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Burns</span>.</p>
+<p>For a tailor is a man, a man, a man,<br />
+And a tailor is a man.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Popular Heroic Song</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>V.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Cursecowl</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>From his red poll a redder cowl hung down;<br />
+His jacket, if through grease we guess, was brown;<br />
+A vigorous scamp, some forty summers old;<br />
+Rough Shetland stockings up his thighs were roll&rsquo;d;<br />
+While at his side horn-handled steels and knives<br />
+Gleam&rsquo;d from his pouch, and thirsted for sheep&rsquo;s lives.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Odoherty&rsquo;s</span>
+<i>Miscellanea Classica</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xii--><a name="pagexii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xii</span>VI.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Pushing my Fortune</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Oh, love, love, lassie,<br />
+&nbsp; Love is like a dizziness,<br />
+It winna let a puir bodie<br />
+&nbsp; Gang about their business.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">James Hogg</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>VII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Forewarning</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>I had a dream which was not all a dream.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Byron</span>.</p>
+<p>Coming events cast their shadows before.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Campbell</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>VIII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Letting Lodgings</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Then first he ate the white puddings,<br />
+&nbsp; And syne he ate the black, O;<br />
+Though muckle thought the Gudewife to hersell,<br />
+&nbsp; Yet ne&rsquo;er a word she spak, O.<br />
+But up then started our Gudeman,<br />
+And an angry man was he, O.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Old Song</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>IX.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Benjie&rsquo;s Christening</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>We&rsquo;ll hap and row, hap and row,<br />
+&nbsp; We&rsquo;ll hap and row the feetie o&rsquo;t.<br />
+It is a wee bit weary thing,<br />
+&nbsp; I dinnie bide the greetie o&rsquo;t.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Provost Creech</span>.</p>
+<p>An honest man, close button&rsquo;d to the chin,<br />
+Broad-cloth without, and a warm heart within.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Cowper</span>.</p>
+<p>This great globe and all that it inherits shall dissolve,<br />
+And, like the baseless fabric of a vision,<br />
+Leave not a rack behind.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xiii--><a name="pagexiii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xiii</span>X.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Resurrection Men</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; How then was the Devil drest!<br />
+&nbsp; He was in his Sunday&rsquo;s best;<br />
+&nbsp; His coat was red, and his breeches were blue,<br />
+&nbsp; With a hole behind where his tail came thro&rsquo;.<br />
+Over the hill, and over the dale,<br />
+&nbsp; And he went over the plain:<br />
+And backward and forward he switch&rsquo;d his tail,<br />
+&nbsp; As a gentleman switches his cane.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Coleridge</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XI.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Taffy with the Pigtail</span>,</p>
+<p>Song,</p>
+<p>Song of the South,</p>
+<p>School Recollections,</p>
+<p>Elegiac Stanzas,</p>
+<p>Dirge,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>In the sweet shire of Cardigan,<br />
+&nbsp; Not far from pleasant Ivor-hall,<br />
+An old man dwells, a little man;<br />
+&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve heard he once was tall.<br />
+A long blue livery-coat has he,<br />
+&nbsp; That&rsquo;s fair behind and fair before;<br />
+Yet, meet him where you will, you see<br />
+&nbsp; At once that he is poor.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Wordsworth</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Volunteering</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Come from the hills where your hirsels are grazing,<br />
+&nbsp; Come from the glen of the buck and the roe;<br />
+Come to the crag where the beacon is blazing,<br />
+&nbsp; Come with the buckler, the lance, and the bow:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Many a banner spread<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Flutters above your head,<br />
+&nbsp; Many a crest that is famous in story;<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Mount and make ready then,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Sons of the mountain glen,<br />
+Fight for the <i>King</i>, and our old Scottish glory.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Sir Walter
+Scott&rsquo;s</span> <i>Monastery</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xiv--><a name="pagexiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xiv</span>XIII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Chincough
+Pilgrimage</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Man hath a weary pilgrimage<br />
+&nbsp; As through the world he wends:<br />
+On every stage from youth to age<br />
+&nbsp; Still discontent attends.<br />
+With heaviness he casts his eye<br />
+&nbsp; Upon the road before,<br />
+And still remembers with a sigh<br />
+&nbsp; The days that are no more.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">&nbsp; <span
+class="smcap">Southey</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XIV.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">My Lord&rsquo;s Races</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Aff they a&rsquo; went galloping, galloping;<br />
+Legs and arms a&rsquo; walloping, walloping;<br />
+De&rsquo;il take the hindmost, quo&rsquo; Duncan M&rsquo;Calapin,<br />
+The Laird of Tillyben, Joe.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Old Song</i>.</p>
+<p>He went a little further,<br />
+&nbsp; And turn&rsquo;d his head aside,<br />
+And just by Goodman Whitfield&rsquo;s gate,<br />
+&nbsp; Oh there the mare he spied.<br />
+He ask&rsquo;d her how she did,<br />
+&nbsp; She stared him in the face,<br />
+Then down she laid her head again&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; She was in wretched case.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Old Poulter&rsquo;s Mo</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XV.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Return</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>That sweet home is there delight,<br />
+And thither they repair<br />
+Communion with their own to hold!<br />
+Peaceful as, at the fall of night,<br />
+Two little lambkins gliding white<br />
+Return unto the gentle air,<br />
+That sleeps within the fold.<br />
+Or like two birds to their lonely nest,<br />
+Or wearied waves to their bay of rest,<br />
+Or fleecy clouds when their race is run,<br />
+That hang in their own beauty blest,<br />
+&rsquo;Mid the calm that sanctifies the west<br />
+Around the setting sun.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Wilson</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xv--><a name="pagexv"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xv</span>XVI.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Bloody Cartridge</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>So stands the Thracian herdsman with his spear<br />
+Full in the gap, and hopes the hunted bear;<br />
+And hears him in the rustling wood, and sees<br />
+His course at distance by the bending trees;<br />
+And thinks&mdash;Here comes my mortal enemy,<br />
+And either he must fall in fight or I.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Dryden&rsquo;s</span>
+<i>Palamon and Arcite</i>.</p>
+<p>Nay, never shake thy gory looks at me;<br />
+Thou canst not say I did it!</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Macbeth</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XVII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">My First and Last Play</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p><i>Pla.</i>&nbsp; I&rsquo; faith<br />
+I like the audience that frequenteth there<br />
+With much applause: a man shall not be chokt<br />
+With the stench of garlick, nor be pasted firm<br />
+With the barmy jacket of a beer-brewer.</p>
+<p><i>Bra.</i>&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a good gentle audience, and I hope<br />
+The boys will come one day in great request.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Jack Drum&rsquo;s Entertainment</i>,
+1601.</p>
+<p>Out cam the gudeman, and laigh he louted;<br />
+Out cam the gudewife, and heigh she shouted;<br />
+And a the toun-neibours gather&rsquo;d about it;<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And there he lay, I trow.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>The Cauldrife Wooer</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XVIII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Barley Fever</span>: <span
+class="smcap">and Rebuke</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Sages their solemn een may steek,<br />
+And raise a philosophic reek,<br />
+And, physically, causes seek,<br />
+&nbsp; In clime and season:<br />
+But tell me <i>Whisky&rsquo;s</i> name in Greek,<br />
+&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll tell the reason.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Burns</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xvi--><a name="pagexvi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xvi</span>XIX.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Awful Night</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; Ha!&mdash;&rsquo;twas but a dream;<br />
+But then so terrible, it shakes my soul!<br />
+Cold drops of sweat hang on my trembling flesh;<br />
+My blood grows chilly, and I freeze with horror,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Richard the Third</i>.</p>
+<p>The Fire-king one day rather amorous felt;<br />
+&nbsp; He mounted his hot copper filly;<br />
+His breeches and boots were of tin, and the belt<br />
+Was made of cast-iron, for fear it should melt<br />
+&nbsp; With the heat of the copper colt&rsquo;s belly.</p>
+<p>Oh! then there was glitter and fire in each eye,<br />
+&nbsp; For two living coals were the symbols;<br />
+His teeth were calcined, and his tongue was so dry,<br />
+It rattled against them as though you should try<br />
+&nbsp; To play the piano on thimbles.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Rejected Addresses</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XX.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Adventures in the Sporting
+Line</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A fig for them by law protected,<br />
+&nbsp; Liberty&rsquo;s glorious feast;<br />
+Courts for cowards were erected,<br />
+&nbsp; Churches built to please the priest.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Jolly Beggars</i>.</p>
+<p>Wi&rsquo; cauk and keel I&rsquo;ll win your bread,<br />
+And spindles and whorles for them wha need,<br />
+Whilk is a gentle trade indeed,<br />
+&nbsp; To carry the Gaberlunzie on.<br />
+I&rsquo;ll bow my leg and crook my knee,<br />
+And draw a black clout owre my ee,<br />
+A cripple or blind they will ca&rsquo; me,<br />
+While we shall be merry and sing.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">King James V.</span></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xvii--><a name="pagexvii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xvii</span>XXI.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Anent Mungo Glen</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Earth to earth,&rdquo; and &ldquo;dust to dust,&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp; The solemn priest hath said,<br />
+So we lay the turf above thee now,<br />
+&nbsp; And we seal thy narrow bed;<br />
+But thy spirit, brother, soars away<br />
+&nbsp; Among the faithful blest,<br />
+Where the wicked cease from troubling,<br />
+&nbsp; And the weary are at rest.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Milman</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The June Jaunt</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>The lapwing lilteth o&rsquo;er the lea,<br />
+&nbsp; With nimble wing she sporteth;<br />
+By vows she&rsquo;ll flee from tree to tree<br />
+&nbsp; Where Philomel resorteth:<br />
+By break of day, the lark can say,<br />
+&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll bid you a good-morrow,<br />
+I&rsquo;ll streik my wing, and mounting sing,<br />
+&nbsp; O&rsquo;er Leader hauchs and Yarrow.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Nicol Burn</span>, <i>the
+Minstrel</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXIII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Catching a Tartar</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p><i>Fr. Sol.</i>&nbsp; O, prennez mis&eacute;ricorde! ayez piti&eacute;
+de moy!</p>
+<p><i>Pist.</i>&nbsp; Moy shall not serve, I will have forty moys!<br />
+For I will fetch my rim out at thy throat,<br />
+In drops of crimson blood.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Henry V.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXIV.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">James Batter and the Maid of
+Damascus</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>He chose a mournful muse<br />
+Soft pity to infuse;<br />
+He sung the Weaver wise and good,<br />
+&nbsp; By too severe a fate,<br />
+Fallen, fallen, fallen, fallen,<br />
+&nbsp; Fallen from his high estate,<br />
+And weltering in his blood.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Dryden</span>
+<i>Revised</i>.</p>
+<p><!-- page xviii--><a name="pagexviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xviii</span>All close they met, all eves, before the dusk<br />
+&nbsp; Had taken from the stars its pleasant veil,<br />
+Close in a bower of hyacinth and musk,<br />
+&nbsp; Unknown of any, free from whispering tale.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Keats</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXV.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">A Philistine in the Coal-Hole</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>They steeked doors, they steeked yetts,<br />
+&nbsp; Close to the cheek and chin;<br />
+They steeked them a&rsquo; but a wee wicket,<br />
+&nbsp; And Lammikin crapt in.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Ballad of the Lammikin</i>.</p>
+<p>Hame cam our gudeman at een,<br />
+&nbsp; And hame cam he;<br />
+And there he spied a man<br />
+&nbsp; Where a man shouldna be.<br />
+Hoo cam this man kimmer,<br />
+&nbsp; And who can it be;<br />
+Hoo cam this carle here,<br />
+&nbsp; Without the leave o&rsquo; me?</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Old Song</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXVI.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Benjie on the Carpet</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>It&rsquo;s no in titles, nor in rank&mdash;<br />
+It&rsquo;s no in wealth, like Lon&rsquo;on bank,<br />
+&nbsp; To purchase peace and rest;<br />
+It&rsquo;s no in making muckle <i>mair</i>&mdash;<br />
+It&rsquo;s no in books&mdash;it&rsquo;s no in lear,<br />
+&nbsp; To make us truly blest.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Burns</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXVII.&nbsp; &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Puggie</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Puggie</span>,&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Saw ye Johnie coming? quo&rsquo; she,<br />
+&nbsp; Saw ye Johnie coming?<br />
+Wi&rsquo; his blue bonnet on his head,<br />
+&nbsp; And his doggie running?</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Old Ballad</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xix--><a name="pagexix"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xix</span>XXVIII.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Serious Musings</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>My eyes are dim with childish tears,<br />
+&nbsp; My heart is idly stirr&rsquo;d,<br />
+For the same sound is in mine ears,<br />
+&nbsp; Which in those days I heard.<br />
+Thus fares it still in our decay;<br />
+&nbsp; And yet the wiser mind<br />
+Mourns less for what age takes away,<br />
+&nbsp; Than what it leaves behind.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Wordsworth</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>XXIX.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Conclusion</span>,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>He prayeth well, who loveth well<br />
+Both man, and bird, and beast&mdash;<br />
+He prayeth best, who loveth best<br />
+All things both great and small;<br />
+For the dear God who loveth us,<br />
+He made and loveth all.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Coleridge</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2><!-- page xxi--><a name="pagexxi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xxi</span>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i><span class="smcap">from oil paintings
+by</span></i><br />
+<i>CHARLES MARTIN HARDIE</i>, <i>R.S.A.</i></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">One of the Duke&rsquo;s Huntsmen</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>Frontispiece</i></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mansie&rsquo;s Shop Door</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>Title-page</i></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mansie&rsquo;s Wedding</span>: <span
+class="smcap">The Dance gaed through the Lighted Hall</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>Page</i> 8</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mansie and Nancy</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>24</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Minister&rsquo;s Lassie Jess</span>: <span
+class="smcap">A Blue-eyed Lassie of a Serving Maid</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>40</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mansie&rsquo;s Father</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>56</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Rev. Mr Wiggie</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>72</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">The First Day I got my Regimentals on</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>104</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Thomas Burlings</span>: <span
+class="smcap">Elder</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>136</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mungo Glen</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>184</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">James Batter</span>, <span class="smcap">Mostly
+Blinded in both his Eyes</span>, <span class="smcap">looking for our Name
+in the Book of Martyrs</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>216</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Country Lassies bleaching their Snow-white
+Linen</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>248</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Waiting Girl</span>, <span class="smcap">Jeanie
+Amos</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>264</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Peter Farrel</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>280</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">An Old Dalkeith Body</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>312</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Lazy Corner</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Dalkeith</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>344</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xxii--><a name="pagexxii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xxii</span>The sun rises bright in France,<br />
+&nbsp; And fair sets he;<br />
+But he has tint the blithe blink he had<br />
+&nbsp; In my ain countree.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Allan
+Cunningham</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+1</span>CHAPTER ONE&mdash;IN THE TIME OF MY GRANDFATHER</h2>
+<p>Some of the rich houses and great folk pretend to have histories of the
+auncientness of their families, which they can count back on their fingers
+almost to the days of Noah&rsquo;s ark, and King Fergus the First; but
+whatever may spunk out after on this point, I am free to confess, with a
+safe conscience, in the meantime, that it is not in my power to come up
+within sight of them; having never seen or heard tell of anybody in our
+connexion, further back than auld granfaither, that I mind of when a
+laddie; and who it behoves to have belonged by birthright to some parish or
+other; but where-away, gude kens.&nbsp; James Batter mostly blinded both
+his eyes, looking all last winter for one of our name in the Book of
+Martyrs, to make us proud of; but his search, I am free to confess, worse
+than failed&mdash;as the only man of the name he could find out was a
+Sergeant Jacob Wauch, that lost his lug and his left arm, fighting like a
+Russian Turk against the godly, at the bloody battle of the Pentland
+Hills.</p>
+<p>Auld granfaither died when I was a growing callant, some seven or eight
+years old; yet I mind him full well; it being a curious thing how early
+such matters take hold of one&rsquo;s memory.&nbsp; He was a straught,
+tall, old man, with a shining bell-pow, and reverend white <!-- page 2--><a
+name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>locks hanging down about
+his haffets; a Roman nose, and two cheeks blooming through the winter of
+his long age like roses, when, poor body, he was sand-blind with
+infirmity.&nbsp; In his latter days he was hardly able to crawl about
+alone; but used to sit resting himself on the truff seat before our door,
+leaning forward his head on his staff, and finding a kind of pleasure in
+feeling the beams of God&rsquo;s own sun beaking on him.&nbsp; A blackbird,
+that he had tamed, hung above his head in a whand-cage of my father&rsquo;s
+making; and he had taken a pride in learning it to whistle two three turns
+of his own favourite sang, &ldquo;Oure the water to Charlie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I recollect, as well as yesterday, that, on the Sundays, he wore a braid
+bannet with a red worsted cherry on the top of it; and had a
+single-breasted coat, square in the tails, of light Gilmerton blue, with
+plaited white buttons, bigger than crown pieces.&nbsp; His waistcoat was
+low in the neck, and had flap pouches, wherein he kept his mull for rappee,
+and his tobacco-box.&nbsp; To look at him, with his rig-and-fur Shetland
+hose pulled up over his knees, and his big glancing buckles in his shoon,
+sitting at our door-cheek, clean and tidy as he was kept, was just as if
+one of the ancient patriarchs had been left on earth, to let succeeding
+survivors witness a picture of hoary and venerable eld.&nbsp; Poor body,
+many a bit Gibraltar-rock and gingerbread did he give to me, as he would
+pat me on the head, and <!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 3</span>prophesy I would be a great man yet; and sing me
+bits of old songs about the bloody times of the Rebellion, and Prince
+Charlie.&nbsp; There was nothing that I liked so well as to hear him set
+a-going with his auld-warld stories and lilts; though my mother used
+sometimes to say, &ldquo;Wheest, granfaither, ye ken it&rsquo;s no canny to
+let out a word of thae things; let byganes be byganes, and
+forgotten.&rdquo;&nbsp; He never liked to give trouble, so a rebuke of this
+kind would put a tether to his tongue for a wee; but, when we were left by
+ourselves, I used aye to egg him on to tell me what he had come through in
+his far-away travels beyond the broad seas; and of the famous battles he
+had seen and shed his precious blood in; for his pinkie was hacked off by a
+dragoon of Cornel Gardener&rsquo;s, down by at Prestonpans, and he had
+catched a bullet with his ankle over in the north at Culloden.&nbsp; So it
+was no wonder that he liked to crack about these times, though they had
+brought him muckle and no little mischief, having obliged him to skulk like
+another Cain among the Highland hills and heather, for many a long month
+and day, homeless and hungry.&nbsp; Not dauring to be seen in his own
+country, where his head would have been chacked off like a sybo, he took
+leg-bail in a ship over the sea, among the Dutch folk; where he followed
+out his lawful trade of a cooper, making girrs for the herring barrels and
+so on; and sending, when he could find time and opportunity, <!-- page
+4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>such savings from
+his wages as he could afford, for the maintenance of his wife and small
+family of three helpless weans, that he had been obligated to leave, dowie
+and destitute, at their native home of pleasant Dalkeith.</p>
+<p>At long and last, when the breeze had blown over, and the feverish pulse
+of the country began to grow calm and cool, auld granfaither took a longing
+to see his native land; and though not free of jeopardy from king&rsquo;s
+cutters on the sea, and from spies on shore, he risked his neck over in a
+sloop from Rotterdam to Aberlady, that came across with a valuable cargo of
+smuggled gin.&nbsp; When granfaither had been obliged to take the wings of
+flight for the preservation of his life and liberty, my father was a wean
+at grannie&rsquo;s breast: so, by her fending&mdash;for she was a canny
+industrious body, and kept a bit shop, in the which she sold oatmeal and
+red herrings, needles and prins, potatoes and tape, and cabbage, and what
+not&mdash;he had grown a strapping laddie of eleven or twelve, helping his
+two sisters, one of whom perished of the measles in the dear year, to go
+errands, chap sand, carry water, and keep the housie clean.&nbsp; I have
+heard him say, when auld granfaither came to their door at the dead of
+night, tirling, like a thief of darkness, at the window-brod to get in,
+that he was so altered in his voice and lingo that no living soul kenned
+him, not even the wife of his bosom; so he had to put grannie in mind <!--
+page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>of things
+that had happened between them, before she would allow my father to lift
+the sneck, or draw the bar.&nbsp; Many and many a year, for gude kens how
+long after, I have heard tell, that his speech was so Dutchified as to be
+scarcely kenspeckle to a Scotch European; but Nature is powerful, and, in
+the course of time, he came in the upshot to gather his words together like
+a Christian.</p>
+<p>Of my auntie Bell, that, as I have just said, died of the measles in the
+dear year, at the age of fourteen, I have no story to tell but one, and
+that a short one, though not without a sprinkling of interest.</p>
+<p>Among her other ways of doing, grannie kept a cow, and sold the milk
+round about to the neighbours in a pitcher, whiles carried by my father,
+and whiles by my aunties, at the ransom of a halfpenny the mutchkin.&nbsp;
+Well, ye observe, that the cow ran yeild, and it was as plain as pease that
+she was with calf:&mdash;Geordie Drouth, the horse-doctor, could have made
+solemn affidavy on that head.&nbsp; So they waited on, and better waited on
+for the prowie&rsquo;s calfing, keeping it upon draff and oat-strae in the
+byre; till one morning every thing seemed in a fair way, and my auntie Bell
+was set out to keep watch and ward.</p>
+<p>Some of her companions, however, chancing to come by, took her out to
+the back of the house to have a game at the pallall; and, in the interim,
+Donald Bogie, the tinkler from Yetholm, came and left his <!-- page 6--><a
+name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>little jackass in the
+byre, while he was selling about his crockery of cups and saucers, and
+brown plates, on the old one, through the town, in two creels.</p>
+<p>In the middle of auntie Bell&rsquo;s game, she heard an unco noise in
+the byre; and, knowing that she had neglected her charge, she ran round the
+gable, and opened the door in a great hurry; when, seeing the beastie, she
+pulled it to again, and fleeing, half out of breath, into the kitchen
+cried,&mdash;&ldquo;Come away, come away, mother, as fast as ye can.&nbsp;
+Eh, lyst, the cow&rsquo;s cauffed,&mdash;and it&rsquo;s a
+cuddie!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+7</span>CHAPTER TWO&mdash;MY OWN FATHER</h2>
+<p>My own father, that is to say, auld Mansie Wauch with regard to myself,
+but young Mansie with reference to my granfather after having run the
+errands, and done his best to grannie during his early years, was, at the
+age of thirteen, as I have heard him tell, bound a prentice to the weaver
+trade which from that day and date, for better for worse, he, prosecuted to
+the hour of his death:&mdash;I should rather have said to within a
+fortnight of it, for he lay for that time in the mortal fever, that cut
+through the thread of his existence.&nbsp; Alas! as Job says, &ldquo;How
+time flies like a weaver&rsquo;s shuttle!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was a tall, thin, lowering man, blackaviced, and something in the
+physog like myself, though scarcely so weel-faured; with a kind of blueness
+about his chin, as if his beard grew of that colour&mdash;which I scarcely
+think it would do&mdash;but might arise either from the dust of the blue
+cloth, constantly flying about the shop, taking a rest there, or from his
+having a custom of giving it a rub now and then with his finger and thumb,
+both of which were dyed of that colour, as well as his apron, from rubbing
+against, and handling the webs of checkit claith in the loom.</p>
+<p>Ill would it become me, I trust a dutiful son, to say that my father was
+any thing but a decent, industrious, hard-working man, doing everything for
+the good of his family, and winning the respect of all that knew the value
+of his worth.&nbsp; As to his decency, few&mdash;<!-- page 8--><a
+name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>very few
+indeed&mdash;laid beneath the mools of Dalkeith kirkyard, made their beds
+there, leaving a better name behind them; and as to industry, it is but
+little to say that he toiled the very flesh off his bones, driving the
+shuttle from Monday morning till Saturday night, from the rising up of the
+sun, even to the going down thereof; and whiles, when opportunity led him,
+or occasion required, digging and delving away at the bit kail-yard, till
+moon and stars were in the lift, and the dews of heaven that fell on his
+head, were like the oil that flowed from Aaron&rsquo;s beard, even to the
+skirts of his garment.&nbsp; But what will ye say there?&nbsp; Some are
+born with a silver spoon in their mouths, and others with a
+parritch-stick.&nbsp; Of the latter was my father; for, with all his
+fechting, he never was able much more than to keep our heads above the
+ocean of debt.&nbsp; Whatever was denied him, a kind Providence, howsoever,
+enabled him to do that; and so he departed this life contented, leaving to
+my mother and me, the two survivors, the prideful remembrance of being,
+respectively, she the widow, and me the son, of an honest man.&nbsp; Some
+left with twenty thousand cannot boast as much; so every one has their
+comforts.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p8b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mansie&rsquo;s wedding" src="images/p8s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Having never entered much into public life, further than attending the
+kirk twice every Sabbath&mdash;and thrice when there was evening
+service&mdash;the days of my father glided over like the waters of a deep
+river that make little noise in their course; so I do not <!-- page 9--><a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>know whether to lament or
+to rejoice at having almost nothing to record of him.&nbsp; Had Buonaparte
+as little ill to account for, it would be well this day for him:&mdash;but,
+losh me!&nbsp; I had almost skipped over his wedding.</p>
+<p>In the five-and-twentieth year of his age, he had fallen in love with my
+mother, Marion Laverock, at the christening of a neighbour&rsquo;s bairn,
+where they both happened to forgather; little, I daresay, jealousing, at
+the time their eyes first met, that fate had destined them for a pair, and
+to be the honoured parents of me, their only bairn.&nbsp; Seeing my
+father&rsquo;s heart was catched as in the net of the fowler, she took
+every lawful means, such as adding another knot to her cockernony, putting
+up her hair in screw curls, and so on, to follow up her advantage; the
+result of all which was, that, after three months&rsquo; courtship, she
+wrote a letter out to her friends at Loanhead, telling them of what was
+more than likely to happen, and giving a kind invitation to such of them as
+might think it worth their whiles to come in and be spectators of the
+ceremony.&mdash;And a prime day I am told they had of it, having, by advice
+of more than one, consented to make it a penny wedding; and hiring Deacon
+Laurie&rsquo;s malt-barn at five shillings, for the express purpose.</p>
+<p>Many yet living, among whom James Batter, who was the best-man, and
+Duncan Imrie, the heelcutter in the Flesh-Market Close, are still above
+board to <!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+10</span>bear solemn testimony to the grandness of the occasion, and the
+uncountable numerousness of the company, with such a display of
+mutton-broth, swimming thick with raisins,&mdash;and roasted jiggets of
+lamb,&mdash;to say nothing of mashed turnips and champed potatoes,&mdash;as
+had not been seen in the wide parish of Dalkeith in the memory of
+man.&nbsp; It was not only my father&rsquo;s bridal day, but it brought
+many a lad and lass together by way of partners at foursome reels and
+Hieland jigs, whose courtship did not end in smoke, couple above couple
+dating the day of their happiness from that famous forgathering.&nbsp;
+There were no less than three fiddlers, two of them blind with the
+small-pox, and one naturally; and a piper with his drone and chanter,
+playing as many pibrochs as would have deaved a mill-happer,&mdash;all
+skirling, scraping, and bumming away throughither, the whole afternoon and
+night, and keeping half the countryside dancing, capering, and cutting, in
+strathspey step and quick time, as if they were without a weary, or had not
+a bone in their bodies.&nbsp; In the days of darkness, the whole concern
+would have been imputed to magic and glamour; and douce folk, finding how
+they were transgressing over their usual bounds, would have looked about
+them for the wooden pin that auld Michael Scott the warlock drave in behind
+the door, leaving the family to dance themselves to death at their
+leisure.</p>
+<p><!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+11</span>Had the business ended in dancing, so far well, for a sound sleep
+would have brought a blithe wakening, and all be tight and right again;
+but, alas and alackaday! the violent heat and fume of foment they were all
+thrown into, caused the emptying of so many ale-tankers, and the swallowing
+of so muckle toddy, by way of cooling and refreshing the company, that they
+all got as fou as the Baltic; and many ploys, that shall be nameless, were
+the result of a sober ceremony, whereby two douce and decent people, Mansie
+Wauch, my honoured father, and Marion Laverock, my respected mother, were
+linked thegither, for better for worse, in the lawful bonds of honest
+wedlock.</p>
+<p>It seems as if Providence, reserving every thing famous and remarkable
+for me, allowed little or nothing of consequence to happen to my father,
+who had few cruiks in his lot; at least I never learned, either from him or
+any other body, of any adventures likely seriously to interest the world at
+large.&nbsp; I have heard tell, indeed, that he once got a terrible fright
+by taking the bounty, during the American war, from an Eirish corporal, of
+the name of Dochart O&rsquo;Flaucherty, at Dalkeith Fair, when he was at
+his prenticeship; he, not being accustomed to malt-liquor, having got
+fouish and frisky&mdash;which was not his natural disposition&mdash;over a
+half a bottle of porter.&nbsp; From this it will easily be seen, in the
+first place, that it would be with a fight that his master would get him
+off, by obliging <!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 12</span>the corporal to take back the trepan money; in
+the second place, how long a date back it is since the Eirish began to be
+the death of us; and, in conclusion, that my honoured faither got such a
+fleg, as to spain him effectually, for the space of ten years, from every
+drinkable stronger than good spring-well water.&nbsp; Let the unwary take
+caution; and may this be a wholesome lesson to all whom it may concern.</p>
+<p>In this family history it becomes me, as an honest man, to make passing
+mention of my father&rsquo;s sister, auntie Mysie, that married a carpenter
+and undertaker in the town of Jedburgh; and who, in the course of nature
+and industry, came to be in a prosperous and thriving way; indeed, so much
+so, as to be raised from the rank of a private head of a family; and at
+last elected, by a majority of two votes over a famous cow-doctor, a member
+of the town-council itself.</p>
+<p>There is a good story, howsoever, connected with this business, with
+which I shall make myself free to wind up this somewhat fusty and
+fushionless chapter.</p>
+<p>Well, ye see, some great lord,&mdash;I forget his name, but no
+matter,&mdash;that had made a most tremendous sum of money, either by foul
+or fair means, among the blacks in the East Indies, had returned, before he
+died, to lay his bones at home, as yellow as a Limerick glove, and as rich
+as Dives in the New Testament.&nbsp; He kept flunkies with plush
+small-clothes and sky-blue coats with scarlet-velvet cuffs and
+collars,&mdash;lived <!-- page 13--><a name="page13"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 13</span>like a princie, and settled, as I said before,
+in the neighbourhood of Jedburgh.</p>
+<p>The body, though as brown as a toad&rsquo;s back, was as prideful and
+full of power as old King Nebuchadneisher; and how to exhibit all his
+purple and fine linen, he aye thought and better thought, till at last the
+happy determination came over his mind like a flash of lightning, to invite
+the bailies, deacons, and town-council, all in a body, to come and dine
+with him.</p>
+<p>Save us! what a brushing of coats, such a switching of stoury trowsers,
+and bleaching of white cotton stockings, as took place before the
+catastrophe of the feast, never before happened since Jeddert was a
+burgh.&nbsp; Some of them that were forward and geyan bold in the spirit,
+crowed aloud for joy, at being able to boast that they had received an
+invitation letter to dine with a great lord; while others as proud as
+peacocks of the honour, yet not very sure as to their being up to the trade
+of behaving themselves at the tables of the great, were mostly dung stupid
+with not knowing what to think.&nbsp; A council meeting or two was held in
+the gloamings, to take such a serious business into consideration; some
+expressing their fears and inward down-sinking, while others cheered them
+up with a fillip of pleasant consolation.&nbsp; Scarcely a word of the
+matter, for which they were summoned together by the town-officer&mdash;and
+which was about the mending of the old bell-rope&mdash;was discussed by any
+of them.&nbsp; <!-- page 14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+14</span>So after a sowd of toddy was swallowed, with the hopes of making
+them brave men, and good soldiers of the magistracy, they all plucked up a
+proud spirit, and do or die, determined to march in a body up to the gate,
+and forward to the table of his lordship.</p>
+<p>My uncle, who had been one of the ringleaders of the chicken-hearted,
+crap away up among the rest, with his new blue coat on, shining fresh from
+the ironing of the goose, but keeping well among the thick, to be as little
+kenspeckle as possible; for all the folk of the town were at their doors
+and windows to witness the great occasion of the town-council going a way
+up like gentlemen of rank to take their dinner with his lordship.&nbsp;
+That it was a terrible trial to all cannot be for a moment denied; yet some
+of them behaved themselves decently; and, if we confess that others
+trembled in the knees, as if they were marching to a field of battle, it
+was all in the course of human nature.</p>
+<p>Yet ye would wonder how they came on by degrees; and, to cut a long tale
+short, at length found themselves in a great big room, like a palace in a
+fairy tale, full of grand pictures with gold frames, and looking-glasses
+like the side of a house, where they could see down to their very
+shoes.&nbsp; For a while they were like men in a dream, perfectly dazzled
+and dumfoundered; and it was five minutes before they could either see a
+seat, or think of sitting down.&nbsp; With the reflection of the
+looking-glasses, one of the bailies was so possessed <!-- page 15--><a
+name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>within himself, that he
+tried to chair himself where chair was none, and landed, not very softly,
+on the carpet; while another of the deacons, a fat and dumpy man, as he was
+trying to make a bow, and throw out his leg behind him, stramped on a
+favourite Newfoundland dog&rsquo;s tail, that, wakening out of its slumbers
+with a yell that made the roof ring, played drive against my uncle, who was
+standing abaft, and wheeled him like a butterfly, side foremost, against a
+table with a heap of flowers on it, where, in trying to kep himself, he
+drove his head, like a battering-ram, through a looking-glass, and bleached
+back on his hands and feet on the carpet.</p>
+<p>Seeing what had happened, they were all frightened; but his lordship,
+after laughing heartily, was politer, and knew better about manners than
+all that; so, bidding the flunkies hurry away with the fragments of the
+china jugs and jars, they found themselves, sweating with terror and
+vexation, ranged along silk settees, cracking about the weather and other
+wonderfuls.</p>
+<p>Such a dinner! the fume of it went round about their hearts like myrrh
+and frankincense.&nbsp; The landlord took the head of the table, the
+bailies the right and left of him; the deacons and councillors were ranged
+along the sides, like files of soldiers; and the chaplain at the foot said
+grace.&nbsp; It is entirely out of the power of man to set down on paper
+all that they got to eat and drink; <!-- page 16--><a
+name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>and such was the effect
+of French cookery, that they did not know fish from flesh.&nbsp; Howsoever,
+for all that, they laid their lugs in every thing that lay before them, and
+what they could not eat with forks they supped with spoons; so it was all
+to one purpose.</p>
+<p>When the dishes were removing, each had a large blue glass bowl full of
+water, and a clean calendered red damask towel, put down by a smart flunkie
+before him; and many of them that had not helped themselves well to the
+wine, while they were eating their steaks and French frigassees, were now
+vexed to death on that score, imagining that nothing remained for them, but
+to dight their nebs and flee up.</p>
+<p>Ignorant folk should not judge rashly, and the worthy town-council were
+here in error; for their surmises, however feasible, did the landlord
+wrong.&nbsp; In a minute they had fresh wine decanters ranged down before
+them, filled with liquors of all variety of colours, red, green, and blue;
+and the table was covered with dishes full of jargonelles and pippins,
+raisins and almonds, shell-walnuts and plumdamases, with nut-crackers, and
+everything else they could think of eating; so that, after drinking
+&ldquo;The King, and long life to him,&rdquo; and &ldquo;The constitution
+of the country at home and abroad,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Success to
+trade,&rdquo; and &ldquo;A good harvest,&rdquo; and &ldquo;May ne&rsquo;er
+waur be among us,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Botheration to the French,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Corny toes and short shoes to the foes of old Scotland,&rdquo; and
+so <!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+17</span>on, their tongues began at length not to be so tacked; and the
+weight of their own dignity, that had taken flight before his lordship,
+came back and rested on their shoulders.</p>
+<p>In the course of the evening, his lordship whispered to one of the
+flunkies to bring in some things&mdash;they could not hear what&mdash;as
+the company might like them.&nbsp; The wise ones thought within themselves
+that the best aye comes hindmost; so in brushed a powdered valet, with
+three dishes on his arm of twisted black things, just like sticks of
+Gibraltar-rock, but different in the colour.</p>
+<p>Bailie Bowie helped himself to a jargonelle, and Deacon Purves to a
+wheen raisins; and my uncle, to show that he was not frighted, and knew
+what he was about, helped himself to one of the long black things, which,
+without much ceremony, he shoved into his mouth and began to.&nbsp; Two or
+three more, seeing that my uncle was up to trap, followed his example, and
+chewed away like nine-year-olds.</p>
+<p>Instead of the curious-looking black thing being sweet as
+honey&mdash;for so they expected&mdash;they soon found they had catched a
+Tartar; for it had a confounded bitter tobacco-taste.&nbsp; Manners,
+however, forbade them laying it down again, more especially as his
+lordship, like a man dumfoundered, was aye keeping his eye on them.&nbsp;
+So away they chewed, and better chewed, and whammelled them round in their
+<!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+18</span>mouths, first in one cheek, and then in the other, taking now and
+then a mouthful of drink to wash the trash down, then chewing away again,
+and syne another whammel from one cheek to the other, and syne another
+mouthful, while the whole time their eyes were staring in their heads like
+mad, and the faces they made may be imagined, but cannot be
+described.&nbsp; His lordship gave his eyes a rub, and thought he was
+dreaming; but no&mdash;there they were bodily, chewing, and whammelling,
+and making faces; so no wonder that, in keeping in his laugh, he sprung a
+button from his waistcoat, and was like to drop down from his chair,
+through the floor, in an ecstacy of astonishment, seeing they were all
+growing sea-sick, and pale as stucco images.</p>
+<p>Frightened out of his wits at last that he would be the death of the
+whole council, and that more of them would poison themselves, he took up
+one of the segars&mdash;every one knows segars now, for they are
+fashionable among the very sweeps&mdash;which he lighted at the candle, and
+commenced puffing like a tobacco-pipe.</p>
+<p>My uncle and the rest, if they were ill before, were worse now; so when
+they got to the open air, instead of growing better, they grew sicker and
+sicker, till they were waggling from side to side like ships in a storm;
+and, not knowing whether their heels or heads were uppermost, went spinning
+round about like pieries.</p>
+<p><!-- page 19--><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+19</span>&ldquo;A little spark may make muckle wark.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is
+perfectly wonderful what great events spring out of trifles, or what seem
+to common eyes but trifles.&nbsp; I do not allude to the nine days&rsquo;
+deadly sickness, that was the legacy of every one that ate his segar, but
+to the awful truth, that, at the next election of councillors, my poor
+uncle Jamie was completely blackballed&mdash;a general spite having been
+taken to him in the town-hall, on account of having led the magistracy
+wrong, by doing what he ought to have let alone, thereby making himself and
+the rest a topic of amusement to the world at large, for many and many a
+month.</p>
+<p>Others, to be sure, it becomes me to make mention, have another version
+of the story, and impute the cause of his having been turned out to the
+implacable wrath of old Bailie Bogie, whose best black coat, square in the
+tails, that he had worn only on the Sundays for nine years, was totally
+spoiled, on their way home in the dark from his lordship&rsquo;s, by a
+tremendous blash, that my unfortunate uncle happened, in the course of
+nature, to let flee in the frenzy of a deadly upthrowing.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+20</span>CHAPTER THREE&mdash;THE COMING INTO THE WORLD OF MANSIE WAUCH</h2>
+<p>I have no distinct recollection of the thing myself, yet there is every
+reason to believe that I was born on the 15th of October 1765, in that
+little house standing by itself, not many yards from the eastmost side of
+the Flesh-market Gate, Dalkeith.&nbsp; My eyes opened on the light about
+two o&rsquo;clock in a dark and rainy morning.&nbsp; Long was it spoken
+about that something great and mysterious would happen on that dreary
+night; as the cat, after washing her face, went mewing about, with her tail
+sweeing behind her like a ramrod; and a corbie, from the Duke&rsquo;s
+woods, tumbled down Jamie Elder&rsquo;s lum, when he had set the little
+still-a-going&mdash;giving them a terrible fright, as they all took it
+first for the devil, and then for an exciseman&mdash;and fell with a great
+cloud of soot, and a loud skraigh, into the empty kail-pot.</p>
+<p>The first thing that I have any clear memory of, was my being carried
+out on my auntie&rsquo;s shoulder, with a leather cap tied under my chin,
+to see the Fair Race.&nbsp; Oh! but it was a grand sight!&nbsp; I have read
+since then the story of Aladdin&rsquo;s Wonderful Lamp, but this beat it
+all to sticks.&nbsp; There was a long row of tables covered with carpets of
+bonny patterns, heaped from one end to the other with shoes of every kind
+and size, some with polished soles, and some glittering with sparribles and
+cuddy-heels; and little red worsted boots for bairns, with blue and white
+edgings, hanging like <!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 21</span>strings of flowers up the posts at each
+end;&mdash;and then what a collection of luggies! the whole meal in the
+market-sacks on a Thursday did not seem able to fill them;&mdash;and
+horn-spoons, green and black freckled, with shanks clear as
+amber,&mdash;and timber caups,&mdash;and ivory egg-cups of every
+pattern.&nbsp; Have a care of us! all the eggs in Smeaton dairy might have
+found resting places for their doups in a row.&nbsp; As for the
+gingerbread, I shall not attempt a description.&nbsp; Sixpenny and shilling
+cakes, in paper, tied with skinie; and roundabouts, and snaps, brown and
+white quality, and parliaments, on stands covered with calendered linen,
+clean from the fold.&nbsp; To pass it was just impossible; it set my teeth
+a-watering, and I skirled like mad, until I had a gilded lady thrust into
+my little nieve; the which, after admiring for a minute, I applied my teeth
+to, and of the head I made no bones; so that in less than no time she had
+vanished, petticoats and all, no trace of her being to the fore, save and
+except long treacly daubs, extending east and west from ear to ear, and
+north and south from cape neb of the nose to the extremity of
+beardy-land.</p>
+<p>But what, of all things, attracted my attention on that memorable day,
+was the show of cows, sheep, and horses, mooing, baaing and neighering; and
+the race&mdash;that was best!&nbsp; Od, what a sight!&mdash;we were jammed
+in the crowd of old wives, with their toys and shining ribands; and carter
+lads, with their blue bonnets; and young <!-- page 22--><a
+name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>wenches, carrying home
+their fairings in napkins, as muckle as would hold their teeth going for a
+month;&mdash;there scarcely could be much for love, when there was so much
+for the stomach;&mdash;and men, with wooden legs, and brass virls at the
+end of them, playing on the fiddle,&mdash;and a bear that roared, and
+danced on its hind feet, with a muzzled mouth,&mdash;and Punch and
+Polly,&mdash;and puppie-shows, and more than I can tell,&mdash;when up came
+the horses to the starting-post.&nbsp; I shall never forget the bonny
+dresses of the riders.&nbsp; One had a napkin tied round his head, with the
+flaps fleeing at his neck; and his coat-tails were curled up into a big
+hump behind; it was so tight buttoned ye would not think he could have
+breathed.&nbsp; His corduroy trowsers (such like as I have often since made
+to growing callants) were tied round his ankles with a string; and he had a
+rusty spur on one shoe, which I saw a man take off to lend him.&nbsp; Save
+us! how he pulled the beast&rsquo;s head by the bridle, and flapped up and
+down on the saddle when he tried a canter!&nbsp; The second one had on a
+black velvet hunting-cap, and his coat stripped.&nbsp; I wonder he was not
+feared of cold, his shirt being like a riddle, and his nether nankeens but
+thin for such weather; but he was a brave lad; and sorry were the folks for
+him, when he fell off in taking over sharp a turn, by which old Pullen, the
+bell-ringer, who was holding the post, was made to coup the creels, and got
+a bloody nose.&mdash;And but the last was a wearyful <!-- page 23--><a
+name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>one!&nbsp; He was all
+life, and as gleg as an eel.&nbsp; Up and down he went; and up and down
+philandered the beast on its hind-legs and its fore-legs, funking like mad;
+yet though he was not above thirteen, or fourteen at most, he did not cry
+out for help more than five or six times, but grippit at the mane with one
+hand, and at the back of the saddle with the other, till daft Robie, the
+hostler at the stables, claught hold of the beast by the head, and off they
+set.&nbsp; The young birkie had neither hat nor shoon, but he did not spare
+the stick; round and round they flew like mad.&nbsp; Ye would have thought
+their eyes would have loupen out; and loudly all the crowds were hurraing,
+when young hatless came up foremost, standing in the stirrups, the long
+stick between his teeth, and his white hair fleeing behind him in the wind
+like streamers on a frosty night.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+24</span>CHAPTER FOUR&mdash;CALF-LOVE</h2>
+<p>The long and the short is, that I was sent to school, where I learned to
+read and spell, making great progress in the Single and Mother&rsquo;s
+Carritch.&nbsp; No, what is more, few could fickle me in the Bible, being
+mostly able to spell it all over, save the second of Ezra and the seventh
+of Nehemiah, which the Dominie himself could never read through twice in
+the same way, or without variations.</p>
+<p>My father, to whom I was born, like Isaac to Abraham, in his old age,
+was an elder in the Relief Kirk, respected by all for his canny and douce
+behaviour, and, as I have observed before, a weaver to his trade.&nbsp; The
+cot and the kail-yard were his own, and had been auld granfaither&rsquo;s;
+but still he had to ply the shuttle from Monday to Saturday, to keep all
+right and tight.&nbsp; The thrums were a perquisite of my own, which I
+niffered with the gundy-wife for Gibraltar-rock, cut-throat, gib, or
+bull&rsquo;s-eyes.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p24b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mansie and Nancy" src="images/p24s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Having come into the world before my time, and being of a pale face and
+delicate make, Nature never could have intended me for the naval or
+military line, or for any robustious trade or profession whatsoever.&nbsp;
+No, no, I never liked fighting in my life; peace was aye in my
+thoughts.&nbsp; When there was any riot in the streets, I fled, and
+scougged myself at the chimney-lug as quickly as I dowed; and, rather than
+double a nieve to a school-fellow, I pocketed many shabby epithets, got my
+paiks, and took the coucher&rsquo;s blow <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>from laddies that could
+hardly reach up to my waistband.</p>
+<p>Just after I was put to my prenticeship, having made free choice of the
+tailoring trade, I had a terrible stound of calf-love.&nbsp; Never shall I
+forget it.&nbsp; I was growing up, long and lank as a willow-wand.&nbsp;
+Brawns to my legs there were none, as my trowsers of other years too
+visibly effected to show.&nbsp; The long yellow hair hung down like a
+flax-wig, the length of my lantern jaws, which looked, notwithstanding my
+yapness and stiff appetite, as if eating and they had broken up
+acquaintanceship.&nbsp; My blue jacket seemed in the sleeves to have picked
+a quarrel with the wrists, and had retreated to a tait below the
+elbows.&nbsp; The haunch-buttons, on the contrary, appeared to have taken a
+strong liking to the shoulders, a little below which they showed their
+tarnished brightness.&nbsp; At the middle of the back the tails terminated,
+leaving the well-worn rear of my corduroys, like a full moon seen through a
+dark haze.&nbsp; Oh! but I must have been a bonny lad.</p>
+<p>My first flame was the minister&rsquo;s lassie, Jess, a buxom and
+forward quean, two or three years older than myself.&nbsp; I used to sit
+looking at her in the kirk, and felt a droll confusion when our eyes
+met.&nbsp; It dirled through my heart like a dart, and I looked down at my
+psalm-book sheepish and blushing.&nbsp; Fain would I have spoken to her,
+but it would not do; my courage aye failed me at the pinch, though she
+whiles <!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+26</span>gave me a smile when she passed me.&nbsp; She used to go to the
+well every night with her two stoups, to draw water after the manner of the
+Israelites at gloaming; so I thought of watching to give her the two apples
+which I had carried in my pocket for more than a week for that
+purpose.&nbsp; How she started when I stappit them into her hand, and
+brushed by without speaking!&nbsp; I stood at the bottom of the close
+listening, and heard her laughing till she was like to split.&nbsp; My
+heart flap-flappit in my breast like a pair of fanners.&nbsp; It was a
+moment of heavenly hope; but I saw Jamie Coom, the blacksmith, who I aye
+jealoused was my rival, coming down to the well.&nbsp; I saw her give him
+one of the apples; and, hearing him say, with a loud gaffaw, &ldquo;Where
+is the tailor?&rdquo;&nbsp; I took to my heels, and never stopped till I
+found myself on the little stool by the fireside, and the hamely sound of
+my mother&rsquo;s wheel bum-bumming in my lug, like a gentle lullaby.</p>
+<p>Every noise I heard flustered me, but I calmed in time, though I went to
+my bed without my supper.&nbsp; When I was driving out the gaislings to the
+grass on the next morn, who was it my ill fate to meet but the
+blacksmith.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ou, Mansie,&rdquo; said Jamie Coom, &ldquo;are ye
+gaun to take me for your best man?&nbsp; I hear you are to be cried in the
+kirk on Sunday?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Me!&rdquo; answered I, shaking and staring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;Jess the minister&rsquo;s maid told
+me last night, that you had been giving up your name at <!-- page 27--><a
+name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>the manse.&nbsp; Ay,
+it&rsquo;s ower true&mdash;for she showed me the apples ye gied her in a
+present.&nbsp; This is a bonny story, Mansie, my man, and you only at your
+prenticeship yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Terror and despair had struck me dumb.&nbsp; I stood as still and as
+stiff as a web of buckram.&nbsp; My tongue was tied, and I could not
+contradict him.&nbsp; Jamie folded his arms, and went away whistling,
+turning every now and then his sooty face over his shoulder, and mostly
+sticking his tune, as he could not keep his mouth screwed for
+laughing.&nbsp; What would I not have given to have laughed too!</p>
+<p>There was no time to be lost; this was the Saturday.&nbsp; The next
+rising sun would shine on the Sabbath.&nbsp; Ah, what a case I was
+in!&nbsp; I could mostly have drowned myself, had I not been
+frighted.&nbsp; What could I do?&nbsp; My love had vanished like lightning;
+but oh, I was in a terrible gliff!&nbsp; Instead of gundy, I sold my thrums
+to Mrs Walnut for a penny, with which I bought at the counter a sheet of
+paper and a pen; so that in the afternoon I wrote out a letter to the
+minister, telling him what I had been given to hear, and begging him, for
+the sake of mercy, not to believe Jess&rsquo;s word, as I was not able to
+keep a wife, and as she was a leeing gipsy.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+28</span>CHAPTER FIVE&mdash;CURSECOWL</h2>
+<p>But, losh me!&nbsp; I have come on too far already, before mentioning a
+wonderful thing that happened to me when I was only seven years old.&nbsp;
+Few things in my eventful life have made a deeper impression on me than
+what I am going to relate.</p>
+<p>It was the custom, in those times, for the different schools to have
+cock-fighting on Fastern&rsquo;s E&rsquo;en: and the victor, as he was
+called, treated the other scholars to a football.&nbsp; Many a dust have I
+seen rise out of that business&mdash;broken shins and broken heads, sore
+bones and sound duckings&mdash;but this was none of these.</p>
+<p>Our next neighbour was a flesher; and right before the window was a
+large stone, on which old wives with their weans would sometimes take a
+rest; so what does I, when I saw the whole hobble-shaw coming fleeing down
+the street, with the kick-ba&rsquo; at their noses, but up I speels upon
+the stone (I was a wee chap with a daidley, a ruffled shirt, and leather
+cap edged with rabbit fur) that I might see all the fun.&nbsp; This one
+fell, and that one fell, and a third was knocked over and a fourth got a
+bloody nose: and so on; and there was such a noise and din, as would have
+deaved the workmen of Babel&mdash;when, lo! and behold! the ball played
+bounce mostly at my feet, and the whole mob after it.&nbsp; I thought I
+should have been dung to pieces; so I pressed myself back with all my
+might, and through went my elbow into Cursecowl&rsquo;s kitchen.&nbsp; It
+<!-- page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>did
+not stick long there.&nbsp; Before you could say Jack Robinson, out flew
+the flesher in his killing-clothes; his face was as red as fire, and he had
+his pouch full of bloody knives buckled to his side.&nbsp; I skreighed out
+in his face when I looked at him, but he did not stop a moment for
+that.&nbsp; With a girn that was like to rive his mouth, he twisted his
+nieve in the back of my hair, and off with me hanging by the cuff of the
+neck, like a kittling.&nbsp; My eyes were like to loup out of my head, but
+I had no breath to cry.&nbsp; I heard him thraw the key, for I could not
+look down, the skin of my face was pulled so tight; and in he flang me like
+a pair of old boots into his booth, where I landed on my knees upon a raw
+bloody calf&rsquo;s skin.&nbsp; I thought I would have gone out of my wits,
+when I heard the door locked upon me, and looked round me in such an
+unearthly place.&nbsp; It had only one sparred window, and there was a
+garden behind; but how was I to get out?&nbsp; I danced round and round
+about, stamping my heels on the floor, and rubbing my begritten face with
+my coat sleeve.&nbsp; To make matters worse, it was wearing to the
+darkening.&nbsp; The floor was all covered with lappered blood, and sheep
+and calf skins.&nbsp; The calves and the sheep themselves, with their
+cuttit throats, and glazed een, and ghastly girning faces, were hanging
+about on pins, heels uppermost.&nbsp; Losh me!&nbsp; I thought on Bluebeard
+and his wives in the bloody chamber!</p>
+<p><!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+30</span>And all the time it was growing darker and darker, and more
+dreary; and all was as quiet as death itself.&nbsp; It looked, by all the
+world, like a grave, and me buried alive within it; till the rottens came
+out of their holes to lick the blood, and whisked about like wee evil
+spirits.&nbsp; I thought on my father and my mother, and how I should never
+see them more; for I was sure that Cursecowl would come in the dark, tie my
+hands and feet thegither, and lay me across the killing-stool.&nbsp; I grew
+more and more frightened; and it grew more and more dark.&nbsp; I thought
+all the sheep-heads were looking at one another, and then girn-girning at
+me.&nbsp; At last I grew desperate; and my hair was as stiff as wire,
+though it was as wet as if I had been douking in the Esk.&nbsp; I began to
+bite through the wooden spars with my teeth, and rugged at them with my
+nails, till they were like to come off&mdash;but no, it would not do.&nbsp;
+At length, when I had greeted myself mostly blind, and cried till I was as
+hoarse as a corbie, I saw auld Janet Hogg taking in her bit washing from
+the bushes, and I reeled and screamed till she heard me.&mdash;It was like
+being transported into heaven; for, in less than no time, my mother, with
+her apron at her eyes, was at the door; and Cursecowl, with a candle in the
+front of his hat, had scarcely thrawn the key, when out I flew; and she
+lifted up her foot (I dare say it was the first and last time in her life,
+for she was a douce woman) and gave him such a kick and a push that <!--
+page 31--><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>he played
+bleach over, head foremost, without being able to recover himself; and, as
+we ran down the close, we heard him cursing and swearing in the dark, like
+a devil incarnate.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 32--><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+32</span>CHAPTER SIX&mdash;MANSIE WAUCH ON THE PUSHING OF HIS FORTUNE</h2>
+<p>The days of the years of my prenticeship having glided cannily over on
+the working-board of my respected maister, James Hosey, where I sat sewing
+cross-legged like a busy bee, in the true spirit of industrious
+contentment, I found myself, at the end of the seven year, so well
+instructed in the tailoring trade, to which I had paid a near-sighted
+attention, that, without more ado, I girt myself round about with a proud
+determination of at once cutting my mother&rsquo;s apron string, and
+venturing to go without a hold.&nbsp; Thinks I to myself, &ldquo;faint
+heart never won fair lady&rdquo;; so, taking my stick in my hand, I set out
+towards Edinburgh, as brave as a Highlander, in search of a
+journeyman&rsquo;s place.&nbsp; When I think how many have been out of
+bread, month after month, making vain application at the house of call, I
+may set it down to an especial Providence, that I found a place, on the
+very first day, to my heart&rsquo;s content, in by at the Grassmarket,
+where I stayed for the space of six calendar months.</p>
+<p>Had it not been from a real sense of the duty I owed to my future
+employers, whomsoever they might be, in making myself a first-rate hand in
+the cutting, shaping, and sewing line, I would not have found courage in my
+breast to have helped me out through such a long and dreary time.&nbsp; The
+change from our own town, where every face was friendly, and where <!--
+page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>I could
+ken every man I saw, by the cut of his coat, at half a mile&rsquo;s
+distance, to the bum and bustle of the High Street, the tremendous cannons
+of the Castle, packed full of soldiers ready for war, and the filthy,
+ill-smelling abominations of the Cowgate, where I put up, was almost more
+than could be tholed by man of woman born.&nbsp; My lodging was up six pair
+of stairs, in a room of Widow Randie&rsquo;s, which I rented for
+half-a-crown a week, coals included; and many a time, after putting out my
+candle, before stepping into my bed, I used to look out at the window,
+where I could see thousands and thousands of lamps, spreading for miles
+adown streets and through squares, where I did not know a living soul; and
+dreeing the awful and insignificant sense of being a lonely stranger in a
+foreign land.&nbsp; Then would the memory of past days return to me; yet I
+had the same trust in Heaven as I had before, seeing that they were the
+dividual stars above my head which I used to glour up at in wonder at
+Dalkeith&mdash;pleasant Dalkeith! ay, how different, with its bonny river
+Esk, its gardens full of gooseberry bushes and pear-trees, its grass parks
+spotted with sheep, and its grand green woods, from the bullying
+blackguards, the comfortless reek, and the nasty gutters of the
+Netherbow.</p>
+<p>To those, nevertheless, that take the world as they find it, there are
+pleasures in all situations; nor was mine, bad though I allow it to be,
+entirely destitute <!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 34</span>of them; for our work-room being at the top of
+the stairs, and the light of heaven coming down through skylights, three in
+number, we could, by putting out our heads, have a vizzy of the grand
+ancient building of George Heriot&rsquo;s Hospital, with the crowds of
+young laddies playing through the grass parks, with their bit brown
+coaties, and shining leather caps, like a wheen puddocks; and all the sweet
+country out by Barrowmuirhead, and thereaway; together with the
+Corstorphine Hills&mdash;and the Braid Hills&mdash;and the Pentland
+Hills&mdash;and all the rest of the hills, covered here and there with
+tufts of blooming whins, as yellow as the beaten gold&mdash;spotted round
+about their bottoms with green trees, and growing corn, but with tops as
+bare as a gaberlunzie&rsquo;s coat&mdash;kepping the rowling clouds on
+their awful shoulders on cold and misty days; and freckled over with the
+flowers of the purple heather, on which the shy moorfowl take a delight to
+fatten and fill their craps, through the cosy months of the blythe summer
+time.</p>
+<p>Let nobody take it amiss, yet I must bear witness to the truth, though
+the devil should have me.&nbsp; My heart was sea-sick of Edinburgh folk and
+town manners, for the which I had no stomach.&nbsp; I could form no
+friendly acquaintanceship with a living soul; so I abode by myself, like St
+John in the Isle of Patmos, on spare allowance, making a sheep-head serve
+me for three day&rsquo;s kitchen.&nbsp; I longed like a <!-- page 35--><a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>sailor that has been
+far at sea, and wasted and weatherbeaten, to see once more my native home;
+and, bundling up, flee from the noisy stramash to the loun dykeside of
+domestic privacy.&nbsp; Everything around me seemed to smell of sin and
+pollution, like the garments of the Egyptians with the ten plagues; and
+often, after I took off my clothes to lie down in my bed, when the watchmen
+that guarded us through the night in blue dreadnoughts with red necks, and
+battons, and horn-bouets, from thieves, murderers, and pickpockets, were
+bawling, &ldquo;Half-past ten o&rsquo;clock,&rdquo; did I commune with my
+own heart, and think within myself, that I would rather be a sober, poor,
+honest man in the country, able to clear my day and way by the help of
+Providence, than the Provost himself, my lord though he be, or even the
+Mayor of London, with his velvet gown trailing for yards in the glaur
+behind him&mdash;do what he likes to keep it up; or riding about the
+streets&mdash;as Joey Smith the Yorkshire Jockey, to whom I made a hunting
+cap, told me&mdash;in a coach made of clear crystal, and wheels of the
+beaten gold.</p>
+<p>It was an awful business; dog on it, I ay wonder yet how I got through
+with it.&nbsp; There was no rest for soul or body, by night or day, with
+police-officers crying, &ldquo;One o&rsquo;clock, an&rsquo; a frosty
+morning,&rdquo; knocking Eirishmen&rsquo;s teeth down their throats with
+their battons, hauling limmers by the lug and horn into <!-- page 36--><a
+name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>the lock-up house, or
+over by to Bridewell, where they were set to beat hemp for a small wage,
+and got their heads shaved; with carters bawling, &ldquo;Ye yo, yellow
+sand, yellow sand,&rdquo; with mouths as wide as a barn-door, and voices
+that made the drums of your ears dirl, and ring again like mad; with
+fishwives from Newhaven, Cockenzie, and Fisherrow, skirling,
+&ldquo;Roug-a-rug, warstling herring,&rdquo; as if every one was trying to
+drown out her neighbour, till the very landladies, at the top of the
+seventeen story houses, could hear, if they liked to be fashed, and might
+come down at their leisure to buy them at three for a penny; men from
+Barnton, and thereaway on the Queensferry Road, halloing &ldquo;Sour douk,
+sour douk&rdquo;; tinklers skirmishing the edges of brown plates they were
+trying to make the old wives buy&mdash;and what not.&nbsp; To me it was a
+real hell upon earth.</p>
+<p>Never let us repine, howsomever, but consider that all is ordered for
+the best.&nbsp; The sons of the patriarch Jacob found out their brother
+Joseph in a foreign land, and where they least expected it; so it was
+here&mdash;even here, where my heart was sickening unto death, from my
+daily and nightly thoughts being as bitter as gall&mdash;that I fell in
+with the greatest blessing of my life, Nanse Cromie!</p>
+<p>In the flat below our workshop lived Mrs Whitteraick, the wife of Mr
+Whitteraick, a dealer in hens <!-- page 37--><a name="page37"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 37</span>and hams in the poultry market, that had been
+fallen in with, when her gudeman was riding out on his bit sheltie in the
+Lauder direction, bargaining with the farmers for their ducks, chickens,
+gaislings, geese, turkey-pouts, howtowdies, guinea-hens, and other
+barn-door fowls; and, among his other calls, having happened to make a
+transaction with her father, anent some Anchovy-ducks, he, by a warm
+invitation, was kindly pressed to remain for the night.</p>
+<p>The upshot of the business was, that, on mounting his pony to make the
+best of his way home, next morning after breakfast, Maister Whitteraick
+found he was shot through the heart with a stound of love; and that, unless
+a suitable remedy could be got, there was no hope for him on this side of
+time, let alone blowing out his brains, or standing before the
+minister.&nbsp; Right it was in him to run the risk of deciding on the
+last; and so well did he play his game, that, in two months from that date,
+after sending sundry presents on his part to the family, of smeaked hams
+and salt tongues&mdash;acknowledged on theirs, by return of carrier, in the
+shape of sucking pigs, jargonelle pears, skim-milk cheeses, and such
+like&mdash;matters were soldered; and Miss Jeanie Learig, made into Mrs
+Whitteraick by the blessing of Dr Blether, rode away into Edinburgh in a
+post-chaise, with a brown and a black horse, one blind and the other lame,
+seated cheek-by-jowl with her loving spouse, who, <!-- page 38--><a
+name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>doubtless was busked
+out in his best, with a Manchester superfine blue coat, and double gilt
+buttons, a waterproof hat, silk stockings, with open-steek gushats, and
+bright yellow shamoy gloves.</p>
+<p>A stranger among strangers, and not knowing how she might thole the
+company and conversation of town-life, Mrs Whitteraick, that was to be,
+hired a bit wench of a lassie from the neighbourhood, that was to follow
+her, come the term.&nbsp; And who think ye should this lassie be, but Nanse
+Cromie&mdash;afterwards, in the course of a kind Providence, the honoured
+wife of my bosom, and the mother of bonny Benjie.</p>
+<p>In going up and down the stairs&mdash;it being a common entry, ye
+observe&mdash;me maybe going down with my everyday hat on to my dinner, and
+she coming up, carrying a stoup of water, or half-a-pound of pouthered
+butter on a plate, with a piece paper thrown over it&mdash;we frequently
+met half-way, and had to stand still to let one another pass.&nbsp; Nothing
+came out of these foregatherings, howsomever, for a month or two, she being
+as shy and modest as she was bonny, with her clean demity short-gown, and
+snow-white morning mutch, to say nothing of her cheery mouth, and her
+glancing eyes; and me unco douffie, in making up to strangers.&nbsp; We
+could not help, nevertheless, to take aye a stolen look of each other in
+passing; and I was a gone man, bewitched out of my seven senses, <!-- page
+39--><a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>falling from my
+clothes, losing my stomach, and over the lugs in love, three weeks and some
+odd days before ever a single syllable passed between us.</p>
+<p>Gude kens how long this Quaker-meeting-like silence would have
+continued, had we not chanced to foregather one gloaming; and I, having
+gotten a dram from one of our customers with a hump-back, at the
+Crosscausey, whose fashionable new coat I had been out fitting on, found
+myself as brave as a Bengal tiger, and said to her, &ldquo;This is a fine
+day, I say, my dear Nancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The ice being once broken, every thing went on as smoothly as ye like;
+so, in the long run, we went like lightning from twohanded cracks on the
+stair-head, to stown walks, after work-hours, out by the West Port, and
+thereaway.</p>
+<p>If ever a man loved, and loved like mad, it was me, Mansie
+Wauch&mdash;and I take no shame in the confession; but, knowing it all in
+the course of nature, declare it openly and courageously in the face of the
+wide world.&nbsp; Let them laugh who like; honest folk, I pity them; such
+know not the pleasures of virtuous affection.&nbsp; It is not in corrupted,
+sinful hearts that the fire of true love can ever burn clear.&nbsp; Alas,
+and ohon orie! they lose the sweetest, completest, dearest, truest pleasure
+that this world has in store for its children.&nbsp; They know not the
+bliss to meet, that makes the embrace of separation bitter.&nbsp; They
+never dreamed the <!-- page 40--><a name="page40"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 40</span>dreams that make wakening to the morning light
+unpleasant.&nbsp; They never felt the raptures that can dirl like darts
+through a man&rsquo;s soul from a woman&rsquo;s eye.&nbsp; They never
+tasted the honey that dwells on a woman&rsquo;s lip, sweeter than yellow
+marygolds to the bee; or fretted under the fever of bliss that glows
+through the frame in pressing the hand of a suddenly met, and fluttering
+sweetheart.&nbsp; But tuts-tuts&mdash;hech-how! my day has long since
+passed: and this is stuff to drop from the lips of an auld fool.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless, forgive me, friends: I cannot help all-powerful nature.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p40b.jpg">
+<img alt="The minister&rsquo;s lassie Jess" src="images/p40s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Nanse&rsquo;s taste being like my own, we amused one another in abusing
+great cities, which are all chokeful of the abominations of the Scarlet
+Woman; and it is curious how soon I learned to be up to trap&mdash;I mean
+in an honest way; for, when she said she was wearying the very heart out of
+her to be home again to Lauder, which she said was her native, and the true
+land of Goshen, I spoke back to her by way of answer&mdash;&ldquo;Nancy, my
+dear, believe me that the real land of Goshen is out at Dalkeith; and if
+ye&rsquo;ll take up house with me, and enter into a way of doing, I daursay
+in a while, ye&rsquo;ll come to think so too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What will ye say there?&nbsp; Matters were by-and-by settled full tosh
+between us; and, though the means of both parties were small, we were
+young, and able and willing to help one another.&nbsp; Nanse, out of her
+wages, had hained a trifle; and I had, safe lodged <!-- page 41--><a
+name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>under lock-and-key in
+the Bank of Scotland, against the time of my setting up, the siller which
+was got by selling the bit house of granfaither&rsquo;s, on the death of my
+ever-to-be-lamented mother, who survived her helpmate only six months,
+leaving me an orphan lad in a wicked world, obliged to fend, forage and
+look out for myself.</p>
+<p>Taking matters into account, therefore, and considering that it is not
+good for man to be alone, Nanse and me laid our heads together towards the
+taking a bit house in the fore-street of Dalkeith; and at our leisure kept
+a look-out about buying the plenishing&mdash;the expense of which, for
+different littles and littles, amounted to more than we expected; yet, to
+our hearts&rsquo; content, we made some most famous second-hand bargains of
+sprechery, amongst the old-furniture warehousemen of the Cowgate.&nbsp; I
+might put down here the prices of the room-grate, the bachelor&rsquo;s
+oven, the cheese-toaster, and the warming-pan, especially, which, though it
+had a wheen holes in it, kept a fine polish; but, somehow or other, have
+lost the receipt and cannot make true affidavy.</p>
+<p>Certain it is, whatever cadgers may say to the contrary, that the back
+is aye made for the burden; and, were all to use the means, and be
+industrious, many, that wyte bad harvests, and worse times, would have,
+like the miller in the auld sang, &ldquo;A penny in the purse for dinner
+and for supper,&rdquo; or better to finish the verse, <!-- page 42--><a
+name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>&ldquo;Gin ye please a
+guid fat cheese, and lumps of yellow butter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For two three days, I must confess, after Maister Wiggie had gone
+through the ceremony of tying us together, and Nanse and me found ourselves
+in the comfortable situation of man and wife, I was a wee dowie and
+desponding, thinking that we were to have a numerous small family, and
+where trade was to come from; but no sooner was my sign nailed up, with
+four iron hold-fasts, by Johnny Hammer, painted in black letters on a blue
+ground, with a picture of a jacket on one side and a pair of shears on the
+other,&mdash;and my shop-door opened to the public, with a wheen ready-made
+waistcoats, gallowses, leather-caps, and Kilmarnock cowls, hung up at the
+window, than business flowed in upon us in a perfect torrent.&nbsp; First
+one came in for his measure, and then another.&nbsp; A wife came in for a
+pair of red worsted boots for her bairn, but would not take them for they
+had not blue fringes.&nbsp; A bareheaded lassie, hoping to be handsel,
+threw down twopence, and asked tape at three yards for a halfpenny.&nbsp;
+The minister sent an old black coat beneath his maid&rsquo;s arm, pinned up
+in a towel, to get docked in the tails down into a jacket; which I trust I
+did to his entire satisfaction, making it fit to a hair.&nbsp; The
+Duke&rsquo;s butler himself patronized me, by sending me a coat which was
+all hair-powder and pomate, to get a new neck put to it.&nbsp; And James
+Batter, aye a staunch friend of <!-- page 43--><a name="page43"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 43</span>the family, dispatched a barefoot cripple
+lassie down the close to me, with a brown paper parcel, tied with skinie,
+and having a memorandum letter sewed on the top of it, and wafered with a
+wafer.&nbsp; It ran as follows; &ldquo;Maister Batter has sent down, per
+the bearer, with his compliments to Mr Wauch, a cuttikin of corduroy,
+deficient in the instep, which please let out, as required.&nbsp; Maister
+Wauch will also please be so good as observe that three of the buttons have
+sprung the thorls, which he will be obliged to him to replace, at his
+earliest convenience.&nbsp; Please send me a message what they may be; and
+have the account made out, article for article, and duly discharged, that I
+may send down the bearer with the change; and to bring me back the cuttikin
+and the account, to save time and trouble.&nbsp; I am, dear sir, your most
+obedient friend, and ever most sincerely,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">James
+Batter</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No wonder than we attracted customers, for our sign was the prettiest ye
+ever saw, though the jacket was not just so neatly painted, as for some
+sand-blind creatures not to take it for a goose.&nbsp; I daresay there were
+fifty half-naked bairns glowring their eyes out of their heads at it, from
+morning till night; and, after they all were gone to their beds, both Nanse
+and me found ourselves so proud of our new situation in life, that we
+slipped out in the dark by ourselves, and had a prime look at it with a
+lantern.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+44</span>CHAPTER SEVEN&mdash;MANSIE WAUCH AND HIS FOREWARNING</h2>
+<p>On first commencing business, I have freely confessed, I believe, that I
+was unco solicitous of custom, though less from sinful, selfish motives,
+than from the, I trust, laudable fear I had about becoming in a jiffy the
+father of a small family, every one with a mouth to fill and a back to
+cleid&mdash;helpless bairns, with nothing to look to or lean on, save and
+except the proceeds of my daily handiwork.&nbsp; Nothing, however, is sure
+in this world, as Maister Wiggie more than once took occasion to observe,
+when lecturing on the house built by the foolish man on the sea-sands; for
+months passed on, and better passed on; and these, added together by simple
+addition, amounted to three years; and still neither word nor wittens of a
+family, to perpetuate our name to future generations, appeared to be
+forthcoming.</p>
+<p>Between friends, I make no secret of the matter, that this was a
+catastrophe which vexed me not a little, for more reasons than one.&nbsp;
+In the first place, youngsters being a bond of mutual affection between man
+and wife, sweeter than honey from the comb, and stronger than the Roman
+cement with which the old Picts built their bridges, that will last till
+the day of doom.&nbsp; In the second place, bairns toddling round a bit
+ingle make a house look like itself, especially in the winter time, when
+hailstanes rattle on the window, and winds roar like the voices of mighty
+giants at the <!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+45</span>lum-head; for then the maister of the dwelling finds himself like
+an ancient patriarch, and the shepherd of a flock, tender as young lambs,
+yet pleasant to his eye, and dear to his heart.&nbsp; And, in the third
+place (for I&rsquo;ll speak the truth and shame the deil) as I could not
+thole the gibes and idle tongues of a wheen fools that, for their
+diversion, would be asking me, &ldquo;How the wife and bairns were; and if
+I had sent my auldest laddie to the school yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have swithered within myself for more than half-an-hour, whether I
+should relate a circumstance bordering a little on the supernatural line,
+that happened to me, as connected with the business of the bairns of which
+I have just been speaking; and, were it for no other reason, but just to
+plague the scoffer that sits in his elbow-chair, I have determined to jot
+down the whole miraculous paraphernally in black and white.&nbsp; With folk
+that will not listen to the voice of reason, it is needless to be wasterful
+of words; so them that like, may either prin their faith to my coat-sleeve,
+about what I am going to relate, or not&mdash;just as they choose.&nbsp;
+All that I can say in my defence, and as an affidavy to my veracity, is
+that I have been thirty year an elder of Maister Wiggie&rsquo;s
+kirk&mdash;and that is no joke.&nbsp; The matter I make free to consider is
+not a laughing concern, nor anything belonging to the Merry-Andrew line;
+and, if folk were but strong in the faith, there is no saying what may come
+to pass for their <!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 46</span>good.&nbsp; One might as well hold up their
+brazen face, and pretend not to believe any thing&mdash;neither the Witch
+of Endor raising up Samuel; nor Cornel Gardener&rsquo;s vision; nor Johnny
+Wilkes and the De&rsquo;il; nor Peden&rsquo;s prophecies.</p>
+<p>Nanse and me aye made what they call an anniversary of our wedding-day,
+which happened to be the fifth of November, the very same as that on which
+the Gunpowder Plot chances to be occasionally held&mdash;Sundays
+excepted.&nbsp; According to custom, this being the fourth year, we
+collected a good few friends to a tea-drinking; and had our cracks and a
+glass or two of toddy.&nbsp; Thomas Burlings, if I mind, was there, and his
+wife; and Deacon Paunch, he was a bachelor; and likewise James Batter; and
+David Sawdust and his wife, and their four bairns, good customers; and a
+wheen more, that, without telling a lie, I could not venture to
+particularize at this moment, though maybe I may mind them when I am not
+wanting&mdash;but no matter.&nbsp; Well, as I was saying, after they all
+went away, and Nanse and me, after locking the door, slipped to our bed, I
+had one of the most miraculous dreams recorded in the history of man; more
+especially if we take into consideration where, when, and to whom it
+happened.</p>
+<p>At first I thought I was sitting by the fireside, where the cat and the
+kittling were playing with a mouse they had catched in the meal-kit,
+cracking with <!-- page 47--><a name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+47</span>James Batter on check-reels for yarn, and the cleverest way of
+winding pirns, when, all at once, I thought myself transplanted back to the
+auld world&mdash;forgetting the tailoring-trade; broad and narrow cloth;
+worsted boots and Kilmarnock cowls; pleasant Dalkeith; our late yearly
+ploy; my kith and kindred; the friends of the people; the Duke&rsquo;s
+parks; and so on&mdash;and found myself walking beneath beautiful trees,
+from the branches of which hung apples, and oranges, and cocky-nuts, and
+figs, and raisins, and plumdamases, and corry-danders, and more than the
+tongue of man can tell, while all the birds and beasts seemed as tame as
+our bantings; in fact, just as they were in the days of Adam and
+Eve&mdash;Bengal tigers passing by on this hand, and Russian bears on that,
+rowing themselves on the grass, out of fun; while peacocks, and magpies,
+and parrots, and cockytoos, and yorlins, and grey-linties, and all birds of
+sweet voice and fair feather, sported among the woods, as if they had
+nothing to do but sit and sing in the sweet sunshine, having dread neither
+of the net of the fowler, the double-barrelled gun of the gamekeeper, nor
+the laddies&rsquo; girn set with moorlings of bread.&nbsp; It was real
+paradise; and I found myself fairly lifted off my feet and transported out
+of my seven senses.</p>
+<p>While sauntering about at my leisure, with my Sunday hat on, and a pair
+of clean white cotton stockings, in this heavenly mood, under the green
+trees, <!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>and beside the still waters, out of which beautiful salmon trouts
+were sporting and leaping, methought in a moment I fell down in a trance,
+as flat as a flounder, and I heard a voice visibly saying to me,
+&ldquo;Thou shalt have a son; let him be christened Benjamin!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The joy that this vision brought my spirit thrilled through my bones, like
+the sounds of a blind man grinding &ldquo;Rule Britannia&rdquo; out of an
+organ, and my senses vanished from me into a kind of slumber, on rousing
+from which I thought I found myself walking, all dressed, with powdered
+hair, and a long tye behind, just like a grand gentleman, with a valuable
+bamboo walking-stick in my hand, among green yerbs and flowers, like an
+auncient hermit far away among the hills, at the back of beyont; as if
+broad cloth and buckram had never been heard tell of, and serge, twist,
+pocket-linings, and shamoy leather, were matters with which mortal man had
+no concern.</p>
+<p>Speak of auld-light or new-light as ye like, for my own part I am not
+much taken up with any of your warlock and wizard tribe; I have no brew of
+your auld Major Weir, or Tam o&rsquo; Shanter, or Michael Scott, or Thomas
+the Rhymer&rsquo;s kind, knocking in pins behind doors to make decent folk
+dance, jig, cut, and shuffle themselves to death&mdash;splitting the hills
+as ye would spelder a haddy, and playing all manner of evil pranks, and
+sinful abominations, till their crafty maister, Auld Nick, puts them to
+their mettle, by setting <!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 49</span>them to twine ropes out of sea-sand, and such
+like.&nbsp; I like none of your paternosters, and saying of prayers
+backwards, or drawing lines with chalk round ye, before crying,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Redcowl, redcowl, come if ye daur;<br />
+Lift the sneck, and draw the bar.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I never, in the whole course of my life, was fond of lending the
+sanction of my countenance to any thing that was not canny; and, even when
+I was a wee smout of a callant, with my jacket and trowsers buttoned all in
+one, I never would play, on Hallo&rsquo;-&rsquo;een night, at anything else
+but douking for apples, burning nuts, pulling kail-runts, foul water and
+clean, drapping the egg, or trying who was to be your sweetheart out of the
+lucky-bag.</p>
+<p>As I have often thought, and sometimes taken occasion to observe, it
+would be well for us all to profit by experience&mdash;&ldquo;burned bairns
+should dread the fire,&rdquo; as the proverb goes.&nbsp; After the
+miserable catastrophe of the playhouse, for instance&mdash;which I shall
+afterwards have occasion to commemorate in due time, and in a subsequent
+chapter of my eventful life&mdash;I would have been worse than mad, had I
+persisted, night after night, to pay my shilling for a veesy of vagrants in
+buckram, and limmers in silk, parading away at no allowance&mdash;as kings
+and queens, with their tale&mdash;speaking havers that only fools have
+throats wide enough to swallow, and giving <!-- page 50--><a
+name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>themselves airs to
+which they have no more earthly title than the man in the moon.&nbsp; I say
+nothing, besides, of their throwing glamour in honest folks een; but
+I&rsquo;ll not deny that I have been told by them who would not lie, and
+were living witnesses of the transaction, that, as true as death, they had
+seen the tane of these ne&rsquo;er-do-weels spit the other, through and
+through, with a weel-sharpened, old, Highland, forty-second Andrew Ferrary,
+in single combat; whereupon, as might reasonably be expected, he would, in
+the twinkling of a farthing rushlight, fall down as dead as a bag of sand;
+yet, by their rictum-ticktum, rise-up-Jack, slight-of-hand, hocus-pocus
+way, would be on his legs, brushing the stour from his breeches knees,
+before the green curtain was half-way down.&nbsp; James Batter himself once
+told me, that, when he was a laddie, he saw one of these clanjamphrey go in
+behind the scenes with nankeen trowsers, a blue coat out at the elbows, and
+fair hair hanging over his ears, and in less than no time, come out a real
+negro, as black as Robinson Crusoe&rsquo;s man Friday, with a jacket on his
+back of Macgregor tartan, and as good a pair of buckskin breeches as jockey
+ever mounted horse in at a Newmarket race.&nbsp; Where the silk stockings
+were wrought, and the Jerusalem sandals made, that he had on his feet,
+James Batter used doucely to observe he would leave every reasonable man to
+guess at a venture.</p>
+<p><!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>A
+good story not being the worse of being twice told, I repeat it over again,
+that I would have been worse than daft, after the precious warning it was
+my fortune to get, to have sanctioned such places with my presence, in
+spite of the remonstrances of my conscience&mdash;and of Maister
+Wiggie&mdash;and of the kirk-session.&nbsp; Whenever any thing is carried
+on out of the course of nature, especially when accompanied with dancing
+and singing, toot-tooing of clarionets, and bumming of bass-fiddles, ye may
+be as sure as you are born, that ye run a chance of being deluded out of
+your right senses&mdash;that the sounds are by way of lulling the soul
+asleep&mdash;and that, to the certainty of a without-a-doubt, you are in
+the heat and heart of one of the devil&rsquo;s rendevooses.</p>
+<p>To say no more, I was once myself, for example, at one of our Dalkeith
+fairs, present in a hay-loft&mdash;I think they charged threepence at the
+door, but let me in with a grudge for twopence, but no matter&mdash;to see
+a punch and puppie-show business, and other slight-of-hand work.&nbsp;
+Well, the very moment I put my neb within the door, I was visibly convinced
+of the smell of burnt roset, with, which I understand they make lightning,
+and knew, as well as maybe, what they had been trafficking about with their
+black art; but, nevertheless, having a stout heart, I determined to sit
+still, and see what they would make of it, knowing well enough, that, as
+long as I <!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+52</span>had the Psalm-book in my pocket, they would be gay and clever to
+throw any of their blasted cantrips over me.</p>
+<p>What do ye think they did?&nbsp; One of them, a wauf, drucken-looking
+scoundrel, fired a gold ring over the window, and mostly set fire to the
+thatch house opposite&mdash;which was not insured.&nbsp; Yet where think ye
+did the ring go to?&nbsp; With my living een I saw it taken out of auld
+Willie Turneep&rsquo;s waistcoat pouch, who was sitting blind fou, with his
+mouth open, on one of the back seats; so, by no earthly possibility could
+it have got there, except by whizzing round the gable, and in through the
+steeked door by the key-hole.</p>
+<p>Folk may say what they chuse by way of apology, but I neither like nor
+understand such on-going as changing sterling silver half-crowns into
+copper penny-pieces, or mending a man&rsquo;s coat&mdash;as they did mine,
+after cutting a blad out of one of the tails&mdash;by the black-art.</p>
+<p>But, hout-tout, one thing and another coming across me, had almost clean
+made me forget explaining to the world, the upshot of my extraordinary
+vision; but better late than never&mdash;and now for it.</p>
+<p>Nanse, on finding herself in a certain way, was a thought dumfoundered;
+and instead of laughing, as she did at first, when I told her my dream, she
+soon came to regard the matter as one of sober earnest.&nbsp; <!-- page
+53--><a name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>The very
+prospect of what was to happen threw a gleam of comfort round our bit
+fireside; and, long ere the day had come about which was to crown our
+expectations, Nanse was prepared with her bit stock of baby&rsquo;s wearing
+apparel, and all necessaries appertaining thereto&mdash;wee little mutches
+with lace borders, and side-knots of blue three-ha&rsquo;penny
+ribbon&mdash;long muslin frockies, vandyked across the breast, drawn round
+the waist with narrow nittings and tucked five rows about the
+tail&mdash;Welsh-flannel petticoaties&mdash;demity wrappers&mdash;a coral
+gumstick, and other uncos, which it does not befit the like of me to
+particularize.&nbsp; I trust, on my part, as far as in me lay, I was not
+found wanting; having taken care to provide a famous Dunlop cheese, at
+fivepence-halfpenny the pound&mdash;I believe I paled fifteen, in Joseph
+Gowdy&rsquo;s shop, before I fixed on it;&mdash;to say nothing of a bottle,
+or maybe two, of real peat-reek, Farintosh, small-still Hieland
+whisky&mdash;Glenlivat, I think, is the name o&rsquo;t&mdash;half a peck of
+shortbread, baken by Thomas Burlings, with three pounds of butter, and two
+ounces of carvie-seeds in it, let alone orange-peel, and a pennyworth of
+ground cinnamon&mdash;half a mutchkin of best cony brandy, by way of
+change&mdash;and a Musselburgh ankerstoke, to slice down for tea-drinkings
+and posset cups.</p>
+<p>Everyone has reason to be thankful, and me among the rest; for many a
+worse provided for, and less <!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 54</span>welcome down-lying has taken place, time out of
+mind, throughout broad Scotland.&nbsp; I say this with a warm heart, as I
+am grateful for my all mercies.&nbsp; To hundreds above hundreds such a
+catastrophe brings scarcely any joy at all; but it was far different with
+me, who had a Benjamin to look for.</p>
+<p>If the reader will be so kind as to look over the next chapter, he will
+find whether or not I was disappointed in my expectations.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+55</span>CHAPTER EIGHT&mdash;LETTING LODGINGS</h2>
+<p>It would be curious if I passed over a remarkable incident, which at
+this time fell out.&nbsp; Being but new beginners in the world, the wife
+and I put our heads constantly together to contrive for our forward
+advancement, as it is the bounden duty of all to do.&nbsp; So our housie
+being rather large (two rooms and a kitchen, not speaking of the
+coal-cellar and a hen-house,) and having as yet only the expectation of a
+family, we thought we could not do better than get John Varnish the
+painter, to do off a small ticket, with &ldquo;A Furnished Room to
+Let&rdquo; on it, which we nailed out at the window; having collected into
+it the choicest of our furniture, that it might fit a genteeler lodger and
+produce a better rent&mdash;And a lodger soon we got.</p>
+<p>Dog on it!&nbsp; I think I see him yet.&nbsp; He was a blackaviced
+Englishman, with curled whiskers and a powdered pow, stout round the
+waistband, and fond of good eating, let alone drinking, as we found to our
+cost.&nbsp; Well, he was our first lodger.&nbsp; We sought a good price,
+that we might, on bargaining, have the merit of coming down a tait; but no,
+no&mdash;go away wi&rsquo; ye; it was dog-cheap to him.&nbsp; The
+half-guinea a-week was judged perfectly moderate; but if all his debts
+were&mdash;yet I must not cut before the cloth.</p>
+<p>Hang expenses! was the order of the day.&nbsp; Ham and eggs for
+breakfast, let alone our currant jelly.&nbsp; Roast-mutton cold, and strong
+ale at twelve, by way <!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 56</span>of check, to keep away wind from the
+stomach.&nbsp; Smoking roast-beef, with scraped horse raddish, at four
+precisely; and toasted cheese, punch, and porter, for supper.&nbsp; It
+would have been less, had all the things been within ourselves.&nbsp;
+Nothing had we but the cauler new-laid eggs; then there was Deacon
+Heukbane&rsquo;s butcher&rsquo;s account; and John Cony&rsquo;s spirit
+account; and Thomas Burlings&rsquo; bap account; and deevil kens how many
+more accounts, that came all in upon us afterwards.&nbsp; But the crowning
+of all was reserved for the end.&nbsp; It was no farce at the time, and
+kept our heads down at the water edge for many a day.&nbsp; I was just
+driving the hot goose along the seams of a Sunday jacket I was finishing
+for Thomas Clod the ploughman, when the Englisher came in at the shop door,
+whistling &ldquo;Robert Adair,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Scots wha ha&rsquo;e
+wi&rsquo; Wallace bled,&rdquo; and whiles, maybe, churming to himself like
+a young blackbird;&mdash;but I have not patience to go through with
+it.&nbsp; The long and the short of the matter, however, was, that, after
+rummaging among my two or three webs of broadcloth on the shelf, he pitched
+on a Manchester blue, five quarters wide, marked CXD.XF, which is to say,
+three-and-twenty shillings the yard.&nbsp; I told him it was impossible to
+make a pair of pantaloons to him in two hours; but he insisted upon having
+them, alive or dead, as he had to go down the same afternoon to dine with
+my Lord Duke, no less.&nbsp; I convinced him, that if I was to sit up <!--
+page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>all night,
+he could get them by five next morning, if that would do, as I would keep
+my laddie, Tammy Bodkin, out of his bed; but no&mdash;I thought he would
+have jumped out of his seven senses.&nbsp; &ldquo;Just look,&rdquo; he
+said, turning up the inside seam of the leg&mdash;&ldquo;just see&mdash;can
+any gentleman make a visit in such things as these? they are as full of
+holes as a coal-sieve.&nbsp; I wonder the devil why my baggage has not come
+forward.&nbsp; Can I get a horse and boy to ride express to Edinburgh for a
+ready-made article?&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p56b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mansie&rsquo;s father" src="images/p56s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>A thought struck me; for I had heard of wonderful advancement in the
+world, for those who had been so lucky as help the great at a pinch.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If ye&rsquo;ll no take it amiss, sir,&rdquo; said I, making my
+obedience, &ldquo;a notion has just struck me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what is it?&rdquo; said he briskly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, I have a pair of knee-breeches, of most famous
+velveteen, double tweel, which have been only once on my legs, and that no
+farther gone than last Sabbath.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m pretty sure they would fit
+ye in the meantime; and I would just take a pleasure in driving the needle
+all night, to get your own ready.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A clever thought,&rdquo; said the Englisher.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you
+think they would fit me?&mdash;Devilish clever thought, indeed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To a hair,&rdquo; I answered; and cried to Nanse to bring the
+velveteens.</p>
+<p>I do not think he was ten minutes, when lo, and <!-- page 58--><a
+name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>behold! out at the door
+he went, and away past the shop-window like a lamplighter.&nbsp; The
+buttons on the velveteens were glittering like gold at the knees.&nbsp;
+Alas! it was like the flash of the setting sun; I never beheld them
+more.&nbsp; He was to have been back in two or three hours, but the laddie,
+with the box on his shoulder, was going through the street crying
+&ldquo;Hot penny-pies&rdquo; for supper, and neither word nor wittens of
+him.&nbsp; I began to be a thought uneasy, and fidgeted on the board like a
+hen on a hot girdle.&nbsp; No man should do anything when he is vexed, but
+I could not help giving Tammy Bodkin, who was sewing away at the lining of
+the new pantaloons, a terrible whisk in the lug for singing to
+himself.&nbsp; I say I was vexed for it afterwards; especially as the
+laddie did not mean to give offence; and as I saw the blae marks of my four
+fingers along his chaft-blade.</p>
+<p>The wife had been bothering me for a new gown, on strength of the
+payment of our grand bill; and in came she, at this blessed moment of time,
+with about twenty swatches from Simeon Calicoe&rsquo;s pinned on a screed
+of paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which of these do you think bonniest?&rdquo; said Nanse, in a
+flattering way; &ldquo;I ken, Mansie, you have a good taste.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cut not before the cloth,&rdquo; answered I,
+&ldquo;gudewife,&rdquo; with a wise shake of my head.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;ll be time enough, I daresay, to make your choice
+to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 59--><a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+59</span>Nanse went out as if her nose had been blooding.&nbsp; I could
+thole it no longer; so, buttoning my breeches-knees, I threw my cowl into a
+corner, clapped my hat on my head, and away down in full birr to the
+Duke&rsquo;s gate.</p>
+<p>I speired at the porter, if the gentleman with the velveteen breeches
+and powdered hair, that was dining with the Duke, had come up the avenue
+yet?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Velveteen breeches and powdered hair!&rdquo; said auld Paul
+laughing, and taking the pipe out of his cheek, &ldquo;whose butler
+is&rsquo;t that ye&rsquo;re after?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said I to him, &ldquo;I see it all as plain as a
+pikestaff.&nbsp; He is off bodily; but may the meat and the drink he has
+taken off us be like drogs to his inside; and may the velveteens play
+crack, and cast the steeks at every step he takes!&rdquo;&nbsp; It was no
+Christian wish; and Paul laughed till he was like to burst, at my
+expense.&nbsp; &ldquo;Gang your ways hame, Mansie,&rdquo; said he to me,
+clapping me on the shoulder as if I had been a wean, &ldquo;and give over
+setting traps, for ye see you have catched a Tartar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was too much; first to be cheated by a swindling loon, and then
+made game of by a flunkie; and, in my desperation, I determined to do some
+awful thing.</p>
+<p>Nanse followed me in from the door, and asked what news?&mdash;I was
+ower big, and ower vexed to hear her; so, never letting on, I went to the
+little looking-glass <!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 60</span>on the drawers&rsquo; head, and set it down on
+the table.&nbsp; Then I looked myself in it for a moment, and made a
+gruesome face.&nbsp; Syne I pulled out the little drawer, and got the
+sharping strap, the which I fastened to my button.&nbsp; Syne I took my
+razor from the box, and gave it five or six turns along first one side and
+then the other, with great precision.&nbsp; Syne I tried the edge of it
+along the flat of my hand.&nbsp; Syne I loosed my neckcloth, and laid it
+over the back of the chair; and syne I took out the button of my shirt
+neck, and folded it back.&nbsp; Nanse, who was, all time, standing behind,
+looking what I was after, asked me, &ldquo;if I was going to shave without
+hot water?&rdquo; when I said to her in a fierce and brave manner, (which
+was very cruel, considering the way she was in,) &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let you
+see that presently.&rdquo;&nbsp; The razor looked desperate sharp; and I
+never liked the sight of blood; but oh, I was in a terrible flurry and
+fermentation.&nbsp; A kind of cold trembling went through me; and I thought
+it best to tell Nanse what I was going to do, that she might be something
+prepared for it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fare ye well, my dear!&rdquo; said I to her,
+&ldquo;you will be a widow in five minutes&mdash;for here
+goes!&rdquo;&nbsp; I did not think she could have mustered so much courage,
+but she sprang at me like a tiger; and, throwing the razor into the
+ass-hole, took me round the neck, and cried like a bairn.&nbsp; First she
+was seized with a fit of the hystericks, and then with her pains.&nbsp;
+<!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 61</span>It
+was a serious time for us both, and no joke; for my heart smote me for my
+sin and cruelty.&nbsp; But I did my best to make up for it.&nbsp; I ran up
+and down like mad for the Howdie, and at last brought her trotting along
+with me by the lug.&nbsp; I could not stand it.&nbsp; I shut myself up in
+the shop with Tammy Bodkin, like Daniel in the lions&rsquo; den; and every
+now and then opened the door to spier what news.&nbsp; Oh, but my heart was
+like to break with anxiety!&nbsp; I paced up and down, and to and fro, with
+my Kilmarnock on my head, and my hands in my breeches pockets, like a man
+out of Bedlam.&nbsp; I thought it would never be over; but, at the second
+hour of the morning, I heard a wee squeel, and knew that I was a father;
+and so proud was I, that notwithstanding our loss, Lucky Bringthereout and
+me whanged away at the cheese and bread, and drank so briskly at the whisky
+and foot-yill, that, when she tried to rise and go away, she could not stir
+a foot.&nbsp; So Tammy and I had to oxter her out between us, and deliver
+the howdie herself&mdash;safe in at her own door.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+62</span>CHAPTER NINE&mdash;BENJIE&rsquo;S CHRISTENING</h2>
+<p>At the christening of our only bairn, Benjie, two or three remarkable
+circumstances occurred, which it behoves me to relate.</p>
+<p>It was on a cold November afternoon; and really when the bit room was
+all redd up, the fire bleezing away, and the candles lighted, every thing
+looked full tosh and comfortable.&nbsp; It was a real pleasure, after
+looking out into the drift that was fleeing like mad from the east, to turn
+one&rsquo;s neb inwards, and think that we had a civilized home to comfort
+us in the dreary season.&nbsp; So, one after another, the bit party we had
+invited to the ceremony came papping in; and the crack began to get loud
+and hearty; for, to speak the truth, we were blessed with canny friends,
+and a good neighbourhood.&nbsp; Notwithstanding, it was very curious, that
+I had no mind of asking down James Batter, the weaver, honest man, though
+he was one of our own elders; and in papped James, just when the company
+had haffins met, with his stocking-sleeves on his arms, his nightcap on his
+head, and his blue-stained apron hanging down before him, to light his pipe
+at our fire.</p>
+<p>James, when he saw his mistake, was fain to make his retreat; but we
+would not hear tell of it, till he came in, and took a dram out of the
+bottle, as we told him the not doing so would spoil the wean&rsquo;s
+beauty, which is an old freak, (the small-pox, however, afterwards did
+that;) so, with much persuasion, he took <!-- page 63--><a
+name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>a chair for a gliff,
+and began with some of his drolls&mdash;for he is a clever, humoursome man,
+as ye ever met with.&nbsp; But he had now got far on with his jests, when
+lo! a rap came to the door, and Mysie whipped away the bottle under her
+apron, saying, &ldquo;Wheesht, wheesht, for the sake of gudeness,
+there&rsquo;s the minister!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The room had only one door, and James mistook it, running his head, for
+lack of knowledge, into the open closet, just as the minister lifted the
+outer-door sneck.&nbsp; We were all now sitting on nettles, for we were
+frighted that James would be seized with a cough, for he was a wee
+asthmatic; or that some, knowing there was a thief in the pantry, might
+hurt good manners by breaking out into a giggle.&nbsp; However, all for a
+considerable time was quiet, and the ceremony was performed; little Nancy,
+our niece, handing the bairn upon my arm to receive its name.&nbsp; So, we
+thought, as the minister seldom made a long stay on similar occasions, that
+all would pass off well enough&mdash;But wait a wee.</p>
+<p>There was but one of our company that had not cast up, to wit, Deacon
+Paunch, the flesher, a most worthy man, but tremendously big, and grown to
+the very heels; as was once seen on a wager, that his ankle was greater
+than my brans.&nbsp; It was really a pain to all feeling Christians, to see
+the worthy man waigling about, being, when weighed in his own <!-- page
+64--><a name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>scales,
+two-and-twenty stone ten ounces, Dutch weight.&nbsp; Honest man, he had had
+a sore fecht with the wind and the sleet, and he came in with a shawl
+roppined round his neck, peching like a broken-winded horse; so fain was he
+to find a rest for his weary carcass in our stuffed chintz pattern
+elbow-chair by the fire cheek.</p>
+<p>From the soughing of wind at the window, and the rattling in the lum, it
+was clear to all manner of comprehension, that the night was a dismal one;
+so the minister, seeing so many of his own douce folk about him, thought he
+might do worse than volunteer to sit still, and try our toddy: indeed, we
+would have pressed him before this to do so; but what was to come of James
+Batter, who was shut up in the closet, like the spies in the house of
+Rahab, the harlot, in the city of Jericho?</p>
+<p>James began to find it was a bad business; and having been driving the
+shuttle about from before daylight, he was fain to cruik his hough, and
+felt round about him quietly in the dark for a chair to sit down upon,
+since better might not be.&nbsp; But, wae&rsquo;s me! the cat was soon out
+of the pock.</p>
+<p>Me and the minister were just argle-bargling some few words on the
+doctrine of the camel and the eye of the needle, when, in the midst of our
+discourse, as all was wheesht and attentive, an awful thud was heard in the
+closet, which gave the minister, who <!-- page 65--><a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>thought the house had
+fallen down, such a start, that his very wig louped for a full
+three-eighths off his crown.&nbsp; I say we were needcessitated to let the
+cat out of the pock for two reasons; firstly, because we did not know what
+had happened; and, secondly, to quiet the minister&rsquo;s fears, decent
+man, for he was a wee nervous.&nbsp; So we made a hearty laugh of it, as
+well as we could, and opened the door to bid James Batter come out, as we
+confessed all.&nbsp; Easier said than done, howsoever.&nbsp; When we pulled
+open the door, and took forward one of the candles, there was James doubled
+up, sticking twofold like a rotten in a sneck-trap, in an old chair, the
+bottom of which had gone down before him, and which, for some craize about
+it, had been put out of the way by Nanse, that no accident might
+happen.&nbsp; Save us! if the deacon had sate down upon it, pity on our
+brick-floor.</p>
+<p>Well, after some ado, we got James, who was more frighted than hurt,
+hauled out of his hidy-hole; and after lifting off his cowl, and sleeking
+down his front hair, he took a seat beside us, apologeezing for not being
+in his Sunday&rsquo;s garb, the which the minister, who was a free and easy
+man, declared there was no occasion for, and begged him to make himself
+comfortable.</p>
+<p>Well, passing over that business, Mr Wiggie and me entered into our
+humours, for the drappikie was beginning to tell on my noddle, and make me
+somewhat <!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>venturesome&mdash;not to say that I was not a little proud to have
+the minister in my bit housie; so, says I to him in a cosh way, &ldquo;Ye
+may believe me or no, Mr Wiggie, but mair than me think ye out of sight the
+best preacher in the parish&mdash;nane of them, Mr Wiggie; can hold the
+candle to ye, man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weesht, weesht,&rdquo; said the body, in rather a cold way that I
+did not expect, knowing him to be as proud as a peacock&mdash;&ldquo;I
+daresay I am just like my neighbours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was not quite so kind&mdash;so says I to him, &ldquo;Maybe, sae,
+for many a one thinks ye could not hold a candle to Mr Blowster the
+Cameronian, that whiles preaches at Lugton.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was a stramp on his corny toe.&nbsp; &ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; answered
+Mr Wiggie, rather nettled; &ldquo;let us drop that subject.&nbsp; I preach
+like my neighbours.&nbsp; Some of them may be worse, and others better;
+just as some of your own trade may make clothes worse, and some better,
+than yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My corruption was raised.&nbsp; &ldquo;I deny that,&rdquo; said I, in a
+brisk manner, which I was sorry for after&mdash;&ldquo;I deny that, Mr
+Wiggie,&rdquo; says I to him; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll make a pair of breeches
+with the face of clay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But this was only a passing breeze, during the which, howsoever, I
+happened to swallow my thimble, which accidentally slipped off my middle
+finger, causing both me and the company general alarm, as there <!-- page
+67--><a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>were great
+fears that it might mortify in the stomach; but it did not; and neither
+word nor wittens of it have been seen or heard tell of from that to this
+day.&nbsp; So, in two or three minutes, we had some few good songs, and a
+round of Scotch proverbs, when the clock chapped eleven.&nbsp; We were all
+getting, I must confess, a thought noisy; Johnny Soutter having broken a
+dram-glass, and Willie Fegs couped a bottle on the bit table-cloth; all
+noisy, I say, except Deacon Paunch, douce man, who had fallen into a
+pleasant slumber; so, when the minister rose to take his hat, they all rose
+except the Deacon, whom we shook by the arms for some time, but in vain, to
+waken him.&nbsp; His round, oily face, good creature, was just as if it had
+been cut out of a big turnip, it was so fat, fozy, and soft; but at last,
+after some ado, we succeeded, and he looked about him with a wild stare,
+opening his two red eyes, like Pandore oysters, asking what had happened;
+and we got him hoized up on his legs, tying the blue shawl round his
+bull-neck again.</p>
+<p>Our company had not got well out of the door, and I was priding myself
+in my heart, about being landlord to such a goodly turn out, when Nanse
+took me by the arm, and said, &ldquo;Come, and see such an unearthly
+sight.&rdquo;&nbsp; This startled me, and I hesitated; but, at long and
+last, I went in with her, a thought alarmed at what had happened,
+and&mdash;my gracious!! there on the easy-chair, was our bonny
+tortoise-shell cat; <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 68</span>Tommy, with the red morocco collar about its
+neck, bruised as flat as a flounder, and as dead as a mawk!!!</p>
+<p>The Deacon had sat down upon it without thinking; and the poor animal,
+that our neighbours&rsquo; bairns used to play with, and be so fond of, was
+crushed out of life without a cheep.&nbsp; The thing, doubtless, was not
+intended, but it gave Nanse and me a very sore heart.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 69--><a name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+69</span>CHAPTER TEN&mdash;RESURRECTION MEN</h2>
+<p>About this time there arose a great sough and surmise, that some loons
+were playing false with the kirkyard, howking up the bodies from their damp
+graves, and harling them away to the College.&nbsp; Words cannot describe
+the fear, and the dool, and the misery it caused.&nbsp; All flocked to the
+kirk-yett; and the friends of the newly buried stood by the mools, which
+were yet dark, and the brown newly cast divots, that had not yet taken
+root, looking, with mournful faces, to descry any tokens of sinking in.</p>
+<p>I&rsquo;ll never forget it.&nbsp; I was standing by when three young
+lads took shools, and, lifting up the truff, proceeded to houk down to the
+coffin, wherein they had laid the grey hairs of their mother.&nbsp; They
+looked wild and bewildered like, and the glance of their een was like that
+of folk out of a mad-house; and none dared in the world to have spoken to
+them.&nbsp; They did not even speak to one another; but wrought on with a
+great hurry, till the spades struck on the coffin lid&mdash;which was
+broken.&nbsp; The dead-clothes were there huddled together in a nook, but
+the dead was gone.&nbsp; I took hold of Willie Walker&rsquo;s arm, and
+looked down.&nbsp; There was a cold sweat all over me;&mdash;losh me! but I
+was terribly frighted and eerie.&nbsp; Three more graves were opened, and
+all just alike; save and except that of a wee unchristened wean, which was
+off bodily, coffin and all.</p>
+<p><!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>There was a burst of righteous indignation throughout the parish;
+nor without reason.&nbsp; Tell me that doctors and graduates must have the
+dead; but tell it not to Mansie Wauch, that our hearts must be trampled in
+the mire of scorn, and our best feelings laughed at, in order that a bruise
+may be properly plastered up, or a sore head cured.&nbsp; Verily, the
+remedy is worse than the disease.</p>
+<p>But what remead?&nbsp; It was to watch in the session-house, with loaded
+guns, night about, three at a time.&nbsp; I never liked to go into the
+kirkyard after darkening, let-a-be to sit there through a long winter
+night, windy and rainy it may be, with none but the dead around us.&nbsp;
+Save us! it was an unco thought, and garred all my flesh creep; but the
+cause was good&mdash;my corruption was raised&mdash;and I was determined
+not to be dauntened.</p>
+<p>I counted and counted, but the dread day at length came and I was
+summoned.&nbsp; All the live-long afternoon, when ca&rsquo;ing the needle
+upon the board, I tried to whistle Jenny Nettles, Neil Gow, and other funny
+tunes, and whiles crooned to myself between hands; but my consternation was
+visible, and all would not do.</p>
+<p>It was in November; and the cold glimmering sun sank behind the
+Pentlands.&nbsp; The trees had been shorn of their frail leaves, and the
+misty night was closing fast in upon the dull and short day; but the
+candles glittered at the shop windows, and leery-light-the-lamps <!-- page
+71--><a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 71</span>was brushing
+about with his ladder in his oxter, and bleezing flamboy sparking out
+behind him.&nbsp; I felt a kind of qualm of faintness and down-sinking
+about my heart and stomach, to the dispelling of which I took a thimbleful
+of spirits, and, tying my red comforter about my neck, I marched briskly to
+the session-house.&nbsp; A neighbour (Andrew Goldie, the pensioner) lent me
+his piece, and loaded it to me.&nbsp; He took tent that it was only
+half-cock, and I wrapped a napkin round the dog-head, for it was
+raining.&nbsp; Not being well acquaint with guns, I kept the muzzle aye
+away from me; as it is every man&rsquo;s duty not to throw his precious
+life into jeopardy.</p>
+<p>A furm was set before the session-house fire, which bleezed brightly,
+nor had I any thought that such an unearthly place could have been made to
+look half so comfortable either by coal or candle; so my spirits rose up as
+if a weight had been taken off them, and I wondered, in my bravery, that a
+man like me could be afraid of anything.&nbsp; Nobody was there but a
+touzy, ragged, halflins callant of thirteen, (for I speired his age,) with
+a desperate dirty face, and long carroty hair, tearing a speldrin with his
+teeth, which looked long and sharp enough, and throwing the skin and lugs
+into the fire.</p>
+<p>We sat for mostly an hour together, cracking the best way we could in
+such a place; nor was anybody more likely to cast up.&nbsp; The night was
+now <!-- page 72--><a name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+72</span>pitmirk; the wind soughed amid the head-stones and railings of the
+gentry, (for we must all die,) and the black corbies in the steeple-holes
+cackled and crawed in a fearsome manner.&nbsp; All at once we heard a
+lonesome sound; and my heart began to play pit-pat&mdash;my skin grew all
+rough, like a pouked chicken&mdash;and I felt as if I did not know what was
+the matter with me.&nbsp; It was only a false alarm, however, being the
+warning of the clock; and, in a minute or two thereafter, the bell struck
+ten.&nbsp; Oh, but it was a lonesome and dreary sound!&nbsp; Every chap
+went through my breast like the dunt of a fore-hammer.</p>
+<p>Then up and spak the red-headed laddie:&mdash;&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no fair;
+anither should hae come by this time.&nbsp; I wad rin awa hame, only I am
+frighted to gang out my lane.&mdash;Do ye think the doup of that candle wad
+carry i&rsquo; my cap?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Na, na, lad; we maun bide here, as we are here now.&mdash;Leave
+me alane?&nbsp; Lord save us! and the yett lockit, and the bethrel sleeping
+with the key in his breek pouches!&mdash;We canna win out now though we
+would,&rdquo; answered I, trying to look brave, though half frightened out
+of my seven senses:&mdash;&ldquo;Sit down, sit down; I&rsquo;ve baith
+whisky and porter wi&rsquo; me.&nbsp; Hae, man, there&rsquo;s a cawker to
+keep your heart warm; and set down that bottle,&rdquo; quoth I, wiping the
+saw-dust affn&rsquo;t with my hand, &ldquo;to get a toast; I&rsquo;se
+warrant it for Deacon Jaffrey&rsquo;s best brown stout.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p72b.jpg">
+<img alt="Rev. Mr Wiggie" src="images/p72s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+73</span>The wind blew higher, and like a hurricane; the rain began to fall
+in perfect spouts; the auld kirk rumbled and rowed, and made a sad
+soughing; and the branches of the bourtree behind the house, where auld
+Cockburn that cut his throat was burned, creaked and crazed in a frightful
+manner; but as to the roaring of the troubled waters, and the bumming in
+the lum-head, they were past all power of description.&nbsp; To make bad
+worse, just in the heart of the brattle, the grating sound of the yett
+turning on its rusty hinges was but too plainly heard.&nbsp; What was to be
+done?&nbsp; I thought of our both running away; and then of our locking
+ourselves in, and firing through the door; but who was to pull the
+trigger?</p>
+<p>Gudeness watch over us!&nbsp; I tremble yet when I think on it.&nbsp; We
+were perfectly between the de&rsquo;il and the deep sea&mdash;either to
+stand still and fire our gun, or run and be shot at.&nbsp; It was really a
+hang choice.&nbsp; As I stood swithering and shaking, the laddie flew to
+the door, and, thrawing round the key, clapped his back to it.&nbsp; Oh!
+how I looked at him, as he stood for a gliff, like a magpie hearkening with
+his lug cocked up, or rather like a terrier watching a rotten.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re coming! they&rsquo;re coming!&rdquo; he cried out;
+&ldquo;cock the piece, ye sumph;&rdquo; while the red hair rose up from his
+pow like feathers; &ldquo;they&rsquo;re coming, I hear them tramping on the
+gravel.&rdquo;&nbsp; Out he stretched his arms against the wall, and
+brizzed his back against the door like <!-- page 74--><a
+name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>mad; as if he had been
+Samson pushing over the pillars in the house of Dagon.&nbsp; &ldquo;For the
+Lord&rsquo;s sake, prime the gun,&rdquo; he cried out, &ldquo;or our
+throats will be cut frae lug to lug before we can cry Jack Robison!&nbsp;
+See that there&rsquo;s priming in the pan.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I did the best I could; but my whole strength could hardly lift up the
+piece, which waggled to and fro like a cock&rsquo;s tail on a rainy day; my
+knees knocked against one another, and though I was resigned to die&mdash;I
+trust I was resigned to die&mdash;&rsquo;od, but it was a frightful thing
+to be out of one&rsquo;s bed, and to be murdered in an old session-house,
+at the dead hour of night, by unearthly resurrection men, or rather let me
+call them deevils incarnate, wrapt up in dreadnoughts, with blacked faces,
+pistols, big sticks, and other deadly weapons.</p>
+<p>A snuff-snuffing was heard; and, through below the door, I saw a pair of
+glancing black een.&nbsp; &rsquo;Od, but my heart nearly louped off the
+bit&mdash;a snouff, and a gur-gurring, and over all the plain tramp of a
+man&rsquo;s heavy tackets and cuddy-heels among the gravel.&nbsp; Then came
+a great slap like thunder on the wall; and the laddie, quitting his grip,
+fell down, crying, &ldquo;Fire, fire!&mdash;murder! holy murder!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wha&rsquo;s there?&rdquo; growled a deep rough voice;
+&ldquo;open, I&rsquo;m a freend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I tried to speak, but could not; something like a halfpenny roll was
+sticking in my throat, so I tried <!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 75</span>to cough it up, but it would not come.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Gie the pass-word then,&rdquo; said the laddie, staring as if his
+eyes would loup out; &ldquo;gie the pass-word!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>First came a loud whistle, and then &ldquo;Copmahagen,&rdquo; answered
+the voice.&nbsp; Oh! what a relief!&nbsp; The laddie started up, like one
+crazy with joy.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ou! ou!&rdquo; cried he, thrawing round the
+key, and rubbing his hands; &ldquo;by jingo, it&rsquo;s the
+bethrel&mdash;it&rsquo;s the bethrel&mdash;it&rsquo;s auld Isaac
+himsell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>First rushed in the dog, and then Isaac, with his glazed hat, slouched
+over his brow, and his horn bowet glimmering by his knee.&nbsp; &ldquo;Has
+the French landed, do ye think?&nbsp; Losh keep us a&rsquo;,&rdquo; said
+he, with a smile on his half-idiot face (for he was a kind of a sort of a
+natural, with an infirmity in his leg), &lsquo;&ldquo;od sauf us, man, put
+by your gun.&nbsp; Ye dinna mean to shoot me, do ye?&nbsp; What are ye
+about here with the door lockit?&nbsp; I just keepit four resurrectioners
+louping ower the wall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gude guide us!&rdquo; I said, taking a long breath to drive the
+blood from my heart, and something relieved by Isaac&rsquo;s
+company&mdash;&ldquo;Come now, Isaac, ye&rsquo;re just gieing us a
+fright.&nbsp; Isn&rsquo;t that true, Isaac?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;m joking&mdash;and what for no?&mdash;but they might
+have been, for onything ye wad hae hindered them to the contrair, I&rsquo;m
+thinking.&nbsp; Na, na, ye maunna lock the door; that&rsquo;s no fair
+play.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When the door was put ajee, and the furm set fornent <!-- page 76--><a
+name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>the fire, I gave Isaac
+a dram to keep his heart up on such a cold stormy night.&nbsp; &rsquo;Od,
+but he was a droll fellow, Isaac.&nbsp; He sung and leuch as if he had been
+boozing in Luckie Thamson&rsquo;s, with some of his drucken cronies.&nbsp;
+Feint a hair cared he about auld kirks, or kirkyards, or vouts, or
+through-stanes, or dead folk in their winding-sheets, with the wet grass
+growing over them, and at last I began to brighten up a wee myself; so when
+he had gone over a good few funny stories, I said to him, quoth I,
+&ldquo;Mony folk, I daresay, mak mair noise about their sitting up in a
+kirkyard than it&rsquo;s a&rsquo; worth.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s naething here
+to harm us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I beg to differ wi&rsquo; ye there,&rdquo; answered Isaac, taking
+out his horn mull from his coat pouch, and tapping on the lid in a queer
+style&mdash;&ldquo;I could gie anither version of that story.&nbsp; Did ye
+no ken of three young doctors&mdash;Eirish students&mdash;alang with some
+resurrectioners, as waff and wile as themsells, firing shottie for shottie
+with the guard at Kirkmabreck, and lodging three slugs in ane of their
+backs, forbye firing a ramrod through anither ane&rsquo;s hat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was a wee alarming&mdash;&ldquo;No,&rdquo; quoth I; &ldquo;no,
+Isaac, man; I never heard of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, let alane resurrectioners, do you no think there is sic a
+thing as ghaists?&nbsp; Guide ye, man, my grannie could hae telled as
+muckle about them as would have filled a minister&rsquo;s sermons from June
+to January.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 77--><a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+77</span>&ldquo;Kay&mdash;kay&mdash;that&rsquo;s all buff,&rdquo; I
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are there nae cutty-stool businesses&mdash;are there nae
+marriages going on just now, Isaac?&rdquo; for I was keen to change the
+subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye may kay&mdash;kay, as ye like, though; I can just tell ye
+this:&mdash;Ye&rsquo;ll mind auld Armstrong with the leather breeks, and
+the brown three-story wig&mdash;him that was the grave-digger?&nbsp; Weel,
+he saw a ghaist, wi&rsquo; his leeving een&mdash;aye, and what&rsquo;s
+better, in this very kirkyard too.&nbsp; It was a cauld spring morning, and
+daylight just coming in when he came to the yett yonder, thinking to meet
+his man, paidling Jock&mdash;but Jock had sleepit in, and wasna
+there.&nbsp; Weel, to the wast corner ower yonder he gaed, and throwing his
+coat ower a headstane, and his hat on the tap o&rsquo;t, he dug away with
+his spade, casting out the mools, and the coffin handles, and the green
+banes and sic like, till he stoppit a wee to take breath.&mdash;What! are
+ye whistling to yoursell?&rdquo; quoth Isaac to me, &ldquo;and no hearing
+what&rsquo;s God&rsquo;s truth?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ou, ay,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;but ye didna tell me if onybody was
+cried last Sunday?&rdquo;&mdash;I would have given every farthing I had
+made by the needle, to have been at that blessed time in my bed with my
+wife and wean.&nbsp; Ay, how I was gruing!&nbsp; I mostly chacked off my
+tongue in chittering.&mdash;But all would not do.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, speaking of ghaists&mdash;when he was resting on his spade
+he looked up to the steeple, to see what <!-- page 78--><a
+name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>o&rsquo;clock it was,
+wondering what way Jock hadna come, when lo! and behold, in the lang diced
+window of the kirk yonder, he saw a lady a&rsquo; in white, with her hands
+clasped thegither, looking out to the kirkyard at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He couldna believe his een, so he rubbit them with his sark
+sleeve, but she was still there bodily; and, keeping ae ee on her, and
+anither on his road to the yett, he drew his coat and hat to him below his
+arm, and aff like mad, throwing the shool half a mile ahint him.&nbsp; Jock
+fand that; for he was coming singing in at the yett, when his maister ran
+clean ower the tap o&rsquo; him, and capsized him like a toom barrel; never
+stopping till he was in at his ain house, and the door baith bolted and
+barred at his tail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did ye ever hear the like of that, Mansie?&nbsp; Weel, man,
+I&rsquo;ll explain the hail history of it to ye.&nbsp; Ye
+see&mdash;&rsquo;Od! how sound that callant&rsquo;s sleeping,&rdquo;
+continued Isaac; &ldquo;he&rsquo;s snoring like a
+nine-year-auld!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was glad he had stopped, for I was like to sink through the ground
+with fear; but no, it would not do.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dinna ye ken&mdash;sauf us! what a fearsome night this is!&nbsp;
+The trees will be all broken.&nbsp; What a noise in the lum!&nbsp; I
+daresay there&rsquo;s some auld hag of a witch-wife gaun to come rumble
+doun&rsquo;t.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s no the first time, I&rsquo;ll swear.&nbsp;
+Hae ye a silver sixpence?&nbsp; Wad ye like that?&rdquo; he bawled up the
+chimney.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ll hae heard,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;lang
+ago, that a wee murdered wean was buried&mdash;didna ye hear a
+voice?&mdash;was buried <!-- page 79--><a name="page79"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 79</span>below that corner&mdash;the hearth-stane there,
+where the laddie&rsquo;s lying on?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had now lost my breath, so that I could not stop him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye never heard tell o&rsquo;t, didna ye?&nbsp; Weel, I&rsquo;se
+tell&rsquo;t ye&mdash;Sauf us, what swurls of smoke coming doun the
+chimley&mdash;I could swear something no canny&rsquo;s stopping up the lum
+head&mdash;Gang out, and see!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that moment a clap like thunder was heard&mdash;the candle was driven
+over&mdash;the sleeping laddie roared &ldquo;Help!&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Murder!&rdquo; and &ldquo;Thieves!&rdquo; and, as the furm on which
+we were sitting played flee backwards, cripple Isaac bellowed out,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m dead!&mdash;I&rsquo;m killed&mdash;shot through the
+head!&mdash;Oh! oh! oh!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Surely I had fainted away; for, when I came to myself, I found my red
+comforter loosed; my face all wet&mdash;Isaac rubbing down his waistcoat
+with his sleeve&mdash;the laddie swigging ale out of a bicker&mdash;and the
+brisk brown stout, which, by casting its cork, had caused all the alarm,
+whizz&mdash;whizz&mdash;whizzing in the chimley lug.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+80</span>CHAPTER ELEVEN&mdash;TAFFY WITH THE PIGTAIL: SCHOOL
+RECOLLECTIONS</h2>
+<p>It was a clear starry night, in the blasty month of January, I mind it
+well.&nbsp; The snow had fallen during the afternoon; or, as Benjie came in
+crying, that &ldquo;the auld wives o&rsquo; the norlan sky were plucking
+their geese&rdquo;; and it continued dim and dowie till towards the
+gloaming, when, as the road-side labourers were dandering home from their
+work, some with pickaxes and others with shools, and just as our cocks and
+hens were going into their beds, poor things, the lift cleared up to a
+sharp freeze, and the well-ordered stars came forth glowing over the blue
+sky.&nbsp; Between six and seven the moon rose; and I could not get my two
+prentices in from the door, where they were bickering one another with
+snow-balls, or maybe carhailling the folk on the street in their idle
+wantonness; so I was obliged for that night to disappoint Edie Macfarlane
+of the pair of black spatterdashes he was so anxious to get finished, for
+dancing in next day, at Souple Jack the carpenter&rsquo;s grand
+penny-wedding.</p>
+<p>Seeing that little more good was to be expected till morning, I came to
+the resolution of shutting-in half-an-hour earlier than usual; so, as I was
+carrying out the shop-shutters, with my hat over my cowl, for it was
+desperately sharp, I mostly in my hurry knocked down an old man, that was
+coming up to ask me, &ldquo;if I was Maister Wauch the tailor and
+furnisher.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 81--><a name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+81</span>Having told him that I was myself, instead of a better; and having
+asked him to step in, that I might have a glimpse of his face at the
+candle, I saw that he was a stranger, dressed in a droll auld-farrant green
+livery-coat, faced with white.&nbsp; His waistcoat was cut in the Parly-voo
+fashion, with long lappels, and a double row of buttons down the breast;
+and round his neck he had a black corded stock, such like, but not so
+broad, as I afterwards wore in the volunteers, when drilling under Big
+Sam.&nbsp; He had a well-worn scraper on his head, peaked before and
+behind, with a bit crape knotted round it, which he politely took off,
+making a low bow; and requesting me to bargain with him for a few articles
+of grand second-hand apparel, which once belonged to his master that was
+deceased, and which was now carried by himself, in a bundle under his left
+oxter.</p>
+<p>Happening never to make a trade of dealing in this line, and not very
+sure like as to how the old man might have come by the bundle in these
+riotous and knock-him-down times, I swithered a moment, giving my chin a
+rub, before answering; and then advised him to take a step in at his
+leisure to St Mary&rsquo;s Wynd, where he would meet in with merchants in
+scores.&nbsp; But no; he seemed determined to strike a bargain with me; and
+I heard from the man&rsquo;s sponsible and feasible manner of
+speech&mdash;for he was an old weatherbeaten-looking body of a creature,
+with gleg een, a <!-- page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 82</span>cock nose, white locks, and a tye
+behind&mdash;that the clothes must have been left him, as a kind of
+friendly keepsake, by his master, now beneath the mools.&nbsp; Thinking by
+this, that if I got them at a wanworth, I might boldly venture, I
+condescended to his loosing down the bundle, which was in a blue silk
+napkin with yellow flowers.&nbsp; As he was doing this, he told me that he
+was on his way home from the north to his own country, which lay among the
+green Welsh hills, far away; and that he could not carry much luggage with
+him, as he was obliged to travel with his baggage tied up in a bundle, on
+the end of his walking-staff, over his right shoulder.</p>
+<p>Pity me! what a grand coat it was!&nbsp; I thought at first it must have
+been worn on the King&rsquo;s own back, honest man; for it was made of
+green velvet, and embroidered all round about&mdash;back seams, side seams,
+flaps, lappels, button-holes, nape and cuffs, with gold lace and spangles,
+in a manner to have dazzled the understanding of any Jew with a beard
+shorter than his arm.&nbsp; So, no wonder that it imposed on the like of
+me; and I was mostly ashamed to make him an offer for it of a crown-piece
+and a dram.&nbsp; The waistcoat, which was of white satin, single-breasted,
+and done up with silver tinsel in a most beautiful manner, I also bought
+from him for a couple of shillings, and four hanks of black thread.&nbsp;
+Though I would on no account or consideration give him a bode for the
+Hessian boots, <!-- page 83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+83</span>which having cuddy-heels and long silk tossels, were by far and
+away over grand for the like of a tailor, such as me, and fit for the
+Sunday&rsquo;s wear of some fashionable Don of the first water.&nbsp;
+However, not to part uncivilly, and be as good as my word, I brought ben
+Nanse&rsquo;s bottle, and gave him a cawker at the shop counter; and, after
+taking a thimbleful to myself, to drink a good journey to him, I bade him
+take care of his feet, as the causeway was frozen, and saw the auld flunkie
+safely over the strand with a candle.</p>
+<p>Ye may easily conceive that Nanse got a surprise, when I paraded ben to
+the room with the grand coat and waistcoat on, cocking up my head, putting
+my hands into the haunch pockets, and strutting about more like a peacock
+than a douce elder of Maister Wiggie&rsquo;s kirk; so just as, thinking
+shame of myself, I was about to throw it off, I found something bulky at
+the bottom of the side pocket, which I discovered to be a wheen papers
+fastened together with green tape.&nbsp; Finding they were written in a
+real neat hand, I put on my spectacles, and sending up the close for James
+Batter, we sat round the fireside, and read away like nine-year-aulds.</p>
+<p>The next matter of consideration was, whether, in buying the coat as it
+stood, the paper belonged to me, or the old flunkie waiting-servant with
+the peaked hat.&nbsp; James and me, after an hour and a half&rsquo;s
+argle-bargleing pro and con, in the way of Parliament-house <!-- page
+84--><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>lawyers, came
+at last to be unanimously of opinion, that according to the auld Scotch
+proverb of</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;He that finds keeps,<br />
+And he that loses seeks,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>whatever was part or pendicle of the coat at the time of purchase, when
+it hung exposed for sale over the white-headed Welshman&rsquo;s little
+finger, became according to the law of nature and nations, as James Batter
+wisely observed, part and pendicle of the property of me, Mansie Wauch, the
+legal purchaser.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding all this, however, I was not sincerely convinced in my
+own conscience; and I daresay if the creature had cast up, and come seeking
+them back, I would have found myself bound to make restitution.&nbsp; This
+is not now likely to happen; for twenty long years have come and passed
+away, like the sunshine of yesterday, and neither word nor wittens of the
+body have been seen or heard tell of; so, according to the course of
+nature, being a white-headed old man, with a pigtail, when the bargain was
+made, his dust and bones have, in all likelihood, long ago mouldered down
+beneath the green turf of his own mountains, like his granfather&rsquo;s
+before him.&nbsp; This being the case, I daresay it is the reader&rsquo;s
+opinion as well as my own, that I am quite at liberty to make what use of
+them I like.&nbsp; Concerning the poem things that came first in hand, I do
+not pretend to be any judge; but James thinks he could scarcely write any
+<!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>muckle better himself: so here goes; but I cannot tell you to what
+tune:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">SONG</p>
+<p>I</p>
+<p>They say that other eyes are bright,<br />
+&nbsp; I see no eyes like thine;<br />
+So full of Heaven&rsquo;s serenest light,<br />
+&nbsp; Like midnight stars they shine.</p>
+<p>II</p>
+<p>They say that other cheeks are fair&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; But fairer cannot glow<br />
+The rosebud in the morning air,<br />
+&nbsp; Or blood on mountain snow.</p>
+<p>III</p>
+<p>Thy voice&mdash;Oh sweet it streams to me,<br />
+&nbsp; And charms my raptured breast;<br />
+Like music on the moonlight sea,<br />
+&nbsp; When waves are lull&rsquo;d to rest.</p>
+<p>IV</p>
+<p>The wealth of worlds were vain to give<br />
+&nbsp; Thy sinless heart to buy;<br />
+Oh I will bless thee while I live,<br />
+&nbsp; And love thee till I die!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From this song it appears a matter beyond doubt&mdash;for I know human
+nature&mdash;that the flunkie&rsquo;s master had, in his earlier years,
+been deeply in love with some beautiful young lady, that loved him again,
+and that maybe, with a bounding and bursting heart, durst not let her
+affection be shown, from dread of her cruel relations, who insisted on her
+marrying some lord or baronet that she did not care one button about.&nbsp;
+If so, unhappy pair, I pity them!&nbsp; Were <!-- page 86--><a
+name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>we to guess our way in
+the dark a wee farther, I think it not altogether unlikely, that he must
+have fallen in with his sweetheart abroad, when wandering about on his
+travels; for what follows seems to come as it were from her, lamenting his
+being called to leave her forlorn and return home.&nbsp; This is all merely
+supposition on my part, and in the antiquarian style, whereby much is made
+out of little; but both me and James Batter are determined to be
+unanimously of this opinion, until otherwise convinced to the
+contrary.&nbsp; Love is a fiery and fierce passion every where; but I am
+told that we, who live in a more favoured land, know very little of the
+terrible effects it sometimes causes, and the bloody tragedies, which it
+has a thousand times produced, where the heart of man is uncontrolled by
+reason or religion, and his blood heated into a raging fever, by the
+burning sun that glows in the heaven above his head.</p>
+<p>Here follows the poem of Taffy&rsquo;s master&rsquo;s foreign
+sweetheart; which, considering it to be a woman&rsquo;s handiwork, is, I
+daresay, not that far amiss.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">SONG OF THE SOUTH</p>
+<p>I</p>
+<p>Of all the garden flowers<br />
+&nbsp; The fairest is the rose;<br />
+Of winds that stir the bowers,<br />
+&nbsp; Oh! there is none that blows<br />
+Like the south&mdash;the gentle south&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; For that balmy breeze is ours.</p>
+<p><!-- page 87--><a name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+87</span>II</p>
+<p>Cold is the frozen north;<br />
+&nbsp; In its stern and savage mood,<br />
+&rsquo;Mid gales, come drifting forth<br />
+&nbsp; Bleak snows and drenching flood;<br />
+But the south&mdash;the gentle south&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; Thaws to love the unwilling blood.</p>
+<p>III</p>
+<p>Bethink thee of the vales,<br />
+&nbsp; With their birds and blossoms fair&mdash;<br />
+Of the darkling nightingales,<br />
+&nbsp; That charm the starry air<br />
+In the south&mdash;the gentle south&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; Ah! our own dear home is there.</p>
+<p>IV</p>
+<p>Where doth Beauty brightest glow,<br />
+&nbsp; With each rich and radiant charm,<br />
+Eye of light, and brow of snow,<br />
+&nbsp; Cherry lip, and bosom warm;<br />
+In the south&mdash;the gentle south&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; There she waits, and works her harm.</p>
+<p>V</p>
+<p>Say, shines the Star of Love,<br />
+&nbsp; From the clear and cloudless sky,<br />
+The shadowy groves above,<br />
+&nbsp; Where the nestling ringdoves lie;<br />
+From the south&mdash;the gentle south&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; Gleams its lone and lucid eye.</p>
+<p>VI</p>
+<p>Then turn ye to the home<br />
+&nbsp; Of your brethren and your bride;<br />
+Far astray your steps may roam,<br />
+&nbsp; But more joys for thee abide,<br />
+In the south&mdash;our gentle south&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp; Than in all the world beside.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 88--><a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+88</span>After reading a lot of the unknown gentleman&rsquo;s compositions
+in prose and verse, something like his private history, James Batter
+informs me, can be made out, provided we are allowed to eke a little here
+and there.&nbsp; That he was an Englisher we both think amounts to a
+probability; and, from having an old &ldquo;Taffy was a Welshman&rdquo; for
+a flunkie, it would not be out of the order of nature to jealouse, that he
+may have resided somewhere among the hills, where he had picked him up and
+taken him into his kitchen, promoting him thereafter, for sobriety and good
+conduct, to be his body servant, and gentleman&rsquo;s gentleman.&nbsp;
+Where he was born, however, is a matter of doubt, and also who were his
+folks; but of a surety, he was either born with a silver spoon in his
+mouth, or rose from the ranks like many another great man.&nbsp; That,
+however, is a matter of moonshine; we are all descended in a direct line
+from Adam.&nbsp; Where he was educated does not appear; but there can
+scarcely be a shadow of doubt, that he was for a considerable while at some
+school or other, where he had a number of cronies.&nbsp; In proof of this,
+and to show that we have good reasons for our suppositions, James
+recommends me to print the following rigmarole meditations, on the top of
+which is written in half-text,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">SCHOOL RECOLLECTIONS.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;They who in the vale of years advance,<br />
+And the dark eve is closing on their way,<br />
+<!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>When
+on the mind the recollections glance<br />
+Of early joy, and Hope&rsquo;s delightful day,<br />
+Behold, in brighter hues than those of truth,<br />
+The light of morning on the fields of youth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Southey</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The morning being clear and fine, full of Milton&rsquo;s &ldquo;vernal
+delight and joy,&rdquo; I determined on a saunter; the inclemency of the
+weather having, for more than a week, kept me a prisoner at home.&nbsp;
+Although now advanced into the heart of February, a great fall of snow had
+taken place; the roads were blocked up; the mails obstructed; and, while
+the merchant grumbled audibly for his letters, the politician, no less
+chagrined, conned over and over again his dingy rumpled old newspaper,
+compelled &ldquo;to eat the leek of his disappointment.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+wind, which had blown inveterately steady from the surly north-east, had
+veered, however, during the preceding night, to the west; and, as it were
+by the spell of an enchanter, an instant thaw commenced.&nbsp; In the low
+grounds the snow gleamed forth in patches of a pearly whiteness; but, on
+the banks of southern exposure, the green grass and the black trodden
+pathway again showed themselves.&nbsp; The vicissitudes of twenty-four
+hours were indeed wonderful.&nbsp; Instead of the sharp frost, the
+pattering hail, and the congealed streams, we had the blue sky, the vernal
+zephyr, and the genial sunshine; the stream murmuring with a broader wave,
+as if making up for the season spent in the fetters of congelation; and
+that luxurious <!-- page 90--><a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+90</span>flow of the spirits, which irresistibly comes over the heart, at
+the re-assertion of Nature&rsquo;s suspended vigour.</p>
+<p>As I passed on under the budding trees, how delightful it was to hear
+the lark and the linnet again at their cheerful songs, to be aware that now
+&ldquo;the winter was over and gone;&rdquo; and to feel that the prospect
+of summer, with its lengthening days, and its rich variety of fruits and
+flowers, lay fully before us.&nbsp; There is something within us that
+connects the spring of the year with the childhood of our existence, and it
+is more especially at that season, that the thrilling remembrances of long
+departed pleasures are apt to steal into the thoughts; the re-awakening of
+nature calling us, by a fearful contrast, to the contemplation of joys that
+never can return, while all the time the heart is rendered more susceptible
+by the beauteous renovation in the aspect of the external world.</p>
+<p>This sensation pressed strongly on my mind, as I chanced to be passing
+the door of the village school, momentarily opened for the admission of
+one, creeping along somewhat tardily with satchel on back, and
+&ldquo;shining morning face.&rdquo;&nbsp; What a sudden burst of sound was
+emitted&mdash;what harmonious discord&mdash;what a commixture of all the
+tones in the vocal gamut, from the shrill treble to the deep
+underhum!&nbsp; A chord was touched which vibrated in unison; boyish days
+and school recollections crowded upon me; pleasures long vanished; feelings
+long stifled; and <!-- page 91--><a name="page91"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 91</span>friendships&mdash;aye, everlasting
+friendships&mdash;cut asunder by the sharp stroke of death!</p>
+<p>A public school is a petty world within itself&mdash;a wheel within a
+wheel&mdash;in so far as it is entirely occupied with its own concerns,
+affords its peculiar catalogue of virtues and vices, its own cares,
+pleasures, regrets, anticipations, and disappointments&mdash;in fact, a
+Lilliputian facsimile of the great one.&nbsp; By grown men, nothing is more
+common than the assertion that childhood is a perfect Elysium; but it is a
+false supposition that school-days are those of unalloyed carelessness and
+enjoyment.&nbsp; It seems to be a great deal too much overlooked, that
+&ldquo;little things are great to little men;&rdquo; and perhaps the mind
+of boyhood is more active in its conceptions&mdash;more alive to the
+impulses of pleasure and pain&mdash;in other words, has a more extended
+scope of sensations, than during any other portion of our existence.&nbsp;
+Its days are not those of lack-occupation; they are full of stir,
+animation, and activity, for it is then we are in training for after life;
+and, when the hours of school restraint glide slowly over, &ldquo;like
+wounded snakes,&rdquo; the clock, that chimes to liberty, sends forth the
+blood with a livelier flow; and pleasure thus derives a double zest from
+the bridle that duty has imposed, joy being generally measured according to
+the difficulty of its attainment.&nbsp; What delight in life have we ever
+experienced more exquisite than that, which flowed at once in upon us from
+the teacher&rsquo;s <!-- page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 92</span>&ldquo;<i>bene</i>, <i>bene</i>,&rdquo; our own
+self-approbation, and release from the tasks of the day?&mdash;the green
+fields around us wherein to ramble, the stream beside us wherein to angle,
+the world of games and pastimes, &ldquo;before us where to
+choose.&rdquo;&nbsp; Words are inadequate to express the thrill of
+transport, with which, on the rush from the school-house door, the hat is
+waved in air, and the shout sent forth!</p>
+<p>Then what a variety of amusements succeed each other.&nbsp; Every month
+has its favourite ones.&nbsp; The sports-man does not more keenly
+scrutinize his kalendar for the commencement of the trouting, grouse
+shooting, or hare-hunting season, than the younker for the time of flying
+kites, bowling at cricket, football, spinning peg-tops, and playing at
+marbles.&nbsp; Pleasure is the focus, which it is the common aim to
+approximate; and the mass is guided by a sort of unpremeditated social
+compact, which draws them out of doors as soon as meals are discussed, with
+a sincere thirst of amusement, as certainly as rooks congregate in spring
+to discuss the propriety of building nests, or swallows in autumn to
+deliberate in conclave on the expediency of emigration.</p>
+<p>Then how perfectly glorious was the anticipation of a holiday&mdash;a
+long summer day of liberty and ease!&nbsp; In anticipation it was a thing
+boundless and endless, a foretaste of Elysium.&nbsp; It extended from the
+<i>prima luce</i>, from the earliest dawn of radiance that streaked <!--
+page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>the
+&ldquo;severing clouds in yonder east,&rdquo; through the sun&rsquo;s
+matin, meridian, postmeridian, and vesper circuit; from the disappearance
+of Lucifer in the re-illumined skies, to his evening entr&eacute;e in the
+character of Hesperus.&nbsp; Complain not of the brevity of life;
+&rsquo;tis <i>men</i> that are idle; a thousand things could be contrived
+and accomplished in that space, and a thousand schemes were devised by us,
+when <i>boys</i>, to prevent any portion of it passing over without
+improvement.&nbsp; We pursued the fleet angel of time through all his
+movements till he blessed us.</p>
+<p>With these and similar thoughts in my mind, I strayed down to the banks
+of the river, and came upon the very spot, which, in those long-vanished
+years, had been a favourite scene of our boyish sports.&nbsp; The
+impression was overpowering; and as I gazed silently around me, my mind was
+subdued to that tone of feeling which Ossian so finely designates
+&ldquo;the joy of grief.&rdquo;&nbsp; The trees were the same, but older,
+like myself; seemingly unscathed by the strife of years&mdash;and herein
+was a difference.&nbsp; Some of the very bushes I recognized as our old
+lurking-places at &ldquo;hunt the hare&rdquo;; and, on the old fantastic
+beech-tree, I discovered the very bough from which we were accustomed to
+suspend our swings.&nbsp; What alterations&mdash;what sad havoc had time,
+circumstances, the hand of fortune, and the stroke of death, made among us
+since then!&nbsp; How were the thoughts of the heart, the hopes, the
+pursuits, <!-- page 94--><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+94</span>the feelings changed; and, in almost every instance, it is to be
+feared, for the worse!&nbsp; As I gazed around me, and paused, I could not
+help reciting aloud to myself the lines of Charles Lamb, so touching in
+their simple beauty.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;I have had playmates, I have had companions,<br />
+In my days of childhood, in my joyful school-days;<br />
+All, all are gone, the old familiar faces.<br />
+Some they have died, and some they have left me,<br />
+And some are taken from me, all are departed;<br />
+All, all are gone, the old familiar faces.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The fresh green plat, by the brink of the stream, lay before me.&nbsp;
+It was there that we played at leap-frog, or gathered dandelions for our
+tame rabbits; and, at its western extremity, were still extant the reliques
+of the deal-seat, at which we used to assemble on autumn evenings to have
+our round of stories.&nbsp; Many a witching tale and wondrous tradition
+hath there been told; many a marvel of &ldquo;figures that visited the
+glimpses of the moon&rdquo;; many a recital of heroic and chivalrous
+enterprise, accomplished ere warriors dwindled away to the mere puny
+strength of mortals.&nbsp; Sapped by the wind and rain, the planks lay in a
+sorely decayed and rotten state, looking in their mossiness like a
+sign-post of desolation, a memento of terrestrial instability.&nbsp; Traces
+of the knife were still here and there visible upon the trunks of the
+supporting trees; and with little difficulty I could decipher some
+well-remembered initials.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cold were the hands that carved them there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 95--><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>It
+is, no doubt, wonderful that the human mind can retain such a mass of
+recollections; yet we seem to be, in general, little aware that for one
+solitary incident in our lives, preserved by memory, hundreds have been
+buried in the silent charnel-house of oblivion.&nbsp; We peruse the past,
+like a map of pleasing or melancholy recollections, and observe lines
+crossing and re-crossing each other in a thousand directions; some spots
+are almost blank; others faintly traced; and the rest a confused and
+perplexed labyrinth.&nbsp; A thousand feelings that, in their day and hour,
+agitated our bosoms, are now forgotten; a thousand hopes, and joys, and
+apprehensions, and fears, are vanished without a trace.&nbsp; Schemes,
+which cost us much care in their formation, and much anxiety in their
+fulfilment, have glided, like the clouds of yesterday, from our
+remembrance.&nbsp; Many a sharer of our early friendships, and of our
+boyish sports, we think of no more; they are as if they had never been,
+till perhaps some accidental occurrence, some words in conversation, some
+object by the wayside, or some passenger in the street, attract our
+notice&mdash;and then, as if awaking from a perplexing trance, a light
+darts in upon our darkness; and we discover that thus some one long ago
+spoke; that there something long ago happened; or that the person, who just
+passed us like a vision, shared smiles with us long, long years ago, and
+added a double zest to the enjoyments of our childhood.</p>
+<p><!-- page 96--><a name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>Of
+our old class-fellows, of those whose days were of &ldquo;a mingled
+yarn&rdquo; with ours, whose hearts blended in the warmest reciprocities of
+friendship, whose joys, whose cares, almost whose wishes were in common,
+how little do we know? how little will even the severest scrutiny enable us
+to discover?&nbsp; Yet, at one time, we were inseparable &ldquo;like
+Juno&rsquo;s swans&rdquo;; we were as brothers, nor dreamt we of ought
+else, in the susceptibility of our youthful imagination, than that we were
+to pass through all the future scenes of life, side by side; and, mutually
+supporting and supported, lengthen out the endearments, the ties, and the
+feelings of boyhood unto the extremities of existence.&nbsp; What a fine
+but a fond dream&mdash;alas, how wide of the cruel reality!&nbsp; The
+casual relation of a traveller may discover to us where one of them resided
+or resides.&nbsp; The page of an obituary may accidentally inform us how
+long one of them lingered on the bed of sickness, and by what death he
+died.&nbsp; Some we may perhaps discover in elevated situations, from which
+worldly pride might probably prevent their stooping down to recognize
+us.&nbsp; Others, immersed in the labyrinths of business, have forgot all,
+in the selfish pursuits of earthly accumulation.&nbsp; While the rest, the
+children of misfortune and disappointment, we may occasionally find out
+amid the great multitude of the streets, to whom life is but a desert of
+sorrow, and against whom prosperity seems to have shut for ever her golden
+gates.</p>
+<p><!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+97</span>Such are the diversities of condition, the varieties of fortune to
+which man is exposed, while climbing the hill of probationary
+difficulty.&nbsp; And how sublimely applicable are the words of Job,
+expatiating on the uncertainty of human existence: &ldquo;Man dieth and
+wasteth away; yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where is he?&nbsp; As the
+waters fail from the sea, and the flood decayeth and drieth up; so man
+lieth down and riseth not till the heavens be no more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While standing on the same spot, where of yore the boyish multitude
+congregated in pursuit of their eager sports, a silent awe steals over the
+bosom, and the heart desponds at the thought, that all these once smiling
+faces are scattered now!&nbsp; Some, mayhap, tossing on the waste and
+perilous seas; some the merchants of distant lands; some fighting the
+battles of their country; others dead&mdash;inhabitants of the dark and
+narrow house, and hearing no more the billows of life, that thunder and
+break above their low and lonely dwelling-place!</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Nanse, who was sitting by the table, knitting a pair of light-blue
+worsted stockings for Benjie, and myself, who was sewing on the buttons of
+a velveteen jacket for a country lad, were, I must say, not a little
+delighted, not only with the way in which the Welshman&rsquo;s late master
+had spoken of his school-fellows, but with the manner in which James
+Batter, with his <!-- page 98--><a name="page98"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 98</span>specs on, had read it over to us.&nbsp; Upon my
+word&mdash;and that of an elder&mdash;I do not believe that even Mr Wiggie
+himself could have done the thing greater justice.&nbsp; It was just as if
+he had been a play-actor man, spouting Douglas&rsquo;s tragedy.</p>
+<p>Having folded up that paper, and turned over not a few others, the
+docketings of which he read out to us, James at last says, &ldquo;Ou ay,
+here it is.&nbsp; I think I can now prove to ye, that the gentlemen&rsquo;s
+sweetheart died abroad; and that, likely from her name&mdash;for it is here
+mentioned&mdash;she must have been a Portug&eacute;e or
+Spaniard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, let us hear it,&rdquo; cried Nanse.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do, like a
+man, let us hear it, James; for I delight above a&rsquo; things to hear
+about love-stories.&nbsp; Do ye mind, Maister,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;when
+ye was so deep in love aince yoursell?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Foolish woman,&rdquo; I said, giving her a kind of severe look;
+&ldquo;is that all your manners to interrupt Mr Batter?&nbsp; If
+ye&rsquo;ll just keep a calm sough, ye&rsquo;ll hear the long and the short
+o&rsquo;t, in good time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this, James, who did not relish interruption, and was a thought
+fidgety in his natural temper, had laid down the paper on the table,
+snuffed the candle, and raised his spectacles on his brow.&nbsp; But I said
+to him, &ldquo;Excuse freedoms, James, and be so good as resume your
+discourse.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then wishing to smooth him down, I added, by way of
+compliment&mdash;&ldquo;Do go <!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 99</span>on; for you really are a prime reader.&nbsp;
+Nature surely intended ye for a minister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dinna flatter me,&rdquo; said James; looking, however, rather
+proudishly at what I had said, and replacing his glasses on the brig of his
+nose, he then read us a screed of metre to the following effect; part of
+which, I am free to confess, is rather above my comprehension.&nbsp; But,
+never mind.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">ELEGIAC STANZAS</p>
+<p>I</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis midnight deep; the full round moon,<br />
+As &rsquo;twere a spectre, walks the sky;<br />
+The balmy breath of gentlest June<br />
+Just stirs the stream that murmurs by;<br />
+Above me frowns the solemn wood;<br />
+Nature, methinks, seems Solitude<br />
+Embodied to the eye.</p>
+<p>II</p>
+<p>Yes, &rsquo;tis a season and a scene,<br />
+Inez, to think on thee; the day,<br />
+With stir and strife, may come between<br />
+Affection and thy beauty&rsquo;s ray,<br />
+But feeling here assumes control,<br />
+And mourns my desolated soul<br />
+That thou are rapt away!</p>
+<p>III</p>
+<p>Thou wert a rainbow to my sight,<br />
+The storms of life before thee fled;<br />
+The glory and the guiding light,<br />
+That onward cheer&rsquo;d and upward led;<br />
+From boyhood to this very hour,<br />
+For me, and only me, thy flower<br />
+Its fragrance seem&rsquo;d to shed.</p>
+<p><!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+100</span>IV</p>
+<p>Dark though the world for me might show<br />
+Its sordid faith and selfish gloom,<br />
+Yet &rsquo;mid life&rsquo;s wilderness to know<br />
+For me that sweet flower shed its bloom,<br />
+Was joy, was solace:&mdash;thou art gone&mdash;<br />
+And hope forsook me, when the stone<br />
+Sank darkly o&rsquo;er thy tomb.</p>
+<p>V</p>
+<p>And art thou dead?&nbsp; I dare not think<br />
+That thus the solemn truth can be;<br />
+And broken is the only link<br />
+That chain&rsquo;d youth&rsquo;s pleasant thoughts to me!<br />
+Alas! that thou couldst know decay,<br />
+That, sighing, I should live to say<br />
+&ldquo;The cold grave holdeth thee!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>VI</p>
+<p>For me thou shon&rsquo;st, as shines a star,<br />
+Lonely, in clouds when Heaven is lost;<br />
+Thou wert my guiding light afar,<br />
+When on misfortune&rsquo;s billows tost:<br />
+Now darkness hath obscured that light,<br />
+And I am left in rayless night,<br />
+On Sorrow&rsquo;s lowering coast.</p>
+<p>VII</p>
+<p>And art thou gone?&nbsp; I deem&rsquo;d thee some<br />
+Immortal essence&mdash;art thou gone?&mdash;<br />
+I saw thee laid within the tomb,<br />
+And turn&rsquo;d away to mourn alone:<br />
+Once to have loved, is to have loved<br />
+Enough; and, what with thee I proved,<br />
+Again I&rsquo;ll seek in none.</p>
+<p>VIII</p>
+<p>Earth in thy sight grew fa&euml;ry land;&mdash;<br />
+Life was Elysium&mdash;thought was love,&mdash;<br />
+When, long ago, hand clasp&rsquo;d in hand,<br />
+<!-- page 101--><a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>We
+roam&rsquo;d through Autumn&rsquo;s twilight grove;<br />
+Or watch&rsquo;d the broad uprising moon<br />
+Shed, as it were, a wizard noon,<br />
+The blasted heath above.</p>
+<p>IX</p>
+<p>Farewell!&mdash;and must I say farewell?&mdash;<br />
+No&mdash;thou wilt ever be to me<br />
+A present thought; thy form shall dwell<br />
+In love&rsquo;s most holy sanctuary;<br />
+Thy voice shall mingle with my dreams,<br />
+And haunt me, when the shot-star gleams<br />
+Above the rippling sea.</p>
+<p>X</p>
+<p>Never revives the past again;<br />
+But still thou art, in lonely hours,<br />
+To me earth&rsquo;s heaven,&mdash;the azure main,&mdash;<br />
+Soft music,&mdash;and the breath of flowers;<br />
+My heart shall gain from thee its hues;<br />
+And Memory give, though Truth refuse,<br />
+The bliss that once was ours!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>After this, Mr Batter read over to us a great many other curiosities,
+about foreign things wonderful to hear, and foreign places wonderful to
+behold.&nbsp; Moreover, also, of divers adventures by sea and land.&nbsp;
+But the time wearing late, and Tammie Bodkin having brought ben the
+shop-key, after putting on the window-shutters, Nanse and I, out of
+good-fellowship, thought we could not do less than ask the honest man,
+whose cleverality had diverted us so much, to sit still and take a chack of
+supper;&mdash;James being up in the air, from having been allowed to ride
+on his hobby so briskly, made only a show of objection; <!-- page 102--><a
+name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>so, after a rizzard
+haddo, we had a jug of toddy, and sat round the fire with our feet on the
+fender&mdash;Benjie having fallen asleep with his clothes on, and been
+carried away to his bed.&nbsp; Poor bit mannikin!</p>
+<p>I never remember to have heard James so prime either on Boston or
+Josephus; but as his heart warmed with the liquor and the good fire, for it
+was a cold rawish night,&mdash;he returned to Taffy with the
+pigtail&rsquo;s master; and insisted, that as we had heard about his
+foreign sweetheart&rsquo;s death, which he appeared to have taken so much
+to heart, we should just bear with him once more, as he read over what he
+called her dirgie, which was written on a half-sheet of grey mouldy
+paper&mdash;as if handed down from the days of the Covenanters.&nbsp; It
+jingles well; and both Nanse and me thought it gey and pretty; but eh! if
+ye only had heard how James Batter read it.&nbsp; It beat
+cock-fighting.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">DIRGE</p>
+<p>I</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;Oh she was far too fair,<br />
+&nbsp; Too pure to dwell on this guilt-tainted earth!<br />
+The sinless glory, and the golden air<br />
+&nbsp; Of Zion, seem&rsquo;d to claim her from her birth;<br />
+A Spirit wander&rsquo;d from its native Zone,<br />
+Which, soon discovering, took her for its own:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p>II</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;Her span was like the sky,<br />
+&nbsp; Whose thousand stars shine beautiful and bright;<br />
+Like flowers that know not what it is to die;<br />
+&nbsp; <!-- page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+103</span>Like long-linked, shadeless months of Polar light;<br />
+Like music floating o&rsquo;er a waveless lake,<br />
+While Echo answers from the flowery brake:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p>III</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;She died in early youth,<br />
+&nbsp; Ere hope had lost its rich romantic hues;<br />
+When human bosoms seem&rsquo;d the homes of truth,<br />
+&nbsp; And earth still gleam&rsquo;d with beauty&rsquo;s radiant dews.<br
+/>
+Her summer prime waned not to days that freeze;<br />
+Her wine of life was run not to the lees:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p>IV</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;By fleet or slow decay,<br />
+&nbsp; It never grieved her bosom&rsquo;s core to mark<br />
+The playmates of her childhood wane away,<br />
+&nbsp; Her prospects wither, or her hopes grow dark;<br />
+Translated by her God with spirit shriven,<br />
+She pass&rsquo;d as &rsquo;twere in smiles from earth to heaven.<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p>V</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;It was not hers to feel<br />
+&nbsp; The miseries that corrode amassing years,<br />
+&rsquo;Gainst dreams of baffled bliss the heart to steel,<br />
+&nbsp; To wander sad down age&rsquo;s vale of tears,<br />
+As whirl the withered leaves from friendship&rsquo;s tree,<br />
+And on earth&rsquo;s wintry wold alone to be:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p>VI</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;She is an angel now,<br />
+&nbsp; And treads the sapphire floors of paradise:<br />
+All darkness wiped from her refulgent brow,<br />
+&nbsp; Sin, sorrow, suffering, banish&rsquo;d from her eyes;<br />
+Victorious over death, to her appear<br />
+The vista&rsquo;d joys of heaven&rsquo;s eternal year;<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p><!-- page 104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+104</span>VII</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;Her memory is the shrine<br />
+&nbsp; Of pleasant thoughts, soft as the scent of flowers,<br />
+Calm as on windless eve the sun&rsquo;s decline,<br />
+&nbsp; Sweet as the song of birds among the bowers,<br />
+Rich as a rainbow with its hues of light,<br />
+Pure as the moonshine of an autumn night:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her!</p>
+<p>VIII</p>
+<p>Weep not for her!&mdash;There is no cause for woe;<br />
+&nbsp; But rather nerve the spirit that it walk<br />
+Unshrinking o&rsquo;er the thorny paths below,<br />
+&nbsp; And from earth&rsquo;s low defilements keep thee back:<br />
+So, when a few, fleet, severing years have flown,<br />
+She&rsquo;ll meet thee at heaven&rsquo;s gate&mdash;and lead thee on!<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Weep not for Her.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p104b.jpg">
+<img alt="The first day I got my regimentals on" src="images/p104s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Having right and law on my side, as any man of judgment may perceive
+with half an eye, nothing could hinder me, if I so liked, to print the
+whole bundle; but, in the meantime, we must just be satisfied with the
+foregoing curiosities, which we have picked out.&nbsp; All that I have set
+down concerning myself, the reader may take on credit as open and even-down
+truth; but as to whether Taffy&rsquo;s master&rsquo;s nick-nackets be true
+or false, every one is at liberty, in this free country, to think for
+himself.&nbsp; Old sparrows are not easily caught with chaff; and unless I
+saw a proper affidavit, I would not, for my own part, pin my faith to a
+single word of them.&nbsp; But every man his own
+opinion,&mdash;that&rsquo;s my motto.</p>
+<p>In the Yankee Almanack of Poor Richard, which, besides the
+Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress and the Book of Martyrs, <!-- page 105--><a
+name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>I whiles read on the
+week-days for a little diversion, I see it is set down with great
+rationality, that &ldquo;we should never buy for the bargain
+sake.&rdquo;&nbsp; Experience teaches all men, and I found that to my cost
+in this matter; for, cheap as the coat and waistcoat seemed which I had
+bought from the auld-farrant Welsh flunkie with the peaked hat and the
+pigtail, I made no great shakes of them after all.&nbsp; Neither the Lord
+Provost of Edinburgh, nor any other of the grand public characters, ever
+made me an offer for them, as some had led me to expect; and the play house
+people lay all as quiet as ducks in a storm.&nbsp; After hanging at my
+window for two or three months, collecting all the idle wives and weans of
+the parish to glour and gaze at them from morn till night, during which
+time I got half of my lozens broken, by their knocking one another&rsquo;s
+heads through, I was obliged to get quit of them at last, by selling them
+to a man and his son, that kept dancing dogs, Pan&rsquo;s pipes, and a
+tambourine; and that made a livelihood by tumbling on a carpet in the
+middle of the street, the one playing &ldquo;Carle now the King&rsquo;s
+come,&rdquo; as the other whummled head over heels, and then jumped up into
+the air, cutting capers, to show that not a bone of his body had been
+broken.</p>
+<p>Knowing that the raiment was not for everybody&rsquo;s wear, and that
+the like of it was not to be found in a country side, I put a decent price
+on it, &ldquo;foreign birds with fair feathers&rdquo; aye taking the top
+place of the <!-- page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+106</span>market.&nbsp; When I mentioned forty shillings to the dancing-dog
+man and his son, they said nothing, but, putting their tongues in their
+cheeks, took up their hats, wishing me a good day.&nbsp; Next forenoon,
+however, a sleight-of-hand character having arrived, together with a bass
+drum and a bugle horn, that was likely to take the shine out of them, and
+maybe also purchase my article&mdash;which was capital for his purpose,
+having famous wide sleeves&mdash;they came back in less than no time,
+asking the liberty, before finally concluding with me, of carrying them
+home to their lodgings for ten minutes to see how they would fit; and, in
+that case, offering me thirty-five shillings and an old flute.&nbsp; The
+old flute was for next to no use at all, except for wee Benjie, poor thing,
+too-tooing on, to keep him good, and I told them so, myself being no
+musicianer; but would take their offer not to quarrel.&nbsp; It would not
+do unless some of us were timber-tuned; men not being meant for
+blackbirds.</p>
+<p>Home went the man, and home went the son, and home went my grand coat
+and waistcoat over his arm; and putting my hands into my breeches pockets,
+as if I had satisfactorily concluded a great transaction, I marched ben to
+the back shop, and took my needle into play, as if nothing in the world had
+happened; but where their home lay, or whether the raiment fitted or not,
+goodness knows, having never to this blessed hour heard word or wittens of
+either of them.&nbsp; Such a <!-- page 107--><a name="page107"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 107</span>pair of blacks!&nbsp; It just shows us how
+simple we Scotch folk are.&nbsp; The London man swindled me out of my
+lawful room-rent and my Sunday velveteens; the Eirishers, as will be but
+too soon seen, made free with my hen-house, committing felonious robbery at
+the dead hour of night; and here a decent-looking old Welshman, with a
+pigtail tied with black tape, palmed a grand coat and waistcoat upon me,
+that were made away with by a man and his son, a devilish deal too long out
+of Botany Bay.</p>
+<p>Benjie, poor doggie, was vastly proud of the flute, which he fifed away
+on morning, noon, and night; and, for more than a fortnight, would not go
+to his bed unless it was laid under his pillow.&nbsp; But for me I could
+not bide the sight of it, knowing whose hands it had been in, and reminding
+me as it did of the depravity of human nature.</p>
+<p>Verily, verily, this is a wonderfully wicked world.&nbsp; To find out
+the two vagabonds would have been hopeless; unless I could have followed
+them to the Back of Beyond, where the mare foaled the fiddler.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+108</span>CHAPTER TWELVE&mdash;MANSIE ON THE OLD VOLUNTEERING DAYS</h2>
+<p>The sough of war and invasion flew over the face of the land, at this
+time, like a great whirlwind; and the hearts of men died within their
+persons with fear and trembling.&nbsp; The accounts that came from abroad
+were just dreadful beyond all power of description.&nbsp; Death stalked
+about from place to place, like a lawless tyrant, and human blood was spilt
+like water; while the heads of crowned kings were cut off; and great dukes
+and lords were thrown into dark dungeons, or obligated to flee for their
+lives into foreign lands, and to seek out hiding-places of safety beyond
+the waves of the sea.&nbsp; What was worst of all, our trouble seemed a
+smittal one; the infection spread around; and even our own land, which all
+thought hale and healthy, began to show symptoms of the plague-spot.&nbsp;
+Losh me! that men, in their seven senses, could have ever shown themselves
+so infatuated.&nbsp; Johnny Wilkes and liberty was but a joke to what was
+hanging over the head of the nation, brewing like a dark tempest which was
+to swallow it up.&nbsp; Bills were posted up through night, by hands that
+durst not have been seen at the work through day; and the agents of the
+Spirit of Darkness, calling themselves the Friends of the People, held
+secret meetings, and hatched plots to blow up our blessed King and
+Constitution.</p>
+<p>Yet the business, though fearsome in the main, was <!-- page 109--><a
+name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>in some parts almost
+laughable.&nbsp; Everything was to be divided, and every one made alike:
+houses and lands were to be distributed by lot; and the mighty man and the
+beggar&mdash;the auld man and the hobble-de-hoy&mdash;the industrious man
+and the spendthrift&mdash;the maimed, the cripple, and the blind, the
+clever man of business and the haveril simpleton, made all just brethren,
+and alike.&nbsp; Save us! but to think of such nonsense!!&mdash;At one of
+their meetings, held at the sign of the Tappet Hen and the Tankard, there
+was a prime fight of five rounds between Tammy Bowsie the snab, and auld
+Thrashem the dominie with the boulie-back about their drawing cuts which
+was to get Dalkeith Palace, and which Newbottle Abbey.&nbsp; Oh, sic
+riff-raff!!!</p>
+<p>What was worst of all, it was an agreed and determined on thing among
+them, these wise men of Gotham, to abolish all kings, clergy, and religion,
+as havers.&nbsp; No, no&mdash;what need had such wise pows as theirs of
+being taught or lectured to?&nbsp; What need had such feelosophers of
+having a king to rule over, or a Parliament to direct them?&nbsp; There was
+not a single one among their number, that did not think himself, in his own
+conceit, as wise as Solomon or William Pitt, and as mighty as King
+Nebuchadnezzar.</p>
+<p>It was full time to put a stop to all such nonsense.&nbsp; The
+newspapers told us what it had done abroad; and what better could we expect
+from it at home?&nbsp; <!-- page 110--><a name="page110"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 110</span>Weeds will not grow into flowers anywhere, and
+no man can handle tar without being defiled; the first of which comparisons
+is I daresay true, and the latter must be&mdash;for we read of it in
+Scripture.&nbsp; Well, as I was saying, it was a brave notion of the king
+to put the loyalty of his land to the test, that the daft folk might be
+dismayed, and that the clanjamphrey might be tumbled down before their
+betters, like windle-straes in a hurricane:&mdash;and so they were.</p>
+<p>Such a crowd that day, when the names of the volunteers came to be taken
+down!&nbsp; No house could have held them, even though many had not stepped
+forward who thought to have got themselves enrolled.&nbsp; Losh me! did
+they think the government was so far gone, as to take characters with
+deformed legs, and thrawn necks, and blind eyes, and hashie lips, and grey
+hairs on their pows?&nbsp; No, no, they were not put to such straits;
+though it showed that the right spirit was in the creatures, and that,
+though their bodies might be deformed, they had consciences to direct them,
+and souls to be saved like their neighbours.</p>
+<p>I will never forget the first day that I got my regimentals on; and when
+I looked myself in the bit glass, just to think I was a sodger, who never
+in my life could thole the smell of powder, and had not fired anything but
+a penny cannon on a Fourth of June, when I was a haflins callant.&nbsp; I
+thought my throat would have been cut with the black corded <!-- page
+111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 111</span>stock; for,
+whenever I looked down, without thinking like, my chaff-blade played clank
+against it, with such a dunt that I mostly chacked my tongue off.&nbsp;
+And, as to the soaping of the hair, that beat cock-fighting.&nbsp; It was
+really fearsome; but I could scarcely keep from laughing when I
+glee&rsquo;d round over my shoulder, and saw a glazed leather queue hanging
+for half an ell down the braid of my back, and a pickle horse-hair curling
+out like a rotten&rsquo;s tail at the far end of it.&nbsp; And then the
+worsted taissels on the shoulders&mdash;and the lead buttons&mdash;and the
+yellow facings,&mdash;oh, but it was grand!&nbsp; I sometimes fancied
+myself a general, and giving the word of command.&nbsp; Then the pipeclayed
+breeches&mdash;but that was a sore job; many a weary arm did they give
+me&mdash;beat-beating camstane into them.</p>
+<p>The pipeclaying of the breeches, I was saying, was the most fashious
+job, let alone courtship, that ever mortal man put his hand to.&nbsp;
+Indeed, there was no end to the rubbing, and scrubbing, and brushing, and
+fyling, and cleaning; for to the like of me, who was not well accustomed to
+the thing, the whitening was continually coming off and destroying my red
+coat or my black leggings.&nbsp; I had mostly forgot to speak of the birse
+for cleaning out the pan, and the piker for clearing the motion-hole.&nbsp;
+But time enough till we come to firing.</p>
+<p>Big Sam, who was a sergeant of the Fencibles, and <!-- page 112--><a
+name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>enough to have put
+five Frenchmen to flight any day of the year, whiles came to train us; and
+a hard battle he had with more than me.&nbsp; I have already said, that
+nature never intended me for the soldiering trade; and why should I
+hesitate about confessing, that Sam never got me out of the awkward
+squad?&nbsp; But I had two or three neighbours to keep me in
+countenance.&nbsp; A weary work we made with the right, left&mdash;left,
+right,&mdash;right-wheel, left-wheel&mdash;to the right about,&mdash;at
+ease,&mdash;attention,&mdash;by sections,&mdash;and all the rest of
+it.&nbsp; But then there is nothing in the course of nature that is
+useless; and what was to hinder me from acting as orderly, or being one of
+the camp-colour-men on head days?</p>
+<p>We all cracked very crouse about fighting, when we heard of garments
+rolled in blood only from abroad; but one dark night we got a fleg in sober
+earnest.</p>
+<p>There were signal-posts on the hills, up and down all the country, to
+make alarms in case of necessity; and I never went to my bed without giving
+first a glee eastward to Falside-brae, and then another westward to the
+Calton-hill, to see that all the country was quiet.&nbsp; I had just papped
+in&mdash;it might be about nine o&rsquo;clock&mdash;after being gey hard
+drilled, and sore between the shoulders, with keeping my head back and
+playing the dumb-bells; when, lo and behold! instead of getting my needful
+rest in my own bed, with my wife and wean, jow went the bell, and
+row-de-dow gaed the <!-- page 113--><a name="page113"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 113</span>drums, and all in a minute was confusion and
+uproar.&nbsp; I was seized with a severe shaking of the knees, and a flang
+at the heart; but I hurried, with my nightcap on, up to the garret window,
+and there I too plainly saw that the French had landed&mdash;for all the
+signal posts were in a bleeze.&nbsp; This was in reality to be a
+soldier!&nbsp; I never got such a fright since the day I was cleckit.&nbsp;
+Then such a noise and hullabaloo in the streets&mdash;men, women, and
+weans, all hurrying through ither, and crying with loud voices, amid the
+dark, as if the day of judgment had come, to find us all unprepared; and
+still the bells ringing, and the drums beating to arms.&nbsp; Poor Nanse
+was in a bad condition, and I was well worse; she, at the fears of losing
+me, their bread-winner; and I, with the grief of parting from her, the wife
+of my bosom, and going out to scenes of blood, bayonets, and gunpowder,
+none of which I had the least stomach for.&nbsp; Our little son, Benjie,
+mostly grat himself blind, pulling me back by the cartridge-box; but there
+was no contending with fate, so he was obliged at last to let go.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding all that, we behaved ourselves like true-blue Scotsmen
+called forth to fight the battles of our country; and if the French had
+come, as they did not come, they would have found that to their cost, as
+sure as my name is Mansie.&nbsp; However, it turned out as well, in the
+meantime, that it was a false alarm, and that the thief Buonaparte had not
+landed at <!-- page 114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>Dunbar, as it was jealoused: so, after standing under arms for
+half the night, with nineteen rounds of ball-cartridge in our boxes, and
+the baggage carts all loaden, and ready to follow us to the field of
+battle, we were sent home to our beds; and, notwithstanding the awful state
+of alarm to which I had been put, never in the course of my life did I
+enjoy six hours sounder sleep; for we were hippet the morning parade, on
+account of our gallant men being kept so long without natural rest.&nbsp;
+It is wise to pick a lesson even out of our adversities; and, at all
+events, it was at this time fully shown to us the necessity of our regiment
+being taught the art of firing&mdash;a tactic to the length of which it had
+never yet come.</p>
+<p>Next day, out we were taken for the whilk purpose; and we went through
+our motions bravely.&nbsp; Prime&mdash;load&mdash;handle
+cartridge&mdash;ram down cartridge&mdash;return bayonets&mdash;and shoulder
+hoop&mdash;make ready&mdash;present&mdash;fire.&nbsp; Such was the
+confusion, and the flurry, and the din of the report, that I was so
+flustered and confused, thinking that half of us would have been shot dead,
+that&mdash;will ye believe it?&mdash;I never yet had mind to pull the
+tricker.&nbsp; Howsomever, I minded aye with the rest to ram down a fresh
+cartridge at the word of command; and something told me I would repent not
+doing like the rest (for I had half a kind of notion that my piece never
+went off); so, when the firing was over, the sergeant of the company
+ordered <!-- page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+115</span>all that had loaded pieces to come to the front.&nbsp; I
+swithered a little, not being very sure like what to do; but some five or
+six stept out; and our corporal, on looking at my piece, ordered me with
+the rest to the front.&nbsp; It was just by all the world like an
+execution; we six, in the face of the regiment, in a little line, going
+through our man&oelig;uvres at the word of command; and I could hardly
+stand upon my feet, with a queer feeling of fear and trembling, till at
+length the terrible moment came.&nbsp; I looked straight forward&mdash;for
+I durst not jee my head about, and turned to the hills and green trees, as
+if I was never to see nature more.</p>
+<p>Our pieces were cocked; and at the word&mdash;Fire!&mdash;off they
+went.&nbsp; It was an act of desperation to draw the tricker, and I had
+hardly well shut my blinkers, when I got such a thump in the shoulder, as
+knocked me backwards head-over-heels on the grass.&nbsp; Before I came to
+my senses, I could have sworn I was in another world; but, when I opened my
+eyes, there were the men at ease, holding their sides, laughing like to
+spleet them; and my gun lying on the ground two or three ell before me.</p>
+<p>When I found myself not killed outright, I began to rise up.&nbsp; As I
+was rubbing my breek-knees, I saw one of the men going forward to lift up
+the fatal piece; and my care for the safety of others overcame the sense of
+my own peril,&mdash;&ldquo;Let alane&mdash;let alane!&rdquo; <!-- page
+116--><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>cried I to
+him, &ldquo;and take care of yoursell, for it has to gang off five times
+yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The laughing was now terrible; but being little of a soldier, I thought,
+in my innocence, that we should hear as many reports as I had crammed
+cartridges down her muzzle.&nbsp; This was a sore joke against me for a
+length of time; but I tholed it patiently, considering cannily within
+myself, that knowledge is only to be bought by experience, and that, if we
+can credit the old song, even Johnny Cope himself did not learn the art of
+war in a single morning.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 117--><a name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+117</span>CHAPTER THIRTEEN&mdash;MANSIE IN SEARCH OF A CURE FOR
+CHINCOUGH</h2>
+<p>Some folks having been bred up from their cradle to the writing of
+books, of course naturally do the thing regularly and scientifically; but
+that&rsquo;s not to be expected from the like of me, that have followed no
+other way of life than the shaping and sewing line.&nbsp; It behoves me,
+therefore, to beg pardon for not being able to carry my history aye
+regularly straight forward, and for being forced whiles to zig-zag and
+vandyke.&nbsp; For instance, I clean forgot to give, in its proper place, a
+history of one of my travels, with Benjie in my bosom, in search of a cure
+for the chincough.</p>
+<p>My son Benjie was, at this dividual time, between four and five years
+old, when&mdash;poor wee chieldie!&mdash;he took the chincough, and in more
+respects than one was not in a good way; so the doctor recommended his
+mother and me, for the change of air, first to carry him down a coal-pit,
+and syne to the limekilns at Cousland.</p>
+<p>The coal-pit I could not think of at all; to say nothing of the danger
+of swinging down into the bowels of the earth in a creel, the thing aye put
+me in mind of the awful place, where the wicked, after death and judgment,
+howl, and hiss, and gnash their teeth; and where, unless Heaven be more
+merciful than we are just&mdash;we may all be soon enough.&nbsp; So I could
+not think of that, till other human means failed; and I <!-- page 118--><a
+name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>determined, in the
+first place, to hire Tammie Dobbie&rsquo;s cart, and try a smell of the
+fresh air about the limekilns.</p>
+<p>It was a fine July forenoon, and the cart, filled with clean straw, was
+at the door by eleven o&rsquo;clock; so our wife handed us out a pair of
+blankets to hap round me, and syne little Benjie into my arms, with his
+big-coatie on, and his leather cappie tied below his chin, and a bit red
+worsted comforterie round his neck; for, though the sun was warm and
+pleasant withal, we dreaded cold, as the doctor bade us.&nbsp; Oh, he was a
+fine old man, Doctor Hartshorn!</p>
+<p>We had not well got out of the town, when Tammie Dobbie louped up on the
+fore-tram.&nbsp; He was a crouse, cantie auld cock, having seen much and
+not little in his day; so he began a pleasant confab, pointing out all the
+gentlemen&rsquo;s houses round the country, and the names of the farms on
+the hill sides.&nbsp; To one like me, whose occupations tie him to the
+town-foot, it really is a sweet and grateful thing to be let loose, as it
+were, for a wee among the scenes of peace and quietness, where nature is in
+a way wild and wanton&mdash;where the clouds above our heads seem to sail
+along more grandly over the bosom of the sky, and the wee birds to cheep
+and churm, from the hedges among the fields, with greater pleasure, feeling
+that they are God&rsquo;s free creatures.</p>
+<p>I cannot tell how many thoughts came over my <!-- page 119--><a
+name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>mind, one after
+another, like the waves of the sea down on Musselburgh beach; but
+especially the days when I was a wee callant with a daidly at Dominie
+Duncan&rsquo;s school, were fresh in my mind as if the time had been but
+yesterday; though much, much was I changed since then, being at that time a
+little, careless, ragged laddie, and now the head of a family, earning
+bread to my wife and wean by the sweat of my brow.&nbsp; I thought on the
+blythe summer days when I dandered about the braes and bushes seeking
+birds&rsquo;-nests with Alick Bowsie and Samuel Search; and of the time
+when we stood upon one another&rsquo;s backs to speil up to the ripe
+cherries that hung over the garden walls of Woodburn.&nbsp; Awful changes
+had taken place since then.&nbsp; I had seen Sammy die of the black
+jaundice&mdash;an awful spectacle! and poor Alick Bowsie married to a
+drucken randie, that wore the breeks, and did not allow the misfortunate
+creature the life of a dog.</p>
+<p>When I was meditating thus, after the manner of the patriarch Isaac,
+there was a pleasant sadness at my heart, though it was like to loup to my
+mouth; but I could not get leave to enjoy it long for the tongue of Tammie
+Dobbie.&nbsp; He bade me look over into a field, about the middle of which
+were some wooden railings round the black gaping mouth of a coal-pit.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Div ye see that dark bit owre yonder amang the green clover,
+wi&rsquo; the sticks about it?&rdquo; asked Tammie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;and what for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 120--><a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+120</span>&ldquo;Weel, do you ken,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Tammie, &ldquo;that
+has been a weary place to mair than ane.&nbsp; Twa-three year ago, some
+o&rsquo; the collyer bodies were choked to death down below wi&rsquo; a
+blast of foul air; and a pour o&rsquo; orphan weans they left behint them
+on the cauldrife parish.&nbsp; But ye&rsquo;ll mind Hornem, the
+sherry-officer wi&rsquo; the thrawn shouther?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ou, bravely; I believe he came to some untimeous end hereaway
+about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just in that spat,&rdquo; answered Tammie.&nbsp; &ldquo;He was a
+drucken, blustering chield, as ye mind; fearing neither man nor
+de&rsquo;il, and living a wild, wicked, regardless life; but, puir man,
+that couldna aye last.&nbsp; He had been bousing about the countryside
+somehow&mdash;maybe harrying out of house and hald some puir bodies that
+hadna the wherewith to pay their rents; so, in riding hame fou&mdash;it was
+pitmirk, and the rain pouring down in bucketfu&rsquo;s&mdash;he became
+dumfoundered wi&rsquo; the darkness and the dramming thegither; and, losing
+his way, wandered about the fields, hauling his mare after him by the
+bridle.&nbsp; In the morning the beast was found nibbling away at the grass
+owre by yonder, wi&rsquo; the saddle upon its back, and a broken bridle
+hinging down about its fore-legs, by the which the folks round were putten
+upon the scent; for, on making search down yon pit, he was fund at the
+bottom, wi&rsquo; his brains smashed about him, and his legs and arms
+broken to chitters!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+121</span>&ldquo;Save us!&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;it makes a&rsquo; my flesh
+grue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel it may,&rdquo; answered Tammie, &ldquo;or the story&rsquo;s
+lost in the telling; for the collyers that fand him shook as if they had
+been seized wi&rsquo; the ague.&nbsp; The dumb animal, ye observe, had far
+mair sense than him; for, when his fitting gaed way, instead of following
+it had plunged back; and the bit o&rsquo; the bridle, that had broken, was
+still in his grup, when they spied him wi&rsquo; their lanterns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was an awful like way to leave the world,&rdquo; said I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Deed it was, and nae less,&rdquo; answered Tammie,
+&ldquo;to gang to his lang account in the middle of his mad thochtlessness,
+without a moment&rsquo;s warning.&nbsp; But see, yonder&rsquo;s Cousland
+lying right forrit to the east hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this very nick of time Benjie was seized with a severe kink; so
+Tammie stopped his cart, and I held his head over the side of it till the
+cough went by.&nbsp; I thought his inside would have jumped out; but he
+fell sound asleep in two or three minutes; and we jogged on till we came to
+the yill-house door, where, after louping out, we got a pickle pease-strae
+to Tammie&rsquo;s horse.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+122</span>CHAPTER FOURTEEN&mdash;MANSIE AND TAMMIE AT MY LORD&rsquo;S
+RACES</h2>
+<p>It happened curiously that, of all the days of the year, this should
+have been the one on which the Carters&rsquo;-play was held; and, by good
+luck, we were just in time to see that grand sight.&nbsp; The whole
+regiment of carters were paraded up at my Lord&rsquo;s door, for so they
+call their box-master; and a beautiful thing it was, I can assure ye.&nbsp;
+What a sight of ribands was on the horses!&nbsp; Many a crame must have
+been emptied ere such a number of manes and long tails could have been
+busked out.&nbsp; The beasts themselves, poor things, I dare say, wondered
+much at their bravery, and no less I am sure did the riders.&nbsp; They
+looked for all the world like living haberdashery shops.&nbsp; Great
+bunches of wallflower, thyme, spearmint, batchelor buttons,
+gardeners&rsquo; gartens, peony roses, gillyflower, and southernwood, were
+stuck in their button holes; and broad belts of stripped silk, of every
+colour in the rainbow, were flung across their shoulders.&nbsp; As to their
+hats, the man would have had a clear e&rsquo;e that could have kent what
+was their shape or colour.&nbsp; They were all rowed round with ribands,
+and puffed about the rim with long green or white feathers; and cockades
+were stuck on the off side, to say nothing of long strips fleeing behind
+them in the wind like streamers.&nbsp; Save us! to see men so proud of
+finery; if they had been peacocks one would have thought less; but in
+decent sober men, the heads of <!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 123</span>small families, and with no great wages, the
+thing was crazy-like.&nbsp; Was it not?</p>
+<p>At long and last we saw them all set in motion, like a regiment of
+dragoons, two and two, with a drum and fife at their head, as if they had
+been marching to the field of battle.&nbsp; By-the-bye, it was two of our
+own volunteer lads that were playing that day before them, Rory Skirl the
+snab, and Geordie Thump the dyer; so this, ye see, verified the old
+proverb, that travel where ye like, to the world&rsquo;s end, ye&rsquo;ll
+aye meet with kent faces; Tammie and me coming out to the yill-house door
+to see them pass by.</p>
+<p>Behind the drum and fife came a big, half-crazy looking chield, with a
+broad blue bonnet on his head, and a red worsted cherry sticking in the
+crown of it.&nbsp; He was carrying a new car-saddle over his shoulder on a
+well-cleaned pitchfork.&nbsp; Syne came three abreast, one on each side of
+my lord, being the key-keepers; he keeping the box, and they keeping the
+keys, in case like he should take any thing out.&nbsp; And syne came the
+auld my lord&mdash;him that was my lord last year, ye observe; and syne
+came the colours, as bright and bonny as mostly any thing ye ever
+saw.&nbsp; On one of them was painted a plough and harrows, and a man
+sowing wheat; over the top of which were gilded letters, the which I was
+able to read when I put on my specs, being, if I mind well, &ldquo;Speed
+the Plough.&rdquo;&nbsp; On the other one, which was a mazarine blue with
+<!-- page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+124</span>yellow fringes, was the picture of two carters, with flat bonnets
+on their heads, the tane with a whip in his hand, and the tither a rake,
+making hay like.&nbsp; Then came they all passing by two and two, looking
+as if each one of them had been the Duke of Buccleuch himself, every one
+rigged out in his best; the young callants, such like as had just entered
+the box, coming hindmost, and thinking themselves, I daresay, no small
+drink, and the day a great one when they were first allowed to be art and
+part in such a grand procession.</p>
+<p>But losh me!&nbsp; I had mostly forgot the piper, that played in the
+middle, as proud as Hezekiah, that we read of in Second Kings, strutting
+about from side to side with his bare legs and big buckles, and bit
+Macgregor tartan jacket&mdash;his cheeks blown up with wind like a
+smith&rsquo;s bellows&mdash;the feathers dirling with conceit in his
+bonnet&mdash;and the drone, below his oxter, squeeling and skirling like an
+evil spirit tied up in a green bag.&nbsp; Keep us all! what gleys he gied
+about him to observe that the folk were looking at him!&nbsp; He put me in
+mind of the song that old Barny used to sing about the streets&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Ilka ane his sword and dirk has,<br />
+Ilka ane as proud&rsquo;s a Turk is;<br />
+There&rsquo;s the Grants o&rsquo; Tullochgorum,<br />
+Wi&rsquo; their pipers gaun before &rsquo;em;<br />
+Proud the mithers are that bore &rsquo;em.<br />
+Feedle, faddle, fa, fum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>But who do ye think should come up to us at this blessed moment,
+with a staff in his hand, being old now, and not able to ride in the
+procession, as he had many a time and often done before, but honest
+Saunders Tram, that had been a staunch customer of mine since the day on
+which I opened shop, and to whom I had made countless pairs of corduroy
+spatterdashes; so we shook hands jocosely together, like old acquaintances,
+and the body hodged and leuch as if he had found a fiddle, he was so glad
+to see me.</p>
+<p>Benjie having fallen asleep, Luckie Barm of the Change, a douce woman,
+put him to his bed, and promised to take care of him till we came back;
+Saunders Tram insisting on us to go forward along with him to see the
+race.&nbsp; I had no great scruple to do this, as I thought Benjie would
+likely sleep for an hour, being wearied with the joggling of the cart, and
+having supped a mutchkin bowlful of Luckie Barm&rsquo;s broo and bread.</p>
+<p>By the time we had tramped on to the braehead, two or three had booked
+for the race, and were busy pulling away the flowers that hung over about
+their horses&rsquo; lugs, to say little of the tapes and twine; and which
+made them look, poor brutes, as if they were not very sure what was the
+matter with them.&nbsp; Meanwhile, there was a terrible uproar between my
+lord and a man from Edinburgh Grassmarket, leading a <!-- page 126--><a
+name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 126</span>limping horse,
+covered with a dirty sheet, with two holes for the beast&rsquo;s een
+looking out at.</p>
+<p>But, for all this outward care, the poor thing seemed very like as if
+wind was more plenty in the land than corn, being thin and starved-looking,
+and as lame as Vulcan in the off hind-leg.&nbsp; So ye see the managers of
+the box insisted on its not running; and the man said &ldquo;it had a right
+to run as well as any other horse&rdquo;; and my lord said &ldquo;it had no
+such thing, as it was not in the box&rdquo;; and the man said &ldquo;he
+would take out a protest&rdquo;; and my lord said &ldquo;he didna gie a
+bawbee for a protest; and that he would not allow him to run on any account
+whatsoever&rdquo;; but the man was throng all the time they were
+argle-bargling taking the cover off the beast&rsquo;s back, that was ready
+saddled, and as accoutred for running as our regiment of volunteers was for
+fighting on field-days.&nbsp; So he swore like a trooper, that,
+notwithstanding all their debarring, he would run in spite of their
+teeth&mdash;both my lord&rsquo;s teeth, ye observe, and that of the two
+key-keepers;&mdash;maybe, too, of the man that carried the saddle, for he
+aye lent in a word at my lord&rsquo;s back, egging him on to stand out for
+the laws to the last drop of his blood.</p>
+<p>To cut a long tale short, the drum ruffed, and off set four of them, a
+black one, and a white one, and a brown one, and the man&rsquo;s one, neck
+and neck, as neat as you like.&nbsp; The race course was along the high
+road; and, dog on it, they made a noise like thunder, throwing <!-- page
+127--><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 127</span>out their
+big heavy feet behind them, and whisking their tails from side to side as
+if they would have dung out one another&rsquo;s een; till, not being used
+to gallop, they at last began to funk and fling; syne first one stopping,
+and then another, wheeling round and round about like peiries, in spite of
+the riders whipping them, and pulling them by the heads.&nbsp; The
+man&rsquo;s mare, however, from the Grassmarket, with the limping leg,
+carried on, followed by the white one, an old tough brute, that had
+belonged in its youth to a trumpeter of the Scots Greys; and, to tell the
+truth, it showed mettle still, though far past its best; so back they came,
+neck and neck, all the folk crying, and holloing, and clapping their
+hands&mdash;some &ldquo;Weel dune the lame ane&mdash;five shillings on the
+lame ane&rdquo;;&mdash;and others, &ldquo;Weel run Bonaparte&mdash;at him,
+auld Bonaparte&mdash;two to one that Whitey beats him all to
+sticks,&rdquo;&mdash;when, dismal to relate, the limping-legged ane couped
+the creels, and old white Bonaparte came in with his tail cocked amid loud
+cheering, and no small clapping of hands.</p>
+<p>We all ran down the road to the place where the limping horse was lying,
+for it was never like to rise up again any more than the bit rider, that
+was thrown over its head like an arrow out of a bow; but on helping him to
+his feet, save and except the fright, two wide screeds across his
+trowser-knees, and a scratch along the brig of his nose, nothing visible
+was to be <!-- page 128--><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+128</span>perceived.&nbsp; It was different, however, with the limping
+horse.&nbsp; Misfortunate brute! one of its fore-legs had folded below it,
+and snapped through at the fetlock joint.&nbsp; There was it lying with a
+sad sorrowful look, as if it longed for death to come quick and end its
+miseries; the blood, all the while, gush-gushing out at the gaping
+wound.&nbsp; To all it was as plain as the A, B, C, that the bones would
+never knit; and that, considering the case it was in, it would be an act of
+Christian charity to put the beast out of pain.&nbsp; The maister gloomed,
+stroked his chin, and looked down, knowing, weel-a-wat, that he had lost
+his bread-winner, then gave his head a nod, nod&mdash;thrusting both his
+hands down to the bottom lining of the pockets of his long square-tailed
+jockey coat.&nbsp; He was a wauf, hallanshaker-looking chield, with an old
+broad-snouted japanned beaver hat pulled over his brow&mdash;one that
+seemed by his phisog to hold the good word of the world as
+nothing&mdash;and that had, in the course of circumstances, been reduced to
+a kind of wild desperation, either by chance-misfortunes, cares and trials,
+or, what is more likely, by his own sinful, regardless way of life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It canna be helpit,&rdquo; he said, giving his head a bit shake;
+&ldquo;it canna be helpit, friends.&nbsp; Ay, Jess, ye were a gude ane in
+yere day, lass,&mdash;mony a penny and pound have I made out of ye.&nbsp;
+Which o&rsquo; ye can lend me a hand, lads?&nbsp; Rin away for a gun some
+o&rsquo; ye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+129</span>Here Thomas Clod interfered with a small bit of advice&mdash;a
+thing that Thomas was good at, being a Cameronian elder, and accustomed to
+giving a word.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wad ye no think it better,&rdquo; said Thomas,
+&ldquo;to stick her with a long gully-knife, or a sharp shoemaker&rsquo;s
+parer?&nbsp; It wad be an easier way, I&rsquo;m thinking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dog on it!&nbsp; I could scarcely keep from shuddering when I heard them
+speaking in this wild, heathenish, bloody sort of a manner.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;Deed no,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Saunders Tram, at whose side I
+was standing, &ldquo;far better send away for the smith&rsquo;s forehammer,
+and hit her a smack or twa betwixt the een; so ye wad settle her in half a
+second.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; cried Tammie Dobbie, lending in his word; &ldquo;a
+better plan than a&rsquo; that, wad be to make a strong kinch of ropes, and
+hang her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Loveyding! such ways of showing how to be merciful!!&nbsp; But the old
+Jockey himself interfered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Haud yere tongues, fules,&rdquo;
+was his speech; &ldquo;yonder&rsquo;s the man coming wi&rsquo; a gun.&nbsp;
+We&rsquo;ll shune put an end to her.&nbsp; She would have won for a hundred
+pounds, if she hadna broken her leg.&nbsp; Wha&rsquo;ll wager me that she
+wadna hae won?&nbsp; But she&rsquo;s the last of my stable, puir beast; and
+I havena ae plack to rub against anither, now that I have lost her.&nbsp;
+Gi&rsquo;e me the gun and the penny candle.&nbsp; Is she loaded?&rdquo;
+speired he at the man that carried the piece.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Troth is she,&rdquo; was the answer, &ldquo;double
+charged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+130</span>&ldquo;Then stand back, lads,&rdquo; quoth the old
+round-shouthered horse-couper, and ramming down the candle he lifted up the
+piece, cocking it as he went four or five yards in front of the poor
+bleeding brute, that seemed, though she could not rise, to know what he was
+about with the weapon of destruction; casting her black eye up at him, and
+looking pitifully in his face.</p>
+<p>When I saw him taking his aim, and preparing to draw the trigger, I
+turned round my back, not being able to stand it, and brizzed the flats of
+my hands with all my pith against the opening of my ears; nevertheless, I
+heard a faint boom; so, heeling round, I observed the miserable bleeding
+creature lift her head, and pulling up her legs, give them a plunge down
+again on the divots: after which she lay still, and we all saw, to our
+satisfaction, that death had come to her relief.</p>
+<p>We are not commanded to be the judges of our fellow-creatures, but to
+think charitably of all men, hoping every thing for the best; and, though
+the horse-couper was a thought suspicious, both in look, speech, dress, and
+outward behaviour, still, ever and anon, we were bound by the ten
+commandments to consider him only in the light of a fellow-mortal in
+distress of mind and poverty of pocket; so we made a superscription for the
+poor man; and, though he did not look much like one that deserved our
+charity, nevertheless <!-- page 131--><a name="page131"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 131</span>and howsoever, maybe he was a bad halfpenny,
+and maybe not; yet one thing was visibly certain, that he was as poor as
+Job&mdash;misery being written in big-hand letters on his brow.&nbsp; So it
+behoved each one to open his purse as he could afford it; and, though I say
+not what I put into the hat, proud am I to tell that he collected two or
+three shillings to help him home.</p>
+<p>This job being over to his mind as well as mine, and the money safely
+stowed into his big hinder coat-pocket&mdash;would ye believe it? ere yet
+the beast was scarcely cold, just as we were decamping from the place, and
+buttoning up our breeches-pockets, we saw him casting his coat, and had the
+curiosity to stand still for a jiffy, to observe what he was after, in
+case, in the middle of his misfortunes, he was bent on some act of
+desperation; when, lo and behold! he out with a gully knife, and began
+skinning his old servant, as if he had been only peeling the bark off a
+fallen tree!</p>
+<p>One cannot sit at their ingle-cheek and expect, without casting their
+eyes about them, to grow experienced in the ways of men, or the on-goings
+of the world.&nbsp; This spectacle gave me, I can assure you, much and no
+little insight; and so dowie was I with the thoughts of what I had
+witnessed of the selfishness, the sinfulness, and perversity of man, that I
+grew more and more home-sick, thinking never so much in my life before of
+my quiet hearthstone and cheerful ingle; and though Thomas Clod insisted
+<!-- page 132--><a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+132</span>greatly on my staying to their head-meeting dinner, and taking a
+reel with the lassies in the barn; and Tammie Dobbie, the bit body, had got
+so much into the spirit of the thing, that little persuasion would have
+made him stay all night and reel till the dawing&mdash;yet I was determined
+to make the best of my way home; more-be-token, as Benjie might take skaith
+from the night air, and our jaunt therefrom might, instead of contributing
+to his welfare, do him more harm than good.&nbsp; So, after getting some
+cheese and bread, to say nothing of a glass or two of strong beer and a
+dram at Luckie Barm&rsquo;s, we waited in her parlour, which was hung round
+with most beautiful pictures of Joseph and his Brethren, besides two stucco
+parrots on the chimney-piece, amusing ourselves with looking at them, as a
+pastime like, till Benjie wakened; on the which I made Tammie yoke his
+beast, and rowing the bit callant in his mother&rsquo;s shawl, took him
+into my arms in the cart, and after shaking hands with all and sundry twice
+or thrice over, we bade them a &ldquo;good-night,&rdquo; and drove
+away.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+133</span>CHAPTER FIFTEEN&mdash;MANSIE ON THE RETURN FROM MY LORD&rsquo;S
+RACES</h2>
+<p>I may confess, without thinking shame, that I was glad when I found our
+nebs turned homeward; and, when we got over the turn of the brae at the old
+quarry-holes, to see the blue smoke of our own Dalkeith, hanging like a
+thin cloud over the tops of the green trees, through which I perceived the
+glittering weathercock on the old kirk steeple.&nbsp; Tammie, poor
+creature, I observed, was a whit ree with the good cheer; and, as he sat on
+the fore-tram, with his whip-hand thrown over the beast&rsquo;s haunches,
+he sang, half to himself and half-aloud, a great many old Scotch songs,
+such as &ldquo;the Gaberlunzie,&rdquo; &ldquo;Aiken Drum,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Tak&rsquo; yere Auld Cloak about ye,&rdquo; and &ldquo;the Deuks
+dang ower my Daddie&rdquo;; besides &ldquo;The Mucking o&rsquo;
+Geordie&rsquo;s Byre,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Ca&rsquo; the Ewes to the
+Knowes,&rdquo; and so on; but, do what I liked, I could not keep my spirits
+up, thinking of the woful end of the poor old horse, and of the
+ne&rsquo;er-do-weel loon its master.&nbsp; Many an excellent instruction of
+Mr Wiggie&rsquo;s came to my mind, of how we misguided the good things that
+were lent us for our use here, by a gracious Provider, who would, however,
+bid us render a final account to him of our conduct and conversation.&nbsp;
+I thought of how many were aye complaining and complaining, myself whiles
+among the rest, of the hardships, the miseries, and the misfortunes of
+their lot; putting all down to the score of fate, and never <!-- page
+134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>once
+thinking of the plantations of sorrow, reared up from the seeds of our own
+sinfulness; or how any thing, save punishment, could come of the breaking
+of the ten commandments delivered to the patriarch Moses.&nbsp; Perhaps,
+reckoned I with myself, perhaps in this, even I myself may have in this
+day&rsquo;s transactions erred.&nbsp; Here am I wandering about in a cart;
+exposing myself to the defilement of the world, to the fear of robbers, and
+to the night air, in the search of health for a dwining laddie; as if the
+hand that dealt that blessing out was not as powerful at home as it is
+abroad.&nbsp; Had I remained at my own lap-broad, the profits of my
+day&rsquo;s work would have been over and above for the maintenance of my
+family, outside and inside; instead of which, I have been at the expense of
+a cart-hire and a horse&rsquo;s up-putting, let alone Tammie&rsquo;s debosh
+and my own, besides the trifle of threepence to the round-shouldered old
+horse-couper with the slouched japan beaver hat.&nbsp; The story was too
+true a one; but, alack-a-day, it was now over late to repent!</p>
+<p>As I was thus musing, the bright red sun of summer sank down behind the
+top of the Pentland Hills, and all looked bluish, dowie, and dreary, as if
+the heart of the world had been seized with a sudden dwalm, and the face of
+nature had at once withered from blooming youth into the hoariness of old
+age.&nbsp; Now and then the birds gave a bit chitter; and whiles a cow <!--
+page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>mooed
+from the fields; and the dew was falling like the little tears of the
+fairies out of the blue lift, where the gloaming-star soon began to glow
+and glitter bonnily.</p>
+<p>What I had seen and witnessed made my thoughts heavy and my heart sad; I
+could not get the better of it.&nbsp; I looked round and round me, as we
+jogged along over the height, down on the far distant country, that spread
+out as if it had been a great big picture, with hills, and fields, and
+woods; and I could still see to the norward the ships lying at their
+anchors on the sea, and the shores of Fife far far beyond it.&nbsp; It was
+a great and a grand sight; and made me turn from the looking at it into my
+own heart, causing me to think more and more of the glory of the
+Maker&rsquo;s handiworks, and less and less of the littleness of prideful
+man.&nbsp; But Tammie had gotten his drappikie, and the tongue of the body
+would not lie still a moment; so he blethered on from one thing to another,
+as we jogged along, till I was forced at the last to give up thinking, and
+begin a twa-handed crack with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you your snuff-box upon ye?&rdquo; said Tammie.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Gi&rsquo;e me a pinch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having given him the box, I observed to him, that &ldquo;it was
+beginning to grow dark and dowie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Deed is&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Tammie; &ldquo;but a body can
+now scarcely meet on the road wi&rsquo; ony think waur than <!-- page
+136--><a name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+136</span>themsell.&nbsp; Mony a witch, de&rsquo;il, and bogle, however,
+did my grannie see and hear tell of, that used to scud and scamper hereaway
+langsyne like maukins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Witches!&rdquo; quo&rsquo; I.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, no, Tammie, all
+these things are out of the land now; and muckle luck to them.&nbsp; But we
+have other things to fear; what think ye of highway robbers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Highway robbers!&rdquo; said Tammie.&nbsp; &ldquo;Kay, kay;
+I&rsquo;ll tell ye of something that I met in wi&rsquo; mysell.&nbsp; Ae
+dark winter night, as I was daundering hame frae Pathhead&mdash;it was
+pitmirk, and about the twall&mdash;losh me, I couldna see my finger afore
+me!&mdash;that a stupid thocht cam into my head that I wad never wun hame,
+but be either killed, lost, murdered, or drowned, between that and the
+dawing.&nbsp; All o&rsquo; a sudden I sees a light coming dancing forrit
+amang the trees; and my hair began to stand up on end.&nbsp; Then, in the
+next moment&mdash;save us a&rsquo;!&mdash;I sees anither light, and forrit,
+forrit they baith cam, like the een of some great fiery monster, let loose
+frae the pit o&rsquo; darkness by its maister, to seek whom it might
+devour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop, Tammie,&rdquo; said I to him, &ldquo;ye&rsquo;ll wauken
+Benjie.&nbsp; How far are we from Dalkeith?&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p136b.jpg">
+<img alt="Thomas Burlings" src="images/p136s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Twa mile and a bittock,&rdquo; answered Tammie.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+wait a wee.&mdash;Up cam the two lights snoov-snooving, nearer and nearer;
+and I heard distinctly the sound of feet that werena
+men&rsquo;s&mdash;cloven feet, maybe&mdash;but nae wheels.&nbsp; Sae nearer
+it cam and nearer, till the <!-- page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 137</span>sweat began to pour owre my een as cauld as
+ice; and, at lang and last, I fand my knees beginning to gi&rsquo;e way;
+and, after tot-tottering for half a minute, I fell down, my staff playing
+bleach out before me.&nbsp; When I cam to mysell, and opened my een, there
+were the twa lights before me, bleez-bleezing, as if they wad blast my
+sight out.&nbsp; And what did they turn out to be, think ye?&nbsp; The
+de&rsquo;il or spunkie, whilk o&rsquo; them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I canna tell,&rdquo; said I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naithing mair then,&rdquo; answered Tammie, &ldquo;but twa
+bowets; ane tied to ilka knee of auld Doofie, the half-crazy horse-doctor,
+mounted on his lang-tailed naig, and away through the dark by himsell, at
+the dead hour o&rsquo; night, to the relief of a man&rsquo;s mare seized
+with the batts, somewhere down about Oxenford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was glad that Tammie&rsquo;s story had ended in this way, when out
+came another tramping on its heels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you see the top of yon black trees to the eastward there, on
+the braehead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I do,&rdquo; was my reply.&nbsp; &ldquo;But how far,
+think ye, are we from home now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About a mile and a half,&rdquo; said Tammie.&mdash;&ldquo;Weel,
+as to the trees, I&rsquo;ll tell ye something about them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was an auld widow-leddy lived langsyne about the town-end
+of Dalkeith.&nbsp; A sour, cankered, curious body&mdash;she&rsquo;s dead
+and rotten lang ago.&nbsp; But what I was gaun to say, she had a bonny bit
+fair-haired, <!-- page 138--><a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+138</span>blue-ee&rsquo;d lassie of a servant-maid that lodged in the house
+wi&rsquo; her, just by all the world like a lamb wi&rsquo; an wolf; a
+bonnier quean, I&rsquo;ve heard tell, never steppit in leather shoon; so
+all the young lads in the gate-end were wooing at her, and fain to have
+her; but she wad only have ae joe for a&rsquo; that.&nbsp; He was a
+journeyman wright, a trades-lad, and they had come, three or four year
+before, frae the same place thegither&mdash;maybe having had a liking for
+ane anither since they were bairns; so they were gaun to be married the
+week after Da&rsquo;keith Fair, and a&rsquo; was settled.&nbsp; But what,
+think ye, happened?&nbsp; He got a drap drink, and a recruiting party
+listed him in the king&rsquo;s name, wi&rsquo; pitting a white shilling in
+his loof.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the poor lassie heard what had come to pass, and how her
+sweetheart had ta&rsquo;en the bounty, she was like to gang distrackit, and
+took to her bed.&nbsp; The doctor never took up her trouble; and some said
+it was a fever.&nbsp; At last she was roused out o&rsquo;t, but naebody
+ever saw her laugh after; and frae ane that was as cantie as a lintie, she
+became as douce as a Quaker, though she aye gaed cannily about her wark, as
+if amaist naething had happened.&nbsp; If she was ony way light-headed
+before, to be sure she wasna that noo; but just what a decent quean should
+be, sitting for hours by the kitchen fire her lane, reading the Bible, and
+thinking, wha kens, of what wad become o&rsquo; the wicked after they died;
+and so ye see&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 139--><a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+139</span>&ldquo;What light is yon?&rdquo; said I, interrupting him,
+wishing him like to break off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ou, it&rsquo;s just the light on some of the coal-hills.&nbsp;
+The puir blackened creatures will be gaun down to their wark.&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s an unyearthly kind of trade, turning night intil day, and
+working like moudiewarts in the dark, when decent folks are in their beds
+sleeping.&mdash;And so, as I was saying, ye see, it happened ae Sunday
+night that a chap cam to the back door; and the mistress too heard
+it.&nbsp; She was sitting in the foreroom wi&rsquo; her specs on, reading
+some sermon book; but it was the maid that answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a while thereafter, she rang her bell, being a curious body,
+and aye anxious to ken a&rsquo; thing of her ain affairs, let alane her
+neighbours; so, after waiting a wee, she rang again,&mdash;and better rang;
+then lifting up her stick, for she was stiff with the rheumaticks and decay
+of nature, she hirpled into the kitchen,&mdash;but feint a hait saw she
+there, save the open Bible lying on the table, the cat streekit out before
+the fire, and the candle burning&mdash;the candle&mdash;na, I daur say I am
+wrang there, I believe it was a lamp, for she was a near ane.&nbsp; As for
+her maiden, there was no trace of her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do ye think came owre her then?&rdquo; said I to him, liking
+to be at my wits&rsquo; end.&nbsp; &ldquo;Naething uncanny, I daur
+say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ll hear in a moment,&rdquo; answered Tammie,
+&ldquo;a&rsquo; that I ken o&rsquo; the matter.&nbsp; Ye see&mdash;as I
+asked ye before&mdash;<!-- page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 140</span>yon trees on the hill-head to the eastward;
+just below yon black cloud yonder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Preceesely,&rdquo; said I&mdash;&ldquo;I see them well
+enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, after a&rsquo; thochts of finding her were gi&rsquo;en up,
+and it was fairly concluded, that it was the auld gudeman that had come and
+chappit her out, she was fund in a pond among yon trees, floating on her
+back, wi&rsquo; her Sunday&rsquo;s claes on!!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drowned?&rdquo; said I to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drowned&mdash;and as stiff as a deal board,&rdquo; answered
+Tammie.&nbsp; &ldquo;But when she was drowned&mdash;or how she came to be
+drowned&mdash;or who it was drowned her&mdash;has never been found out to
+this blessed moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; said I, lending in my word&mdash;&ldquo;maybe she
+had grown demented, and thrown herself in i&rsquo; the dark.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or maybe,&rdquo; said Tammie, &ldquo;the deil flew away wi&rsquo;
+her in a flash o&rsquo; fire; and, soosing her down frae the lift, she
+landit in that hole, where she was fund floating.&nbsp;
+But&mdash;wo!&mdash;wo!&rdquo; cried he to his horse, coming across its
+side with his whip&mdash;&ldquo;We maun be canny; for this brig has a sharp
+turn (it was the Cow Brig, ye know), and many a one, both horse and man,
+have got their necks broken, by not being wary enough of that
+corner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This made me a thought timorous, having the bit laddie Benjie fast
+asleep in my arms; and as I saw that Tammie&rsquo;s horse was a wee
+fidgety, and glad, I <!-- page 141--><a name="page141"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 141</span>dare say, poor thing, to find itself so near
+home.&nbsp; We heard the water, far down below, roaring and hushing over
+the rocks, and thro&rsquo; among the Duke&rsquo;s woods&mdash;big, thick,
+black trees, that threw their branches, like giant&rsquo;s arms, half
+across the Esk, making all below as gloomy as midnight; while over the tops
+of them, high, high aboon, the bonnie wee starries were twink-twinkling far
+amid the blue.&nbsp; But there was no end to Tammie&rsquo;s tongue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;speaking o&rsquo; the brig,
+I&rsquo;ll tell you a gude story about that.&nbsp; Auld Jamie Bowie, the
+potato merchant, that lived at the Gate-end, had a horse and cart that met
+wi&rsquo; an accident just at the turn o&rsquo; the corner yonder; and up
+cam a chield sair forfaughten, and a&rsquo; out of breath, to Jamie&rsquo;s
+door, crying like the prophet Jeremiah to the auld Jews, &lsquo;Rin, rin
+away doun to the Cow Brig; for your cart&rsquo;s dung to shivers, and the
+driver&rsquo;s killed, as weel as the horse!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;James ran in for his hat; but as he was coming out at the door,
+he met another messenger, such as came running across the plain to David,
+to acquaint him of the death of Absalom, crying, &lsquo;Rin away doun,
+Jamie, rin away doun; your cart is standing yonder, without either horse or
+driver; for they&rsquo;re baith killed!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jamie thanked Heaven that the cart was to the fore; then, rinning
+back for his stick, which he had forgotten, he stopped a moment to bid his
+wife not <!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+142</span>greet so loud, and was then rushing out in full birr, when he ran
+foul of a third chield, that mostly knocked doun the door in his
+hurry.&nbsp; &lsquo;Awfu&rsquo; news, man, awfu&rsquo; news,&rsquo; was the
+way o&rsquo;t, with this second Eliphaz the Temanite.&nbsp; &lsquo;Your
+cart and horse ran away&mdash;and threw the driver, puir fellow, clean owre
+the brig into the water.&nbsp; No a crunch o&rsquo; him is to be seen or
+heard tell of; for he was a&rsquo; smashed to pieces!!&nbsp; It&rsquo;s an
+awfu&rsquo; business!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;But where&rsquo;s the horse? and where&rsquo;s the cart,
+then?&rsquo; askit Jamie, a thought brisker.&nbsp; &lsquo;Where&rsquo;s the
+horse and cart, then, my man?&nbsp; Can ye tell me ought of
+that?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ou,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;they&rsquo;re baith doun at the
+Toll yonder, no a hair the waur.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That&rsquo;s the best news I&rsquo;ve heard the nicht, my
+man.&mdash;Goodwife, I say, Goodwife; are ye deaf or donnart?&nbsp; Give
+this lad a dram; and, as it rather looks like a shower, I&rsquo;ll
+e&rsquo;en no go out the night.&mdash;I&rsquo;ll easy manage to find
+another driver, though half a hundred o&rsquo; the blockheads should get
+their brains knocked out.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is not that a gude ane noo?&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Tammie,
+laughing.&nbsp; &lsquo;&ldquo;Od Jamie Bowie was a real ane.&nbsp; He wadna
+let them light a candle by his bedside to let him see to dee; he gied them
+a curse, and said that was needless extravagance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dog on it, thought I to myself, the further in the deeper.&nbsp; This
+beats the round-shouldered, horse-couper <!-- page 143--><a
+name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 143</span>with the Japan hat,
+skinning his reeking horse, all to sticks; and so I again fell into a
+gloomy sort of a musing; when, just as we came opposite the Duke&rsquo;s
+gate, with the deers on each side of it, two men rushed out upon us, and
+one of them seized Tammie&rsquo;s horse by the bridle, as the other one
+held his horse-pistol to my nose, and bade me stop in the King&rsquo;s
+name!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold your hand, hold your hand, for the sake of mercy!&rdquo;
+cried I.&nbsp; &ldquo;Spare the father of a small family that will starve
+on the street if ye take my life!!&nbsp; Hae&mdash;hae&mdash;there&rsquo;s
+every coin and copper I have about me in the world!&nbsp; Be merciful, be
+merciful; and do not shed blood, that will not, cannot be rubbed out of
+your conscience.&nbsp; Take all that we have&mdash;horse and cart and all
+if ye like; only spare our lives, and let us away home!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;De&rsquo;il&rsquo;s in the man,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Tammie,
+&ldquo;horse and cart! that&rsquo;s a gude one!&nbsp; Na, na, lads; fire
+away gin ye like; for as lang as I hae a drap o&rsquo; bluid in me,
+ye&rsquo;ll get neither.&nbsp; Better be killed than starve.&nbsp; Do your
+best, ye thieves that ye are; and I&rsquo;ll hae baith of ye hanged neist
+week before the Fifteen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Every moment I expected my head to be shot off, till I got my hand
+clapped on Tammie&rsquo;s mouth, and could get cried to
+them&mdash;&ldquo;Shoot him then, lads; shoot him then, lads, if he wants
+it; but take my siller like Christians, and let me away with my poor deeing
+bairn!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 144--><a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+144</span>The two men seemed a something dumfoundered with what they heard;
+and I began to think them, if they were highway robbers, a wee slow at
+their trade; when, what think ye did they turn out to be&mdash;only
+guess?&nbsp; Nothing more nor less than two excise officers, that had got
+information of some smuggled gin, coming up in a cart from Fisherrow
+Harbour, and were lurking on the road-side, looking out for spuilzie!!</p>
+<p>When they quitted us giggling, I could not keep from laughing too;
+though the sights I had seen, and the fright I had got, made me nervish and
+eerie; so blithe was I when the cart rattled on our own street, and I began
+to waken Benjie, as we were not above a hundred yards from our own
+door.</p>
+<p>In this day&rsquo;s adventures, I saw the sin and folly of my conduct
+visibly, as I jumped out of the cart at our close mouth.&nbsp; So I
+determined within myself, with a strong determination, to behave more
+sensibly for the future, and think no more about limekilns and coal-pits;
+but to trust, for Benjie&rsquo;s recovery from the chincough, to a kind
+Providence, together with Daffy&rsquo;s elixir, and warm blankets.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+145</span>CHAPTER SIXTEEN&mdash;TAILOR MANSIE AND THE BLOODY CARTRIDGE</h2>
+<p>It was on a fine summer morning, somewhere about four o&rsquo;clock,
+when I wakened from my night&rsquo;s rest, and was about thinking to bestir
+myself, that I heard the sound of voices in the kail-yard stretching south
+from our back windows.&nbsp; I listened&mdash;and I listened&mdash;and I
+better listened&mdash;and still the sound of the argle-bargling became more
+distinct, now in a fleeching way, and now in harsh angry tones, as if some
+quarrelsome disagreement had taken place.&nbsp; I had not the comfort of my
+wife&rsquo;s company in this dilemmy; she being away, three days before, on
+the top of Tammie Trundle the carrier&rsquo;s cart, to Lauder, on a visit
+to her folks there; her mother (my gudemother like) having been for some
+time ill with an income in her leg, which threatened to make a lameter of
+her in her old age, the two doctors there&mdash;not speaking of the
+blacksmith, and sundry skeely old women&mdash;being able to make nothing of
+the business; so nobody happened to be with me in the room saving wee
+Benjie, who was lying asleep at the back of the bed, with his little
+Kilmarnock on his head, as sound as a top.&nbsp; Nevertheless, I looked for
+my clothes; and, opening one half of the window shutter, I saw four young
+birkies, well dressed&mdash;indeed three of them customers of my
+own&mdash;all belonging to the town; two of them young doctors, one of them
+a writer&rsquo;s clerk, and the other a grocer.&nbsp; The whole appeared
+<!-- page 146--><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+146</span>very fierce and fearsome, like turkey-cocks; swaggering about
+with warlike arms as if they had been the king&rsquo;s dragoons; and
+priming a pair of pistols, which one of the surgeons, a spirity, outspoken
+lad, Maister Blister, was holding in his grip.</p>
+<p>I jealoused at once what they were after, being now a wee up to
+fire-arms; so I saw that scaith was to come of it; and that I would be
+wanting in my duty on four heads,&mdash;first, as a Christian; second, as a
+man; third, as a subject; and fourth, as a father; if I withheld myself
+from the scene; nor lifted up my voice, however fruitlessly, against such
+crying iniquity as the wanton letting out of human blood; so forth I
+hastened, half dressed, with my grey stockings rolled up my thighs over my
+corduroys, and my old hat above my cowl, to the kail-yard of
+contention.</p>
+<p>I was just in the nick of time; and my presence checked the effusion of
+blood for a little&mdash;but wait a wee.&nbsp; So high and furious were at
+least three of the party, that I saw it was catching water in a sieve to
+waste words on them, knowing as clearly as the sun serves the world, that
+interceding would be of no avail.&nbsp; However, I made a feint, and
+threatened to bowl away for a magistrate, if they would not desist from
+their barbarous and bloody purpose; but, i&rsquo;fegs, I had better kept my
+counsel till it was asked for.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tailor Mansie,&rdquo; blustered out Maister Thomas <!-- page
+147--><a name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>Blister with
+a furious cock of his eye&mdash;he was a queer Eirish birkie, come over for
+his education&mdash;&ldquo;since ye have ventured to thrust your nose, ma
+vourneen,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;where nobody invited ye, you must just
+stay,&rdquo; added he, &ldquo;and abide by the consequences.&nbsp; This is
+an affair of honour, you take, don&rsquo;t ye? and if ye venture to stir
+one foot from the spot, och then, ma bouchal,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;by the
+poker of St Patrick, but whisk through ye goes one of these leaden
+playthings, as sure as ye ever spoiled a coat, or cabbaged
+broadcloth!&nbsp; Ye have now come out, ye observe,&mdash;hark ye,&rdquo;
+said he, &ldquo;and are art and part in the business; and if one, or both,
+of the principals be killed, poor devils,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we are all
+alike liable to take our trial before the Justiciary Court, hark ye; and by
+the powers,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I doubt not but, on proper
+consideration, machree, that they will allow us to get off mercifully, on
+this side of swinging, by a verdict of manslaughter&mdash;and be hanged to
+them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Od, I found myself immediately in a scrape; but how to get out of
+it baffled my gumption.&nbsp; It set me all a shivering; yet I thought
+that, come the worst when it should, they surely would not hang the father
+of a helpless small family, that had nothing but his needle for their
+support, if I made a proper affidavy, about having tried to make peace
+between the youths.&nbsp; So, conscience being a brave supporter, I abode
+in silence, though not without many queer and qualmish <!-- page 148--><a
+name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 148</span>thoughts, and a
+pit-patting of the heart, not unco pleasant in the tholing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blood and wounds!&rdquo; bawled Maister Thomas Blister, &ldquo;it
+would be a disgrace for ever on the honourable profession of physic,&rdquo;
+egging on poor Maister Willy Magneezhy, whose face was as white as
+double-bleached linen, &ldquo;to make an apology for such an insult.&nbsp;
+Arrah, my honey! you not fit to doctor a cat,&mdash;you not fit to bleed a
+calf,&mdash;you not fit to poultice a pig,&mdash;after three years&rsquo;
+apprenticeship,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and a winter with Doctor
+Monro?&nbsp; By the cupping-glasses of &rsquo;Pocrates,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;and by the pistol of Gallon, but I would have caned him on the spot
+if he had just let out half as much to me!&nbsp; Look ye, man,&rdquo; said
+he, &ldquo;look ye, man, he is all shaking&rdquo; (this was a God&rsquo;s
+truth); &ldquo;he&rsquo;ll turn tail.&nbsp; At him like fire,
+Willie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Magneezhy, though sadly frightened, looked a thought brighter; and made
+a kind of half step forward.&nbsp; &ldquo;Say that ye&rsquo;ll ask my
+pardon once more,&mdash;and if not,&rdquo; whined the poor lad, with a
+voice broken and trembling, &ldquo;then we must just shoot one
+another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Devil a bit,&rdquo; answered Maister Bloatsheet, &ldquo;devil a
+bit.&nbsp; No, sir; you must down on your bare knees, and beg ten thousand
+pardons for calling me out here, in a raw morning; or I&rsquo;ll have a
+shot at you, whether you will or not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you stand that?&rdquo; said Blister, with eyes like burning
+coals.&nbsp; &ldquo;By the living jingo, and the holy <!-- page 149--><a
+name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>poker, Magneezhy, if
+you stand that,&mdash;if you stand that, I say, I stand no longer your
+second, but leave you to disgrace and a caning.&nbsp; If he likes to shoot
+you like a dog, and not as a gentleman, then, cuishla machree,&mdash;let
+him do it, and be done!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; replied Magneezhy with a quivering voice, which
+he tried in vain, poor fellow, to render warlike (he had never been in the
+volunteers like me).&nbsp; &ldquo;Hand us the pistols, then; and let us do
+or die!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Spoken like a hero, and brother of the lancet: as little afraid
+at the sight of your own blood, as at that of your patients,&rdquo; said
+Blister.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hand over the pistols.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was an awful business.&nbsp; Gude save us, such goings on in a
+Christian land!&nbsp; While Mr Bloatsheet, the young writer, was in the act
+of cocking the bloody weapon, I again, but to no purpose, endeavoured to
+slip in a word edgeways.&nbsp; Magneezhy was in an awful case; if he had
+been already shot, he could not have looked more clay and corpse-like; so I
+took up a douce earnest confabulation, while the stramash was drawing to a
+bloody conclusion, with Mr Harry Molasses, the fourth in the spree, who was
+standing behind Bloatsheet with a large mahogany box under his arm,
+something in shape like that of a licensed packman, ganging about from
+house to house, through the country-side, selling toys and trinkets; or
+niffering plaited ear-rings, and suchlike, with young lasses, for old
+silver coins or cracked teaspoons.</p>
+<p><!-- page 150--><a name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+150</span>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; answered he, very composedly, as if it had been
+a canister full of black-rapee or black-guard, that he had just lifted down
+from his top-shelf, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s just Doctor Blister&rsquo;s saws,
+whittles, and big knives, in case any of their legs or arms be blown away,
+that he may cut them off.&rdquo;&nbsp; Little would have prevented me
+sinking down through the ground, had I not remembered at the preceese
+moment, that I myself was a soldier, and liable, when the hour of danger
+threatened, to be called out, in marching-order, to the field of
+battle.&nbsp; But by this time the pistols were in the hands of the two
+infatuated young men, Mr Bloatsheet, as fierce as a hussar dragoon, and
+Magneezhy as supple in the knees as if he was all on oiled hinges; so the
+next consideration was to get well out of the way, the lookers-on running
+nearly as great a chance of being shot as the principals, they not being
+accustomed, like me for instance, to the use of arms; on which account, I
+scougged myself behind a big pear-tree; both being to fire when Blister
+gave the word &ldquo;Off!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had scarcely jouked into my hidy-hole, when
+&ldquo;crack&mdash;crack&rdquo; played the pistols like lightning; and as
+soon as I got my cowl taken from my eyes, and looked about, woes me!&nbsp;
+I saw Magneezhy clap his hand to his brow, wheel round like a peerie, or a
+sheep seized with the sturdie, and then play flap down on his broadside,
+breaking the necks of half-a-dozen cabbage-stocks&mdash;three of which were
+afterwards clean <!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 151</span>lost, as we could not put them all into the
+pot at one time.&nbsp; The whole of us ran forward, but foremost was
+Bloatsheet, who seizing Magneezhy by the hand, cried, with a mournful face,
+&ldquo;I hope you forgive me?&nbsp; Only say this as long as you have
+breath; for I am off to Leith harbour in half a minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The blood was running over poor Magneezhy&rsquo;s eyes, and
+drib-dribbling from the neb of his nose, so he was truly in a pitiful
+state; but he said with more strength than I thought he could have
+mustered,&mdash;&ldquo;Yes, yes, fly for your life.&nbsp; I am dying
+without much pain&mdash;fly for your life, for I am a gone man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bloatsheet bounced through the kail-yard like a maukin, clamb over the
+bit wall, and off like mad; while Blister was feeling Magneezhy&rsquo;s
+pulse with one hand, and looking at his doctor&rsquo;s watch, which he had
+in the other.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do ye think that the poor lad will live,
+doctor?&rdquo; said I to him.</p>
+<p>He gave his head a wise shake, and only observed, &ldquo;I dare say, it
+will be a hanging business among us.&nbsp; In what direction do you think,
+Mansie, we should all take flight?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But I answered bravely, &ldquo;Flee them that will, I&rsquo;se flee
+nane.&nbsp; If I am taken prisoner, the town-officers maun haul me from my
+own house; but, nevertheless, I trust the visibility of my innocence will
+be as plain as a pikestaff to the eyes of the Fifteen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+152</span>&ldquo;What, then, Mansie, will we do with poor Magneezhy?&nbsp;
+Give us your advice in need.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us carry him down to my own bed,&rdquo; answered I; &ldquo;I
+would not desert a fellow-creature in his dying hour!&nbsp; Help me down
+with him, and then flee the country as fast as you are able!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We immediately proceeded, and lifted the poor lad, who had now dwalmed
+away, upon our wife&rsquo;s hand-barrow&mdash;Blister taking the feet, and
+me the oxters, whereby I got my waistcoat all japanned with blood; so, when
+we got him laid right, we proceeded to carry him between us down the close,
+just as if he had been a sticked sheep, and in at the back door, which cost
+us some trouble, being narrow, and the barrow getting jammed in; but, at
+long and last, we got him streeked out above the blankets, having
+previously shooken Benjie, and wakened him out of his morning&rsquo;s
+nap.</p>
+<p>All this being accomplished and got over, Blister decamped, leaving me
+my leeful lane, excepting Benjie, who was next to nobody, in the house with
+the dying man.&nbsp; What a frightful face he had, all smeared over with
+blood and powder&mdash;and I really jealoused, that if he died in that room
+it would be haunted for evermair, he being in a manner a murdered man; so
+that, even should I be acquitted of art and part, his ghost might still
+come to bother us, making our house a hell upon earth, and frighting us out
+of our seven senses.&nbsp; But in the midst of my dreadful surmises, when
+all <!-- page 153--><a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+153</span>was still, so that you might have heard a pin fall, a
+knock-knock-knock, came to the door, on which, recovering my senses, I
+dreaded first that it was the death-chap, and syne that the affair had got
+wind, and that it was the beagles come in search of me; so I kissed little
+Benjie, who was sitting on his creepie, blubbering and greeting for his
+parritch, while a tear stood in my own eye as I went forward to lift the
+sneck to let the officers, as I thought, harrie our house, by carrying off
+me, its master; but it was, thank Heaven, only Tammie Bodkin, coming in
+whistling to his work, with some measuring papers hanging round his
+neck.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Tammie,&rdquo; said I to him, my heart warming at a kent
+face, and making the laddie, although my bounden servant by a regular
+indenture of five years, a friend in my need, &ldquo;come in, my man.&nbsp;
+I fear ye&rsquo;ll hae to take charge of the business for some time to
+come; mind what I tell&rsquo;d ye about the shaping and the cutting, and no
+making the goose ower warm; as I doubt I am about to be harled away to the
+tolbooth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tammie&rsquo;s heart swelled to his mouth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah,
+maister,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;ye&rsquo;re joking.&nbsp; What should ye
+have done that ye should be ta&rsquo;en to sic an ill place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, Tammie, lad,&rdquo; answered I, &ldquo;it is but ower
+true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, weel,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Tammie&mdash;I really thought it a
+great deal of the laddie&mdash;&ldquo;weel, weel, they canna prevent me
+coming to sew beside ye; and if I can take <!-- page 154--><a
+name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 154</span>the measure of
+customers without, ye can cut the claith within.&nbsp; But what is&rsquo;t
+for, maister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come in here,&rdquo; said I to him, &ldquo;and believe your ain
+een, Tammie, my man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Losh me!&rdquo; cried the poor laddie, glowring at the bloody
+face of the man in the bed, and starting back on his tip-toes.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Ay&mdash;ay&mdash;ay! maister; save us, maister;
+ay&mdash;ay&mdash;ay&mdash;you have na cloured his harnpan with the
+guse?&nbsp; Ay, maister, maister! whaten an unearthly sight!!&nbsp; I doubt
+they&rsquo;ll hang us a&rsquo;; you for doing&rsquo;t&mdash;and me on
+suspicion&mdash;and Benjie as art and part, puir thing!&nbsp; But
+I&rsquo;ll rin for a doctor.&nbsp; Will I, maister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The thought had never struck me before, being in a sort of a manner dung
+stupid; but catching up the word, I said with all my pith and birr,
+&ldquo;Rin, rin, Tammie, rin for life and death!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tammie bolted like a nine-year-old, never looking behind his tail; so,
+in less than ten minutes, he returned, hauling along old Doctor Peelbox,
+whom he had waukened out of his bed, in a camblet morning-gown, and a pair
+of red slippers, by the lug and horn, at the very time I was trying to
+quiet young Benjie, who was following me up and down the house, as I was
+pacing to and fro in distraction, girning and whingeing for his
+breakfast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bad business, bad business; bless us, what is this?&rdquo; said
+the old Doctor, who was near-sighted, staring at <!-- page 155--><a
+name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>Magneezhy&rsquo;s
+bloody face through his silver spectacles&mdash;&ldquo;what&rsquo;s the
+matter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The poor patient knew at once his master&rsquo;s tongue, and lifting up
+one of his eyes, the other being stiff and barkened down, said in a
+melancholy voice, &ldquo;Ah, master, do you think I&rsquo;ll get
+better?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Doctor Peelbox, old man as he was, started back as if he had been a
+French dancing-master, or had stramped on a hot bar of iron.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Tom, Tom, is this you? what, in the name of wonder, has done
+this?&rdquo; Then feeling his wrist&mdash;&ldquo;but your pulse is quite
+good.&nbsp; Have you fallen, boy?&nbsp; Where is the blood coming
+from?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Somewhere about the hairy scalp,&rdquo; answered Magneezhy, in
+their own queer sort of lingo.&nbsp; &ldquo;I doubt some artery&rsquo;s cut
+through!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Doctor immediately bade him lie quiet and hush, as he was getting a
+needle and silken thread ready to sew it up; ordering me to have a basin
+and water ready, to wash the poor lad&rsquo;s physog.&nbsp; I did so as
+hard as I was able, though I was not sure about the blood just; old Doctor
+Peelbox watching over my shoulder with a lighted penny candle in one hand,
+and the needle and thread in the other, to see where the blood spouted
+from.&nbsp; But we were as daft as wise; so he bade me take my big shears,
+and cut out all the hair on the fore part of the head as bare as my loof;
+and syne we washed, and better washed; so Magneezhy <!-- page 156--><a
+name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 156</span>got the other eye up,
+when the barkened blood was loosed; looking, though as pale as a clean
+shirt, more frighted than hurt; until it became plain to us all, first to
+the Doctor, syne to me, and syne to Tammie Bodkin, and last of all to
+Magneezhy himself, that his skin was not so much as peeled.&nbsp; So we
+helped him out of the bed, and blithe was I to see the lad standing on the
+floor, without a hold, on his own feet.</p>
+<p>I did my best to clean his neckcloth and shirt of the blood, making him
+look as decentish as possible, considering circumstances; and lending him,
+as the scripture commands, my tartan mantle to hide the infirmity of his
+bloody trowsers and waistcoat.&nbsp; Home went he and his master together;
+me standing at our close mouth, wishing them a good-morning, and blithe to
+see their backs.&nbsp; Indeed, a condemned thief with the rope about his
+neck, and the white cowl tied over his eyes, to say nothing of his hands
+yerked together behind his back, and on the nick of being thrown over,
+could not have been more thankful for a reprieve than I was, at the same
+blessed moment.&nbsp; It was like Adam seeing the deil&rsquo;s rear
+marching out of Paradise, if one may be allowed to think such a thing.</p>
+<p>The whole business, tag-rag and bob-tail, soon, however, spunked out,
+and was the town talk for more than one day.&mdash;But you&rsquo;ll
+hear.</p>
+<p>At the first I pitied the poor lads, that I thought had fled for ever
+and aye from their native country, to <!-- page 157--><a
+name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 157</span>Bengal, Seringapatam,
+Copenhagen, Botany Bay, or Jamaica, leaving behind them all their friends
+and old Scotland, as they might never hear of the goodness of Providence in
+their behalf.&nbsp; But wait a wee.</p>
+<p>Would you believe it?&nbsp; As sure&rsquo;s death, the whole was but a
+wicked trick played by that mischievous loon Blister and his cronies, upon
+one that was a simple and soft-headed callant.&nbsp; De&rsquo;il a hait was
+in the one pistol but a pluff of powder; and in the other, a
+cartridge-paper, full of blood, was rammed down upon the charge; the which,
+hitting Magneezhy on the ee-bree, had caused a business that seemed to have
+put him out of life, and nearly put me (though one of the volunteers) out
+of my seven senses.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 158--><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+158</span>CHAPTER SEVENTEEN&mdash;MANSIE WAUCH&mdash;HIS FIRST AND LAST
+PLAY</h2>
+<p>The time of Tammie Bodkin&rsquo;s apprenticeship being nearly worn
+through, it behoved me, as a man attentive to business, and the interests
+of my family, to cast my eyes around me in search of a callant to fill his
+place; as it is customary in our trade for young men, when their time is
+out, taking a year&rsquo;s journeymanship in Edinburgh, to perfect them in
+the more intricate branches of the business, and learn the newest manner of
+the French and London fashions, by cutting cloth for the young advocates,
+the college students, the banking-house clerks, the half-pay ensigns, and
+the rest of the principal tip-top bucks.</p>
+<p>Having, though I say it myself, the word of being a canny maister, more
+than one brought their callants to me, on reading the bill of &ldquo;An
+apprentice wanted,&rdquo; pasted on my shop-window.</p>
+<p>Offering to bind them for the regular time, yet not wishing to take but
+one, I thought best not to fix in a hurry, and make choice of him that
+seemed more exactly cut out for my purpose.&nbsp; In the course of a few
+weeks three or four cast up, among whom was a laddie of Ben Aits the
+mealmonger, and a son of William Burlings the baker; to say little of the
+callant of Saunders Broom the sweep, that would fain have put his
+blackit-looking bit creature with the one eye and the wooden leg under my
+wing; but I aye <!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 159</span>looked to respectability in these matters; so
+glad was I when I got the offer of Mungo Glen.&mdash;But more of this in
+half a minute.</p>
+<p>I must say I was glad of any feasible excuse to make to the sweep, to
+get quit of him and his laddie, the father being a drucken
+ne&rsquo;er-do-weel, that I wonder did not fall long ere this time of day
+from some chimney-head, and get his neck broken.&nbsp; So I told him at
+long and last, when he came papping into my shop, plaguing me every time he
+passed, that I had fitted myself; and that there would be no need of his
+taking the trouble to call again.&nbsp; Upon which he gave his blacked
+nieve a desperate thump on the counter, making the observation, that out of
+respect for him I might have given his son the preference.&nbsp; Though I
+was a wee puzzled for an answer, I said to him for want of a better, that
+having a timber leg, he could not well creuk his hough to the shop-board
+for our trade.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hout, touts,&rdquo; said Saunders, giving his lips a
+smack&mdash;&ldquo;Creuk his hough, ye body you!&nbsp; Do you think his
+timber leg canna screw off?&mdash;That&rsquo;ll no pass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was a little dumfoundered at this cleverness.&nbsp; So I said, more on
+my guard&mdash;&ldquo;True, true, Saunders, but he&rsquo;s ower
+little.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ower little, and be hanged to ye!&rdquo; cried the disrespectful
+fellow, wheeling about on his heel, as he <!-- page 160--><a
+name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>grasped the sneck of
+the shop-door, and gave a girn that showed the only clean parts of his
+body&mdash;to wit the whites of his eyes, and his sharp
+teeth:&mdash;&ldquo;Ower little!&mdash;Pu, pu!&mdash;He&rsquo;s like the
+blackamoor&rsquo;s pig, then, Maister Wauch&mdash;he&rsquo;s like the
+blackamoor&rsquo;s pig&mdash;he may be ver&rsquo; leetle, but he be tam
+ould&rdquo;; and with this he showed his back, clapping the door at his
+tail without wishing a good-day; and I am scarcely sorry when I confess,
+that I never cut cloth for either father or son from that hour to this one,
+the losing of such a customer being no great matter at best, and almost
+clear gain compared with saddling myself with a callant with only one eye
+and one leg; the one having fallen a victim to the dregs of the measles,
+and the other having been harled off by a farmer&rsquo;s
+threshing-mill.&nbsp; However, I got myself properly suited;&mdash;but ye
+shall hear.</p>
+<p>Our neighbour Mrs Grassie, a widow woman, unco intimate with our wife,
+and very attentive to Benjie when he had the chincough, had a far-away
+cousin of the name of Glen, that held out among the howes of the Lammermoor
+hills&mdash;a distant part of the country, ye observe.&nbsp; Auld Glen, a
+decent-looking body of a creature, had come in with his sheltie about some
+private matters of business&mdash;such as the buying of a horse, or
+something to that effect, where he could best fall in with it, either at
+our fair, or the Grassmarket, or suchlike; so he had up-pitting, free of
+expense, <!-- page 161--><a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+161</span>from Mrs Grassie, on account of his relationship; Glen being
+second cousin to Mrs Grassie&rsquo;s brother&rsquo;s wife, which is
+deceased.&nbsp; I might, indeed, have mentioned, that our neighbour herself
+had been twice married, and had the misery of seeing out both her gudemen;
+but such was the will of fate, and she bore up with perfect
+resignation.</p>
+<p>Having made a bit warm dinner ready, for she was a tidy body, and knew
+what was what, she thought she could not do better than ask in a reputable
+neighbour to help her friend to eat it, and take a cheerer with him; as,
+maybe, being a stranger here, he would not like to use the freedom of
+drinking by himself&mdash;a custom which is at the best an unsocial
+one&mdash;especially with none but women-folk near him; so she did me the
+honour to make choice of me&mdash;though I say it, who should not say
+it;&mdash;and when we got our jug filled for the second time, and began to
+grow better acquainted, ye would really wonder to see how we became merry,
+and cracked away just like two pen-guns.&nbsp; I asked him, ye see, about
+sheep and cows, and corn and hay, and ploughing and threshing, and horses
+and carts, and fallow land, and lambing-time, and har&rsquo;st, and making
+cheese and butter, and selling eggs, and curing the sturdie, and the
+snifters, and the batts, and such like;&mdash;and he, in his turn, made
+enquiry regarding broad and narrow cloth, Kilmarnock cowls, worsted
+comforters, Shetland hose, mittens, <!-- page 162--><a
+name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 162</span>leather-caps,
+stuffing and padding, metal and mule buttons, thorls, pocket-linings,
+serge, twist, buckram, shaping and sewing, back-splaying, cloth-runds,
+goosing the labroad, botkins, black thread, patent shears, measuring, and
+all the other particulars belonging to our trade, which he said, at long
+and last after we had joked together, was a power better one than the
+farming line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye should make your son ane, then,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if ye
+think so.&nbsp; Have ye any bairns?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ve hit the nail on the head.&mdash;&rsquo;Od, man, if ye
+wasna so far away, I would bind our auldest callant to yoursell, I&rsquo;m
+sae weel pleased wi&rsquo; your gentlemanly manners.&nbsp; But I&rsquo;m
+speaking havers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Havers here or havers there, what,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;is to
+prevent ye boarding him, at a cheap rate, either with our friend Mrs
+Grassie, or with the wife?&nbsp; Either of the two would be a sort of
+mother to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;Deed I daur say would they,&rdquo; answered Maister Glen,
+stroking his chin, which was gey rough, and had not got a clean since
+Sunday, having had four days of sheer growth&mdash;our meeting, you will
+observe by this, being on the Thursday afternoon&mdash;&ldquo;&rsquo;Deed
+would they.&mdash;&rsquo;Od, I maun speak to the mistress about
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the head of this we had another jug, three being cannie, after which
+we were both a wee tozy-mozy; and I daresay Mrs Grassie saw plainly that we
+were <!-- page 163--><a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+163</span>getting into a state where we would not easily make a halt; so,
+without letting on, she brought in the tea-things before us, and showed us
+a playbill, to tell us that a company of strolling playactors had come in a
+body in the morning, with a whole cartful of scenery and grand dresses; and
+were to make an exhibition at seven o&rsquo;clock, at the ransom of a
+shilling a-head, in Laird Wheatley&rsquo;s barn.</p>
+<p>Many a time and often had I heard of playacting; and of players making
+themselves kings and queens, and saying a great many wonderful things; but
+I had never before an opportunity of making myself a witness to the truth
+of these hearsays.&nbsp; So Maister Glen, being as full of nonsense, and as
+fain to have his curiosity gratified as myself, we took upon us the stout
+resolution to go out together, he offering to treat me; and I determined to
+run the risk of Maister Wiggie, our minister&rsquo;s rebuke, for the
+transgression, hoping it would make no lasting impression on his mind,
+being for the first and only time.&nbsp; Folks should not on all occasions
+be over scrupulous.</p>
+<p>After paying our money at the door, never, while I live and breathe,
+will I forget what we saw and heard that night; it just looks to me, by all
+the world, when I think on it, like a fairy dream.&nbsp; The place was
+crowded to the full; Maister Glen and me having nearly got our ribs dung in
+before we found a seat, the folks behind being obliged to mount the back
+<!-- page 164--><a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+164</span>benches to get a sight.&nbsp; Right to the forehand of us was a
+large green curtain, some five or six ells wide, a good deal the worse of
+the wear, having seen service through two-three summers; and, just in the
+front of it, were eight or ten penny candles stuck in a board fastened to
+the ground, to let us see the players&rsquo; feet like, when they came on
+the stage&mdash;and even before they came on the stage&mdash;for the
+curtain being scrimpit in length, we saw legs and sandals moving behind the
+scenes very neatly; while two blind fiddlers they had brought with them
+played the bonniest ye ever heard.&nbsp; &rsquo;Od, the very music was
+worth a sixpence of itself.</p>
+<p>The place, as I said before, was choke-full, just to excess; so that one
+could scarcely breathe.&nbsp; Indeed, I never saw any part so crowded, not
+even at a tent preaching, when the Rev. Mr Roarer was giving his discourses
+on the building of Solomon&rsquo;s Temple.&nbsp; We were obligated to have
+the windows opened for a mouthful of fresh air, the barn being as close as
+a baker&rsquo;s oven, my neighbour and me fanning our red faces with our
+hats, to keep us cool; and, though all were half stewed, we certainly had
+the worst of it, the toddy we had taken having fermented the blood of our
+bodies into a perfect fever.</p>
+<p>Just at the time that the two blind fiddlers were playing the Downfall
+of Paris, a handbell rang, and up goes the green curtain; being hauled to
+the ceiling, <!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+165</span>as I observed with the tail of my eye, by a birkie at the side,
+that had hold of a rope.&nbsp; So, on the music stopping, and all becoming
+as still as that you might have heard a pin fall, in comes a decent old
+gentleman at his leisure, well powdered, with an old-fashioned coat on,
+waistcoat with flap-pockets, brown breeches with buckles at the knees, and
+silk stockings with red gushats on a blue ground.&nbsp; I never saw a man
+in such distress; he stamped about, and better stamped about, dadding the
+end of his staff on the ground, and imploring all the powers of heaven and
+earth to help him to find out his runaway daughter, that had decamped with
+some ne&rsquo;er-do-weel loon of a half-pay captain, that keppit her in his
+arms from her bedroom-window, up two pair of stairs.</p>
+<p>Every father and head of a family must have felt for a man in his
+situation, thus to be robbed of his dear bairn, and an only daughter too,
+as he told us over and over again, as the salt, salt tears ran gushing down
+his withered face, and he aye blew his nose on his clean calendered
+pocket-napkin.&nbsp; But, ye know the thing was absurd to suppose that we
+should know, any inkling about the matter, having never seen him or his
+daughter between the een before, and not kenning them by headmark; so,
+though we sympathized with him, as folks ought to do with a fellow-creature
+in affliction, we thought it best to hold our tongues, to see what might
+cast up better than he expected.&nbsp; So <!-- page 166--><a
+name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 166</span>out he went stumping
+at the other side, determined, he said, to find them out, though he should
+follow them to the world&rsquo;s end, Johnny Groat&rsquo;s House, or
+something to that effect.</p>
+<p>Hardly was his back turned, and almost before he could cry Jack Robison,
+in comes the birkie and the very young lady the old gentleman described,
+arm-and-arm together, smoodging and laughing like daft.&nbsp; Dog on it! it
+was a shameless piece of business.&nbsp; As true as death, before all the
+crowd of folk, he put his arm round her waist, and called her his
+sweetheart, and love, and dearie, and darling, and everything that is
+fine.&nbsp; If they had been courting in a close together on a Friday
+night, they could not have said more to one another, or gone greater
+lengths.&nbsp; I thought such shame to be an eye-witness to sic ongoings,
+that I was obliged at last to hold up my hat before my face, and look down;
+though, for all that, the young lad, to be such a blackguard as his conduct
+showed, was well enough faured, and had a good coat to his back with double
+gilt buttons and fashionable lapells, to say little of a very well-made
+pair of buckskins, a thought the worse of the wear to be sure, but which,
+if they had been well cleaned, would have looked almost as good as
+new.&nbsp; How they had come we never could learn, as we neither saw chaise
+nor gig; but, from his having spurs on his boots, it is more than likely
+that they had lighted at the back-door of the <!-- page 167--><a
+name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>barn from a horse,
+she riding on a pad behind him, maybe, with her hand round his waist.</p>
+<p>The father looked to be a rich old bool, both from his manner of
+speaking, and the rewards he seemed to offer for the apprehension of his
+daughter; but to be sure, when so many of us were present that had an equal
+right to the spuilzie, it would not be a great deal a thousand pounds, when
+divided, still it was worth the looking after; so we just bidit a wee.</p>
+<p>Things were brought to a bearing, howsoever, sooner than either
+themselves, I daresay, or anybody else present, seemed to have the least
+glimpse of; for, just in the middle of their fine goings-on, the sound of a
+coming foot was heard, and the lassie, taking guilt to her, cried out,
+&ldquo;Hide me, hide me, for the sake of goodness, for yonder comes my old
+father!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No sooner said than done.&nbsp; In he stappit her into a closet; and,
+after shutting the door on her, he sat down upon a chair, pretending to be
+asleep in the twinkling of a walking-stick.&nbsp; The old father came
+bouncing in, and seeing the fellow as sound as a top, he ran forward and
+gave him such a shake as if he would have shooken him all sundry; which
+soon made him open his eyes as fast as he had steeked them.&nbsp; After
+blackguarding the chield at no allowance, cursing him up hill and down
+dale, and calling him every name but a gentleman, he held his staff over
+his crown, and gripping him by the cuff of the neck, asked him, <!-- page
+168--><a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>in a fierce
+tone, what he had made of his daughter.&nbsp; Never since I was born did I
+ever see such brazenfaced impudence!&nbsp; The rascal had the brass to say
+at once, that he had not seen word or wittens of the lassie for a month,
+though more than a hundred folk sitting in his company had beheld him
+dauting her with his arm round her jimpy waist, not five minutes
+before.&nbsp; As a man, as a father, as an elder of our kirk, my corruption
+was raised, for I aye hated lying as a poor cowardly sin, and an inbreak on
+the ten commandments; and I found my neighbour, Mr Glen, fidgeting on the
+seat as well as me; so I thought, that whoever spoke first would have the
+best right to be entitled to the reward; whereupon, just as he was in the
+act of rising up, I took the word out of his mouth, saying, &ldquo;Dinna
+believe him, auld gentleman&mdash;dinna believe him, friend; he&rsquo;s
+telling a parcel of lees.&nbsp; Never saw her for a month!&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+no worth arguing, or calling witnesses; just open that press-door, and
+ye&rsquo;ll see whether I&rsquo;m speaking truth or not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man stared, and looked dumfoundered; and the young one, instead
+of running forward with his double nieves to strike me, the only thing I
+was feared for, began a-laughing, as if I had done him a good turn.&nbsp;
+But never since I had a being, did I ever witness such an uproar and noise
+as immediately took place.&nbsp; The whole house was so glad that the
+scoundrel had been exposed, that they set up siccan a roar of laughter,
+<!-- page 169--><a name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+169</span>and thumped away at siccan a rate at the boards with their feet,
+that at long and last, with pushing and fidgeting, clapping their hands,
+and holding their sides, down fell the place they call the gallery; all the
+folk in&rsquo;t being hurl&rsquo;d topsy-turvy, head foremost among the
+saw-dust on the floor below; their guffawing soon being turned to howling,
+each one crying louder than another at the top note of their voices,
+&ldquo;Murder! murder! hold off me; murder! my ribs are in; murder!&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m killed&mdash;I&rsquo;m speechless!&rdquo; and other lamentations
+to that effect; so that a rush to the door took place, in the which every
+thing was overturned&mdash;the door-keeper being wheeled away like
+wildfire&mdash;the furms stramped to pieces&mdash;the lights knocked
+out&mdash;and the two blind fiddlers dung head-foremost over the stage, the
+bass fiddle cracking like thunder at every bruise.&nbsp; Such tearing, and
+swearing, and tumbling, and squealing, was never witnessed in the memory of
+man since the building of Babel: legs being likely to be broken, sides
+staved in, eyes knocked out, and lives lost&mdash;there being only one
+door, and that a small one; so that, when we had been carried off our feet
+that length, my wind was fairly gone, and a sick dwalm came over me, lights
+of all manner of colours, red, blue, green, and orange, dancing before me,
+that entirely deprived me of common sense; till, on opening my eyes in the
+dark, I found myself leaning with my broadside against the wall on the
+opposite side of the <!-- page 170--><a name="page170"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 170</span>close.&nbsp; It was some time before I minded
+what had happened; so dreading skaith, I found first the one arm, and then
+the other, to see if they were broken&mdash;syne my head&mdash;and finally
+both of my legs; but all as well as I could discover, was skin-whole and
+scart-free.&nbsp; On perceiving this, my joy was without bounds, having a
+great notion that I had been killed on the spot.&nbsp; So I reached round
+my hand, very thankfully, to take out my pocket-napkin, to give my brow a
+wipe, when lo, and behold! the tail of my Sunday&rsquo;s coat was fairly
+off and away, docked by the hainch buttons.</p>
+<p>So much for plays and playactors&mdash;the first and last, I trust in
+grace, that I shall ever see.&nbsp; But indeed I could expect no better,
+after the warning that Maister Wiggie had more than once given us from the
+pulpit on the subject.&nbsp; Instead, therefore, of getting my grand reward
+for finding the old man&rsquo;s daughter, the whole covey of them, no
+better than a set of swindlers, took leg-bail, and made that very night a
+moonlight flitting; and Johnny Hammer, honest man, that had wrought from
+sunrise to sunset for two days, fitting up their place by contract, instead
+of being well paid for his trouble as he deserved, got nothing left him but
+a ruckle of his own good deals, all dung to shivers.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 171--><a name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+171</span>CHAPTER EIGHTEEN&mdash;MANSIE&rsquo;S BARLEY-FEVER: AND THE
+REBUKE</h2>
+<p>On the morning after the business of the playhouse had happened, I had
+to take my breakfast in my bed, a thing very uncommon to me, being
+generally up by cock-craw, except on Sunday mornings whiles, when each one,
+according to the bidding of the Fourth Commandment, has a license to do as
+he likes; having a desperate sore head, and a squeamishness at the stomach,
+occasioned, I jealouse in a great measure, from what Mr Glen and me had
+discussed at Widow Grassie&rsquo;s, in the shape of warm toddy, over our
+cracks concerning what is called the agricultural and manufacturing
+interests.&nbsp; So our wife, poor body, put a thimbleful of brandy, Thomas
+Mixem&rsquo;s real, into my first cup of tea, which had a wonderful virtue
+in putting all things to rights; so that I was up and had shaped a pair of
+lady&rsquo;s corsets, an article in which I sometimes dealt, before ten
+o&rsquo;clock, though, the morning being rather cold, I did not dispense
+with my Kilmarnock.</p>
+<p>At eleven in the forenoon, or thereabouts, maybe five minutes before or
+after, but no matter, in comes my crony Maister Glen, rather dazed-like
+about the een; and with a large piece of white sticking-plaister, about
+half a nail wide, across one of his cheeks, and over the bridge of his
+nose; giving him a wauf, outlandish, and rather blackguard sort of
+appearance; so that I was a thought uneasy at what neighbours <!-- page
+172--><a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 172</span>might
+surmise concerning our intimacy; but the honest man accounted for the thing
+in a very feasible manner, from the falling down on that side of his head
+of one of the brass candlesticks, while he was lying on his broadside
+before one of the furms in the stramash.</p>
+<p>His purpose of calling was to tell me, that he could not leave the town
+without looking in upon me to bid me farewell; more betoken, as he intended
+sending in his son Mungo by the carrier for trial, to see how the line of
+life pleased him, and how I thought he would answer&mdash;a thing which I
+was glad came from his side of the house, being likely to be in the upshot
+the best for both parties.&nbsp; Yet I thought he would find our way of
+doing so canny and comfortable, that it was not very likely he could ever
+start objections; and I must confess, that I looked forward with no small
+degree of pride, seeing the probability of my soon having the son of a
+Lammermoor farmer sitting crosslegged, cheek for jowl with me on the board,
+and bound to serve me at all lawful times, by night and day, by a regular
+indenture of five years.&nbsp; Maister Glen insisted on the laddie having a
+three months&rsquo; trial; and then, after a trifling show of standing out,
+just to make him aware that I could be elsewhere fitted if I had a mind, I
+agreed that the request was reasonable, and that I had no earthly
+objections to conforming with it.&nbsp; So, after giving him his meridian
+and a bite of shortbread, we shook hands, <!-- page 173--><a
+name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>and parted in the
+understanding that his son would arrive on the top of limping Jamie the
+carrier&rsquo;s cart, in the course, say, of a fortnight.</p>
+<p>Through the whole of the forepart of the day, I remained rather
+queerish, as if something was working about my inwards, and a droll pain
+between my eyes.&nbsp; The wife saw the case I was in, and advised me, for
+the sake of the fresh air, to take a step into the bit garden, and try a
+hand at the spade, the smell of the new earth being likely to operate as a
+cordial; but no&mdash;it would not do; and when I came in at one
+o&rsquo;clock to my dinner, the steam of the fresh broth, instead of making
+me feel, as usual, as hungry as a hawk, was like to turn my stomach, while
+the sight of the sheep&rsquo;s head, one of the primest ones I had seen the
+whole season, looked, by all the world, like the head of a boiled
+blackamoor, and made me as sick as a dog; so I could do nothing but take a
+turn out again, and swig away at the small beer, that never seemed able to
+slocken my drouth.&nbsp; At long and last, I minded having heard Andrew
+Redbeak, the excise-officer, say, that nothing ever put him right after a
+debosh except something they call a bottle of soda-water; so my wife
+dispatched Benjie to the place where we knew it could be found, and he
+returned in a jiffie with a thing like a blacking-bottle below his daidly,
+as he was bidden.&nbsp; There being a wire over the cork for some purpose
+or other, or maybe just to look <!-- page 174--><a name="page174"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 174</span>neat, we had some fight to get it torn away,
+but at last we succeeded.&nbsp; I had turned about for a jug, and the wife
+was rummaging for the screw, while Benjie was fiddling away with his
+fingers at the cork&mdash;Save us! all at once it gave a thud like thunder,
+driving the cork over poor Benjie&rsquo;s head, while it squirted there-up
+in his eyes like a fire-engine, and I had only just time to throw down the
+jug, and up with the bottle to my mouth.&nbsp; Luckily, for the sixpence it
+cost, there was a drop left, which tasted, by all the world, just like
+brisk dish-washings; but for all that, it had a wonderful power of setting
+me to rights; and my noddle in a while began to clear up, like a March-day
+after a heavy shower.</p>
+<p>I mind very well too, on the afternoon of the dividual same day, that my
+door-neighbour, Thomas Burlings, popped in; and, in our two-handed crack
+over the counter, after asking me in a dry, curious way, if I had come by
+no skaith in the business of the play, he said, the thing had now spread
+far and wide, and was making a great noise in the world.&nbsp; I thought
+the body a wee sharp in his observes; so I pretended to take it quite
+lightly, proceeding in my shaping-out a pair of buckskin breeches, which I
+was making for one of the Duke&rsquo;s huntsmen; so seeing he was off the
+scent, he said in a more jocose way:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, speaking about buckskins, I&rsquo;ll tell ye a good story
+about that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 175--><a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+175</span>&ldquo;Let us hear&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said I; for I was in that sort
+of queerish way, that I did not care much about being very busy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;se get it as I heard it,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Thomas;
+&ldquo;and it&rsquo;s no less worth telling, that it bears a good moral
+application in its tail; after the same fashion that a blister does good by
+sucking away the vicious humours of the body, thereby making the very pain
+it gives precious.&rdquo;&nbsp; And here&mdash;though maybe it was just my
+thought&mdash;the body stroked his chin, and gave me a kind of half gley,
+as much as saying, &ldquo;take that to ye, neighbour.&rdquo;&nbsp; But I
+deserved it all, and could not take it ill off his hand; being, like
+myself, one of the elders of our kirk, and an honest enough,
+precise-speaking man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye see, ye ken,&rdquo; said Thomas, &ldquo;that the Breadalbane
+Fencibles, a wheen Highland birkies, were put into camp at Fisherrow links,
+maybe for the benefit of their douking, on account of the fiddle <a
+name="citation175"></a><a href="#footnote175"
+class="citation">[175]</a>&mdash;or maybe in case the French should land at
+the water-mouth&mdash;or maybe to give the regiment the benefit of the sea
+air&mdash;or maybe to make their bare houghs hardier, for it was the winter
+time, frost and snaw being as plenty as ye like, and no sae scarce as
+pantaloons among the core&mdash;or for some ither reason, guid, bad, or
+indifferent, which disna muckle matter; but ye see, the lang and the short
+o&rsquo; the story is, that there they were encamped, <!-- page 176--><a
+name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 176</span>man and
+mother&rsquo;s son of them, going through their dreels by day, and sleeping
+by night&mdash;the privates in their tents, and the offishers in their
+marquees, living in the course of nature on their usual rations of beef,
+and tammies, and so on.&nbsp; So, ye understand me, there was nae such
+smart ordering of things in the army in those days, the men not having the
+beef served out to them by a butcher, supplying each company or companies
+by a written contract, drawn up between him and the paymaster before
+&rsquo;sponsible witnesses; but ilka ane bringing what pleased him, either
+tripe, trotters, steaks, cow&rsquo;s-cheek, pluck, hough, spar-rib, jigget,
+or so forth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Od!&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;Thomas, ye crack like a
+minister.&nbsp; Where did ye happen to pick up all that
+knowledge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where should I have got it, but from an auld half-pay
+sergeant-major, that lived in our spare room, and had been out in the
+American war, having seen a power of service, and been twice wounded, once
+in the aff-cuit, and the other time in the cuff of the neck.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought as muckle,&rdquo; said I&mdash;&ldquo;Weel, say on,
+man, it&rsquo;s unco entertaining.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel,&rdquo; continued he, &ldquo;let me see where I was at when
+ye stoppit me; for maybe I&rsquo;ll hae to begin at the beginning
+again.&nbsp; For gif ye yinterrupt me, or edge in a word, or put me out by
+asking questions, I lose the thread of my discourse, and canna
+proceed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 177--><a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+177</span>&ldquo;Ou, let me see,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;ye was about the
+contract concerning the beef.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Preceesely,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Thomas, stretching out his
+fore-finger&mdash;&ldquo;ye&rsquo;ve said it to a hair.&nbsp; At that time,
+as I was observing, the butcher didna supply a company or companies,
+according to the terms of a contract, drawn up before &rsquo;sponsible
+witnesses, between him and the paymaster; but the soldiers got beef-money
+along with their pay; with which said money, given them, ye observe, for
+said purpose, they were bound and obligated, in terms of the statute, to
+buy, purchase, and provide the said beef, twice a-week or oftener, as it
+might happen; an orderly offisher making inspection of the camp-kettles
+regularly every forenoon at one o&rsquo;clock or thereabouts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, as ye&rsquo;ll pay attention to observe, there was a private
+in Captain M&rsquo;Tavish&rsquo;s company, the second to the left of the
+centre, of the name of Duncan MacAlpine, a wee, hardy, blackaviced,
+in-knee&rsquo;d creature, remarkable for nothing that ever I heard tell of,
+except being reported to have shotten a gauger in Badenough, or
+thereabouts; and for having a desperate red nose, the effects, ye observe,
+of drinking spirituous liquors; ye observe, I daur say, what I am
+saying&mdash;the effects of drinking malt speerits.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, week after week passed over, and better passed over, and
+Duncan played aff his tricks, like anither Herman Boaz, the slight
+o&rsquo;-hand juggler, him <!-- page 178--><a name="page178"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 178</span>that&rsquo;s suspeckit to be in league and
+paction with the de&rsquo;il.&nbsp; But ye&rsquo;ll hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Od, it&rsquo;s diverting, Thomas,&rdquo; said I to him;
+&ldquo;gang on, man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, ye see, as I was observing&mdash;Let me see where I was
+at?&mdash;Ou ay, having a paction with the de&rsquo;il.&nbsp; So, when all
+were watching beside the camp-kettles, some stirring them with spurtles, or
+parritch-sticks, or forks, or whatever was necessary, the orderly offisher
+made a point and practice of regularly coming by, about the chap of one
+past meridian, as I observed to ye before, to make inspection of what ilka
+ane had wared his pay on, and what he had got simmering in the het water
+for his dinner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, on the day concerning which I am about to speak, it fell out,
+as usual, that he happened to be making his rounds, halting a moment, or
+twa maybe, before ilka pot; the man that had the charge thereof, by the way
+of stirring like, clapping down his lang fork, and bringing up the piece of
+meat, or whatever he happened to be making kail of it, to let the inspector
+see whether it was lamb, pork, beef, mutton, or veal.&nbsp; For, ye
+observe,&rdquo; continued Thomas, giving me, as I took it to myself,
+another queer side-look, &ldquo;the purpose of the offisher making the
+inspection, was to see that they laid out their pay-money conform to
+military regulation; and not to fyling their stamicks, and ruining baith
+sowl and body, by throwing it away on whisky&mdash;<!-- page 179--><a
+name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 179</span>as but ower mony,
+that aiblins should have kenned better, have dune but too often.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis but ower true,&rdquo; said I till him; &ldquo;but the
+best will fa&rsquo; intil a faut sometimes.&nbsp; We have a&rsquo; our
+failings, Thomas.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; answered Thomas; &ldquo;but where was I
+at?&mdash;Ou, about the whisky.&nbsp; Weel, speaking about the whisky, ye
+see the offisher, Lovetenant Todrick I b&rsquo;lief they called him, had
+made an observe about Duncan&rsquo;s kettle; so, when he came to him,
+Duncan was sitting in the lown side of a dyke, with his red nose, and a
+pipe in his cheek, on a big stane, glowring frae him anither way; and, as I
+was saying, when he came to him he said,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Weel, Duncan MacAlpine, what have ye in your kettle the
+day, man?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Duncan, rinning down his lang fork, answered in his ain
+Highland brogue way&mdash;&lsquo;Please your honours, just my auld
+favourite, tripe.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;&rsquo;Deed, Duncan,&rsquo; said Lovetenant Todrick, or
+whatever they caa&rsquo;d him, &lsquo;it is an auld favourite surely, for I
+have never seen ye have onything else for your dinner, man.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Every man to his taste, please your honour,&rsquo;
+answered Duncan MacAlpine; &lsquo;let ilka ane please her nain
+sell&rsquo;&mdash;hauling up a screed half a yard lang.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ilka
+man to his taste, please your honour, Lovetenant Todrick.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+180</span>&ldquo;&rsquo;Od, man,&rdquo; said I to him, &ldquo;&rsquo;Od,
+man, ye&rsquo;re a deacon at telling a story.&nbsp; Ye&rsquo;re a queer
+hand.&nbsp; Weel, what came next?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What think ye should come next?&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Thomas
+drily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I dinna ken,&rdquo; answered I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell&mdash;but where was
+I at?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ou, at the observe of Lovetenant Todrick, or what they
+caa&rsquo;d him, about the tripe; and the answer of Duncan MacAlpine on
+that head, &lsquo;That ilka man has his ain taste.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Vera true,&rsquo; said Lovetenant Todrick, &lsquo;but lift
+it out a&rsquo; the-gither on that dish, till I get my specs on; for never
+since I was born, did I ever see before boiled tripe with buttons and
+button-holes intill&rsquo;t.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this I set up a loud laughing, which I could not help, though it was
+like to split my sides; but Thomas Burlings bade me whisht till I heard him
+out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Buttons and button-holes!&rsquo; quo&rsquo; Duncan
+MacAlpine.&nbsp; &lsquo;Look again, wi&rsquo; yer specs; for ye&rsquo;re
+surely wrang, Lovetenant Todrick.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Buttons and button-holes! and &rsquo;deed I am surely
+right, Duncan,&rsquo; answered the Lovetenant Todrick, taking his specs
+deliberately off the brig o&rsquo; his nose, and faulding them thegither,
+as he put them first into his shagreen case, and syne into his
+pocket&mdash;&lsquo;Howsomever, Duncan MacAlpine, I&rsquo;ll pass ye ower
+for this time, gif ye take my warning, and for the future <!-- page
+181--><a name="page181"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 181</span>ware your
+pay-money on wholesome butcher&rsquo;s meat, like a Christian, and no be
+trying to delude your ain stamick, and your offisher&rsquo;s een, by
+holding up, on a fork, such a heathenish mak-up for a dish, as the leg of a
+pair o&rsquo; buckskin breeches!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Buckskin breeches!&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and did he really and
+actually boil siccan trash to his dinner?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nae sae far south as that yet, friend,&rdquo; answered
+Thomas.&nbsp; &ldquo;Duncan was not so bowed in the intellect as ye
+imagine, and had some spice of cleverality about his queer
+man&oelig;uvres.&mdash;Eat siccan trash to his dinner!&nbsp; Nae mair,
+Mansie, than ye intend to eat that iron guse ye&rsquo;re rinning along that
+piece claith; but he wanted to make his offishers believe that his pay gaed
+the right way: like the Pharisees of old that keepit praying, in ell-lang
+faces, about the corners of the streets, and gaed hame wi&rsquo; hearts
+full of wickedness and a&rsquo; manner of cheatrie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what way did his pay gang, then?&rdquo; asked I; &ldquo;and
+how did he live?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I telled ye before, frien,&rdquo; answered Thomas, &ldquo;that he
+was a deboshed creature; and, like ower mony in the world, likit weel what
+didna do him ony good.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a wearyfu&rsquo; thing that
+whisky.&nbsp; I wish it could be banished to Botany Bay.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is that,&rdquo; said I.&nbsp; &ldquo;Muckle and nae little sin
+does it breed and produce in this world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad,&rdquo; quoth Thomas, stroking down his chin <!--
+page 182--><a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 182</span>in a
+slee way, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad the guilty should see the folly o&rsquo;
+their ain ways; it&rsquo;s the first step, ye ken, till
+amendment;&mdash;and indeed I tell&rsquo;t Maister Wiggie, when he sent me
+here, that I could almost become guid for your being mair wary of your
+conduct for the future time to come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was like a thunder-clap to me, and I did not know for a jiffie what
+to feel, think, or do, more than perceiving that it was a piece of devilish
+cruelty on their parts, taking things on this strict.&nbsp; As for myself,
+I could freely take sacred oath on the Book, that I had not had a dram in
+my head for four months before; the knowledge of which made my corruption
+rise like lightning, as a man is aye brave when he is innocent; so, giving
+my pow a bit scart, I said briskly, &ldquo;So ye&rsquo;re after some
+session business in this visit, are ye?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ve just guessed it,&rdquo; answered Thomas Burlings,
+sleeking down his front hair with his fingers in a sober way; &ldquo;we had
+a meeting this forenoon; and it was resolved ye should stand a public
+rebuke in the meeting-house on Sunday next.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hang me, if I do!&rdquo; answered I, thumping my nieve down with
+all my might on the counter, and throwing back my cowl behind me in a
+corner.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, man!&rdquo; added I, snapping with great pith my
+finger and thumb in Thomas&rsquo;s eyes, &ldquo;not for all the ministers
+and elders that ever were cleckit!&nbsp; They may do <!-- page 183--><a
+name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 183</span>their best; and ye
+may tell them so, if ye like.&nbsp; I was born a free man; I live in a free
+country; I am the subject of a free king and constitution; and I&rsquo;ll
+be shot before I submit to such rank, diabolical papistry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooly and fairly,&rdquo; quoth Thomas, staring a wee astonished
+like, and not a little surprised to see my birse up in this manner; for,
+when he thought upon shearing a lamb, he found he had catched a tartar; so,
+calming down as fast as ye like, he said, &ldquo;Hooly and fairly
+Mansie&rdquo; (or Maister Wauch, I believe, he did me the honour to call
+me), &ldquo;they&rsquo;ll maybe no be sae hard as they threaten.&nbsp; But
+ye ken, my friend, I&rsquo;m speaking to ye as a brither; it was an
+unco-like business for an elder, not only to gang till a play, which is ane
+of the deevil&rsquo;s rendevouses, but to gang there in a state of liquor:
+making yoursell a world&rsquo;s wonder&mdash;and you an elder of our
+kirk!&nbsp; I put the question to yourself soberly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His threatening I could despise, and could have fought, cuffed, and
+kicked with all the ministers and elders of the General Assembly, to say
+nothing of the Relief Synod and the Burgher Union, before I would have
+demeaned myself to yield to what my inward spirit plainly told me to be
+rank cruelty and injustice; but ah! his calm, brotherly, flattering way I
+could not thole with, and the tears came rapping into my eyes, faster than
+it cared my manhood to let be seen; so I said till him, &ldquo;Weel, weel,
+Thomas, I ken I have <!-- page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 184</span>done wrong; and I am sorry for&rsquo;t:
+they&rsquo;ll never find me in siccan a scrape again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thomas Burlings then came forward in a friendly way, and shook hands
+with me; telling that he would go back and plead before them in my
+behalf.&nbsp; He said this over again, as we parted at my shop-door; and,
+to do him justice, surely he had not been worse than his word, for I have
+aye attended the kirk as usual, standing, when it came to my rotation, at
+the plate, and nobody, gentle or semple, ever spoke to me on the subject of
+the playhouse, or minted the matter of the Rebuke from that day to
+this.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p184b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mungo Glen" src="images/p184s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h2><!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+185</span>CHAPTER NINETEEN&mdash;MANSIE&rsquo;S ADVENTURES OF THE AWFUL
+NIGHT</h2>
+<p>In the course of a fortnight from the time I parted with Maister Glen,
+the Lauder carrier, limping Jamie, brought his callant to our shop-door in
+his hand.&nbsp; He was a tall slender laddie, some fourteen years old, and
+sore grown away from his clothes.&nbsp; There was something genty and
+delicate-like about him, having a pale sharp face, blue eyes, a nose like a
+hawk&rsquo;s, and long yellow hair hanging about his haffets, as if barbers
+were unco scarce cattle among the howes of the Lammermoor hills.&nbsp;
+Having a general experience of human nature, I saw that I would have
+something to do towards bringing him into a state of rational civilization;
+but, considering his opportunities, he had been well educated, and I liked
+his appearance on the whole not that ill.</p>
+<p>To divert him a while, as I did not intend yoking him to work the first
+day, I sent out Benjie with him, after giving him some refreshment of bread
+and milk, to let him see the town and all the uncos about it.&nbsp; I told
+Benjie first to take him to the auld kirk, which is one wonderful building,
+steeple and aisle; and as for mason-work, far before anything to be seen or
+heard tell of in our day; syne to Lugton brig, which is one grand affair,
+hanging over the river Esk and the flour-mills like a rainbow&mdash;syne to
+the Tolbooth, which is a terror to evil-doers, and from which the Lord
+preserve us all!&mdash;syne to the Market, where <!-- page 186--><a
+name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 186</span>ye&rsquo;ll see lamb,
+beef, mutton, and veal, hanging up on cleeks, in roasting and boiling
+pieces&mdash;spar-rib, jigget, shoulder, and heuk-bane, in the greatest
+prodigality of abundance;&mdash;and syne down to the Duke&rsquo;s gate, by
+looking through the bonny white-painted iron-stanchels of which,
+ye&rsquo;ll see the deer running beneath the green trees; and the palace
+itself, in the inside of which dwells one that needs not be proud to call
+the king his cousin.</p>
+<p>Brawly did I know, that it is a little after a laddie&rsquo;s being
+loosed from his mother&rsquo;s apron-string, and hurried from home, till
+the mind can make itself up to stay among fremit folk; or that the
+attention can be roused to anything said or done, however simple in the
+uptake.&nbsp; So, after Benjie brought Mungo home again, gey forfaughten
+and wearied-out like, I bade the wife give him his four-hours, and told him
+he might go to his bed as soon as he liked.&nbsp; Jealousing also, at the
+same time, that creatures brought up in the country have strange notions
+about them with respect to supernaturals&mdash;such as ghosts, brownies,
+fairies, and bogles&mdash;to say nothing of witches, warlocks, and
+evil-spirits, I made Benjie take off his clothes and lie down beside him,
+as I said, to keep him warm; but, in plain matter of fact (between
+friends), that the callant might sleep sounder, finding himself in a
+strange bed, and not very sure as to how the house stood as to the matter
+of a good name.</p>
+<p><!-- page 187--><a name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+187</span>Knowing by my own common sense, and from long experience of the
+ways of a wicked world, that there is nothing like industry, I went to
+Mungo&rsquo;s bedside in the morning, and wakened him betimes.&nbsp;
+Indeed, I&rsquo;m leeing there&mdash;I need not call it wakening
+him&mdash;for Benjie told me, when he was supping his parritch out of his
+luggie at breakfast-time, that he never winked an eye all night, and that
+sometimes he heard him greeting to himself in the dark&mdash;such and so
+powerful is our love of home and the force of natural affection.&nbsp;
+Howsoever, as I was saying, I took him ben the house with me down to the
+workshop, where I had begun to cut out a pair of nankeen trowsers for a
+young lad that was to be married the week after to a servant-maid of
+Maister Wiggie&rsquo;s,&mdash;a trig quean, that afterwards made him a good
+wife, and the father of a numerous small family.</p>
+<p>Speaking of nankeen, I would advise every one, as a friend, to buy the
+Indian, and not the British kind&mdash;the expense of outlay being ill
+hained, even at sixpence a yard&mdash;the latter not standing the washing,
+but making a man&rsquo;s legs, at a distance, look like a yellow
+yorline.</p>
+<p>It behoved me now as a maister, bent on the improvement of his prentice,
+to commence learning Mungo some few of the mysteries of our trade; so
+having showed him the way to crook his hough (example is better than
+precept, as James Batter <!-- page 188--><a name="page188"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 188</span>observes), I taught him the plan of holding
+the needle; and having fitted his middle-finger with a bottomless thimble
+of our own sort, I set him to sewing the cotton-lining into one leg,
+knowing that it was a part not very particular, and not very likely to be
+seen; so that the matter was not great, whether the stitching was exactly
+regular, or rather in the <i>zigzag</i> line.&nbsp; As is customary with
+all new beginners, he made a desperate awkward hand at it, and of which I
+would of course have said nothing, but that he chanced to brog his thumb,
+and completely soiled the whole piece of work with the stains of blood;
+which, for one thing, could not wash out without being seen; and, for
+another, was an unlucky omen to happen to a marriage garment.</p>
+<p>Every man should be on his guard; this was a lesson I learned when I was
+in the volunteers, at the time Buonaparte was expected to land down at
+Dunbar.&nbsp; Luckily for me in this case, I had, by some foolish mistake
+or another, made an allowance of a half yard, over and above what I found I
+could manage to shape on; so I boldly made up my mind to cut out the piece
+altogether, it being in the back seam.&nbsp; In that business I trust I
+showed the art of a good tradesman, having managed to do it so neatly that
+it could not be noticed without the narrowest inspection; and having the
+advantage of a covering by the coat-flaps, had indeed no chance of being
+so, except on desperately windy days.</p>
+<p><!-- page 189--><a name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+189</span>In the week succeeding that on which this unlucky mischance
+happened, an accident almost as bad befell, though not to me, further than
+that everyone is bound by the Ten Commandments, to say nothing of his own
+conscience, to take a part in the afflictions that befall their
+door-neighbours.</p>
+<p>When the voice of man was wheisht, and all was sunk in the sound sleep
+of midnight, it chanced that I was busy dreaming that I was sitting one of
+the spectators, looking at another play-acting piece of business.&nbsp;
+Before coming this length, howsoever, I should by right have observed, that
+ere going to bed I had eaten for my supper part of a black pudding, and two
+sausages, that Widow Grassie had sent in a compliment to my wife, being a
+genteel woman, and mindful of her friends&mdash;so that I must have had
+some sort of nightmare, and not been exactly in my seven senses&mdash;else
+I could not have been even dreaming of siccan a place.&nbsp; Well, as I was
+saying, in the playhouse I thought I was; and all at once I heard Maister
+Wiggie, like one crying in the wilderness, hallooing with a loud voice
+through the window, bidding me flee from the snares, traps, and gin-nets of
+the Evil One; and from the terrors of the wrath to come.&nbsp; I was in a
+terrible funk; and just as I was trying to rise from the seat, that seemed
+somehow glued to my body, and would not let me, to reach down my hat,
+which, with its glazed cover, was hanging on a pin <!-- page 190--><a
+name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>to one side, my face
+all red, and glowing like a fiery furnace, for shame of being a second time
+caught in deadly sin, I heard the kirk-bell jow-jowing, as if it was the
+last trump summoning sinners to their long and black account; and Maister
+Wiggie thrust in his arm in his desperation, in a whirlwind of passion,
+claughting hold of my hand like a vice to drag me out head-foremost.&nbsp;
+Even in my sleep, howsoever, it appears that I like free-will, and ken that
+there are no slaves in our blessed country; so I tried with all my might to
+pull against him, and gave his arm such a drive back, that he seemed to
+bleach over on his side, and raised a hullaballoo of a yell, that not only
+wakened me, but made me start upright in my bed.</p>
+<p>For all the world such a scene!&nbsp; My wife was roaring &ldquo;Murder,
+murder!&mdash;Mansie Wauch, will ye no wauken?&mdash;Murder, murder!
+ye&rsquo;ve felled me wi&rsquo; your nieve,&mdash;ye&rsquo;ve felled me
+outright,&mdash;I&rsquo;m gone for evermair,&mdash;my haill teeth are doun
+my throat.&nbsp; Will ye no wauken, Mansie Wauch?&mdash;will ye no
+wauken?&mdash;Murder, murder!&mdash;I say murder, murder, murder,
+murder!!!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s murdering us?&rdquo; cried I, throwing my cowl back
+on the pillow, and rubbing my eyes in the hurry of a tremendous
+fright.&mdash;&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s murdering us?&mdash;where&rsquo;s the
+robbers?&mdash;send for the town-officer!!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Mansie!&mdash;O Mansie!&rdquo; said Nanse, in a kind <!-- page
+191--><a name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>of greeting
+tone, &ldquo;I daursay ye&rsquo;ve felled me&mdash;but no matter, now
+I&rsquo;ve gotten ye roused.&nbsp; Do ye no see the haill street in a
+bleeze of flames?&nbsp; Bad is the best; we maun either be burned to death,
+or out of house and hall, without a rag to cover our nakedness.&nbsp;
+Where&rsquo;s my son?&mdash;where&rsquo;s my dear bairn Benjie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a most awful consternation, I jumped at this out to the middle of the
+floor, hearing the causeway all in an uproar of voices; and seeing the
+flichtering of the flames glancing on the houses in the opposite side of
+the street, all the windows of which were filled with the heads of
+half-naked folks, in round-eared mutches or Kilmarnocks; their mouths open,
+and their eyes staring with fright; while the sound of the fire-engine,
+rattling through the streets like thunder, seemed like the dead-cart of the
+plague, come to hurry away the corpses of the deceased for interment in the
+kirk-yard.</p>
+<p>Never such a spectacle was witnessed in this world of sin and sorrow
+since the creation of Adam.&nbsp; I pulled up the window and looked
+out&mdash;and, lo and behold! the very next house to our own was all in a
+low from cellar to garret; the burning joists hissing and cracking like
+mad; and the very wind that blew along, as warm as if it had been out of
+the mouth of a baker&rsquo;s oven!!</p>
+<p>It was a most awful spectacle! more by token to me, who was likely to be
+intimately concerned with it; and beating my brow with my clenched nieve,
+<!-- page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+192</span>like a distracted creature, I saw that the labour of my whole
+life was likely to go for nought, and me to be a ruined man; all the
+earnings of my industry being laid out on my stock in trade, and on the
+plenishing of our bit house.&nbsp; The darkness of the latter days came
+over my spirit like a vision before the prophet Isaiah; and I could see
+nothing in the years to come but beggary and starvation; myself a
+fallen-back old man, with an out-at-the-elbows coat, a greasy hat, and a
+bald pow, hirpling over a staff, requeeshting an awmous&mdash;Nanse a
+broken-hearted beggar wife, torn down to tatters, and weeping like Rachel
+when she thought on better days&mdash;and poor wee Benjie going from door
+to door with a meal-pock on his back.</p>
+<p>The thought first dung me stupid, and then drove me to desperation; and
+not even minding the dear wife of my bosom, that had fainted away as dead
+as a herring, I pulled on my trowsers like mad, and rushed out into the
+street, bareheaded and barefoot as the day that Lucky Bringthereout dragged
+me into the world.</p>
+<p>The crowd saw in the twinkling of an eyeball that I was a desperate man,
+fierce as Sir William Wallace, and not to be withstood by gentle or
+semple.&nbsp; So most of them made way for me; they that tried to stop me
+finding it a bad job, being heeled over from right to left, on the broad of
+their backs, like flounders without respect of age or person; some old
+women that <!-- page 193--><a name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+193</span>were obstrapulous being gey sore hurt, and one of them with a
+pain in her hainch even to this day.&nbsp; When I had got almost to the
+door-cheek of the burning house, I found one grupping me by the back like
+grim death; and, in looking over my shoulder, who was it but Nanse herself,
+that, rising up from her faint, had pursued me like a whirlwind.&nbsp; It
+was a heavy trial, but my duty to myself in the first place, and to my
+neighbours in the second, roused me up to withstand it; so, making a spend
+like a grey-hound, I left the hindside of my shirt in her grasp, like
+Joseph&rsquo;s garment in the nieve of Potiphar&rsquo;s wife, and up the
+stairs head-foremost among the flames.</p>
+<p>Mercy keep us all! what a sight for mortal man to glowr at with his
+living eyes!&nbsp; The bells were tolling amid the dark, like a summons
+from above for the parish of Dalkeith to pack off to another world; the
+drums were beat-beating as if the French were coming, thousand on thousand,
+to kill, slay, and devour every maid and mother&rsquo;s son of us; the
+fire-engine pump-pump-pumping like daft, showering the water like rainbows,
+as if the windows of heaven were opened, and the days of old Noah come back
+again; and the rabble throwing the good furniture over the windows like
+onion peelings, where it either felled the folk below, or was dung to a
+thousand shivers on the causey.&nbsp; I cried to them, for the love of
+goodness, to make search in the beds, in case there might be any weans
+there, <!-- page 194--><a name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+194</span>human life being still more precious than human means; but not a
+living soul was seen but a cat, which, being raised and wild with the din,
+would on no consideration allow itself to be catched.&nbsp; Jacob Dribble
+found that to his cost; for, right or wrong, having a drappie in his head,
+he swore like a trooper that he would catch her, and carry her down beneath
+his oxter; so forward he weired her into a corner, crouching on his
+hunkers.&nbsp; He had much better have left it alone; for it fuffed over
+his shoulder like wildfire, and scarting his back all the way down, jumped
+like a lamplighter head-foremost through the flames, where, in the raging
+and roaring of the devouring element, its pitiful cries were soon hushed to
+silence for ever and ever, Amen!</p>
+<p>At long and last, a woman&rsquo;s howl was heard on the street,
+lamenting, like Hagar over young Ishmael in the wilderness of Beersheba,
+and crying that her old grannie, that was a lameter, and had been bedridden
+for four years come the Martinmas following, was burning to a cinder in the
+fore-garret.&nbsp; My heart was like to burst within me when I heard this
+dismal news, remembering that I myself had once an old mother, that was now
+in the mools; so I brushed up the stair like a hatter, and burst open the
+door of the fore-garret&mdash;for in the hurry I could not find the sneck,
+and did not like to stand on ceremony.&nbsp; I could not see my finger
+before me, and did not know my right hand <!-- page 195--><a
+name="page195"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 195</span>from the left, for
+the smoke; but I groped round and round, though the reek mostly cut my
+breath, and made me cough at no allowance, till at last I catched hold of
+something cold and clammy, which I gave a pull, not knowing what it was,
+but found out to be the old wife&rsquo;s nose.&nbsp; I cried out as loud as
+I was able for the poor creature to hoise herself up into my arms; but,
+receiving no answer, I discovered in a moment that she was suffocated, the
+foul air having gone down her wrong hause; and, though I had aye a terror
+at looking at, far less handling a dead corpse, there was something brave
+within me at the moment, my blood being up; so I caught hold of her by the
+shoulders, and harling her with all my might out of her bed, got her lifted
+on my back heads and thraws, in the manner of a boll of meal, and away as
+fast as my legs could carry me.</p>
+<p>There was a providence in this haste; for, ere I was half-way down the
+stair, the floor fell with a thud like thunder; and such a combustion of
+soot, stour, and sparks arose, as was never seen or heard tell of in the
+memory of man since the day that Samson pulled over the pillars in the
+house of dragon, and smoored all the mocking Philistines as flat as
+flounders.&nbsp; For the space of a minute I was as blind as a beetle, and
+was like to be choked for want of breath; however, as the dust began to
+clear up, I saw an open window, and hallooed down to the crowd for the sake
+of mercy <!-- page 196--><a name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+196</span>to bring a ladder, to save the lives of two perishing
+fellow-creatures, for now my own was also in imminent jeopardy.&nbsp; They
+were long of coming, and I did not know what to do; so thinking that the
+old wife, as she had not spoken, was maybe dead already, I was once
+determined just to let her drop down upon the street; but I knew that the
+so doing would have cracked every bone in her body, and the glory of my
+bravery would thus have been worse than lost.&nbsp; I persevered,
+therefore, though I was fit to fall down under the dead weight, she not
+being able to help herself, and having a deal of beef in her skin for an
+old woman of eighty; but I got a lean, by squeezing her a wee between me
+and the wall.</p>
+<p>I thought they would never have come, for my shoeless feet were all
+bruised, and bleeding from the crunched lime and the splinters of broken
+stones; but at long and last, a ladder was hoisted up, and having fastened
+a kinch of ropes beneath her oxters, I let her slide down over the upper
+step, by way of a pillyshee, having the satisfaction of seeing her safely
+landed in the arms of seven old wives, that were waiting with a cosey warm
+blanket below.&nbsp; Having accomplished this grand man&oelig;uvre, wherein
+I succeeded in saving the precious life of a woman of eighty, that had been
+four long years bedridden, I tripped down the steps myself like a
+nine-year-old, and had the pleasure, when the roof fell in, to know that I
+for one <!-- page 197--><a name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+197</span>had done my duty; and that, to the best of my knowledge, no
+living creature except the poor cat had perished within the jaws of the
+devouring element.</p>
+<p>But, bide a wee; the work was, as yet, only half done.&nbsp; The fire
+was still roaring and raging, every puff of wind that blew through the
+black firmament, driving the red sparks high into the air, where they died
+away like the tail of a comet, or the train of a skyrocket; the joisting
+crazing, cracking, and tumbling down; and now and then the bursting cans
+playing flee in a hundred flinders from the chimney-heads.&nbsp; One would
+have naturally enough thought that our engine could have drowned out a fire
+of any kind whatsoever in half a second, scores of folk driving about with
+pitcherfuls of water, and scaling half of it on one another and the causey
+in their hurry; but woe&rsquo;s me! it did not play puh on the red-het
+stones, that whizzed like iron in a smiddy trough; so, as soon as it was
+darkness and smoke in one place, it was fire and fury in another.</p>
+<p>My anxiety was great; seeing that I had done my best for my neighbours,
+it behoved me now, in my turn, to try and see what I could do for myself;
+so, notwithstanding the remonstrances of my friend James Batter&mdash;whom
+Nanse, knowing I had bare feet, had sent out to seek me, with a pair of
+shoon in his hand; and who, in scratching his head, mostly rugged out every
+hair of his wig with sheer vexation&mdash;<!-- page 198--><a
+name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 198</span>I ran off, and
+mounted the ladder a second time, and succeeded, after muckle speeling, in
+getting upon the top of the wall; where, having a bucket slung up to me by
+means of a rope, I swashed down such showers on the top of the flames, that
+I soon did more good, in the space of five minutes, than the engine and the
+ten men, that were all in a broth of perspiration with pumping it, did the
+whole night over: to say nothing of the multitude of drawers of water, men,
+wives, and weans, with their cuddies, leglins, pitchers, pails, and
+water-stoups; having the satisfaction, in a short time, to observe every
+thing getting as black as the crown of my hat, and the gable of my own
+house becoming as cool as a cucumber.</p>
+<p>Being a man of method, and acquainted with business, I could have liked
+to have given a finishing stitch to my work before descending the ladder;
+but, losh me! sic a whingeing, girning, greeting, and roaring, got up all
+of a sudden, as was never seen or heard of since bowed Joseph raised the
+meal-mob, and burned Johnnie Wilkes in effigy; and, looking down, I saw
+Benjie, the bairn of my own heart, and the callant Glen, my apprentice on
+trial, that had both been as sound as tops till this blessed moment,
+standing in their nightgowns and their little red cowls, rubbing their
+eyes, cowering with cold and fright, and making an awful uproar, crying on
+me to come down and not be killed.&nbsp; The voice of Benjie especially
+pierced <!-- page 199--><a name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+199</span>through and through my heart, like a two-edged sword, and I could
+on no manner of account suffer myself to bear it any longer, as I jealoused
+the bairn would have gone into convulsion fits if I had not heeded him; so,
+making a sign to them to be quiet, I came my ways down, taking hold of one
+in ilka hand, which must have been a fatherly sight to the spectators that
+saw us.&nbsp; After waiting on the crown of the causey for half an hour, to
+make sure that the fire was extinguished, and all tight and right, I saw
+the crowd scaling, and thought it best to go in too, carrying the two
+youngsters along with me.&nbsp; When I began to move off, however, siccan a
+cheering of the multitude got up as would have deafened a cannon; and
+though I say it myself, who should not say it, they seemed struck with a
+sore amazement at my heroic behaviour, following me with loud cheers even
+to the threshold of my own door.</p>
+<p>From this folk should condescend to take a lesson, seeing that, though
+the world is a bitter bad world, yet that good deeds are not only a reward
+to themselves, but call forth the applause of Jew and Gentile: for the
+sweet savour of my conduct on this memorable night remained in my nostrils
+for goodness knows the length of time, many praising my brave humanity in
+public companies and assemblies of the people, such as strawberry ploys,
+council meetings, dinner parties, and so forth; and many in private
+conversation at <!-- page 200--><a name="page200"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 200</span>their own ingle-cheek, by way of two-handed
+crack; in stage-coach confab, and in causey talk in the forenoon, before
+going in to take their meridians.&nbsp; Indeed, between friends, the
+business proved in the upshot of no small advantage to me, bringing to me a
+sowd of strange faces, by way of customers, both gentle and semple, that I
+verily believe had not so muckle as ever heard of my name before, and
+giving me many a coat to cut, and cloth to shape, that, but for my gallant
+behaviour on the fearsome night aforesaid, would doubtless have been cut,
+sewed, and shaped by other hands.&nbsp; Indeed, considering the great noise
+the thing made in the world, it is no wonder that every one was anxious to
+have a garment of wearing apparel made by the individual same hands that
+had succeeded, under Providence, in saving the precious life of an old
+woman of eighty, that had been bedridden, some say, four years come Yule,
+and others, come Martinmas.</p>
+<p>When we got to the ingle-side, and, barring the door, saw that all was
+safe, it was now three in the morning; so we thought it by much the best
+way of managing, not to think of sleeping any more, but to be on the
+look-out&mdash;as we aye used to be when walking sentry in the
+volunteers&mdash;in case the flames should, by ony mischancy accident or
+other, happen to break out again.&nbsp; My wife blamed my hardihood muckle,
+and the rashness with which I had ventured at once <!-- page 201--><a
+name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>to places where even
+masons and sclaters were afraid to put foot on; yet I saw, in the interim,
+that she looked on me with a prouder eye&mdash;knowing herself the helpmate
+of one that had courageously risked his neck, and every bone in his skin,
+in the cause of humanity.&nbsp; I saw this as plain as a pikestaff, as,
+with one of her kindest looks, she insisted on my putting on a better
+happing to screen me from the cold, and on my taking something comfortable
+inwardly towards the dispelling of bad consequences.&nbsp; So, after half a
+minute&rsquo;s stand-out, by way of refusal like, I agreed to a cupful of
+het-pint, as I thought it would be a thing Mungo Glen might never have had
+the good fortune to have tasted; and as it might operate by way of a
+cordial on the callant Benjie, who kept aye smally, and in a dwining
+way.&nbsp; No sooner said than done&mdash;and off Nanse brushed in a couple
+of hurries to make the het-pint.</p>
+<p>After the small beer was put into the pan to boil, we found to our great
+mortification, that there were no eggs in the house, and Benjie was sent
+out with a candle to the hen house, to see if any of the hens had laid
+since gloaming, and fetch what he could get.&nbsp; In the middle of the
+mean time, I was expatiating to Mungo on what taste it would have, and how
+he had never seen anything finer than it would be, when in ran Benjie, all
+out of breath, and his face as pale as a dishclout.</p>
+<p><!-- page 202--><a name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+202</span>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, Benjie, what&rsquo;s the
+matter?&rdquo; said I to him, rising up from my chair in a great hurry of a
+fright&mdash;&ldquo;Has onybody killed ye? or is the fire broken out again?
+or has the French landed? or have ye seen a ghost? or are&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh, crifty!&rdquo; cried Benjie, coming till his speech,
+&ldquo;they&rsquo;re a&rsquo; aff&mdash;cock and hens and
+a&rsquo;&mdash;there&rsquo;s naething left but the rotten nest-egg in the
+corner!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was an awful dispensation, of which more hereafter.&nbsp; In the
+midst of the desolation of the fire&mdash;such is the depravity of human
+nature&mdash;some ne&rsquo;er-do-weels had taken advantage of my absence to
+break open the hen-house door; and our whole stock of poultry, the cock
+along with our seven hens&mdash;two of them tappit, and one
+muffed&mdash;were carried away bodily, stoop and roop.</p>
+<p>On this subject, howsoever, I shall say no more in this chapter, but
+merely observe in conclusion, that as to our het-pint, we were obligated to
+make the best of a bad bargain, making up with whisky what it wanted in
+eggs; though our banquet could not be called altogether a merry one, the
+joys of our escape from the horrors of the fire being damped, as it were by
+a wet blanket, on account of the nefarious pillaging of our hen-house.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 203--><a name="page203"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+203</span>CHAPTER TWENTY&mdash;MANSIE&rsquo;S ADVENTURES IN THE SPORTING
+LINE</h2>
+<p>The situation of me and my family at this time affords an example of the
+truth of the old proverb, that &ldquo;ae evil never comes its lane&rdquo;;
+being no sooner quit of our dread concerning the burning, than we were
+doomed by Providence to undergo the disaster of the rookery of our
+hen-house.&nbsp; I believe I have mentioned the number of our
+stock&mdash;to wit, a cock and seven hens, eight in all; but I neglected,
+on account of their size, or somehow overlooked, the two bantams, than
+which two more neat or curiouser-looking creatures were not to be seen in
+the whole country-side.&nbsp; The hennie was quite a conceit of a thing,
+and laid an egg not muckle bigger than my thimble; while, for its size, the
+bit he-ane was, for spirit in the fechting line, a perfect wee deevil
+incarnate.</p>
+<p>Most fortunately for my family in this matter, it so happened that, by
+paying in half-a-crown a-year, I was a regular member of a society for
+prosecuting all whom it might concern, that dabbled with foul fingers in
+the sinful and lawless trade of thievery, breaking the eighth commandment
+at no allowance, and drawing on their heads not only the passing
+punishments of this world, by way of banishment to Botany Bay, or hanging
+at the Luckenbooths, but the threatened vengeance of one that will last for
+ever and ever.</p>
+<p><!-- page 204--><a name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+204</span>Accordingly, putting on my hat about nine o&rsquo;clock, or
+thereabouts, when the breakfast things were removing from the bit table, I
+poppit out, in the first and foremost instance, to take a vizzy of the
+depredation the flames had made in our neighbourhood.&nbsp; Losh keep us
+all, what a spectacle of wreck and ruination!&nbsp; The roof was clean off
+and away, as if a thunderbolt from heaven had knocked it down through the
+two floors, carrying every thing before it like a perfect whirlwind.&nbsp;
+Nought were standing but black, bare walls, a perfect picture of
+desolation; some with the bit pictures on nails still hanging up where the
+rooms were like; and others with old coats hanging on pins; and empty
+bottles in boles, and so on.&nbsp; Indeed, Jacob Glowr, who was standing by
+my side with his specs on, could see as plain as a pikestaff, a tea-kettle
+still on the fire, in the hearth-place of one of the gable garrets, where
+Miss Jenny Withershins lived, but happened luckily, at the era of the
+conflagration, to be away to Prestonpans, on a visit to some of her
+far-away cousins, providentially for her safety, greviously, at that very
+time, smitten with the sciatics.</p>
+<p>Having satisfied my eyes with a daylight view of the terrible
+devastation, I went away leisurely up the street with my hands in my
+breeches-pockets, comparing the scene in my mind with the downfall of
+Babylon the Great, and Sodom and Gomorrah, and <!-- page 205--><a
+name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 205</span>Tyre and Sidon, and
+Jerusalem, and all the lave of the great towns that had fallen to decay,
+according to the foretelling of the sacred prophets, until I came to the
+door of Donald Gleig, the head of the Thief Society, to whom I related,
+from beginning to end, the whole business of the hen-stealing.&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Od he was a mettle bodie of a creature; far north, Aberdeen-awa
+like, and looking at two sides of a halfpenny; but, to give the devil his
+due, in this instance he behaved to me like a gentleman.&nbsp; Not only did
+Donald send through the drum in the course of half an hour, offering a
+reward for the apprehension of the offenders of three guineas, names
+concealed, but he got a warrant granted to Francie Deep, the
+sherry-officer, to make search in the houses of several suspicious
+persons.</p>
+<p>The reward offered by tuck of drum failed, nobody making application to
+the crier; but the search succeeded; as, after turning everything
+topsy-turvy, the feathers were found in a bag, in the house of an old woman
+of vile character, who contrived to make out a way of living by hiring beds
+at twopence a-night to Eirish travellers&mdash;South-country
+packmen&mdash;sturdy beggars, men and women, and weans of
+them&mdash;Yetholm tinklers&mdash;wooden-legged sailors without Chelsea
+pensions&mdash;dumb spaewomen&mdash;keepers of wild-beast
+shows&mdash;dancing-dog folk&mdash;spunk-makers, and suchlike
+pick-pockets.&nbsp; The thing was as plain as the loof of my hand; for,
+besides great <!-- page 206--><a name="page206"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 206</span>suspicion, what was more, was the finding the
+head of the muffed hen, to which I could have sworn, lying in a bye-corner;
+the body itself not being so kenspeckle in its disjasket state&mdash;as it
+hung twirling in a string by its legs before the fire, all buttered over
+with swine&rsquo;s seam, and half roasted.</p>
+<p>After some little ado, and having called in two men that were passing to
+help us to take them prisoners, in case of their being refractory, we
+carried them by the lug and the horn before a justice of peace.</p>
+<p>Except the fact of the stolen goods being found in their possession, it
+so chanced, ye observe, that we had no other sort of evidence whatsoever;
+but we took care to examine them one at a time, the one not hearing what
+the other said; so, by dint of cross-questioning by one who well knew how
+to bring fire out of flint, we soon made the guilty convict themselves, and
+brought the transaction home to two wauf-looking fellows that we had got
+smoking in a corner.&nbsp; From the speerings that were put to them during
+their examination, it was found that they tried to make a way of doing by
+swindling folks at fairs by the game of the garter.&nbsp; Indeed, it was
+stupid of me not to recognise their faces at first sight, having observed
+both of them loitering about our back bounds the afternoon before; and one
+of them, the tall one with the red head and fustian jacket, having been in
+my shop in the fore part of the night, about the gloaming like, asking me
+<!-- page 207--><a name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 207</span>as
+a favour for a yard or two of spare runds, or selvages.</p>
+<p>I have aye heard that seeing is believing; and that youth might take a
+warning from the punishment that sooner or later is ever tacked to the tail
+of crime, I took Benjie and Mungo to hear the trial; and two more rueful
+faces than they put on, when they looked at the culprits, were never seen
+since Adam was a boy.&nbsp; It was far different with the two Eirishers,
+who showed themselves so hardened by a long course of sin and misery, that,
+instead of abasing themselves in the face of a magistrate, they scarcely
+almost gave a civil answer to a single question which was speered at
+them.&nbsp; Howsoever, they paid for that at a heavy ransom, as ye shall
+hear by and by.</p>
+<p>Having been kept all night in the cold tolbooth on bread and water,
+without either coal or candle to warm their toes, or let them see what they
+were doing, they were harled out amid an immense crowd of young and old,
+more especially wives and weans, at eleven o&rsquo;clock on the next
+forenoon, to the endurance of a punishment which ought to have afflicted
+them almost as muckle as that of death itself.</p>
+<p>When the key of the jail door was thrawn, and the two loons brought out,
+there was a bumming of wonder, and maybe sorrow, among the terrible crowd,
+to see fellow-creatures so left alone to themselves as to have robbed an
+honest man&rsquo;s hen-house at the dead <!-- page 208--><a
+name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 208</span>hour of night, when a
+fire was bleezing next door, and the howl of desolation soughing over the
+town like a visible judgment.&nbsp; One of them, as I said before, had a
+red pow, and a foraging cap, with a black napkin roppined round his
+weasand; a jean jacket with six pockets, and square tails; a velveteen
+waistcoat with plated buttons; corduroy breeches buttoned at the knees;
+rig-and-fur stockings; and heavy, clanking wooden clogs.&nbsp; The other,
+who was little and round-shouldered, with a bull neck and bushy black
+whiskers, just like a shoebrush stuck to each cheek of his head, as if he
+had been a travelling agent for Macassar, had on a low-crowned, plated
+beaver hat, with the end of a peacock&rsquo;s feather, stuck in the band; a
+long-tailed old black coat, as brown as a berry, and as bare as my loof, to
+say nothing of being out at both elbows.&nbsp; His trowsers, I dare say,
+had once been nankeen; but as they did not appear to have seen the
+washing-tub for a season or two, it would be rash to give any decided
+opinion on that head.&nbsp; In short, they were two awful-like
+raggamuffins.</p>
+<p>Women, however, are aye sympathizing and merciful; so as I was standing
+among the crowd, as they came down the tolbooth stair, chained together by
+the cuffs of the coat, one said, &ldquo;Wae&rsquo;s me! what a
+weel-faur&rsquo;d fellow, wi&rsquo; the red head, to be found guilty of
+stealing folk&rsquo;s hen-houses.&rdquo;&mdash;And another one said,
+&ldquo;Hech, sirs! what a bonny blackaviced man <!-- page 209--><a
+name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 209</span>that little ane is,
+to be paraded through the streets for a warld&rsquo;s wonder!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But I said nothing, knowing the thing was just, and a wholesome example;
+holding Benjie on my shoulder to see the poukit hens tied about their necks
+like keeking-glasses.&nbsp; But, puh! the fellows did not give one pinch of
+snuff; so off they set, and in this manner were drummed through the bounds
+of the parish, a constable walking at each side of them with Lochaber axes,
+and the town-drummer row-de-dowing the thief&rsquo;s march at their
+backs.&nbsp; It was a humbling sight.</p>
+<p>My heart was sorrowful, notwithstanding the ills they had done me and
+mine, by the nefarious pillaging of our hen-house, to see two human
+creatures of the same flesh and blood as myself, undergoing the righteous
+sentence of the law, in a manner so degrading to themselves, and so pitiful
+to all that beheld them.&nbsp; But, nevertheless, considering what they had
+done, they neither deserved, nor did they seem to care for commiseration,
+holding up their brazen faces as if they had been taking a pleasure walk
+for the benefit of their health, and the poukit hens, that dangled before
+them, ornaments of their bravery.&nbsp; The whole crowd, young and old,
+followed them from one end of the town to the other, liking to ding one
+another over, so anxious were they to get a sight of what was going on; but
+when they came to the gate-end, they stopped and gave the
+ne&rsquo;er-do-weels three cheers.&nbsp; What think <!-- page 210--><a
+name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 210</span>you did the
+ne&rsquo;er-do-weels do in return?&nbsp; Fie shame! they took off their old
+scrapers and gave a huzza too; clapping their hands behind them, in a
+manner as deplorable to relate as it was shocking to behold.</p>
+<p>Their chains&mdash;the things, ye know, that held their cuffs
+together&mdash;were by this time taken off, along with the poukit hens,
+which I fancy the town-offishers took home and cooked for their dinner; so
+they shook hands with the drummer, wishing him a good-day and a pleasant
+walk home, brushing away on the road to Edinburgh, where their wives and
+weans, who had no doubt made a good supper on the spuilzie of the hens, had
+gone away before, maybe to have something comfortable for their arrival,
+their walk being likely to give them an appetite.</p>
+<p>Had they taken away all the rest of the hens, and only left the bantams,
+on which they must have found but desperate little eating, and the muffed
+one, I would have cared less; it being from several circumstances a pet one
+in the family, having been brought in a blackbird&rsquo;s cage by the
+carrier from Lauder, from my wife&rsquo;s mother, in a present to Benjie on
+his birth-day.&nbsp; The creature almost grat himself blind, when he heard
+of our having seen it roasting in a string by the legs before the fire, and
+found its bonny muffed head in a corner.</p>
+<p>But let alone likings, the callant was otherwise a loser in its death,
+she having regularly laid a caller <!-- page 211--><a
+name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 211</span>egg to him every
+morning, which he got along with his tea and bread, to the no small benefit
+of his health, being, as I have taken occasion to remark before, far from
+being robusteous in the constitution.&nbsp; I am sure I know one thing, and
+that is, that I would have willingly given the louns a crown-piece to have
+preserved it alive, hen though it was of my own; but no&mdash;the bloody
+deed was over and done, before we were aware that the poor thing&rsquo;s
+life was sacrificed.</p>
+<p>The names of the two Eirishers were John Dochart and Dennis Flint, both,
+according to their own deponement, from the county of Tipperary; and
+weel-a-wat the place has no great credit in producing two such
+bairns.&nbsp; Often, after that, did I look through that part of the
+Advertizer newspapers, that has a list of all the accidents, and so on,
+just above the births, marriages and deaths, which I liked to read
+regularly.&nbsp; Howsoever, it was two years before I discovered their
+names again, having it seems, during a great part of that period, lived
+under the forged name of Alias; and I saw that they were both shipped off
+at Leith, for transportation to some country called the Hulks, for being
+habit and repute thieves, and for having made a practice of coining bad
+silver.&nbsp; The thing, however, that condemned them, was for having
+knocked down a drunk man, in a beastly state of intoxication, on the
+King&rsquo;s highway in broad daylight; and having robbed him of his hat,
+wig, and neckcloth, an upper <!-- page 212--><a name="page212"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 212</span>and under vest, a coat and great-coat, a pair
+of Hessian boots which he had on his legs, a silver watch with four brass
+seals and a key, besides a snuff-box made of boxwood, with an invisible
+hinge, one of the Lawrencekirk breed, a pair of specs, some odd
+halfpennies, and a Camperdown pocket-napkin.</p>
+<p>But of all months of the year&mdash;or maybe, indeed, of my blessed
+lifetime&mdash;this one was the most adventurous.&nbsp; It seemed, indeed,
+as if some especial curse of Providence hung over the canny town of
+Dalkeith; and that, like the great cities of the plain, we were at long and
+last to be burnt up from the face of the earth with a shower of fire and
+brimstone.</p>
+<p>Just three days after the drumming of the two Eirish
+ne&rsquo;er-do-weels, a deaf and dumb woman came in prophesying at our back
+door, offering to spae fortunes.&nbsp; She was tall and thin, an unco
+witch-looking creature, with a runkled brow, sunburnt haffits, and two
+sharp piercing eyes, like a hawk&rsquo;s, whose glance went through ye like
+the cut and thrust of a two-edged sword.&nbsp; On her head she had a tawdry
+brownish black bonnet, that had not improved from two three years&rsquo;
+tholing of sun and wind; a thin rag of a grey duffle mantle was thrown over
+her shoulders, below which was a checked shortgown of gingham stripe, and a
+green glazed manco petticoat.&nbsp; Her shoon were terrible bauchles, and
+her grey worsted stockings, to hide the holes in them, were all dragooned
+down about her <!-- page 213--><a name="page213"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 213</span>heels.&nbsp; On the whole, she was rather, I
+must confess, an out-of-the-way creature; and though I had not muckle faith
+in these bodies that pretend to see further through a millstone than their
+neighbours, I somehow or other, taking pity on her miserable condition,
+being still a fellow-creature, though plain in the lugs, had not the heart
+to huff her out; more by token, as Nanse, Benjie, and the new prentice
+Mungo, had by this time got round me, all dying to know what grand fortunes
+waited them in the years of their after pilgrimage.&nbsp; Sinful creatures
+that we are! not content with the insight into its ways that Providence
+affords us, but diving beyond our deeps, only to flounder into the
+whirlpools of error.&nbsp; Is it not clear, that had it been for our good,
+all things would have been revealed to us; and is it not as clear, that not
+a wink of sound sleep would we ever have got, had all the ills that have
+crossed our paths been ranged up before our een, like great black towering
+mountains of darkness?&nbsp; How could we have found contentment in our
+goods and gear, if we saw them melting from us next year like snow from a
+dyke; how could we sit down on the elbow-chair of ease, could we see the
+misfortunes that may make next week a black one; or how could we look a
+kind friend in the face without tears, could we see him, ere a month maybe
+was gone, lying streiked beneath his winding sheet, his eyes closed for
+evermore, and his mirth hushed to an awful silence!&nbsp; No, no, let us
+rest content that <!-- page 214--><a name="page214"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 214</span>Heaven decrees what is best for us; let us do
+our duty as men and Christians, and every thing, both here and hereafter,
+will work together for our good.</p>
+<p>Having taken a piece of chalk out of her big, greasy, leather pouch, she
+wrote down on the table, &ldquo;Your wife, your son, and your
+prentice.&rdquo;&nbsp; This was rather curious, and every one of them, a
+wee thunderstruck like, cried out as they held up their hands, &ldquo;Losh
+me! did onybody ever see or hear tell of the like o&rsquo; that?&nbsp;
+She&rsquo;s no canny!&rdquo;&mdash;It was gey droll, I thought; and I was
+aware from the Witch of Endor, and sundry mentions in the Old Testament,
+that things out of the course of nature have more than once been permitted
+to happen; so I reckoned it but right to give the poor woman a fair
+hearing, as she deserved.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Nanse to me, &ldquo;ye ken our Benjie&rsquo;s
+eight year auld; see if she kens; ask her how old he is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had scarcely written down the question, when she wrote beneath it,
+&ldquo;The bonny laddie, your only son, is eight year old: He&rsquo;ll be
+an admiral yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An admiral!&rdquo; said his mother; &ldquo;that&rsquo;s gey and
+extraordinar.&nbsp; I never kenned he had ony inkling for the seafaring
+line; and I thought, Mansie, you intended bringing him up to your ain
+trade.&nbsp; But, howsoever, ye&rsquo;re wrong ye see.&nbsp; I tell&rsquo;t
+ye he wad either make a spoon or spoil a horn.&nbsp; I tell&rsquo;t ye,
+ower and ower again, that he would be either something or naething; what
+think ye o&rsquo; that noo?&mdash;See if she kens <!-- page 215--><a
+name="page215"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 215</span>that Mungo comes from
+the country; and where the Lammermoor hills is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When I had put down the question, in a jiffie she wrote down beside it,
+&ldquo;That boy comes from the high green hills, and his name is
+Mungo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dog on it! this astonished us more and more, and fairly bamboozled my
+understanding; as I thought there surely must be some league and paction
+with the Old One; but the further in the deeper.&nbsp; She then pointed to
+my wife, writing down, &ldquo;Your name is Nancy&rdquo;&mdash;and turning
+to me, as she made some dumbie signs, she chalked down, &ldquo;Your name is
+Mansie Wauch, that saved the precious life of an old bedridden woman from
+the fire; and will soon get a lottery ticket of twenty thousand
+pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Knowing the truth of the rest of what she had said, I could not help
+jumping on the floor with joy, and seeing that she was up to everything, as
+plain as if it had happened in her presence.&nbsp; The good news set us all
+a skipping like young lambs, my wife and the laddies clapping their hands
+as if they had found a fiddle; so, jealousing they might lose their
+discretion in their mirth, I turned round to the three, holding up my hand,
+and saying, &ldquo;In the name o&rsquo; Gudeness, dinna mention this to ony
+leeving sowl; as, mind ye, I havena taken out the ticket yet.&nbsp; The
+doing so might not only set them to the sinful envying of our good fortune,
+as forbidden in the tenth commandment, <!-- page 216--><a
+name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>but might lead away
+ourselves to be gutting our fish before we get them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mind then,&rdquo; said Nanse, &ldquo;about your promise to me,
+concerning the silk gown, and the pair&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wheesht, wheesht, gudewifie,&rdquo; answered I.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a braw time coming.&nbsp; We must not be in ower great
+a hurry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I then bade the woman sit down by the ingle cheek, and our wife to give
+her a piece of cold beef, and a shave of bread, besides twopence out of my
+own pocket.&nbsp; Some, on hearing siccan sums mentioned, would have
+immediately struck work, but, even in the height of my grand expectations,
+I did not forget the old saying, that &ldquo;a bird in the hand is worth
+two in the bush&rdquo;; and being thrang with a pair of leggins for Eben
+Bowsie, I brushed away ben to the workshop, thinking the woman, or witch,
+or whatever she was, would have more freedom and pleasure in eating by
+herself.&mdash;That she had, I am now bound to say by experience.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p216b.jpg">
+<img alt="James Batter" src="images/p216s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Two days after, when we were sitting at our comfortable four-hours, in
+came little Benjie, running out of breath&mdash;just at the dividual moment
+of time my wife and me were jeering one another, about how we would behave
+when we came to be grand ladies and gentlemen, keeping a flunkie
+maybe&mdash;to tell us, that when he was playing at the bools, on the
+plainstones before the old kirk, he had seen the deaf and dumb <!-- page
+217--><a name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 217</span>spaewife
+harled away to the tolbooth, for stealing a pair of trowsers that were
+hanging drying on a tow in Juden Elshinder&rsquo;s back close.&nbsp; I
+could scarcely credit the callant, though I knew he would not tell a lie
+for sixpence; and I said to him, &ldquo;Now be sure, Benjie, before ye
+speak.&nbsp; The tongue is a dangerous weapon, and apt to bring folk into
+trouble&mdash;it might be another woman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was real cleverality in the callant.&nbsp; He said, &ldquo;Ay,
+faither, but it was her; and she contrived to bring herself into trouble
+without a tongue at a&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I could not help laughing at this, it showed Benjie to be such a genius;
+so he said,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye needa laugh, faither; for it&rsquo;s as true&rsquo;s death it
+was her.&nbsp; Do you think I didna ken in a minute our cheese-toaster,
+that used to hing beside the kitchen fire; and that the sherry-offisher
+took out frae beneath her grey cloak?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The smile went off Nanse&rsquo;s cheek like lightning, she said it could
+not be true; but she would go to the kitchen to see.&nbsp; I&rsquo;fegs it
+was too true; for she never came back to tell the contrary.</p>
+<p>This was really and truly a terrible business, but the truth for all
+that; the cheese-toaster casting up not an hour after, in the hands of
+Daniel Search, to whom I gave a dram.&nbsp; The loss of the tin
+cheese-toaster would have been a trifle, especially as it was broken in the
+handle&mdash;but this was an awful blow to <!-- page 218--><a
+name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 218</span>the truth of the
+thieving dumbie&rsquo;s grand prophecy.&nbsp; Nevertheless, it seemed at
+the time gey puzzling to me, to think how a deaf and dumb woman, unless she
+had some wonderful gift, could have told us what she did.</p>
+<p>On the next day, the Friday, I think, that story was also made as clear
+as daylight to us; for being banished out of the town as a common thief and
+vagabond, down on the Musselburgh Road, by order of a justice of the peace,
+it was the bounden duty of Daniel Search and Geordie Sharp to see her safe
+past the kennel, the length of Smeaton.&nbsp; They then tried to make her
+understand by writing on the wall, that if ever again she was seen or heard
+tell of in the town, she would be banished to Botany Bay; but she had a
+great fight, it seems, to make out Daniel&rsquo;s bad spelling, he having
+been very ill yedicated, and no deacon at the pen.</p>
+<p>Howsoever, they got her to understand their meaning, by giving her a
+shove forward by the shoulders, and aye pointing down to Inveresk.&nbsp;
+Thinking she did not hear them, they then took upon themselves the liberty
+of calling her some ill names, and bade her good-day as a bad one.&nbsp;
+But she was upsides with them for acting, in that respect, above their
+commission; for she wheeled round again to them, and snapping her fingers
+at their noses, gave a curse, and bade them go home for a couple of dirty
+Scotch vermin.</p>
+<p><!-- page 219--><a name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+219</span>The two men were perfectly dumfoundered at hearing the
+tongue-tied wife speaking as good English as themselves; and could not help
+stopping to look after her for a long way on the road, as every now and
+then she stuck one of her arms a-kimbo in her side, and gave a dance round
+in the whirling-jig way, louping like daft, and lilting like a
+grey-lintie.&nbsp; From her way of speaking, they also saw immediately that
+she too was an Eirisher.&mdash;They must be a bonny family when they are
+all at home.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 220--><a name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+220</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE&mdash;ANENT THE YOUNG CALLANT MUNGO GLEN</h2>
+<p>Perhaps, since I was born, I do not remember such a string of casualties
+as happened to me and mine, all within the period of one short
+fortnight.&nbsp; To say nothing connected with the play-acting business,
+which was immediately before&mdash;first came Mungo Glen&rsquo;s misfortune
+with regard to the blood-soiling of the new nankeen trowsers, the foremost
+of his transactions, and a bad omen&mdash;next, the fire, and all its
+wonderfuls, the saving of the old bedridden woman&rsquo;s precious life,
+and the destruction of the poor cat&mdash;syne the robbery of the hen-house
+by the Eirish ne&rsquo;er-do-weels, who paid so sweetly for their
+pranks&mdash;and lastly, the hoax, the thieving of the cheese-toaster
+without the handle, and the banishment of the spaewife.</p>
+<p>These were awful signs of the times, and seemed to say that the world
+was fast coming to a finis; the ends of the earth appearing to have
+combined in a great Popish plot of villany.&nbsp; Every man that had a
+heart to feel, must have trembled amid these threatening, judgment-like,
+and calamitous events.&nbsp; As for my own part, the depravity of the
+nations, which most of these scenes showed me, I must say, fell heavily
+upon my spirit; and I could not help thinking of the old cities of the
+plain, over the house-tops of which, for their heinous sins and iniquitous
+abominations, the wrath of the Almighty showered down fire and <!-- page
+221--><a name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 221</span>brimstone
+from heaven till the very earth melted and swallowed them up for ever and
+ever.</p>
+<p>These added to the number, to be sure; but not that I had never before
+seen signs and wonders in my time.&nbsp; I had seen the friends of the
+people,&mdash;and the scarce years,&mdash;and the bloody gulleteening
+over-bye among the French blackguards,&mdash;and the business of Watt and
+Downie nearer home, at our own doors almost, in Edinburgh like,&mdash;and
+the calling out of the volunteers,&mdash;and divers sea-fights at
+Camperdown and elsewhere,&mdash;and land battles countless,&mdash;and the
+American war, part o&rsquo;t,&mdash;and awful murders,&mdash;and mock
+fights in the Duke&rsquo;s Parks,&mdash;and highway robberies,&mdash;and
+breakings of all the Ten Commandments, from the first to the last; so that,
+allowing me to have had but a common spunk of reflection, I must, like
+others, have cast a wistful eye on the ongoings of men: and, if I had not
+strength to pour out my inward lamentations, I could not help thinking,
+with fear and trembling, at the rebellion of such a worm as man, against a
+Power whose smallest word could extinguish his existence, and blot him out
+in a twinkling from the roll of living things.</p>
+<p>But, if I was much affected, the callant Mungo was a great deal
+more.&nbsp; From the days in which he had lain in his cradle, he had been
+brought up in a remote and quiet part of the country, far from the bustling
+of towns, and from man encountering man in the stramash <!-- page 222--><a
+name="page222"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 222</span>of daily life; so
+that his heart seemed to pine within him like a flower, for want of the
+blessed morning dew; and, like a bird that has been catched in a girn among
+the winter snows, his appetite failed him, and he fell away from his meat
+and his clothes.</p>
+<p>I was vexed exceedingly to see the callant in this dilemmy, for he was
+growing very tall and thin, his chaft-blades being lank and white, and his
+eyes of a hollow drumliness, as if he got no refreshment from the slumbers
+of the night.&nbsp; Beholding all this work of destruction going on in
+silence, I spoke to his friend Mrs Grassie about him, and she was so
+motherly as to offer to have a glass of port-wine, stirred with best
+jesuit&rsquo;s barks, ready for him every forenoon at twelve o&rsquo;clock;
+for really nobody could be but interested in the laddie, he was so gentle
+and modest, making never a word of complaint, though melting like snow off
+a dyke; and, though he must have suffered both in body and mind, enduring
+all with a silent composure, worthy of a holy martyr.</p>
+<p>Perceiving things going on from bad to worse, I thought it was best to
+break the matter to him, as he was never like to speak himself; and I asked
+him in a friendly way, as we were sitting together on the board finishing a
+pair of fustian overalls for Maister Bob Bustle&mdash;a riding clerk for
+one of the Edinburgh spirit shops, but who liked aye to have his clothes of
+the Dalkeith cut, having been born, bred, and educated <!-- page 223--><a
+name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>in our town, like his
+forbears before him&mdash;if there was anything the matter with him, that
+he was aye so dowie and heartless?&nbsp; Never shall I forget the look he
+gave me as he lifted up his eyes, in which I could see visible distress
+painted as plain as the figures of the saints on old kirk windows; but he
+told me, with a faint smile, that he had nothing particular to complain of,
+only that he would have liked to have died among his friends, as he could
+not live from home, and away from the life he had been accustomed to all
+his days.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Od, I was touched to the quick; and when I heard him speaking of
+death in such a calm, quiet way, I found something, as if his words were
+words of prophecy, and as if I had seen a sign that told me he was not to
+be long for this world.&nbsp; Howsoever, I hope I had more sense than to
+let this be seen, so I said to him, &ldquo;Ou, if that be a&rsquo;, Mungo,
+ye&rsquo;ll soon come to like us a&rsquo; well enough.&nbsp; Ye should take
+a stout heart, man; and when your prenticeship&rsquo;s done, ye&rsquo;ll
+gang hame and set up for a great man, making coats for all the lords and
+lairds in broad Lammermoor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; answered the callant with a trembling voice, which
+mostly made my heart swell to my mouth, and brought the tear to my eye,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never see the end of my prenticeship, nor Lammermoor
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hout touts, man,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; I, &ldquo;never speak in that
+sort o&rsquo; way; it&rsquo;s distrustfu&rsquo; and hurtful.&nbsp; Live in
+hope, <!-- page 224--><a name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+224</span>though we should die in despair.&nbsp; When ye go home again,
+ye&rsquo;ll be as happy as ever.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh, na&mdash;never, never, even though I was to gang hame the
+morn.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll never be as I was before.&nbsp; I lived and lived
+on, never thinking that such days were to come to an end&mdash;but now I
+find it can, and must be otherwise.&nbsp; The thoughts of my heart have
+been broken in upon, and nothing can make whole what has been shivered to
+pieces.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was to the point, as Dannie Thummel said to his needle; so just for
+speaking&rsquo;s sake, and to rouse him up a bit, I said, &ldquo;Keh, man,
+what need ye care sae muckle about the country?&mdash;It&rsquo;ll never be
+like our bonny streets, with all the braw shop windows, and the auld kirk;
+and the stands with the horn spoons and luggies; and all the carts on the
+market-days; and the Duke&rsquo;s gate, and so on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, but, maister,&rdquo; answered Mungo, &ldquo;ye was never
+brought up in the country&mdash;ye never kent what it was to wander about
+in the simmer glens, wi&rsquo; naething but the warm sun looking down on
+ye, the blue waters streaming ower the braes, the birds singing, and the
+air like to grow sick wi&rsquo; the breath of blooming birks, and flowers
+of all colours, and wild-thyme sticking full of bees, humming in joy and
+thankfulness&mdash;Ye never kent, maister, what it was to wake in the still
+morning, when, looking out, ye saw the snaws lying for miles round about ye
+on the hills, breast deep, <!-- page 225--><a name="page225"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 225</span>shutting ye out from the world, as it were;
+the foot of man never coming during the storm to your door, nor the voice
+of a stranger heard from ae month&rsquo;s end till the ither.&nbsp; See, it
+is coming on o&rsquo; hail the now, and my mother with my sister&mdash;I
+have but ane&mdash;and my four brithers, will be looking out into the
+drift, and missing me away for the first time frae their fireside.&nbsp;
+They&rsquo;ll hae a dreary winter o&rsquo;t, breaking their hearts for
+me&mdash;their ballants and their stories will never be sae funny
+again&mdash;and my heart is breaking for them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With this, the tears prap-prapped down his cheeks, but his pride bade
+him turn his head round to hide them from me.&nbsp; A heart of stone would
+have felt for him.</p>
+<p>I saw it was in vain to persist long, as the laddie was falling out of
+his clothes as fast as leaves from the November tree; so I wrote home by
+limping Jamie the carrier, telling his father the state of things, and
+advising him, as a matter of humanity, to take his son out to the free air
+of the hills again, as the town smoke did not seem to agree with his
+stomach; and, as he might be making a sticked tailor of one who was capable
+of being bred a good farmer; no mortal being likely to make a great
+progress in any thing, unless the heart goes with the handiwork.</p>
+<p>Some folks will think I acted right, and others wrong in this matter; if
+I erred, it was on the side of mercy <!-- page 226--><a
+name="page226"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 226</span>and my conscience
+does not upbraid me for the transaction.&nbsp; In due course of time, I had
+an answer from Mr Glen; and we got everything ready and packed up, against
+the hour that Jamie was to set out again.</p>
+<p>Mungo got himself all dressed; and Benjie had taken such a liking to
+him, that I thought he would have grutten himself senseless when he heard
+he was going away back to his own home.&nbsp; One would not have imagined,
+that such a sincere friendship could have taken root in such a short time;
+but the bit creature Benjie was as warm-hearted a callant as ye ever
+saw.&nbsp; Mungo told him, that if he would not cry he would send him in a
+present of a wee ewe-milk cheese whenever he got home; which promise
+pacified him, and he asked me if Benjie would come out for a month gin
+simmer, when he would let him see all worthy observation along the country
+side.</p>
+<p>When we had shaken hands with Mungo, and, after fastening his comforter
+about his neck, wished him a good journey, we saw him mounted on the front
+of limping Jamie&rsquo;s cart; and, as he drove away, I must confess my
+heart was grit.&nbsp; I could not help running up the stair, and pulling up
+the fore-window to get a long look after him.&nbsp; Away, and away they
+wore; in a short time, the cart took a turn and disappeared; and, when I
+drew down the window, and sauntered, with my arms crossed, back to the
+workshop, something seemed amissing, and the snug wee place, with <!-- page
+227--><a name="page227"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 227</span>its
+shapings, and runds, and paper-measurings, and its bit fire, seemed in my
+eyes to look douff and gousty.</p>
+<p>Whether in the jougging of the cart, or what else I cannot say, but
+it&rsquo;s an unco story; for on the road, it turned out that poor Mungo
+was seized with a terrible pain in his side; and, growing worse and worse,
+was obliged to be left at Lauder, in the care of a decent widow woman that
+had a blind eye, and a room to let furnished.</p>
+<p>It was not for two-three days that we learnt these awful tidings, which
+greatly distressed us all; and I gave the driver of the Lauder coach
+threepence to himself, to bring us word every morning, as he passed the
+door, how the laddie was going on.</p>
+<p>I learned shortly, that his father and mother had arrived, which was one
+comfort; but that matters with poor Mungo were striding on from bad to
+worse, being pronounced, by a skeely doctor, to be in a galloping
+consumption&mdash;and not able to be removed home, a thing that the laddie
+freaked and pined for night and day.&nbsp; At length, hearing for certain
+that he had not long to live, I thought myself bound to be at the expense
+of taking a ride out on the top of the coach, though I was aware of the
+danger of the machine&rsquo;s whiles couping, if it were for no more than
+to bid him fare-ye-weel&mdash;and I did so.</p>
+<p>It was a cold cloudy day in February, and everything <!-- page 228--><a
+name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 228</span>on the road looked
+dowie and cheerless; the very cows and sheep, that crowded cowering beneath
+the trees in the parks, seemed to be grieving for some disaster, and
+hanging down their heads like mourners at a burial.&nbsp; The rain whiles
+obliged me to put up my umbrella, and there was nobody on the top beside
+me, save a deaf woman, that aye said &ldquo;ay&rdquo; to every question I
+speered, and with whom I found it out of the power of man to carry on any
+rational conversation; so I was obliged to sit glowering from side to side
+at the bleak bare fields&mdash;and the plashing grass&mdash;and the gloomy
+dull woods&mdash;and the gentlemen&rsquo;s houses, of which I knew not the
+names&mdash;and the fearful rough hills, that put me in mind of the
+wilderness, and of the abomination of desolation mentioned in scripture, I
+believe in Ezekiel.&nbsp; The errand I was going on, to be sure, helped to
+make me more sorrowful; and I could not think on human life without
+agreeing with Solomon, that &ldquo;all was vanity and vexation of
+spirit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At long and last, when we came to our journey&rsquo;s end, and I louped
+off the top of the coach, Maister Glen came out to the door, and bad me
+haste me if I wished to see Mungo breathing.&nbsp; Save us! to think that a
+poor young thing was to be taken away from life and the cheerful sun, thus
+suddenly, and be laid in the cold damp mools, among the moudiewarts and the
+green banes, &ldquo;where there is no work or device.&rdquo;&nbsp; But what
+will ye say there? it was the will of Him, who knows <!-- page 229--><a
+name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 229</span>best what is for his
+creatures, and to whom we should&mdash;and must submit.&nbsp; I was just in
+time to see the last row of his glazing een, that then stood still for
+ever, as he lay, with his face as pale as clay, on the pillow, his mother
+holding his hand, and sob-sobbing with her face leant on the bed, as if her
+hope was departed, and her heart would break.&nbsp; I went round about, and
+took hold of the other one for a moment; but it was clammy, and growing
+cold with the coldness of grim death.&nbsp; I could hear my heart beating;
+but Mungo&rsquo;s heart stood still, like a watch that has run itself
+down.&nbsp; Maister Glen sat in the easy chair, with his hand before his
+eyes, saying nothing, and shedding not a tear; for he was a strong, little,
+blackaviced man, with a feeling heart, but with nerves of steel.&nbsp; The
+rain rattled on the window, and the smoke gave a swarl as the wind
+rummelled in the lum.&nbsp; The hour spoke to the soul, and the silence was
+worth twenty sermons.</p>
+<p>They who would wish to know the real value of what we are all over-apt
+to prize in this world, should have been there too, and learnt a lesson not
+soon to be forgotten.&nbsp; I put my hand in my coat-pocket for my napkin
+to give my eyes a wipe, but found it was away, and feared much I had
+dropped it on the road; though in this I was happily mistaken, having,
+before I went to my bed, found that on my journey I had tied it over my
+neckcloth, to keep away sore throats.</p>
+<p>It was a sad heart to us all to see the lifeless creature <!-- page
+230--><a name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 230</span>in his white
+nightcap and eyes closed, lying with his yellow hair spread on the pillow;
+and we went out, that the women-folk might cover up the looking-glass and
+the face of the clock, ere they proceeded to dress the body in its last
+clothes&mdash;clothes that would never need changing; but, when we were
+half down the stair, and I felt glad with the thoughts of getting to the
+fresh air, we were obliged to turn up again for a little, to let the man
+past that was bringing in the dead deal.</p>
+<p>But why weave a long story out of the materials of sorrow? or endeavour
+to paint feelings that have no outward sign, lying shut up within the
+sanctuary of the heart?&nbsp; The grief of a father and a mother can only
+be conceived by them who, as fathers and mothers, have suffered the loss of
+their bairns,&mdash;a treasure more precious to nature than silver or gold,
+home to the land-sick sailor, or daylight to the blind man sitting beaking
+in the heat of the morning sun.</p>
+<p>The coffin having been ordered to be got ready with all haste, two men
+brought it on their shoulders betimes on the following morning; and it was
+a sight that made my blood run cold to see the dead corpse of poor Mungo,
+my own prentice, hoisted up from the bed, and laid in his black-handled,
+narrow housie.&nbsp; All had taken their last looks, the lid was screwed
+down by means of screw-drivers, and I read the plate, which said,
+&ldquo;Mungo Glen, aged 15.&rdquo;&nbsp; Alas! early was he cut off from
+among the living&mdash;a flower snapped in its spring <!-- page 231--><a
+name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 231</span>blossom&mdash;and an
+awful warning to us all, sinful and heedless mortals, of the uncertainty of
+this state of being.</p>
+<p>In the course of the forenoon, Maister Glen&rsquo;s cart was brought to
+the door, drawn by two black horses with long tails and hairy feet, a tram
+one and a leader.&nbsp; Though the job shook my nerves, I could not refuse
+to give them a hand down the stair with the coffin, which had a fief-like
+smell of death and saw-dust; and we got it fairly landed in the cart, among
+clean straw.&nbsp; I saw the clodhapper of a ploughman aye dighting his een
+with the sleeve of his big-coat.</p>
+<p>The mother, Mistress Glen, a little fattish woman, and as fine a homely
+body as ye ever met with, but sorely distracted at this time by sorrow, sat
+at the head, with her bonnet drawn over her face, and her shawl thrown
+across her shoulders, being a blue and red spot on a white ground.&nbsp; It
+was a dismal-like-looking thing to see her sitting there, with the dead
+body of her son at her feet; and, at the side of it, his kist with his
+claes, on the top of which was tied&mdash;not being room for it in the
+inside like (for he had twelve shirts, and three pair of trowsers, and a
+Sunday and every day&rsquo;s coat, with stockings and other
+things)&mdash;his old white beaver hat, turned up behind, which he used to
+wear when he was with me.&nbsp; His Sunday&rsquo;s hat I did not see; but
+most likely it was in among his claes, to keep it from the rain, and
+preserved, no doubt, for the use of some of <!-- page 232--><a
+name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 232</span>his little brothers,
+please God, when they grew up a wee bigger.</p>
+<p>Seeing Maister Glen, who had cut his chin in shaving, in a worn-out
+disjasket state, mounted on his sheltie, I shook hands with them both; and,
+in my thoughtlessness, wished them &ldquo;a good
+journey,&rdquo;&mdash;knowing well what a sorrowful home-going it would be
+to them, and what their bairns would think when they saw what was lying in
+the cart beside their mother.&nbsp; On this the big ploughman, that wore a
+broad blue bonnet and corduroys cutikins, with a grey big-coat slit up
+behind in the manner I commonly made for laddies, gave his long whip a
+crack, and drove off to the eastward.</p>
+<p>It would be needless in me to waste precious time in relating how I
+returned to my own country, especially as I may be thankful that nothing
+particular happened, excepting the coach-wheels riding over an old dog that
+was lying sleeping on the middle of the road, and, poor brute, nearly got
+one of his fore-paws chacked off.&nbsp; The day was sharp and frosty and
+all the passengers took a loup off at a yill-house, with a Highlandman on
+the sign of it, to get a dram, to gar them bear up against the cold; yet
+knowing what had but so lately happened, and having the fears of Maister
+Wiggie before my eyes, I had made a solemn vow within myself, not to taste
+liquor for six months at least; nor would I here break my word, <!-- page
+233--><a name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 233</span>tho&rsquo;
+much made a fool of by an Englisher, and a fou Eirisher, who sang all the
+road; contenting myself, in the best way I could, with a tumbler of strong
+beer and two butter-bakes.</p>
+<p>It is an old proverb, and a true one, that there is no rest to the
+wicked; so when I got home, I found business crying out for me loudly,
+having been twice wanted to take the measure for suits of clothes.&nbsp; Of
+course, knowing that my two customers would be wearying, I immediately cut
+my stick to their houses, and promised without fail to have my work done
+against the next Sabbath.&nbsp; Whether from my hurry, or my grief for poor
+Mungo, or maybe from both, I found on the Saturday night, when the clothes
+were sent home on the arm of Tammie Bodkin, whom I was obliged to hire by
+way of foresman, that some awful mistake had occurred&mdash;the dress of
+the one having been made for the back of the other, the one being long and
+tall, the other thick and short; so that Maister Peter Pole&rsquo;s cuffs
+did not reach above half-way down his arms, and the tails ended at the
+small of his back, rendering him a perfect fright; while Maister Watty
+Firkin&rsquo;s new coat hung on him like a dreadnought, the sleeves coming
+over the nebs of his fingers, and the hainch buttons hanging down between
+his heels, making him resemble a mouse below a firlot.&nbsp; With some
+persuasion, however, there being but small difference in the value of the
+cloths, the one being a <!-- page 234--><a name="page234"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 234</span>west of England bottle-green, and the other a
+Manchester blue, I caused them to niffer, and hushed up the business,
+which, had they been obstreperous, would have made half the parish of
+Dalkeith stand on end.</p>
+<p>After poor Mungo had been beneath the mools, I daresay a good month,
+Benjie, as he was one forenoon diverting himself dozing his top in the room
+where they sleeped, happened to drive it in below the bed, where,
+scrambling in on his hands and feet, he found a half sheet of paper written
+over in Mungo&rsquo;s hand-writing, the which he brought to me; and, on
+looking over it, I found it jingled in metre like the Psalms of David.</p>
+<p>Having no skeel in these matters, I sent up the close for James Batter,
+who, being a member of the fifteenpence a-quarter subscription book-club,
+had read a power of all sorts of things, sacred and profane.&nbsp; James,
+as he was humming it over with his specs on his beak, gave now and then a
+thump on his thigh, &ldquo;Prime, prime, man; fine, prime, good,
+capital!&rdquo; and so on, which astonished me much, kenning who had
+written it&mdash;a callant that had sleeped with our Benjie, and could not
+have shaped a pair of leggins though we had offered him the crown of the
+three kingdoms.</p>
+<p>Seeing what it was thought of by one who knew what was what, and could
+distinguish the difference between a B and a bull&rsquo;s foot, I judged it
+necessary for <!-- page 235--><a name="page235"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 235</span>me to take a copy of it; which, for the
+benefit of them that like poems, I do not scruple to tag to the tail of
+this chapter.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Oh, wad that my time were ower but,<br />
+&nbsp; Wi&rsquo; this wintry sleet and snaw,<br />
+That I might see our house again<br />
+&nbsp; I&rsquo; the bonny birken shaw!&mdash;<br />
+For this is no my ain life,<br />
+&nbsp; And I peak and pine away<br />
+Wi&rsquo; the thochts o&rsquo; hame, and the young flow&rsquo;rs<br />
+&nbsp; I&rsquo; the glad green month o&rsquo; May.</p>
+<p>I used to wauk in the morning<br />
+&nbsp; Wi&rsquo; the loud sang o&rsquo; the lark,<br />
+And the whistling o&rsquo; the ploughmen lads<br />
+&nbsp; As they gaed to their wark;<br />
+I used to weir in the young lambs<br />
+&nbsp; Frae the tod and the roaring stream;<br />
+But the warld is changed, and a&rsquo; thing now<br />
+&nbsp; To me seems like a dream.</p>
+<p>There are busy crowds around me<br />
+&nbsp; On ilka lang dull street;<br />
+Yet, though sae mony surround me<br />
+&nbsp; I kenna ane I meet.<br />
+And I think on kind, kent faces,<br />
+&nbsp; And o&rsquo; blythe and cheery days,<br />
+When I wander&rsquo;d out, wi&rsquo; our ain folk,<br />
+&nbsp; Out-owre the simmer braes.</p>
+<p>Wae&rsquo;s me, for my heart is breaking!<br />
+&nbsp; I think on my brithers sma&rsquo;,<br />
+And on my sister greeting,<br />
+&nbsp; When I came fra hame awa<br />
+And oh! how my mither sobbi,<br />
+&nbsp; As she shook me by the hand;<br />
+When I left the door o&rsquo; our auld house,<br />
+&nbsp; To come to this stranger land;</p>
+<p><!-- page 236--><a name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+236</span>There&rsquo;s nae place like our ain hame;<br />
+&nbsp; Oh, I wish that I was there!&mdash;<br />
+There&rsquo;s nae hame like our ain hame<br />
+&nbsp; To be met wi&rsquo; ony where!&mdash;<br />
+And oh! that I were back again<br />
+&nbsp; To our farm and fields so green;<br />
+And heard the tongues o&rsquo; my ain folk,<br />
+&nbsp; And was what I hae been!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>That&rsquo;s poor Mungo&rsquo;s poem; which I and James Batter, and the
+rest, think excellent, and not far short of Robert Burns himself, had he
+been spared.&nbsp; Some may judge otherwise, out of bad taste or ill
+nature; but I would just thank them to write a better at their leisure.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 237--><a name="page237"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+237</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO&mdash;THE JUNE JAUNT WITH PETER FARREL</h2>
+<p>After Tammie Bodkin had been working with me on the board for more than
+four years in the capacity of foresman, superintending the workshop
+department, together with the conduct and conversation of Joe Breeky,
+Walter Cuff, and Jack Thorl, my three bounden apprentices, I thought I
+might lippen him awee to try his hand in the shaping line, especially with
+the clothes of such of our customers as I knew were not very nice, provided
+they got enough of cutting from the Manchester manufacture, and room to
+shake themselves in.&nbsp; The upshot, however, proved to a moral
+certainty, that such a length of tether is not chancey for youth, and that
+a master cannot be too much on the head of his own business.</p>
+<p>It was in the pleasant month of June, sometime, maybe six or eight days,
+after the birth-day of our good old King George the Third&mdash;for I
+recollect the withering branches of lily-oak and flowers still sticking up
+behind the signs, and over the lamp-posts,&mdash;that my respected
+acquaintance and customer, Peter Farrel the baker, to whom I have made many
+a good suit of pepper-and-salt clothes&mdash;which he preferred from their
+not dirtying so easily with the bakehouse&mdash;called in upon me,
+requesting me, in a very pressing manner, to take a pleasure ride up with
+him the length of Roslin, in his good-brother&rsquo;s bit phieton, to eat a
+<!-- page 238--><a name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+238</span>wheen strawberries, and see how the forthcoming harvest was
+getting on.</p>
+<p>That the offer was friendly admitted not of doubt, but I did not like to
+accept for two-three reasons; among which were, in the first place, my
+awareness of the danger of riding in such vehicles&mdash;having read sundry
+times in the newspapers of folk having been tumbled out of them, drunk or
+sober, head-foremost, and having got eyes knocked ben, skulls cloured, and
+collar-bones broken; and, in the second place, the expense of feeding the
+horse, together with our feeding ourselves in meat and drink during the
+journey&mdash;let alone tolls, strawberries and cream, bawbees to the
+waiter, the hostler, and what not.&nbsp; But let me speak the
+knock-him-down truth, and shame the de&rsquo;il,&mdash;above all, I was
+afraid of being seen by my employers wheeling about, on a work-day, like a
+gentleman, dressed out in my best, and leaving my business to mind itself
+as it best could.</p>
+<p>Peter Farrel, however, being a man of determination, stuck to his text
+like a horse-leech; so, after a great to-do, and considerable
+argle-bargling, he got me, by dint of powerful persuasion, to give him my
+hand on the subject.&nbsp; Accordingly, at the hour appointed, I popped up
+the back loan with my stick in my hand&mdash;Peter having agreed to be
+waiting for me on the roadside, a bit beyond the head of the town, near
+Gallows-hall toll.&nbsp; The cat should be let <!-- page 239--><a
+name="page239"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 239</span>out of the pock by my
+declaring, that Nanse, the goodwife, had also a finger in the pie&mdash;as,
+do what ye like, women will make their points good&mdash;she having
+overcome me in her wheedling way, by telling me, that it was curious I had
+no ambition to speel the ladder of gentility, and hold up my chin in
+imitation of my betters.</p>
+<p>That we had a most beautiful drive I cannot deny; for though I would not
+allow Peter to touch the horse with the whip, in case it might run away,
+fling, or trot ower fast&mdash;and so we made but slow
+progress&mdash;little more even than walking; yet, as I told him, it gave a
+man leisure to use his eyes, and make observation to the right and the
+left; and so we had a prime look of Eskbank, and Newbottle Abbey, and
+Melville Castle, and Dalhousie, and Polton, and Hawthornden, and Dryden
+woods&mdash;and the powder mills, the paper mills, the
+bleachfield&mdash;and so on.&nbsp; The day was bright and beautiful, and
+the feeling of summer came over our bosoms: the flowers blossomed and the
+birds sang; and, as the sun looked from the blue sky, the quiet of nature
+banished from our thoughts all the poor and paltry cares that embitter
+life, and all the pitiful considerations which are but too apt to be the
+only concerns of the busy and bustling, from their awaking in the morning
+to their lying down on the pillow of evening rest.&nbsp; Peter and myself
+felt this forcibly; he, <!-- page 240--><a name="page240"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 240</span>as he confessed to me, having entirely forgot
+the four pan-soled loaves that were, that morning, left by his laddie,
+Peter Crust, in the oven, and burned to sticks; and for my own part, do
+what I liked, I could not bring myself to mind what piece of work I was
+employed on the evening before, till, far on the road, I recollected that
+it was a pair of mouse-brown spatterdashes for worthy old Mr Mooleypouch
+the mealmonger.</p>
+<p>Oh, it is a pleasant thing, now and then, to get a peep of the
+country!&nbsp; To them who live among shops and markets, and stone-walls,
+and butcher-stalls, and fishwives&mdash;and the smell of ready-made tripe,
+red herring, and Cheshire cheeses&mdash;the sights, and sounds, and smells
+of the country, bring to mind the sinless days of the world before the fall
+of man, when all was love, peace, and happiness.&nbsp; Peter Farrel and I
+were transported out of our seven senses, as we feasted our eyes on the
+beauty of the green fields.&nbsp; The bumbees were bizzing among the gowans
+and blue-bells; and a thousand wee birds among the green trees were
+churm-churming away, filling earth and air with music, as it were a
+universal hymn of gratitude to the Creator for his unbounded goodness to
+all his creatures.&nbsp; We saw the trig country lasses bleaching their
+snow-white linen on the grass by the waterside, and they too were lilting
+their favourite songs, Logan Water, the Flowers <!-- page 241--><a
+name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>of the Forest, and
+the Broom of the Cowdenknowes.&nbsp; All the world seemed happy, and I
+could scarcely believe&mdash;what I kent to be true for all that&mdash;that
+we were still walking in the realms of sin and misery.&nbsp; The milk-cows
+were nipping the clovery parks, and chewing their cuds at their
+leisure;&mdash;the wild partridges whidding about in pairs, or birring
+their wings with fright over the hedges;&mdash;and the blue-bonneted
+ploughmen on the road cracking their whips in wantonness, and whistling
+along amid the clean straw in their carts.&nbsp; And then the rows of snug
+cottages, with their kailyards and their goose-berry bushes, with the fruit
+hanging from the branches like ear-rings on the neck of a lady of
+fashion.&nbsp; How happy, thought we both&mdash;both Peter Farrel and
+me&mdash;how happy might they be, who, without worldly pride or ambition,
+passed their days in such situations, in the society of their wives and
+children.&nbsp; Ah! such were a blissful lot!</p>
+<p>During our ride, Peter Farrel and I had an immense deal of rational
+conversation on a variety of matters, Peter having seen great part of the
+world in his youth, from having made two voyages to Greenland, during one
+of which he was very nearly frozen up&mdash;with his uncle, who was the
+mate of a whale-vessel.&nbsp; To relate all that Peter told me he had seen
+and witnessed in his far-away travels, among the white bears, and the
+frozen seas, would take up a great deal of the reader&rsquo;s time, <!--
+page 242--><a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 242</span>and of
+my paper; but as to its being very diverting, there is no doubt of
+that.&nbsp; However, when Peter came to the years of discretion, Peter had
+sense enough in his noddle to discover, that &ldquo;a rowing stane gathers
+no fog&rdquo;; and, having got an inkling of the penny-pie manufacture when
+he was a wee smout, he yoked to the baking trade tooth and nail; and, in
+the course of years, thumped butter-bakes with his elbows to some purpose;
+so that, at the time of our colleaguing together, Peter was well to do in
+the world&mdash;had bought his own bounds, and built new ones&mdash;could
+lay down the blunt for his article, and take the measure of the markets, by
+laying up wheat in his granaries against the day of trouble&mdash;to
+wit&mdash;rise of prices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Peter,&rdquo; said I to him, &ldquo;seeing that ye read the
+newspapers, and have a notion of things, what think ye, just at the present
+moment, of affairs in general?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peter cocked up his lugs at this appeal, and, looking as wise as if he
+had been Solomon&rsquo;s nephew, gave a knowing smirk, and said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it foreign or domestic affairs that you are after, Maister
+Wauch? for the question is a six-quarters wide one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was determined not to be beat by man of woman born; so I answered with
+almost as much cleverality as himself, &ldquo;Oh, Mr Farrel, as to our
+foreign concerns, I trust I am ower loyal a subject of George the Third
+<!-- page 243--><a name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 243</span>to
+have any doubt at all about them, as the Buonaparte is yet to be born that
+will ever beat our regulars abroad&mdash;to say nothing of our volunteers
+at home; but what think you of the paper specie&mdash;the national
+debt&mdash;borough reform&mdash;the poor-rates&mdash;and the Catholic
+question?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I do not think Peter jealoused I ever had so much in my noddle; but when
+he saw I had put him to his mettle, he did his best to give me satisfactory
+answers to my queries, saying, that till gold came in fashion, it would not
+be for my own interest, or that of my family, to refuse bank-notes, for
+which he would, any day of the year, give me as many quarter loaves as I
+could carry, to say nothing of coarse flour for the prentices&rsquo;
+scones, and bran for the pigs&mdash;that the national debt would take care
+of itself long after both him and I were gathered to our fathers: and that
+individual debt was a much more hazardous, pressing, and personal concern,
+far more likely to come home to our more immediate bosoms and
+businesses&mdash;that the best species of reform was every one&rsquo;s
+commencing to make amendment in their own lives and
+conversations&mdash;that poor-rates were likely to be worse before they
+were better; and that, as to the Catholic question,&mdash;&ldquo;But,
+Mansie,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;it would give me great pleasure to hear your
+candid and judicious opinion of Popery and the Papists.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I saw, with half an e&rsquo;e, that Peter was trying to put <!-- page
+244--><a name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 244</span>me to my
+mettle, and I devoutly wished that I had had James Batter at my elbow to
+have given him play for his money&mdash;James being the longest-headed man
+that ever drove a shuttle between warp and woof; but most fortunately, just
+as I was going to say, that &ldquo;every honest man, who wished well to the
+good of his country, could only have one opinion on that
+subject,&rdquo;&mdash;we came to the by-road, that leads away off on the
+right-hand side down to Hawthornden, and we observed, from the curious
+ringle, that one of the naig&rsquo;s fore-shoon was loose; which
+consequently put an end to the discussion of this important question,
+before Peter and I had time to get it comfortably settled to the
+world&rsquo;s satisfaction.</p>
+<p>The upshot was, that we were needcessitated to dismount, and lead the
+animal by the head forward to Kittlerig, where Macturk Sparrible keeps his
+smith&rsquo;s shop; in order that, with his hammer, he might make fast the
+loose nails: and that him and his foresman did in a couple of hurries; me
+and Peter looking over them with our hands in our big-coat pockets, while
+they pelt-pelted away with the beast&rsquo;s foot between their knees, as
+if we had been a couple of grand gentlemen incog.; and so we were to
+him.</p>
+<p>After getting ourselves again decently mounted, and giving Sparrible a
+consideration for his trouble, Peter took occasion, from the horse casting
+its shoe, to make a few apropos moral observations, in the manner <!-- page
+245--><a name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 245</span>of the Rev.
+Mr Wiggie, on the uncertainties which it is every man&rsquo;s lot to
+encounter in the weariful pilgrimage of human life.&nbsp; &ldquo;There is
+many a slip &rsquo;tween the cup and the lip,&rdquo; said Peter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And, indeed, Mr Farrel, ye never spoke a truer word,&rdquo; said
+I.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are here to-day&mdash;yonder to-morrow; this moment we
+are shining like the mid-day sun, and on the next, pugh! we go out like the
+snuff of a candle.&nbsp; &lsquo;Man&rsquo;s life,&rsquo; as Job observes,
+&lsquo;is like a weaver&rsquo;s shuttle.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Maister Waugh,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; Peter, who was a hearer of
+the Parish Church, &ldquo;you dissenting bodies aye take the black side of
+things; never considering that the doubtful shadows of affairs sometimes
+brighten up into the cloudless daylight.&nbsp; For instance, now, there was
+an old fellow-apprentice of my father&rsquo;s, who, like myself, was a
+baker, his name was Charlie Cheeper; and, both his father and mother dying
+when he was yet hardly in trowsers, he would have been left without a hame
+in the world, had not an old widow woman, who had long lived next door to
+them, and whose only breadwinner was her spinning-wheel, taken the wee
+wretchie in to share her morsel.&nbsp; For several years, as might
+naturally have been expected, the callant was a perfect dead-weight on the
+concern, and perhaps, in her hours of greater distress, the widow regretted
+the heedlessness of her Christian charity; but Charlie had a winning way
+with him, and she could not find <!-- page 246--><a
+name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 246</span>it in her heart to
+turn him to the door.&nbsp; By the time he was seven&mdash;and a ragged
+coute he was as ever stepped without shoes&mdash;he could fend for himself,
+by running messages&mdash;holding horses at shop doors&mdash;winning bools
+and selling them&mdash;and so on; so that when he had collected
+half-a-crown in a penny pig, the widow sent him to the school, where he got
+on like a hatter, and in a little while, could both read and write.&nbsp;
+When he was ten, he was bound apprentice to Saunders Snaps in the Back-row,
+whose grandson has yet, as you know, the sign of the Wheat Sheaf; and for
+five years he behaved himself like his betters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, when his time was out, Charlie had an ambition to see
+the world; and, by working for a month or two as journeyman in the
+Candlemaker-row at Edinburgh, he raked as much together as took him up to
+London in the steerage of a Leith smack.&nbsp; For several years nothing
+was heard of him, except an occasional present of a shawl, or so on, to the
+widow, who had been so kind to him in his helpless years; and at length a
+farewell present of some little money came to her, with his blessing for
+past favours, saying that he was off for good and all to America.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the course of time, Widow Amos became frail and
+sand-blind.&nbsp; She was unable to work for herself, and the charity she
+had shown to others no one seemed disposed to extend to her.&nbsp; Her only
+child, Jeanie Amos, was obliged to leave her service, and come home <!--
+page 247--><a name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 247</span>to the
+house of poverty, to guard her mother&rsquo;s grey hairs from accident, and
+to divide with her the little she could make at the trade of mangling; for,
+with the money that Charlie Cheeper had sent, before leaving the country,
+the old woman had bought a calender, and let it out to the neighbours at so
+much an hour; honest poverty having many shifts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Matters had gone on in this way for two or three fitful years;
+and Jeanie, who, when she had come home from service, was a buxom and
+blooming lass, although yet but a wee advanced in her thirties, began to
+show, like all earthly things, that she was wearing past her best.&nbsp;
+Some said that she had lost hopes of Charlie&rsquo;s return; and others,
+that, come hame when he liked, he would never look over his left shoulder
+after her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, as fact as death, I mind mysell, when a laddie, of the
+rumpus the thing made in the town.&nbsp; One Saturday night, a whole
+washing of old Mrs Pernickity&rsquo;s that had been sent to be calendered,
+vanished like lightning, no one knew where: the old lady was neither to
+hold nor bind: and nothing would serve her, but having both the old woman
+and her daughter committed to the Tolbooth.&nbsp; So to the Tolbooth they
+went, weeping and wailing; followed by a crowd, who cried loudly out at the
+sin and iniquity of the proceeding; because the honesty of the prisoners,
+although impeached, was unimpeachable; the <!-- page 248--><a
+name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 248</span>mob were furious; and
+before the Sunday sun arose old Mrs Pernickity awakened with a sore throat,
+every pane of her windows having been miraculously broken during the dead
+hours.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p248b.jpg">
+<img alt="Country lassies bleaching their snow-white linen"
+src="images/p248s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;The mother and the daughter were kept in custody until the
+Monday; when, as they were standing making a declaration of their innocence
+before the justices, who should come in but Francie Deep, the
+Sheriff-officer, with an Irish vagrant and his wife&mdash;two tinklers who
+were lodging in the Back-row, and in whose possession the bundle was found
+bodily, basket and all.&nbsp; Such a cheering as the folk set up! it did
+all honest folk&rsquo;s hearts good to hear it.&nbsp; Mrs Pernickity and
+her lass, to save their bacon, were obliged to be let out by a back door;
+and, as the justices were about to discharge the two prisoners, who had
+been so unjustly and injuriously suspected, a stranger forced his way to
+the middle of the floor, and took the old woman in his arms!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Charlie Cheeper returned, for a gold guinea,&rdquo; said I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And no other it was,&rdquo; said Peter, resuming his comical
+story.&nbsp; &ldquo;The world had flowed upon him to his heart&rsquo;s
+desire.&nbsp; Over in Virginia he had given up the baking business, and
+commenced planter; and, after years of industrious exertion, having made
+enough and to spare, he had returned to spend the rest of his days in peace
+and plenty, in his native town.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 249--><a name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+249</span>&ldquo;Not to interrupt you,&rdquo; added I, &ldquo;Mr Farrel, I
+think I could wager something mair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a witch of a guesser I know, Mansie,&rdquo; said Peter;
+&ldquo;and I see what you are at.&nbsp; Well, sir, you are right
+again.&nbsp; For, on the very day week that Patrick Makillaguddy and his
+spouce got their heads shaved, and were sent to beat hemp in the New
+Bridgewell on the Caltonhill, Jeanie Amos became Mrs Cheeper; the calender
+and the spinning-wheel were both burned by a crowd of wicked weans before
+old Mrs Pernickity&rsquo;s door, raising such a smoke as almost smeaked her
+to a rizzar&rsquo;d haddock; and the old widow under the snug roof of her
+ever grateful son-in-law, spent the remainder of her Christian life in
+peace and prosperity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That story ends as it ought,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;Mr Farrel;
+neither Jew nor Gentle dare dispute that; and as to the telling of it, I do
+not think man of woman born, except maybe James Batter, who is a nonsuch,
+could have handled it more prettily.&nbsp; I like to hear virtue aye
+getting its ain reward.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As these dividual words were falling from my lips, we approached the end
+of our journey, the Roslin Inn house heaving in sight, at the door of which
+me and Peter louped out, an hostler with a yellow striped waistcoat, and
+white calico sleeves, I meantime holding the naig&rsquo;s head, in case it
+should spend off, and capsize the concern.&nbsp; After seeing the horse and
+gig put into the stable, Peter and I pulled up our shirt necks, and <!--
+page 250--><a name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 250</span>after
+looking at our watches, as if time was precious, oxtered away, arm-in-arm,
+to see the Chapel, which surpasses all, and beats cock-fighting.</p>
+<p>It is an unaccountable thing to me, how the auld folk could afford to
+build such grand kirks and castles.&nbsp; If once gold was like slate
+stones, there is a wearyful change now-a-days, I must confess; for, so to
+speak, gold guineas seem to have taken flight from the land along with the
+witches and warlocks, and posterity are left as toom in the pockets as
+rookit gamblers.</p>
+<p>But if the mammon of precious metals be now totally altogether out of
+the world, weel-a-wat we had a curiosity still, and that was a clepy woman
+with a long stick, and rhaemed away, and better rhaemed away, about the
+Prentice&rsquo;s Pillar, who got a knock on the pow from his jealous
+blackguard of a master&mdash;and about the dogs and the deer&mdash;and Sir
+Thomas this-thing and my Lord tother-thing, who lay buried beneath the
+broad flag stones in their rusty coats of armour&mdash;and such a heap of
+havers, that no throat was wide enough to swallow them for gospel, although
+gey an&rsquo; entertaining I allow.&nbsp; However, it was a real farce;
+that is certain.</p>
+<p>Oh, but the building was a grand and overpowering sight, making man to
+dree the sense of his own insignificance, even in the midst of his own
+handiwork!&nbsp; First, we looked over our shoulders to the grand carved
+roofs, where the swallows swee-swee&rsquo;d, as they darted <!-- page
+251--><a name="page251"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 251</span>through the
+open windows, and the yattering sparrows fed their gorbals in the far
+boles; and syne we looked shuddering down into the dark vaults, where
+nobody in their senses could have ventured, though Peter Farrel, being a
+rash courageous body, was keen on it, having heard less than I could tell
+him of such places being haunted by the spirits of those who have died or
+been murdered within them in the bloody days of the old times; or of their
+being so full of foul air, as to extinguish man&rsquo;s breath in his
+nostrils like the snuff of a candle.&nbsp; Though no man should throw his
+life into jeopardy, yet I commend all for taking timeous
+recreation&mdash;the King himself on the throne not being able to live
+without the comforts of life; and even the fifteen Lords of Session, with
+as much powder on their wigs as would keep a small family in loaves for a
+week, requiring air and exercise, after sentencing vagabonds to be first
+hanged, and then their clothes given to Jock Heich, and their bodies to
+Doctor Monro.</p>
+<p>Before going out to inspect the wonderfuls, we had taken the natural
+precaution to tell the goodman of the inn, that we would be back to take a
+smack of something from him, at such and such an hour; and, having had our
+bellyful of the Chapel,&mdash;and the Prentice&rsquo;s Pillar,&mdash;and
+the vaults,&mdash;and the cleipy auld wife with the lang stick,&mdash;we
+found that we had still half an hour to spare; so took a stroll into the
+<!-- page 252--><a name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+252</span>Kirkyard, to see if we could find out any of the martyrs had been
+buried there-away-abouts.</p>
+<p>We saw a good few head-stones, you may make no doubt, both ancient and
+modern; but nothing out of the course of nature; so, the day being
+pleasant, Mr Farrell and me sat down on a throughstane, below an old
+hawthorn, and commenced chatting on the Pentland Hills&mdash;the river
+Esk&mdash;Penicuik&mdash;Glencorse&mdash;and all the rest of the beautiful
+country within sight.&nbsp; A mooly auld skull was lying among the grass,
+and Peter, as he spoke, was aye stirring it about with his stick.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never touched a dead man&rsquo;s bones in my life,&rdquo; said
+I to Peter, &ldquo;nor would I for a sixpence.&nbsp; Who might that have
+belonged to, now, I wonder?&nbsp; Maybe to a baker or a tailor, in his day
+and generation, like you and I, Peter; or maybe to ane of the great
+Sinclairs with their coats-of-mail, that the auld wife was cracking so
+crousely about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Deil may care,&rdquo; said Peter; &ldquo;but are you really
+frighted to touch a skull, Mansie?&nbsp; You would make a bad doctor,
+I&rsquo;m doubting, then; to say nothing of a resurrection man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor!&nbsp; I would not be a doctor for all the gold and silver
+on the walls of Solomon&rsquo;s Temple&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet you would think the young doctors suck in their trade with
+their mother&rsquo;s milk, and could cut off one another&rsquo;s heads as
+fast as look at you.&mdash;Speaking <!-- page 253--><a
+name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 253</span>of skulls,&rdquo;
+added Peter, &ldquo;I mind when my father lived in the under-flat of the
+three-storey house at the top of Dalkeith Street, that the Misses
+Skinflints occupied the middle story, and Doctor Chickenweed had the one
+above, with the garrets, in which was the laboratory.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, ye observe, in getting to the shop, it was not necessary to
+knock at the Doctor&rsquo;s door, but just proceed up the narrow wooden
+stairs, facing the top of which was the shop-door, which, for light to the
+customer&rsquo;s feet, was generally allowed to stand open.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For a long time, the Doctor had heard the most unearthly noises
+in the house&mdash;as if a thunderbolt was in the habit of coming in at one
+of the sky-lights, and walking down stairs; and the Misses Skinflints had
+more than once nearly got their door carried off the hinges; so they had
+not the life of dogs, for constant startings and surprises.&nbsp; At first
+they had no faith in ghosts; but, in the course of time, they came to be
+alike doubtful on that point; but you shall hear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The foundation of the mystery was this.&nbsp; The three
+mischievous laddies&mdash;the apprentices&mdash;after getting their daily
+work over, of making pills and potions for his Majesty&rsquo;s unfortunate
+subjects, took to the trick of mounting a human skull, like that, upon
+springs, so that it could open its mouth, and setting it on a stand at the
+end of the counter, could <!-- page 254--><a name="page254"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 254</span>make it gape, and turn from side to side, by
+pulling a string.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The door being left purposely ajee&mdash;whenever the rascals saw
+a fit subject, they set the skull a-moving and a-gaping; the consequence of
+which was, that many a poor customer descended without counting the number
+of steps, and after bouncing against Dr Chickenweed&rsquo;s panels, played
+flee down to try the strength of Misses Skinflints&rsquo;.&nbsp; One of the
+three instantly darted down, behind the evanished patient; and, after
+assisting her or him&mdash;whichever it might chance to be&mdash;to gain
+their feet, begged of them not to mention what they had seen, as the house
+was haunted by the ghost of an old maiden aunt of their master&rsquo;s who
+had died abroad; and that the thing would hurt his feelings if ever it came
+to his ears.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dog on me,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if ever I heard of such a trick
+since ever I was born!&nbsp; What was the upshot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The upshot was, that the thing might have continued long enough,
+and the laboratory been left as deserted as Tadmor in the Wilderness, had
+not a fat old woman fallen one day perfectly through the doctor&rsquo;s
+door, and dislocated her ankle&mdash;which unfortunately incapacitated her
+from making a similar attack on that of the Misses Skinflints.&nbsp; The
+consequence was, that the conspiracy was detected&mdash;the Doctor&rsquo;s
+aunt&rsquo;s ghost laid, and the fat old woman carried down on a <!-- page
+255--><a name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 255</span>shutter to
+her bed, where she lay till her ankle grew better in the course of
+nature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It being near the hour at which we had ordered our dinner to be ready,
+we rose up from the tombstone; and, after taking a snuff out of
+Peter&rsquo;s box, we returned arm-in-arm to the tavern, to lay in a stock
+of provisions.</p>
+<p>Peter Farrel was a warm-hearted, thorough-going fellow, and did not like
+half-measures, such as swollowing the sheep and worrying on the tail; so,
+after having ate as many strawberries as we could well stow away, he began
+trying to fright me with stories of folk taking the elic passion&mdash;the
+colic&mdash;the mulligrubs&mdash;and other deadly maladies, on account of
+neglecting to swallow a drop of something warm to qualify the coldness of
+the fruit; so, after we had discussed good part of a fore-quarter of lamb
+and chopped cabbage&mdash;the latter a prime dish&mdash;we took first one
+jug, and syne another, till Peter was growing tongue-tied, and as red in
+the face as a bubbly-jock; and, to speak the truth, my own een began to
+reel like merligoes.&nbsp; In a jiffy, both of us found our hearts waxing
+so brave as to kick and spur at all niggardly hesitation; and we leuch and
+thumped on the good-man of the inn-house&rsquo;s mahogany table, as if it
+had been warranted never to break.&nbsp; In fact, we were as furious and
+obstrapulous as two unchristened Turks; and it was a mercy that we ever
+thought of rising to come away at all.&nbsp; At the long and the last,
+however, we found ourselves mounted and <!-- page 256--><a
+name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 256</span>trotting home at no
+allowance, me telling Peter, as far as I mind, to give the beast a good
+creish, and not to be frighted.</p>
+<p>The evening was fine and warmer than we could have wished, our cheeks
+glowing like dragons&rsquo; jackets; and as we passed like lightning
+through among the trees, the sun was setting with a golden glory in the
+west, between the Pentland and the Corstorphine Hills, and flashing in upon
+us through the branches at every opening.&nbsp; About half-way on our road
+back, we foregathered with Robbie Maut, drucken body, with his Shetland
+rig-and-fur hose on, and his green umbrella in his hand, shug-shugging away
+home, keeping the trot, with his tale, and his bit arm shak-shaking at his
+tae side, on his grey sheltie; so, after carhailing him, we bragged him to
+a race full gallop for better than a mile to the toll.&nbsp; The damage we
+did I dare not pretend to recollect.&nbsp; First, we knocked over two drunk
+Irishmen, that were singing &ldquo;Erin-go-Bragh,&rdquo;
+arm-in-arm&mdash;syne we rode over the top of an old woman with a
+wheelbarrow of cabbages&mdash;and when we came to the toll, which was kept
+by a fat man with a red waistcoat, Robbie&rsquo;s pony, being, like all
+Highlanders, a wilful creature, stopped all at once; and though he won the
+half mutchkin by getting through first, after driving over the tollman, it
+was at the expense of poor Robbie&rsquo;s being ejected from his stirrups
+like a battering-ram, and disappearing head-foremost through <!-- page
+257--><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 257</span>the
+toll-house window, which was open, hat, wig, green umbrella, and
+all&mdash;the tollman&rsquo;s wife&rsquo;s bairn making a providential
+escape from Robbie&rsquo;s landing on all-fours, more than two yards on the
+far-side of the cradle in which it was lying asleep, with its little
+flannel nightgown on.</p>
+<p>At the time, all was war and rebellion with the tollman, assault and
+battery, damages, broken panes, and what not; but with skilful management,
+and a few words in the private ear of Mr Rory Sneckdrawer, the
+penny-writer, we got matters southered up when we were in our sober senses;
+though I shall not say how much it cost us both in preaching and pocket, to
+make the man keep a calm sough as to bringing us in for the penalty, which
+would have been deadly.&nbsp; I think black-burning shame of myself to make
+mention of such ploys and pliskies; but, after all, it is better to make a
+clean breast.</p>
+<p>Hame at last we got, making fire flee out of the Dalkeith causey stones
+like mad: and we arrived at our own door between nine and ten at night,
+still in a half-seas-overish state.&nbsp; I had, nevertheless, sense enough
+about me remaining, to make me aware that the best place for me would be my
+bed; so, after making Nanse bring the bottle and glass to the door on a
+server, to give Peter Farrel a dram by way of &ldquo;doch-an-dorris,&rdquo;
+as the Gaelic folk say, we wished him a good-night, and left him to drive
+home the bit <!-- page 258--><a name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+258</span>gig, with the broken shaft spliced with ropes, to his own bounds;
+little jealousing, as we heard next morning, that he would be thrown over
+the back of it, without being hurt, by taking too sharp a turn at the
+corner.</p>
+<p>After a tremendous sound sleep, I was up betimes in the morning, though
+a wee drumly about the head, anxious to enquire at Tammie Bodkin, the head
+of the business department, me being absent, if any extraordinars had
+occurred on the yesterday; and found that the only particular customer
+making enquiries anent me was our old friend Cursecowl, savage for the
+measure of a killing-coat, which he wanted made as fast as directly.&nbsp;
+Though dreadfully angry at finding me from home, and unco swithering at
+first, he at length, after a volley of oaths enough to have opened a stone
+wall, allowed Tammie Bodkin to take his inches; but, as he swore and went
+on havering and speaking nonsense all the time, Tammie&rsquo;s hand shook,
+partly through fear, and partly through anxiety; and if he went wrong in
+making a nick in the paper here and there in a wrong place, it was no more
+than might have been looked for, from his fright and inexperience.</p>
+<p>In the twinkle of an eyelid, I saw that there was some mortal mistake in
+the measurement; as, unless Cursecowl had lost beef at no allowance, I
+knew, judging from the past, that it would not peep on his <!-- page
+259--><a name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 259</span>corpus by
+four inches.&nbsp; The matter was, however, now past all earthly remede,
+and there was nothing to be done but trusting to good fortune, and allowing
+the killing-coat to take its chance in the world.&nbsp; How the thing
+happened, I have bothered and beat my brains to no purpose to make out, and
+it remains a wonderful mystery to me to this blessed day; but, by long
+thought on the subject, both when awake and in my bed, and by multifarious
+cross-questionings at Tammie&rsquo;s self concerning the paper measurings,
+I am devoutly inclined to think, that he mistook the nicking of the
+side-seams and the shoulder-strap for the girth of the belly-band.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 260--><a name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+260</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE&mdash;ON CATCHING A
+TARTAR&mdash;CURSECOWL</h2>
+<p>From the first moment I clapped eye on the caricature thing of a coat,
+that Tammie Bodkin had, in my absence, shaped out for Cursecowl the
+butcher, I foresaw, in my own mind, that a catastrophe was brewing for us;
+and never did soldier gird himself to fight the French, or sailor prepare
+for a sea-storm, with greater alacrity, than I did to cope with the
+bull-dog anger, and buffet back the uproarious vengeance of our heathenish
+customer.</p>
+<p>At first I thought of letting the thing take its natural course, and of
+threaping down Cursecowl&rsquo;s throat that he must have been feloniously
+keeping in his breath when Tammie took his measure; and, moreover, that as
+it was the fashion to be straight-laced, Tammie had done his utmost trying
+to make him look like his betters; till, my conscience checking me for such
+a nefarious intention, I endeavoured, as became me in the relations of man,
+merchant, and Christian, to solder the matter peaceably, and show him, if
+there was a fault committed, that there was no evil intention on my side of
+the house.&nbsp; To this end I dispatched the bit servant wench, on the
+Friday afternoon, to deliver the coat, which was neatly tied up in a brown
+paper, and directed&mdash;&ldquo;Mr Cursecowl, with care,&rdquo; and to buy
+a sheep&rsquo;s head; bidding her, by the way of being civil, give my kind
+compliments, and enquire how Mr and Mrs Cursecowl, and the five <!-- page
+261--><a name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>little Miss
+Cursecowl&rsquo;s, were keeping their healths, and trusting to his honour
+in sending me a good article.&nbsp; But have a moment&rsquo;s patience.</p>
+<p>Being busy at the time, turning a pair of kuttikins for old Mr
+Molleypouch the mealmonger, when the lassie came back, I had no mind of
+asking a sight of the sheep&rsquo;s head, as I aye like the little
+blackfaced, in preference to the white, fat, fozy Cheviot breed: but, most
+providentially, I catched a gliskie of the wench passing the shop window,
+on the road over to Jamie Coom the smith&rsquo;s, to get it singed, having
+been dispatched there by her mistress.&nbsp; Running round the counter like
+lightning, I opened the sneck, and halooed to her to wheel to the right
+about, having, somehow or other, a superstitious longing to look at the
+article.&nbsp; As I was saying, there was a Providence in this, which, at
+the time, mortal man could never have thought of.</p>
+<p>James Batter had popped in with a newspaper in his hand, to read me a
+curious account of a mermaid, that was seen singing a Gaelic song, and
+combing its hair with a tortoise-shell comb, someway terrible far north
+about Shetland, by a respectable minister of the district, riding home in
+the gloaming after a presbytery dinner.&nbsp; So, as he was just taking off
+his spectacles cannily, and saying to me&mdash;&ldquo;And was not that
+droll?&rdquo;&mdash;the lassie spread down her towel on the counter, when,
+lo and behold! such an abominable spectacle, James Batter observing me run
+back, and turn white! <!-- page 262--><a name="page262"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 262</span>put on his glasses again, cannily taking them
+out of his well-worn shagreen case, and, giving a stare down at the towel,
+almost touched the beast&rsquo;s nose with his own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what, in the name of goodness, is the matter?&rdquo;
+quo&rsquo; James Batter; &ldquo;ye seem in a wonderful quandary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The matter!&rdquo; answered I, in astonishment; looking to see if
+the man had lost his sight or his senses&mdash;&ldquo;the matter! who ever
+saw a sheep&rsquo;s head with straight horns, and a visnomy all colours of
+the rainbow&mdash;red, blue, orange, green, yellow, white, and
+black?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;Deed it is,&rdquo; said James, after a nearer inspection;
+&ldquo;it must be a lowsy-naturay.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m sure I have read most of
+Buffon&rsquo;s books, and I have never heard tell of like.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+gey an&rsquo; queerish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;Od, James,&rdquo; answered I, &ldquo;ye take every thing
+very canny; you&rsquo;re a philosopher, to be sure; but, I daresay, if the
+moon was to fall from the lift, and knock down the old kirk, ye would say
+no more than it&rsquo;s gey an&rsquo; queerish!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Queerish, man! do ye not see that?&rdquo; added I, shoving down
+his head mostly on the top of it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do ye not see that? awful,
+most awful! extonishing!!&nbsp; Do ye not see that long beard?&nbsp; Who,
+in the name of goodness, ever was an eyewitness to a sheep&rsquo;s head, in
+a Christian land, with a beard like an unshaven Jew crying &lsquo;owl
+clowes,&rsquo; with a green bag over his left shoulder!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 263--><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+263</span>&ldquo;Dog on it,&rdquo; said James, giving a fidge with his
+hainches; &ldquo;Dog on it, as I am a living sinner, that is the head of a
+Willie-goat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Willie or Nannie,&rdquo; answered I, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s not meat
+for me; and never shall an ounce of it cross the craig of my
+family:&mdash;that is as sure as ever James Batter drave a shuttle.&nbsp;
+Give counsel in need, James: what is to be done?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That needs consideration,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; James, giving a bit
+hoast.&nbsp; &ldquo;Unless he makes ample apology, and explains the mistake
+in a feasible way, it is my humble opinion that he ought to be summoned
+before his betters.&nbsp; That is the legal way to make him smart for his
+sins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At last a thought struck me, and I saw farther through my difficulties
+than ever mortal man did through a millstone; but, like a politician, I
+minted not the matter to James.&nbsp; Keeping my tongue cannily within my
+teeth, I then laid the head, wrapped up in the bit towel, in a corner
+behind the counter; and turning my face round again to James, I put my
+hands into my breeches-pockets, as if nothing in the world had happened,
+and ventured back to the story of the mermaid.&nbsp; I asked him how she
+looked&mdash;what kind of dress she wore&mdash;if she swam with her
+corsets&mdash;what was the colour of her hair&mdash;where she would buy the
+tortoise-shell comb&mdash;and so on; when, just as he was clearing his pipe
+to reply, who should burst open the <!-- page 264--><a
+name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 264</span>shop-door like a clap
+of thunder, with burning cat&rsquo;s een, and a face as red as a
+soldier&rsquo;s jacket, but Cursecowl himself, with the new killing-coat in
+his hand,&mdash;which, giving a tremendous curse, the words of which are
+not essentially necessary for me to repeat, being an elder of our kirk, he
+made play flee at me with such a birr, that it twisted round my neck, and,
+mostly blinding me, made me doze like a tottum.&nbsp; At the same time, to
+clear his way, and the better to enable him to take a good mark, he gave
+James Batter a shove, that made him stotter against the wall, and snacked
+the good new farthing tobacco-pipe, that James was taking his first whiff
+out of; crying, at the same blessed moment&mdash;&ldquo;Hold out o&rsquo;
+my road, ye long withered wabster.&nbsp; Ye&rsquo;er a pair of havering
+idiots; but I&rsquo;ll have pennyworths out of both your skins, as
+I&rsquo;m a sinner!&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p264b.jpg">
+<img alt="The waiting girl, Jeanie Amos" src="images/p264s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>What was to be done?&nbsp; There was no time for speaking, for
+Cursccowl, foaming like a mad dog with passion, seized hold of the
+ell-wand, which he flourished round his head like a Highlander&rsquo;s
+broadsword, and stamping about, with his stockings drawn up his thighs,
+threatened every moment to commit bloody murder.</p>
+<p>If James Batter never saw service before, he learned a little of it that
+day, being in a pickle of bodily terror not to be imagined by living man;
+but his presence of mind did not forsake him, and he cowered for safety
+<!-- page 265--><a name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+265</span>and succour into a far corner, holding out a web of buckram
+before him&mdash;me crying all the time, &ldquo;Send for the town officer!
+will ye not send for the town-officer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>You may talk of your general Moores, and your Lord Wellingtons, as ye
+like; but never, since I was born, did I ever see or hear tell of anything
+braver than the way Tammie Bodkin behaved, in saving both our precious
+lives, at that blessed nick of time, from touch-and-go jeopardy: for, when
+Cursecowl was rampauging about, cursing and swearing like a Russian bear,
+hurling out volleys of oaths that would have frighted John Knox, forbye the
+like of us, Tammie stole in behind him like a wild-cat, followed by Joseph
+Breekey, Walter Cuff, and Jack Thorl, the three apprentices on their
+stocking soles; and, having strong and dumpy arms, pinned back his elbows
+like a flash of lightning, giving the other callants time to jump on his
+back, and hold him like a vice; while, having got time to draw my breath,
+and screw up my pluck, I ran forward like a lion, and houghed the whole
+concern&mdash;Tammie Bodkin, the three faithful apprentices, Cursecowl and
+all, coming to the ground like a battered castle.</p>
+<p>It was now James Batter&rsquo;s time to come up in line, and, though a
+douce man (being savage for the insulting way that Cursecowl had dared to
+use him), he dropped down like mad, with his knees on Cursecowl&rsquo;s
+breast, who was yelling, roaring, and grinding his <!-- page 266--><a
+name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>buck-teeth like a mad
+bull, kicking right and spurring left with fire and fury; and, taking his
+Kilmarnock off his head, thrust it, like a battering-ram, into
+Cursecowl&rsquo;s mouth, to hinder him from alarming the neighbourhood, and
+bringing the whole world about our ears.&nbsp; Such a stramash of tumbling,
+roaring, tearing, swearing, kicking, pushing, cuffing, rugging and riving
+about the floor!!&nbsp; I thought they would not have left one another with
+a shirt on: it seemed a combat even to the death.&nbsp; Cursecowl&rsquo;s
+breath was choked up within him like wind in an empty bladder, and when I
+got a gliskie of his face, from beneath James&rsquo;s cowl, it was growing
+as black as the crown of my hat.&nbsp; It feared me much that murder would
+be the upshot, the webs being all heeled over, both of broad cloth,
+buckram, cassimir, and Welsh flannel; and the paper shapings and worsted
+runds coiled about their throats and bodies like fiery serpents.&nbsp; At
+long and last, I thought it became me, being the head of the house, to
+sound a parley, and bid them give the savage a mouthful of fresh air, to
+see if he had anything to say in his defence.</p>
+<p>Cursecowl, by this time, had forcible assurance of our ability to
+overpower him, and finding he had by far the worst of it, was obliged to
+grow tamer, using the first breath he got to cry out, &ldquo;A barley, ye
+thieves! a barley!&nbsp; I tell ye, give me wind.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s not a
+man in nine of ye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Finding our own strength, we saw, by this time, <!-- page 267--><a
+name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 267</span>that we were masters
+of the field; nevertheless, we took care to make good terms when they were
+in our power; nor would we allow Cursecowl to sit upright, till after he
+had said, three times over, on his honour as a gentleman, that he would
+behave as became one.&nbsp; After giving his breeches-knees a skuff with
+his loof, to dad off the stoure, he came, right foot foremost, to the
+counter side, while the laddies were dighting their brows, and stowing away
+the webs upon their ends round about, saying, &ldquo;Maister Wauch, how
+have ye the conscience to send hame such a piece o&rsquo; wark as that coat
+to ony decent man?&nbsp; Do ye dare to imagine that I am a Jerusalem
+spider, that I could be crammed, neck and heels, into such a thing as
+that?&nbsp; Fye, shame&mdash;it would not button on yourself, man,
+scarecrow-looking mortal though ye be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>James Batter&rsquo;s blood was now up, and boiling like an old
+Roman&rsquo;s; so he was determined to show Cursecowl that I had a friend
+in court, able and willing to keep him at stave&rsquo;s-end.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Keep a calm sough,&rdquo; said James Batter, interfering, &ldquo;and
+not miscall the head of the house in his own shop; or, to say nothing of
+present consequences, byway of showing ye the road to the door, perhaps
+Maister Sneckdrawer, the penny-writer, &rsquo;ll give ye a caption-paper
+with a broad margin, to claw your elbow with at your leisure, my good
+fellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pugh, pugh,&rdquo; cried Cursecowl, snapping his finger <!-- page
+268--><a name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 268</span>and thumb at
+James&rsquo;s beak, &ldquo;I do not value your threatening an ill
+halfpenny.&nbsp; Come away out your ways to the crown of the causey, and
+I&rsquo;ll box any three of ye, over the bannys, for half-a-mutchkin.&nbsp;
+But &rsquo;od-sake, Batter, my man, nobody&rsquo;s speaking to you,&rdquo;
+added Cursecowl, giving a hack now and then, and a bit spit down on the
+floor; &ldquo;go hame, man, and get your cowl washed; I dare say you have
+pushioned me, so I have no more to say to the like of you.&nbsp; But now,
+Maister Wauch, just speaking holy and fairly, do you not think black
+burning shame of yourself, for putting such an article into any decent
+Christian man&rsquo;s hand, like mine?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a wee&mdash;wait a wee, friend, and I&rsquo;ll give ye a
+lock salt to your broth,&rdquo; answered I, in a calm and cool way; for,
+being a confidential elder of Maister Wiggie&rsquo;s, I kept myself free
+from the sin of getting into a passion, or fighting, except in
+self-defence, which is forbidden neither by law nor gospel; and, stooping
+down, I took up the towel from the corner, and, spreading it upon the
+counter, bade him look, and see if he knew an auld acquaintance!</p>
+<p>Cursecowl, to be such a dragoon, had some rational points in his
+character; so, seeing that he lent ear to me with a smirk on his rough red
+face, I went on: &ldquo;Take my advice as a friend, and make the best of
+your way home, killing-coat and all; for the most perfect will sometimes
+fall into an innocent mistake, and, <!-- page 269--><a
+name="page269"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 269</span>at any rate, it
+cannot be helped now.&nbsp; But if ye show any symptom of obstrapulosity,
+I&rsquo;ll find myself under the necessity of publishing you abroad to the
+world for what you are, and show about that head in the towel for a wonder
+to broad Scotland, in a manner that will make customers flee from your
+booth, as if it was infected with the seven plagues of Egypt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At sight of the goat&rsquo;s-head, Cursecowl clapped his hand on his
+thigh two or three times, and could scarcely muster good manners enough to
+keep himself from bursting out a-laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye seem to have found a fiddle, friend,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;but
+give me leave to tell you, that ye&rsquo;ll may be find it liker a
+hanging-match than a musical matter.&nbsp; Are you not aware that I could
+hand you over to the sheriff, on two special indictments?&nbsp; In the
+first place, for an action of assault and batterification, in cuffing me,
+an elder of our kirk, with a sticked killing-coat, in my own shop; and, in
+the second place, as a swindler, imposing on his Majesty&rsquo;s loyal
+subjects, taking the coin of the realm on false pretences, and palming off
+goat&rsquo;s flesh upon Christians, as if they were perfect
+Pagans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Heathen though Cursecowl was, this oration alarmed him in a jiffie, soon
+showing him, in a couple of hurries, that it was necessary for him to be
+our humble servant: so he said, still keeping the smirk on his face,
+&ldquo;Keh, keh, it&rsquo;s not worth making a noise about after all.&nbsp;
+Gie me the jacket, Mansie, my man, and it&rsquo;ll maybe <!-- page 270--><a
+name="page270"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 270</span>serve my nephew,
+young Killim, who is as lingit in the waist as a wasp.&nbsp; Let us take a
+shake of your paw over the counter, and be friends.&nbsp; Bye-ganes should
+be bye-ganes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Never let it be said that Mansie Wauch, though one of the king&rsquo;s
+volunteers, ever thrust aside the olive branch of peace; so, ill-used
+though I had been, to say nothing of James Batter, who had got his pipe
+smashed to crunches, and one of the eyes of his spectacles knocked out, I
+gave him my fist frankly.</p>
+<p>James Batter&rsquo;s birse had been so fiercely put up, and no wonder,
+that it was not so easily sleeked down; so, for a while he looked unco
+glum, till Cursecowl insisted that our meeting should not be a dry one; nor
+would he hear a single word on me and James Batter not accepting his treat
+of a mutchkin of Kilbagie.</p>
+<p>I did not think James would have been so doure and
+refractory&mdash;funking and flinging like old Jeroboam; but at last, with
+the persuasion of the treat, he came to, and, sleeking down his front hair,
+we all three took a step down to the far end of the close, at the back
+street, where Widow Thamson kept the sign of &ldquo;The Tankard and the
+Tappit Hen&rdquo;; Cursecowl, when we got ourselves seated, ordering in the
+spirits with a loud rap on the table with his knuckles, and a whistle on
+the landlady through his fore-teeth, that made the roof ring.&nbsp; A
+bottle of beer <!-- page 271--><a name="page271"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 271</span>was also brought; so, after drinking one
+another&rsquo;s healths round, with a tasting out of the dram glass,
+Cursecowl swashed the rest of the raw creature into the tankard,
+saying&mdash;&ldquo;Now take your will o&rsquo;t; there&rsquo;s drink fit
+for a king; that&rsquo;s real &lsquo;Pap-in.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was an awful body, Cursecowl, and had a power of queer stories,
+which, weel-a-wat, did no lose in the telling.&nbsp; James Batter beginning
+to brighten up, hodged and leuch like a nine-year-old; and I freely
+confess, for another, that I was so diverted, that, I dare say, had it not
+been for his fearsome oaths, which made our very hair stand on end, and
+were enough to open the stone-wall, we would have both sate from that time
+to this.</p>
+<p>We got the whole story of the Willie-goat, out and out; it seeming to
+be, with Cursecowl, a prime matter of diversion, especially that part of it
+relating to the head, by which he had won a crown from Deacon Paunch, who
+wagered that the wife and me would eat it, without ever finding out our
+mistake.&nbsp; But, aha, lad!</p>
+<p>The long and the short of the matter was this.&nbsp; The Willie-goat,
+had, for eighteen year, belonged to a dragoon marching regiment, and, in
+its better days, had seen a power of service abroad; till, being now old
+and infirm, it had fallen off one of the baggage-carts, and got its leg
+broken on the road to Piershill, where it was sold to Cursecowl, by a
+corporal, for half-a-crown <!-- page 272--><a name="page272"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 272</span>and a dram.&nbsp; The four quarters he had
+managed to sell for mutton, like lightning&mdash;this one buying a jigget,
+that one a back-ribs, and so on.&nbsp; However, he had to weather a gey
+brisk gale in making his point good.&nbsp; One woman remarked, that it had
+an unearthly, rank smell; to which he said, &ldquo;No, no&mdash;ye do not
+ken your blessings, friend,&mdash;that&rsquo;s the smell of venison, for
+the beast was brought up along with the deers in the Duke&rsquo;s
+parks.&rdquo;&nbsp; And to another wife, that, after smell-smelling at it,
+thought it was a wee humphed, he replied, &ldquo;Faith that&rsquo;s all the
+thanks folk gets for letting their sheep crop heather among Cheviot
+Hills&rdquo;; and such like lies.&nbsp; But as for the head, that had been
+the doure business.&nbsp; Six times had it been sold and away, and six
+times had it been brought back again.&nbsp; One bairn said, that her
+&ldquo;mother didna like a sheep&rsquo;s head with horns like these, and
+wanted it changed for another one.&rdquo;&nbsp; A second one said, that,
+&ldquo;it had tup&rsquo;s een, and her father liked wether
+mutton.&rdquo;&nbsp; A third customer found mortal fault with the colours,
+which, she said, &ldquo;were not canny, or in the course of
+nature.&rdquo;&nbsp; What the fourth one said, and the fifth one took leave
+to observe, I have stupidly forgotten, though, I am sure, I heard both; but
+I mind one remarked, quite off-hand, as she sought back her money, that
+&ldquo;unless sheep could do without beards, like their neighbours, she
+would keep the pot boiling with a piece beef, in the meantime.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+After all this, <!-- page 273--><a name="page273"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 273</span>would any mortal man believe it, Deacon
+Paunch, the greasy Daniel Lambert that he is, had taken the wager, as I
+before took opportunity to remark, that our family would swallow the
+bait?&nbsp; But, aha, he was off his eggs there!</p>
+<p>James and me were so tickled with Cursecowl&rsquo;s wild, outrageous,
+off-hand, humoursome way of telling his crack, that, though sore with
+neighering, none of the two of us ever thought of rising; Cursecowl
+chapping in first one stoup, and then another, and birling the tankard
+round the table, as if we had been drinking dub-water.&nbsp; I dare say I
+would never have got away, had I not slipped out behind Lucky
+Thamson&rsquo;s back&mdash;for she was a broad fat body, with a round-eared
+mutch, and a full-plaited check apron&mdash;when she was drawing the sixth
+bottle of small beer, with her corkscrew between her knees; Cursecowl
+lecturing away, at the dividual moment, like a Glasgow professor, to James
+Batter, whose een were gathering straws, on a pliskie he had once, in the
+course of trade, played on a conceited body of a French sicknurse, by
+selling her a lump of fat pork to make beef-tea of to her mistress, who was
+dwining in the blue Beelzebubs.</p>
+<p>Ohone, and woes me, for old Father Adam and the fall of man!&nbsp; Poor,
+sober, good, honest James Batter was not, by a thousand miles, a match for
+such company.&nbsp; Everything, however, has its moral, and <!-- page
+274--><a name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 274</span>the truth
+will out.&nbsp; When Nanse and me were sitting at our breakfast next
+morning, we heard from Benjie, who had been early up fishing for eels at
+the water-side, that the whole town-talk was concerning the misfortunate
+James Batter, who had been carried home, totally incapable, far in the
+night, by Cursecowl and an Irish labourer&mdash;that sleeped in Widow
+Thamson&rsquo;s garret&mdash;on a hand-barrow, borrowed from Maister
+Wiggie&rsquo;s servant-lass, Jenny Jessamine.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 275--><a name="page275"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+275</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR&mdash;JAMES BATTER &amp; THE MAID OF
+DAMASCUS</h2>
+<p>On the morning after the debosh with Mr Cursecowl, my respected friend,
+James Batter, the pattern of steadiness and sobriety, awoke in a terrible
+pliskie.&nbsp; The decent man came to the use of his senses as from a
+trance, and scarcely knew either where he was, or whether his head or heels
+were uppermost.&nbsp; He found himself lying without his Kilmarnock, from
+which he might have received deadly damage, being subject to the rheumatics
+in the cuff of the neck; and everything about him was in a most fearful and
+disjaskit state.&nbsp; It was a long time before he could, for the life of
+him, bring his mind or memory to a sense of his condition, having still on
+his corduroy trowsers, and his upper and under vest, besides one of his
+stockings:&mdash;his hat, his wig, his neckcloth, his shoes, his coat, his
+snuff-box, his spectacles, and the other stocking, all lying on the floor,
+together with a table, a chair, a candlestick, with a broken candle, which
+had been knocked over;&mdash;the snuffers standing upright, being sharp in
+the point, and having stuck in the deal floor.</p>
+<p>It was a terrible business! and might have been a life-long lesson to
+every one, of the truth of St Paul&rsquo;s maxim, that &ldquo;evil
+communication corrupts good manners&rdquo;;&mdash;Cursecowl being the most
+incomprehensible fellow that ever breathed the breath of life.&nbsp; To add
+to his calamities, James found, on attempting <!-- page 276--><a
+name="page276"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 276</span>to rise, that he had,
+in some way or other, of which he had not a shadow of recollection,
+dismally sprained his left ankle, which, to his consternation, was swelled
+like a door-post, and as blue as his apron.&nbsp; There was also a black
+ugly lump on his brow, as big as a pigeon&rsquo;s egg, which was horrible
+to look at in the bit glass.&nbsp; Many a gallant soldier escaped from
+Waterloo with less scaith&mdash;and that they did.&nbsp; Poor innocent
+sowl!&nbsp; I pitied him from the very bottom of my heart&mdash;as who
+would not?</p>
+<p>Having got an inkling of the town-talk by breakfast time, and knowing
+also that many a one&mdash;such is the corruption of human
+nature&mdash;would like to have a hair in the neck of James, by taking up
+an evil report, I remembered within myself that a friend in need is a
+friend indeed, and cannily papped up the close, after I had got myself
+shaved, to see how the land lay.&nbsp; And a humbling spectacle it
+was!&nbsp; James could scarcely yet be said to be himself, for his eyes
+were like scored collops, and his stomach was so sick that his face was
+like ill-bleached linen&mdash;pale as a dishclout.&nbsp; When he tried to
+speak, it was between a bock and a hiccup with him, and my feeling for his
+situation was such&mdash;knowing, as I did, all the ins and outs of the
+business&mdash;that I could not help being very wae for him.&nbsp; It
+therefore behoved me to make Nanse send him a cup of well-made tea, to see
+if it would act as a settler, but his <!-- page 277--><a
+name="page277"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 277</span>heart stood at it, as
+if it had been &rsquo;cacuana, and do as he liked, he could not let a drop
+of it down his craig.&nbsp; When the wife informed me of this, I at last
+luckily remembered the old saying about giving one a hair of the dog that
+bit him; and I made poor James swallow a thimbleful of malt
+spirits&mdash;the real unadulterated creatur, with wonderfully good
+effects.&nbsp; Though then in his sixty-first year, James declares on his
+honour as a gentleman, that this was the first time he ever had fallen a
+victim to the barley-fever!</p>
+<p>How could we do otherwise! it afforded Nanse and I great
+pleasure&mdash;and no mistake&mdash;in acting the part of good Samaritans,
+by pouring oil and wine into his wounds; I having bound up his brow with a
+Sunday silk-napkin, and she having fomented his unfortunate ankle with warm
+water and hog&rsquo;s lard.&nbsp; The truth is, that I found myself in
+conscience bound and obligated to take a deep interest in the decent
+man&rsquo;s distresses, he having come to his catastrophe in a cause of
+mine, and having fallen a victim to the snares and devices of Cursecowl,
+instead of myself, for whom the vagabond&rsquo;s girn was set.&nbsp;
+Providence decided that, in this particular case, I should escape; but a
+better man, James Batter, was caught in it by the left ankle.&nbsp; What
+will a body say there?</p>
+<p>The web of Lucky Caird, which James had promised to carry home to her on
+the Saturday night, <!-- page 278--><a name="page278"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 278</span>was still in the loom, and had I been up to
+the craft, I would not have hesitated to have driven the shuttle myself
+till I had got it off hand for him; but every man to his trade; so afraid
+of consequences, I let the batter and the bobbin-box lie still, trusting to
+Lucky Caird&rsquo;s discretion, and my friend&rsquo;s speedy
+recovery.&nbsp; But the distress of James Batter was not the business of a
+day.&nbsp; In the course of the next night, to be sure, he had some natural
+sleep, which cleared his brain from the effects of that dangerous and
+deluding drink, the &ldquo;Pap-in&rdquo;; but his ankle left him a grievous
+lameter, hirpling on a staff; and, although his brown scratch and his
+Kilmarnock helped to hide the bump upon his temple, the dregs of it fell
+down upon his e&rsquo;e-bree, which, to the consternation of everybody,
+became as green as a docken leaf.</p>
+<p>My friend, however, be it added to this, was not more a sufferer in body
+than in estate; for the illness, being of his own bringing on, he could not
+make application to the Weavers&rsquo; Society&mdash;of which he had been a
+regular member for forty odd years&mdash;for his lawful sick-money.&nbsp;
+But, being a philosopher, James submitted to his bed of thorns without a
+murmur; Nanse and I soothing his calamities, as we best could, by a bowl of
+sheep-head broth; a rizzar&rsquo;d haddock; a tankard of broo-and-bread; a
+caller egg; a swine&rsquo;s trotter; and other circumstantialities needless
+to repeat&mdash;as occasion required.</p>
+<p><!-- page 279--><a name="page279"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+279</span>As for Cursecowl, the invincible reprobate, so ashamed was he of
+his infamous conduct, that he did not dare, for the life in his body, to
+show himself before my shop-window&mdash;far less in my presence&mdash;for
+more than a week; yet, would ye believe it! he made a perfect farce of the
+whole business among his own wauf cronies; and, instead of repentance, I
+verily believe, would not have cared twopence to have played me the same
+pliskie that he did my douce and worthy friend.&nbsp; But away with him! he
+is not worth speaking about; and ye&rsquo;ll get nothing from a sow
+but&mdash;grumph!</p>
+<p>Being betimes on mending order, James sent down, one forenoon, to
+request, with his compliments, that I would hand him up by the bearer old
+Taffy with the Pigtail&rsquo;s bundle of old papers,&mdash;as having more
+leisure in his hands than either he liked, or well knew how to dispose of,
+it might afford him some diversion to take a reading of them, for the
+purpose of enquiring farther into the particulars of the Welsh
+gentleman&rsquo;s history&mdash;which undoubtedly was a wee mysterious;
+consisting of matters lying heads and thraws; and of odds and ends, that no
+human skill could dovetail into a Christian consistency.</p>
+<p>On the night of the next day&mdash;I mind it weel, for it was on that
+dividual evening that Willie, the minister&rsquo;s man, married Mysie
+Clouts, the keeper of the lodging-house called the Beggars&rsquo;
+Opera&mdash;it struck <!-- page 280--><a name="page280"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 280</span>me, seeing the general joy of the weans on the
+street, and the laughing, daffing, and hallabuloo that they were making,
+that poor James must be lonely at his ingle side, and that a drink of
+porter and a crack would do his old heart good.&nbsp; Accordingly, I made
+Nanse send the bit lassie, our servant, Jenny Heggins, for a couple of
+bottles of Deacon Jaffrey&rsquo;s best brown stout, asking if he could pawn
+his word anent its being genuine, as it was for a gentleman in delicate
+health.&nbsp; So, brushing the saw-dust off the doup of one of them, and
+slipping it into my coat pocket, which was gey an&rsquo; large, I popped at
+leisure up the close to pay my neighbour a friendly visit.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p280b.jpg">
+<img alt="Peter Farrel" src="images/p280s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>&rsquo;Od, but comfort is a grand thing.&nbsp; If ever ye saw an ancient
+patriarch, there was one.&nbsp; James was seated in his snug old easychair
+by the fireside, as if he had been an Edinburgh Parliament House lawyer,
+studying his hornings, duplies, and fugie warrants, with his left leg
+paraded out on a stool, with a pillow smoothed down over it, and all the
+Welshman&rsquo;s papers docketed on the bit table before him.&nbsp; The cat
+was lying streaked out on the hearth, pur-purring away to herself, and the
+kettle by the fire cheek was singing along with her, as if to cheer the
+heart of their mutual master.&nbsp; As for Mr Batter, he looked as prejinct
+as a pikestaff, and so taken up was he with his papers, that, when I asked
+him how he felt, his answer, to my wonderment, was, that &ldquo;in the Song
+of Songs <!-- page 281--><a name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+281</span>Solomon had likened the nose of his beloved to the tower of
+Lebanon, which looketh towards Damascus.&rdquo;&nbsp; So brown was he in
+his studies, that, for a while, I feared the fall had produced some crack
+in his pan, and that his seven senses had gone a wool-gathering; but the
+story will out, as ye will hear, and being naturally a wee-camstairie, I
+gave him time to gather the feet of his faculties before pressing him too
+hard; but even the sight of the bottle of porter toasting by the cheek of
+the fire, hardly brought him at once to his right mind.</p>
+<p>Mr Batter&rsquo;s noddle, however, after a little patience, clearing up,
+we leisurely discussed between us the porter, which was in prime condition,
+with a ream as yellow as a marigold; together with half-a-dozen of
+butter-bakes, crimp and new-baked, it being batch-day with Thomas Burlings,
+who, like his father and grandfather before him, have been notorious in the
+biscuit department.&nbsp; It soon became clear to me, that the dialogue
+about Lebanon and Damascus, which was followed up with a clishmaclaver
+anent dirks, daggers, red cloaks, and other bloody weapons which made all
+my flesh grue, had some connexion with Taffy&rsquo;s papers on the
+table&mdash;out of which James had been diverting himself by reading bits
+here and there, at random like.</p>
+<p>In the course of our confab, he told me a monstrous heap about them;
+but, in general, the things were so out of the course of Providence, and so
+queer and <!-- page 282--><a name="page282"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+282</span>leeing-like, that I, for one, would not believe them without
+solemn affidavy.&nbsp; Indeed, I began at length to question within
+myself&mdash;for the subject naturally resolved itself into two heads;
+firstly, whether Taffy&rsquo;s master might not have had a bee in his
+bonnet; or, secondly, whether he was a person not over-scrupulous regarding
+the matter of truth.&nbsp; As for James, he declared him a nonsuch, and
+said, that although poor, he would not have hesitated to have given him
+sixpence for a lock of his hair, just to keep beside him for a keepsake;
+(did anybody ever hear such nonsense?)&nbsp; Before parting, he insisted
+that I should bear with him, till he read me over the story he had just
+finished as I came in, and which had been running in his noddle.&nbsp; At
+such a late hour, for it was now wearing on to wellnigh ten o&rsquo;clock,
+I was not just clear about listening to anything bloody; but not to vex the
+old boy, who, I am sure, would not have sleeped a wink through the night
+for disappointment, had he not got a free breast made of it, I at long and
+last consented&mdash;provided his story was not too long.&nbsp; My chief
+particularity on this point, as I should mention, was, that it was past
+Benjie&rsquo;s bedtime, and the callant had a hoast, which required all his
+mother&rsquo;s as well as my own good doctoring&mdash;having cost us two
+bottles of Dantzic black beer, with little effect; besides not a few other
+recommendations of friends and skielly acquaintances.</p>
+<p><!-- page 283--><a name="page283"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+283</span>It was best, therefore, to consent with a good grace; so, after
+clearing his windpipes, James wiped the eyes of his spectacles with the
+corner of his red-check pocket-napkin; and thereafter fixing them on his
+beak, he commenced preaching away in grand style at some queer outlandish
+stuff, which fairly baffled my gumption.&nbsp; I must confess, however,
+both in fairness to Taffy and to James, that, as I had been up since five
+in the morning (having pawned my word to send home Duncan Imrie, the
+heel-cutter&rsquo;s new duffle great-coat by breakfast time, as he had to
+go into the Edinburgh leather-market by eleven), my een were gathering
+straws; and it was only at the fearsome parts that I could for half a
+moment keep them sundry.&nbsp; &ldquo;Many men,&rdquo; however, &ldquo;many
+minds,&rdquo; as the copy-line book says; and as every one has a right to
+judge for himself, I requested James to copy the concern out for me; and ye
+here have it, word for word, without substraction, multiplication, or
+addition.</p>
+<h3>The Maid Of Damascus</h3>
+<p>In the reign of the Greek Emperor Heraclius, when the beautiful city of
+Damascus was at the height of its splendour and magnificence, dwelt therein
+a young noble, named Demetrius, whose decayed fortunes did not correspond
+with the general prosperity of the times.&nbsp; He was a youth of ardent
+disposition, and <!-- page 284--><a name="page284"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 284</span>very handsome in person: pride kept him from
+bettering his estate by the profession of merchandise, yet more keenly did
+he feel the obscurity to which adverse fates had reduced him, that in his
+lot was involved the fortune of one dearer than himself.</p>
+<p>It so happened that, in that quarter of the city which faces the row of
+palm-trees, within the gate Keisan, dwelt a wealthy old merchant, who had a
+beautiful daughter.&nbsp; Demetrius had by chance seen her some time
+before, and he was so struck with her loveliness, that, after pining for
+many months in secret, he ventured on a disclosure, and, to his delighted
+surprise, found that Isabelle had long silently nursed a deep and almost
+hopeless passion for him also; so, being now aware that their love was
+mutual, they were as happy as the bird that, all day long, sings in the
+sunshine from the summits of the cypress-trees.</p>
+<p>True is the adage of the poet, that &ldquo;the course of true love never
+did run smooth&rdquo;; and, in the father of the maiden, they found that a
+stumbling-block lay in the path of their happiness, for he was of an
+avaricious disposition, and they knew that he valued gold more than
+nobility of blood.&nbsp; Their fears grew more and more, as Isabelle, in
+her private conversations, endeavoured to sound her father on this point;
+and although the suspicions of affection are often more apparent than real,
+in this they were not mistaken; for, without consulting his child&mdash;and
+as if <!-- page 285--><a name="page285"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+285</span>her soul had been in his hand&mdash;he promised her in marriage
+to a rich old miser, ay, twice as rich, and nearly as old as himself.</p>
+<p>Isabelle knew not what to do; for, on being informed by her father of
+the fate he had destined for her, her heart forsook her, and her spirit was
+bowed to the dust.&nbsp; Nowhere could she rest, like the Thracian bird
+that knoweth not to fold its wings in slumber&mdash;a cloud had fallen for
+her over the fair face of nature&mdash;and, instead of retiring to her
+couch, she wandered about weeping, under the midnight stars, on the terrace
+on the house-top&mdash;wailing over the hapless fate, and calling on death
+to come and take her from her sorrows.</p>
+<p>At morning she went forth alone into the garden; but neither could the
+golden glow of the orange-trees, nor the perfumes of the rosiers, nor the
+delicate fragrance of the clustering henna and jasmine, delight her; so she
+wearied for the hour of noon, having privately sent to Demetrius, inviting
+him to meet her by the fountain of the pillars at that time.</p>
+<p>Poor Demetrius had, for some time, observed a settled sorrow in the
+conduct and countenance of his beautiful Isabelle&mdash;he felt that some
+melancholy revelation was to be made to him; and, all eagerness, he came at
+the appointed hour.&nbsp; He passed along the winding walks, unheeding of
+the tulips streaked like the ruddy evening clouds&mdash;of the flower
+betrothed <!-- page 286--><a name="page286"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+286</span>to the nightingale&mdash;of the geranium blazing in scarlet
+beauty,&mdash;till, on approaching the place of promise, he caught a glance
+of the maid he loved&mdash;and, lo! she sate there in the sunlight,
+absorbed in thought; a book was on her knee, and at her feet lay the harp
+whose chords had been for his ear so often modulated to harmony.</p>
+<p>He laid his hand gently on her shoulder, as he seated himself beside her
+on the steps; and seeing her sorrowful, he comforted her, and bade her be
+of good cheer, saying, that Heaven would soon smile propitiously on their
+fortunes, and that their present trials would but endear them the more to
+each other in the days of after years.&nbsp; At length, with tears and
+sobs, she told him of what she had learned; and, while they wept on each
+other&rsquo;s bosoms, they vowed over the Bible, which Isabelle held in her
+hand, to be faithful to each other to their dying day.</p>
+<p>Meantime the miser was making preparations for the marriage ceremony,
+and the father of Isabelle had portioned out his daughter&rsquo;s dowery;
+when the lovers, finding themselves driven to extremity, took the
+resolution of escaping together from the city.</p>
+<p>Now, it so happened, in accordance with the proverb, which saith that
+evils never come single, that, at this very time, the city of Damascus was
+closely invested by a mighty army, commanded by the Caliph Abubeker
+Alwakidi, the immediate successor of Mahomet; <!-- page 287--><a
+name="page287"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 287</span>and, in leaving the
+walls, the lovers were in imminent hazard of falling into their cruel
+hands; yet, having no other resource left, they resolved to put their
+perilous adventure to the risk.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twas the Mussulman hour of prayer Magrib: the sun had just
+disappeared, and the purple haze of twilight rested on the hills, darkening
+all the cedar forests, when the porter of the gate Keisan, having been
+bribed with a largess, its folding leaves slowly opened, and forthwith
+issued a horseman closely wrapt up in a mantle; and behind him, at a little
+space, followed another similarly clad.&nbsp; Alas! for the unlucky
+fugitives, it so chanced that Derar, the captain of the night-guard, was at
+that moment making his rounds, and observing what was going on, he detached
+a party to throw themselves between the strangers and the town.&nbsp; The
+foremost rider, however, discovered their intention, and he called back to
+his follower to return.&nbsp; Isabelle&mdash;for it was she&mdash;instantly
+regained the gate which had not yet closed, but Demetrius fell into the
+hands of the enemy.</p>
+<p>As wont in those bloody wars, the poor prisoner was immediately carried
+by an escort into the presence of the Caliph, who put the alternative in
+his power of either, on the instant, renouncing his religion, or submitting
+to the axe of the headsman.&nbsp; Demetrius told his tale with a noble
+simplicity; and his youth, his open countenance, and stately bearing, so
+far <!-- page 288--><a name="page288"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+288</span>gained on the heart of Abubeker, that, on his refusal to embrace
+Mahomedism, he begged of him seriously to consider of his situation, and
+ordered a delay of the sentence, which he must otherwise pronounce, until
+the morrow.</p>
+<p>Heart-broken and miserable, Demetrius was loaded with chains, and
+carried to a gloomy place of confinement.&nbsp; In the solitude of the
+night-hours he cursed the hour of his birth&mdash;bewailed his miserable
+situation&mdash;and feeling that all his schemes of happiness were
+thwarted, almost rejoiced that he had only a few hours to live.</p>
+<p>The heavy hours lagged on towards daybreak, and, quite exhausted by the
+intense agony of his feelings, he sank down upon the ground in a profound
+sleep, from which a band, with crescented turbans and crooked sword-blades,
+awoke him.&nbsp; Still persisting to reject the Prophet&rsquo;s faith, he
+was led forth to die; but, in passing through the camp, the Soubachis of
+the Caliph stopped the troop, as he had been commanded, and Demetrius was
+ushered into the tent, where Abubeker, not yet arisen, lay stretched on his
+sofa.&nbsp; For a while the captive remained resolute, preferring death to
+the disgrace of turning a renegado; but the wily Caliph, who had taken a
+deep and sudden interest in the fortunes of the youth, knew well the
+spring, by the touch of which his heart was most likely to be
+affected.&nbsp; He pointed out to Demetrius <!-- page 289--><a
+name="page289"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 289</span>prospects of
+preferment and grandeur, while he assured him that, in a few days, Damascus
+must to a certainty surrender, in which case his mistress must fall into
+the power of a fierce soldiery, and be left to a fate full of dishonour,
+and worse than death itself; but, if he assumed the turban, he pledged his
+royal word that especial care should be taken that no harm should alight on
+her he loved.</p>
+<p>Demetrius paused, and Abubeker saw that the heart of his captive was
+touched.&nbsp; He drew pictures of power, and affluence, and domestic love,
+that dazzled the imagination of his hearer; and while the prisoner thought
+of his Isabelle, instead of rejecting the impious proposal, as at first he
+had done, with disdain and horror, his soul bent like iron in the breath of
+the furnace flame, and he wavered and became irresolute.&nbsp; The keen eye
+of the Caliph saw the working of his spirit within him, and allowed him yet
+another day to form his resolution.&nbsp; When the second day was expired,
+Demetrius craved a third; and on the fourth morning miserable man, he
+abjured the faith of his fathers, and became a Mussulman.</p>
+<p>Abubeker loved the youth, assigning him a post of dignity, and all the
+mighty host honoured him whom the Caliph delighted to honour.&nbsp; He was
+clad in rich attire, and magnificently attended, and, to all eyes,
+Demetrius seemed a person worthy of envy; yet, in the calm of thought, his
+conscience upbraided <!-- page 290--><a name="page290"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 290</span>him, and he was far less happy than he seemed
+to be.</p>
+<p>Ere yet the glow of novelty had entirely ceased to bewilder the
+understanding of the renegade, preparations were made for the assault; and
+after a fierce but ineffectual resistance, under their gallant leaders
+Thomas and Herbis, the Damascenes were obliged to submit to their imperious
+conqueror, on condition of being allowed, within three days, to leave the
+city unmolested.</p>
+<p>When the gates were opened, Demetrius, with a heart overflowing with
+love and delight, was among the first to enter.&nbsp; He enquired of every
+one he met of the fate of Isabelle; but all turned from him with
+disgust.&nbsp; At length he found her out, but what was his grief and
+surprise&mdash;in a nunnery!&nbsp; Firm to the troth she had so solemnly
+plighted, she had rejected the proposition of her mercenary parent; and,
+having no idea but that her lover had shared the fate of all Christian
+captives, she had shut herself up from the world, and vowed to live the
+life of a vestal.</p>
+<p>The surprise, the anguish, the horror of Isabelle, when she beheld
+Demetrius in his Moslem habiliments, cannot be described.&nbsp; Her first
+impulse, on finding him yet alive, was to have fallen into his arms; but,
+instantly recollecting herself, she shrank back from him with loathing, as
+a mean and paltry dastard.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; she cried,
+&ldquo;you are no longer the man I loved; <!-- page 291--><a
+name="page291"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 291</span>our vows of fidelity
+were pledged over the Bible; that book you have renounced as a fable; and
+he who has proved himself false to Heaven, can never be true to
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Demetrius was conscience-struck; too late he felt his crime, and foresaw
+its consequences.&nbsp; The very object for whom he had dared to make the
+tremendous sacrifice had deserted him, and his own soul told him with how
+much justice; so, without uttering a syllable, he turned away heart-broken,
+from the holy and beautiful being whose affections he had forfeited for
+ever.</p>
+<p>When the patriots left Damascus, Isabelle accompanied them.&nbsp;
+Retiring to Antioch, she lived with the sisterhood for many years; and, as
+her time was passed between acts of charity and devotion, her bier was
+watered with many a tear, and the hands of the grateful duly strewed her
+grave with flowers.&nbsp; To Demetrius was destined a briefer career.&nbsp;
+All-conscious of his miserable degradation, loathing himself, and life, and
+mankind, he rushed back from the city into the Mahomedan camp; and
+entering, with a hurried step, the tent of the Caliph, he tore the turban
+from his brow, and cried aloud&mdash;&ldquo;Oh, Abubeker! behold a
+God-forsaken wretch.&nbsp; Think not it was the fear of death that led me
+to abjure my religion&mdash;the religion of my fathers&mdash;the only true
+faith.&nbsp; No; it was the idol of Love that stood between my heart and
+heaven, darkening the latter with its shadow; and had <!-- page 292--><a
+name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 292</span>I remained as true to
+God, as I did to the Maiden of my love, I had not needed this.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+So saying, and ere the hand of Abubeker could arrest him, he drew a poniard
+from his embroidered vest, and the heart-blood of the renegade spouted on
+the royal robes of the successor of Mahomet.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>So grandly had James spooted this bloody story, that notwithstanding my
+sleepiness, his words whiles dirled through my marrow like quicksilver, and
+set all my flesh a grueing.&nbsp; In the middle of it, he was himself so
+worked up, that twice he pulled his Kilmarnock from his head, silk-napkin,
+bandage and all, and threw them down with a thump on the table, which once
+wellnigh capsized a candlestick.</p>
+<p>The porter and the stabbing, also, very nearly put me beside myself; and
+I felt so queerish and eerie when I took my hat to wish him a
+good-night&mdash;knowing that baith Nanse and Benjie would be neither to
+hold nor bind, it being now half-past ten o&rsquo;clock&mdash;that, had it
+not been for the shame of the thing, and that I remembered being one of the
+King&rsquo;s gallant volunteers, I fear I would have asked James for the
+lend of his lantern, to show me down the dark close.</p>
+<p>The reader will thus perceive that the adventure of the killing-coat,
+stuck alike in the measurement and in the making by Tammie Bodkin, was
+destined, in the great current of human events, to form a prominent <!--
+page 293--><a name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+293</span>feature, not only in my own history, but in that of worthy James
+Batter.&nbsp; To me it might be considered as a passing breeze&mdash;having
+been accustomed to see and suffer a vast deal; but my friend, I fear much,
+will bear marks of it to his grave.&nbsp; Yet I cannot blame myself with a
+safe conscience for James having fallen the victim to Cursecowl.&nbsp; I
+had tried everything to solder up matters which the heart of man could
+suggest; and knowing that it was a catastrophe which would bring down open
+war and rebellion throughout the whole parish, my thoughts were all of
+peace, and how to stave off the eruption of the bloody heathen.&nbsp; I had
+thought over the thing seriously in my bed; and, reckoning plainly that
+Cursecowl was not one likely soon to hold out a flag of truce, I had come
+to the determination within myself to sound a parley&mdash;and offer either
+to take back the coat, or refund part of the purchase-money.&nbsp; I may
+add, that having an unbounded regard for his judgment and descretion, I
+had, in my own mind, selected James Batter to be sent as the
+ambassador.&nbsp; The same day, however, brought round the extraordinary
+purchase of the Willie-goat&rsquo;s head, and gave a new and unexpected
+turn to the whole business.</p>
+<p>Folk, moreover, should never be so over-proud as not to confess when
+they are in fault; and from what happened, I am free to admit, that James,
+harmless as a sucking dove, was no match in such a matter for <!-- page
+294--><a name="page294"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 294</span>the like of
+Cursecowl, who was a perfect incarnation, for devilry and cunning, of the
+old Serpent himself.</p>
+<p>My intentions, however, were good, and those of a Christian; for, had
+Cursecowl accepted the ten shillings by way of blood-money, which it was
+thus my intention to have offered, this fearful and bloody stramash would
+have been hushed up without the world having become a whit the wiser.&nbsp;
+But &ldquo;there is many a slip,&rdquo; as the proverb says, &ldquo;between
+the cup and the lip&rdquo;; and the best intentions often fall to the
+ground, like the beggarman between the two stools.</p>
+<p>The final conclusion of the whole tradegy was, as it behoves me to
+mention, that Cursecowl, in consideration of a month&rsquo;s gratis work in
+the slaughter-house, made a brotherly legacy of the coat to his nephew,
+young Killim.&nbsp; The laddie was a perfect world&rsquo;s wonder every
+Sunday, and would have been laughed at out of his seven senses, had he not
+at last rebelled and fairly thrown it off.&nbsp; I make every allowance for
+the young man; and am sorry to confess that it was indeed a perfect shame
+to be seen.&nbsp; At Dalkeith, where one is well known, anything may pass;
+but I was always in bodily terror, that, had he gone to Edinburgh, he would
+have been taken up by the police, on suspicion of being either a Spanish
+pawtriot or a highway robber.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 295--><a name="page295"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+295</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE&mdash;CATCHING A PHILISTINE IN THE
+COAL-HOLE</h2>
+<p>Years wore on after the departure and death of poor Mungo Glen, during
+the which I had a sowd of prentices, good, bad, and indifferent, and who
+afterwards cut, and are cutting, a variety of figures in the world.&nbsp;
+Sometimes I had two or three at a time; for the increase of business that
+flowed in upon me with a full stream was tremendous, enabling me&mdash;who
+say it that should not say it&mdash;to lay by a wheen bawbees for a sore
+head, or the frailties of old age.&nbsp; Somehow or other, the clothes made
+on my shopboard came into great vogue through all Dalkeith, both for
+neatness of shape and nicety of workmanship; and the young journeymen of
+other masters did not think themselves perfected, or worthy a decent wage,
+till they had crooked their houghs for three months in my service.&nbsp;
+With regard to myself, some of my acquaintances told me, that if I had gone
+into Edinburgh to push my fortune, I could have cut half the trade out of
+bread, and maybe risen, in the course of nature, to be Lord Provost
+himself; but I just heard them speak, and kept my wheisht.&nbsp; I never
+was overly ambitious; and I remembered how proud Nebuchadnaazer ended with
+eating grass on all-fours.&nbsp; Every man has a right to be the best judge
+of his own private matters; though, to be sure, the advice of a true friend
+is often more precious than rubies, and sweeter than the Balm of
+Gilead.</p>
+<p><!-- page 296--><a name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+296</span>It was about the month of March, in the year of grace <i>anno
+Domini</i> eighteen hundred, that the whole country trembled, like a giant
+ill of the ague, under the consternation of Buonaparte, and all the French
+vagabonds emigrating over, and landing in the Firth.&nbsp; Keep us all! the
+folk, doitit bodies, put less confidence than became them in what our
+volunteer regiments were able and willing to do; yet we had a remnant among
+us of the true blood, that with loud laughter laughed the creatures to
+scorn; and I, for one, kept up my pluck, like a true Highlander.&nbsp; Does
+any living soul believe that Scotland&mdash;the land of the Tweed, and the
+Clyde, and the Tay&mdash;could be conquered, and the like of us sold, like
+Egyptian slaves, into captivity?&nbsp; Fie, fie&mdash;I despise such
+haivers.&nbsp; Are we not descended, father and son, from Robert Bruce and
+Sir William Wallace, having the bright blood of freemen in our veins, and
+the Pentland Hills, as well as our own dear homes and firesides, to fight
+for?&nbsp; The rascal that would not give cut-and-thrust for his country as
+long as he had a breath to draw, or a leg to stand on, should be tied neck
+and heels, without benefit of clergy, and thrown over Leith pier, to swim
+for his life like a mangy dog!</p>
+<p>Hard doubtless it is&mdash;and I freely confess it&mdash;to be called by
+sound of bugle, or tuck of drum, from the counter and the
+shopboard&mdash;men, that have been born and bred to peaceful callings, to
+mount the red-jacket, <!-- page 297--><a name="page297"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 297</span>soap the hair, buckle on the buff-belt, load
+with ball-cartridge, and screw bayonets; but it&rsquo;s no use
+talking.&nbsp; We were ever the free British; and before we would say to
+Frenchmen that we were their humble servants, we would either twist the
+very noses off their faces, or perish in the glorious struggle.</p>
+<p>It was aye the opinion of the Political folk, the Whigs, the Black-nebs,
+the Radicals, the Papists, and the Friends of the People, together with the
+rest of the clan-jamphrey, that it was a done battle, and that Buonaparte
+would lick us back and side.&nbsp; All this was in the heart and heat of
+the great war, when we were struggling, like drowning men, for our very
+life and existence, and when our colours&mdash;the true British
+flag&mdash;were nailed to the mast-head.&nbsp; One would have thought these
+rips were a set of prophets, they were all so busy prophesying, and never
+anything good.&nbsp; They kent (believe them) that we were to be smote hip
+and thigh; and that to oppose the vile Corsican was like men with
+strait-jackets out of Bedlam.&nbsp; They could see nothing brewing around
+them but death, and disaster, and desolation, and pillage, and national
+bankruptcy&mdash;our brave Highlanders, with their heads shot off, lying on
+the bloody field of battle, all slaughtered to a man; our sailors,
+handcuffed and shackled, musing in a French prison on the bypast days of
+Camperdown, and of Lord Rodney breaking through the line; with all their
+fleets sunk to the <!-- page 298--><a name="page298"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 298</span>bottom of the salt sea, after being raked fore
+and aft with chain-shot; and our timber, sugar, tea and treacle merchants,
+all fleeing for safety and succour down to lodgings in the Abbey Strand,
+with a yellow stocking on the ae leg and a black one on the other, like a
+wheen mountebanks.&nbsp; Little could they foresee, with their spentacles
+of prophecy, that a battle of Waterloo would ever be fought, to make the
+confounded fugies draw in their horns, and steek up their scraighing gabs
+for ever.&nbsp; Poor fushionless creatures!</p>
+<p>I do not pretend to be a politician,&mdash;having been bred to the
+tailoring line syne ever I was a callant, and not seeing the Adverteezer
+Newspapers, or the Edinburgh Evening Courant, save and except at an orra
+time,&mdash;so I shall say no more, nor pretend to be one of the
+thousand-and-one wise men, able and willing to direct his Majesty&rsquo;s
+Ministers on all matters of importance regarding Church or State.&nbsp; One
+thing, however, I trust I ken, and that is, my duty to my King as his loyal
+subject, to old Scotland as her unworthy son, and to my family as their
+prop, support, and breadwinner;&mdash;so I shall stick to all three (under
+Heaven) as long as I have a drop of blood in my precious veins.&nbsp; But
+the truth is&mdash;and I will let it out and shame the
+de&rsquo;il&mdash;that I could not help making these general observations
+(as Maister Wiggie calls the spiritualeezing of his discourses), as what I
+have to relate might well make my principles suspected, <!-- page 299--><a
+name="page299"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 299</span>were they not known
+to all the world to be as firm as the foundations of the Bass Rock.&nbsp;
+Ye shall nevertheless judge for yourselves.</p>
+<p>It was sometime in the blasty month of March, the weather being rawish
+and rainy, with sharp frosty nights that left all the window-soles
+whitewashed over with frost rind in the mornings, that as I was going out
+in the dark, before lying down in my bed, to give a look into the
+hen-house, and lock the coal-cellar, so that I might hang the bit key on
+the nail behind our room window-shutter, I happened to give a keek in, and,
+lo and behold! the awful apparition of a man with a yellow jacket, lying
+sound asleep on a great lump of parrot-coal in a corner!</p>
+<p>In the first hurry of my terror and surprise, at seeing a man with a
+yellow jacket and a green foraging-cap in such a situation, I was like to
+drop the good twopenny candle, and faint clean away; but, coming to myself
+in a jiffie, I determined, in case it might be a highway robber, to thraw
+about the key, and, running up for the firelock, shoot him through the head
+instantly, if found necessary.&nbsp; In turning round the key, the lock,
+being in want of a feather of oil, made a noise, and wakened the poor
+wretch, who, jumping to the soles of his feet in despair, cried out in a
+voice that was like to break my heart, though I could not make out one word
+of his paraphernally.&nbsp; It minded me, by all the world, of a wheen cats
+fuffing and fighting <!-- page 300--><a name="page300"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 300</span>through ither, and whiles something that
+sounded like &ldquo;Sugar, sugar, measure the cord,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;dabble dabble.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was worse than the most outrageous
+Gaelic ever spoken in the height of passion by a Hieland shearer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; thinks I, &ldquo;friend, ye cannot be a Christian
+from your lingo, that&rsquo;s one thing poz; and I would wager tippence
+you&rsquo;re a Frenchy.&nbsp; Who kens, keep us all, but ye may be
+Buonaparte himself in disguise, come over in a flat-bottomed boat to spy
+the nakedness of the land.&nbsp; So ye may just rest content, and keep your
+quarters good till the morn&rsquo;s morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was a wonderful business, and enough to happen to a man in the course
+of his lifetime, to find Mounseer from Paris in his coal-neuk, and have the
+enemy of his country snug under lock and key; so, while he kept rampauging,
+fuffing, stamping, and <i>diabbling</i> away, I went in and brought out
+Benjie, with a blanket rowed round him, and my journeyman, Tommy
+Staytape&mdash;who, being an orphan, I made a kind of parlour-boarder of,
+he sleeping on a shake-down beyond the kitchen-fire&mdash;to hold a
+consultation, and be witness of the transaction.</p>
+<p>I got my musket, and Tommy Staytape armed himself with the goose&mdash;a
+deadly weapon, whoever may get a clour with it&mdash;and Benjie took the
+poker in one hand, and the tongs in the other; and out we all marched
+briskly, to make the Frenchman, that <!-- page 301--><a
+name="page301"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 301</span>was locked up from
+the light of day in the coal-house, surrender.&nbsp; After hearkening at
+the door for a while, and finding all quiet, we gave a knock to rouse him
+up, and see if we could bring any thing out of him by speering
+cross-questions.&nbsp; Tommy and Benjie trembled from top to toe, like
+aspen leaves, but fient a word could we make common sense of at all.&nbsp;
+I wonder who educates these foreign creatures? it was in vain to follow
+him, for he just gab-gabbled away, like one of the stone masons at the
+Tower of Babel.&nbsp; At first I was completely bamboozled, and almost dung
+stupid, though I kent one word of French which I wanted to put to him, so I
+cried through, &ldquo;Canna you speak Scotcha, Mounseer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had not the politeness to stop and make answer, but just went on with
+his string of haivers, without either rhyme or reason, which we could make
+neither top, tail, nor main of.</p>
+<p>It was a sore trial to us all, putting us to our wit&rsquo;s end, and
+how to come on was past all visible comprehension; when Tommy Staytape,
+giving his elbow a rub, said, &ldquo;Od, maister, I wager something that
+he&rsquo;s broken loose frae Penicuik.&nbsp; We have him like a rotten in a
+fa&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On Penicuik being mentioned, we heard the foreign creature in the
+coal-house groaning out, &ldquo;och,&rdquo; and &ldquo;ochone,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;parbleu,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Mysie Rabble,&rdquo;&mdash;that I fancy
+was his sweetheart at home, some bit French <!-- page 302--><a
+name="page302"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 302</span>quean, that wondered
+he was never like to come from the wars and marry her.&nbsp; I thought on
+this, for his voice was mournful, though I could not understand the words;
+and kenning he was a stranger in a far land, my bowels yearned within me
+with compassion towards him.</p>
+<p>I would have given half-a-crown at that blessed moment to have been able
+to wash my hands free of him; but I swithered, and was like the cuddie
+between the two bundles of hay.&nbsp; At long and last a thought struck me,
+which was to give the deluded simple creature a chance of escape; reckoning
+that, if he found his way home, he would see the shame and folly of
+fighting against us any more; and, marrying Mysie Rabble, live a contented
+and peaceful life, under his own fig and bay tree.&nbsp; So wishing him a
+sound sleep, I cried through the door, &ldquo;Mounseer, gooda
+nighta&rdquo;; decoying away Benjie and Tommy Staytape into the
+house.&nbsp; Bidding them depart to their beds, I said to them after
+shutting the door, &ldquo;Now, callants, we have the precious life of a
+fellow-creature in our hand, and to account for.&nbsp; Though he has a
+yellow jacket on, and speaks nonsense, yet, nevertheless, he is of the same
+flesh and blood as ourselves.&nbsp; Maybe we may be all obliged to wear
+green foraging-caps before we die yet!&nbsp; Mention what we have seen or
+heard to no living soul; for maybe, if he were to escape, we would be all
+taken up on suspicion <!-- page 303--><a name="page303"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 303</span>of being spies, and hanged on a gallows as
+high as Haman.&rdquo;&mdash;After giving them this wholesome advice, I
+dispatched them to their beds like lamplighters, binding them to never fash
+their thumbs, but sleep like tops, as I would keep a sharp look-out till
+morning.</p>
+<p>As soon, howsoever, as I heard them sleeping, and playing on the pipes
+through their noses, I cried first &ldquo;Tommy,&rdquo; and syne
+&ldquo;Benjie,&rdquo; to be sure; and, glad to receive no answer from
+either, I went to the aumrie and took out a mutton-bone, gey sair pyked,
+but fleshy enough at the mouse end; and, putting a penny row beside it,
+crap out to the coal-house on my tiptaes.&nbsp; All was quiet as
+pussie,&mdash;so I shot them through the hole at the corner made for
+letting the gaislings in by; and giving a tirl, cried softly through,
+&ldquo;Halloa, Mounseer, there&rsquo;s your suppera fora youa; for I dara
+saya you are yauppa.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The poor chiel commenced again to grunt and grane, and groan and yelp,
+and cry ochone;&mdash;and make such woful lamentations, that heart of man
+could not stand it; and I found the warm tears prap-prapping to my
+een.&nbsp; Before being put to this trial of my strength, I thought that,
+if ever it was my fortune to foregather with a Frenchman, either him or me
+should do or die; but, i&rsquo;fegs, one should not crack so crouse before
+they are put to the test; and, though I had taken a prisoner without
+fighting at all&mdash;though he had come into the coal-hole of the
+Philistines of his own accord <!-- page 304--><a name="page304"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 304</span>as it were, and was as safe as the spy in the
+house of Rahab at Jericho&mdash;and though we had him like a mouse beneath
+a firlet, snug under custody of lock and key, yet I considered within
+myself, with a pitiful consideration, that, although he could not speak
+well, he might yet feel deeply; that he might have a father and mother, and
+sisters and brothers, in his ain country, weeping and wearying for his
+return; and that his true love Mysie Rabble might pine away like a snapped
+flower, and die of a broken heart.</p>
+<p>Being a volunteer, and so one of his Majesty&rsquo;s confidential
+servants, I swithered tremendously between my duty as a man and a soldier;
+but, do what you like, nature will aye be uppermost.&nbsp; The scale
+weighed down to the side of pity.&nbsp; I hearkened to the scripture that
+promises a blessing to the merciful in heart; and determined, come of it
+what would, to let the Frenchy take his chance of falling into other
+hands.</p>
+<p>Having given him a due allowance by looking at my watch, and thinking he
+would have had enough of time to have taken his will of the mutton-bone in
+the way of pyking, I went to the press and brought out a bottle of swipes,
+which I also shoved through the hole; although, for lack of a tanker, there
+being none at hand, he would be obliged to lift it to his head, and do his
+best.&nbsp; To show the creature did not want sense, he shoved, when he was
+done, the empty plate and the toom bottle through beneath the door,
+mumbling <!-- page 305--><a name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+305</span>some trash or other which no living creature could comprehend,
+but which I dare say, from the way it was said, was the telling me how much
+he was obliged for his supper and poor lodging.&nbsp; From my kindness
+towards him, he grew more composed; but as he went back to the corner to
+lie down, I heard him give two-three heavy sighs.&mdash;I could not
+thole&rsquo;t, mortal foe though the man was of mine; so I gave the key a
+canny thraw round in the lock, as it were by chance; and, wishing him a
+good-night, went to my bed beside Nanse.</p>
+<p>At the dawn of day, by cock-craw, Benjie and Tommy Staytape, keen of the
+ploy, were up and astir, as anxious as if their life depended on it, to see
+that all was safe and snug, and that the prisoner had not shot the
+lock.&nbsp; They agreed to march sentry over him half an hour the piece,
+time about, the one stretching himself out on a stool beside the kitchen
+fire, by way of a bench in the guard-house, while the other went to and fro
+like the ticker of a clock.&nbsp; I dare say they saw themselves marching
+him after breakfast time, with his yellow jacket, through a mob of weans
+with glowering een and gaping mouths, up to the Tolbooth.</p>
+<p>The back window being up a jink, I heard the two confabbing.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll draw cuts,&rdquo; said Benjie, &ldquo;which is to walk
+sentry first; see, here&rsquo;s two straws, the longest gets the
+choice.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve won,&rdquo; cried Tommy; &ldquo;so
+gang you in a while, and if I need ye, or grow frightened, <!-- page
+306--><a name="page306"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 306</span>I&rsquo;ll
+beat leather-ty-patch wi&rsquo; my buckles on the back-door.&nbsp; But we
+had better see first what he is about, for he may be howking a hole through
+aneath the foundations; thae fiefs can work like
+moudiwarts.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll slip forret,&rdquo; said Benjie,
+&ldquo;and gie a peep.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Keep to a side,&rdquo; cried
+Tommy Staytape, &ldquo;for, dog on it, Moosey&rsquo;ll maybe hae a pistol;
+and, if his birse be up, he would think nae mair o&rsquo; shooting ye as
+dead as a red herring, than I would do of taking my breakfast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll rin past, and gie a knock at the door wi&rsquo; the
+poker to rouse him up?&rdquo; asked Benjie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come away then,&rdquo; answered Tommy, &ldquo;and ye&rsquo;ll
+hear him gie a yowl, and commence gabbling like a goose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As all this was going on, I rose and took a vizzy between the chinks of
+the window-shutters; so, just as I got my neb to the hole, I saw Benjie, as
+he flew past, give the door a drive.&nbsp; His consternation, on finding it
+flee half open, may be easier imagined than described; especially, as on
+the door dunting to again, it being soople in the hinges, they both plainly
+heard a fistling within.&nbsp; Neither of them ever got such a fleg since
+they were born; for expecting the Frenchman to bounce out like a roaring
+lion, they hurried like mad into the house, couping the creels over one
+another, Tommy spraining his thumb against the back-door, and
+Benjie&rsquo;s foot going into Tommy&rsquo;s coat-pocket, which it carried
+away with it, like a cloth-sandal.</p>
+<p><!-- page 307--><a name="page307"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+307</span>At the noise of this stramash, I took opportunity to come fleeing
+down the stair, with the gun in my hand; in the first place, to show them I
+was not frightened to handle fire-arms; and, in the second, making pretence
+that I thought it was Mounseer with his green foraging-cap making an
+attempt at housebreaking.&nbsp; Benjie was in a terrible pickle; and,
+though his nose was blooding with the drive he had come against
+Tommy&rsquo;s teeth, he took hold of my arm like grim death, crying,
+&ldquo;Take tent, faither, take tent; the door is open, and the Penicuiker
+hiding himself behind it.&nbsp; He&rsquo;ll brain some of us with a lump of
+coal&mdash;and will he!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I jealoused at once that this was nonsense; judging that, by all means
+of rationality, the creature would be off and away like lightning to the
+sea-shore, and over to France in some honest man&rsquo;s fishing boat, down
+by at Fisherrow; but, to throw stoure in the een of the two callants, I
+loaded with a wheen draps in their presence; and, warily priming the pan,
+went forward with the piece at full-cock.</p>
+<p>Tommy and Benjie came behind me, while, pushing the door wide open with
+the muzzle, as I held my finger at the tricker, I cried, &ldquo;Stand or be
+shot&rdquo;; when young Cursecowl&rsquo;s big ugly mastiff-dog, with the
+bare mutton bone in its teeth, bolted through between my legs like a fury,
+and with such a force as to heel me over on the braid of my back, while I
+went <!-- page 308--><a name="page308"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+308</span>a dunt on the causey that made the gun go off, and riddled
+Nanse&rsquo;s best washing-tub, in a manner that laid it on the
+superannuated list as to the matter of holding in water.&nbsp; The goose
+that was sitting on her eggs, among clean straw, in the inside of it, was
+also rendered a lameter for life.</p>
+<p>What became of the French vagrant was never seen or heard tell of, from
+that day to this.&nbsp; Maybe he was catched, and, tied neck and heels,
+hurried back to Penicuik as fast as he left it; or maybe&mdash;as one of
+the Fisherrow oyster-boats was amissing next morning&mdash;he succeeded in
+giving our brave fleets the slip, and rowing night and day against wind and
+tide, got home in a safe skin: but this is all matter of
+surmise&mdash;nobody kens.</p>
+<p>On making search in the coal-house at our leisure afterwards, we found a
+boxful of things with black dots on them, some with one, some with two, and
+four, and six, and so on, for playing at an outlandish game they call the
+dominoes.&nbsp; It was the handiwork of the poor French creature, that had
+no other Christian employment but making these and suchlike, out of
+sheep-shanks and marrow bones.&nbsp; I never liked gambling all my life, it
+being contrary to the Ten Commandments; and mind of putting on the back of
+the fire the old pack of cards, with the Jack of Trumps among them, that
+the deboshed journeymen tailors, in the shop with me in the Grassmarket,
+used to play birkie <!-- page 309--><a name="page309"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 309</span>with when the maister&rsquo;s back was
+turned.&nbsp; This is the first time I have acknowledged the transaction to
+a living soul; had they found me out at the time, my life would not have
+been worth a pinch of snuff.&nbsp; But as to the dominoes, considering that
+the Frenchy must have left them as a token of gratitude, and as the only
+payment in his power for a bit comfortable supper, it behoved me&mdash;for
+so I thought&mdash;not to turn the wrong side of my face altogether on his
+present, as that would be unmannerly towards a poor stranger.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, and notwithstanding all these reasons, the dominoes, after
+everything that can be said of good anent them, were a black sight, and for
+months and months produced a scene of riot and idleness after working
+hours, that went far to render our housie that was before a picture of
+decorum and decency a tabernacle of confusion and a hell upon earth.&nbsp;
+Whenever time for stopping work came about, down we regularly all sat,
+night after night, the wife, Benjie, and Tommy Staytape, and myself,
+playing for a ha&rsquo;penny the game, and growing as anxious, fierce, and
+keen about it, as if we had been earning the bread of life.&nbsp; After two
+or three months&rsquo; trial, I saw that it would never do, for all
+subordination was fast coming to an end in our bit house, and, for lack of
+looking after, a great number of small accounts for clouting elbows,
+piecing waistcoats, and mending leggins, remained unpaid; a great number of
+wauf customers <!-- page 310--><a name="page310"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 310</span>crowding about us, by way of giving us their
+change, but with no intention of ever paying a single fraction.&nbsp; The
+wife, that used to keep everything bein and snug, behaving herself like the
+sober mother of a family, began to funk on being taken through hands, and
+grew obstrapulous with her tongue.&nbsp; Instead of following my
+directions&mdash;who was his born maister in the cutting and shaping
+line&mdash;Tommy Staytape pretended to set up a judgment of his own, and
+disfigured some ploughmen&rsquo;s jackets in a manner most hideous to
+behold; while, to crown all, even Absalom, the very callant Benjie, my only
+bairn, had the impudence to contradict me more than once, and began to
+think himself as clever as his father.&nbsp; Save us all! it was a terrible
+business, but I determined, come what would, to give it the finishing
+stitch.</p>
+<p>Every night being worse than another, I did not wait long for an
+opportunity of letting the whole of them ken my mind, and that, whenever I
+chose, I could make them wheel to the right about.&nbsp; So it chanced, as
+we were playing, that I was in prime luck, first rooking the one and syne
+the other, and I saw them twisting and screwing their mouths about as if
+they were chewing bitter aloes.&nbsp; Finding that they were on the point
+of being beaten roop and stoop, they all three rose up from the chairs,
+crying with one voice, that I was a cheat.&mdash;An elder of Maister
+Wiggie&rsquo;s kirk to be called a cheat!&nbsp; Most awful!!!&nbsp; Flesh
+and blood could <!-- page 311--><a name="page311"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 311</span>not stand it, more especially when I thought
+on who had dared to presume to call me such; so, in a whirlwind of fury, I
+swept up two nievefuls of dominoes off the table, and made them flee into
+the bleezing fire; where, after fizzing and cracking like a wheen squeebs,
+the whole tot, except about half-a-dozen which fell into the porritch-pot,
+which was on boiling at the time, were reduced to a heap of grey
+aizles.&nbsp; I soon showed them who was the top of the tree, and what they
+were likely to make of undutiful rebellion.</p>
+<p>So much for a Mounseer&rsquo;s legacy; being in a kind of doubt whether,
+according to the Riot Act and the Articles of War, I had a clear conscience
+in letting him away, I could not expect that any favour granted at his
+hands was likely to prosper.&nbsp; In fighting, it is well kent to
+themselves and all the world, that they have no earthly chance with us; so
+they are reduced to the necessity of doing what they can, by coming to our
+firesides in sheep&rsquo;s clothing, and throwing ram-pushion among the
+family broth.&nbsp; They had better take care that they do not get their
+fingers scadded.</p>
+<p>Having given the dominoes their due, and washed my hands free of
+gambling I trust for evermore, I turned myself to a better business, which
+was the going, leaf by leaf, back through our bit day-book, where I found a
+tremendous sowd of wee outstanding debts.&nbsp; I daresay, not to tell a
+lee, there were fifty of them, from a shilling to eighteenpence, and so on;
+but small <!-- page 312--><a name="page312"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+312</span>and small, reckoned up by simple addition, amount to a round sum;
+while, to add to the misery of the matter, I found we were entangling
+ourselves to work to a wheen ugly customers, skemps that had not
+wherewithal to pay lawful debts, and downright rascal-raggamuffins, and
+ne&rsquo;er-do-weels.&nbsp; According to the articles of indenture drawn up
+between me and Tommy Staytape, by Rory Sneckdrawer the penny-writer, when
+he was bound a prentice to me for seven years, I had engaged myself to
+bring him up to be a man of business.&nbsp; Though now a journeyman, I
+reckoned the obligation still binding; so, tying up two dockets of accounts
+with a piece of twine, I gave one parcel to Tommy, and the other to Benjie,
+telling them by way of encouragement, that I would give them a penny the
+pound for what silver they could bring me in by hook or crook.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p312b.jpg">
+<img alt="An old Dalkeith body" src="images/p312s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>After three days&rsquo; toil and trouble, wherein they mostly wore their
+shoon off their feet, going first up one close and syne down another, up
+trap-stairs to garrets and ben long trances that led into dirty
+holes&mdash;what think ye did they collect?&nbsp; Not one bodle&mdash;not
+one coin of copper!&nbsp; This one was out of work;&mdash;and that one had
+his house-rent to pay;&mdash;and a third one had an income in his
+nose;&mdash;and a fourth was bedridden with rheumatics;&mdash;and a fifth
+one&rsquo;s mother&rsquo;s auntie&rsquo;s cousin was dead;&mdash;and a
+sixth one&rsquo;s good-brother&rsquo;s nevoy was going to be married come
+Martymas;&mdash;<!-- page 313--><a name="page313"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 313</span>and a seventh one was away to the back of
+beyond to see his granny in the Hielands;&mdash;and so on.&nbsp; It was a
+terrible business, but what wool can ye get by clipping swine?</p>
+<p>The only rational answers I got were two; one of them, Geggie Trotter, a
+natural simpleton, told Tommy Staytape, &ldquo;that, for part-payment, he
+would give me a prime leg of mutton, as he had killed his sow last
+week.&rdquo;&mdash;And what, said I to Benjie, did Jacob Truff the
+gravedigger tell ye by way of news?&nbsp; &ldquo;He just bad me tell ye,
+faither, that hoo could ye expect he cou&rsquo;d gie ye onything till the
+times grew better; as he hadna buried a living soul in the kirkyard for
+mair nor a fortnight.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 314--><a name="page314"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+314</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX&mdash;ANENT BENJIE IN HIS THIRTEENTH YEAR</h2>
+<p>It is a most wonderful thing to the eye of a philosopher, to make
+observation how youth gets up, notwithstanding all the dunts and tumbles of
+infancy&mdash;to say nothing of the spaining-brash and the teeth-cutting;
+and to behold the visible changes that the course of a few years
+produces.&nbsp; Keep us all! it seemed but yesterday to me, when Benjie, a
+wee bit smout of a wean, with long linty locks and docked petticoats,
+toddled but and ben, with a coral gumstick tied round his waist with a bit
+knitten; and now, after he had been at Dominie Threshem&rsquo;s for four
+years, he had learned to read Barrie&rsquo;s Collection almost as well as
+the master could do for his lugs; and was up to all manner of accounts,
+from simple addition and the multiplication-table, even to vulgar
+fractions, and all the lave of them.</p>
+<p>At the yearly examination of the school-room by the Presbytery and
+Maister Wiggie, he aye sat at the head of the form, and never failed
+getting a clap on the head and a wheen carvies.&nbsp; They that are fathers
+will not wonder that this made me as proud as a peacock; but when they
+asked his name, and found whose son he was, then the matter seemed to cease
+being a business of wonder, as nobody could suppose that an only bairn,
+born to me in lawful wedlock, could be a dult.&nbsp; Folk&rsquo;s
+cleverness&mdash;at least I should think so&mdash;lies in their pows; and,
+that allowed, <!-- page 315--><a name="page315"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 315</span>Benjie&rsquo;s was a gey droll one, being of
+the most remarkable sort of a shape ye ever saw; but, what is more to the
+purpose both here and hereafter, he was a real good-hearted callant, though
+as gleg as a hawk and as sharp as a needle.&nbsp; Everybody that had the
+smallest gumption prophesied that he would be a real clever one; nor could
+we grudge that we took pains in his rearing&mdash;he having been like a
+sucking-turkey, or a hot-house plant from far away, delicate in the
+constitution&mdash;when we saw that the debt was likely to be paid with
+bank-interest, and that, by his uncommon cleverality, the callant was to be
+a credit to our family.</p>
+<p>Many and long were the debates between his fond mother and me, what
+trade we would breed him up to&mdash;for the matter now became serious,
+Benjie being in his thirteenth year; and, though a wee bowed in the near
+leg, from a suppleness about his knee-joint, nevertheless as active as a
+hatter, and fit for any calling whatsoever under the sun.&nbsp; One thing I
+had determined in my own mind, and that was, that he should never with my
+will go abroad.&nbsp; The gentry are no doubt philosophers enough to bring
+up their bairns like sheep to the slaughter, and dispatch them as cadies to
+Bengal and the Cape of Good Hope, as soon as they are grown up; when, lo
+and behold! the first news they hear of them is in a letter, sealed with
+black wax, telling how they died of the liver <!-- page 316--><a
+name="page316"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 316</span>complaint, and were
+buried by six blacks two hours after.</p>
+<p>That was one thing settled and sealed, so no more need be said about it;
+yet, notwithstanding of Nanse&rsquo;s being satisfied that the spaewife was
+a deceitful gipsy, perfectly untrustworthy, she would aye have a finger in
+the pie, and try to persuade me in a coaxing way.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+sure,&rdquo; she would say, &ldquo;ane with half an e&rsquo;e may see that
+our son Benjie has just the physog of an admiral.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a great
+shame contradicting nature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Po, po,&rdquo; answered I, &ldquo;woman, ye dinna ken what
+ye&rsquo;re saying.&nbsp; Do ye imagine that, if he were made a
+sea-admiral, we could ever live to have any comfort in the son of our
+bosom?&nbsp; Would he not, think ye, be obliged with his ship to sail the
+salt seas, through foul weather and fair; and, when he met the French, to
+fight, hack, and hew them down, lith and limb, with grape-shot and cutlass;
+till some unfortunate day or other, after having lost a leg and an arm in
+the service, he is felled as dead as a door-nail, with a cut and thrust
+over the crown, by some furious rascal that saw he was off his guard,
+glowring with his blind e&rsquo;e another way?&mdash;Ye speak havers,
+Nanse; what are all the honours of this world worth?&nbsp; No worth this
+pinch of snuff I have between my finger and thumb, no worth a bodle, if we
+never saw our Benjie again, but he was aye ranging and rampauging far
+abroad, shedding human blood; and when we could only aye dream about him
+<!-- page 317--><a name="page317"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 317</span>in
+our sleep, as one that was wandering night and day blindfold, down the
+long, dark, lampless avenue of destruction, and destined never more to
+visit Dalkeith again, except with a wooden stump and a brass virl, or to
+have his head blown off his shoulders, mast high, like ingan peelings, with
+some exploding earthquake of combustible gunpowder.&mdash;Call in the
+laddie, I say, and see what he would like to be himsell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nanse ran but the house, and straightway brought Benjie, who was playing
+at the bools, ben by the lug and horn.&nbsp; I had got a glass, so my
+spirit was up.&nbsp; &ldquo;Stand there,&rdquo; I said; &ldquo;Benjie, look
+me in the face, and tell me what trade ye would like to be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trade?&rdquo; answered Benjie; &ldquo;I would like to be a
+gentleman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dog on it, it was more than I could thole, and I saw that his mother had
+spoiled him; so, though I aye liked to give him wholesome reproof rather
+than lift my fist, I broke through this rule in a couple of hurries, and
+gave him such a yerk in the cheek with the loof of my hand, as made, I am
+sure, his lugs ring, and sent him dozing to the door like a peerie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye see that,&rdquo; said I, as the laddie went ben the house
+whingeing; &ldquo;ye see what a kettle of fish ye have made
+o&rsquo;t?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel, weel,&rdquo; answered Nanse, a wee startled by my strong,
+decisive way of managing, &ldquo;ye ken best, and, I fancy, maun tak&rsquo;
+the matter your ain way.&nbsp; But <!-- page 318--><a
+name="page318"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 318</span>ye can have no
+earthly objection to making him a lawyer&rsquo;s advocatt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wad see him hanged first,&rdquo; answered I.&nbsp; &ldquo;What!
+do you imagine I would set a son of mine to be a sherry-offisher, ganging
+about rampauging through the country, taking up fiefs and robbers, and
+suspicious characters, with wauf looks and waur claes; exposed to all
+manner of evil communication from bad company, in the way of business; and
+rouping out puir creatures that cannot find wherewithal to pay their lawful
+debts, at the Cross, by warrant of the Sherry, with an auld chair in ae
+hand and a eevery hammer in the ither?&nbsp; Siccan a sight wad be the
+death o&rsquo; me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What think ye then of the preaching line?&rdquo; asked Nanse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The preaching line!&rdquo; quo&rsquo; I&mdash;&ldquo;No, no,
+that&rsquo;ll never do.&nbsp; Not that I want respect for ministers, who
+are the servants of the Most High; but the truth is, that unless ye have
+great friends and patronage of the like of the Duke down by, or Marquis of
+Lothian up by, or suchlike, ye may preach yoursell as hoarse as a corbie,
+from June to January, before onybody will say, &lsquo;Hae, puir man,
+there&rsquo;s a kirk.&rsquo;&nbsp; And if no kirk casts up&mdash;which is
+more nor likely&mdash;what can a young probationer turn his hand to?&nbsp;
+He had learned no trade, so he can neither work nor want.&nbsp; He daurna
+dig nor delve, even, though he were able, or he would be hauled by the cuff
+of the neck before his betters in the General Assembly, <!-- page 319--><a
+name="page319"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 319</span>for having the
+impudence to go for to be so bold as dishonour the cloth; and though he may
+get his bit orra half-a-guinea whiles, for holding forth in some bit
+country kirk, to a wheen shepherds and their dogs, when the minister
+himself, staring with the fat of good living and little work, is lying ill
+of a bile fever, or has the gout in his muckle toe, yet he has aye the
+miseries of uncertainty to encounter; his coat grows bare in the cuffs,
+greasy in the neck, and brown between the shouthers; his jawbones get long
+and lank, his een sunk, and his head grey wi&rsquo; vexation, and what the
+wise Solomon calls &lsquo;hope deferred&rsquo;; so at long and last,
+friendless and penniless, he takes the incurable complaint of a broken
+heart, and is buried out of the gate, in some bit strange corner of the
+kirkyard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop, stop, gudeman,&rdquo; cried Nanse, half greeting,
+&ldquo;that&rsquo;s an awfu&rsquo; business; but I daresay it&rsquo;s owre
+true.&nbsp; But mightna we breed him a doctor?&nbsp; It seems they have
+unco profits; and, as he&rsquo;s sae clever, he might come to be a
+graduit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor!&rdquo; answered I&mdash;&ldquo;Keh, keh, let that flee
+stick i&rsquo; the wa&rsquo;; it&rsquo;s a&rsquo; ye ken about it.&nbsp; If
+ye was only aware of what doctors had to do and see, between dwining weans
+and crying wives, ye would have thought twice before ye let that out.&nbsp;
+How de ye think our callant has a heart within him to look at folk blooding
+like sheep, or to sew up cutted throats with a silver needle and silk
+thread, as I would stitch <!-- page 320--><a name="page320"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 320</span>a pair of trowsers; or to trepan out pieces of
+coloured skulls, filling up the hole with an iron plate; and pull teeth,
+maybe the only ones left, out of auld women&rsquo;s heads, and so on, to
+say nothing of rampauging with dark lanterns and double-tweel dreadnoughts,
+about gousty kirkyards, among humlock and long nettles, the haill night
+over, like spunkie&mdash;shoving the dead corpses, winding-sheets and all,
+into corn-sacks, and boiling their bones, after they have dissected all the
+red flesh off them, into a big caudron, to get out the marrow to make drogs
+of?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh, stop, stop, Mansie!&rdquo; cried Nanse holding up her
+hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Na,&rdquo; continued I, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s a true
+bill&mdash;it&rsquo;s as true as ye are sitting there.&nbsp; And do ye
+think that any earthly compensation, either gowpins of gowd by way of fees,
+or yellow chariots to ride in, with a black servant sticking up behind,
+like a sign over a tobacconist&rsquo;s door, can ever make up for the loss
+of a man&rsquo;s having all his feelings seared to iron, and his soul made
+into whinstone, yea, into the nether-millstone, by being art and part in
+sic dark and devilish abominations?&nbsp; Go away wi&rsquo; siccan
+downright nonsense.&nbsp; Hearken, to my words, Nanse, my dear.&nbsp; The
+happiest man is he that can live quietly and soberly on the earnings of his
+industry, pays his day and way, works not only to win the bread of life for
+his wife and weans, but because he kens that idle-set is sinful; keeps a
+<!-- page 321--><a name="page321"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+321</span>pure heart towards God and man; and, caring not for the fashion
+of this world, departs from it in the hope of going, through the merits of
+his Redeemer, to a better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye are right, after a&rsquo;,&rdquo; said Nanse, giving me a pat
+on the shouther; and finding who was her master as well as
+spouse&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll wad it become me to gang for to gie advice
+to my betters.&nbsp; Tak&rsquo; your will of the business, gudeman; and if
+ye dinna mak&rsquo; him an admiral, just mak&rsquo; him what ye
+like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now is the time, thought I to myself, to carry out my point, finding the
+drappikie I had taken with Donald M&rsquo;Naughton, in settling his account
+for the green jacket, still working in my noddle, and giving me a power of
+words equal to Mr Blouster, the Cameronian preacher,&mdash;now is the time,
+for I still saw the unleavened pride of womankind wambling within her like
+a serpent that has got a knock on the pow, and been cast down but not
+destroyed; so taking a hearty snuff out of my box, and drawing it up first
+one nostril, then another, syne dighting my finger and thumb on my
+breek-knees, &ldquo;What think ye,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;of a sweep?&nbsp;
+Were it not for getting their faces blacked like savages, a sweep is not
+such a bad trade after a&rsquo;; though, to be sure, going down lums six
+stories high, head-foremost, and landing upon the soles of their feet upon
+the hearth-stone, like a kittlin, is no just so pleasant.&rdquo;&nbsp; Ye
+observe, it was only to <!-- page 322--><a name="page322"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 322</span>throw cold wayter on the unthrifty flame of a
+mother&rsquo;s pride that I said this, and to pull down uppishness from its
+heathenish temple in the heart, head-foremost.&nbsp; So I looked to her, to
+hear how she would come on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haivers, haivers,&rdquo; said Nanse, birsing up like a cat before
+a cooley.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sweep, say ye?&nbsp; I would sooner send him up
+wi&rsquo; Lunardi to the man of the moon; or see him banished, shackled
+neck and heels, to Botany Bay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A weel, a weel,&rdquo; answered I, &ldquo;what notion have ye of
+the packman line?&nbsp; We could fill his box with needles, and prins, and
+tape, and hanks of worsted, and penny thimbles, at a small expense; and,
+putting a stick in his hand, send him abroad into the wide world to push
+his fortune.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The wife looked dumfoundered.&nbsp; Howsoever&mdash;&ldquo;Or breed him
+a rowley-powley man,&rdquo; continued I, &ldquo;to trail about the country
+frequenting fairs; and dozing thro&rsquo; the streets selling penny cakes
+to weans, out of a basket slung round the neck with a leather strap; and
+parliaments, and quality, brown and white, and snaps well peppered, and
+gingerbread nits, and so on.&nbsp; The trade is no a bad ane, if creatures
+would only learn to be careful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mansie Wauch, Mansie Wauch, hae ye gane out o&rsquo; yere
+wuts?&rdquo; cried Nanse&mdash;&ldquo;are ye really serious?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I saw what I was about, so went on without pretending <!-- page 323--><a
+name="page323"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 323</span>to mind her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Or what say ye to a penny-pie-man?&nbsp; I&rsquo;fegs, it&rsquo;s a
+cozy birth, and ane that gars the cappers birl down.&nbsp; What&rsquo;s the
+expense of a bit daigh, half an ounce weight, pirled round wi&rsquo; the
+knuckles into a case, and filled half full o&rsquo; salt and water,
+wi&rsquo; twa or three nips o&rsquo; braxy floating about in&rsquo;t?&nbsp;
+Just naething ava;&mdash;and consider on a winter night, when iceshackles
+are hinging from the tiles, and stomachs relish what is warm and tasty,
+what a sale they can get, if they go about jingling their little bell, and
+keep the genuine article.&nbsp; Then ye ken in the afternoon, he can show
+that he has two strings to his bow; and have a wheen cookies, either new
+baked for ladies&rsquo; teaparties, or the yesterday&rsquo;s auld
+shopkeepers&rsquo; het up i&rsquo; the oven again&mdash;which is all to ae
+purpose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are ye really in your seven natural senses&mdash;or can I believe
+my ain een?&nbsp; I could almost believe some warlock had thrown glamour
+into them,&rdquo; said Nanse staring me broad in the face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take a good look, gudewife, for seeing&rsquo;s believing,&rdquo;
+quo&rsquo; I; and then continued, without drawing breath or bridle, at full
+birr&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or if the baking line does not please ye, what say ye to binding
+him regularly to a man-cook?&nbsp; There he&rsquo;ll see life in all its
+variorums.&nbsp; Losh keep us a&rsquo;, what an insight into the secrets of
+roasting, brandering, frying, boiling, baking, and brewing&mdash;nicking of
+<!-- page 324--><a name="page324"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+324</span>geese&rsquo;s craigs&mdash;hacking the necks of dead chickens,
+and cutting out the tongues of leeving turkeys!&nbsp; Then what a steaming
+o&rsquo; fat soup in the nostrils; and siccan a collection o&rsquo; fine
+smells, as would persuade a man that he could fill his stomach through his
+nose!&nbsp; No weather can reach such cattle: it may be a storm of snow
+twenty feet deep, or an even-down pour of rain, washing the very cats off
+the house tops; when a weaver is shivering at his loom, with not a drop of
+blood at his finger nails, and a tailor like myself, so numb with cauld,
+that instead of driving the needle through the claith, he brogs it through
+his ain thumb&mdash;then, fient a hair care they; but, standing beside a
+ranting, roaring, parrot-coal fire, in a white apron and gingham jacket,
+they pour sauce out of ae pan into another, to suit the taste of my Lord
+this, and my Lady that, turning, by their legerdemain, fish into fowl, and
+fowl into flesh; till, in the long run, man, woman, and wean, a&rsquo; chew
+and champ away, without kenning more what they are eating than ye ken the
+day ye&rsquo;ll dee, or whether the Witch of Endor wore a demity falderal,
+or a manco petticoat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weel,&rdquo; cried Nanse, half rising to go ben the house,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll sit nae langer to hear ye gabbling nonsense like a
+magpie.&nbsp; Mak&rsquo; Benjie what ye like; but ye&rsquo;ll mak&rsquo; me
+greet the een out o&rsquo; my head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooly and fairly,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;Nanse, sit still like a
+woman, and hear me out;&rdquo; so, giving her a pat on the <!-- page
+325--><a name="page325"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 325</span>shouther,
+she sat her ways down, and I resumed my discourse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ve heard, gudewife, from Benjie&rsquo;s own mouth, that
+he has made up his mind to follow out the trade of a gentleman;&mdash;who
+has put such outrageous notions in his head I&rsquo;m sure I&rsquo;ll not
+pretend to guess at.&nbsp; Having never myself been above daily bread, and
+constant work&mdash;when I could get it&mdash;I dare not presume to speak
+from experience: but this I can say, from having some acquaintances in the
+line, that, of all easy lives, commend me to that of a gentleman&rsquo;s
+gentleman.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s true he&rsquo;s caa&rsquo;d a flunky, which
+does not sound quite the thing; but what of that? what&rsquo;s in a name?
+pugh! it does not signify a bawbee&mdash;no, nor that pinch of snuff: for,
+if we descend to particulars, we&rsquo;re all flunkies together, except his
+Majesty on the throne.&mdash;Then William Pitt is his flunky&mdash;and half
+the house of Commons are his flunkies, doing what he bids them, right or
+wrong, and no daring to disobey orders, not for the hair in their
+heads&mdash;then the Earl waits on my Lord Duke&mdash;Sir Something waits
+on my Lord Somebody&mdash;and his tenant, Mr So-and-so, waits on
+him&mdash;and Mr So-and-so has his butler&mdash;and the butler has his
+flunky&mdash;and the shoeblack brushes the flunky&rsquo;s jacket&mdash;and
+so on.&nbsp; We all hang at one another&rsquo;s tails like a rope of
+ingans&mdash;so ye observe, that any such objection in the sight of a
+philosopher like our Benjie, would not weigh a straw&rsquo;s weight.</p>
+<p><!-- page 326--><a name="page326"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+326</span>&ldquo;Then consider, for a moment&mdash;just consider,
+gudewife&mdash;what company a flunky is every day taken up with, standing
+behind the chairs, and helping to clean plates and porter; and the manners
+he cannot help learning, if he is in the smallest gleg in the uptake, so
+that, when out of livery, it is the toss up of a halfpenny whether ye find
+out the difference between the man and the master.&nbsp; He learns, in
+fact, everything.&nbsp; He learns French&mdash;he learns dancing in all its
+branches&mdash;he learns how to give boots the finishing polish&mdash;he
+learns how to play at cards, as if he had been born and bred an
+Earl&mdash;he learns, from pouring the bottles, the names of every wine
+brewed abroad&mdash;he learns how to brush a coat, so that, after six
+months&rsquo; tear and wear, one without spectacles would imagine it had
+only gotten the finishing stitch on the Saturday night before; and he
+learns to play on the flute, and the spinnet, and the piano, and the
+fiddle, and the bagpipes; and to sing all manner of songs, and to skirl,
+full gallop, with such a pith and birr, that though he was to lose his
+precious eyesight with the small-pox, or a flash of forked lightning, or
+fall down a three-story stair dead drunk, smash his legs to such a degree
+that both of them required to be cut off, above the knees, half an hour
+after, so far all right and well&mdash;for he could just tear off his
+shoulder-knot, and make a perfect fortune&mdash;in the one case, in being
+led from door to door by a ragged laddie, with a string at the button-hole,
+playing <!-- page 327--><a name="page327"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+327</span>&lsquo;Ower the Border,&rsquo; &lsquo;The Hen&rsquo;s
+March,&rsquo; &lsquo;Donald M&rsquo;Donald,&rsquo; &lsquo;Jenny
+Nettles,&rsquo; and such like grand tunes, on the clarinet; or, in the
+other case, being drawn from town to town, and from door to door, on a
+hurdle, like a lord, harnessed to four dogs of all colours, at the rate of
+two miles in the hour, exclusive of stoppages.&mdash;What say ye,
+gudewife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nanse gave a mournful look, as if she was frighted I had grown demented,
+and only said, &ldquo;Tak&rsquo; your ain way, gudeman; ye&rsquo;se get
+your ain way for me, I fancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Seeing her in this Christian state of resignation, I determined at once
+to hit the nail on the head, and put an end to the whole business as I
+intended.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now, Nanse,&rdquo; quo&rsquo; I, &ldquo;to come to
+close quarters with ye, tell me candidly and seriously what ye think of a
+barber?&nbsp; Every one must allow it&rsquo;s a canny and cozy
+trade.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A barber that shaves beards!&rdquo; said Nanse.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Od Mansie, ye&rsquo;re surely gaun gyte.&nbsp; Ye&rsquo;re
+surely joking me all the time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joking!&rdquo; answered I, smoothing down my chin, which was gey
+an&rsquo; rough&mdash;&ldquo;Joking here or joking there, I should not
+think the settling of an only bairn in an honourable way of doing for all
+the days of his natural life, is any joking business.&nbsp; Ye dinna ken
+what ye&rsquo;re saying, woman.&nbsp; Barbers! i&rsquo;fegs, to turn up
+your nose at barbers! did ever living hear such nonsense!&nbsp; But to be
+sure, one can blame nobody if <!-- page 328--><a name="page328"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 328</span>they speak to the best of their
+experience.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve heard tell of barbers, woman, about London,
+that rode up this street, and down that other street, in coaches and four,
+jumping out to every one that halooed to them, sharping razors both on
+stone and strap, at the ransome of a penny the pair; and shaving off
+men&rsquo;s beards, whiskers and all, stoop and roop, for a
+three-ha&rsquo;pence.&nbsp; Speak of barbers! it&rsquo;s all ye ken about
+it.&nbsp; Commend me to a safe employment, and a profitable.&nbsp; They may
+give others a nick, and draw blood, but catch them hurting
+themselves.&nbsp; They are not exposed to colds and rheumatics, from east
+winds and rainy weather; for they sit, in white aprons, plaiting hair into
+wigs for auld folks that have bell-pows, or making false curls for ladies
+that would fain like to look smart in the course of nature.&nbsp; And then
+they go from house to house, like gentlemen in the morning; cracking with
+Maister this or Madam that, as they soap their chins with scented-soap, or
+put their hair up in marching order either for kirk or playhouse.&nbsp;
+Then at their leisure, when they&rsquo;re not thrang at home, they can pare
+corns to the gentry, or give ploughmen&rsquo;s heads the bicker-cut for a
+penny, and the hair into the bargain for stuffing chairs with; and between
+us, who knows&mdash;many rottener ship has come to land&mdash;but that some
+genty Miss, fond of plays, poems, and novels, may fancy our Benjie when he
+is giving her red hair a twist with the torturing irons, and run away with
+<!-- page 329--><a name="page329"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+329</span>him, almost whether he will or not, in a stound of unbearable
+love!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here making an end of my discourse, and halting to draw breath, I looked
+Nanse broad in the face, as much as to say, &ldquo;Contradict me if ye
+daur,&rdquo; and, &ldquo;What think ye of that now?&rdquo;&mdash;The man is
+not worth his lugs, that allows his wife to be maister; and being by all
+laws, divine and human, the head of the house, I aye made a rule of keeping
+my putt good.&nbsp; To be candid, howsoever, I must take leave to confess,
+that Nanse, being a reasonable woman, gave me but few opportunities of
+exerting my authority in this way.&nbsp; As in other matters, she soon
+came, on reflection, to see the propriety of what I had been saying and
+setting forth.&nbsp; Besides, she had such a motherly affection towards our
+bit callant, that sending him abroad would have been the death of her.</p>
+<p>To be sure, since these days&mdash;which, alas, and woe&rsquo;s me! are
+not yesterday now, as my grey hair and wrinkled brow but too visibly remind
+me&mdash;such ups and downs have taken place in the commercial world, that
+the barber line has been clipped of its profits and shaved close, from a
+patriotic competition among its members, like all the rest.&nbsp; Among
+other things, hair-powder, which was used from the sweep on the lum-head to
+the king on the throne, is only now in fashion with the Lords of Session
+and valy-deshambles; and pig-tails have been cut off from the face of the
+earth, <!-- page 330--><a name="page330"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+330</span>root and branch.&nbsp; Nevertheless, as I have taken occasion to
+make observation, the foundations of the cutting and shaving line are as
+sure as that of the everlasting rocks; beards being likely to roughen, and
+heads to require polling, as long as wood grows and water runs.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 331--><a name="page331"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+331</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN&mdash;&ldquo;PUGGIE, PUGGIE&rdquo;&mdash;A
+STORY WITHOUT A TAIL</h2>
+<p>The welfare of the human race and the improvement of society being my
+chief aim, in this record of my sayings and doings through the pilgrimage
+of life, I make bold at the instigation of Nanse, my worthy wife, to record
+in black and white a remarkably curious thing, to which I was an
+eye-witness in the course of nature.&nbsp; I have little reluctance to
+consent, not only because the affair was not a little striking in
+itself&mdash;as the reader will soon see&mdash;but because, like
+&AElig;sop&rsquo;s Fables, it bears a good moral at the end of it.</p>
+<p>Many a time have I thought of the business alluded to, which happened to
+take place in our fore-shop one bonny summer afternoon, when I was selling
+a coallier wife, from the Marquis of Lothian&rsquo;s upper hill, a yard of
+serge at our counter-side.&nbsp; At the time she came in, although busied
+in reading an account of one of Buonaparte&rsquo;s battles in the Courant
+newspaper, I observed at her foot a bonny wee doggie, with a bushy black
+tail, of the dancing breed&mdash;that could sit on its hind-legs like a
+squirrel, cast biscuit from its nose, and play a thousand other most
+diverting tricks.&nbsp; Well, as I was saying, I saw the woman had a pride
+in the bit creature&mdash;it was just a curiosity like&mdash;and had
+belonged to a neighbour&rsquo;s son that volunteered out of the
+Berwickshire militia (the Birses, as they were called), into a regiment
+that was draughted away into Egypt, Malta, or the East Indies, I
+believe&mdash;so, <!-- page 332--><a name="page332"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 332</span>it seems, the lad&rsquo;s father and mother
+thought much more about it, for the sake of him that was off and
+away&mdash;being to their fond eyes a remembrancer, and to their parental
+hearts a sort of living keepsake.</p>
+<p>After bargaining about the serge&mdash;and taking two or three other
+things, such as a leather-cap edged with rabbit-fur for her little
+nevoy&mdash;a dozen of plated buttons for her goodman&rsquo;s new
+waistcoat, which was making up at Bonnyrig by Nicky Sharpshears, my old
+apprentice&mdash;and a spotted silk napkin for her own Sunday neck
+wear&mdash;I tied up the soft articles with grey paper and skinie, and was
+handing over the odd bawbees of change, when, just as she was lifting the
+leather-cap from the counter, she said with a terrible face, looking down
+to the ground as if she was short sighted, &ldquo;Pity me! what&rsquo;s
+that&rdquo;?</p>
+<p>I could not imagine, gleg as I generally am, what had happened; so came
+round about the far end of the counter, with my spectacles on, to see what
+it was, when, lo and behold!&nbsp; I perceived a dribbling of blood all
+along the clean sanded floor, up and down, as if somebody had been walking
+about with a cut finger; but, after looking around us for a little, we soon
+found out the thief&mdash;and that we did.</p>
+<p>The bit doggie was sitting cowering and shivering, and pressing its back
+against the counter, giving every now and then a mournful whine, so we
+plainly saw that everything was not right.&nbsp; On the which, the wife,
+<!-- page 333--><a name="page333"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+333</span>slipping a little back, snapped her finger and thumb before its
+nose, and cried out&mdash;&ldquo;Hiskie, poor fellow!&rdquo; but
+no&mdash;it would not do.&nbsp; She then tried it by its own name, and bade
+it rise, saying, &ldquo;Puggie, Puggie!&rdquo; when&mdash;would ever mortal
+man of woman born believe it?&mdash;its bit black, bushy, curly tail, was
+off by the rump&mdash;docked and away, as if it had been for a wager.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh, megstie!&rdquo; cried the woman, laying down the leather-cap
+and the tied-up parcel, and holding out both her hands in
+astonishment.&nbsp; &ldquo;Eh, my goodness, what&rsquo;s come o&rsquo; the
+brute&rsquo;s tail?&nbsp; Lovyding! just see, it&rsquo;s clean gane!&nbsp;
+Losh keep me! that&rsquo;s awfu&rsquo;!&nbsp; Div ye keep rotten-fa&rsquo;s
+about your premises, Maister Wauch?&nbsp; See, a bonny business as ever
+happened in the days of ane&rsquo;s lifetime!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As a furnishing tailor, as a Christian, and as an inhabitant of
+Dalkeith, my corruption was raised&mdash;was up like a flash of lightning,
+or a cat&rsquo;s back.&nbsp; Such doings in an enlightened age and a
+civilized country!&mdash;in a town where we have three kirks, a grammar
+school, a subscription library, a ladies&rsquo; benevolent society, a
+mechanics&rsquo; institution, and a debating club!&nbsp; My heart burned
+within me like dry tow; and I could mostly have jumped up to the ceiling
+with vexation and anger&mdash;seeing as plain as a pikestaff, though the
+simple woman did not, that it was the handiwork of none other than our
+neighbour Reuben Cursecowl, the butcher.&nbsp; Dog on it, it was too
+bad&mdash;it was a rascally transaction; <!-- page 334--><a
+name="page334"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 334</span>so, come of it what
+would, I could not find it in my heart to screen him.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll wager, however,&rdquo; said I, in a kind of off-hand way,
+not wishing exactly, ye observe, to be seen in the business, &ldquo;that it
+will have been running away with beef-steaks, mutton-chops, sheep feet, or
+something else out of the booth; and some of his prentice laddies may have
+come across its hind-quarters accidentally with the cleaver.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mistake here, or mistake there,&rdquo; said the woman, her face
+growing as red as the sleeve of a soldier&rsquo;s jacket, and her two eyes
+burning like live coals&mdash;&ldquo;&rsquo;Od the butcher, but I&rsquo;ll
+butcher him, the nasty, ugly, ill-faured vagabond; the thief-like, cruel,
+malicious, ill-hearted, down-looking blackguard!&nbsp; He would go for to
+offer for to presume for to dare to lay hands on an honest man&rsquo;s
+son&rsquo;s doug!&nbsp; It sets him weel, the bloodthirsty Gehazi, the
+halinshaker ne&rsquo;er-do-weel!&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll gie him sic a redding up
+as he never had since the day his mother boor him!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then
+looting down to the poor bit beast, that was bleeding like a
+sheep&mdash;&ldquo;Ay, Puggie, man,&rdquo; she said in a doleful voice,
+&ldquo;they&rsquo;ve made ye an unco fright; but I&rsquo;ll gie them up
+their fit for&rsquo;t; I&rsquo;ll show them, in a couple of hurries, that
+they have catched a Tartar!&rdquo;&mdash;and with that out went the woman,
+paper-parcel, leather-cap and all, randying like a tinkler from Yetholm;
+the wee wretchie cowering behind her, with the mouse-wabs sticking on the
+place I had put them to stop the bleeding; and looking, by all the <!--
+page 335--><a name="page335"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 335</span>world,
+like a sight I once saw, when I was a boy, on a visit to my father&rsquo;s
+half-cousin, Aunt Heatherwig, on the Castle-hill of Edinburgh&mdash;to wit,
+a thief going down Leith Walk, on his road to be shipped for transportation
+to Botany Bay, after having been pelted for a couple of hours with rotten
+eggs in the pillory.</p>
+<p>Knowing the nature of the parties concerned, and that intimately on both
+sides, I jealoused directly that there would be a stramash; so not liking,
+for sundry reasons, to have my nebseen in the business, I shut to the door,
+and drew the long bolt; while I hastened ben to the room, and, softly
+pulling up a jink of the window clapped the side of my head to it; that,
+unobserved, I might have an opportunity of overhearing the conversation
+between Reuben Cursecowl and the coallier wife; which, weel-a-wat, was
+likely to become public property.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hollo! you man, de ye ken onything about that?&rdquo; cried the
+randy woman;&mdash;but wait a moment, till I give a skiff of description of
+our neighbour Reuben.</p>
+<p>By this time&mdash;it was ten years after James Batter&rsquo;s
+tragedy&mdash;Mr Cursecowl was an oldish man&mdash;he is gathered to his
+fathers now&mdash;and was considerably past his best, as his wife, douce,
+honest woman, used to observe.&nbsp; His dress was a little in the Pagan
+style, and rendered him kenspeckle to the eye of observation.&nbsp; Instead
+of a hat, he generally wore a long red Kilmarnock nightcap, with a cherry
+on the top of it, <!-- page 336--><a name="page336"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 336</span>through foul weather and fair; and having a
+kind of trot in his walk, from a bink forward in his knees, it dang-dangled
+behind him, like the cap of Mr Merry-man with the painted face, the
+showfolk&rsquo;s fool.&nbsp; On the afternoon alluded to, he was in full
+killing-dress, having on an auld blue short coatie, once long, but now
+docked in the tails, so that the pocket-flaps and hainch buttons were not
+above three inches from the place where his wife had snibbed it across by;
+and, from long use in his blood-thirsty occupation, his sleeves flashed in
+the daylight as if they had been double japanned.&nbsp; Tied round his
+beer-barrel-like waist was a stripped apron, blue and white; and at his
+left side hung a bloody gaping leather pouch, as if he had been an
+Israelite returned from the slaughter of the Philistines, filled with
+steels and knives, straight and crooked, that had done ample execution in
+their day I&rsquo;ll warrant them.&nbsp; Up his thighs were rolled his
+coarse rig-and-fur stockings, as if it were to gird him for the battle, and
+his feet were slipped into a pair of bauchles&mdash;that is, the under part
+of auld boots cut from the legs.&nbsp; As to his face, lo, and behold! the
+moon shining in the Nor-west&mdash;yea, the sun blazing in his
+glory&mdash;had not a more crimson aspect than Reuben.&nbsp; Like the
+pig-eyed Chinese folk on tea-cups, his peepers were diminutive and
+twinkling; but his nose made up for them&mdash;and that it did&mdash;being
+portly in all its dimensions broad and long, as to colour, liker a radish
+<!-- page 337--><a name="page337"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+337</span>than any other production in nature.&nbsp; In short, he was as
+bonny a figure as ever man of woman born clapped eye on; and was cleaving
+away most devoutly, at a side of black-faced mutton, when the woman, as I
+said before, cried out, &ldquo;Hollo! you man, do ye ken onything about
+that?&rdquo; pointing to the dumb animal that crawled and crouched behind
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aweel, what o&rsquo;t?&rdquo; cried Cursecowl, still hacking and
+cleaving away at the meat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What o&rsquo;t? i&rsquo; faith, billy, that&rsquo;s a gude
+ane,&rdquo; answered the wife.&nbsp; &ldquo;But ye&rsquo;ll no get aff that
+way; catch me, my man.&nbsp; My name&rsquo;s no Jenny Mathieson an I haena
+ye afore your betters.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll learn ye what soommenses
+are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Looking at her with a look of lightning for a couple of
+seconds&mdash;&ldquo;Aff wi&rsquo; ye, gin you&rsquo;re wise,&rdquo;
+quo&rsquo; Cursecowl, still cleaving away&mdash;&ldquo;or I&rsquo;ll maybe
+bring ye in for the sheep&rsquo;s-head it was trying to make off with its
+teeth.&nbsp; Do ye understand that?&rdquo; And he gave a girn, that
+stretched his mouth from ear to ear.</p>
+<p>This was too much for the subterranean daughter of Eve; it was like
+putting a red-hot poker among the coals of her own pit.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, ye
+incarnate cannibal!&rdquo; she bawled out, doubling her nieve, and shaking
+it in Reuben&rsquo;s face; &ldquo;if ye have a conscience at a&rsquo;,
+think black-burning shame o&rsquo; yoursell!&nbsp; Just look, ye bluidy
+salvage; just take a look there, my bonny man, o&rsquo; your handiwark
+now.&nbsp; Isn&rsquo;t that very pretty?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Aff <!-- page
+338--><a name="page338"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 338</span>wi&rsquo;
+ye,&rdquo; continued Cursecowl, still cleaving away with the chopping-axe,
+and muttering a volley of curses through the knife, which he held between
+his teeth&mdash;&ldquo;Aff wi&rsquo; ye; and keep a calm sough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The dog&rsquo;s no mine, or I wadna have cared sae muckle.&nbsp;
+Siccan a like beast!&nbsp; Siccan a fright to be seen!!!&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;faith I think shame to tak&rsquo; it hame again!!&nbsp; Ay, man,
+ye&rsquo;re a pretty fellow!&nbsp; Ye&rsquo;ve run fast when the noses were
+dealing; ye&rsquo;re a bonny man to hack off the poor dumb animal&rsquo;s
+tail.&nbsp; If it had been a Christian like yoursell, it wad have mattered
+less&mdash;but a puir bit dumb harmless animal!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aff wi&rsquo; ye there, and nane o&rsquo; your chatter,&rdquo;
+thundered Reuben, stopping in his cleaving, and turning the side of his red
+face round to the woman.&nbsp; &ldquo;Flee&mdash;vanish&mdash;and be cursed
+to ye&mdash;baith you and your doug thegither, ye infernal limmer!&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s well for&rsquo;t, luckie, it was not his head instead of its
+tail.&nbsp; Ye had better steik your gab&mdash;cut your stick&mdash;and
+pack off, gin ye be wise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Think shame&mdash;think shame&mdash;think black-burning shame
+o&rsquo; yoursell, ye born and bred ruffian!&rdquo; roared out the wife at
+the top story of her voice&mdash;shaking her doubled nieve before
+him&mdash;stamping her heels on the causey&mdash;then, drawing herself up,
+and holding her hands on her hainches&mdash;&ldquo;Just look, I tell ye,
+you unhanged blackguard, at your precious handywark!&nbsp; Just look, what
+think ye of that now?&nbsp; Tak&rsquo; another <!-- page 339--><a
+name="page339"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 339</span>look now, ower that
+fief-like fiery nose o&rsquo; yours, ye regardless Pagan!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Flesh and blood could stand this no longer; and I saw Cursecowl&rsquo;s
+anger boiling up within him, as in a red-hot fiery furnace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a wee, my woman,&rdquo; muttered Cursecowl to himself, as,
+swearing between his teeth, he hurried into the killing-booth.</p>
+<p>Furious as the woman, however, was, she had yet enough of common sense
+remaining within her to dread skaith; so, apprehending the bursting storm,
+she had just taken to her heels, when out he came, rampauging after her
+like a Greenland bear, with a large liver in each hand;&mdash;the one of
+which, after describing a circle round his head, flashed after her like
+lightning, and hearted her between the shoulders like a clap of thunder;
+while the other, as he was repeating the volley, slipping sideways from his
+fingers while he was driving it with all his force, played drive directly
+through the window where I was standing, and gave me such a yerk on the
+side of the head, that it could be compared to nothing else but the lines
+written on the stucco image of Shakspeare, the great playactor, on our
+parlour chimneypiece,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The great globe itself,<br />
+Yea, all that it inherits, shall dissolve;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and I lay speechless on the floor for goodness knows the length of
+time.&nbsp; Even when I came to my recollection, <!-- page 340--><a
+name="page340"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 340</span>it was partly to a
+sense of torment; for Nanse, coming into the room, and not knowing the
+cause of my disastrous overthrow, attributed it all to a fit of the
+apoplexy; and, in her frenzy of affliction, had blistered all my nose with
+her Sunday scent-bottle of aromatic vinegar.</p>
+<p>For some weeks after there was a bumming in my ears, as if all the
+bee-skeps on the banks of the Esk had been pent up within my head; and
+though Reuben Cursecowl paid, like a gentleman, for the four panes he had
+broken, he drove into me, I can assure him, in a most forcible and striking
+manner, the truth of the old proverb&mdash;which is the moral of this
+chapter that &ldquo;listeners seldom hear anything to their own
+advantage.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 341--><a name="page341"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+341</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT&mdash;MANSIE WAUCH ON SOME SERIOUS
+MUSINGS</h2>
+<p>After consultation with friends, and much serious consideration on such
+a momentous subject, it having been finally settled on between the wife and
+myself to educate Benjie to the barber and haircutting line, we looked
+round about us in the world for a suitable master to whom we might entrust
+our dear laddie, he having now finished his education, and reached his
+fourteenth year.</p>
+<p>It was visible in a twinkling to us both, that his apprenticeship could
+not be gone through with at home in that first-rate style which would
+enable him to reach the top of the tree in his profession; yet it gave us a
+sore heart to think of sending away, at so tender an age, one who was so
+dear to his mother and me, and whom we had, as it were, in a manner made a
+pet of; so we reckoned it best to article him for a twelvemonth with
+Ebenezer Packwood at the corner, before finally sending him off to
+Edinburgh, to get his finishing in the wig, false-curl, and hair-baking
+department, under Urquhart, Maclachlan, or Connal.&nbsp; Accordingly, I
+sent for Eben to come and eat an egg with me&mdash;matters were entered
+upon and arranged&mdash;Benjie was sent on trial; and though at first he
+funked and fought refractory, he came, to the astonishment of his master
+and the old apprentice, in less than no time to cut hair without many
+visible shear-marks; and, within the first quarter, succeeded, without so
+much as drawing <!-- page 342--><a name="page342"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 342</span>blood, to unbristle for a wager of his
+master&rsquo;s, the Saturday night&rsquo;s countenance of Daniel Shoebrush
+himself, who was as rough as a badger.</p>
+<p>Having thus done for Benjie, it now behoved me to have an eye towards
+myself; for, having turned the corner of manhood, I found that I was
+beginning to be wearing away down the hillside of life.&nbsp; Customers,
+who had as much faith in me as almost in their Bible with regard to
+everything connected with my own department, and who could depend on their
+cloth being cut according to the newest and most approved fashions, began
+now and then to return a coat upon my hand for alteration, as being quite
+out of date; while my daily work, to which in the days of other years I had
+got up blythe as the lark, instead of being a pleasure, came to be looked
+forward to with trouble and anxiety, weighing on my heart as a care, and on
+my shoulders as a burden.</p>
+<p>Finding but too severely that such was the case, and that there is no
+contending with the course of nature, I took sweet counsel together with
+James Batter over a cup of tea and a cookie, concerning what it was best
+for a man placed in my circumstances to betake myself to.</p>
+<p>As industry ever has its own reward, let me without brag or boasting be
+allowed to state, that in my own case, it did not disappoint my
+exertions.&nbsp; I had sat down a tenant, and I was now not only the
+landlord <!-- page 343--><a name="page343"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+343</span>of my own house and shop, but of all the back tenements to the
+head of the garden, as also of the row of one-story houses behind, facing
+to the loan, in the centre of which Lucky Thamson keeps up the sign of the
+Tankard and Tappit Hen.&nbsp; It was also a relief to my mind, as the head
+of my family, that we had cut Benjie loose from his mother&rsquo;s apron
+string, poor fellow, and set him adrift in an honest way of doing to buffet
+the stormy ocean of life; so, everything considered, it was found that
+enough and to spare had been laid past by Nanse and me to spend the evening
+of our days by the lound dykeside of domestic comfort.</p>
+<p>In Tammy Bodkin, to whom I trust I had been a dutiful, as I know I was
+an honoured master, I found a faithful journeyman, he having served me in
+that capacity for nine years; so, it is not miraculous, being constantly,
+during that period, under my attentive eye, that he was now quite a deacon
+in all the departments of the business.&nbsp; As an eident scholar he had
+his reward; for customers, especially during the latter years, when my
+sight was scarcely so good, came at length to be not very scrupulous as to
+whether their cloth was cut by the man or his master.&nbsp; Never let
+filial piety be overlooked:&mdash;when I first patronized Tammie, and
+promoted him to the dignity of sitting crosslegged along with me on the
+working-board, he was a hatless and shoeless ragamuffin, the orphan lad of
+a widowed mother, whose husband had been killed <!-- page 344--><a
+name="page344"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 344</span>by a chain-shot,
+which carried off his head, at the bloody battle of the Nile, under Lord
+Nelson.&nbsp; Tammie was the oldest of four, and the other three were
+lasses, that knew not in the morning where the day&rsquo;s providing was to
+come from, except by trust in Him who sent the ravens to Elijah.&nbsp; By
+allowing Tammie a trifle for board-wages, I was enabled to add my mite to
+the comforts of the family; for he was kind, frugal, and dutiful, and would
+willingly share with them to the last morsel.&nbsp; In the course of a few
+years he became his mother&rsquo;s bread-winner, the lasses being sent to
+service, I myself having recommended one of them to Deacon Burlings, and
+another to Springheel the dancing-master; retaining Katie, the youngest,
+for ourselves, to manage the kitchen, and go messages when required.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p344b.jpg">
+<img alt="The lazy corner, Dalkeith" src="images/p344s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Providence having thus blessed Tammie&rsquo;s efforts in the paths of
+industrious sobriety, what could I do better&mdash;James Batter being
+exactly of the same opinion&mdash;than make him my successor; giving him
+the shop at a cheap rent, the stock in trade at a moderate valuation, and
+the good-will of the business as a gratis gift.</p>
+<p>Having recommended Tammie to public patronage and support, he is now, as
+all the world knows, a thriving man; nor, from Berwick Bridge to Johnny
+Groat&rsquo;s, is it in the power of any gentleman to have his coat cut in
+a more fashionable way, or on more <!-- page 345--><a
+name="page345"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 345</span>moderate terms, than
+at the sign of the Goose and the Pair of Shears rampant.</p>
+<p>Leaving Tammie to take care of his own matters, as he is well able to
+do, allow me to observe, that it is curious how habit becomes a second
+nature, and how the breaking in upon the ways we have been long and long
+accustomed to, through the days of the years that are past, is as the
+cutting asunder of the joints and marrow.&nbsp; This I found bitterly, even
+though I had the prospect before me of spending my old age in peace and
+plenty.&nbsp; I could not think of leaving my auld house&mdash;every room,
+every nook in it was familiar to my heart.&nbsp; The garden trees seemed to
+wave their branches sorrowfully over my head, as bidding me a farewell; and
+when I saw all the scraighing hens catched out of the hen-house I had
+twenty years before built and tiled with my own hands, and tumbled into a
+sack, to be carried on limping Jock Dalgleish&rsquo;s back up to our new
+abode at Lugton, my heart swelled to my mouth, and the mist of gushing
+tears bedimmed my eyesight.&nbsp; Four of Thomas Burlings&rsquo; flour
+carts stood laden before the door with our furniture, on the top of which
+were three of Nanse&rsquo;s grand geraniums in flower-pots, with five of my
+walking-sticks tied together with a string; and as I paced through the
+empty rooms, where I had passed so many pleasant and happy hours, the sound
+of my feet on the bare floor seemed in my ears like an echo from the
+grave.&nbsp; On <!-- page 346--><a name="page346"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 346</span>our road to Lugton I could scarcely muster
+common sense to answer a person who wished us a good-day; and Nanse, as we
+daundered on arm-in-arm, never once took her napkin from her een.&nbsp; Oh,
+but it was a weary business!</p>
+<p>Being in this sober frame of mind, allow me to wind up this
+chapter&mdash;the last catastrophe of my eventful life that I mean at
+present to make public&mdash;with a few serious reflections; as it fears
+me, that, in much of what I have set down, ill-natured people may see a
+good deal scarcely consistent with my character for douceness and
+circumspection; but if many wonderfuls have befallen to my share, it would
+be well to remember that a man&rsquo;s lot is not of his own making.&nbsp;
+Musing within myself on the chances and changes of time, the uncertainties
+of life, the frail thread by which we are tacked to this world, and how the
+place that now knows us shall soon know us no more, I could not help, for
+two or three days previous to my quitting my dear old house and shop,
+taking my stick into my hand, and wandering about all my old haunts and
+houffs&mdash;and need I mention that among these were the road down to the
+Duke&rsquo;s south gate with the deers on it, the waterside by Woodburn,
+the Cow-brigg, up the back street, through the flesh-market, and over to
+the auld kirk in among the headstones?&nbsp; For three walks, on three
+different days, I set out in different directions; yet, strange to
+say!&nbsp; I aye landed in the kirkyard:&mdash;<!-- page 347--><a
+name="page347"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 347</span>and where is the man
+of woman born proud enough to brag, that it shall not be his fate to land
+there at last?</p>
+<p>Headstones and headstones around me! some newly put up, and others mossy
+and grey; it was a humbling yet an edifying sight, preaching, as forcibly
+as ever Maister Wiggie did in his best days, of the vanity and the
+passingness of all human enjoyments.&nbsp; Mouldered to dust beneath the
+tufts lay the blithe laddies with whom I have a hundred times played merry
+games on moonlight nights; some were soon cut off; others grew up to their
+full estate; and there stood I, a greyhaired man, among the weeds and
+nettles, mourning over times never to return!</p>
+<p>The reader will no doubt be anxious to hear a few words regarding my son
+Benjie, who has turned out just as his friends and the world
+expected.&nbsp; After his time with Ebenezer Packwood in Dalkeith, he
+served for four years in Edinburgh, where he cut a distinguished figure,
+having shaved and shorn lots of the nobility and gentry; among whom was a
+French Duchess, and many other foreigners of distinction.&nbsp; In short,
+nothing went down at the principal hotels but the expertness of Mr Benjamin
+Wauch; and, had he been so disposed, he could have commenced on his own
+footing with every chance of success; but knowing himself fully young, and
+being anxious to see more of the world before settling, he took out a
+passage <!-- page 348--><a name="page348"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+348</span>in one of the Leith smacks, and set sail for London, where he
+arrived, after a safe and prosperous voyage, without a hair of his head
+injured.&nbsp; The only thing I am ashamed to let out about him is, that he
+is now, and has been for some time past, principal shopman in a Wallflower
+Hair-powder and Genuine Macassar Oil Warehouse, kept by three Frenchmen,
+called Moosies Peroukey.</p>
+<p>But, though our natural enemies, he writes me that he has found them
+agreeable and chatty masters, full of good manners and pleasant discourse,
+first-rate in their articles, and, except in their language, almost
+Christians.</p>
+<p>I aye thought Benjie was a genius; and he is beginning to show himself
+his father&rsquo;s son, being in thoughts of taking out a patent for making
+hair-oil from rancid butter.&nbsp; If he succeeds it will make the
+callant&rsquo;s fortune.&nbsp; But he must not marry Madamoselle Peroukey
+without my especial consent, as Nanse says, that her having a French woman
+for her daughter-in-law would be the death of her.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 349--><a name="page349"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+349</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE&mdash;CONCLUSION</h2>
+<p>On first commencing this memoir of my life, I put pen to paper with the
+laudable view of handing down to posterity&mdash;to our children, and to
+their children&rsquo;s children&mdash;the accidents, adventures, and
+mischances that may fall to the lot of a man placed by Providence even in
+the loundest situation of life, where he seemed to lie sheltered in the
+bield of peace and privacy;&mdash;and, at that time, it was my intention to
+have carried down my various transactions to this dividual day and
+date.&nbsp; My materials, however, have swelled on my hand like summer corn
+under sunny showers; one thing has brought another to remembrance; sowds of
+bypast marvels have come before my mind&rsquo;s eye in the silent watches
+of the night, concerning the days when I sat working crosslegged on the
+board; and if I do not stop at this critical juncture&mdash;to wit, my
+retiring from trade, and the settlement of my dear and only son Benjie in
+an honourable way of doing; as who dares to deny that the barber and
+hair-cutting line is a safe and honourable employment?&mdash;I do not know
+when I might get to the end of my tether; and the interest which every
+reasonable man must take in the extraordinary adventures of my early years,
+might be grievously marred and broken in upon through the garrulity of old
+age.</p>
+<p>Perhaps I am going a little too far when I say, that the whole world
+cannot fail to be interested in the occurrences of my life; for since its
+creation, which was not yesterday, I do not believe&mdash;and James Batter
+is exactly of the same mind&mdash;that there ever was a subject concerning
+which the bulk of mankind have not had two opinions.&nbsp; Knowing this to
+be the case, I would be a great gomeril to expect that I should be the only
+white swan that ever appeared; and that all parties in church and state,
+who are for cutting each other&rsquo;s throats on every other great
+question, should be unanimous only in what regards me.&nbsp; Englishmen,
+for instance, will say that I am a bad speller, and that my language is
+kittle; and such of the Irishers as can read, will be threaping that I have
+abused their precious country; but, my certie, instead of blaming me for
+letting out what I could not deny, they must just learn to behave
+themselves better when they come to see us, or bide at home.</p>
+<p>Being by nature a Scotsman&mdash;being, I say, of the blood of Robert
+Bruce and Sir William Wallace&mdash;and having in my day and generation
+buckled on my sword to keep the battle from our gates in the hour of
+danger, ill would it become me to speak but the plain truth, the whole
+truth, and anything but the truth.&nbsp; No; although bred to a peaceable
+occupation, I am the subject of a free king and constitution; and, if I
+have written as I speak, I have just spoken as I thought.&nbsp; The man of
+learning, that kens no language saving Greek, and Gaelic, and Hebrew, will
+doubtless laugh at the curiosity of my dialect; but <!-- page 351--><a
+name="page351"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 351</span>I would just
+recommend him, as he is a philosopher, to consider for a wee, that there
+are other things, in mortal life and in human nature, worth a
+moment&rsquo;s consideration besides old Pagan heathens-pot-hooks and
+hangers&mdash;the asses&rsquo; bridge and the weary walls of Troy; which
+last city, for all that has been said and sung about it, would be found, I
+would stake my life upon it, could it be seen at this moment, not worth
+half a thought when compared with the New Town of Edinburgh.&nbsp; Of all
+towns in the world, however, Dalkeith for my money.&nbsp; If the ignorant
+are dumfoundered at one of their own kidney&mdash;a tailor laddie, that got
+the feck of his small education leathered into him at Dominie
+Threshem&rsquo;s school&mdash;thinking himself an author, I would just
+remind them that seeing is believing; and that they should keep up a good
+heart, as it is impossible to say what may yet be their own fortune before
+they die.&nbsp; The rich man&rsquo;s apology I would beg; if in this humble
+narrative, this detail of manners almost hidden from the sphere of his
+observation, I have in any instance tramped on the tender toes of good
+breeding, or given just offence in breadth of expression, or vulgarity of
+language.&nbsp; Let this, however, be my apology, that the only value of my
+wonderful history consists in its being as true as death&mdash;a
+circumstance which it could have slender pretensions to, had I coined
+stories, or coloured them so as to please my own fancy <!-- page 352--><a
+name="page352"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 352</span>and that of the
+world.&nbsp; In that case it would have been very easy for me to have made
+a Sinbad the Sailor tale out of it&mdash;to have shown myself up a man such
+as the world has never seen except on paper&mdash;to have made Cursecowl
+behave like a gentleman, and the Frenchman from Penicuik crack like a
+Christian.&nbsp; And to the poor man, him whom the wise Disposer of all
+events has seen fit to place in a situation similar to that in which I have
+been placed, ordaining him to earn daily bread by the labour of his hands
+and the sweat of his brow, if my adventures shall afford an hour or
+two&rsquo;s pleasant amusement, when, after working hours, he sits by his
+bleezing ingle with a bairn on each knee, whilst his oldest daughter is
+sewing her seam, and his goodwife with her right foot birls round the
+spinning-wheel, then my purpose is gained, and more than gained; for it is
+my firm belief that no man, who has by head or hand, in any way lightened
+an ounce weight of the load of human misery, can be truly said to have been
+unprofitable in his day, or disappointed the purpose of his creation.&nbsp;
+For what more can we do here below?&nbsp; The God who formed us, breathing
+into our nostrils the breath of life, is, in his Almighty power and wisdom,
+far removed beyond the sphere of our poor and paltry offices.&nbsp; We are
+of the clay; and return to the elements from which we are formed.&nbsp; He
+is a Spirit, without beginning of days or end of years.&nbsp; The extent of
+our limited exertions <!-- page 353--><a name="page353"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 353</span>reaches no further than our belief in, and our
+duty towards Him; which, in my humble opinion, can be best shown by us in
+our love and charity towards our fellow-creatures&mdash;the master-work of
+his hands.</p>
+<p>I would not willingly close this record of my life, without expressing a
+few words of heartfelt gratitude towards the multitude from whom, in the
+intercourse of the world, I have experienced good offices; and towards the
+few who, in the hour of my trials and adversities, remained with faces
+towards me steadfast and unalterable, scorning the fickle who scoffed, and
+the Levite who passed by on the other side.&nbsp; Of old hath it been said,
+that a true friend is the medicine of life; and in the day of darkness,
+when my heart was breaking, and the world with all its concerns seemed
+shaded in a gloom never to pass away, how deeply have I acknowledged the
+truth of the maxim!&nbsp; How shall I repay such kindness?&nbsp; Alas! it
+is out of my power.&nbsp; But all I can do, I do.&nbsp; I think of it on my
+pillow at the silent hour of midnight; my heart burns with the gratitude it
+hath not&mdash;may never have an opportunity of showing to the world; and I
+put up my prayer in faith to Him who seeth in secret, that he may bless and
+reward them openly.</p>
+<p>Sorrows and pleasures are inseparably mixed up in the cup set for
+man&rsquo;s drinking; and the sunniest day hath its cloud.&nbsp; But I have
+made this observation, that if true happiness, or any thing like true
+happiness, <!-- page 354--><a name="page354"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+354</span>is to be found in this world, it is only to be purchased by the
+practice of virtue.&nbsp; Things will fall out&mdash;so it hath been
+ordained in this scene of trial&mdash;even to the best and purest of heart,
+which must carry sorrow to the bosom, and bring tears to the eyelids; and
+then to the wayward and the wicked, bitter is their misery as the waters of
+Marah.&nbsp; But never can the good man be wholly unhappy; he has that
+within which passeth show; the anchor of his faith is fixed on the Rock of
+Ages; and when the dark cloud hath glided over&mdash;and it will
+glide&mdash;it leaves behind it the blue and unclouded heaven.</p>
+<p>If, concerning religious matters, a tone of levity at any time seems to
+infect these pages, I cry ye mercy; for nothing was further from my
+intention; yet, though acknowledging this, I maintain that it is a vain
+thing to look on religion as on a winter night, full of terror, and
+darkness, and storms.&nbsp; No one, it strikes me, errs more widely than he
+who supposes that man was made to mourn&mdash;that the sanctity of the
+heart is shown by the length of the face&mdash;and that mirth, the pleasant
+mirth of innocent hearts, is sinful in the sight of Heaven.&nbsp; I will
+never believe that.&nbsp; The very sun may appear dim to such folks as
+choose only to look at him through green spectacles; as by the poor wretch
+who is dwining in the jaundice, the driven snow could be sworn to as a
+bright yellow.&nbsp; Such opinions, however, lie between man and his Maker,
+and are not for <!-- page 355--><a name="page355"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 355</span>the like of us to judge of.&nbsp; For myself,
+I have enjoyed a pleasant run of good health through life, reading my Bible
+more in hope than fear; our salvation, and not our destruction, being I
+should suppose its purpose.&nbsp; So, when I behold bright suns and blue
+skies, the trees in blossom, and birds on the wing, the waters singing to
+the woods, and earth looking like the abode of them who were at first
+formed but a little lower than the angels, I trust that the overflowing of
+a grateful heart will not be reckoned against me for unrighteousness.</p>
+<h2>Footnotes:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote175"></a><a href="#citation175"
+class="footnote">[175]</a>&nbsp; See Dr Jamieson.&mdash;P. D.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF MANSIE WAUCH***</p>
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+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,9216 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Life of Mansie Wauch, by D. M. Moir,
+Illustrated by Charles Martin Hardie
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Life of Mansie Wauch
+ tailor in Dalkeith
+
+
+Author: D. M. Moir
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 5, 2007 [eBook #23739]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF MANSIE WAUCH***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1911 T. N. Foulis edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+ [Picture: One of the Duke's huntsmen]
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LIFE OF
+MANSIE WAUCH
+TAILOR IN DALKEITH WRITTEN
+BY HIMSELF AND EDITED BY
+D. M. MOIR
+ILLUSTRATED IN COLOUR BY
+CHARLES MARTIN HARDIE, R.S.A.
+
+
+ T.N.FOULIS
+ London & Edinburgh
+ 1 9 1 1
+
+ _October_ 1911
+
+ _Turnbull & Spears_, _Printers_, _Edinburgh_
+
+ TO
+ JOHN GALT, ESQ.,
+ AUTHOR OF "ANNALS OF THE PARISH," "THE PROVOST,"
+ "AYRSHIRE LEGATEES," ETC.
+
+ THE FOLLOWING SKETCHES,
+
+ PRINCIPALLY OF HUMBLE SCOTTISH CHARACTER,
+
+ ARE DEDICATED,
+
+ BY HIS SINCERE FRIEND AND ADMIRER,
+
+ THE EDITOR.
+
+ [Picture: Mansie's shop door]
+
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARIES TO THIS VOLUME
+
+
+Having, within myself, made observation of late years, that all notable
+characters, whatsoever line of life they may have pursued, and to
+whatever business they might belong, have made a trade of committing to
+paper all the surprising occurrences and remarkable events that chanced
+to happen to them in the course of Providence, during their journey
+through life--that such as come after them might take warning and be
+benefited--I have found it incumbent on me, following a right example, to
+do the same thing; and have set down, in black and white, a good few
+uncos, that I should reckon will not soon be forgotten, provided they
+make as deep an impression on the world as they have done on me. To this
+decision I have been urged by the elbowing on of not a few judicious
+friends, among whom I would particularly remark James Batter, who has
+been most earnest in his request, and than whom a truer judge on anything
+connected with book-lear, or a better neighbour, does not breathe the
+breath of life: both of which positions will, I doubt not, appear as
+clear as daylight to the reader, in the course of the work: to say
+nothing of the approval the scheme met with from the pious Maister
+Wiggie, who has now gone to his account, and divers other advisers, that
+wished either the general good of the world, or studied their own
+particular profit.
+
+Had the course of my pilgrimage lain just on the beaten track, I would
+not--at least I think so--have been o'ercome by ony perswasions to do
+what I have done; but as will be seen, in the twinkling of half-an-eye,
+by the judicious reader, I am a man that has witnessed much, and come
+through a great deal, both in regard to the times wherein I have lived,
+and the out-o'-the-way adventures in which it has been my fortune to be
+engaged. Indeed, though I say it myself, who might as well be silent, I
+that have never stirred, in a manner so to speak, from home, have
+witnessed more of the world we live in, and the doings of men, than many
+who have sailed the salt seas from the East Indies to the West; or, in
+the course of nature, visited Greenland, Jamaica, or Van Diemen's Land.
+The cream of the matter, and to which we would solicit the attention of
+old and young, rich and poor, is just this, that, unless unco doure
+indeed to learn, the inexperienced may gleam from my pages sundry grand
+lessons, concerning what they have a chance to expect in the course of an
+active life; and the unsteady may take a hint concerning what it is
+possible for one of a clear head and a stout heart to go through with.
+
+Notwithstanding, however, these plain and evident conclusions, even after
+writing the whole out, I thought I felt a kind of a qualm of conscience
+about submitting an account of my actions and transactions to the world
+during my lifetime; and I had almost determined, for decency's sake, not
+to let the papers be printed till after I had been gathered to my
+fathers; but I took into consideration the duty that one man owes to
+another; and that my keeping back, and withholding these curious
+documents, would be in a great measure hindering the improvement of
+society, so far as I was myself personally concerned. Now this is a
+business, which James Batter agrees with me in thinking is carried on,
+furthered, and brought about, by every one furnishing his share of
+experience to the general stock. Let-a-be this plain truth, another
+point of argument for my bringing out my bit book at the present time is,
+that I am here to the fore bodily, with the use of my seven senses, to
+give day and date to all such as venture to put on the misbelieving front
+of Sadducees, with regard to any of the accidents, mischances, marvellous
+escapes, and extraordinary businesses therein related; and to show them,
+as plain as the bool of a pint stoup, that each and everything set down
+by me within its boards is just as true, as that a blind man needs not
+spectacles, or that my name is Mansie Wauch.
+
+Perhaps as a person willing and anxious to give every man his due, it is
+necessary for me explicitly to mention, that, in the course of this book,
+I am indebted to my friend James Batter, for his able help in assisting
+me to spell the kittle words, and in rummaging out scraps of poem-books
+for headpieces to my different chapters which appear in the table of
+contents.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF CONTENTS
+
+
+PRELIMINARIES
+
+I. OUR OLD GRANDFATHER,
+
+II. MY OWN FATHER,
+
+ The weaver he gied up the stair,
+ Dancing and singing;
+ A bunch o' bobbins at his back,
+ Rattling and ringing.
+
+ _Old Song_.
+
+III. COMING INTO THE WORLD,
+
+ --At first the babe
+ Was sickly; and a smile was seen to pass
+ Across the midwife's cheek, when, holding up
+ The feeble wretch, she to the father said,
+ "A fine man-child!" What else could they expect?
+ The father being, as I said before,
+ A weaver.
+
+ HOGG'S _Poetic Mirror_.
+
+IV. CALF-LOVE,
+
+ Bonny lassie, will ye go, will ye go, will ye go,
+ Bonny lassie, will ye go to the Birks of Aberfeldy?
+
+ BURNS.
+
+ For a tailor is a man, a man, a man,
+ And a tailor is a man.
+
+ _Popular Heroic Song_.
+
+V. CURSECOWL,
+
+ From his red poll a redder cowl hung down;
+ His jacket, if through grease we guess, was brown;
+ A vigorous scamp, some forty summers old;
+ Rough Shetland stockings up his thighs were roll'd;
+ While at his side horn-handled steels and knives
+ Gleam'd from his pouch, and thirsted for sheep's lives.
+
+ ODOHERTY'S _Miscellanea Classica_.
+
+VI. PUSHING MY FORTUNE,
+
+ Oh, love, love, lassie,
+ Love is like a dizziness,
+ It winna let a puir bodie
+ Gang about their business.
+
+ JAMES HOGG.
+
+VII. THE FOREWARNING,
+
+ I had a dream which was not all a dream.
+
+ BYRON.
+
+ Coming events cast their shadows before.
+
+ CAMPBELL.
+
+VIII. LETTING LODGINGS,
+
+ Then first he ate the white puddings,
+ And syne he ate the black, O;
+ Though muckle thought the Gudewife to hersell,
+ Yet ne'er a word she spak, O.
+ But up then started our Gudeman,
+ And an angry man was he, O.
+
+ _Old Song_.
+
+IX. BENJIE'S CHRISTENING,
+
+ We'll hap and row, hap and row,
+ We'll hap and row the feetie o't.
+ It is a wee bit weary thing,
+ I dinnie bide the greetie o't.
+
+ PROVOST CREECH.
+
+ An honest man, close button'd to the chin,
+ Broad-cloth without, and a warm heart within.
+
+ COWPER.
+
+ This great globe and all that it inherits shall dissolve,
+ And, like the baseless fabric of a vision,
+ Leave not a rack behind.
+
+ SHAKESPEARE.
+
+X. THE RESURRECTION MEN,
+
+ How then was the Devil drest!
+ He was in his Sunday's best;
+ His coat was red, and his breeches were blue,
+ With a hole behind where his tail came thro'.
+ Over the hill, and over the dale,
+ And he went over the plain:
+ And backward and forward he switch'd his tail,
+ As a gentleman switches his cane.
+
+ COLERIDGE.
+
+XI. TAFFY WITH THE PIGTAIL,
+
+Song,
+
+Song of the South,
+
+School Recollections,
+
+Elegiac Stanzas,
+
+Dirge,
+
+ In the sweet shire of Cardigan,
+ Not far from pleasant Ivor-hall,
+ An old man dwells, a little man;
+ I've heard he once was tall.
+ A long blue livery-coat has he,
+ That's fair behind and fair before;
+ Yet, meet him where you will, you see
+ At once that he is poor.
+
+ WORDSWORTH.
+
+XII. VOLUNTEERING,
+
+ Come from the hills where your hirsels are grazing,
+ Come from the glen of the buck and the roe;
+ Come to the crag where the beacon is blazing,
+ Come with the buckler, the lance, and the bow:
+ Many a banner spread
+ Flutters above your head,
+ Many a crest that is famous in story;
+ Mount and make ready then,
+ Sons of the mountain glen,
+ Fight for the _King_, and our old Scottish glory.
+
+ SIR WALTER SCOTT'S _Monastery_.
+
+XIII. THE CHINCOUGH PILGRIMAGE,
+
+ Man hath a weary pilgrimage
+ As through the world he wends:
+ On every stage from youth to age
+ Still discontent attends.
+ With heaviness he casts his eye
+ Upon the road before,
+ And still remembers with a sigh
+ The days that are no more.
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+XIV. MY LORD'S RACES,
+
+ Aff they a' went galloping, galloping;
+ Legs and arms a' walloping, walloping;
+ De'il take the hindmost, quo' Duncan M'Calapin,
+ The Laird of Tillyben, Joe.
+
+ _Old Song_.
+
+ He went a little further,
+ And turn'd his head aside,
+ And just by Goodman Whitfield's gate,
+ Oh there the mare he spied.
+ He ask'd her how she did,
+ She stared him in the face,
+ Then down she laid her head again--
+ She was in wretched case.
+
+ _Old Poulter's Mo_.
+
+XV. THE RETURN,
+
+ That sweet home is there delight,
+ And thither they repair
+ Communion with their own to hold!
+ Peaceful as, at the fall of night,
+ Two little lambkins gliding white
+ Return unto the gentle air,
+ That sleeps within the fold.
+ Or like two birds to their lonely nest,
+ Or wearied waves to their bay of rest,
+ Or fleecy clouds when their race is run,
+ That hang in their own beauty blest,
+ 'Mid the calm that sanctifies the west
+ Around the setting sun.
+
+ WILSON.
+
+XVI. THE BLOODY CARTRIDGE,
+
+ So stands the Thracian herdsman with his spear
+ Full in the gap, and hopes the hunted bear;
+ And hears him in the rustling wood, and sees
+ His course at distance by the bending trees;
+ And thinks--Here comes my mortal enemy,
+ And either he must fall in fight or I.
+
+ DRYDEN'S _Palamon and Arcite_.
+
+ Nay, never shake thy gory looks at me;
+ Thou canst not say I did it!
+
+ _Macbeth_.
+
+XVII. MY FIRST AND LAST PLAY,
+
+ _Pla._ I' faith
+ I like the audience that frequenteth there
+ With much applause: a man shall not be chokt
+ With the stench of garlick, nor be pasted firm
+ With the barmy jacket of a beer-brewer.
+
+ _Bra._ 'Tis a good gentle audience, and I hope
+ The boys will come one day in great request.
+
+ _Jack Drum's Entertainment_, 1601.
+
+ Out cam the gudeman, and laigh he louted;
+ Out cam the gudewife, and heigh she shouted;
+ And a the toun-neibours gather'd about it;
+ And there he lay, I trow.
+
+ _The Cauldrife Wooer_.
+
+XVIII. THE BARLEY FEVER: AND REBUKE,
+
+ Sages their solemn een may steek,
+ And raise a philosophic reek,
+ And, physically, causes seek,
+ In clime and season:
+ But tell me _Whisky's_ name in Greek,
+ I'll tell the reason.
+
+ BURNS.
+
+XIX. THE AWFUL NIGHT,
+
+ Ha!--'twas but a dream;
+ But then so terrible, it shakes my soul!
+ Cold drops of sweat hang on my trembling flesh;
+ My blood grows chilly, and I freeze with horror,
+
+ _Richard the Third_.
+
+ The Fire-king one day rather amorous felt;
+ He mounted his hot copper filly;
+ His breeches and boots were of tin, and the belt
+ Was made of cast-iron, for fear it should melt
+ With the heat of the copper colt's belly.
+
+ Oh! then there was glitter and fire in each eye,
+ For two living coals were the symbols;
+ His teeth were calcined, and his tongue was so dry,
+ It rattled against them as though you should try
+ To play the piano on thimbles.
+
+ _Rejected Addresses_.
+
+XX. ADVENTURES IN THE SPORTING LINE,
+
+ A fig for them by law protected,
+ Liberty's glorious feast;
+ Courts for cowards were erected,
+ Churches built to please the priest.
+
+ _Jolly Beggars_.
+
+ Wi' cauk and keel I'll win your bread,
+ And spindles and whorles for them wha need,
+ Whilk is a gentle trade indeed,
+ To carry the Gaberlunzie on.
+ I'll bow my leg and crook my knee,
+ And draw a black clout owre my ee,
+ A cripple or blind they will ca' me,
+ While we shall be merry and sing.
+
+ KING JAMES V.
+
+XXI. ANENT MUNGO GLEN,
+
+ "Earth to earth," and "dust to dust,"
+ The solemn priest hath said,
+ So we lay the turf above thee now,
+ And we seal thy narrow bed;
+ But thy spirit, brother, soars away
+ Among the faithful blest,
+ Where the wicked cease from troubling,
+ And the weary are at rest.
+
+ MILMAN.
+
+XXII. THE JUNE JAUNT,
+
+ The lapwing lilteth o'er the lea,
+ With nimble wing she sporteth;
+ By vows she'll flee from tree to tree
+ Where Philomel resorteth:
+ By break of day, the lark can say,
+ I'll bid you a good-morrow,
+ I'll streik my wing, and mounting sing,
+ O'er Leader hauchs and Yarrow.
+
+ NICOL BURN, _the Minstrel_.
+
+XXIII. CATCHING A TARTAR,
+
+ _Fr. Sol._ O, prennez misericorde! ayez pitie de moy!
+
+ _Pist._ Moy shall not serve, I will have forty moys!
+ For I will fetch my rim out at thy throat,
+ In drops of crimson blood.
+
+ _Henry V._
+
+XXIV. JAMES BATTER AND THE MAID OF DAMASCUS,
+
+ He chose a mournful muse
+ Soft pity to infuse;
+ He sung the Weaver wise and good,
+ By too severe a fate,
+ Fallen, fallen, fallen, fallen,
+ Fallen from his high estate,
+ And weltering in his blood.
+
+ DRYDEN _Revised_.
+
+ All close they met, all eves, before the dusk
+ Had taken from the stars its pleasant veil,
+ Close in a bower of hyacinth and musk,
+ Unknown of any, free from whispering tale.
+
+ KEATS.
+
+XXV. A PHILISTINE IN THE COAL-HOLE,
+
+ They steeked doors, they steeked yetts,
+ Close to the cheek and chin;
+ They steeked them a' but a wee wicket,
+ And Lammikin crapt in.
+
+ _Ballad of the Lammikin_.
+
+ Hame cam our gudeman at een,
+ And hame cam he;
+ And there he spied a man
+ Where a man shouldna be.
+ Hoo cam this man kimmer,
+ And who can it be;
+ Hoo cam this carle here,
+ Without the leave o' me?
+
+ _Old Song_.
+
+XXVI. BENJIE ON THE CARPET,
+
+ It's no in titles, nor in rank--
+ It's no in wealth, like Lon'on bank,
+ To purchase peace and rest;
+ It's no in making muckle _mair_--
+ It's no in books--it's no in lear,
+ To make us truly blest.
+
+ BURNS.
+
+XXVII. "PUGGIE, PUGGIE,"
+
+ Saw ye Johnie coming? quo' she,
+ Saw ye Johnie coming?
+ Wi' his blue bonnet on his head,
+ And his doggie running?
+
+ _Old Ballad_.
+
+XXVIII. SERIOUS MUSINGS,
+
+ My eyes are dim with childish tears,
+ My heart is idly stirr'd,
+ For the same sound is in mine ears,
+ Which in those days I heard.
+ Thus fares it still in our decay;
+ And yet the wiser mind
+ Mourns less for what age takes away,
+ Than what it leaves behind.
+
+ WORDSWORTH.
+
+XXIX. CONCLUSION,
+
+ He prayeth well, who loveth well
+ Both man, and bird, and beast--
+ He prayeth best, who loveth best
+ All things both great and small;
+ For the dear God who loveth us,
+ He made and loveth all.
+
+ COLERIDGE.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ _FROM OIL PAINTINGS BY_
+ _CHARLES MARTIN HARDIE_, _R.S.A._
+ONE OF THE DUKE'S HUNTSMEN _Frontispiece_
+MANSIE'S SHOP DOOR _Title-page_
+MANSIE'S WEDDING: THE DANCE GAED _Page_ 8
+THROUGH THE LIGHTED HALL
+MANSIE AND NANCY 24
+THE MINISTER'S LASSIE JESS: A 40
+BLUE-EYED LASSIE OF A SERVING
+MAID
+MANSIE'S FATHER 56
+REV. MR WIGGIE 72
+THE FIRST DAY I GOT MY 104
+REGIMENTALS ON
+THOMAS BURLINGS: ELDER 136
+MUNGO GLEN 184
+JAMES BATTER, MOSTLY BLINDED IN 216
+BOTH HIS EYES, LOOKING FOR OUR
+NAME IN THE BOOK OF MARTYRS
+COUNTRY LASSIES BLEACHING THEIR 248
+SNOW-WHITE LINEN
+THE WAITING GIRL, JEANIE AMOS 264
+PETER FARREL 280
+AN OLD DALKEITH BODY 312
+THE LAZY CORNER, DALKEITH 344
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The sun rises bright in France,
+ And fair sets he;
+ But he has tint the blithe blink he had
+ In my ain countree.
+
+ ALLAN CUNNINGHAM.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ONE--IN THE TIME OF MY GRANDFATHER
+
+
+Some of the rich houses and great folk pretend to have histories of the
+auncientness of their families, which they can count back on their
+fingers almost to the days of Noah's ark, and King Fergus the First; but
+whatever may spunk out after on this point, I am free to confess, with a
+safe conscience, in the meantime, that it is not in my power to come up
+within sight of them; having never seen or heard tell of anybody in our
+connexion, further back than auld granfaither, that I mind of when a
+laddie; and who it behoves to have belonged by birthright to some parish
+or other; but where-away, gude kens. James Batter mostly blinded both
+his eyes, looking all last winter for one of our name in the Book of
+Martyrs, to make us proud of; but his search, I am free to confess, worse
+than failed--as the only man of the name he could find out was a Sergeant
+Jacob Wauch, that lost his lug and his left arm, fighting like a Russian
+Turk against the godly, at the bloody battle of the Pentland Hills.
+
+Auld granfaither died when I was a growing callant, some seven or eight
+years old; yet I mind him full well; it being a curious thing how early
+such matters take hold of one's memory. He was a straught, tall, old
+man, with a shining bell-pow, and reverend white locks hanging down about
+his haffets; a Roman nose, and two cheeks blooming through the winter of
+his long age like roses, when, poor body, he was sand-blind with
+infirmity. In his latter days he was hardly able to crawl about alone;
+but used to sit resting himself on the truff seat before our door,
+leaning forward his head on his staff, and finding a kind of pleasure in
+feeling the beams of God's own sun beaking on him. A blackbird, that he
+had tamed, hung above his head in a whand-cage of my father's making; and
+he had taken a pride in learning it to whistle two three turns of his own
+favourite sang, "Oure the water to Charlie."
+
+I recollect, as well as yesterday, that, on the Sundays, he wore a braid
+bannet with a red worsted cherry on the top of it; and had a
+single-breasted coat, square in the tails, of light Gilmerton blue, with
+plaited white buttons, bigger than crown pieces. His waistcoat was low
+in the neck, and had flap pouches, wherein he kept his mull for rappee,
+and his tobacco-box. To look at him, with his rig-and-fur Shetland hose
+pulled up over his knees, and his big glancing buckles in his shoon,
+sitting at our door-cheek, clean and tidy as he was kept, was just as if
+one of the ancient patriarchs had been left on earth, to let succeeding
+survivors witness a picture of hoary and venerable eld. Poor body, many
+a bit Gibraltar-rock and gingerbread did he give to me, as he would pat
+me on the head, and prophesy I would be a great man yet; and sing me bits
+of old songs about the bloody times of the Rebellion, and Prince Charlie.
+There was nothing that I liked so well as to hear him set a-going with
+his auld-warld stories and lilts; though my mother used sometimes to say,
+"Wheest, granfaither, ye ken it's no canny to let out a word of thae
+things; let byganes be byganes, and forgotten." He never liked to give
+trouble, so a rebuke of this kind would put a tether to his tongue for a
+wee; but, when we were left by ourselves, I used aye to egg him on to
+tell me what he had come through in his far-away travels beyond the broad
+seas; and of the famous battles he had seen and shed his precious blood
+in; for his pinkie was hacked off by a dragoon of Cornel Gardener's, down
+by at Prestonpans, and he had catched a bullet with his ankle over in the
+north at Culloden. So it was no wonder that he liked to crack about
+these times, though they had brought him muckle and no little mischief,
+having obliged him to skulk like another Cain among the Highland hills
+and heather, for many a long month and day, homeless and hungry. Not
+dauring to be seen in his own country, where his head would have been
+chacked off like a sybo, he took leg-bail in a ship over the sea, among
+the Dutch folk; where he followed out his lawful trade of a cooper,
+making girrs for the herring barrels and so on; and sending, when he
+could find time and opportunity, such savings from his wages as he could
+afford, for the maintenance of his wife and small family of three
+helpless weans, that he had been obligated to leave, dowie and destitute,
+at their native home of pleasant Dalkeith.
+
+At long and last, when the breeze had blown over, and the feverish pulse
+of the country began to grow calm and cool, auld granfaither took a
+longing to see his native land; and though not free of jeopardy from
+king's cutters on the sea, and from spies on shore, he risked his neck
+over in a sloop from Rotterdam to Aberlady, that came across with a
+valuable cargo of smuggled gin. When granfaither had been obliged to
+take the wings of flight for the preservation of his life and liberty, my
+father was a wean at grannie's breast: so, by her fending--for she was a
+canny industrious body, and kept a bit shop, in the which she sold
+oatmeal and red herrings, needles and prins, potatoes and tape, and
+cabbage, and what not--he had grown a strapping laddie of eleven or
+twelve, helping his two sisters, one of whom perished of the measles in
+the dear year, to go errands, chap sand, carry water, and keep the housie
+clean. I have heard him say, when auld granfaither came to their door at
+the dead of night, tirling, like a thief of darkness, at the window-brod
+to get in, that he was so altered in his voice and lingo that no living
+soul kenned him, not even the wife of his bosom; so he had to put grannie
+in mind of things that had happened between them, before she would allow
+my father to lift the sneck, or draw the bar. Many and many a year, for
+gude kens how long after, I have heard tell, that his speech was so
+Dutchified as to be scarcely kenspeckle to a Scotch European; but Nature
+is powerful, and, in the course of time, he came in the upshot to gather
+his words together like a Christian.
+
+Of my auntie Bell, that, as I have just said, died of the measles in the
+dear year, at the age of fourteen, I have no story to tell but one, and
+that a short one, though not without a sprinkling of interest.
+
+Among her other ways of doing, grannie kept a cow, and sold the milk
+round about to the neighbours in a pitcher, whiles carried by my father,
+and whiles by my aunties, at the ransom of a halfpenny the mutchkin.
+Well, ye observe, that the cow ran yeild, and it was as plain as pease
+that she was with calf:--Geordie Drouth, the horse-doctor, could have
+made solemn affidavy on that head. So they waited on, and better waited
+on for the prowie's calfing, keeping it upon draff and oat-strae in the
+byre; till one morning every thing seemed in a fair way, and my auntie
+Bell was set out to keep watch and ward.
+
+Some of her companions, however, chancing to come by, took her out to the
+back of the house to have a game at the pallall; and, in the interim,
+Donald Bogie, the tinkler from Yetholm, came and left his little jackass
+in the byre, while he was selling about his crockery of cups and saucers,
+and brown plates, on the old one, through the town, in two creels.
+
+In the middle of auntie Bell's game, she heard an unco noise in the byre;
+and, knowing that she had neglected her charge, she ran round the gable,
+and opened the door in a great hurry; when, seeing the beastie, she
+pulled it to again, and fleeing, half out of breath, into the kitchen
+cried,--"Come away, come away, mother, as fast as ye can. Eh, lyst, the
+cow's cauffed,--and it's a cuddie!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWO--MY OWN FATHER
+
+
+My own father, that is to say, auld Mansie Wauch with regard to myself,
+but young Mansie with reference to my granfather after having run the
+errands, and done his best to grannie during his early years, was, at the
+age of thirteen, as I have heard him tell, bound a prentice to the weaver
+trade which from that day and date, for better for worse, he, prosecuted
+to the hour of his death:--I should rather have said to within a
+fortnight of it, for he lay for that time in the mortal fever, that cut
+through the thread of his existence. Alas! as Job says, "How time flies
+like a weaver's shuttle!"
+
+He was a tall, thin, lowering man, blackaviced, and something in the
+physog like myself, though scarcely so weel-faured; with a kind of
+blueness about his chin, as if his beard grew of that colour--which I
+scarcely think it would do--but might arise either from the dust of the
+blue cloth, constantly flying about the shop, taking a rest there, or
+from his having a custom of giving it a rub now and then with his finger
+and thumb, both of which were dyed of that colour, as well as his apron,
+from rubbing against, and handling the webs of checkit claith in the
+loom.
+
+Ill would it become me, I trust a dutiful son, to say that my father was
+any thing but a decent, industrious, hard-working man, doing everything
+for the good of his family, and winning the respect of all that knew the
+value of his worth. As to his decency, few--very few indeed--laid
+beneath the mools of Dalkeith kirkyard, made their beds there, leaving a
+better name behind them; and as to industry, it is but little to say that
+he toiled the very flesh off his bones, driving the shuttle from Monday
+morning till Saturday night, from the rising up of the sun, even to the
+going down thereof; and whiles, when opportunity led him, or occasion
+required, digging and delving away at the bit kail-yard, till moon and
+stars were in the lift, and the dews of heaven that fell on his head,
+were like the oil that flowed from Aaron's beard, even to the skirts of
+his garment. But what will ye say there? Some are born with a silver
+spoon in their mouths, and others with a parritch-stick. Of the latter
+was my father; for, with all his fechting, he never was able much more
+than to keep our heads above the ocean of debt. Whatever was denied him,
+a kind Providence, howsoever, enabled him to do that; and so he departed
+this life contented, leaving to my mother and me, the two survivors, the
+prideful remembrance of being, respectively, she the widow, and me the
+son, of an honest man. Some left with twenty thousand cannot boast as
+much; so every one has their comforts.
+
+ [Picture: Mansie's wedding]
+
+Having never entered much into public life, further than attending the
+kirk twice every Sabbath--and thrice when there was evening service--the
+days of my father glided over like the waters of a deep river that make
+little noise in their course; so I do not know whether to lament or to
+rejoice at having almost nothing to record of him. Had Buonaparte as
+little ill to account for, it would be well this day for him:--but, losh
+me! I had almost skipped over his wedding.
+
+In the five-and-twentieth year of his age, he had fallen in love with my
+mother, Marion Laverock, at the christening of a neighbour's bairn, where
+they both happened to forgather; little, I daresay, jealousing, at the
+time their eyes first met, that fate had destined them for a pair, and to
+be the honoured parents of me, their only bairn. Seeing my father's
+heart was catched as in the net of the fowler, she took every lawful
+means, such as adding another knot to her cockernony, putting up her hair
+in screw curls, and so on, to follow up her advantage; the result of all
+which was, that, after three months' courtship, she wrote a letter out to
+her friends at Loanhead, telling them of what was more than likely to
+happen, and giving a kind invitation to such of them as might think it
+worth their whiles to come in and be spectators of the ceremony.--And a
+prime day I am told they had of it, having, by advice of more than one,
+consented to make it a penny wedding; and hiring Deacon Laurie's
+malt-barn at five shillings, for the express purpose.
+
+Many yet living, among whom James Batter, who was the best-man, and
+Duncan Imrie, the heelcutter in the Flesh-Market Close, are still above
+board to bear solemn testimony to the grandness of the occasion, and the
+uncountable numerousness of the company, with such a display of
+mutton-broth, swimming thick with raisins,--and roasted jiggets of
+lamb,--to say nothing of mashed turnips and champed potatoes,--as had not
+been seen in the wide parish of Dalkeith in the memory of man. It was
+not only my father's bridal day, but it brought many a lad and lass
+together by way of partners at foursome reels and Hieland jigs, whose
+courtship did not end in smoke, couple above couple dating the day of
+their happiness from that famous forgathering. There were no less than
+three fiddlers, two of them blind with the small-pox, and one naturally;
+and a piper with his drone and chanter, playing as many pibrochs as would
+have deaved a mill-happer,--all skirling, scraping, and bumming away
+throughither, the whole afternoon and night, and keeping half the
+countryside dancing, capering, and cutting, in strathspey step and quick
+time, as if they were without a weary, or had not a bone in their bodies.
+In the days of darkness, the whole concern would have been imputed to
+magic and glamour; and douce folk, finding how they were transgressing
+over their usual bounds, would have looked about them for the wooden pin
+that auld Michael Scott the warlock drave in behind the door, leaving the
+family to dance themselves to death at their leisure.
+
+Had the business ended in dancing, so far well, for a sound sleep would
+have brought a blithe wakening, and all be tight and right again; but,
+alas and alackaday! the violent heat and fume of foment they were all
+thrown into, caused the emptying of so many ale-tankers, and the
+swallowing of so muckle toddy, by way of cooling and refreshing the
+company, that they all got as fou as the Baltic; and many ploys, that
+shall be nameless, were the result of a sober ceremony, whereby two douce
+and decent people, Mansie Wauch, my honoured father, and Marion Laverock,
+my respected mother, were linked thegither, for better for worse, in the
+lawful bonds of honest wedlock.
+
+It seems as if Providence, reserving every thing famous and remarkable
+for me, allowed little or nothing of consequence to happen to my father,
+who had few cruiks in his lot; at least I never learned, either from him
+or any other body, of any adventures likely seriously to interest the
+world at large. I have heard tell, indeed, that he once got a terrible
+fright by taking the bounty, during the American war, from an Eirish
+corporal, of the name of Dochart O'Flaucherty, at Dalkeith Fair, when he
+was at his prenticeship; he, not being accustomed to malt-liquor, having
+got fouish and frisky--which was not his natural disposition--over a half
+a bottle of porter. From this it will easily be seen, in the first
+place, that it would be with a fight that his master would get him off,
+by obliging the corporal to take back the trepan money; in the second
+place, how long a date back it is since the Eirish began to be the death
+of us; and, in conclusion, that my honoured faither got such a fleg, as
+to spain him effectually, for the space of ten years, from every
+drinkable stronger than good spring-well water. Let the unwary take
+caution; and may this be a wholesome lesson to all whom it may concern.
+
+In this family history it becomes me, as an honest man, to make passing
+mention of my father's sister, auntie Mysie, that married a carpenter and
+undertaker in the town of Jedburgh; and who, in the course of nature and
+industry, came to be in a prosperous and thriving way; indeed, so much
+so, as to be raised from the rank of a private head of a family; and at
+last elected, by a majority of two votes over a famous cow-doctor, a
+member of the town-council itself.
+
+There is a good story, howsoever, connected with this business, with
+which I shall make myself free to wind up this somewhat fusty and
+fushionless chapter.
+
+Well, ye see, some great lord,--I forget his name, but no matter,--that
+had made a most tremendous sum of money, either by foul or fair means,
+among the blacks in the East Indies, had returned, before he died, to lay
+his bones at home, as yellow as a Limerick glove, and as rich as Dives in
+the New Testament. He kept flunkies with plush small-clothes and
+sky-blue coats with scarlet-velvet cuffs and collars,--lived like a
+princie, and settled, as I said before, in the neighbourhood of Jedburgh.
+
+The body, though as brown as a toad's back, was as prideful and full of
+power as old King Nebuchadneisher; and how to exhibit all his purple and
+fine linen, he aye thought and better thought, till at last the happy
+determination came over his mind like a flash of lightning, to invite the
+bailies, deacons, and town-council, all in a body, to come and dine with
+him.
+
+Save us! what a brushing of coats, such a switching of stoury trowsers,
+and bleaching of white cotton stockings, as took place before the
+catastrophe of the feast, never before happened since Jeddert was a
+burgh. Some of them that were forward and geyan bold in the spirit,
+crowed aloud for joy, at being able to boast that they had received an
+invitation letter to dine with a great lord; while others as proud as
+peacocks of the honour, yet not very sure as to their being up to the
+trade of behaving themselves at the tables of the great, were mostly dung
+stupid with not knowing what to think. A council meeting or two was held
+in the gloamings, to take such a serious business into consideration;
+some expressing their fears and inward down-sinking, while others cheered
+them up with a fillip of pleasant consolation. Scarcely a word of the
+matter, for which they were summoned together by the town-officer--and
+which was about the mending of the old bell-rope--was discussed by any of
+them. So after a sowd of toddy was swallowed, with the hopes of making
+them brave men, and good soldiers of the magistracy, they all plucked up
+a proud spirit, and do or die, determined to march in a body up to the
+gate, and forward to the table of his lordship.
+
+My uncle, who had been one of the ringleaders of the chicken-hearted,
+crap away up among the rest, with his new blue coat on, shining fresh
+from the ironing of the goose, but keeping well among the thick, to be as
+little kenspeckle as possible; for all the folk of the town were at their
+doors and windows to witness the great occasion of the town-council going
+a way up like gentlemen of rank to take their dinner with his lordship.
+That it was a terrible trial to all cannot be for a moment denied; yet
+some of them behaved themselves decently; and, if we confess that others
+trembled in the knees, as if they were marching to a field of battle, it
+was all in the course of human nature.
+
+Yet ye would wonder how they came on by degrees; and, to cut a long tale
+short, at length found themselves in a great big room, like a palace in a
+fairy tale, full of grand pictures with gold frames, and looking-glasses
+like the side of a house, where they could see down to their very shoes.
+For a while they were like men in a dream, perfectly dazzled and
+dumfoundered; and it was five minutes before they could either see a
+seat, or think of sitting down. With the reflection of the
+looking-glasses, one of the bailies was so possessed within himself, that
+he tried to chair himself where chair was none, and landed, not very
+softly, on the carpet; while another of the deacons, a fat and dumpy man,
+as he was trying to make a bow, and throw out his leg behind him,
+stramped on a favourite Newfoundland dog's tail, that, wakening out of
+its slumbers with a yell that made the roof ring, played drive against my
+uncle, who was standing abaft, and wheeled him like a butterfly, side
+foremost, against a table with a heap of flowers on it, where, in trying
+to kep himself, he drove his head, like a battering-ram, through a
+looking-glass, and bleached back on his hands and feet on the carpet.
+
+Seeing what had happened, they were all frightened; but his lordship,
+after laughing heartily, was politer, and knew better about manners than
+all that; so, bidding the flunkies hurry away with the fragments of the
+china jugs and jars, they found themselves, sweating with terror and
+vexation, ranged along silk settees, cracking about the weather and other
+wonderfuls.
+
+Such a dinner! the fume of it went round about their hearts like myrrh
+and frankincense. The landlord took the head of the table, the bailies
+the right and left of him; the deacons and councillors were ranged along
+the sides, like files of soldiers; and the chaplain at the foot said
+grace. It is entirely out of the power of man to set down on paper all
+that they got to eat and drink; and such was the effect of French
+cookery, that they did not know fish from flesh. Howsoever, for all
+that, they laid their lugs in every thing that lay before them, and what
+they could not eat with forks they supped with spoons; so it was all to
+one purpose.
+
+When the dishes were removing, each had a large blue glass bowl full of
+water, and a clean calendered red damask towel, put down by a smart
+flunkie before him; and many of them that had not helped themselves well
+to the wine, while they were eating their steaks and French frigassees,
+were now vexed to death on that score, imagining that nothing remained
+for them, but to dight their nebs and flee up.
+
+Ignorant folk should not judge rashly, and the worthy town-council were
+here in error; for their surmises, however feasible, did the landlord
+wrong. In a minute they had fresh wine decanters ranged down before
+them, filled with liquors of all variety of colours, red, green, and
+blue; and the table was covered with dishes full of jargonelles and
+pippins, raisins and almonds, shell-walnuts and plumdamases, with
+nut-crackers, and everything else they could think of eating; so that,
+after drinking "The King, and long life to him," and "The constitution of
+the country at home and abroad," and "Success to trade," and "A good
+harvest," and "May ne'er waur be among us," and "Botheration to the
+French," and "Corny toes and short shoes to the foes of old Scotland,"
+and so on, their tongues began at length not to be so tacked; and the
+weight of their own dignity, that had taken flight before his lordship,
+came back and rested on their shoulders.
+
+In the course of the evening, his lordship whispered to one of the
+flunkies to bring in some things--they could not hear what--as the
+company might like them. The wise ones thought within themselves that
+the best aye comes hindmost; so in brushed a powdered valet, with three
+dishes on his arm of twisted black things, just like sticks of
+Gibraltar-rock, but different in the colour.
+
+Bailie Bowie helped himself to a jargonelle, and Deacon Purves to a wheen
+raisins; and my uncle, to show that he was not frighted, and knew what he
+was about, helped himself to one of the long black things, which, without
+much ceremony, he shoved into his mouth and began to. Two or three more,
+seeing that my uncle was up to trap, followed his example, and chewed
+away like nine-year-olds.
+
+Instead of the curious-looking black thing being sweet as honey--for so
+they expected--they soon found they had catched a Tartar; for it had a
+confounded bitter tobacco-taste. Manners, however, forbade them laying
+it down again, more especially as his lordship, like a man dumfoundered,
+was aye keeping his eye on them. So away they chewed, and better chewed,
+and whammelled them round in their mouths, first in one cheek, and then
+in the other, taking now and then a mouthful of drink to wash the trash
+down, then chewing away again, and syne another whammel from one cheek to
+the other, and syne another mouthful, while the whole time their eyes
+were staring in their heads like mad, and the faces they made may be
+imagined, but cannot be described. His lordship gave his eyes a rub, and
+thought he was dreaming; but no--there they were bodily, chewing, and
+whammelling, and making faces; so no wonder that, in keeping in his
+laugh, he sprung a button from his waistcoat, and was like to drop down
+from his chair, through the floor, in an ecstacy of astonishment, seeing
+they were all growing sea-sick, and pale as stucco images.
+
+Frightened out of his wits at last that he would be the death of the
+whole council, and that more of them would poison themselves, he took up
+one of the segars--every one knows segars now, for they are fashionable
+among the very sweeps--which he lighted at the candle, and commenced
+puffing like a tobacco-pipe.
+
+My uncle and the rest, if they were ill before, were worse now; so when
+they got to the open air, instead of growing better, they grew sicker and
+sicker, till they were waggling from side to side like ships in a storm;
+and, not knowing whether their heels or heads were uppermost, went
+spinning round about like pieries.
+
+"A little spark may make muckle wark." It is perfectly wonderful what
+great events spring out of trifles, or what seem to common eyes but
+trifles. I do not allude to the nine days' deadly sickness, that was the
+legacy of every one that ate his segar, but to the awful truth, that, at
+the next election of councillors, my poor uncle Jamie was completely
+blackballed--a general spite having been taken to him in the town-hall,
+on account of having led the magistracy wrong, by doing what he ought to
+have let alone, thereby making himself and the rest a topic of amusement
+to the world at large, for many and many a month.
+
+Others, to be sure, it becomes me to make mention, have another version
+of the story, and impute the cause of his having been turned out to the
+implacable wrath of old Bailie Bogie, whose best black coat, square in
+the tails, that he had worn only on the Sundays for nine years, was
+totally spoiled, on their way home in the dark from his lordship's, by a
+tremendous blash, that my unfortunate uncle happened, in the course of
+nature, to let flee in the frenzy of a deadly upthrowing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THREE--THE COMING INTO THE WORLD OF MANSIE WAUCH
+
+
+I have no distinct recollection of the thing myself, yet there is every
+reason to believe that I was born on the 15th of October 1765, in that
+little house standing by itself, not many yards from the eastmost side of
+the Flesh-market Gate, Dalkeith. My eyes opened on the light about two
+o'clock in a dark and rainy morning. Long was it spoken about that
+something great and mysterious would happen on that dreary night; as the
+cat, after washing her face, went mewing about, with her tail sweeing
+behind her like a ramrod; and a corbie, from the Duke's woods, tumbled
+down Jamie Elder's lum, when he had set the little still-a-going--giving
+them a terrible fright, as they all took it first for the devil, and then
+for an exciseman--and fell with a great cloud of soot, and a loud
+skraigh, into the empty kail-pot.
+
+The first thing that I have any clear memory of, was my being carried out
+on my auntie's shoulder, with a leather cap tied under my chin, to see
+the Fair Race. Oh! but it was a grand sight! I have read since then the
+story of Aladdin's Wonderful Lamp, but this beat it all to sticks. There
+was a long row of tables covered with carpets of bonny patterns, heaped
+from one end to the other with shoes of every kind and size, some with
+polished soles, and some glittering with sparribles and cuddy-heels; and
+little red worsted boots for bairns, with blue and white edgings, hanging
+like strings of flowers up the posts at each end;--and then what a
+collection of luggies! the whole meal in the market-sacks on a Thursday
+did not seem able to fill them;--and horn-spoons, green and black
+freckled, with shanks clear as amber,--and timber caups,--and ivory
+egg-cups of every pattern. Have a care of us! all the eggs in Smeaton
+dairy might have found resting places for their doups in a row. As for
+the gingerbread, I shall not attempt a description. Sixpenny and
+shilling cakes, in paper, tied with skinie; and roundabouts, and snaps,
+brown and white quality, and parliaments, on stands covered with
+calendered linen, clean from the fold. To pass it was just impossible;
+it set my teeth a-watering, and I skirled like mad, until I had a gilded
+lady thrust into my little nieve; the which, after admiring for a minute,
+I applied my teeth to, and of the head I made no bones; so that in less
+than no time she had vanished, petticoats and all, no trace of her being
+to the fore, save and except long treacly daubs, extending east and west
+from ear to ear, and north and south from cape neb of the nose to the
+extremity of beardy-land.
+
+But what, of all things, attracted my attention on that memorable day,
+was the show of cows, sheep, and horses, mooing, baaing and neighering;
+and the race--that was best! Od, what a sight!--we were jammed in the
+crowd of old wives, with their toys and shining ribands; and carter lads,
+with their blue bonnets; and young wenches, carrying home their fairings
+in napkins, as muckle as would hold their teeth going for a month;--there
+scarcely could be much for love, when there was so much for the
+stomach;--and men, with wooden legs, and brass virls at the end of them,
+playing on the fiddle,--and a bear that roared, and danced on its hind
+feet, with a muzzled mouth,--and Punch and Polly,--and puppie-shows, and
+more than I can tell,--when up came the horses to the starting-post. I
+shall never forget the bonny dresses of the riders. One had a napkin
+tied round his head, with the flaps fleeing at his neck; and his
+coat-tails were curled up into a big hump behind; it was so tight
+buttoned ye would not think he could have breathed. His corduroy
+trowsers (such like as I have often since made to growing callants) were
+tied round his ankles with a string; and he had a rusty spur on one shoe,
+which I saw a man take off to lend him. Save us! how he pulled the
+beast's head by the bridle, and flapped up and down on the saddle when he
+tried a canter! The second one had on a black velvet hunting-cap, and
+his coat stripped. I wonder he was not feared of cold, his shirt being
+like a riddle, and his nether nankeens but thin for such weather; but he
+was a brave lad; and sorry were the folks for him, when he fell off in
+taking over sharp a turn, by which old Pullen, the bell-ringer, who was
+holding the post, was made to coup the creels, and got a bloody
+nose.--And but the last was a wearyful one! He was all life, and as gleg
+as an eel. Up and down he went; and up and down philandered the beast on
+its hind-legs and its fore-legs, funking like mad; yet though he was not
+above thirteen, or fourteen at most, he did not cry out for help more
+than five or six times, but grippit at the mane with one hand, and at the
+back of the saddle with the other, till daft Robie, the hostler at the
+stables, claught hold of the beast by the head, and off they set. The
+young birkie had neither hat nor shoon, but he did not spare the stick;
+round and round they flew like mad. Ye would have thought their eyes
+would have loupen out; and loudly all the crowds were hurraing, when
+young hatless came up foremost, standing in the stirrups, the long stick
+between his teeth, and his white hair fleeing behind him in the wind like
+streamers on a frosty night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOUR--CALF-LOVE
+
+
+The long and the short is, that I was sent to school, where I learned to
+read and spell, making great progress in the Single and Mother's
+Carritch. No, what is more, few could fickle me in the Bible, being
+mostly able to spell it all over, save the second of Ezra and the seventh
+of Nehemiah, which the Dominie himself could never read through twice in
+the same way, or without variations.
+
+My father, to whom I was born, like Isaac to Abraham, in his old age, was
+an elder in the Relief Kirk, respected by all for his canny and douce
+behaviour, and, as I have observed before, a weaver to his trade. The
+cot and the kail-yard were his own, and had been auld granfaither's; but
+still he had to ply the shuttle from Monday to Saturday, to keep all
+right and tight. The thrums were a perquisite of my own, which I
+niffered with the gundy-wife for Gibraltar-rock, cut-throat, gib, or
+bull's-eyes.
+
+ [Picture: Mansie and Nancy]
+
+Having come into the world before my time, and being of a pale face and
+delicate make, Nature never could have intended me for the naval or
+military line, or for any robustious trade or profession whatsoever. No,
+no, I never liked fighting in my life; peace was aye in my thoughts.
+When there was any riot in the streets, I fled, and scougged myself at
+the chimney-lug as quickly as I dowed; and, rather than double a nieve to
+a school-fellow, I pocketed many shabby epithets, got my paiks, and took
+the coucher's blow from laddies that could hardly reach up to my
+waistband.
+
+Just after I was put to my prenticeship, having made free choice of the
+tailoring trade, I had a terrible stound of calf-love. Never shall I
+forget it. I was growing up, long and lank as a willow-wand. Brawns to
+my legs there were none, as my trowsers of other years too visibly
+effected to show. The long yellow hair hung down like a flax-wig, the
+length of my lantern jaws, which looked, notwithstanding my yapness and
+stiff appetite, as if eating and they had broken up acquaintanceship. My
+blue jacket seemed in the sleeves to have picked a quarrel with the
+wrists, and had retreated to a tait below the elbows. The
+haunch-buttons, on the contrary, appeared to have taken a strong liking
+to the shoulders, a little below which they showed their tarnished
+brightness. At the middle of the back the tails terminated, leaving the
+well-worn rear of my corduroys, like a full moon seen through a dark
+haze. Oh! but I must have been a bonny lad.
+
+My first flame was the minister's lassie, Jess, a buxom and forward
+quean, two or three years older than myself. I used to sit looking at
+her in the kirk, and felt a droll confusion when our eyes met. It dirled
+through my heart like a dart, and I looked down at my psalm-book sheepish
+and blushing. Fain would I have spoken to her, but it would not do; my
+courage aye failed me at the pinch, though she whiles gave me a smile
+when she passed me. She used to go to the well every night with her two
+stoups, to draw water after the manner of the Israelites at gloaming; so
+I thought of watching to give her the two apples which I had carried in
+my pocket for more than a week for that purpose. How she started when I
+stappit them into her hand, and brushed by without speaking! I stood at
+the bottom of the close listening, and heard her laughing till she was
+like to split. My heart flap-flappit in my breast like a pair of
+fanners. It was a moment of heavenly hope; but I saw Jamie Coom, the
+blacksmith, who I aye jealoused was my rival, coming down to the well. I
+saw her give him one of the apples; and, hearing him say, with a loud
+gaffaw, "Where is the tailor?" I took to my heels, and never stopped
+till I found myself on the little stool by the fireside, and the hamely
+sound of my mother's wheel bum-bumming in my lug, like a gentle lullaby.
+
+Every noise I heard flustered me, but I calmed in time, though I went to
+my bed without my supper. When I was driving out the gaislings to the
+grass on the next morn, who was it my ill fate to meet but the
+blacksmith. "Ou, Mansie," said Jamie Coom, "are ye gaun to take me for
+your best man? I hear you are to be cried in the kirk on Sunday?"
+
+"Me!" answered I, shaking and staring.
+
+"Yes!" said he; "Jess the minister's maid told me last night, that you
+had been giving up your name at the manse. Ay, it's ower true--for she
+showed me the apples ye gied her in a present. This is a bonny story,
+Mansie, my man, and you only at your prenticeship yet."
+
+Terror and despair had struck me dumb. I stood as still and as stiff as
+a web of buckram. My tongue was tied, and I could not contradict him.
+Jamie folded his arms, and went away whistling, turning every now and
+then his sooty face over his shoulder, and mostly sticking his tune, as
+he could not keep his mouth screwed for laughing. What would I not have
+given to have laughed too!
+
+There was no time to be lost; this was the Saturday. The next rising sun
+would shine on the Sabbath. Ah, what a case I was in! I could mostly
+have drowned myself, had I not been frighted. What could I do? My love
+had vanished like lightning; but oh, I was in a terrible gliff! Instead
+of gundy, I sold my thrums to Mrs Walnut for a penny, with which I bought
+at the counter a sheet of paper and a pen; so that in the afternoon I
+wrote out a letter to the minister, telling him what I had been given to
+hear, and begging him, for the sake of mercy, not to believe Jess's word,
+as I was not able to keep a wife, and as she was a leeing gipsy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIVE--CURSECOWL
+
+
+But, losh me! I have come on too far already, before mentioning a
+wonderful thing that happened to me when I was only seven years old. Few
+things in my eventful life have made a deeper impression on me than what
+I am going to relate.
+
+It was the custom, in those times, for the different schools to have
+cock-fighting on Fastern's E'en: and the victor, as he was called,
+treated the other scholars to a football. Many a dust have I seen rise
+out of that business--broken shins and broken heads, sore bones and sound
+duckings--but this was none of these.
+
+Our next neighbour was a flesher; and right before the window was a large
+stone, on which old wives with their weans would sometimes take a rest;
+so what does I, when I saw the whole hobble-shaw coming fleeing down the
+street, with the kick-ba' at their noses, but up I speels upon the stone
+(I was a wee chap with a daidley, a ruffled shirt, and leather cap edged
+with rabbit fur) that I might see all the fun. This one fell, and that
+one fell, and a third was knocked over and a fourth got a bloody nose:
+and so on; and there was such a noise and din, as would have deaved the
+workmen of Babel--when, lo! and behold! the ball played bounce mostly at
+my feet, and the whole mob after it. I thought I should have been dung
+to pieces; so I pressed myself back with all my might, and through went
+my elbow into Cursecowl's kitchen. It did not stick long there. Before
+you could say Jack Robinson, out flew the flesher in his killing-clothes;
+his face was as red as fire, and he had his pouch full of bloody knives
+buckled to his side. I skreighed out in his face when I looked at him,
+but he did not stop a moment for that. With a girn that was like to rive
+his mouth, he twisted his nieve in the back of my hair, and off with me
+hanging by the cuff of the neck, like a kittling. My eyes were like to
+loup out of my head, but I had no breath to cry. I heard him thraw the
+key, for I could not look down, the skin of my face was pulled so tight;
+and in he flang me like a pair of old boots into his booth, where I
+landed on my knees upon a raw bloody calf's skin. I thought I would have
+gone out of my wits, when I heard the door locked upon me, and looked
+round me in such an unearthly place. It had only one sparred window, and
+there was a garden behind; but how was I to get out? I danced round and
+round about, stamping my heels on the floor, and rubbing my begritten
+face with my coat sleeve. To make matters worse, it was wearing to the
+darkening. The floor was all covered with lappered blood, and sheep and
+calf skins. The calves and the sheep themselves, with their cuttit
+throats, and glazed een, and ghastly girning faces, were hanging about on
+pins, heels uppermost. Losh me! I thought on Bluebeard and his wives in
+the bloody chamber!
+
+And all the time it was growing darker and darker, and more dreary; and
+all was as quiet as death itself. It looked, by all the world, like a
+grave, and me buried alive within it; till the rottens came out of their
+holes to lick the blood, and whisked about like wee evil spirits. I
+thought on my father and my mother, and how I should never see them more;
+for I was sure that Cursecowl would come in the dark, tie my hands and
+feet thegither, and lay me across the killing-stool. I grew more and
+more frightened; and it grew more and more dark. I thought all the
+sheep-heads were looking at one another, and then girn-girning at me. At
+last I grew desperate; and my hair was as stiff as wire, though it was as
+wet as if I had been douking in the Esk. I began to bite through the
+wooden spars with my teeth, and rugged at them with my nails, till they
+were like to come off--but no, it would not do. At length, when I had
+greeted myself mostly blind, and cried till I was as hoarse as a corbie,
+I saw auld Janet Hogg taking in her bit washing from the bushes, and I
+reeled and screamed till she heard me.--It was like being transported
+into heaven; for, in less than no time, my mother, with her apron at her
+eyes, was at the door; and Cursecowl, with a candle in the front of his
+hat, had scarcely thrawn the key, when out I flew; and she lifted up her
+foot (I dare say it was the first and last time in her life, for she was
+a douce woman) and gave him such a kick and a push that he played bleach
+over, head foremost, without being able to recover himself; and, as we
+ran down the close, we heard him cursing and swearing in the dark, like a
+devil incarnate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIX--MANSIE WAUCH ON THE PUSHING OF HIS FORTUNE
+
+
+The days of the years of my prenticeship having glided cannily over on
+the working-board of my respected maister, James Hosey, where I sat
+sewing cross-legged like a busy bee, in the true spirit of industrious
+contentment, I found myself, at the end of the seven year, so well
+instructed in the tailoring trade, to which I had paid a near-sighted
+attention, that, without more ado, I girt myself round about with a proud
+determination of at once cutting my mother's apron string, and venturing
+to go without a hold. Thinks I to myself, "faint heart never won fair
+lady"; so, taking my stick in my hand, I set out towards Edinburgh, as
+brave as a Highlander, in search of a journeyman's place. When I think
+how many have been out of bread, month after month, making vain
+application at the house of call, I may set it down to an especial
+Providence, that I found a place, on the very first day, to my heart's
+content, in by at the Grassmarket, where I stayed for the space of six
+calendar months.
+
+Had it not been from a real sense of the duty I owed to my future
+employers, whomsoever they might be, in making myself a first-rate hand
+in the cutting, shaping, and sewing line, I would not have found courage
+in my breast to have helped me out through such a long and dreary time.
+The change from our own town, where every face was friendly, and where I
+could ken every man I saw, by the cut of his coat, at half a mile's
+distance, to the bum and bustle of the High Street, the tremendous
+cannons of the Castle, packed full of soldiers ready for war, and the
+filthy, ill-smelling abominations of the Cowgate, where I put up, was
+almost more than could be tholed by man of woman born. My lodging was up
+six pair of stairs, in a room of Widow Randie's, which I rented for
+half-a-crown a week, coals included; and many a time, after putting out
+my candle, before stepping into my bed, I used to look out at the window,
+where I could see thousands and thousands of lamps, spreading for miles
+adown streets and through squares, where I did not know a living soul;
+and dreeing the awful and insignificant sense of being a lonely stranger
+in a foreign land. Then would the memory of past days return to me; yet
+I had the same trust in Heaven as I had before, seeing that they were the
+dividual stars above my head which I used to glour up at in wonder at
+Dalkeith--pleasant Dalkeith! ay, how different, with its bonny river Esk,
+its gardens full of gooseberry bushes and pear-trees, its grass parks
+spotted with sheep, and its grand green woods, from the bullying
+blackguards, the comfortless reek, and the nasty gutters of the
+Netherbow.
+
+To those, nevertheless, that take the world as they find it, there are
+pleasures in all situations; nor was mine, bad though I allow it to be,
+entirely destitute of them; for our work-room being at the top of the
+stairs, and the light of heaven coming down through skylights, three in
+number, we could, by putting out our heads, have a vizzy of the grand
+ancient building of George Heriot's Hospital, with the crowds of young
+laddies playing through the grass parks, with their bit brown coaties,
+and shining leather caps, like a wheen puddocks; and all the sweet
+country out by Barrowmuirhead, and thereaway; together with the
+Corstorphine Hills--and the Braid Hills--and the Pentland Hills--and all
+the rest of the hills, covered here and there with tufts of blooming
+whins, as yellow as the beaten gold--spotted round about their bottoms
+with green trees, and growing corn, but with tops as bare as a
+gaberlunzie's coat--kepping the rowling clouds on their awful shoulders
+on cold and misty days; and freckled over with the flowers of the purple
+heather, on which the shy moorfowl take a delight to fatten and fill
+their craps, through the cosy months of the blythe summer time.
+
+Let nobody take it amiss, yet I must bear witness to the truth, though
+the devil should have me. My heart was sea-sick of Edinburgh folk and
+town manners, for the which I had no stomach. I could form no friendly
+acquaintanceship with a living soul; so I abode by myself, like St John
+in the Isle of Patmos, on spare allowance, making a sheep-head serve me
+for three day's kitchen. I longed like a sailor that has been far at
+sea, and wasted and weatherbeaten, to see once more my native home; and,
+bundling up, flee from the noisy stramash to the loun dykeside of
+domestic privacy. Everything around me seemed to smell of sin and
+pollution, like the garments of the Egyptians with the ten plagues; and
+often, after I took off my clothes to lie down in my bed, when the
+watchmen that guarded us through the night in blue dreadnoughts with red
+necks, and battons, and horn-bouets, from thieves, murderers, and
+pickpockets, were bawling, "Half-past ten o'clock," did I commune with my
+own heart, and think within myself, that I would rather be a sober, poor,
+honest man in the country, able to clear my day and way by the help of
+Providence, than the Provost himself, my lord though he be, or even the
+Mayor of London, with his velvet gown trailing for yards in the glaur
+behind him--do what he likes to keep it up; or riding about the
+streets--as Joey Smith the Yorkshire Jockey, to whom I made a hunting
+cap, told me--in a coach made of clear crystal, and wheels of the beaten
+gold.
+
+It was an awful business; dog on it, I ay wonder yet how I got through
+with it. There was no rest for soul or body, by night or day, with
+police-officers crying, "One o'clock, an' a frosty morning," knocking
+Eirishmen's teeth down their throats with their battons, hauling limmers
+by the lug and horn into the lock-up house, or over by to Bridewell,
+where they were set to beat hemp for a small wage, and got their heads
+shaved; with carters bawling, "Ye yo, yellow sand, yellow sand," with
+mouths as wide as a barn-door, and voices that made the drums of your
+ears dirl, and ring again like mad; with fishwives from Newhaven,
+Cockenzie, and Fisherrow, skirling, "Roug-a-rug, warstling herring," as
+if every one was trying to drown out her neighbour, till the very
+landladies, at the top of the seventeen story houses, could hear, if they
+liked to be fashed, and might come down at their leisure to buy them at
+three for a penny; men from Barnton, and thereaway on the Queensferry
+Road, halloing "Sour douk, sour douk"; tinklers skirmishing the edges of
+brown plates they were trying to make the old wives buy--and what not.
+To me it was a real hell upon earth.
+
+Never let us repine, howsomever, but consider that all is ordered for the
+best. The sons of the patriarch Jacob found out their brother Joseph in
+a foreign land, and where they least expected it; so it was here--even
+here, where my heart was sickening unto death, from my daily and nightly
+thoughts being as bitter as gall--that I fell in with the greatest
+blessing of my life, Nanse Cromie!
+
+In the flat below our workshop lived Mrs Whitteraick, the wife of Mr
+Whitteraick, a dealer in hens and hams in the poultry market, that had
+been fallen in with, when her gudeman was riding out on his bit sheltie
+in the Lauder direction, bargaining with the farmers for their ducks,
+chickens, gaislings, geese, turkey-pouts, howtowdies, guinea-hens, and
+other barn-door fowls; and, among his other calls, having happened to
+make a transaction with her father, anent some Anchovy-ducks, he, by a
+warm invitation, was kindly pressed to remain for the night.
+
+The upshot of the business was, that, on mounting his pony to make the
+best of his way home, next morning after breakfast, Maister Whitteraick
+found he was shot through the heart with a stound of love; and that,
+unless a suitable remedy could be got, there was no hope for him on this
+side of time, let alone blowing out his brains, or standing before the
+minister. Right it was in him to run the risk of deciding on the last;
+and so well did he play his game, that, in two months from that date,
+after sending sundry presents on his part to the family, of smeaked hams
+and salt tongues--acknowledged on theirs, by return of carrier, in the
+shape of sucking pigs, jargonelle pears, skim-milk cheeses, and such
+like--matters were soldered; and Miss Jeanie Learig, made into Mrs
+Whitteraick by the blessing of Dr Blether, rode away into Edinburgh in a
+post-chaise, with a brown and a black horse, one blind and the other
+lame, seated cheek-by-jowl with her loving spouse, who, doubtless was
+busked out in his best, with a Manchester superfine blue coat, and double
+gilt buttons, a waterproof hat, silk stockings, with open-steek gushats,
+and bright yellow shamoy gloves.
+
+A stranger among strangers, and not knowing how she might thole the
+company and conversation of town-life, Mrs Whitteraick, that was to be,
+hired a bit wench of a lassie from the neighbourhood, that was to follow
+her, come the term. And who think ye should this lassie be, but Nanse
+Cromie--afterwards, in the course of a kind Providence, the honoured wife
+of my bosom, and the mother of bonny Benjie.
+
+In going up and down the stairs--it being a common entry, ye observe--me
+maybe going down with my everyday hat on to my dinner, and she coming up,
+carrying a stoup of water, or half-a-pound of pouthered butter on a
+plate, with a piece paper thrown over it--we frequently met half-way, and
+had to stand still to let one another pass. Nothing came out of these
+foregatherings, howsomever, for a month or two, she being as shy and
+modest as she was bonny, with her clean demity short-gown, and snow-white
+morning mutch, to say nothing of her cheery mouth, and her glancing eyes;
+and me unco douffie, in making up to strangers. We could not help,
+nevertheless, to take aye a stolen look of each other in passing; and I
+was a gone man, bewitched out of my seven senses, falling from my
+clothes, losing my stomach, and over the lugs in love, three weeks and
+some odd days before ever a single syllable passed between us.
+
+Gude kens how long this Quaker-meeting-like silence would have continued,
+had we not chanced to foregather one gloaming; and I, having gotten a
+dram from one of our customers with a hump-back, at the Crosscausey,
+whose fashionable new coat I had been out fitting on, found myself as
+brave as a Bengal tiger, and said to her, "This is a fine day, I say, my
+dear Nancy."
+
+The ice being once broken, every thing went on as smoothly as ye like;
+so, in the long run, we went like lightning from twohanded cracks on the
+stair-head, to stown walks, after work-hours, out by the West Port, and
+thereaway.
+
+If ever a man loved, and loved like mad, it was me, Mansie Wauch--and I
+take no shame in the confession; but, knowing it all in the course of
+nature, declare it openly and courageously in the face of the wide world.
+Let them laugh who like; honest folk, I pity them; such know not the
+pleasures of virtuous affection. It is not in corrupted, sinful hearts
+that the fire of true love can ever burn clear. Alas, and ohon orie!
+they lose the sweetest, completest, dearest, truest pleasure that this
+world has in store for its children. They know not the bliss to meet,
+that makes the embrace of separation bitter. They never dreamed the
+dreams that make wakening to the morning light unpleasant. They never
+felt the raptures that can dirl like darts through a man's soul from a
+woman's eye. They never tasted the honey that dwells on a woman's lip,
+sweeter than yellow marygolds to the bee; or fretted under the fever of
+bliss that glows through the frame in pressing the hand of a suddenly
+met, and fluttering sweetheart. But tuts-tuts--hech-how! my day has long
+since passed: and this is stuff to drop from the lips of an auld fool.
+Nevertheless, forgive me, friends: I cannot help all-powerful nature.
+
+ [Picture: The minister's lassie Jess]
+
+Nanse's taste being like my own, we amused one another in abusing great
+cities, which are all chokeful of the abominations of the Scarlet Woman;
+and it is curious how soon I learned to be up to trap--I mean in an
+honest way; for, when she said she was wearying the very heart out of her
+to be home again to Lauder, which she said was her native, and the true
+land of Goshen, I spoke back to her by way of answer--"Nancy, my dear,
+believe me that the real land of Goshen is out at Dalkeith; and if ye'll
+take up house with me, and enter into a way of doing, I daursay in a
+while, ye'll come to think so too."
+
+What will ye say there? Matters were by-and-by settled full tosh between
+us; and, though the means of both parties were small, we were young, and
+able and willing to help one another. Nanse, out of her wages, had
+hained a trifle; and I had, safe lodged under lock-and-key in the Bank of
+Scotland, against the time of my setting up, the siller which was got by
+selling the bit house of granfaither's, on the death of my
+ever-to-be-lamented mother, who survived her helpmate only six months,
+leaving me an orphan lad in a wicked world, obliged to fend, forage and
+look out for myself.
+
+Taking matters into account, therefore, and considering that it is not
+good for man to be alone, Nanse and me laid our heads together towards
+the taking a bit house in the fore-street of Dalkeith; and at our leisure
+kept a look-out about buying the plenishing--the expense of which, for
+different littles and littles, amounted to more than we expected; yet, to
+our hearts' content, we made some most famous second-hand bargains of
+sprechery, amongst the old-furniture warehousemen of the Cowgate. I
+might put down here the prices of the room-grate, the bachelor's oven,
+the cheese-toaster, and the warming-pan, especially, which, though it had
+a wheen holes in it, kept a fine polish; but, somehow or other, have lost
+the receipt and cannot make true affidavy.
+
+Certain it is, whatever cadgers may say to the contrary, that the back is
+aye made for the burden; and, were all to use the means, and be
+industrious, many, that wyte bad harvests, and worse times, would have,
+like the miller in the auld sang, "A penny in the purse for dinner and
+for supper," or better to finish the verse, "Gin ye please a guid fat
+cheese, and lumps of yellow butter."
+
+For two three days, I must confess, after Maister Wiggie had gone through
+the ceremony of tying us together, and Nanse and me found ourselves in
+the comfortable situation of man and wife, I was a wee dowie and
+desponding, thinking that we were to have a numerous small family, and
+where trade was to come from; but no sooner was my sign nailed up, with
+four iron hold-fasts, by Johnny Hammer, painted in black letters on a
+blue ground, with a picture of a jacket on one side and a pair of shears
+on the other,--and my shop-door opened to the public, with a wheen
+ready-made waistcoats, gallowses, leather-caps, and Kilmarnock cowls,
+hung up at the window, than business flowed in upon us in a perfect
+torrent. First one came in for his measure, and then another. A wife
+came in for a pair of red worsted boots for her bairn, but would not take
+them for they had not blue fringes. A bareheaded lassie, hoping to be
+handsel, threw down twopence, and asked tape at three yards for a
+halfpenny. The minister sent an old black coat beneath his maid's arm,
+pinned up in a towel, to get docked in the tails down into a jacket;
+which I trust I did to his entire satisfaction, making it fit to a hair.
+The Duke's butler himself patronized me, by sending me a coat which was
+all hair-powder and pomate, to get a new neck put to it. And James
+Batter, aye a staunch friend of the family, dispatched a barefoot cripple
+lassie down the close to me, with a brown paper parcel, tied with skinie,
+and having a memorandum letter sewed on the top of it, and wafered with a
+wafer. It ran as follows; "Maister Batter has sent down, per the bearer,
+with his compliments to Mr Wauch, a cuttikin of corduroy, deficient in
+the instep, which please let out, as required. Maister Wauch will also
+please be so good as observe that three of the buttons have sprung the
+thorls, which he will be obliged to him to replace, at his earliest
+convenience. Please send me a message what they may be; and have the
+account made out, article for article, and duly discharged, that I may
+send down the bearer with the change; and to bring me back the cuttikin
+and the account, to save time and trouble. I am, dear sir, your most
+obedient friend, and ever most sincerely,
+
+ "JAMES BATTER."
+
+No wonder than we attracted customers, for our sign was the prettiest ye
+ever saw, though the jacket was not just so neatly painted, as for some
+sand-blind creatures not to take it for a goose. I daresay there were
+fifty half-naked bairns glowring their eyes out of their heads at it,
+from morning till night; and, after they all were gone to their beds,
+both Nanse and me found ourselves so proud of our new situation in life,
+that we slipped out in the dark by ourselves, and had a prime look at it
+with a lantern.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVEN--MANSIE WAUCH AND HIS FOREWARNING
+
+
+On first commencing business, I have freely confessed, I believe, that I
+was unco solicitous of custom, though less from sinful, selfish motives,
+than from the, I trust, laudable fear I had about becoming in a jiffy the
+father of a small family, every one with a mouth to fill and a back to
+cleid--helpless bairns, with nothing to look to or lean on, save and
+except the proceeds of my daily handiwork. Nothing, however, is sure in
+this world, as Maister Wiggie more than once took occasion to observe,
+when lecturing on the house built by the foolish man on the sea-sands;
+for months passed on, and better passed on; and these, added together by
+simple addition, amounted to three years; and still neither word nor
+wittens of a family, to perpetuate our name to future generations,
+appeared to be forthcoming.
+
+Between friends, I make no secret of the matter, that this was a
+catastrophe which vexed me not a little, for more reasons than one. In
+the first place, youngsters being a bond of mutual affection between man
+and wife, sweeter than honey from the comb, and stronger than the Roman
+cement with which the old Picts built their bridges, that will last till
+the day of doom. In the second place, bairns toddling round a bit ingle
+make a house look like itself, especially in the winter time, when
+hailstanes rattle on the window, and winds roar like the voices of mighty
+giants at the lum-head; for then the maister of the dwelling finds
+himself like an ancient patriarch, and the shepherd of a flock, tender as
+young lambs, yet pleasant to his eye, and dear to his heart. And, in the
+third place (for I'll speak the truth and shame the deil) as I could not
+thole the gibes and idle tongues of a wheen fools that, for their
+diversion, would be asking me, "How the wife and bairns were; and if I
+had sent my auldest laddie to the school yet?"
+
+I have swithered within myself for more than half-an-hour, whether I
+should relate a circumstance bordering a little on the supernatural line,
+that happened to me, as connected with the business of the bairns of
+which I have just been speaking; and, were it for no other reason, but
+just to plague the scoffer that sits in his elbow-chair, I have
+determined to jot down the whole miraculous paraphernally in black and
+white. With folk that will not listen to the voice of reason, it is
+needless to be wasterful of words; so them that like, may either prin
+their faith to my coat-sleeve, about what I am going to relate, or
+not--just as they choose. All that I can say in my defence, and as an
+affidavy to my veracity, is that I have been thirty year an elder of
+Maister Wiggie's kirk--and that is no joke. The matter I make free to
+consider is not a laughing concern, nor anything belonging to the
+Merry-Andrew line; and, if folk were but strong in the faith, there is no
+saying what may come to pass for their good. One might as well hold up
+their brazen face, and pretend not to believe any thing--neither the
+Witch of Endor raising up Samuel; nor Cornel Gardener's vision; nor
+Johnny Wilkes and the De'il; nor Peden's prophecies.
+
+Nanse and me aye made what they call an anniversary of our wedding-day,
+which happened to be the fifth of November, the very same as that on
+which the Gunpowder Plot chances to be occasionally held--Sundays
+excepted. According to custom, this being the fourth year, we collected
+a good few friends to a tea-drinking; and had our cracks and a glass or
+two of toddy. Thomas Burlings, if I mind, was there, and his wife; and
+Deacon Paunch, he was a bachelor; and likewise James Batter; and David
+Sawdust and his wife, and their four bairns, good customers; and a wheen
+more, that, without telling a lie, I could not venture to particularize
+at this moment, though maybe I may mind them when I am not wanting--but
+no matter. Well, as I was saying, after they all went away, and Nanse
+and me, after locking the door, slipped to our bed, I had one of the most
+miraculous dreams recorded in the history of man; more especially if we
+take into consideration where, when, and to whom it happened.
+
+At first I thought I was sitting by the fireside, where the cat and the
+kittling were playing with a mouse they had catched in the meal-kit,
+cracking with James Batter on check-reels for yarn, and the cleverest way
+of winding pirns, when, all at once, I thought myself transplanted back
+to the auld world--forgetting the tailoring-trade; broad and narrow
+cloth; worsted boots and Kilmarnock cowls; pleasant Dalkeith; our late
+yearly ploy; my kith and kindred; the friends of the people; the Duke's
+parks; and so on--and found myself walking beneath beautiful trees, from
+the branches of which hung apples, and oranges, and cocky-nuts, and figs,
+and raisins, and plumdamases, and corry-danders, and more than the tongue
+of man can tell, while all the birds and beasts seemed as tame as our
+bantings; in fact, just as they were in the days of Adam and Eve--Bengal
+tigers passing by on this hand, and Russian bears on that, rowing
+themselves on the grass, out of fun; while peacocks, and magpies, and
+parrots, and cockytoos, and yorlins, and grey-linties, and all birds of
+sweet voice and fair feather, sported among the woods, as if they had
+nothing to do but sit and sing in the sweet sunshine, having dread
+neither of the net of the fowler, the double-barrelled gun of the
+gamekeeper, nor the laddies' girn set with moorlings of bread. It was
+real paradise; and I found myself fairly lifted off my feet and
+transported out of my seven senses.
+
+While sauntering about at my leisure, with my Sunday hat on, and a pair
+of clean white cotton stockings, in this heavenly mood, under the green
+trees, and beside the still waters, out of which beautiful salmon trouts
+were sporting and leaping, methought in a moment I fell down in a trance,
+as flat as a flounder, and I heard a voice visibly saying to me, "Thou
+shalt have a son; let him be christened Benjamin!" The joy that this
+vision brought my spirit thrilled through my bones, like the sounds of a
+blind man grinding "Rule Britannia" out of an organ, and my senses
+vanished from me into a kind of slumber, on rousing from which I thought
+I found myself walking, all dressed, with powdered hair, and a long tye
+behind, just like a grand gentleman, with a valuable bamboo walking-stick
+in my hand, among green yerbs and flowers, like an auncient hermit far
+away among the hills, at the back of beyont; as if broad cloth and
+buckram had never been heard tell of, and serge, twist, pocket-linings,
+and shamoy leather, were matters with which mortal man had no concern.
+
+Speak of auld-light or new-light as ye like, for my own part I am not
+much taken up with any of your warlock and wizard tribe; I have no brew
+of your auld Major Weir, or Tam o' Shanter, or Michael Scott, or Thomas
+the Rhymer's kind, knocking in pins behind doors to make decent folk
+dance, jig, cut, and shuffle themselves to death--splitting the hills as
+ye would spelder a haddy, and playing all manner of evil pranks, and
+sinful abominations, till their crafty maister, Auld Nick, puts them to
+their mettle, by setting them to twine ropes out of sea-sand, and such
+like. I like none of your paternosters, and saying of prayers backwards,
+or drawing lines with chalk round ye, before crying,
+
+ "Redcowl, redcowl, come if ye daur;
+ Lift the sneck, and draw the bar."
+
+I never, in the whole course of my life, was fond of lending the sanction
+of my countenance to any thing that was not canny; and, even when I was a
+wee smout of a callant, with my jacket and trowsers buttoned all in one,
+I never would play, on Hallo'-'een night, at anything else but douking
+for apples, burning nuts, pulling kail-runts, foul water and clean,
+drapping the egg, or trying who was to be your sweetheart out of the
+lucky-bag.
+
+As I have often thought, and sometimes taken occasion to observe, it
+would be well for us all to profit by experience--"burned bairns should
+dread the fire," as the proverb goes. After the miserable catastrophe of
+the playhouse, for instance--which I shall afterwards have occasion to
+commemorate in due time, and in a subsequent chapter of my eventful
+life--I would have been worse than mad, had I persisted, night after
+night, to pay my shilling for a veesy of vagrants in buckram, and limmers
+in silk, parading away at no allowance--as kings and queens, with their
+tale--speaking havers that only fools have throats wide enough to
+swallow, and giving themselves airs to which they have no more earthly
+title than the man in the moon. I say nothing, besides, of their
+throwing glamour in honest folks een; but I'll not deny that I have been
+told by them who would not lie, and were living witnesses of the
+transaction, that, as true as death, they had seen the tane of these
+ne'er-do-weels spit the other, through and through, with a
+weel-sharpened, old, Highland, forty-second Andrew Ferrary, in single
+combat; whereupon, as might reasonably be expected, he would, in the
+twinkling of a farthing rushlight, fall down as dead as a bag of sand;
+yet, by their rictum-ticktum, rise-up-Jack, slight-of-hand, hocus-pocus
+way, would be on his legs, brushing the stour from his breeches knees,
+before the green curtain was half-way down. James Batter himself once
+told me, that, when he was a laddie, he saw one of these clanjamphrey go
+in behind the scenes with nankeen trowsers, a blue coat out at the
+elbows, and fair hair hanging over his ears, and in less than no time,
+come out a real negro, as black as Robinson Crusoe's man Friday, with a
+jacket on his back of Macgregor tartan, and as good a pair of buckskin
+breeches as jockey ever mounted horse in at a Newmarket race. Where the
+silk stockings were wrought, and the Jerusalem sandals made, that he had
+on his feet, James Batter used doucely to observe he would leave every
+reasonable man to guess at a venture.
+
+A good story not being the worse of being twice told, I repeat it over
+again, that I would have been worse than daft, after the precious warning
+it was my fortune to get, to have sanctioned such places with my
+presence, in spite of the remonstrances of my conscience--and of Maister
+Wiggie--and of the kirk-session. Whenever any thing is carried on out of
+the course of nature, especially when accompanied with dancing and
+singing, toot-tooing of clarionets, and bumming of bass-fiddles, ye may
+be as sure as you are born, that ye run a chance of being deluded out of
+your right senses--that the sounds are by way of lulling the soul
+asleep--and that, to the certainty of a without-a-doubt, you are in the
+heat and heart of one of the devil's rendevooses.
+
+To say no more, I was once myself, for example, at one of our Dalkeith
+fairs, present in a hay-loft--I think they charged threepence at the
+door, but let me in with a grudge for twopence, but no matter--to see a
+punch and puppie-show business, and other slight-of-hand work. Well, the
+very moment I put my neb within the door, I was visibly convinced of the
+smell of burnt roset, with, which I understand they make lightning, and
+knew, as well as maybe, what they had been trafficking about with their
+black art; but, nevertheless, having a stout heart, I determined to sit
+still, and see what they would make of it, knowing well enough, that, as
+long as I had the Psalm-book in my pocket, they would be gay and clever
+to throw any of their blasted cantrips over me.
+
+What do ye think they did? One of them, a wauf, drucken-looking
+scoundrel, fired a gold ring over the window, and mostly set fire to the
+thatch house opposite--which was not insured. Yet where think ye did the
+ring go to? With my living een I saw it taken out of auld Willie
+Turneep's waistcoat pouch, who was sitting blind fou, with his mouth
+open, on one of the back seats; so, by no earthly possibility could it
+have got there, except by whizzing round the gable, and in through the
+steeked door by the key-hole.
+
+Folk may say what they chuse by way of apology, but I neither like nor
+understand such on-going as changing sterling silver half-crowns into
+copper penny-pieces, or mending a man's coat--as they did mine, after
+cutting a blad out of one of the tails--by the black-art.
+
+But, hout-tout, one thing and another coming across me, had almost clean
+made me forget explaining to the world, the upshot of my extraordinary
+vision; but better late than never--and now for it.
+
+Nanse, on finding herself in a certain way, was a thought dumfoundered;
+and instead of laughing, as she did at first, when I told her my dream,
+she soon came to regard the matter as one of sober earnest. The very
+prospect of what was to happen threw a gleam of comfort round our bit
+fireside; and, long ere the day had come about which was to crown our
+expectations, Nanse was prepared with her bit stock of baby's wearing
+apparel, and all necessaries appertaining thereto--wee little mutches
+with lace borders, and side-knots of blue three-ha'penny ribbon--long
+muslin frockies, vandyked across the breast, drawn round the waist with
+narrow nittings and tucked five rows about the tail--Welsh-flannel
+petticoaties--demity wrappers--a coral gumstick, and other uncos, which
+it does not befit the like of me to particularize. I trust, on my part,
+as far as in me lay, I was not found wanting; having taken care to
+provide a famous Dunlop cheese, at fivepence-halfpenny the pound--I
+believe I paled fifteen, in Joseph Gowdy's shop, before I fixed on
+it;--to say nothing of a bottle, or maybe two, of real peat-reek,
+Farintosh, small-still Hieland whisky--Glenlivat, I think, is the name
+o't--half a peck of shortbread, baken by Thomas Burlings, with three
+pounds of butter, and two ounces of carvie-seeds in it, let alone
+orange-peel, and a pennyworth of ground cinnamon--half a mutchkin of best
+cony brandy, by way of change--and a Musselburgh ankerstoke, to slice
+down for tea-drinkings and posset cups.
+
+Everyone has reason to be thankful, and me among the rest; for many a
+worse provided for, and less welcome down-lying has taken place, time out
+of mind, throughout broad Scotland. I say this with a warm heart, as I
+am grateful for my all mercies. To hundreds above hundreds such a
+catastrophe brings scarcely any joy at all; but it was far different with
+me, who had a Benjamin to look for.
+
+If the reader will be so kind as to look over the next chapter, he will
+find whether or not I was disappointed in my expectations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHT--LETTING LODGINGS
+
+
+It would be curious if I passed over a remarkable incident, which at this
+time fell out. Being but new beginners in the world, the wife and I put
+our heads constantly together to contrive for our forward advancement, as
+it is the bounden duty of all to do. So our housie being rather large
+(two rooms and a kitchen, not speaking of the coal-cellar and a
+hen-house,) and having as yet only the expectation of a family, we
+thought we could not do better than get John Varnish the painter, to do
+off a small ticket, with "A Furnished Room to Let" on it, which we nailed
+out at the window; having collected into it the choicest of our
+furniture, that it might fit a genteeler lodger and produce a better
+rent--And a lodger soon we got.
+
+Dog on it! I think I see him yet. He was a blackaviced Englishman, with
+curled whiskers and a powdered pow, stout round the waistband, and fond
+of good eating, let alone drinking, as we found to our cost. Well, he
+was our first lodger. We sought a good price, that we might, on
+bargaining, have the merit of coming down a tait; but no, no--go away wi'
+ye; it was dog-cheap to him. The half-guinea a-week was judged perfectly
+moderate; but if all his debts were--yet I must not cut before the cloth.
+
+Hang expenses! was the order of the day. Ham and eggs for breakfast, let
+alone our currant jelly. Roast-mutton cold, and strong ale at twelve, by
+way of check, to keep away wind from the stomach. Smoking roast-beef,
+with scraped horse raddish, at four precisely; and toasted cheese, punch,
+and porter, for supper. It would have been less, had all the things been
+within ourselves. Nothing had we but the cauler new-laid eggs; then
+there was Deacon Heukbane's butcher's account; and John Cony's spirit
+account; and Thomas Burlings' bap account; and deevil kens how many more
+accounts, that came all in upon us afterwards. But the crowning of all
+was reserved for the end. It was no farce at the time, and kept our
+heads down at the water edge for many a day. I was just driving the hot
+goose along the seams of a Sunday jacket I was finishing for Thomas Clod
+the ploughman, when the Englisher came in at the shop door, whistling
+"Robert Adair," and "Scots wha ha'e wi' Wallace bled," and whiles, maybe,
+churming to himself like a young blackbird;--but I have not patience to
+go through with it. The long and the short of the matter, however, was,
+that, after rummaging among my two or three webs of broadcloth on the
+shelf, he pitched on a Manchester blue, five quarters wide, marked
+CXD.XF, which is to say, three-and-twenty shillings the yard. I told him
+it was impossible to make a pair of pantaloons to him in two hours; but
+he insisted upon having them, alive or dead, as he had to go down the
+same afternoon to dine with my Lord Duke, no less. I convinced him, that
+if I was to sit up all night, he could get them by five next morning, if
+that would do, as I would keep my laddie, Tammy Bodkin, out of his bed;
+but no--I thought he would have jumped out of his seven senses. "Just
+look," he said, turning up the inside seam of the leg--"just see--can any
+gentleman make a visit in such things as these? they are as full of holes
+as a coal-sieve. I wonder the devil why my baggage has not come forward.
+Can I get a horse and boy to ride express to Edinburgh for a ready-made
+article?"
+
+ [Picture: Mansie's father]
+
+A thought struck me; for I had heard of wonderful advancement in the
+world, for those who had been so lucky as help the great at a pinch. "If
+ye'll no take it amiss, sir," said I, making my obedience, "a notion has
+just struck me."
+
+"Well, what is it?" said he briskly.
+
+"Well, sir, I have a pair of knee-breeches, of most famous velveteen,
+double tweel, which have been only once on my legs, and that no farther
+gone than last Sabbath. I'm pretty sure they would fit ye in the
+meantime; and I would just take a pleasure in driving the needle all
+night, to get your own ready."
+
+"A clever thought," said the Englisher. "Do you think they would fit
+me?--Devilish clever thought, indeed."
+
+"To a hair," I answered; and cried to Nanse to bring the velveteens.
+
+I do not think he was ten minutes, when lo, and behold! out at the door
+he went, and away past the shop-window like a lamplighter. The buttons
+on the velveteens were glittering like gold at the knees. Alas! it was
+like the flash of the setting sun; I never beheld them more. He was to
+have been back in two or three hours, but the laddie, with the box on his
+shoulder, was going through the street crying "Hot penny-pies" for
+supper, and neither word nor wittens of him. I began to be a thought
+uneasy, and fidgeted on the board like a hen on a hot girdle. No man
+should do anything when he is vexed, but I could not help giving Tammy
+Bodkin, who was sewing away at the lining of the new pantaloons, a
+terrible whisk in the lug for singing to himself. I say I was vexed for
+it afterwards; especially as the laddie did not mean to give offence; and
+as I saw the blae marks of my four fingers along his chaft-blade.
+
+The wife had been bothering me for a new gown, on strength of the payment
+of our grand bill; and in came she, at this blessed moment of time, with
+about twenty swatches from Simeon Calicoe's pinned on a screed of paper.
+
+"Which of these do you think bonniest?" said Nanse, in a flattering way;
+"I ken, Mansie, you have a good taste."
+
+"Cut not before the cloth," answered I, "gudewife," with a wise shake of
+my head. "It'll be time enough, I daresay, to make your choice
+to-morrow."
+
+Nanse went out as if her nose had been blooding. I could thole it no
+longer; so, buttoning my breeches-knees, I threw my cowl into a corner,
+clapped my hat on my head, and away down in full birr to the Duke's gate.
+
+I speired at the porter, if the gentleman with the velveteen breeches and
+powdered hair, that was dining with the Duke, had come up the avenue yet?
+
+"Velveteen breeches and powdered hair!" said auld Paul laughing, and
+taking the pipe out of his cheek, "whose butler is't that ye're after?"
+
+"Well," said I to him, "I see it all as plain as a pikestaff. He is off
+bodily; but may the meat and the drink he has taken off us be like drogs
+to his inside; and may the velveteens play crack, and cast the steeks at
+every step he takes!" It was no Christian wish; and Paul laughed till he
+was like to burst, at my expense. "Gang your ways hame, Mansie," said he
+to me, clapping me on the shoulder as if I had been a wean, "and give
+over setting traps, for ye see you have catched a Tartar."
+
+This was too much; first to be cheated by a swindling loon, and then made
+game of by a flunkie; and, in my desperation, I determined to do some
+awful thing.
+
+Nanse followed me in from the door, and asked what news?--I was ower big,
+and ower vexed to hear her; so, never letting on, I went to the little
+looking-glass on the drawers' head, and set it down on the table. Then I
+looked myself in it for a moment, and made a gruesome face. Syne I
+pulled out the little drawer, and got the sharping strap, the which I
+fastened to my button. Syne I took my razor from the box, and gave it
+five or six turns along first one side and then the other, with great
+precision. Syne I tried the edge of it along the flat of my hand. Syne
+I loosed my neckcloth, and laid it over the back of the chair; and syne I
+took out the button of my shirt neck, and folded it back. Nanse, who
+was, all time, standing behind, looking what I was after, asked me, "if I
+was going to shave without hot water?" when I said to her in a fierce and
+brave manner, (which was very cruel, considering the way she was in,)
+"I'll let you see that presently." The razor looked desperate sharp; and
+I never liked the sight of blood; but oh, I was in a terrible flurry and
+fermentation. A kind of cold trembling went through me; and I thought it
+best to tell Nanse what I was going to do, that she might be something
+prepared for it. "Fare ye well, my dear!" said I to her, "you will be a
+widow in five minutes--for here goes!" I did not think she could have
+mustered so much courage, but she sprang at me like a tiger; and,
+throwing the razor into the ass-hole, took me round the neck, and cried
+like a bairn. First she was seized with a fit of the hystericks, and
+then with her pains. It was a serious time for us both, and no joke; for
+my heart smote me for my sin and cruelty. But I did my best to make up
+for it. I ran up and down like mad for the Howdie, and at last brought
+her trotting along with me by the lug. I could not stand it. I shut
+myself up in the shop with Tammy Bodkin, like Daniel in the lions' den;
+and every now and then opened the door to spier what news. Oh, but my
+heart was like to break with anxiety! I paced up and down, and to and
+fro, with my Kilmarnock on my head, and my hands in my breeches pockets,
+like a man out of Bedlam. I thought it would never be over; but, at the
+second hour of the morning, I heard a wee squeel, and knew that I was a
+father; and so proud was I, that notwithstanding our loss, Lucky
+Bringthereout and me whanged away at the cheese and bread, and drank so
+briskly at the whisky and foot-yill, that, when she tried to rise and go
+away, she could not stir a foot. So Tammy and I had to oxter her out
+between us, and deliver the howdie herself--safe in at her own door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINE--BENJIE'S CHRISTENING
+
+
+At the christening of our only bairn, Benjie, two or three remarkable
+circumstances occurred, which it behoves me to relate.
+
+It was on a cold November afternoon; and really when the bit room was all
+redd up, the fire bleezing away, and the candles lighted, every thing
+looked full tosh and comfortable. It was a real pleasure, after looking
+out into the drift that was fleeing like mad from the east, to turn one's
+neb inwards, and think that we had a civilized home to comfort us in the
+dreary season. So, one after another, the bit party we had invited to
+the ceremony came papping in; and the crack began to get loud and hearty;
+for, to speak the truth, we were blessed with canny friends, and a good
+neighbourhood. Notwithstanding, it was very curious, that I had no mind
+of asking down James Batter, the weaver, honest man, though he was one of
+our own elders; and in papped James, just when the company had haffins
+met, with his stocking-sleeves on his arms, his nightcap on his head, and
+his blue-stained apron hanging down before him, to light his pipe at our
+fire.
+
+James, when he saw his mistake, was fain to make his retreat; but we
+would not hear tell of it, till he came in, and took a dram out of the
+bottle, as we told him the not doing so would spoil the wean's beauty,
+which is an old freak, (the small-pox, however, afterwards did that;) so,
+with much persuasion, he took a chair for a gliff, and began with some of
+his drolls--for he is a clever, humoursome man, as ye ever met with. But
+he had now got far on with his jests, when lo! a rap came to the door,
+and Mysie whipped away the bottle under her apron, saying, "Wheesht,
+wheesht, for the sake of gudeness, there's the minister!"
+
+The room had only one door, and James mistook it, running his head, for
+lack of knowledge, into the open closet, just as the minister lifted the
+outer-door sneck. We were all now sitting on nettles, for we were
+frighted that James would be seized with a cough, for he was a wee
+asthmatic; or that some, knowing there was a thief in the pantry, might
+hurt good manners by breaking out into a giggle. However, all for a
+considerable time was quiet, and the ceremony was performed; little
+Nancy, our niece, handing the bairn upon my arm to receive its name. So,
+we thought, as the minister seldom made a long stay on similar occasions,
+that all would pass off well enough--But wait a wee.
+
+There was but one of our company that had not cast up, to wit, Deacon
+Paunch, the flesher, a most worthy man, but tremendously big, and grown
+to the very heels; as was once seen on a wager, that his ankle was
+greater than my brans. It was really a pain to all feeling Christians,
+to see the worthy man waigling about, being, when weighed in his own
+scales, two-and-twenty stone ten ounces, Dutch weight. Honest man, he
+had had a sore fecht with the wind and the sleet, and he came in with a
+shawl roppined round his neck, peching like a broken-winded horse; so
+fain was he to find a rest for his weary carcass in our stuffed chintz
+pattern elbow-chair by the fire cheek.
+
+From the soughing of wind at the window, and the rattling in the lum, it
+was clear to all manner of comprehension, that the night was a dismal
+one; so the minister, seeing so many of his own douce folk about him,
+thought he might do worse than volunteer to sit still, and try our toddy:
+indeed, we would have pressed him before this to do so; but what was to
+come of James Batter, who was shut up in the closet, like the spies in
+the house of Rahab, the harlot, in the city of Jericho?
+
+James began to find it was a bad business; and having been driving the
+shuttle about from before daylight, he was fain to cruik his hough, and
+felt round about him quietly in the dark for a chair to sit down upon,
+since better might not be. But, wae's me! the cat was soon out of the
+pock.
+
+Me and the minister were just argle-bargling some few words on the
+doctrine of the camel and the eye of the needle, when, in the midst of
+our discourse, as all was wheesht and attentive, an awful thud was heard
+in the closet, which gave the minister, who thought the house had fallen
+down, such a start, that his very wig louped for a full three-eighths off
+his crown. I say we were needcessitated to let the cat out of the pock
+for two reasons; firstly, because we did not know what had happened; and,
+secondly, to quiet the minister's fears, decent man, for he was a wee
+nervous. So we made a hearty laugh of it, as well as we could, and
+opened the door to bid James Batter come out, as we confessed all.
+Easier said than done, howsoever. When we pulled open the door, and took
+forward one of the candles, there was James doubled up, sticking twofold
+like a rotten in a sneck-trap, in an old chair, the bottom of which had
+gone down before him, and which, for some craize about it, had been put
+out of the way by Nanse, that no accident might happen. Save us! if the
+deacon had sate down upon it, pity on our brick-floor.
+
+Well, after some ado, we got James, who was more frighted than hurt,
+hauled out of his hidy-hole; and after lifting off his cowl, and sleeking
+down his front hair, he took a seat beside us, apologeezing for not being
+in his Sunday's garb, the which the minister, who was a free and easy
+man, declared there was no occasion for, and begged him to make himself
+comfortable.
+
+Well, passing over that business, Mr Wiggie and me entered into our
+humours, for the drappikie was beginning to tell on my noddle, and make
+me somewhat venturesome--not to say that I was not a little proud to have
+the minister in my bit housie; so, says I to him in a cosh way, "Ye may
+believe me or no, Mr Wiggie, but mair than me think ye out of sight the
+best preacher in the parish--nane of them, Mr Wiggie; can hold the candle
+to ye, man."
+
+"Weesht, weesht," said the body, in rather a cold way that I did not
+expect, knowing him to be as proud as a peacock--"I daresay I am just
+like my neighbours."
+
+This was not quite so kind--so says I to him, "Maybe, sae, for many a one
+thinks ye could not hold a candle to Mr Blowster the Cameronian, that
+whiles preaches at Lugton."
+
+This was a stramp on his corny toe. "Na, na," answered Mr Wiggie, rather
+nettled; "let us drop that subject. I preach like my neighbours. Some
+of them may be worse, and others better; just as some of your own trade
+may make clothes worse, and some better, than yourself."
+
+My corruption was raised. "I deny that," said I, in a brisk manner,
+which I was sorry for after--"I deny that, Mr Wiggie," says I to him;
+"I'll make a pair of breeches with the face of clay."
+
+But this was only a passing breeze, during the which, howsoever, I
+happened to swallow my thimble, which accidentally slipped off my middle
+finger, causing both me and the company general alarm, as there were
+great fears that it might mortify in the stomach; but it did not; and
+neither word nor wittens of it have been seen or heard tell of from that
+to this day. So, in two or three minutes, we had some few good songs,
+and a round of Scotch proverbs, when the clock chapped eleven. We were
+all getting, I must confess, a thought noisy; Johnny Soutter having
+broken a dram-glass, and Willie Fegs couped a bottle on the bit
+table-cloth; all noisy, I say, except Deacon Paunch, douce man, who had
+fallen into a pleasant slumber; so, when the minister rose to take his
+hat, they all rose except the Deacon, whom we shook by the arms for some
+time, but in vain, to waken him. His round, oily face, good creature,
+was just as if it had been cut out of a big turnip, it was so fat, fozy,
+and soft; but at last, after some ado, we succeeded, and he looked about
+him with a wild stare, opening his two red eyes, like Pandore oysters,
+asking what had happened; and we got him hoized up on his legs, tying the
+blue shawl round his bull-neck again.
+
+Our company had not got well out of the door, and I was priding myself in
+my heart, about being landlord to such a goodly turn out, when Nanse took
+me by the arm, and said, "Come, and see such an unearthly sight." This
+startled me, and I hesitated; but, at long and last, I went in with her,
+a thought alarmed at what had happened, and--my gracious!! there on the
+easy-chair, was our bonny tortoise-shell cat; Tommy, with the red morocco
+collar about its neck, bruised as flat as a flounder, and as dead as a
+mawk!!!
+
+The Deacon had sat down upon it without thinking; and the poor animal,
+that our neighbours' bairns used to play with, and be so fond of, was
+crushed out of life without a cheep. The thing, doubtless, was not
+intended, but it gave Nanse and me a very sore heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TEN--RESURRECTION MEN
+
+
+About this time there arose a great sough and surmise, that some loons
+were playing false with the kirkyard, howking up the bodies from their
+damp graves, and harling them away to the College. Words cannot describe
+the fear, and the dool, and the misery it caused. All flocked to the
+kirk-yett; and the friends of the newly buried stood by the mools, which
+were yet dark, and the brown newly cast divots, that had not yet taken
+root, looking, with mournful faces, to descry any tokens of sinking in.
+
+I'll never forget it. I was standing by when three young lads took
+shools, and, lifting up the truff, proceeded to houk down to the coffin,
+wherein they had laid the grey hairs of their mother. They looked wild
+and bewildered like, and the glance of their een was like that of folk
+out of a mad-house; and none dared in the world to have spoken to them.
+They did not even speak to one another; but wrought on with a great
+hurry, till the spades struck on the coffin lid--which was broken. The
+dead-clothes were there huddled together in a nook, but the dead was
+gone. I took hold of Willie Walker's arm, and looked down. There was a
+cold sweat all over me;--losh me! but I was terribly frighted and eerie.
+Three more graves were opened, and all just alike; save and except that
+of a wee unchristened wean, which was off bodily, coffin and all.
+
+There was a burst of righteous indignation throughout the parish; nor
+without reason. Tell me that doctors and graduates must have the dead;
+but tell it not to Mansie Wauch, that our hearts must be trampled in the
+mire of scorn, and our best feelings laughed at, in order that a bruise
+may be properly plastered up, or a sore head cured. Verily, the remedy
+is worse than the disease.
+
+But what remead? It was to watch in the session-house, with loaded guns,
+night about, three at a time. I never liked to go into the kirkyard
+after darkening, let-a-be to sit there through a long winter night, windy
+and rainy it may be, with none but the dead around us. Save us! it was
+an unco thought, and garred all my flesh creep; but the cause was
+good--my corruption was raised--and I was determined not to be dauntened.
+
+I counted and counted, but the dread day at length came and I was
+summoned. All the live-long afternoon, when ca'ing the needle upon the
+board, I tried to whistle Jenny Nettles, Neil Gow, and other funny tunes,
+and whiles crooned to myself between hands; but my consternation was
+visible, and all would not do.
+
+It was in November; and the cold glimmering sun sank behind the
+Pentlands. The trees had been shorn of their frail leaves, and the misty
+night was closing fast in upon the dull and short day; but the candles
+glittered at the shop windows, and leery-light-the-lamps was brushing
+about with his ladder in his oxter, and bleezing flamboy sparking out
+behind him. I felt a kind of qualm of faintness and down-sinking about
+my heart and stomach, to the dispelling of which I took a thimbleful of
+spirits, and, tying my red comforter about my neck, I marched briskly to
+the session-house. A neighbour (Andrew Goldie, the pensioner) lent me
+his piece, and loaded it to me. He took tent that it was only half-cock,
+and I wrapped a napkin round the dog-head, for it was raining. Not being
+well acquaint with guns, I kept the muzzle aye away from me; as it is
+every man's duty not to throw his precious life into jeopardy.
+
+A furm was set before the session-house fire, which bleezed brightly, nor
+had I any thought that such an unearthly place could have been made to
+look half so comfortable either by coal or candle; so my spirits rose up
+as if a weight had been taken off them, and I wondered, in my bravery,
+that a man like me could be afraid of anything. Nobody was there but a
+touzy, ragged, halflins callant of thirteen, (for I speired his age,)
+with a desperate dirty face, and long carroty hair, tearing a speldrin
+with his teeth, which looked long and sharp enough, and throwing the skin
+and lugs into the fire.
+
+We sat for mostly an hour together, cracking the best way we could in
+such a place; nor was anybody more likely to cast up. The night was now
+pitmirk; the wind soughed amid the head-stones and railings of the
+gentry, (for we must all die,) and the black corbies in the steeple-holes
+cackled and crawed in a fearsome manner. All at once we heard a lonesome
+sound; and my heart began to play pit-pat--my skin grew all rough, like a
+pouked chicken--and I felt as if I did not know what was the matter with
+me. It was only a false alarm, however, being the warning of the clock;
+and, in a minute or two thereafter, the bell struck ten. Oh, but it was
+a lonesome and dreary sound! Every chap went through my breast like the
+dunt of a fore-hammer.
+
+Then up and spak the red-headed laddie:--"It's no fair; anither should
+hae come by this time. I wad rin awa hame, only I am frighted to gang
+out my lane.--Do ye think the doup of that candle wad carry i' my cap?"
+
+"Na, na, lad; we maun bide here, as we are here now.--Leave me alane?
+Lord save us! and the yett lockit, and the bethrel sleeping with the key
+in his breek pouches!--We canna win out now though we would," answered I,
+trying to look brave, though half frightened out of my seven
+senses:--"Sit down, sit down; I've baith whisky and porter wi' me. Hae,
+man, there's a cawker to keep your heart warm; and set down that bottle,"
+quoth I, wiping the saw-dust affn't with my hand, "to get a toast; I'se
+warrant it for Deacon Jaffrey's best brown stout."
+
+ [Picture: Rev. Mr Wiggie]
+
+The wind blew higher, and like a hurricane; the rain began to fall in
+perfect spouts; the auld kirk rumbled and rowed, and made a sad soughing;
+and the branches of the bourtree behind the house, where auld Cockburn
+that cut his throat was burned, creaked and crazed in a frightful manner;
+but as to the roaring of the troubled waters, and the bumming in the
+lum-head, they were past all power of description. To make bad worse,
+just in the heart of the brattle, the grating sound of the yett turning
+on its rusty hinges was but too plainly heard. What was to be done? I
+thought of our both running away; and then of our locking ourselves in,
+and firing through the door; but who was to pull the trigger?
+
+Gudeness watch over us! I tremble yet when I think on it. We were
+perfectly between the de'il and the deep sea--either to stand still and
+fire our gun, or run and be shot at. It was really a hang choice. As I
+stood swithering and shaking, the laddie flew to the door, and, thrawing
+round the key, clapped his back to it. Oh! how I looked at him, as he
+stood for a gliff, like a magpie hearkening with his lug cocked up, or
+rather like a terrier watching a rotten. "They're coming! they're
+coming!" he cried out; "cock the piece, ye sumph;" while the red hair
+rose up from his pow like feathers; "they're coming, I hear them tramping
+on the gravel." Out he stretched his arms against the wall, and brizzed
+his back against the door like mad; as if he had been Samson pushing over
+the pillars in the house of Dagon. "For the Lord's sake, prime the gun,"
+he cried out, "or our throats will be cut frae lug to lug before we can
+cry Jack Robison! See that there's priming in the pan."
+
+I did the best I could; but my whole strength could hardly lift up the
+piece, which waggled to and fro like a cock's tail on a rainy day; my
+knees knocked against one another, and though I was resigned to die--I
+trust I was resigned to die--'od, but it was a frightful thing to be out
+of one's bed, and to be murdered in an old session-house, at the dead
+hour of night, by unearthly resurrection men, or rather let me call them
+deevils incarnate, wrapt up in dreadnoughts, with blacked faces, pistols,
+big sticks, and other deadly weapons.
+
+A snuff-snuffing was heard; and, through below the door, I saw a pair of
+glancing black een. 'Od, but my heart nearly louped off the bit--a
+snouff, and a gur-gurring, and over all the plain tramp of a man's heavy
+tackets and cuddy-heels among the gravel. Then came a great slap like
+thunder on the wall; and the laddie, quitting his grip, fell down,
+crying, "Fire, fire!--murder! holy murder!"
+
+"Wha's there?" growled a deep rough voice; "open, I'm a freend."
+
+I tried to speak, but could not; something like a halfpenny roll was
+sticking in my throat, so I tried to cough it up, but it would not come.
+"Gie the pass-word then," said the laddie, staring as if his eyes would
+loup out; "gie the pass-word!"
+
+First came a loud whistle, and then "Copmahagen," answered the voice.
+Oh! what a relief! The laddie started up, like one crazy with joy. "Ou!
+ou!" cried he, thrawing round the key, and rubbing his hands; "by jingo,
+it's the bethrel--it's the bethrel--it's auld Isaac himsell."
+
+First rushed in the dog, and then Isaac, with his glazed hat, slouched
+over his brow, and his horn bowet glimmering by his knee. "Has the
+French landed, do ye think? Losh keep us a'," said he, with a smile on
+his half-idiot face (for he was a kind of a sort of a natural, with an
+infirmity in his leg), '"od sauf us, man, put by your gun. Ye dinna mean
+to shoot me, do ye? What are ye about here with the door lockit? I just
+keepit four resurrectioners louping ower the wall."
+
+"Gude guide us!" I said, taking a long breath to drive the blood from my
+heart, and something relieved by Isaac's company--"Come now, Isaac, ye're
+just gieing us a fright. Isn't that true, Isaac?"
+
+"Yes, I'm joking--and what for no?--but they might have been, for
+onything ye wad hae hindered them to the contrair, I'm thinking. Na, na,
+ye maunna lock the door; that's no fair play."
+
+When the door was put ajee, and the furm set fornent the fire, I gave
+Isaac a dram to keep his heart up on such a cold stormy night. 'Od, but
+he was a droll fellow, Isaac. He sung and leuch as if he had been
+boozing in Luckie Thamson's, with some of his drucken cronies. Feint a
+hair cared he about auld kirks, or kirkyards, or vouts, or
+through-stanes, or dead folk in their winding-sheets, with the wet grass
+growing over them, and at last I began to brighten up a wee myself; so
+when he had gone over a good few funny stories, I said to him, quoth I,
+"Mony folk, I daresay, mak mair noise about their sitting up in a
+kirkyard than it's a' worth. There's naething here to harm us?"
+
+"I beg to differ wi' ye there," answered Isaac, taking out his horn mull
+from his coat pouch, and tapping on the lid in a queer style--"I could
+gie anither version of that story. Did ye no ken of three young
+doctors--Eirish students--alang with some resurrectioners, as waff and
+wile as themsells, firing shottie for shottie with the guard at
+Kirkmabreck, and lodging three slugs in ane of their backs, forbye firing
+a ramrod through anither ane's hat?"
+
+This was a wee alarming--"No," quoth I; "no, Isaac, man; I never heard of
+it."
+
+"But, let alane resurrectioners, do you no think there is sic a thing as
+ghaists? Guide ye, man, my grannie could hae telled as muckle about them
+as would have filled a minister's sermons from June to January."
+
+"Kay--kay--that's all buff," I said. "Are there nae cutty-stool
+businesses--are there nae marriages going on just now, Isaac?" for I was
+keen to change the subject.
+
+"Ye may kay--kay, as ye like, though; I can just tell ye this:--Ye'll
+mind auld Armstrong with the leather breeks, and the brown three-story
+wig--him that was the grave-digger? Weel, he saw a ghaist, wi' his
+leeving een--aye, and what's better, in this very kirkyard too. It was a
+cauld spring morning, and daylight just coming in when he came to the
+yett yonder, thinking to meet his man, paidling Jock--but Jock had
+sleepit in, and wasna there. Weel, to the wast corner ower yonder he
+gaed, and throwing his coat ower a headstane, and his hat on the tap o't,
+he dug away with his spade, casting out the mools, and the coffin
+handles, and the green banes and sic like, till he stoppit a wee to take
+breath.--What! are ye whistling to yoursell?" quoth Isaac to me, "and no
+hearing what's God's truth?"
+
+"Ou, ay," said I; "but ye didna tell me if onybody was cried last
+Sunday?"--I would have given every farthing I had made by the needle, to
+have been at that blessed time in my bed with my wife and wean. Ay, how
+I was gruing! I mostly chacked off my tongue in chittering.--But all
+would not do.
+
+"Weel, speaking of ghaists--when he was resting on his spade he looked up
+to the steeple, to see what o'clock it was, wondering what way Jock hadna
+come, when lo! and behold, in the lang diced window of the kirk yonder,
+he saw a lady a' in white, with her hands clasped thegither, looking out
+to the kirkyard at him.
+
+"He couldna believe his een, so he rubbit them with his sark sleeve, but
+she was still there bodily; and, keeping ae ee on her, and anither on his
+road to the yett, he drew his coat and hat to him below his arm, and aff
+like mad, throwing the shool half a mile ahint him. Jock fand that; for
+he was coming singing in at the yett, when his maister ran clean ower the
+tap o' him, and capsized him like a toom barrel; never stopping till he
+was in at his ain house, and the door baith bolted and barred at his
+tail.
+
+"Did ye ever hear the like of that, Mansie? Weel, man, I'll explain the
+hail history of it to ye. Ye see--'Od! how sound that callant's
+sleeping," continued Isaac; "he's snoring like a nine-year-auld!"
+
+I was glad he had stopped, for I was like to sink through the ground with
+fear; but no, it would not do.
+
+"Dinna ye ken--sauf us! what a fearsome night this is! The trees will be
+all broken. What a noise in the lum! I daresay there's some auld hag of
+a witch-wife gaun to come rumble doun't. It's no the first time, I'll
+swear. Hae ye a silver sixpence? Wad ye like that?" he bawled up the
+chimney. "Ye'll hae heard," said he, "lang ago, that a wee murdered wean
+was buried--didna ye hear a voice?--was buried below that corner--the
+hearth-stane there, where the laddie's lying on?"
+
+I had now lost my breath, so that I could not stop him.
+
+"Ye never heard tell o't, didna ye? Weel, I'se tell't ye--Sauf us, what
+swurls of smoke coming doun the chimley--I could swear something no
+canny's stopping up the lum head--Gang out, and see!"
+
+At that moment a clap like thunder was heard--the candle was driven
+over--the sleeping laddie roared "Help!" and "Murder!" and "Thieves!"
+and, as the furm on which we were sitting played flee backwards, cripple
+Isaac bellowed out, "I'm dead!--I'm killed--shot through the head!--Oh!
+oh! oh!"
+
+Surely I had fainted away; for, when I came to myself, I found my red
+comforter loosed; my face all wet--Isaac rubbing down his waistcoat with
+his sleeve--the laddie swigging ale out of a bicker--and the brisk brown
+stout, which, by casting its cork, had caused all the alarm,
+whizz--whizz--whizzing in the chimley lug.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ELEVEN--TAFFY WITH THE PIGTAIL: SCHOOL RECOLLECTIONS
+
+
+It was a clear starry night, in the blasty month of January, I mind it
+well. The snow had fallen during the afternoon; or, as Benjie came in
+crying, that "the auld wives o' the norlan sky were plucking their
+geese"; and it continued dim and dowie till towards the gloaming, when,
+as the road-side labourers were dandering home from their work, some with
+pickaxes and others with shools, and just as our cocks and hens were
+going into their beds, poor things, the lift cleared up to a sharp
+freeze, and the well-ordered stars came forth glowing over the blue sky.
+Between six and seven the moon rose; and I could not get my two prentices
+in from the door, where they were bickering one another with snow-balls,
+or maybe carhailling the folk on the street in their idle wantonness; so
+I was obliged for that night to disappoint Edie Macfarlane of the pair of
+black spatterdashes he was so anxious to get finished, for dancing in
+next day, at Souple Jack the carpenter's grand penny-wedding.
+
+Seeing that little more good was to be expected till morning, I came to
+the resolution of shutting-in half-an-hour earlier than usual; so, as I
+was carrying out the shop-shutters, with my hat over my cowl, for it was
+desperately sharp, I mostly in my hurry knocked down an old man, that was
+coming up to ask me, "if I was Maister Wauch the tailor and furnisher."
+
+Having told him that I was myself, instead of a better; and having asked
+him to step in, that I might have a glimpse of his face at the candle, I
+saw that he was a stranger, dressed in a droll auld-farrant green
+livery-coat, faced with white. His waistcoat was cut in the Parly-voo
+fashion, with long lappels, and a double row of buttons down the breast;
+and round his neck he had a black corded stock, such like, but not so
+broad, as I afterwards wore in the volunteers, when drilling under Big
+Sam. He had a well-worn scraper on his head, peaked before and behind,
+with a bit crape knotted round it, which he politely took off, making a
+low bow; and requesting me to bargain with him for a few articles of
+grand second-hand apparel, which once belonged to his master that was
+deceased, and which was now carried by himself, in a bundle under his
+left oxter.
+
+Happening never to make a trade of dealing in this line, and not very
+sure like as to how the old man might have come by the bundle in these
+riotous and knock-him-down times, I swithered a moment, giving my chin a
+rub, before answering; and then advised him to take a step in at his
+leisure to St Mary's Wynd, where he would meet in with merchants in
+scores. But no; he seemed determined to strike a bargain with me; and I
+heard from the man's sponsible and feasible manner of speech--for he was
+an old weatherbeaten-looking body of a creature, with gleg een, a cock
+nose, white locks, and a tye behind--that the clothes must have been left
+him, as a kind of friendly keepsake, by his master, now beneath the
+mools. Thinking by this, that if I got them at a wanworth, I might
+boldly venture, I condescended to his loosing down the bundle, which was
+in a blue silk napkin with yellow flowers. As he was doing this, he told
+me that he was on his way home from the north to his own country, which
+lay among the green Welsh hills, far away; and that he could not carry
+much luggage with him, as he was obliged to travel with his baggage tied
+up in a bundle, on the end of his walking-staff, over his right shoulder.
+
+Pity me! what a grand coat it was! I thought at first it must have been
+worn on the King's own back, honest man; for it was made of green velvet,
+and embroidered all round about--back seams, side seams, flaps, lappels,
+button-holes, nape and cuffs, with gold lace and spangles, in a manner to
+have dazzled the understanding of any Jew with a beard shorter than his
+arm. So, no wonder that it imposed on the like of me; and I was mostly
+ashamed to make him an offer for it of a crown-piece and a dram. The
+waistcoat, which was of white satin, single-breasted, and done up with
+silver tinsel in a most beautiful manner, I also bought from him for a
+couple of shillings, and four hanks of black thread. Though I would on
+no account or consideration give him a bode for the Hessian boots, which
+having cuddy-heels and long silk tossels, were by far and away over grand
+for the like of a tailor, such as me, and fit for the Sunday's wear of
+some fashionable Don of the first water. However, not to part uncivilly,
+and be as good as my word, I brought ben Nanse's bottle, and gave him a
+cawker at the shop counter; and, after taking a thimbleful to myself, to
+drink a good journey to him, I bade him take care of his feet, as the
+causeway was frozen, and saw the auld flunkie safely over the strand with
+a candle.
+
+Ye may easily conceive that Nanse got a surprise, when I paraded ben to
+the room with the grand coat and waistcoat on, cocking up my head,
+putting my hands into the haunch pockets, and strutting about more like a
+peacock than a douce elder of Maister Wiggie's kirk; so just as, thinking
+shame of myself, I was about to throw it off, I found something bulky at
+the bottom of the side pocket, which I discovered to be a wheen papers
+fastened together with green tape. Finding they were written in a real
+neat hand, I put on my spectacles, and sending up the close for James
+Batter, we sat round the fireside, and read away like nine-year-aulds.
+
+The next matter of consideration was, whether, in buying the coat as it
+stood, the paper belonged to me, or the old flunkie waiting-servant with
+the peaked hat. James and me, after an hour and a half's argle-bargleing
+pro and con, in the way of Parliament-house lawyers, came at last to be
+unanimously of opinion, that according to the auld Scotch proverb of
+
+ "He that finds keeps,
+ And he that loses seeks,"
+
+whatever was part or pendicle of the coat at the time of purchase, when
+it hung exposed for sale over the white-headed Welshman's little finger,
+became according to the law of nature and nations, as James Batter wisely
+observed, part and pendicle of the property of me, Mansie Wauch, the
+legal purchaser.
+
+Notwithstanding all this, however, I was not sincerely convinced in my
+own conscience; and I daresay if the creature had cast up, and come
+seeking them back, I would have found myself bound to make restitution.
+This is not now likely to happen; for twenty long years have come and
+passed away, like the sunshine of yesterday, and neither word nor wittens
+of the body have been seen or heard tell of; so, according to the course
+of nature, being a white-headed old man, with a pigtail, when the bargain
+was made, his dust and bones have, in all likelihood, long ago mouldered
+down beneath the green turf of his own mountains, like his granfather's
+before him. This being the case, I daresay it is the reader's opinion as
+well as my own, that I am quite at liberty to make what use of them I
+like. Concerning the poem things that came first in hand, I do not
+pretend to be any judge; but James thinks he could scarcely write any
+muckle better himself: so here goes; but I cannot tell you to what tune:
+
+ SONG
+
+ I
+
+ They say that other eyes are bright,
+ I see no eyes like thine;
+ So full of Heaven's serenest light,
+ Like midnight stars they shine.
+
+ II
+
+ They say that other cheeks are fair--
+ But fairer cannot glow
+ The rosebud in the morning air,
+ Or blood on mountain snow.
+
+ III
+
+ Thy voice--Oh sweet it streams to me,
+ And charms my raptured breast;
+ Like music on the moonlight sea,
+ When waves are lull'd to rest.
+
+ IV
+
+ The wealth of worlds were vain to give
+ Thy sinless heart to buy;
+ Oh I will bless thee while I live,
+ And love thee till I die!
+
+From this song it appears a matter beyond doubt--for I know human
+nature--that the flunkie's master had, in his earlier years, been deeply
+in love with some beautiful young lady, that loved him again, and that
+maybe, with a bounding and bursting heart, durst not let her affection be
+shown, from dread of her cruel relations, who insisted on her marrying
+some lord or baronet that she did not care one button about. If so,
+unhappy pair, I pity them! Were we to guess our way in the dark a wee
+farther, I think it not altogether unlikely, that he must have fallen in
+with his sweetheart abroad, when wandering about on his travels; for what
+follows seems to come as it were from her, lamenting his being called to
+leave her forlorn and return home. This is all merely supposition on my
+part, and in the antiquarian style, whereby much is made out of little;
+but both me and James Batter are determined to be unanimously of this
+opinion, until otherwise convinced to the contrary. Love is a fiery and
+fierce passion every where; but I am told that we, who live in a more
+favoured land, know very little of the terrible effects it sometimes
+causes, and the bloody tragedies, which it has a thousand times produced,
+where the heart of man is uncontrolled by reason or religion, and his
+blood heated into a raging fever, by the burning sun that glows in the
+heaven above his head.
+
+Here follows the poem of Taffy's master's foreign sweetheart; which,
+considering it to be a woman's handiwork, is, I daresay, not that far
+amiss.
+
+ SONG OF THE SOUTH
+
+ I
+
+ Of all the garden flowers
+ The fairest is the rose;
+ Of winds that stir the bowers,
+ Oh! there is none that blows
+ Like the south--the gentle south--
+ For that balmy breeze is ours.
+
+ II
+
+ Cold is the frozen north;
+ In its stern and savage mood,
+ 'Mid gales, come drifting forth
+ Bleak snows and drenching flood;
+ But the south--the gentle south--
+ Thaws to love the unwilling blood.
+
+ III
+
+ Bethink thee of the vales,
+ With their birds and blossoms fair--
+ Of the darkling nightingales,
+ That charm the starry air
+ In the south--the gentle south--
+ Ah! our own dear home is there.
+
+ IV
+
+ Where doth Beauty brightest glow,
+ With each rich and radiant charm,
+ Eye of light, and brow of snow,
+ Cherry lip, and bosom warm;
+ In the south--the gentle south--
+ There she waits, and works her harm.
+
+ V
+
+ Say, shines the Star of Love,
+ From the clear and cloudless sky,
+ The shadowy groves above,
+ Where the nestling ringdoves lie;
+ From the south--the gentle south--
+ Gleams its lone and lucid eye.
+
+ VI
+
+ Then turn ye to the home
+ Of your brethren and your bride;
+ Far astray your steps may roam,
+ But more joys for thee abide,
+ In the south--our gentle south--
+ Than in all the world beside.
+
+After reading a lot of the unknown gentleman's compositions in prose and
+verse, something like his private history, James Batter informs me, can
+be made out, provided we are allowed to eke a little here and there.
+That he was an Englisher we both think amounts to a probability; and,
+from having an old "Taffy was a Welshman" for a flunkie, it would not be
+out of the order of nature to jealouse, that he may have resided
+somewhere among the hills, where he had picked him up and taken him into
+his kitchen, promoting him thereafter, for sobriety and good conduct, to
+be his body servant, and gentleman's gentleman. Where he was born,
+however, is a matter of doubt, and also who were his folks; but of a
+surety, he was either born with a silver spoon in his mouth, or rose from
+the ranks like many another great man. That, however, is a matter of
+moonshine; we are all descended in a direct line from Adam. Where he was
+educated does not appear; but there can scarcely be a shadow of doubt,
+that he was for a considerable while at some school or other, where he
+had a number of cronies. In proof of this, and to show that we have good
+reasons for our suppositions, James recommends me to print the following
+rigmarole meditations, on the top of which is written in half-text,
+
+ SCHOOL RECOLLECTIONS.
+
+ "--They who in the vale of years advance,
+ And the dark eve is closing on their way,
+ When on the mind the recollections glance
+ Of early joy, and Hope's delightful day,
+ Behold, in brighter hues than those of truth,
+ The light of morning on the fields of youth."
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+The morning being clear and fine, full of Milton's "vernal delight and
+joy," I determined on a saunter; the inclemency of the weather having,
+for more than a week, kept me a prisoner at home. Although now advanced
+into the heart of February, a great fall of snow had taken place; the
+roads were blocked up; the mails obstructed; and, while the merchant
+grumbled audibly for his letters, the politician, no less chagrined,
+conned over and over again his dingy rumpled old newspaper, compelled "to
+eat the leek of his disappointment." The wind, which had blown
+inveterately steady from the surly north-east, had veered, however,
+during the preceding night, to the west; and, as it were by the spell of
+an enchanter, an instant thaw commenced. In the low grounds the snow
+gleamed forth in patches of a pearly whiteness; but, on the banks of
+southern exposure, the green grass and the black trodden pathway again
+showed themselves. The vicissitudes of twenty-four hours were indeed
+wonderful. Instead of the sharp frost, the pattering hail, and the
+congealed streams, we had the blue sky, the vernal zephyr, and the genial
+sunshine; the stream murmuring with a broader wave, as if making up for
+the season spent in the fetters of congelation; and that luxurious flow
+of the spirits, which irresistibly comes over the heart, at the
+re-assertion of Nature's suspended vigour.
+
+As I passed on under the budding trees, how delightful it was to hear the
+lark and the linnet again at their cheerful songs, to be aware that now
+"the winter was over and gone;" and to feel that the prospect of summer,
+with its lengthening days, and its rich variety of fruits and flowers,
+lay fully before us. There is something within us that connects the
+spring of the year with the childhood of our existence, and it is more
+especially at that season, that the thrilling remembrances of long
+departed pleasures are apt to steal into the thoughts; the re-awakening
+of nature calling us, by a fearful contrast, to the contemplation of joys
+that never can return, while all the time the heart is rendered more
+susceptible by the beauteous renovation in the aspect of the external
+world.
+
+This sensation pressed strongly on my mind, as I chanced to be passing
+the door of the village school, momentarily opened for the admission of
+one, creeping along somewhat tardily with satchel on back, and "shining
+morning face." What a sudden burst of sound was emitted--what harmonious
+discord--what a commixture of all the tones in the vocal gamut, from the
+shrill treble to the deep underhum! A chord was touched which vibrated
+in unison; boyish days and school recollections crowded upon me;
+pleasures long vanished; feelings long stifled; and friendships--aye,
+everlasting friendships--cut asunder by the sharp stroke of death!
+
+A public school is a petty world within itself--a wheel within a
+wheel--in so far as it is entirely occupied with its own concerns,
+affords its peculiar catalogue of virtues and vices, its own cares,
+pleasures, regrets, anticipations, and disappointments--in fact, a
+Lilliputian facsimile of the great one. By grown men, nothing is more
+common than the assertion that childhood is a perfect Elysium; but it is
+a false supposition that school-days are those of unalloyed carelessness
+and enjoyment. It seems to be a great deal too much overlooked, that
+"little things are great to little men;" and perhaps the mind of boyhood
+is more active in its conceptions--more alive to the impulses of pleasure
+and pain--in other words, has a more extended scope of sensations, than
+during any other portion of our existence. Its days are not those of
+lack-occupation; they are full of stir, animation, and activity, for it
+is then we are in training for after life; and, when the hours of school
+restraint glide slowly over, "like wounded snakes," the clock, that
+chimes to liberty, sends forth the blood with a livelier flow; and
+pleasure thus derives a double zest from the bridle that duty has
+imposed, joy being generally measured according to the difficulty of its
+attainment. What delight in life have we ever experienced more exquisite
+than that, which flowed at once in upon us from the teacher's "_bene_,
+_bene_," our own self-approbation, and release from the tasks of the
+day?--the green fields around us wherein to ramble, the stream beside us
+wherein to angle, the world of games and pastimes, "before us where to
+choose." Words are inadequate to express the thrill of transport, with
+which, on the rush from the school-house door, the hat is waved in air,
+and the shout sent forth!
+
+Then what a variety of amusements succeed each other. Every month has
+its favourite ones. The sports-man does not more keenly scrutinize his
+kalendar for the commencement of the trouting, grouse shooting, or
+hare-hunting season, than the younker for the time of flying kites,
+bowling at cricket, football, spinning peg-tops, and playing at marbles.
+Pleasure is the focus, which it is the common aim to approximate; and the
+mass is guided by a sort of unpremeditated social compact, which draws
+them out of doors as soon as meals are discussed, with a sincere thirst
+of amusement, as certainly as rooks congregate in spring to discuss the
+propriety of building nests, or swallows in autumn to deliberate in
+conclave on the expediency of emigration.
+
+Then how perfectly glorious was the anticipation of a holiday--a long
+summer day of liberty and ease! In anticipation it was a thing boundless
+and endless, a foretaste of Elysium. It extended from the _prima luce_,
+from the earliest dawn of radiance that streaked the "severing clouds in
+yonder east," through the sun's matin, meridian, postmeridian, and vesper
+circuit; from the disappearance of Lucifer in the re-illumined skies, to
+his evening entree in the character of Hesperus. Complain not of the
+brevity of life; 'tis _men_ that are idle; a thousand things could be
+contrived and accomplished in that space, and a thousand schemes were
+devised by us, when _boys_, to prevent any portion of it passing over
+without improvement. We pursued the fleet angel of time through all his
+movements till he blessed us.
+
+With these and similar thoughts in my mind, I strayed down to the banks
+of the river, and came upon the very spot, which, in those long-vanished
+years, had been a favourite scene of our boyish sports. The impression
+was overpowering; and as I gazed silently around me, my mind was subdued
+to that tone of feeling which Ossian so finely designates "the joy of
+grief." The trees were the same, but older, like myself; seemingly
+unscathed by the strife of years--and herein was a difference. Some of
+the very bushes I recognized as our old lurking-places at "hunt the
+hare"; and, on the old fantastic beech-tree, I discovered the very bough
+from which we were accustomed to suspend our swings. What
+alterations--what sad havoc had time, circumstances, the hand of fortune,
+and the stroke of death, made among us since then! How were the thoughts
+of the heart, the hopes, the pursuits, the feelings changed; and, in
+almost every instance, it is to be feared, for the worse! As I gazed
+around me, and paused, I could not help reciting aloud to myself the
+lines of Charles Lamb, so touching in their simple beauty.
+
+ "I have had playmates, I have had companions,
+ In my days of childhood, in my joyful school-days;
+ All, all are gone, the old familiar faces.
+ Some they have died, and some they have left me,
+ And some are taken from me, all are departed;
+ All, all are gone, the old familiar faces."
+
+The fresh green plat, by the brink of the stream, lay before me. It was
+there that we played at leap-frog, or gathered dandelions for our tame
+rabbits; and, at its western extremity, were still extant the reliques of
+the deal-seat, at which we used to assemble on autumn evenings to have
+our round of stories. Many a witching tale and wondrous tradition hath
+there been told; many a marvel of "figures that visited the glimpses of
+the moon"; many a recital of heroic and chivalrous enterprise,
+accomplished ere warriors dwindled away to the mere puny strength of
+mortals. Sapped by the wind and rain, the planks lay in a sorely decayed
+and rotten state, looking in their mossiness like a sign-post of
+desolation, a memento of terrestrial instability. Traces of the knife
+were still here and there visible upon the trunks of the supporting
+trees; and with little difficulty I could decipher some well-remembered
+initials.
+
+"Cold were the hands that carved them there."
+
+It is, no doubt, wonderful that the human mind can retain such a mass of
+recollections; yet we seem to be, in general, little aware that for one
+solitary incident in our lives, preserved by memory, hundreds have been
+buried in the silent charnel-house of oblivion. We peruse the past, like
+a map of pleasing or melancholy recollections, and observe lines crossing
+and re-crossing each other in a thousand directions; some spots are
+almost blank; others faintly traced; and the rest a confused and
+perplexed labyrinth. A thousand feelings that, in their day and hour,
+agitated our bosoms, are now forgotten; a thousand hopes, and joys, and
+apprehensions, and fears, are vanished without a trace. Schemes, which
+cost us much care in their formation, and much anxiety in their
+fulfilment, have glided, like the clouds of yesterday, from our
+remembrance. Many a sharer of our early friendships, and of our boyish
+sports, we think of no more; they are as if they had never been, till
+perhaps some accidental occurrence, some words in conversation, some
+object by the wayside, or some passenger in the street, attract our
+notice--and then, as if awaking from a perplexing trance, a light darts
+in upon our darkness; and we discover that thus some one long ago spoke;
+that there something long ago happened; or that the person, who just
+passed us like a vision, shared smiles with us long, long years ago, and
+added a double zest to the enjoyments of our childhood.
+
+Of our old class-fellows, of those whose days were of "a mingled yarn"
+with ours, whose hearts blended in the warmest reciprocities of
+friendship, whose joys, whose cares, almost whose wishes were in common,
+how little do we know? how little will even the severest scrutiny enable
+us to discover? Yet, at one time, we were inseparable "like Juno's
+swans"; we were as brothers, nor dreamt we of ought else, in the
+susceptibility of our youthful imagination, than that we were to pass
+through all the future scenes of life, side by side; and, mutually
+supporting and supported, lengthen out the endearments, the ties, and the
+feelings of boyhood unto the extremities of existence. What a fine but a
+fond dream--alas, how wide of the cruel reality! The casual relation of
+a traveller may discover to us where one of them resided or resides. The
+page of an obituary may accidentally inform us how long one of them
+lingered on the bed of sickness, and by what death he died. Some we may
+perhaps discover in elevated situations, from which worldly pride might
+probably prevent their stooping down to recognize us. Others, immersed
+in the labyrinths of business, have forgot all, in the selfish pursuits
+of earthly accumulation. While the rest, the children of misfortune and
+disappointment, we may occasionally find out amid the great multitude of
+the streets, to whom life is but a desert of sorrow, and against whom
+prosperity seems to have shut for ever her golden gates.
+
+Such are the diversities of condition, the varieties of fortune to which
+man is exposed, while climbing the hill of probationary difficulty. And
+how sublimely applicable are the words of Job, expatiating on the
+uncertainty of human existence: "Man dieth and wasteth away; yea, man
+giveth up the ghost, and where is he? As the waters fail from the sea,
+and the flood decayeth and drieth up; so man lieth down and riseth not
+till the heavens be no more."
+
+While standing on the same spot, where of yore the boyish multitude
+congregated in pursuit of their eager sports, a silent awe steals over
+the bosom, and the heart desponds at the thought, that all these once
+smiling faces are scattered now! Some, mayhap, tossing on the waste and
+perilous seas; some the merchants of distant lands; some fighting the
+battles of their country; others dead--inhabitants of the dark and narrow
+house, and hearing no more the billows of life, that thunder and break
+above their low and lonely dwelling-place!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nanse, who was sitting by the table, knitting a pair of light-blue
+worsted stockings for Benjie, and myself, who was sewing on the buttons
+of a velveteen jacket for a country lad, were, I must say, not a little
+delighted, not only with the way in which the Welshman's late master had
+spoken of his school-fellows, but with the manner in which James Batter,
+with his specs on, had read it over to us. Upon my word--and that of an
+elder--I do not believe that even Mr Wiggie himself could have done the
+thing greater justice. It was just as if he had been a play-actor man,
+spouting Douglas's tragedy.
+
+Having folded up that paper, and turned over not a few others, the
+docketings of which he read out to us, James at last says, "Ou ay, here
+it is. I think I can now prove to ye, that the gentlemen's sweetheart
+died abroad; and that, likely from her name--for it is here
+mentioned--she must have been a Portugee or Spaniard."
+
+"Ay, let us hear it," cried Nanse. "Do, like a man, let us hear it,
+James; for I delight above a' things to hear about love-stories. Do ye
+mind, Maister," she said, "when ye was so deep in love aince yoursell?"
+
+"Foolish woman," I said, giving her a kind of severe look; "is that all
+your manners to interrupt Mr Batter? If ye'll just keep a calm sough,
+ye'll hear the long and the short o't, in good time."
+
+By this, James, who did not relish interruption, and was a thought
+fidgety in his natural temper, had laid down the paper on the table,
+snuffed the candle, and raised his spectacles on his brow. But I said to
+him, "Excuse freedoms, James, and be so good as resume your discourse."
+Then wishing to smooth him down, I added, by way of compliment--"Do go
+on; for you really are a prime reader. Nature surely intended ye for a
+minister."
+
+"Dinna flatter me," said James; looking, however, rather proudishly at
+what I had said, and replacing his glasses on the brig of his nose, he
+then read us a screed of metre to the following effect; part of which, I
+am free to confess, is rather above my comprehension. But, never mind.
+
+ ELEGIAC STANZAS
+
+ I
+
+ 'Tis midnight deep; the full round moon,
+ As 'twere a spectre, walks the sky;
+ The balmy breath of gentlest June
+ Just stirs the stream that murmurs by;
+ Above me frowns the solemn wood;
+ Nature, methinks, seems Solitude
+ Embodied to the eye.
+
+ II
+
+ Yes, 'tis a season and a scene,
+ Inez, to think on thee; the day,
+ With stir and strife, may come between
+ Affection and thy beauty's ray,
+ But feeling here assumes control,
+ And mourns my desolated soul
+ That thou are rapt away!
+
+ III
+
+ Thou wert a rainbow to my sight,
+ The storms of life before thee fled;
+ The glory and the guiding light,
+ That onward cheer'd and upward led;
+ From boyhood to this very hour,
+ For me, and only me, thy flower
+ Its fragrance seem'd to shed.
+
+ IV
+
+ Dark though the world for me might show
+ Its sordid faith and selfish gloom,
+ Yet 'mid life's wilderness to know
+ For me that sweet flower shed its bloom,
+ Was joy, was solace:--thou art gone--
+ And hope forsook me, when the stone
+ Sank darkly o'er thy tomb.
+
+ V
+
+ And art thou dead? I dare not think
+ That thus the solemn truth can be;
+ And broken is the only link
+ That chain'd youth's pleasant thoughts to me!
+ Alas! that thou couldst know decay,
+ That, sighing, I should live to say
+ "The cold grave holdeth thee!"
+
+ VI
+
+ For me thou shon'st, as shines a star,
+ Lonely, in clouds when Heaven is lost;
+ Thou wert my guiding light afar,
+ When on misfortune's billows tost:
+ Now darkness hath obscured that light,
+ And I am left in rayless night,
+ On Sorrow's lowering coast.
+
+ VII
+
+ And art thou gone? I deem'd thee some
+ Immortal essence--art thou gone?--
+ I saw thee laid within the tomb,
+ And turn'd away to mourn alone:
+ Once to have loved, is to have loved
+ Enough; and, what with thee I proved,
+ Again I'll seek in none.
+
+ VIII
+
+ Earth in thy sight grew faery land;--
+ Life was Elysium--thought was love,--
+ When, long ago, hand clasp'd in hand,
+ We roam'd through Autumn's twilight grove;
+ Or watch'd the broad uprising moon
+ Shed, as it were, a wizard noon,
+ The blasted heath above.
+
+ IX
+
+ Farewell!--and must I say farewell?--
+ No--thou wilt ever be to me
+ A present thought; thy form shall dwell
+ In love's most holy sanctuary;
+ Thy voice shall mingle with my dreams,
+ And haunt me, when the shot-star gleams
+ Above the rippling sea.
+
+ X
+
+ Never revives the past again;
+ But still thou art, in lonely hours,
+ To me earth's heaven,--the azure main,--
+ Soft music,--and the breath of flowers;
+ My heart shall gain from thee its hues;
+ And Memory give, though Truth refuse,
+ The bliss that once was ours!
+
+After this, Mr Batter read over to us a great many other curiosities,
+about foreign things wonderful to hear, and foreign places wonderful to
+behold. Moreover, also, of divers adventures by sea and land. But the
+time wearing late, and Tammie Bodkin having brought ben the shop-key,
+after putting on the window-shutters, Nanse and I, out of
+good-fellowship, thought we could not do less than ask the honest man,
+whose cleverality had diverted us so much, to sit still and take a chack
+of supper;--James being up in the air, from having been allowed to ride
+on his hobby so briskly, made only a show of objection; so, after a
+rizzard haddo, we had a jug of toddy, and sat round the fire with our
+feet on the fender--Benjie having fallen asleep with his clothes on, and
+been carried away to his bed. Poor bit mannikin!
+
+I never remember to have heard James so prime either on Boston or
+Josephus; but as his heart warmed with the liquor and the good fire, for
+it was a cold rawish night,--he returned to Taffy with the pigtail's
+master; and insisted, that as we had heard about his foreign sweetheart's
+death, which he appeared to have taken so much to heart, we should just
+bear with him once more, as he read over what he called her dirgie, which
+was written on a half-sheet of grey mouldy paper--as if handed down from
+the days of the Covenanters. It jingles well; and both Nanse and me
+thought it gey and pretty; but eh! if ye only had heard how James Batter
+read it. It beat cock-fighting.
+
+ DIRGE
+
+ I
+
+ Weep not for her!--Oh she was far too fair,
+ Too pure to dwell on this guilt-tainted earth!
+ The sinless glory, and the golden air
+ Of Zion, seem'd to claim her from her birth;
+ A Spirit wander'd from its native Zone,
+ Which, soon discovering, took her for its own:
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ II
+
+ Weep not for her!--Her span was like the sky,
+ Whose thousand stars shine beautiful and bright;
+ Like flowers that know not what it is to die;
+ Like long-linked, shadeless months of Polar light;
+ Like music floating o'er a waveless lake,
+ While Echo answers from the flowery brake:
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ III
+
+ Weep not for her!--She died in early youth,
+ Ere hope had lost its rich romantic hues;
+ When human bosoms seem'd the homes of truth,
+ And earth still gleam'd with beauty's radiant dews.
+ Her summer prime waned not to days that freeze;
+ Her wine of life was run not to the lees:
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ IV
+
+ Weep not for her!--By fleet or slow decay,
+ It never grieved her bosom's core to mark
+ The playmates of her childhood wane away,
+ Her prospects wither, or her hopes grow dark;
+ Translated by her God with spirit shriven,
+ She pass'd as 'twere in smiles from earth to heaven.
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ V
+
+ Weep not for her!--It was not hers to feel
+ The miseries that corrode amassing years,
+ 'Gainst dreams of baffled bliss the heart to steel,
+ To wander sad down age's vale of tears,
+ As whirl the withered leaves from friendship's tree,
+ And on earth's wintry wold alone to be:
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ VI
+
+ Weep not for her!--She is an angel now,
+ And treads the sapphire floors of paradise:
+ All darkness wiped from her refulgent brow,
+ Sin, sorrow, suffering, banish'd from her eyes;
+ Victorious over death, to her appear
+ The vista'd joys of heaven's eternal year;
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ VII
+
+ Weep not for her!--Her memory is the shrine
+ Of pleasant thoughts, soft as the scent of flowers,
+ Calm as on windless eve the sun's decline,
+ Sweet as the song of birds among the bowers,
+ Rich as a rainbow with its hues of light,
+ Pure as the moonshine of an autumn night:
+ Weep not for Her!
+
+ VIII
+
+ Weep not for her!--There is no cause for woe;
+ But rather nerve the spirit that it walk
+ Unshrinking o'er the thorny paths below,
+ And from earth's low defilements keep thee back:
+ So, when a few, fleet, severing years have flown,
+ She'll meet thee at heaven's gate--and lead thee on!
+ Weep not for Her.
+
+ [Picture: The first day I got my regimentals on]
+
+Having right and law on my side, as any man of judgment may perceive with
+half an eye, nothing could hinder me, if I so liked, to print the whole
+bundle; but, in the meantime, we must just be satisfied with the
+foregoing curiosities, which we have picked out. All that I have set
+down concerning myself, the reader may take on credit as open and
+even-down truth; but as to whether Taffy's master's nick-nackets be true
+or false, every one is at liberty, in this free country, to think for
+himself. Old sparrows are not easily caught with chaff; and unless I saw
+a proper affidavit, I would not, for my own part, pin my faith to a
+single word of them. But every man his own opinion,--that's my motto.
+
+In the Yankee Almanack of Poor Richard, which, besides the Pilgrim's
+Progress and the Book of Martyrs, I whiles read on the week-days for a
+little diversion, I see it is set down with great rationality, that "we
+should never buy for the bargain sake." Experience teaches all men, and
+I found that to my cost in this matter; for, cheap as the coat and
+waistcoat seemed which I had bought from the auld-farrant Welsh flunkie
+with the peaked hat and the pigtail, I made no great shakes of them after
+all. Neither the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, nor any other of the grand
+public characters, ever made me an offer for them, as some had led me to
+expect; and the play house people lay all as quiet as ducks in a storm.
+After hanging at my window for two or three months, collecting all the
+idle wives and weans of the parish to glour and gaze at them from morn
+till night, during which time I got half of my lozens broken, by their
+knocking one another's heads through, I was obliged to get quit of them
+at last, by selling them to a man and his son, that kept dancing dogs,
+Pan's pipes, and a tambourine; and that made a livelihood by tumbling on
+a carpet in the middle of the street, the one playing "Carle now the
+King's come," as the other whummled head over heels, and then jumped up
+into the air, cutting capers, to show that not a bone of his body had
+been broken.
+
+Knowing that the raiment was not for everybody's wear, and that the like
+of it was not to be found in a country side, I put a decent price on it,
+"foreign birds with fair feathers" aye taking the top place of the
+market. When I mentioned forty shillings to the dancing-dog man and his
+son, they said nothing, but, putting their tongues in their cheeks, took
+up their hats, wishing me a good day. Next forenoon, however, a
+sleight-of-hand character having arrived, together with a bass drum and a
+bugle horn, that was likely to take the shine out of them, and maybe also
+purchase my article--which was capital for his purpose, having famous
+wide sleeves--they came back in less than no time, asking the liberty,
+before finally concluding with me, of carrying them home to their
+lodgings for ten minutes to see how they would fit; and, in that case,
+offering me thirty-five shillings and an old flute. The old flute was
+for next to no use at all, except for wee Benjie, poor thing, too-tooing
+on, to keep him good, and I told them so, myself being no musicianer; but
+would take their offer not to quarrel. It would not do unless some of us
+were timber-tuned; men not being meant for blackbirds.
+
+Home went the man, and home went the son, and home went my grand coat and
+waistcoat over his arm; and putting my hands into my breeches pockets, as
+if I had satisfactorily concluded a great transaction, I marched ben to
+the back shop, and took my needle into play, as if nothing in the world
+had happened; but where their home lay, or whether the raiment fitted or
+not, goodness knows, having never to this blessed hour heard word or
+wittens of either of them. Such a pair of blacks! It just shows us how
+simple we Scotch folk are. The London man swindled me out of my lawful
+room-rent and my Sunday velveteens; the Eirishers, as will be but too
+soon seen, made free with my hen-house, committing felonious robbery at
+the dead hour of night; and here a decent-looking old Welshman, with a
+pigtail tied with black tape, palmed a grand coat and waistcoat upon me,
+that were made away with by a man and his son, a devilish deal too long
+out of Botany Bay.
+
+Benjie, poor doggie, was vastly proud of the flute, which he fifed away
+on morning, noon, and night; and, for more than a fortnight, would not go
+to his bed unless it was laid under his pillow. But for me I could not
+bide the sight of it, knowing whose hands it had been in, and reminding
+me as it did of the depravity of human nature.
+
+Verily, verily, this is a wonderfully wicked world. To find out the two
+vagabonds would have been hopeless; unless I could have followed them to
+the Back of Beyond, where the mare foaled the fiddler.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWELVE--MANSIE ON THE OLD VOLUNTEERING DAYS
+
+
+The sough of war and invasion flew over the face of the land, at this
+time, like a great whirlwind; and the hearts of men died within their
+persons with fear and trembling. The accounts that came from abroad were
+just dreadful beyond all power of description. Death stalked about from
+place to place, like a lawless tyrant, and human blood was spilt like
+water; while the heads of crowned kings were cut off; and great dukes and
+lords were thrown into dark dungeons, or obligated to flee for their
+lives into foreign lands, and to seek out hiding-places of safety beyond
+the waves of the sea. What was worst of all, our trouble seemed a
+smittal one; the infection spread around; and even our own land, which
+all thought hale and healthy, began to show symptoms of the plague-spot.
+Losh me! that men, in their seven senses, could have ever shown
+themselves so infatuated. Johnny Wilkes and liberty was but a joke to
+what was hanging over the head of the nation, brewing like a dark tempest
+which was to swallow it up. Bills were posted up through night, by hands
+that durst not have been seen at the work through day; and the agents of
+the Spirit of Darkness, calling themselves the Friends of the People,
+held secret meetings, and hatched plots to blow up our blessed King and
+Constitution.
+
+Yet the business, though fearsome in the main, was in some parts almost
+laughable. Everything was to be divided, and every one made alike:
+houses and lands were to be distributed by lot; and the mighty man and
+the beggar--the auld man and the hobble-de-hoy--the industrious man and
+the spendthrift--the maimed, the cripple, and the blind, the clever man
+of business and the haveril simpleton, made all just brethren, and alike.
+Save us! but to think of such nonsense!!--At one of their meetings, held
+at the sign of the Tappet Hen and the Tankard, there was a prime fight of
+five rounds between Tammy Bowsie the snab, and auld Thrashem the dominie
+with the boulie-back about their drawing cuts which was to get Dalkeith
+Palace, and which Newbottle Abbey. Oh, sic riff-raff!!!
+
+What was worst of all, it was an agreed and determined on thing among
+them, these wise men of Gotham, to abolish all kings, clergy, and
+religion, as havers. No, no--what need had such wise pows as theirs of
+being taught or lectured to? What need had such feelosophers of having a
+king to rule over, or a Parliament to direct them? There was not a
+single one among their number, that did not think himself, in his own
+conceit, as wise as Solomon or William Pitt, and as mighty as King
+Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+It was full time to put a stop to all such nonsense. The newspapers told
+us what it had done abroad; and what better could we expect from it at
+home? Weeds will not grow into flowers anywhere, and no man can handle
+tar without being defiled; the first of which comparisons is I daresay
+true, and the latter must be--for we read of it in Scripture. Well, as I
+was saying, it was a brave notion of the king to put the loyalty of his
+land to the test, that the daft folk might be dismayed, and that the
+clanjamphrey might be tumbled down before their betters, like
+windle-straes in a hurricane:--and so they were.
+
+Such a crowd that day, when the names of the volunteers came to be taken
+down! No house could have held them, even though many had not stepped
+forward who thought to have got themselves enrolled. Losh me! did they
+think the government was so far gone, as to take characters with deformed
+legs, and thrawn necks, and blind eyes, and hashie lips, and grey hairs
+on their pows? No, no, they were not put to such straits; though it
+showed that the right spirit was in the creatures, and that, though their
+bodies might be deformed, they had consciences to direct them, and souls
+to be saved like their neighbours.
+
+I will never forget the first day that I got my regimentals on; and when
+I looked myself in the bit glass, just to think I was a sodger, who never
+in my life could thole the smell of powder, and had not fired anything
+but a penny cannon on a Fourth of June, when I was a haflins callant. I
+thought my throat would have been cut with the black corded stock; for,
+whenever I looked down, without thinking like, my chaff-blade played
+clank against it, with such a dunt that I mostly chacked my tongue off.
+And, as to the soaping of the hair, that beat cock-fighting. It was
+really fearsome; but I could scarcely keep from laughing when I glee'd
+round over my shoulder, and saw a glazed leather queue hanging for half
+an ell down the braid of my back, and a pickle horse-hair curling out
+like a rotten's tail at the far end of it. And then the worsted taissels
+on the shoulders--and the lead buttons--and the yellow facings,--oh, but
+it was grand! I sometimes fancied myself a general, and giving the word
+of command. Then the pipeclayed breeches--but that was a sore job; many
+a weary arm did they give me--beat-beating camstane into them.
+
+The pipeclaying of the breeches, I was saying, was the most fashious job,
+let alone courtship, that ever mortal man put his hand to. Indeed, there
+was no end to the rubbing, and scrubbing, and brushing, and fyling, and
+cleaning; for to the like of me, who was not well accustomed to the
+thing, the whitening was continually coming off and destroying my red
+coat or my black leggings. I had mostly forgot to speak of the birse for
+cleaning out the pan, and the piker for clearing the motion-hole. But
+time enough till we come to firing.
+
+Big Sam, who was a sergeant of the Fencibles, and enough to have put five
+Frenchmen to flight any day of the year, whiles came to train us; and a
+hard battle he had with more than me. I have already said, that nature
+never intended me for the soldiering trade; and why should I hesitate
+about confessing, that Sam never got me out of the awkward squad? But I
+had two or three neighbours to keep me in countenance. A weary work we
+made with the right, left--left, right,--right-wheel, left-wheel--to the
+right about,--at ease,--attention,--by sections,--and all the rest of it.
+But then there is nothing in the course of nature that is useless; and
+what was to hinder me from acting as orderly, or being one of the
+camp-colour-men on head days?
+
+We all cracked very crouse about fighting, when we heard of garments
+rolled in blood only from abroad; but one dark night we got a fleg in
+sober earnest.
+
+There were signal-posts on the hills, up and down all the country, to
+make alarms in case of necessity; and I never went to my bed without
+giving first a glee eastward to Falside-brae, and then another westward
+to the Calton-hill, to see that all the country was quiet. I had just
+papped in--it might be about nine o'clock--after being gey hard drilled,
+and sore between the shoulders, with keeping my head back and playing the
+dumb-bells; when, lo and behold! instead of getting my needful rest in my
+own bed, with my wife and wean, jow went the bell, and row-de-dow gaed
+the drums, and all in a minute was confusion and uproar. I was seized
+with a severe shaking of the knees, and a flang at the heart; but I
+hurried, with my nightcap on, up to the garret window, and there I too
+plainly saw that the French had landed--for all the signal posts were in
+a bleeze. This was in reality to be a soldier! I never got such a
+fright since the day I was cleckit. Then such a noise and hullabaloo in
+the streets--men, women, and weans, all hurrying through ither, and
+crying with loud voices, amid the dark, as if the day of judgment had
+come, to find us all unprepared; and still the bells ringing, and the
+drums beating to arms. Poor Nanse was in a bad condition, and I was well
+worse; she, at the fears of losing me, their bread-winner; and I, with
+the grief of parting from her, the wife of my bosom, and going out to
+scenes of blood, bayonets, and gunpowder, none of which I had the least
+stomach for. Our little son, Benjie, mostly grat himself blind, pulling
+me back by the cartridge-box; but there was no contending with fate, so
+he was obliged at last to let go.
+
+Notwithstanding all that, we behaved ourselves like true-blue Scotsmen
+called forth to fight the battles of our country; and if the French had
+come, as they did not come, they would have found that to their cost, as
+sure as my name is Mansie. However, it turned out as well, in the
+meantime, that it was a false alarm, and that the thief Buonaparte had
+not landed at Dunbar, as it was jealoused: so, after standing under arms
+for half the night, with nineteen rounds of ball-cartridge in our boxes,
+and the baggage carts all loaden, and ready to follow us to the field of
+battle, we were sent home to our beds; and, notwithstanding the awful
+state of alarm to which I had been put, never in the course of my life
+did I enjoy six hours sounder sleep; for we were hippet the morning
+parade, on account of our gallant men being kept so long without natural
+rest. It is wise to pick a lesson even out of our adversities; and, at
+all events, it was at this time fully shown to us the necessity of our
+regiment being taught the art of firing--a tactic to the length of which
+it had never yet come.
+
+Next day, out we were taken for the whilk purpose; and we went through
+our motions bravely. Prime--load--handle cartridge--ram down
+cartridge--return bayonets--and shoulder hoop--make ready--present--fire.
+Such was the confusion, and the flurry, and the din of the report, that I
+was so flustered and confused, thinking that half of us would have been
+shot dead, that--will ye believe it?--I never yet had mind to pull the
+tricker. Howsomever, I minded aye with the rest to ram down a fresh
+cartridge at the word of command; and something told me I would repent
+not doing like the rest (for I had half a kind of notion that my piece
+never went off); so, when the firing was over, the sergeant of the
+company ordered all that had loaded pieces to come to the front. I
+swithered a little, not being very sure like what to do; but some five or
+six stept out; and our corporal, on looking at my piece, ordered me with
+the rest to the front. It was just by all the world like an execution;
+we six, in the face of the regiment, in a little line, going through our
+manoeuvres at the word of command; and I could hardly stand upon my feet,
+with a queer feeling of fear and trembling, till at length the terrible
+moment came. I looked straight forward--for I durst not jee my head
+about, and turned to the hills and green trees, as if I was never to see
+nature more.
+
+Our pieces were cocked; and at the word--Fire!--off they went. It was an
+act of desperation to draw the tricker, and I had hardly well shut my
+blinkers, when I got such a thump in the shoulder, as knocked me
+backwards head-over-heels on the grass. Before I came to my senses, I
+could have sworn I was in another world; but, when I opened my eyes,
+there were the men at ease, holding their sides, laughing like to spleet
+them; and my gun lying on the ground two or three ell before me.
+
+When I found myself not killed outright, I began to rise up. As I was
+rubbing my breek-knees, I saw one of the men going forward to lift up the
+fatal piece; and my care for the safety of others overcame the sense of
+my own peril,--"Let alane--let alane!" cried I to him, "and take care of
+yoursell, for it has to gang off five times yet."
+
+The laughing was now terrible; but being little of a soldier, I thought,
+in my innocence, that we should hear as many reports as I had crammed
+cartridges down her muzzle. This was a sore joke against me for a length
+of time; but I tholed it patiently, considering cannily within myself,
+that knowledge is only to be bought by experience, and that, if we can
+credit the old song, even Johnny Cope himself did not learn the art of
+war in a single morning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THIRTEEN--MANSIE IN SEARCH OF A CURE FOR CHINCOUGH
+
+
+Some folks having been bred up from their cradle to the writing of books,
+of course naturally do the thing regularly and scientifically; but that's
+not to be expected from the like of me, that have followed no other way
+of life than the shaping and sewing line. It behoves me, therefore, to
+beg pardon for not being able to carry my history aye regularly straight
+forward, and for being forced whiles to zig-zag and vandyke. For
+instance, I clean forgot to give, in its proper place, a history of one
+of my travels, with Benjie in my bosom, in search of a cure for the
+chincough.
+
+My son Benjie was, at this dividual time, between four and five years
+old, when--poor wee chieldie!--he took the chincough, and in more
+respects than one was not in a good way; so the doctor recommended his
+mother and me, for the change of air, first to carry him down a coal-pit,
+and syne to the limekilns at Cousland.
+
+The coal-pit I could not think of at all; to say nothing of the danger of
+swinging down into the bowels of the earth in a creel, the thing aye put
+me in mind of the awful place, where the wicked, after death and
+judgment, howl, and hiss, and gnash their teeth; and where, unless Heaven
+be more merciful than we are just--we may all be soon enough. So I could
+not think of that, till other human means failed; and I determined, in
+the first place, to hire Tammie Dobbie's cart, and try a smell of the
+fresh air about the limekilns.
+
+It was a fine July forenoon, and the cart, filled with clean straw, was
+at the door by eleven o'clock; so our wife handed us out a pair of
+blankets to hap round me, and syne little Benjie into my arms, with his
+big-coatie on, and his leather cappie tied below his chin, and a bit red
+worsted comforterie round his neck; for, though the sun was warm and
+pleasant withal, we dreaded cold, as the doctor bade us. Oh, he was a
+fine old man, Doctor Hartshorn!
+
+We had not well got out of the town, when Tammie Dobbie louped up on the
+fore-tram. He was a crouse, cantie auld cock, having seen much and not
+little in his day; so he began a pleasant confab, pointing out all the
+gentlemen's houses round the country, and the names of the farms on the
+hill sides. To one like me, whose occupations tie him to the town-foot,
+it really is a sweet and grateful thing to be let loose, as it were, for
+a wee among the scenes of peace and quietness, where nature is in a way
+wild and wanton--where the clouds above our heads seem to sail along more
+grandly over the bosom of the sky, and the wee birds to cheep and churm,
+from the hedges among the fields, with greater pleasure, feeling that
+they are God's free creatures.
+
+I cannot tell how many thoughts came over my mind, one after another,
+like the waves of the sea down on Musselburgh beach; but especially the
+days when I was a wee callant with a daidly at Dominie Duncan's school,
+were fresh in my mind as if the time had been but yesterday; though much,
+much was I changed since then, being at that time a little, careless,
+ragged laddie, and now the head of a family, earning bread to my wife and
+wean by the sweat of my brow. I thought on the blythe summer days when I
+dandered about the braes and bushes seeking birds'-nests with Alick
+Bowsie and Samuel Search; and of the time when we stood upon one
+another's backs to speil up to the ripe cherries that hung over the
+garden walls of Woodburn. Awful changes had taken place since then. I
+had seen Sammy die of the black jaundice--an awful spectacle! and poor
+Alick Bowsie married to a drucken randie, that wore the breeks, and did
+not allow the misfortunate creature the life of a dog.
+
+When I was meditating thus, after the manner of the patriarch Isaac,
+there was a pleasant sadness at my heart, though it was like to loup to
+my mouth; but I could not get leave to enjoy it long for the tongue of
+Tammie Dobbie. He bade me look over into a field, about the middle of
+which were some wooden railings round the black gaping mouth of a
+coal-pit. "Div ye see that dark bit owre yonder amang the green clover,
+wi' the sticks about it?" asked Tammie.
+
+"Yes," said I; "and what for?"
+
+"Weel, do you ken," quo' Tammie, "that has been a weary place to mair
+than ane. Twa-three year ago, some o' the collyer bodies were choked to
+death down below wi' a blast of foul air; and a pour o' orphan weans they
+left behint them on the cauldrife parish. But ye'll mind Hornem, the
+sherry-officer wi' the thrawn shouther?"
+
+"Ou, bravely; I believe he came to some untimeous end hereaway about?"
+
+"Just in that spat," answered Tammie. "He was a drucken, blustering
+chield, as ye mind; fearing neither man nor de'il, and living a wild,
+wicked, regardless life; but, puir man, that couldna aye last. He had
+been bousing about the countryside somehow--maybe harrying out of house
+and hald some puir bodies that hadna the wherewith to pay their rents;
+so, in riding hame fou--it was pitmirk, and the rain pouring down in
+bucketfu's--he became dumfoundered wi' the darkness and the dramming
+thegither; and, losing his way, wandered about the fields, hauling his
+mare after him by the bridle. In the morning the beast was found
+nibbling away at the grass owre by yonder, wi' the saddle upon its back,
+and a broken bridle hinging down about its fore-legs, by the which the
+folks round were putten upon the scent; for, on making search down yon
+pit, he was fund at the bottom, wi' his brains smashed about him, and his
+legs and arms broken to chitters!"
+
+"Save us!" said I, "it makes a' my flesh grue."
+
+"Weel it may," answered Tammie, "or the story's lost in the telling; for
+the collyers that fand him shook as if they had been seized wi' the ague.
+The dumb animal, ye observe, had far mair sense than him; for, when his
+fitting gaed way, instead of following it had plunged back; and the bit
+o' the bridle, that had broken, was still in his grup, when they spied
+him wi' their lanterns."
+
+"It was an awful like way to leave the world," said I.
+
+"'Deed it was, and nae less," answered Tammie, "to gang to his lang
+account in the middle of his mad thochtlessness, without a moment's
+warning. But see, yonder's Cousland lying right forrit to the east
+hand."
+
+At this very nick of time Benjie was seized with a severe kink; so Tammie
+stopped his cart, and I held his head over the side of it till the cough
+went by. I thought his inside would have jumped out; but he fell sound
+asleep in two or three minutes; and we jogged on till we came to the
+yill-house door, where, after louping out, we got a pickle pease-strae to
+Tammie's horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOURTEEN--MANSIE AND TAMMIE AT MY LORD'S RACES
+
+
+It happened curiously that, of all the days of the year, this should have
+been the one on which the Carters'-play was held; and, by good luck, we
+were just in time to see that grand sight. The whole regiment of carters
+were paraded up at my Lord's door, for so they call their box-master; and
+a beautiful thing it was, I can assure ye. What a sight of ribands was
+on the horses! Many a crame must have been emptied ere such a number of
+manes and long tails could have been busked out. The beasts themselves,
+poor things, I dare say, wondered much at their bravery, and no less I am
+sure did the riders. They looked for all the world like living
+haberdashery shops. Great bunches of wallflower, thyme, spearmint,
+batchelor buttons, gardeners' gartens, peony roses, gillyflower, and
+southernwood, were stuck in their button holes; and broad belts of
+stripped silk, of every colour in the rainbow, were flung across their
+shoulders. As to their hats, the man would have had a clear e'e that
+could have kent what was their shape or colour. They were all rowed
+round with ribands, and puffed about the rim with long green or white
+feathers; and cockades were stuck on the off side, to say nothing of long
+strips fleeing behind them in the wind like streamers. Save us! to see
+men so proud of finery; if they had been peacocks one would have thought
+less; but in decent sober men, the heads of small families, and with no
+great wages, the thing was crazy-like. Was it not?
+
+At long and last we saw them all set in motion, like a regiment of
+dragoons, two and two, with a drum and fife at their head, as if they had
+been marching to the field of battle. By-the-bye, it was two of our own
+volunteer lads that were playing that day before them, Rory Skirl the
+snab, and Geordie Thump the dyer; so this, ye see, verified the old
+proverb, that travel where ye like, to the world's end, ye'll aye meet
+with kent faces; Tammie and me coming out to the yill-house door to see
+them pass by.
+
+Behind the drum and fife came a big, half-crazy looking chield, with a
+broad blue bonnet on his head, and a red worsted cherry sticking in the
+crown of it. He was carrying a new car-saddle over his shoulder on a
+well-cleaned pitchfork. Syne came three abreast, one on each side of my
+lord, being the key-keepers; he keeping the box, and they keeping the
+keys, in case like he should take any thing out. And syne came the auld
+my lord--him that was my lord last year, ye observe; and syne came the
+colours, as bright and bonny as mostly any thing ye ever saw. On one of
+them was painted a plough and harrows, and a man sowing wheat; over the
+top of which were gilded letters, the which I was able to read when I put
+on my specs, being, if I mind well, "Speed the Plough." On the other
+one, which was a mazarine blue with yellow fringes, was the picture of
+two carters, with flat bonnets on their heads, the tane with a whip in
+his hand, and the tither a rake, making hay like. Then came they all
+passing by two and two, looking as if each one of them had been the Duke
+of Buccleuch himself, every one rigged out in his best; the young
+callants, such like as had just entered the box, coming hindmost, and
+thinking themselves, I daresay, no small drink, and the day a great one
+when they were first allowed to be art and part in such a grand
+procession.
+
+But losh me! I had mostly forgot the piper, that played in the middle,
+as proud as Hezekiah, that we read of in Second Kings, strutting about
+from side to side with his bare legs and big buckles, and bit Macgregor
+tartan jacket--his cheeks blown up with wind like a smith's bellows--the
+feathers dirling with conceit in his bonnet--and the drone, below his
+oxter, squeeling and skirling like an evil spirit tied up in a green bag.
+Keep us all! what gleys he gied about him to observe that the folk were
+looking at him! He put me in mind of the song that old Barny used to
+sing about the streets--
+
+ Ilka ane his sword and dirk has,
+ Ilka ane as proud's a Turk is;
+ There's the Grants o' Tullochgorum,
+ Wi' their pipers gaun before 'em;
+ Proud the mithers are that bore 'em.
+ Feedle, faddle, fa, fum.
+
+But who do ye think should come up to us at this blessed moment, with a
+staff in his hand, being old now, and not able to ride in the procession,
+as he had many a time and often done before, but honest Saunders Tram,
+that had been a staunch customer of mine since the day on which I opened
+shop, and to whom I had made countless pairs of corduroy spatterdashes;
+so we shook hands jocosely together, like old acquaintances, and the body
+hodged and leuch as if he had found a fiddle, he was so glad to see me.
+
+Benjie having fallen asleep, Luckie Barm of the Change, a douce woman,
+put him to his bed, and promised to take care of him till we came back;
+Saunders Tram insisting on us to go forward along with him to see the
+race. I had no great scruple to do this, as I thought Benjie would
+likely sleep for an hour, being wearied with the joggling of the cart,
+and having supped a mutchkin bowlful of Luckie Barm's broo and bread.
+
+By the time we had tramped on to the braehead, two or three had booked
+for the race, and were busy pulling away the flowers that hung over about
+their horses' lugs, to say little of the tapes and twine; and which made
+them look, poor brutes, as if they were not very sure what was the matter
+with them. Meanwhile, there was a terrible uproar between my lord and a
+man from Edinburgh Grassmarket, leading a limping horse, covered with a
+dirty sheet, with two holes for the beast's een looking out at.
+
+But, for all this outward care, the poor thing seemed very like as if
+wind was more plenty in the land than corn, being thin and
+starved-looking, and as lame as Vulcan in the off hind-leg. So ye see
+the managers of the box insisted on its not running; and the man said "it
+had a right to run as well as any other horse"; and my lord said "it had
+no such thing, as it was not in the box"; and the man said "he would take
+out a protest"; and my lord said "he didna gie a bawbee for a protest;
+and that he would not allow him to run on any account whatsoever"; but
+the man was throng all the time they were argle-bargling taking the cover
+off the beast's back, that was ready saddled, and as accoutred for
+running as our regiment of volunteers was for fighting on field-days. So
+he swore like a trooper, that, notwithstanding all their debarring, he
+would run in spite of their teeth--both my lord's teeth, ye observe, and
+that of the two key-keepers;--maybe, too, of the man that carried the
+saddle, for he aye lent in a word at my lord's back, egging him on to
+stand out for the laws to the last drop of his blood.
+
+To cut a long tale short, the drum ruffed, and off set four of them, a
+black one, and a white one, and a brown one, and the man's one, neck and
+neck, as neat as you like. The race course was along the high road; and,
+dog on it, they made a noise like thunder, throwing out their big heavy
+feet behind them, and whisking their tails from side to side as if they
+would have dung out one another's een; till, not being used to gallop,
+they at last began to funk and fling; syne first one stopping, and then
+another, wheeling round and round about like peiries, in spite of the
+riders whipping them, and pulling them by the heads. The man's mare,
+however, from the Grassmarket, with the limping leg, carried on, followed
+by the white one, an old tough brute, that had belonged in its youth to a
+trumpeter of the Scots Greys; and, to tell the truth, it showed mettle
+still, though far past its best; so back they came, neck and neck, all
+the folk crying, and holloing, and clapping their hands--some "Weel dune
+the lame ane--five shillings on the lame ane";--and others, "Weel run
+Bonaparte--at him, auld Bonaparte--two to one that Whitey beats him all
+to sticks,"--when, dismal to relate, the limping-legged ane couped the
+creels, and old white Bonaparte came in with his tail cocked amid loud
+cheering, and no small clapping of hands.
+
+We all ran down the road to the place where the limping horse was lying,
+for it was never like to rise up again any more than the bit rider, that
+was thrown over its head like an arrow out of a bow; but on helping him
+to his feet, save and except the fright, two wide screeds across his
+trowser-knees, and a scratch along the brig of his nose, nothing visible
+was to be perceived. It was different, however, with the limping horse.
+Misfortunate brute! one of its fore-legs had folded below it, and snapped
+through at the fetlock joint. There was it lying with a sad sorrowful
+look, as if it longed for death to come quick and end its miseries; the
+blood, all the while, gush-gushing out at the gaping wound. To all it
+was as plain as the A, B, C, that the bones would never knit; and that,
+considering the case it was in, it would be an act of Christian charity
+to put the beast out of pain. The maister gloomed, stroked his chin, and
+looked down, knowing, weel-a-wat, that he had lost his bread-winner, then
+gave his head a nod, nod--thrusting both his hands down to the bottom
+lining of the pockets of his long square-tailed jockey coat. He was a
+wauf, hallanshaker-looking chield, with an old broad-snouted japanned
+beaver hat pulled over his brow--one that seemed by his phisog to hold
+the good word of the world as nothing--and that had, in the course of
+circumstances, been reduced to a kind of wild desperation, either by
+chance-misfortunes, cares and trials, or, what is more likely, by his own
+sinful, regardless way of life.
+
+"It canna be helpit," he said, giving his head a bit shake; "it canna be
+helpit, friends. Ay, Jess, ye were a gude ane in yere day, lass,--mony a
+penny and pound have I made out of ye. Which o' ye can lend me a hand,
+lads? Rin away for a gun some o' ye."
+
+Here Thomas Clod interfered with a small bit of advice--a thing that
+Thomas was good at, being a Cameronian elder, and accustomed to giving a
+word. "Wad ye no think it better," said Thomas, "to stick her with a
+long gully-knife, or a sharp shoemaker's parer? It wad be an easier way,
+I'm thinking."
+
+Dog on it! I could scarcely keep from shuddering when I heard them
+speaking in this wild, heathenish, bloody sort of a manner.
+
+'"Deed no," quo' Saunders Tram, at whose side I was standing, "far better
+send away for the smith's forehammer, and hit her a smack or twa betwixt
+the een; so ye wad settle her in half a second."
+
+"No, no," cried Tammie Dobbie, lending in his word; "a better plan than
+a' that, wad be to make a strong kinch of ropes, and hang her."
+
+Loveyding! such ways of showing how to be merciful!! But the old Jockey
+himself interfered. "Haud yere tongues, fules," was his speech;
+"yonder's the man coming wi' a gun. We'll shune put an end to her. She
+would have won for a hundred pounds, if she hadna broken her leg. Wha'll
+wager me that she wadna hae won? But she's the last of my stable, puir
+beast; and I havena ae plack to rub against anither, now that I have lost
+her. Gi'e me the gun and the penny candle. Is she loaded?" speired he
+at the man that carried the piece.
+
+"Troth is she," was the answer, "double charged."
+
+"Then stand back, lads," quoth the old round-shouthered horse-couper, and
+ramming down the candle he lifted up the piece, cocking it as he went
+four or five yards in front of the poor bleeding brute, that seemed,
+though she could not rise, to know what he was about with the weapon of
+destruction; casting her black eye up at him, and looking pitifully in
+his face.
+
+When I saw him taking his aim, and preparing to draw the trigger, I
+turned round my back, not being able to stand it, and brizzed the flats
+of my hands with all my pith against the opening of my ears;
+nevertheless, I heard a faint boom; so, heeling round, I observed the
+miserable bleeding creature lift her head, and pulling up her legs, give
+them a plunge down again on the divots: after which she lay still, and we
+all saw, to our satisfaction, that death had come to her relief.
+
+We are not commanded to be the judges of our fellow-creatures, but to
+think charitably of all men, hoping every thing for the best; and, though
+the horse-couper was a thought suspicious, both in look, speech, dress,
+and outward behaviour, still, ever and anon, we were bound by the ten
+commandments to consider him only in the light of a fellow-mortal in
+distress of mind and poverty of pocket; so we made a superscription for
+the poor man; and, though he did not look much like one that deserved our
+charity, nevertheless and howsoever, maybe he was a bad halfpenny, and
+maybe not; yet one thing was visibly certain, that he was as poor as
+Job--misery being written in big-hand letters on his brow. So it behoved
+each one to open his purse as he could afford it; and, though I say not
+what I put into the hat, proud am I to tell that he collected two or
+three shillings to help him home.
+
+This job being over to his mind as well as mine, and the money safely
+stowed into his big hinder coat-pocket--would ye believe it? ere yet the
+beast was scarcely cold, just as we were decamping from the place, and
+buttoning up our breeches-pockets, we saw him casting his coat, and had
+the curiosity to stand still for a jiffy, to observe what he was after,
+in case, in the middle of his misfortunes, he was bent on some act of
+desperation; when, lo and behold! he out with a gully knife, and began
+skinning his old servant, as if he had been only peeling the bark off a
+fallen tree!
+
+One cannot sit at their ingle-cheek and expect, without casting their
+eyes about them, to grow experienced in the ways of men, or the on-goings
+of the world. This spectacle gave me, I can assure you, much and no
+little insight; and so dowie was I with the thoughts of what I had
+witnessed of the selfishness, the sinfulness, and perversity of man, that
+I grew more and more home-sick, thinking never so much in my life before
+of my quiet hearthstone and cheerful ingle; and though Thomas Clod
+insisted greatly on my staying to their head-meeting dinner, and taking a
+reel with the lassies in the barn; and Tammie Dobbie, the bit body, had
+got so much into the spirit of the thing, that little persuasion would
+have made him stay all night and reel till the dawing--yet I was
+determined to make the best of my way home; more-be-token, as Benjie
+might take skaith from the night air, and our jaunt therefrom might,
+instead of contributing to his welfare, do him more harm than good. So,
+after getting some cheese and bread, to say nothing of a glass or two of
+strong beer and a dram at Luckie Barm's, we waited in her parlour, which
+was hung round with most beautiful pictures of Joseph and his Brethren,
+besides two stucco parrots on the chimney-piece, amusing ourselves with
+looking at them, as a pastime like, till Benjie wakened; on the which I
+made Tammie yoke his beast, and rowing the bit callant in his mother's
+shawl, took him into my arms in the cart, and after shaking hands with
+all and sundry twice or thrice over, we bade them a "good-night," and
+drove away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIFTEEN--MANSIE ON THE RETURN FROM MY LORD'S RACES
+
+
+I may confess, without thinking shame, that I was glad when I found our
+nebs turned homeward; and, when we got over the turn of the brae at the
+old quarry-holes, to see the blue smoke of our own Dalkeith, hanging like
+a thin cloud over the tops of the green trees, through which I perceived
+the glittering weathercock on the old kirk steeple. Tammie, poor
+creature, I observed, was a whit ree with the good cheer; and, as he sat
+on the fore-tram, with his whip-hand thrown over the beast's haunches, he
+sang, half to himself and half-aloud, a great many old Scotch songs, such
+as "the Gaberlunzie," "Aiken Drum," "Tak' yere Auld Cloak about ye," and
+"the Deuks dang ower my Daddie"; besides "The Mucking o' Geordie's Byre,"
+and "Ca' the Ewes to the Knowes," and so on; but, do what I liked, I
+could not keep my spirits up, thinking of the woful end of the poor old
+horse, and of the ne'er-do-weel loon its master. Many an excellent
+instruction of Mr Wiggie's came to my mind, of how we misguided the good
+things that were lent us for our use here, by a gracious Provider, who
+would, however, bid us render a final account to him of our conduct and
+conversation. I thought of how many were aye complaining and
+complaining, myself whiles among the rest, of the hardships, the
+miseries, and the misfortunes of their lot; putting all down to the score
+of fate, and never once thinking of the plantations of sorrow, reared up
+from the seeds of our own sinfulness; or how any thing, save punishment,
+could come of the breaking of the ten commandments delivered to the
+patriarch Moses. Perhaps, reckoned I with myself, perhaps in this, even
+I myself may have in this day's transactions erred. Here am I wandering
+about in a cart; exposing myself to the defilement of the world, to the
+fear of robbers, and to the night air, in the search of health for a
+dwining laddie; as if the hand that dealt that blessing out was not as
+powerful at home as it is abroad. Had I remained at my own lap-broad,
+the profits of my day's work would have been over and above for the
+maintenance of my family, outside and inside; instead of which, I have
+been at the expense of a cart-hire and a horse's up-putting, let alone
+Tammie's debosh and my own, besides the trifle of threepence to the
+round-shouldered old horse-couper with the slouched japan beaver hat.
+The story was too true a one; but, alack-a-day, it was now over late to
+repent!
+
+As I was thus musing, the bright red sun of summer sank down behind the
+top of the Pentland Hills, and all looked bluish, dowie, and dreary, as
+if the heart of the world had been seized with a sudden dwalm, and the
+face of nature had at once withered from blooming youth into the
+hoariness of old age. Now and then the birds gave a bit chitter; and
+whiles a cow mooed from the fields; and the dew was falling like the
+little tears of the fairies out of the blue lift, where the gloaming-star
+soon began to glow and glitter bonnily.
+
+What I had seen and witnessed made my thoughts heavy and my heart sad; I
+could not get the better of it. I looked round and round me, as we
+jogged along over the height, down on the far distant country, that
+spread out as if it had been a great big picture, with hills, and fields,
+and woods; and I could still see to the norward the ships lying at their
+anchors on the sea, and the shores of Fife far far beyond it. It was a
+great and a grand sight; and made me turn from the looking at it into my
+own heart, causing me to think more and more of the glory of the Maker's
+handiworks, and less and less of the littleness of prideful man. But
+Tammie had gotten his drappikie, and the tongue of the body would not lie
+still a moment; so he blethered on from one thing to another, as we
+jogged along, till I was forced at the last to give up thinking, and
+begin a twa-handed crack with him.
+
+"Have you your snuff-box upon ye?" said Tammie. "Gi'e me a pinch."
+
+Having given him the box, I observed to him, that "it was beginning to
+grow dark and dowie."
+
+"'Deed is't," said Tammie; "but a body can now scarcely meet on the road
+wi' ony think waur than themsell. Mony a witch, de'il, and bogle,
+however, did my grannie see and hear tell of, that used to scud and
+scamper hereaway langsyne like maukins."
+
+"Witches!" quo' I. "No, no, Tammie, all these things are out of the land
+now; and muckle luck to them. But we have other things to fear; what
+think ye of highway robbers?"
+
+"Highway robbers!" said Tammie. "Kay, kay; I'll tell ye of something
+that I met in wi' mysell. Ae dark winter night, as I was daundering hame
+frae Pathhead--it was pitmirk, and about the twall--losh me, I couldna
+see my finger afore me!--that a stupid thocht cam into my head that I wad
+never wun hame, but be either killed, lost, murdered, or drowned, between
+that and the dawing. All o' a sudden I sees a light coming dancing
+forrit amang the trees; and my hair began to stand up on end. Then, in
+the next moment--save us a'!--I sees anither light, and forrit, forrit
+they baith cam, like the een of some great fiery monster, let loose frae
+the pit o' darkness by its maister, to seek whom it might devour."
+
+"Stop, Tammie," said I to him, "ye'll wauken Benjie. How far are we from
+Dalkeith?"
+
+ [Picture: Thomas Burlings]
+
+"Twa mile and a bittock," answered Tammie. "But wait a wee.--Up cam the
+two lights snoov-snooving, nearer and nearer; and I heard distinctly the
+sound of feet that werena men's--cloven feet, maybe--but nae wheels. Sae
+nearer it cam and nearer, till the sweat began to pour owre my een as
+cauld as ice; and, at lang and last, I fand my knees beginning to gi'e
+way; and, after tot-tottering for half a minute, I fell down, my staff
+playing bleach out before me. When I cam to mysell, and opened my een,
+there were the twa lights before me, bleez-bleezing, as if they wad blast
+my sight out. And what did they turn out to be, think ye? The de'il or
+spunkie, whilk o' them?"
+
+"I'm sure I canna tell," said I.
+
+"Naithing mair then," answered Tammie, "but twa bowets; ane tied to ilka
+knee of auld Doofie, the half-crazy horse-doctor, mounted on his
+lang-tailed naig, and away through the dark by himsell, at the dead hour
+o' night, to the relief of a man's mare seized with the batts, somewhere
+down about Oxenford."
+
+I was glad that Tammie's story had ended in this way, when out came
+another tramping on its heels.
+
+"Do you see the top of yon black trees to the eastward there, on the
+braehead?"
+
+"I think I do," was my reply. "But how far, think ye, are we from home
+now?"
+
+"About a mile and a half," said Tammie.--"Weel, as to the trees, I'll
+tell ye something about them.
+
+"There was an auld widow-leddy lived langsyne about the town-end of
+Dalkeith. A sour, cankered, curious body--she's dead and rotten lang
+ago. But what I was gaun to say, she had a bonny bit fair-haired,
+blue-ee'd lassie of a servant-maid that lodged in the house wi' her, just
+by all the world like a lamb wi' an wolf; a bonnier quean, I've heard
+tell, never steppit in leather shoon; so all the young lads in the
+gate-end were wooing at her, and fain to have her; but she wad only have
+ae joe for a' that. He was a journeyman wright, a trades-lad, and they
+had come, three or four year before, frae the same place thegither--maybe
+having had a liking for ane anither since they were bairns; so they were
+gaun to be married the week after Da'keith Fair, and a' was settled. But
+what, think ye, happened? He got a drap drink, and a recruiting party
+listed him in the king's name, wi' pitting a white shilling in his loof.
+
+"When the poor lassie heard what had come to pass, and how her sweetheart
+had ta'en the bounty, she was like to gang distrackit, and took to her
+bed. The doctor never took up her trouble; and some said it was a fever.
+At last she was roused out o't, but naebody ever saw her laugh after; and
+frae ane that was as cantie as a lintie, she became as douce as a Quaker,
+though she aye gaed cannily about her wark, as if amaist naething had
+happened. If she was ony way light-headed before, to be sure she wasna
+that noo; but just what a decent quean should be, sitting for hours by
+the kitchen fire her lane, reading the Bible, and thinking, wha kens, of
+what wad become o' the wicked after they died; and so ye see--"
+
+"What light is yon?" said I, interrupting him, wishing him like to break
+off.
+
+"Ou, it's just the light on some of the coal-hills. The puir blackened
+creatures will be gaun down to their wark. It's an unyearthly kind of
+trade, turning night intil day, and working like moudiewarts in the dark,
+when decent folks are in their beds sleeping.--And so, as I was saying,
+ye see, it happened ae Sunday night that a chap cam to the back door; and
+the mistress too heard it. She was sitting in the foreroom wi' her specs
+on, reading some sermon book; but it was the maid that answered.
+
+"In a while thereafter, she rang her bell, being a curious body, and aye
+anxious to ken a' thing of her ain affairs, let alane her neighbours; so,
+after waiting a wee, she rang again,--and better rang; then lifting up
+her stick, for she was stiff with the rheumaticks and decay of nature,
+she hirpled into the kitchen,--but feint a hait saw she there, save the
+open Bible lying on the table, the cat streekit out before the fire, and
+the candle burning--the candle--na, I daur say I am wrang there, I
+believe it was a lamp, for she was a near ane. As for her maiden, there
+was no trace of her."
+
+"What do ye think came owre her then?" said I to him, liking to be at my
+wits' end. "Naething uncanny, I daur say?"
+
+"Ye'll hear in a moment," answered Tammie, "a' that I ken o' the matter.
+Ye see--as I asked ye before--yon trees on the hill-head to the eastward;
+just below yon black cloud yonder?"
+
+"Preceesely," said I--"I see them well enough."
+
+"Weel, after a' thochts of finding her were gi'en up, and it was fairly
+concluded, that it was the auld gudeman that had come and chappit her
+out, she was fund in a pond among yon trees, floating on her back, wi'
+her Sunday's claes on!!"
+
+"Drowned?" said I to him.
+
+"Drowned--and as stiff as a deal board," answered Tammie. "But when she
+was drowned--or how she came to be drowned--or who it was drowned
+her--has never been found out to this blessed moment."
+
+"Maybe," said I, lending in my word--"maybe she had grown demented, and
+thrown herself in i' the dark."
+
+"Or maybe," said Tammie, "the deil flew away wi' her in a flash o' fire;
+and, soosing her down frae the lift, she landit in that hole, where she
+was fund floating. But--wo!--wo!" cried he to his horse, coming across
+its side with his whip--"We maun be canny; for this brig has a sharp turn
+(it was the Cow Brig, ye know), and many a one, both horse and man, have
+got their necks broken, by not being wary enough of that corner."
+
+This made me a thought timorous, having the bit laddie Benjie fast asleep
+in my arms; and as I saw that Tammie's horse was a wee fidgety, and glad,
+I dare say, poor thing, to find itself so near home. We heard the water,
+far down below, roaring and hushing over the rocks, and thro' among the
+Duke's woods--big, thick, black trees, that threw their branches, like
+giant's arms, half across the Esk, making all below as gloomy as
+midnight; while over the tops of them, high, high aboon, the bonnie wee
+starries were twink-twinkling far amid the blue. But there was no end to
+Tammie's tongue.
+
+"Weel," said he, "speaking o' the brig, I'll tell you a gude story about
+that. Auld Jamie Bowie, the potato merchant, that lived at the Gate-end,
+had a horse and cart that met wi' an accident just at the turn o' the
+corner yonder; and up cam a chield sair forfaughten, and a' out of
+breath, to Jamie's door, crying like the prophet Jeremiah to the auld
+Jews, 'Rin, rin away doun to the Cow Brig; for your cart's dung to
+shivers, and the driver's killed, as weel as the horse!'
+
+"James ran in for his hat; but as he was coming out at the door, he met
+another messenger, such as came running across the plain to David, to
+acquaint him of the death of Absalom, crying, 'Rin away doun, Jamie, rin
+away doun; your cart is standing yonder, without either horse or driver;
+for they're baith killed!'
+
+"Jamie thanked Heaven that the cart was to the fore; then, rinning back
+for his stick, which he had forgotten, he stopped a moment to bid his
+wife not greet so loud, and was then rushing out in full birr, when he
+ran foul of a third chield, that mostly knocked doun the door in his
+hurry. 'Awfu' news, man, awfu' news,' was the way o't, with this second
+Eliphaz the Temanite. 'Your cart and horse ran away--and threw the
+driver, puir fellow, clean owre the brig into the water. No a crunch o'
+him is to be seen or heard tell of; for he was a' smashed to pieces!!
+It's an awfu' business!'
+
+"'But where's the horse? and where's the cart, then?' askit Jamie, a
+thought brisker. 'Where's the horse and cart, then, my man? Can ye tell
+me ought of that?'
+
+"'Ou,' said he, 'they're baith doun at the Toll yonder, no a hair the
+waur.'
+
+"'That's the best news I've heard the nicht, my man.--Goodwife, I say,
+Goodwife; are ye deaf or donnart? Give this lad a dram; and, as it
+rather looks like a shower, I'll e'en no go out the night.--I'll easy
+manage to find another driver, though half a hundred o' the blockheads
+should get their brains knocked out.'
+
+"Is not that a gude ane noo?" quo' Tammie, laughing. '"Od Jamie Bowie
+was a real ane. He wadna let them light a candle by his bedside to let
+him see to dee; he gied them a curse, and said that was needless
+extravagance."
+
+Dog on it, thought I to myself, the further in the deeper. This beats
+the round-shouldered, horse-couper with the Japan hat, skinning his
+reeking horse, all to sticks; and so I again fell into a gloomy sort of a
+musing; when, just as we came opposite the Duke's gate, with the deers on
+each side of it, two men rushed out upon us, and one of them seized
+Tammie's horse by the bridle, as the other one held his horse-pistol to
+my nose, and bade me stop in the King's name!
+
+"Hold your hand, hold your hand, for the sake of mercy!" cried I. "Spare
+the father of a small family that will starve on the street if ye take my
+life!! Hae--hae--there's every coin and copper I have about me in the
+world! Be merciful, be merciful; and do not shed blood, that will not,
+cannot be rubbed out of your conscience. Take all that we have--horse
+and cart and all if ye like; only spare our lives, and let us away home!"
+
+"De'il's in the man," quo' Tammie, "horse and cart! that's a gude one!
+Na, na, lads; fire away gin ye like; for as lang as I hae a drap o' bluid
+in me, ye'll get neither. Better be killed than starve. Do your best,
+ye thieves that ye are; and I'll hae baith of ye hanged neist week before
+the Fifteen!"
+
+Every moment I expected my head to be shot off, till I got my hand
+clapped on Tammie's mouth, and could get cried to them--"Shoot him then,
+lads; shoot him then, lads, if he wants it; but take my siller like
+Christians, and let me away with my poor deeing bairn!"
+
+The two men seemed a something dumfoundered with what they heard; and I
+began to think them, if they were highway robbers, a wee slow at their
+trade; when, what think ye did they turn out to be--only guess? Nothing
+more nor less than two excise officers, that had got information of some
+smuggled gin, coming up in a cart from Fisherrow Harbour, and were
+lurking on the road-side, looking out for spuilzie!!
+
+When they quitted us giggling, I could not keep from laughing too; though
+the sights I had seen, and the fright I had got, made me nervish and
+eerie; so blithe was I when the cart rattled on our own street, and I
+began to waken Benjie, as we were not above a hundred yards from our own
+door.
+
+In this day's adventures, I saw the sin and folly of my conduct visibly,
+as I jumped out of the cart at our close mouth. So I determined within
+myself, with a strong determination, to behave more sensibly for the
+future, and think no more about limekilns and coal-pits; but to trust,
+for Benjie's recovery from the chincough, to a kind Providence, together
+with Daffy's elixir, and warm blankets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIXTEEN--TAILOR MANSIE AND THE BLOODY CARTRIDGE
+
+
+It was on a fine summer morning, somewhere about four o'clock, when I
+wakened from my night's rest, and was about thinking to bestir myself,
+that I heard the sound of voices in the kail-yard stretching south from
+our back windows. I listened--and I listened--and I better listened--and
+still the sound of the argle-bargling became more distinct, now in a
+fleeching way, and now in harsh angry tones, as if some quarrelsome
+disagreement had taken place. I had not the comfort of my wife's company
+in this dilemmy; she being away, three days before, on the top of Tammie
+Trundle the carrier's cart, to Lauder, on a visit to her folks there; her
+mother (my gudemother like) having been for some time ill with an income
+in her leg, which threatened to make a lameter of her in her old age, the
+two doctors there--not speaking of the blacksmith, and sundry skeely old
+women--being able to make nothing of the business; so nobody happened to
+be with me in the room saving wee Benjie, who was lying asleep at the
+back of the bed, with his little Kilmarnock on his head, as sound as a
+top. Nevertheless, I looked for my clothes; and, opening one half of the
+window shutter, I saw four young birkies, well dressed--indeed three of
+them customers of my own--all belonging to the town; two of them young
+doctors, one of them a writer's clerk, and the other a grocer. The whole
+appeared very fierce and fearsome, like turkey-cocks; swaggering about
+with warlike arms as if they had been the king's dragoons; and priming a
+pair of pistols, which one of the surgeons, a spirity, outspoken lad,
+Maister Blister, was holding in his grip.
+
+I jealoused at once what they were after, being now a wee up to
+fire-arms; so I saw that scaith was to come of it; and that I would be
+wanting in my duty on four heads,--first, as a Christian; second, as a
+man; third, as a subject; and fourth, as a father; if I withheld myself
+from the scene; nor lifted up my voice, however fruitlessly, against such
+crying iniquity as the wanton letting out of human blood; so forth I
+hastened, half dressed, with my grey stockings rolled up my thighs over
+my corduroys, and my old hat above my cowl, to the kail-yard of
+contention.
+
+I was just in the nick of time; and my presence checked the effusion of
+blood for a little--but wait a wee. So high and furious were at least
+three of the party, that I saw it was catching water in a sieve to waste
+words on them, knowing as clearly as the sun serves the world, that
+interceding would be of no avail. However, I made a feint, and
+threatened to bowl away for a magistrate, if they would not desist from
+their barbarous and bloody purpose; but, i'fegs, I had better kept my
+counsel till it was asked for.
+
+"Tailor Mansie," blustered out Maister Thomas Blister with a furious cock
+of his eye--he was a queer Eirish birkie, come over for his
+education--"since ye have ventured to thrust your nose, ma vourneen,"
+said he, "where nobody invited ye, you must just stay," added he, "and
+abide by the consequences. This is an affair of honour, you take, don't
+ye? and if ye venture to stir one foot from the spot, och then, ma
+bouchal," said he, "by the poker of St Patrick, but whisk through ye goes
+one of these leaden playthings, as sure as ye ever spoiled a coat, or
+cabbaged broadcloth! Ye have now come out, ye observe,--hark ye," said
+he, "and are art and part in the business; and if one, or both, of the
+principals be killed, poor devils," said he, "we are all alike liable to
+take our trial before the Justiciary Court, hark ye; and by the powers,"
+said he, "I doubt not but, on proper consideration, machree, that they
+will allow us to get off mercifully, on this side of swinging, by a
+verdict of manslaughter--and be hanged to them!"
+
+'Od, I found myself immediately in a scrape; but how to get out of it
+baffled my gumption. It set me all a shivering; yet I thought that, come
+the worst when it should, they surely would not hang the father of a
+helpless small family, that had nothing but his needle for their support,
+if I made a proper affidavy, about having tried to make peace between the
+youths. So, conscience being a brave supporter, I abode in silence,
+though not without many queer and qualmish thoughts, and a pit-patting of
+the heart, not unco pleasant in the tholing.
+
+"Blood and wounds!" bawled Maister Thomas Blister, "it would be a
+disgrace for ever on the honourable profession of physic," egging on poor
+Maister Willy Magneezhy, whose face was as white as double-bleached
+linen, "to make an apology for such an insult. Arrah, my honey! you not
+fit to doctor a cat,--you not fit to bleed a calf,--you not fit to
+poultice a pig,--after three years' apprenticeship," said he, "and a
+winter with Doctor Monro? By the cupping-glasses of 'Pocrates," said he,
+"and by the pistol of Gallon, but I would have caned him on the spot if
+he had just let out half as much to me! Look ye, man," said he, "look
+ye, man, he is all shaking" (this was a God's truth); "he'll turn tail.
+At him like fire, Willie."
+
+Magneezhy, though sadly frightened, looked a thought brighter; and made a
+kind of half step forward. "Say that ye'll ask my pardon once more,--and
+if not," whined the poor lad, with a voice broken and trembling, "then we
+must just shoot one another."
+
+"Devil a bit," answered Maister Bloatsheet, "devil a bit. No, sir; you
+must down on your bare knees, and beg ten thousand pardons for calling me
+out here, in a raw morning; or I'll have a shot at you, whether you will
+or not."
+
+"Will you stand that?" said Blister, with eyes like burning coals. "By
+the living jingo, and the holy poker, Magneezhy, if you stand that,--if
+you stand that, I say, I stand no longer your second, but leave you to
+disgrace and a caning. If he likes to shoot you like a dog, and not as a
+gentleman, then, cuishla machree,--let him do it, and be done!"
+
+"No, sir," replied Magneezhy with a quivering voice, which he tried in
+vain, poor fellow, to render warlike (he had never been in the volunteers
+like me). "Hand us the pistols, then; and let us do or die!"
+
+"Spoken like a hero, and brother of the lancet: as little afraid at the
+sight of your own blood, as at that of your patients," said Blister.
+"Hand over the pistols."
+
+It was an awful business. Gude save us, such goings on in a Christian
+land! While Mr Bloatsheet, the young writer, was in the act of cocking
+the bloody weapon, I again, but to no purpose, endeavoured to slip in a
+word edgeways. Magneezhy was in an awful case; if he had been already
+shot, he could not have looked more clay and corpse-like; so I took up a
+douce earnest confabulation, while the stramash was drawing to a bloody
+conclusion, with Mr Harry Molasses, the fourth in the spree, who was
+standing behind Bloatsheet with a large mahogany box under his arm,
+something in shape like that of a licensed packman, ganging about from
+house to house, through the country-side, selling toys and trinkets; or
+niffering plaited ear-rings, and suchlike, with young lasses, for old
+silver coins or cracked teaspoons.
+
+"Oh!" answered he, very composedly, as if it had been a canister full of
+black-rapee or black-guard, that he had just lifted down from his
+top-shelf, "it's just Doctor Blister's saws, whittles, and big knives, in
+case any of their legs or arms be blown away, that he may cut them off."
+Little would have prevented me sinking down through the ground, had I not
+remembered at the preceese moment, that I myself was a soldier, and
+liable, when the hour of danger threatened, to be called out, in
+marching-order, to the field of battle. But by this time the pistols
+were in the hands of the two infatuated young men, Mr Bloatsheet, as
+fierce as a hussar dragoon, and Magneezhy as supple in the knees as if he
+was all on oiled hinges; so the next consideration was to get well out of
+the way, the lookers-on running nearly as great a chance of being shot as
+the principals, they not being accustomed, like me for instance, to the
+use of arms; on which account, I scougged myself behind a big pear-tree;
+both being to fire when Blister gave the word "Off!"
+
+I had scarcely jouked into my hidy-hole, when "crack--crack" played the
+pistols like lightning; and as soon as I got my cowl taken from my eyes,
+and looked about, woes me! I saw Magneezhy clap his hand to his brow,
+wheel round like a peerie, or a sheep seized with the sturdie, and then
+play flap down on his broadside, breaking the necks of half-a-dozen
+cabbage-stocks--three of which were afterwards clean lost, as we could
+not put them all into the pot at one time. The whole of us ran forward,
+but foremost was Bloatsheet, who seizing Magneezhy by the hand, cried,
+with a mournful face, "I hope you forgive me? Only say this as long as
+you have breath; for I am off to Leith harbour in half a minute."
+
+The blood was running over poor Magneezhy's eyes, and drib-dribbling from
+the neb of his nose, so he was truly in a pitiful state; but he said with
+more strength than I thought he could have mustered,--"Yes, yes, fly for
+your life. I am dying without much pain--fly for your life, for I am a
+gone man!"
+
+Bloatsheet bounced through the kail-yard like a maukin, clamb over the
+bit wall, and off like mad; while Blister was feeling Magneezhy's pulse
+with one hand, and looking at his doctor's watch, which he had in the
+other. "Do ye think that the poor lad will live, doctor?" said I to him.
+
+He gave his head a wise shake, and only observed, "I dare say, it will be
+a hanging business among us. In what direction do you think, Mansie, we
+should all take flight?"
+
+But I answered bravely, "Flee them that will, I'se flee nane. If I am
+taken prisoner, the town-officers maun haul me from my own house; but,
+nevertheless, I trust the visibility of my innocence will be as plain as
+a pikestaff to the eyes of the Fifteen!"
+
+"What, then, Mansie, will we do with poor Magneezhy? Give us your advice
+in need."
+
+"Let us carry him down to my own bed," answered I; "I would not desert a
+fellow-creature in his dying hour! Help me down with him, and then flee
+the country as fast as you are able!"
+
+We immediately proceeded, and lifted the poor lad, who had now dwalmed
+away, upon our wife's hand-barrow--Blister taking the feet, and me the
+oxters, whereby I got my waistcoat all japanned with blood; so, when we
+got him laid right, we proceeded to carry him between us down the close,
+just as if he had been a sticked sheep, and in at the back door, which
+cost us some trouble, being narrow, and the barrow getting jammed in;
+but, at long and last, we got him streeked out above the blankets, having
+previously shooken Benjie, and wakened him out of his morning's nap.
+
+All this being accomplished and got over, Blister decamped, leaving me my
+leeful lane, excepting Benjie, who was next to nobody, in the house with
+the dying man. What a frightful face he had, all smeared over with blood
+and powder--and I really jealoused, that if he died in that room it would
+be haunted for evermair, he being in a manner a murdered man; so that,
+even should I be acquitted of art and part, his ghost might still come to
+bother us, making our house a hell upon earth, and frighting us out of
+our seven senses. But in the midst of my dreadful surmises, when all was
+still, so that you might have heard a pin fall, a knock-knock-knock, came
+to the door, on which, recovering my senses, I dreaded first that it was
+the death-chap, and syne that the affair had got wind, and that it was
+the beagles come in search of me; so I kissed little Benjie, who was
+sitting on his creepie, blubbering and greeting for his parritch, while a
+tear stood in my own eye as I went forward to lift the sneck to let the
+officers, as I thought, harrie our house, by carrying off me, its master;
+but it was, thank Heaven, only Tammie Bodkin, coming in whistling to his
+work, with some measuring papers hanging round his neck.
+
+"Ah, Tammie," said I to him, my heart warming at a kent face, and making
+the laddie, although my bounden servant by a regular indenture of five
+years, a friend in my need, "come in, my man. I fear ye'll hae to take
+charge of the business for some time to come; mind what I tell'd ye about
+the shaping and the cutting, and no making the goose ower warm; as I
+doubt I am about to be harled away to the tolbooth."
+
+Tammie's heart swelled to his mouth. "Ah, maister," he said, "ye're
+joking. What should ye have done that ye should be ta'en to sic an ill
+place?"
+
+"Ay, Tammie, lad," answered I, "it is but ower true."
+
+"Weel, weel," quo' Tammie--I really thought it a great deal of the
+laddie--"weel, weel, they canna prevent me coming to sew beside ye; and
+if I can take the measure of customers without, ye can cut the claith
+within. But what is't for, maister?"
+
+"Come in here," said I to him, "and believe your ain een, Tammie, my
+man."
+
+"Losh me!" cried the poor laddie, glowring at the bloody face of the man
+in the bed, and starting back on his tip-toes. "Ay--ay--ay! maister;
+save us, maister; ay--ay--ay--you have na cloured his harnpan with the
+guse? Ay, maister, maister! whaten an unearthly sight!! I doubt they'll
+hang us a'; you for doing't--and me on suspicion--and Benjie as art and
+part, puir thing! But I'll rin for a doctor. Will I, maister?"
+
+The thought had never struck me before, being in a sort of a manner dung
+stupid; but catching up the word, I said with all my pith and birr, "Rin,
+rin, Tammie, rin for life and death!"
+
+Tammie bolted like a nine-year-old, never looking behind his tail; so, in
+less than ten minutes, he returned, hauling along old Doctor Peelbox,
+whom he had waukened out of his bed, in a camblet morning-gown, and a
+pair of red slippers, by the lug and horn, at the very time I was trying
+to quiet young Benjie, who was following me up and down the house, as I
+was pacing to and fro in distraction, girning and whingeing for his
+breakfast.
+
+"Bad business, bad business; bless us, what is this?" said the old
+Doctor, who was near-sighted, staring at Magneezhy's bloody face through
+his silver spectacles--"what's the matter?"
+
+The poor patient knew at once his master's tongue, and lifting up one of
+his eyes, the other being stiff and barkened down, said in a melancholy
+voice, "Ah, master, do you think I'll get better?"
+
+Doctor Peelbox, old man as he was, started back as if he had been a
+French dancing-master, or had stramped on a hot bar of iron. "Tom, Tom,
+is this you? what, in the name of wonder, has done this?" Then feeling
+his wrist--"but your pulse is quite good. Have you fallen, boy? Where
+is the blood coming from?"
+
+"Somewhere about the hairy scalp," answered Magneezhy, in their own queer
+sort of lingo. "I doubt some artery's cut through!"
+
+The Doctor immediately bade him lie quiet and hush, as he was getting a
+needle and silken thread ready to sew it up; ordering me to have a basin
+and water ready, to wash the poor lad's physog. I did so as hard as I
+was able, though I was not sure about the blood just; old Doctor Peelbox
+watching over my shoulder with a lighted penny candle in one hand, and
+the needle and thread in the other, to see where the blood spouted from.
+But we were as daft as wise; so he bade me take my big shears, and cut
+out all the hair on the fore part of the head as bare as my loof; and
+syne we washed, and better washed; so Magneezhy got the other eye up,
+when the barkened blood was loosed; looking, though as pale as a clean
+shirt, more frighted than hurt; until it became plain to us all, first to
+the Doctor, syne to me, and syne to Tammie Bodkin, and last of all to
+Magneezhy himself, that his skin was not so much as peeled. So we helped
+him out of the bed, and blithe was I to see the lad standing on the
+floor, without a hold, on his own feet.
+
+I did my best to clean his neckcloth and shirt of the blood, making him
+look as decentish as possible, considering circumstances; and lending
+him, as the scripture commands, my tartan mantle to hide the infirmity of
+his bloody trowsers and waistcoat. Home went he and his master together;
+me standing at our close mouth, wishing them a good-morning, and blithe
+to see their backs. Indeed, a condemned thief with the rope about his
+neck, and the white cowl tied over his eyes, to say nothing of his hands
+yerked together behind his back, and on the nick of being thrown over,
+could not have been more thankful for a reprieve than I was, at the same
+blessed moment. It was like Adam seeing the deil's rear marching out of
+Paradise, if one may be allowed to think such a thing.
+
+The whole business, tag-rag and bob-tail, soon, however, spunked out, and
+was the town talk for more than one day.--But you'll hear.
+
+At the first I pitied the poor lads, that I thought had fled for ever and
+aye from their native country, to Bengal, Seringapatam, Copenhagen,
+Botany Bay, or Jamaica, leaving behind them all their friends and old
+Scotland, as they might never hear of the goodness of Providence in their
+behalf. But wait a wee.
+
+Would you believe it? As sure's death, the whole was but a wicked trick
+played by that mischievous loon Blister and his cronies, upon one that
+was a simple and soft-headed callant. De'il a hait was in the one pistol
+but a pluff of powder; and in the other, a cartridge-paper, full of
+blood, was rammed down upon the charge; the which, hitting Magneezhy on
+the ee-bree, had caused a business that seemed to have put him out of
+life, and nearly put me (though one of the volunteers) out of my seven
+senses.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVENTEEN--MANSIE WAUCH--HIS FIRST AND LAST PLAY
+
+
+The time of Tammie Bodkin's apprenticeship being nearly worn through, it
+behoved me, as a man attentive to business, and the interests of my
+family, to cast my eyes around me in search of a callant to fill his
+place; as it is customary in our trade for young men, when their time is
+out, taking a year's journeymanship in Edinburgh, to perfect them in the
+more intricate branches of the business, and learn the newest manner of
+the French and London fashions, by cutting cloth for the young advocates,
+the college students, the banking-house clerks, the half-pay ensigns, and
+the rest of the principal tip-top bucks.
+
+Having, though I say it myself, the word of being a canny maister, more
+than one brought their callants to me, on reading the bill of "An
+apprentice wanted," pasted on my shop-window.
+
+Offering to bind them for the regular time, yet not wishing to take but
+one, I thought best not to fix in a hurry, and make choice of him that
+seemed more exactly cut out for my purpose. In the course of a few weeks
+three or four cast up, among whom was a laddie of Ben Aits the
+mealmonger, and a son of William Burlings the baker; to say little of the
+callant of Saunders Broom the sweep, that would fain have put his
+blackit-looking bit creature with the one eye and the wooden leg under my
+wing; but I aye looked to respectability in these matters; so glad was I
+when I got the offer of Mungo Glen.--But more of this in half a minute.
+
+I must say I was glad of any feasible excuse to make to the sweep, to get
+quit of him and his laddie, the father being a drucken ne'er-do-weel,
+that I wonder did not fall long ere this time of day from some
+chimney-head, and get his neck broken. So I told him at long and last,
+when he came papping into my shop, plaguing me every time he passed, that
+I had fitted myself; and that there would be no need of his taking the
+trouble to call again. Upon which he gave his blacked nieve a desperate
+thump on the counter, making the observation, that out of respect for him
+I might have given his son the preference. Though I was a wee puzzled
+for an answer, I said to him for want of a better, that having a timber
+leg, he could not well creuk his hough to the shop-board for our trade.
+
+"Hout, touts," said Saunders, giving his lips a smack--"Creuk his hough,
+ye body you! Do you think his timber leg canna screw off?--That'll no
+pass."
+
+I was a little dumfoundered at this cleverness. So I said, more on my
+guard--"True, true, Saunders, but he's ower little."
+
+"Ower little, and be hanged to ye!" cried the disrespectful fellow,
+wheeling about on his heel, as he grasped the sneck of the shop-door, and
+gave a girn that showed the only clean parts of his body--to wit the
+whites of his eyes, and his sharp teeth:--"Ower little!--Pu, pu!--He's
+like the blackamoor's pig, then, Maister Wauch--he's like the
+blackamoor's pig--he may be ver' leetle, but he be tam ould"; and with
+this he showed his back, clapping the door at his tail without wishing a
+good-day; and I am scarcely sorry when I confess, that I never cut cloth
+for either father or son from that hour to this one, the losing of such a
+customer being no great matter at best, and almost clear gain compared
+with saddling myself with a callant with only one eye and one leg; the
+one having fallen a victim to the dregs of the measles, and the other
+having been harled off by a farmer's threshing-mill. However, I got
+myself properly suited;--but ye shall hear.
+
+Our neighbour Mrs Grassie, a widow woman, unco intimate with our wife,
+and very attentive to Benjie when he had the chincough, had a far-away
+cousin of the name of Glen, that held out among the howes of the
+Lammermoor hills--a distant part of the country, ye observe. Auld Glen,
+a decent-looking body of a creature, had come in with his sheltie about
+some private matters of business--such as the buying of a horse, or
+something to that effect, where he could best fall in with it, either at
+our fair, or the Grassmarket, or suchlike; so he had up-pitting, free of
+expense, from Mrs Grassie, on account of his relationship; Glen being
+second cousin to Mrs Grassie's brother's wife, which is deceased. I
+might, indeed, have mentioned, that our neighbour herself had been twice
+married, and had the misery of seeing out both her gudemen; but such was
+the will of fate, and she bore up with perfect resignation.
+
+Having made a bit warm dinner ready, for she was a tidy body, and knew
+what was what, she thought she could not do better than ask in a
+reputable neighbour to help her friend to eat it, and take a cheerer with
+him; as, maybe, being a stranger here, he would not like to use the
+freedom of drinking by himself--a custom which is at the best an unsocial
+one--especially with none but women-folk near him; so she did me the
+honour to make choice of me--though I say it, who should not say it;--and
+when we got our jug filled for the second time, and began to grow better
+acquainted, ye would really wonder to see how we became merry, and
+cracked away just like two pen-guns. I asked him, ye see, about sheep
+and cows, and corn and hay, and ploughing and threshing, and horses and
+carts, and fallow land, and lambing-time, and har'st, and making cheese
+and butter, and selling eggs, and curing the sturdie, and the snifters,
+and the batts, and such like;--and he, in his turn, made enquiry
+regarding broad and narrow cloth, Kilmarnock cowls, worsted comforters,
+Shetland hose, mittens, leather-caps, stuffing and padding, metal and
+mule buttons, thorls, pocket-linings, serge, twist, buckram, shaping and
+sewing, back-splaying, cloth-runds, goosing the labroad, botkins, black
+thread, patent shears, measuring, and all the other particulars belonging
+to our trade, which he said, at long and last after we had joked
+together, was a power better one than the farming line.
+
+"Ye should make your son ane, then," said I, "if ye think so. Have ye
+any bairns?"
+
+"Ye've hit the nail on the head.--'Od, man, if ye wasna so far away, I
+would bind our auldest callant to yoursell, I'm sae weel pleased wi' your
+gentlemanly manners. But I'm speaking havers."
+
+"Havers here or havers there, what," said I, "is to prevent ye boarding
+him, at a cheap rate, either with our friend Mrs Grassie, or with the
+wife? Either of the two would be a sort of mother to him."
+
+'"Deed I daur say would they," answered Maister Glen, stroking his chin,
+which was gey rough, and had not got a clean since Sunday, having had
+four days of sheer growth--our meeting, you will observe by this, being
+on the Thursday afternoon--"'Deed would they.--'Od, I maun speak to the
+mistress about it."
+
+On the head of this we had another jug, three being cannie, after which
+we were both a wee tozy-mozy; and I daresay Mrs Grassie saw plainly that
+we were getting into a state where we would not easily make a halt; so,
+without letting on, she brought in the tea-things before us, and showed
+us a playbill, to tell us that a company of strolling playactors had come
+in a body in the morning, with a whole cartful of scenery and grand
+dresses; and were to make an exhibition at seven o'clock, at the ransom
+of a shilling a-head, in Laird Wheatley's barn.
+
+Many a time and often had I heard of playacting; and of players making
+themselves kings and queens, and saying a great many wonderful things;
+but I had never before an opportunity of making myself a witness to the
+truth of these hearsays. So Maister Glen, being as full of nonsense, and
+as fain to have his curiosity gratified as myself, we took upon us the
+stout resolution to go out together, he offering to treat me; and I
+determined to run the risk of Maister Wiggie, our minister's rebuke, for
+the transgression, hoping it would make no lasting impression on his
+mind, being for the first and only time. Folks should not on all
+occasions be over scrupulous.
+
+After paying our money at the door, never, while I live and breathe, will
+I forget what we saw and heard that night; it just looks to me, by all
+the world, when I think on it, like a fairy dream. The place was crowded
+to the full; Maister Glen and me having nearly got our ribs dung in
+before we found a seat, the folks behind being obliged to mount the back
+benches to get a sight. Right to the forehand of us was a large green
+curtain, some five or six ells wide, a good deal the worse of the wear,
+having seen service through two-three summers; and, just in the front of
+it, were eight or ten penny candles stuck in a board fastened to the
+ground, to let us see the players' feet like, when they came on the
+stage--and even before they came on the stage--for the curtain being
+scrimpit in length, we saw legs and sandals moving behind the scenes very
+neatly; while two blind fiddlers they had brought with them played the
+bonniest ye ever heard. 'Od, the very music was worth a sixpence of
+itself.
+
+The place, as I said before, was choke-full, just to excess; so that one
+could scarcely breathe. Indeed, I never saw any part so crowded, not
+even at a tent preaching, when the Rev. Mr Roarer was giving his
+discourses on the building of Solomon's Temple. We were obligated to
+have the windows opened for a mouthful of fresh air, the barn being as
+close as a baker's oven, my neighbour and me fanning our red faces with
+our hats, to keep us cool; and, though all were half stewed, we certainly
+had the worst of it, the toddy we had taken having fermented the blood of
+our bodies into a perfect fever.
+
+Just at the time that the two blind fiddlers were playing the Downfall of
+Paris, a handbell rang, and up goes the green curtain; being hauled to
+the ceiling, as I observed with the tail of my eye, by a birkie at the
+side, that had hold of a rope. So, on the music stopping, and all
+becoming as still as that you might have heard a pin fall, in comes a
+decent old gentleman at his leisure, well powdered, with an old-fashioned
+coat on, waistcoat with flap-pockets, brown breeches with buckles at the
+knees, and silk stockings with red gushats on a blue ground. I never saw
+a man in such distress; he stamped about, and better stamped about,
+dadding the end of his staff on the ground, and imploring all the powers
+of heaven and earth to help him to find out his runaway daughter, that
+had decamped with some ne'er-do-weel loon of a half-pay captain, that
+keppit her in his arms from her bedroom-window, up two pair of stairs.
+
+Every father and head of a family must have felt for a man in his
+situation, thus to be robbed of his dear bairn, and an only daughter too,
+as he told us over and over again, as the salt, salt tears ran gushing
+down his withered face, and he aye blew his nose on his clean calendered
+pocket-napkin. But, ye know the thing was absurd to suppose that we
+should know, any inkling about the matter, having never seen him or his
+daughter between the een before, and not kenning them by headmark; so,
+though we sympathized with him, as folks ought to do with a
+fellow-creature in affliction, we thought it best to hold our tongues, to
+see what might cast up better than he expected. So out he went stumping
+at the other side, determined, he said, to find them out, though he
+should follow them to the world's end, Johnny Groat's House, or something
+to that effect.
+
+Hardly was his back turned, and almost before he could cry Jack Robison,
+in comes the birkie and the very young lady the old gentleman described,
+arm-and-arm together, smoodging and laughing like daft. Dog on it! it
+was a shameless piece of business. As true as death, before all the
+crowd of folk, he put his arm round her waist, and called her his
+sweetheart, and love, and dearie, and darling, and everything that is
+fine. If they had been courting in a close together on a Friday night,
+they could not have said more to one another, or gone greater lengths. I
+thought such shame to be an eye-witness to sic ongoings, that I was
+obliged at last to hold up my hat before my face, and look down; though,
+for all that, the young lad, to be such a blackguard as his conduct
+showed, was well enough faured, and had a good coat to his back with
+double gilt buttons and fashionable lapells, to say little of a very
+well-made pair of buckskins, a thought the worse of the wear to be sure,
+but which, if they had been well cleaned, would have looked almost as
+good as new. How they had come we never could learn, as we neither saw
+chaise nor gig; but, from his having spurs on his boots, it is more than
+likely that they had lighted at the back-door of the barn from a horse,
+she riding on a pad behind him, maybe, with her hand round his waist.
+
+The father looked to be a rich old bool, both from his manner of
+speaking, and the rewards he seemed to offer for the apprehension of his
+daughter; but to be sure, when so many of us were present that had an
+equal right to the spuilzie, it would not be a great deal a thousand
+pounds, when divided, still it was worth the looking after; so we just
+bidit a wee.
+
+Things were brought to a bearing, howsoever, sooner than either
+themselves, I daresay, or anybody else present, seemed to have the least
+glimpse of; for, just in the middle of their fine goings-on, the sound of
+a coming foot was heard, and the lassie, taking guilt to her, cried out,
+"Hide me, hide me, for the sake of goodness, for yonder comes my old
+father!"
+
+No sooner said than done. In he stappit her into a closet; and, after
+shutting the door on her, he sat down upon a chair, pretending to be
+asleep in the twinkling of a walking-stick. The old father came bouncing
+in, and seeing the fellow as sound as a top, he ran forward and gave him
+such a shake as if he would have shooken him all sundry; which soon made
+him open his eyes as fast as he had steeked them. After blackguarding
+the chield at no allowance, cursing him up hill and down dale, and
+calling him every name but a gentleman, he held his staff over his crown,
+and gripping him by the cuff of the neck, asked him, in a fierce tone,
+what he had made of his daughter. Never since I was born did I ever see
+such brazenfaced impudence! The rascal had the brass to say at once,
+that he had not seen word or wittens of the lassie for a month, though
+more than a hundred folk sitting in his company had beheld him dauting
+her with his arm round her jimpy waist, not five minutes before. As a
+man, as a father, as an elder of our kirk, my corruption was raised, for
+I aye hated lying as a poor cowardly sin, and an inbreak on the ten
+commandments; and I found my neighbour, Mr Glen, fidgeting on the seat as
+well as me; so I thought, that whoever spoke first would have the best
+right to be entitled to the reward; whereupon, just as he was in the act
+of rising up, I took the word out of his mouth, saying, "Dinna believe
+him, auld gentleman--dinna believe him, friend; he's telling a parcel of
+lees. Never saw her for a month! It's no worth arguing, or calling
+witnesses; just open that press-door, and ye'll see whether I'm speaking
+truth or not!"
+
+The old man stared, and looked dumfoundered; and the young one, instead
+of running forward with his double nieves to strike me, the only thing I
+was feared for, began a-laughing, as if I had done him a good turn. But
+never since I had a being, did I ever witness such an uproar and noise as
+immediately took place. The whole house was so glad that the scoundrel
+had been exposed, that they set up siccan a roar of laughter, and thumped
+away at siccan a rate at the boards with their feet, that at long and
+last, with pushing and fidgeting, clapping their hands, and holding their
+sides, down fell the place they call the gallery; all the folk in't being
+hurl'd topsy-turvy, head foremost among the saw-dust on the floor below;
+their guffawing soon being turned to howling, each one crying louder than
+another at the top note of their voices, "Murder! murder! hold off me;
+murder! my ribs are in; murder! I'm killed--I'm speechless!" and other
+lamentations to that effect; so that a rush to the door took place, in
+the which every thing was overturned--the door-keeper being wheeled away
+like wildfire--the furms stramped to pieces--the lights knocked out--and
+the two blind fiddlers dung head-foremost over the stage, the bass fiddle
+cracking like thunder at every bruise. Such tearing, and swearing, and
+tumbling, and squealing, was never witnessed in the memory of man since
+the building of Babel: legs being likely to be broken, sides staved in,
+eyes knocked out, and lives lost--there being only one door, and that a
+small one; so that, when we had been carried off our feet that length, my
+wind was fairly gone, and a sick dwalm came over me, lights of all manner
+of colours, red, blue, green, and orange, dancing before me, that
+entirely deprived me of common sense; till, on opening my eyes in the
+dark, I found myself leaning with my broadside against the wall on the
+opposite side of the close. It was some time before I minded what had
+happened; so dreading skaith, I found first the one arm, and then the
+other, to see if they were broken--syne my head--and finally both of my
+legs; but all as well as I could discover, was skin-whole and scart-free.
+On perceiving this, my joy was without bounds, having a great notion that
+I had been killed on the spot. So I reached round my hand, very
+thankfully, to take out my pocket-napkin, to give my brow a wipe, when
+lo, and behold! the tail of my Sunday's coat was fairly off and away,
+docked by the hainch buttons.
+
+So much for plays and playactors--the first and last, I trust in grace,
+that I shall ever see. But indeed I could expect no better, after the
+warning that Maister Wiggie had more than once given us from the pulpit
+on the subject. Instead, therefore, of getting my grand reward for
+finding the old man's daughter, the whole covey of them, no better than a
+set of swindlers, took leg-bail, and made that very night a moonlight
+flitting; and Johnny Hammer, honest man, that had wrought from sunrise to
+sunset for two days, fitting up their place by contract, instead of being
+well paid for his trouble as he deserved, got nothing left him but a
+ruckle of his own good deals, all dung to shivers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHTEEN--MANSIE'S BARLEY-FEVER: AND THE REBUKE
+
+
+On the morning after the business of the playhouse had happened, I had to
+take my breakfast in my bed, a thing very uncommon to me, being generally
+up by cock-craw, except on Sunday mornings whiles, when each one,
+according to the bidding of the Fourth Commandment, has a license to do
+as he likes; having a desperate sore head, and a squeamishness at the
+stomach, occasioned, I jealouse in a great measure, from what Mr Glen and
+me had discussed at Widow Grassie's, in the shape of warm toddy, over our
+cracks concerning what is called the agricultural and manufacturing
+interests. So our wife, poor body, put a thimbleful of brandy, Thomas
+Mixem's real, into my first cup of tea, which had a wonderful virtue in
+putting all things to rights; so that I was up and had shaped a pair of
+lady's corsets, an article in which I sometimes dealt, before ten
+o'clock, though, the morning being rather cold, I did not dispense with
+my Kilmarnock.
+
+At eleven in the forenoon, or thereabouts, maybe five minutes before or
+after, but no matter, in comes my crony Maister Glen, rather dazed-like
+about the een; and with a large piece of white sticking-plaister, about
+half a nail wide, across one of his cheeks, and over the bridge of his
+nose; giving him a wauf, outlandish, and rather blackguard sort of
+appearance; so that I was a thought uneasy at what neighbours might
+surmise concerning our intimacy; but the honest man accounted for the
+thing in a very feasible manner, from the falling down on that side of
+his head of one of the brass candlesticks, while he was lying on his
+broadside before one of the furms in the stramash.
+
+His purpose of calling was to tell me, that he could not leave the town
+without looking in upon me to bid me farewell; more betoken, as he
+intended sending in his son Mungo by the carrier for trial, to see how
+the line of life pleased him, and how I thought he would answer--a thing
+which I was glad came from his side of the house, being likely to be in
+the upshot the best for both parties. Yet I thought he would find our
+way of doing so canny and comfortable, that it was not very likely he
+could ever start objections; and I must confess, that I looked forward
+with no small degree of pride, seeing the probability of my soon having
+the son of a Lammermoor farmer sitting crosslegged, cheek for jowl with
+me on the board, and bound to serve me at all lawful times, by night and
+day, by a regular indenture of five years. Maister Glen insisted on the
+laddie having a three months' trial; and then, after a trifling show of
+standing out, just to make him aware that I could be elsewhere fitted if
+I had a mind, I agreed that the request was reasonable, and that I had no
+earthly objections to conforming with it. So, after giving him his
+meridian and a bite of shortbread, we shook hands, and parted in the
+understanding that his son would arrive on the top of limping Jamie the
+carrier's cart, in the course, say, of a fortnight.
+
+Through the whole of the forepart of the day, I remained rather queerish,
+as if something was working about my inwards, and a droll pain between my
+eyes. The wife saw the case I was in, and advised me, for the sake of
+the fresh air, to take a step into the bit garden, and try a hand at the
+spade, the smell of the new earth being likely to operate as a cordial;
+but no--it would not do; and when I came in at one o'clock to my dinner,
+the steam of the fresh broth, instead of making me feel, as usual, as
+hungry as a hawk, was like to turn my stomach, while the sight of the
+sheep's head, one of the primest ones I had seen the whole season,
+looked, by all the world, like the head of a boiled blackamoor, and made
+me as sick as a dog; so I could do nothing but take a turn out again, and
+swig away at the small beer, that never seemed able to slocken my drouth.
+At long and last, I minded having heard Andrew Redbeak, the
+excise-officer, say, that nothing ever put him right after a debosh
+except something they call a bottle of soda-water; so my wife dispatched
+Benjie to the place where we knew it could be found, and he returned in a
+jiffie with a thing like a blacking-bottle below his daidly, as he was
+bidden. There being a wire over the cork for some purpose or other, or
+maybe just to look neat, we had some fight to get it torn away, but at
+last we succeeded. I had turned about for a jug, and the wife was
+rummaging for the screw, while Benjie was fiddling away with his fingers
+at the cork--Save us! all at once it gave a thud like thunder, driving
+the cork over poor Benjie's head, while it squirted there-up in his eyes
+like a fire-engine, and I had only just time to throw down the jug, and
+up with the bottle to my mouth. Luckily, for the sixpence it cost, there
+was a drop left, which tasted, by all the world, just like brisk
+dish-washings; but for all that, it had a wonderful power of setting me
+to rights; and my noddle in a while began to clear up, like a March-day
+after a heavy shower.
+
+I mind very well too, on the afternoon of the dividual same day, that my
+door-neighbour, Thomas Burlings, popped in; and, in our two-handed crack
+over the counter, after asking me in a dry, curious way, if I had come by
+no skaith in the business of the play, he said, the thing had now spread
+far and wide, and was making a great noise in the world. I thought the
+body a wee sharp in his observes; so I pretended to take it quite
+lightly, proceeding in my shaping-out a pair of buckskin breeches, which
+I was making for one of the Duke's huntsmen; so seeing he was off the
+scent, he said in a more jocose way:--
+
+"Well, speaking about buckskins, I'll tell ye a good story about that."
+
+"Let us hear't," said I; for I was in that sort of queerish way, that I
+did not care much about being very busy.
+
+"Ye'se get it as I heard it," quo' Thomas; "and it's no less worth
+telling, that it bears a good moral application in its tail; after the
+same fashion that a blister does good by sucking away the vicious humours
+of the body, thereby making the very pain it gives precious." And
+here--though maybe it was just my thought--the body stroked his chin, and
+gave me a kind of half gley, as much as saying, "take that to ye,
+neighbour." But I deserved it all, and could not take it ill off his
+hand; being, like myself, one of the elders of our kirk, and an honest
+enough, precise-speaking man.
+
+"Ye see, ye ken," said Thomas, "that the Breadalbane Fencibles, a wheen
+Highland birkies, were put into camp at Fisherrow links, maybe for the
+benefit of their douking, on account of the fiddle {175}--or maybe in
+case the French should land at the water-mouth--or maybe to give the
+regiment the benefit of the sea air--or maybe to make their bare houghs
+hardier, for it was the winter time, frost and snaw being as plenty as ye
+like, and no sae scarce as pantaloons among the core--or for some ither
+reason, guid, bad, or indifferent, which disna muckle matter; but ye see,
+the lang and the short o' the story is, that there they were encamped,
+man and mother's son of them, going through their dreels by day, and
+sleeping by night--the privates in their tents, and the offishers in
+their marquees, living in the course of nature on their usual rations of
+beef, and tammies, and so on. So, ye understand me, there was nae such
+smart ordering of things in the army in those days, the men not having
+the beef served out to them by a butcher, supplying each company or
+companies by a written contract, drawn up between him and the paymaster
+before 'sponsible witnesses; but ilka ane bringing what pleased him,
+either tripe, trotters, steaks, cow's-cheek, pluck, hough, spar-rib,
+jigget, or so forth."
+
+"'Od!" said I, "Thomas, ye crack like a minister. Where did ye happen to
+pick up all that knowledge?"
+
+"Where should I have got it, but from an auld half-pay sergeant-major,
+that lived in our spare room, and had been out in the American war,
+having seen a power of service, and been twice wounded, once in the
+aff-cuit, and the other time in the cuff of the neck."
+
+"I thought as muckle," said I--"Weel, say on, man, it's unco
+entertaining."
+
+"Weel," continued he, "let me see where I was at when ye stoppit me; for
+maybe I'll hae to begin at the beginning again. For gif ye yinterrupt
+me, or edge in a word, or put me out by asking questions, I lose the
+thread of my discourse, and canna proceed."
+
+"Ou, let me see," said I, "ye was about the contract concerning the
+beef."
+
+"Preceesely," quo' Thomas, stretching out his fore-finger--"ye've said it
+to a hair. At that time, as I was observing, the butcher didna supply a
+company or companies, according to the terms of a contract, drawn up
+before 'sponsible witnesses, between him and the paymaster; but the
+soldiers got beef-money along with their pay; with which said money,
+given them, ye observe, for said purpose, they were bound and obligated,
+in terms of the statute, to buy, purchase, and provide the said beef,
+twice a-week or oftener, as it might happen; an orderly offisher making
+inspection of the camp-kettles regularly every forenoon at one o'clock or
+thereabouts.
+
+"So, as ye'll pay attention to observe, there was a private in Captain
+M'Tavish's company, the second to the left of the centre, of the name of
+Duncan MacAlpine, a wee, hardy, blackaviced, in-knee'd creature,
+remarkable for nothing that ever I heard tell of, except being reported
+to have shotten a gauger in Badenough, or thereabouts; and for having a
+desperate red nose, the effects, ye observe, of drinking spirituous
+liquors; ye observe, I daur say, what I am saying--the effects of
+drinking malt speerits.
+
+"Weel, week after week passed over, and better passed over, and Duncan
+played aff his tricks, like anither Herman Boaz, the slight o'-hand
+juggler, him that's suspeckit to be in league and paction with the de'il.
+But ye'll hear."
+
+"'Od, it's diverting, Thomas," said I to him; "gang on, man."
+
+"Weel, ye see, as I was observing--Let me see where I was at?--Ou ay,
+having a paction with the de'il. So, when all were watching beside the
+camp-kettles, some stirring them with spurtles, or parritch-sticks, or
+forks, or whatever was necessary, the orderly offisher made a point and
+practice of regularly coming by, about the chap of one past meridian, as
+I observed to ye before, to make inspection of what ilka ane had wared
+his pay on, and what he had got simmering in the het water for his
+dinner.
+
+"So, on the day concerning which I am about to speak, it fell out, as
+usual, that he happened to be making his rounds, halting a moment, or twa
+maybe, before ilka pot; the man that had the charge thereof, by the way
+of stirring like, clapping down his lang fork, and bringing up the piece
+of meat, or whatever he happened to be making kail of it, to let the
+inspector see whether it was lamb, pork, beef, mutton, or veal. For, ye
+observe," continued Thomas, giving me, as I took it to myself, another
+queer side-look, "the purpose of the offisher making the inspection, was
+to see that they laid out their pay-money conform to military regulation;
+and not to fyling their stamicks, and ruining baith sowl and body, by
+throwing it away on whisky--as but ower mony, that aiblins should have
+kenned better, have dune but too often."
+
+"'Tis but ower true," said I till him; "but the best will fa' intil a
+faut sometimes. We have a' our failings, Thomas."
+
+"Just so," answered Thomas; "but where was I at?--Ou, about the whisky.
+Weel, speaking about the whisky, ye see the offisher, Lovetenant Todrick
+I b'lief they called him, had made an observe about Duncan's kettle; so,
+when he came to him, Duncan was sitting in the lown side of a dyke, with
+his red nose, and a pipe in his cheek, on a big stane, glowring frae him
+anither way; and, as I was saying, when he came to him he said,
+
+"'Weel, Duncan MacAlpine, what have ye in your kettle the day, man?'
+
+"And Duncan, rinning down his lang fork, answered in his ain Highland
+brogue way--'Please your honours, just my auld favourite, tripe.'
+
+"''Deed, Duncan,' said Lovetenant Todrick, or whatever they caa'd him,
+'it is an auld favourite surely, for I have never seen ye have onything
+else for your dinner, man.'
+
+"'Every man to his taste, please your honour,' answered Duncan MacAlpine;
+'let ilka ane please her nain sell'--hauling up a screed half a yard
+lang. 'Ilka man to his taste, please your honour, Lovetenant Todrick.'"
+
+"'Od, man," said I to him, "'Od, man, ye're a deacon at telling a story.
+Ye're a queer hand. Weel, what came next?"
+
+"What think ye should come next?" quo' Thomas drily.
+
+"I'm sure I dinna ken," answered I.
+
+"Weel," said he, "I'll tell--but where was I at?"
+
+"Ou, at the observe of Lovetenant Todrick, or what they caa'd him, about
+the tripe; and the answer of Duncan MacAlpine on that head, 'That ilka
+man has his ain taste.'"
+
+"'Vera true,' said Lovetenant Todrick, 'but lift it out a' the-gither on
+that dish, till I get my specs on; for never since I was born, did I ever
+see before boiled tripe with buttons and button-holes intill't.'"
+
+At this I set up a loud laughing, which I could not help, though it was
+like to split my sides; but Thomas Burlings bade me whisht till I heard
+him out.
+
+"'Buttons and button-holes!' quo' Duncan MacAlpine. 'Look again, wi' yer
+specs; for ye're surely wrang, Lovetenant Todrick.'"
+
+"'Buttons and button-holes! and 'deed I am surely right, Duncan,'
+answered the Lovetenant Todrick, taking his specs deliberately off the
+brig o' his nose, and faulding them thegither, as he put them first into
+his shagreen case, and syne into his pocket--'Howsomever, Duncan
+MacAlpine, I'll pass ye ower for this time, gif ye take my warning, and
+for the future ware your pay-money on wholesome butcher's meat, like a
+Christian, and no be trying to delude your ain stamick, and your
+offisher's een, by holding up, on a fork, such a heathenish mak-up for a
+dish, as the leg of a pair o' buckskin breeches!'"
+
+"Buckskin breeches!" said I, "and did he really and actually boil siccan
+trash to his dinner?"
+
+"Nae sae far south as that yet, friend," answered Thomas. "Duncan was
+not so bowed in the intellect as ye imagine, and had some spice of
+cleverality about his queer manoeuvres.--Eat siccan trash to his dinner!
+Nae mair, Mansie, than ye intend to eat that iron guse ye're rinning
+along that piece claith; but he wanted to make his offishers believe that
+his pay gaed the right way: like the Pharisees of old that keepit
+praying, in ell-lang faces, about the corners of the streets, and gaed
+hame wi' hearts full of wickedness and a' manner of cheatrie."
+
+"And what way did his pay gang, then?" asked I; "and how did he live?"
+
+"I telled ye before, frien," answered Thomas, "that he was a deboshed
+creature; and, like ower mony in the world, likit weel what didna do him
+ony good. It's a wearyfu' thing that whisky. I wish it could be
+banished to Botany Bay.
+
+"It is that," said I. "Muckle and nae little sin does it breed and
+produce in this world."
+
+"I'm glad," quoth Thomas, stroking down his chin in a slee way, "I'm glad
+the guilty should see the folly o' their ain ways; it's the first step,
+ye ken, till amendment;--and indeed I tell't Maister Wiggie, when he sent
+me here, that I could almost become guid for your being mair wary of your
+conduct for the future time to come."
+
+This was like a thunder-clap to me, and I did not know for a jiffie what
+to feel, think, or do, more than perceiving that it was a piece of
+devilish cruelty on their parts, taking things on this strict. As for
+myself, I could freely take sacred oath on the Book, that I had not had a
+dram in my head for four months before; the knowledge of which made my
+corruption rise like lightning, as a man is aye brave when he is
+innocent; so, giving my pow a bit scart, I said briskly, "So ye're after
+some session business in this visit, are ye?"
+
+"Ye've just guessed it," answered Thomas Burlings, sleeking down his
+front hair with his fingers in a sober way; "we had a meeting this
+forenoon; and it was resolved ye should stand a public rebuke in the
+meeting-house on Sunday next."
+
+"Hang me, if I do!" answered I, thumping my nieve down with all my might
+on the counter, and throwing back my cowl behind me in a corner. "No,
+man!" added I, snapping with great pith my finger and thumb in Thomas's
+eyes, "not for all the ministers and elders that ever were cleckit! They
+may do their best; and ye may tell them so, if ye like. I was born a
+free man; I live in a free country; I am the subject of a free king and
+constitution; and I'll be shot before I submit to such rank, diabolical
+papistry."
+
+"Hooly and fairly," quoth Thomas, staring a wee astonished like, and not
+a little surprised to see my birse up in this manner; for, when he
+thought upon shearing a lamb, he found he had catched a tartar; so,
+calming down as fast as ye like, he said, "Hooly and fairly Mansie" (or
+Maister Wauch, I believe, he did me the honour to call me), "they'll
+maybe no be sae hard as they threaten. But ye ken, my friend, I'm
+speaking to ye as a brither; it was an unco-like business for an elder,
+not only to gang till a play, which is ane of the deevil's rendevouses,
+but to gang there in a state of liquor: making yoursell a world's
+wonder--and you an elder of our kirk! I put the question to yourself
+soberly."
+
+His threatening I could despise, and could have fought, cuffed, and
+kicked with all the ministers and elders of the General Assembly, to say
+nothing of the Relief Synod and the Burgher Union, before I would have
+demeaned myself to yield to what my inward spirit plainly told me to be
+rank cruelty and injustice; but ah! his calm, brotherly, flattering way I
+could not thole with, and the tears came rapping into my eyes, faster
+than it cared my manhood to let be seen; so I said till him, "Weel, weel,
+Thomas, I ken I have done wrong; and I am sorry for't: they'll never find
+me in siccan a scrape again."
+
+Thomas Burlings then came forward in a friendly way, and shook hands with
+me; telling that he would go back and plead before them in my behalf. He
+said this over again, as we parted at my shop-door; and, to do him
+justice, surely he had not been worse than his word, for I have aye
+attended the kirk as usual, standing, when it came to my rotation, at the
+plate, and nobody, gentle or semple, ever spoke to me on the subject of
+the playhouse, or minted the matter of the Rebuke from that day to this.
+
+ [Picture: Mungo Glen]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINETEEN--MANSIE'S ADVENTURES OF THE AWFUL NIGHT
+
+
+In the course of a fortnight from the time I parted with Maister Glen,
+the Lauder carrier, limping Jamie, brought his callant to our shop-door
+in his hand. He was a tall slender laddie, some fourteen years old, and
+sore grown away from his clothes. There was something genty and
+delicate-like about him, having a pale sharp face, blue eyes, a nose like
+a hawk's, and long yellow hair hanging about his haffets, as if barbers
+were unco scarce cattle among the howes of the Lammermoor hills. Having
+a general experience of human nature, I saw that I would have something
+to do towards bringing him into a state of rational civilization; but,
+considering his opportunities, he had been well educated, and I liked his
+appearance on the whole not that ill.
+
+To divert him a while, as I did not intend yoking him to work the first
+day, I sent out Benjie with him, after giving him some refreshment of
+bread and milk, to let him see the town and all the uncos about it. I
+told Benjie first to take him to the auld kirk, which is one wonderful
+building, steeple and aisle; and as for mason-work, far before anything
+to be seen or heard tell of in our day; syne to Lugton brig, which is one
+grand affair, hanging over the river Esk and the flour-mills like a
+rainbow--syne to the Tolbooth, which is a terror to evil-doers, and from
+which the Lord preserve us all!--syne to the Market, where ye'll see
+lamb, beef, mutton, and veal, hanging up on cleeks, in roasting and
+boiling pieces--spar-rib, jigget, shoulder, and heuk-bane, in the
+greatest prodigality of abundance;--and syne down to the Duke's gate, by
+looking through the bonny white-painted iron-stanchels of which, ye'll
+see the deer running beneath the green trees; and the palace itself, in
+the inside of which dwells one that needs not be proud to call the king
+his cousin.
+
+Brawly did I know, that it is a little after a laddie's being loosed from
+his mother's apron-string, and hurried from home, till the mind can make
+itself up to stay among fremit folk; or that the attention can be roused
+to anything said or done, however simple in the uptake. So, after Benjie
+brought Mungo home again, gey forfaughten and wearied-out like, I bade
+the wife give him his four-hours, and told him he might go to his bed as
+soon as he liked. Jealousing also, at the same time, that creatures
+brought up in the country have strange notions about them with respect to
+supernaturals--such as ghosts, brownies, fairies, and bogles--to say
+nothing of witches, warlocks, and evil-spirits, I made Benjie take off
+his clothes and lie down beside him, as I said, to keep him warm; but, in
+plain matter of fact (between friends), that the callant might sleep
+sounder, finding himself in a strange bed, and not very sure as to how
+the house stood as to the matter of a good name.
+
+Knowing by my own common sense, and from long experience of the ways of a
+wicked world, that there is nothing like industry, I went to Mungo's
+bedside in the morning, and wakened him betimes. Indeed, I'm leeing
+there--I need not call it wakening him--for Benjie told me, when he was
+supping his parritch out of his luggie at breakfast-time, that he never
+winked an eye all night, and that sometimes he heard him greeting to
+himself in the dark--such and so powerful is our love of home and the
+force of natural affection. Howsoever, as I was saying, I took him ben
+the house with me down to the workshop, where I had begun to cut out a
+pair of nankeen trowsers for a young lad that was to be married the week
+after to a servant-maid of Maister Wiggie's,--a trig quean, that
+afterwards made him a good wife, and the father of a numerous small
+family.
+
+Speaking of nankeen, I would advise every one, as a friend, to buy the
+Indian, and not the British kind--the expense of outlay being ill hained,
+even at sixpence a yard--the latter not standing the washing, but making
+a man's legs, at a distance, look like a yellow yorline.
+
+It behoved me now as a maister, bent on the improvement of his prentice,
+to commence learning Mungo some few of the mysteries of our trade; so
+having showed him the way to crook his hough (example is better than
+precept, as James Batter observes), I taught him the plan of holding the
+needle; and having fitted his middle-finger with a bottomless thimble of
+our own sort, I set him to sewing the cotton-lining into one leg, knowing
+that it was a part not very particular, and not very likely to be seen;
+so that the matter was not great, whether the stitching was exactly
+regular, or rather in the _zigzag_ line. As is customary with all new
+beginners, he made a desperate awkward hand at it, and of which I would
+of course have said nothing, but that he chanced to brog his thumb, and
+completely soiled the whole piece of work with the stains of blood;
+which, for one thing, could not wash out without being seen; and, for
+another, was an unlucky omen to happen to a marriage garment.
+
+Every man should be on his guard; this was a lesson I learned when I was
+in the volunteers, at the time Buonaparte was expected to land down at
+Dunbar. Luckily for me in this case, I had, by some foolish mistake or
+another, made an allowance of a half yard, over and above what I found I
+could manage to shape on; so I boldly made up my mind to cut out the
+piece altogether, it being in the back seam. In that business I trust I
+showed the art of a good tradesman, having managed to do it so neatly
+that it could not be noticed without the narrowest inspection; and having
+the advantage of a covering by the coat-flaps, had indeed no chance of
+being so, except on desperately windy days.
+
+In the week succeeding that on which this unlucky mischance happened, an
+accident almost as bad befell, though not to me, further than that
+everyone is bound by the Ten Commandments, to say nothing of his own
+conscience, to take a part in the afflictions that befall their
+door-neighbours.
+
+When the voice of man was wheisht, and all was sunk in the sound sleep of
+midnight, it chanced that I was busy dreaming that I was sitting one of
+the spectators, looking at another play-acting piece of business. Before
+coming this length, howsoever, I should by right have observed, that ere
+going to bed I had eaten for my supper part of a black pudding, and two
+sausages, that Widow Grassie had sent in a compliment to my wife, being a
+genteel woman, and mindful of her friends--so that I must have had some
+sort of nightmare, and not been exactly in my seven senses--else I could
+not have been even dreaming of siccan a place. Well, as I was saying, in
+the playhouse I thought I was; and all at once I heard Maister Wiggie,
+like one crying in the wilderness, hallooing with a loud voice through
+the window, bidding me flee from the snares, traps, and gin-nets of the
+Evil One; and from the terrors of the wrath to come. I was in a terrible
+funk; and just as I was trying to rise from the seat, that seemed somehow
+glued to my body, and would not let me, to reach down my hat, which, with
+its glazed cover, was hanging on a pin to one side, my face all red, and
+glowing like a fiery furnace, for shame of being a second time caught in
+deadly sin, I heard the kirk-bell jow-jowing, as if it was the last trump
+summoning sinners to their long and black account; and Maister Wiggie
+thrust in his arm in his desperation, in a whirlwind of passion,
+claughting hold of my hand like a vice to drag me out head-foremost.
+Even in my sleep, howsoever, it appears that I like free-will, and ken
+that there are no slaves in our blessed country; so I tried with all my
+might to pull against him, and gave his arm such a drive back, that he
+seemed to bleach over on his side, and raised a hullaballoo of a yell,
+that not only wakened me, but made me start upright in my bed.
+
+For all the world such a scene! My wife was roaring "Murder,
+murder!--Mansie Wauch, will ye no wauken?--Murder, murder! ye've felled
+me wi' your nieve,--ye've felled me outright,--I'm gone for evermair,--my
+haill teeth are doun my throat. Will ye no wauken, Mansie Wauch?--will
+ye no wauken?--Murder, murder!--I say murder, murder, murder, murder!!!"
+
+"Who's murdering us?" cried I, throwing my cowl back on the pillow, and
+rubbing my eyes in the hurry of a tremendous fright.--"Who's murdering
+us?--where's the robbers?--send for the town-officer!!"
+
+"O Mansie!--O Mansie!" said Nanse, in a kind of greeting tone, "I daursay
+ye've felled me--but no matter, now I've gotten ye roused. Do ye no see
+the haill street in a bleeze of flames? Bad is the best; we maun either
+be burned to death, or out of house and hall, without a rag to cover our
+nakedness. Where's my son?--where's my dear bairn Benjie?"
+
+In a most awful consternation, I jumped at this out to the middle of the
+floor, hearing the causeway all in an uproar of voices; and seeing the
+flichtering of the flames glancing on the houses in the opposite side of
+the street, all the windows of which were filled with the heads of
+half-naked folks, in round-eared mutches or Kilmarnocks; their mouths
+open, and their eyes staring with fright; while the sound of the
+fire-engine, rattling through the streets like thunder, seemed like the
+dead-cart of the plague, come to hurry away the corpses of the deceased
+for interment in the kirk-yard.
+
+Never such a spectacle was witnessed in this world of sin and sorrow
+since the creation of Adam. I pulled up the window and looked out--and,
+lo and behold! the very next house to our own was all in a low from
+cellar to garret; the burning joists hissing and cracking like mad; and
+the very wind that blew along, as warm as if it had been out of the mouth
+of a baker's oven!!
+
+It was a most awful spectacle! more by token to me, who was likely to be
+intimately concerned with it; and beating my brow with my clenched nieve,
+like a distracted creature, I saw that the labour of my whole life was
+likely to go for nought, and me to be a ruined man; all the earnings of
+my industry being laid out on my stock in trade, and on the plenishing of
+our bit house. The darkness of the latter days came over my spirit like
+a vision before the prophet Isaiah; and I could see nothing in the years
+to come but beggary and starvation; myself a fallen-back old man, with an
+out-at-the-elbows coat, a greasy hat, and a bald pow, hirpling over a
+staff, requeeshting an awmous--Nanse a broken-hearted beggar wife, torn
+down to tatters, and weeping like Rachel when she thought on better
+days--and poor wee Benjie going from door to door with a meal-pock on his
+back.
+
+The thought first dung me stupid, and then drove me to desperation; and
+not even minding the dear wife of my bosom, that had fainted away as dead
+as a herring, I pulled on my trowsers like mad, and rushed out into the
+street, bareheaded and barefoot as the day that Lucky Bringthereout
+dragged me into the world.
+
+The crowd saw in the twinkling of an eyeball that I was a desperate man,
+fierce as Sir William Wallace, and not to be withstood by gentle or
+semple. So most of them made way for me; they that tried to stop me
+finding it a bad job, being heeled over from right to left, on the broad
+of their backs, like flounders without respect of age or person; some old
+women that were obstrapulous being gey sore hurt, and one of them with a
+pain in her hainch even to this day. When I had got almost to the
+door-cheek of the burning house, I found one grupping me by the back like
+grim death; and, in looking over my shoulder, who was it but Nanse
+herself, that, rising up from her faint, had pursued me like a whirlwind.
+It was a heavy trial, but my duty to myself in the first place, and to my
+neighbours in the second, roused me up to withstand it; so, making a
+spend like a grey-hound, I left the hindside of my shirt in her grasp,
+like Joseph's garment in the nieve of Potiphar's wife, and up the stairs
+head-foremost among the flames.
+
+Mercy keep us all! what a sight for mortal man to glowr at with his
+living eyes! The bells were tolling amid the dark, like a summons from
+above for the parish of Dalkeith to pack off to another world; the drums
+were beat-beating as if the French were coming, thousand on thousand, to
+kill, slay, and devour every maid and mother's son of us; the fire-engine
+pump-pump-pumping like daft, showering the water like rainbows, as if the
+windows of heaven were opened, and the days of old Noah come back again;
+and the rabble throwing the good furniture over the windows like onion
+peelings, where it either felled the folk below, or was dung to a
+thousand shivers on the causey. I cried to them, for the love of
+goodness, to make search in the beds, in case there might be any weans
+there, human life being still more precious than human means; but not a
+living soul was seen but a cat, which, being raised and wild with the
+din, would on no consideration allow itself to be catched. Jacob Dribble
+found that to his cost; for, right or wrong, having a drappie in his
+head, he swore like a trooper that he would catch her, and carry her down
+beneath his oxter; so forward he weired her into a corner, crouching on
+his hunkers. He had much better have left it alone; for it fuffed over
+his shoulder like wildfire, and scarting his back all the way down,
+jumped like a lamplighter head-foremost through the flames, where, in the
+raging and roaring of the devouring element, its pitiful cries were soon
+hushed to silence for ever and ever, Amen!
+
+At long and last, a woman's howl was heard on the street, lamenting, like
+Hagar over young Ishmael in the wilderness of Beersheba, and crying that
+her old grannie, that was a lameter, and had been bedridden for four
+years come the Martinmas following, was burning to a cinder in the
+fore-garret. My heart was like to burst within me when I heard this
+dismal news, remembering that I myself had once an old mother, that was
+now in the mools; so I brushed up the stair like a hatter, and burst open
+the door of the fore-garret--for in the hurry I could not find the sneck,
+and did not like to stand on ceremony. I could not see my finger before
+me, and did not know my right hand from the left, for the smoke; but I
+groped round and round, though the reek mostly cut my breath, and made me
+cough at no allowance, till at last I catched hold of something cold and
+clammy, which I gave a pull, not knowing what it was, but found out to be
+the old wife's nose. I cried out as loud as I was able for the poor
+creature to hoise herself up into my arms; but, receiving no answer, I
+discovered in a moment that she was suffocated, the foul air having gone
+down her wrong hause; and, though I had aye a terror at looking at, far
+less handling a dead corpse, there was something brave within me at the
+moment, my blood being up; so I caught hold of her by the shoulders, and
+harling her with all my might out of her bed, got her lifted on my back
+heads and thraws, in the manner of a boll of meal, and away as fast as my
+legs could carry me.
+
+There was a providence in this haste; for, ere I was half-way down the
+stair, the floor fell with a thud like thunder; and such a combustion of
+soot, stour, and sparks arose, as was never seen or heard tell of in the
+memory of man since the day that Samson pulled over the pillars in the
+house of dragon, and smoored all the mocking Philistines as flat as
+flounders. For the space of a minute I was as blind as a beetle, and was
+like to be choked for want of breath; however, as the dust began to clear
+up, I saw an open window, and hallooed down to the crowd for the sake of
+mercy to bring a ladder, to save the lives of two perishing
+fellow-creatures, for now my own was also in imminent jeopardy. They
+were long of coming, and I did not know what to do; so thinking that the
+old wife, as she had not spoken, was maybe dead already, I was once
+determined just to let her drop down upon the street; but I knew that the
+so doing would have cracked every bone in her body, and the glory of my
+bravery would thus have been worse than lost. I persevered, therefore,
+though I was fit to fall down under the dead weight, she not being able
+to help herself, and having a deal of beef in her skin for an old woman
+of eighty; but I got a lean, by squeezing her a wee between me and the
+wall.
+
+I thought they would never have come, for my shoeless feet were all
+bruised, and bleeding from the crunched lime and the splinters of broken
+stones; but at long and last, a ladder was hoisted up, and having
+fastened a kinch of ropes beneath her oxters, I let her slide down over
+the upper step, by way of a pillyshee, having the satisfaction of seeing
+her safely landed in the arms of seven old wives, that were waiting with
+a cosey warm blanket below. Having accomplished this grand manoeuvre,
+wherein I succeeded in saving the precious life of a woman of eighty,
+that had been four long years bedridden, I tripped down the steps myself
+like a nine-year-old, and had the pleasure, when the roof fell in, to
+know that I for one had done my duty; and that, to the best of my
+knowledge, no living creature except the poor cat had perished within the
+jaws of the devouring element.
+
+But, bide a wee; the work was, as yet, only half done. The fire was
+still roaring and raging, every puff of wind that blew through the black
+firmament, driving the red sparks high into the air, where they died away
+like the tail of a comet, or the train of a skyrocket; the joisting
+crazing, cracking, and tumbling down; and now and then the bursting cans
+playing flee in a hundred flinders from the chimney-heads. One would
+have naturally enough thought that our engine could have drowned out a
+fire of any kind whatsoever in half a second, scores of folk driving
+about with pitcherfuls of water, and scaling half of it on one another
+and the causey in their hurry; but woe's me! it did not play puh on the
+red-het stones, that whizzed like iron in a smiddy trough; so, as soon as
+it was darkness and smoke in one place, it was fire and fury in another.
+
+My anxiety was great; seeing that I had done my best for my neighbours,
+it behoved me now, in my turn, to try and see what I could do for myself;
+so, notwithstanding the remonstrances of my friend James Batter--whom
+Nanse, knowing I had bare feet, had sent out to seek me, with a pair of
+shoon in his hand; and who, in scratching his head, mostly rugged out
+every hair of his wig with sheer vexation--I ran off, and mounted the
+ladder a second time, and succeeded, after muckle speeling, in getting
+upon the top of the wall; where, having a bucket slung up to me by means
+of a rope, I swashed down such showers on the top of the flames, that I
+soon did more good, in the space of five minutes, than the engine and the
+ten men, that were all in a broth of perspiration with pumping it, did
+the whole night over: to say nothing of the multitude of drawers of
+water, men, wives, and weans, with their cuddies, leglins, pitchers,
+pails, and water-stoups; having the satisfaction, in a short time, to
+observe every thing getting as black as the crown of my hat, and the
+gable of my own house becoming as cool as a cucumber.
+
+Being a man of method, and acquainted with business, I could have liked
+to have given a finishing stitch to my work before descending the ladder;
+but, losh me! sic a whingeing, girning, greeting, and roaring, got up all
+of a sudden, as was never seen or heard of since bowed Joseph raised the
+meal-mob, and burned Johnnie Wilkes in effigy; and, looking down, I saw
+Benjie, the bairn of my own heart, and the callant Glen, my apprentice on
+trial, that had both been as sound as tops till this blessed moment,
+standing in their nightgowns and their little red cowls, rubbing their
+eyes, cowering with cold and fright, and making an awful uproar, crying
+on me to come down and not be killed. The voice of Benjie especially
+pierced through and through my heart, like a two-edged sword, and I could
+on no manner of account suffer myself to bear it any longer, as I
+jealoused the bairn would have gone into convulsion fits if I had not
+heeded him; so, making a sign to them to be quiet, I came my ways down,
+taking hold of one in ilka hand, which must have been a fatherly sight to
+the spectators that saw us. After waiting on the crown of the causey for
+half an hour, to make sure that the fire was extinguished, and all tight
+and right, I saw the crowd scaling, and thought it best to go in too,
+carrying the two youngsters along with me. When I began to move off,
+however, siccan a cheering of the multitude got up as would have deafened
+a cannon; and though I say it myself, who should not say it, they seemed
+struck with a sore amazement at my heroic behaviour, following me with
+loud cheers even to the threshold of my own door.
+
+From this folk should condescend to take a lesson, seeing that, though
+the world is a bitter bad world, yet that good deeds are not only a
+reward to themselves, but call forth the applause of Jew and Gentile: for
+the sweet savour of my conduct on this memorable night remained in my
+nostrils for goodness knows the length of time, many praising my brave
+humanity in public companies and assemblies of the people, such as
+strawberry ploys, council meetings, dinner parties, and so forth; and
+many in private conversation at their own ingle-cheek, by way of
+two-handed crack; in stage-coach confab, and in causey talk in the
+forenoon, before going in to take their meridians. Indeed, between
+friends, the business proved in the upshot of no small advantage to me,
+bringing to me a sowd of strange faces, by way of customers, both gentle
+and semple, that I verily believe had not so muckle as ever heard of my
+name before, and giving me many a coat to cut, and cloth to shape, that,
+but for my gallant behaviour on the fearsome night aforesaid, would
+doubtless have been cut, sewed, and shaped by other hands. Indeed,
+considering the great noise the thing made in the world, it is no wonder
+that every one was anxious to have a garment of wearing apparel made by
+the individual same hands that had succeeded, under Providence, in saving
+the precious life of an old woman of eighty, that had been bedridden,
+some say, four years come Yule, and others, come Martinmas.
+
+When we got to the ingle-side, and, barring the door, saw that all was
+safe, it was now three in the morning; so we thought it by much the best
+way of managing, not to think of sleeping any more, but to be on the
+look-out--as we aye used to be when walking sentry in the volunteers--in
+case the flames should, by ony mischancy accident or other, happen to
+break out again. My wife blamed my hardihood muckle, and the rashness
+with which I had ventured at once to places where even masons and
+sclaters were afraid to put foot on; yet I saw, in the interim, that she
+looked on me with a prouder eye--knowing herself the helpmate of one that
+had courageously risked his neck, and every bone in his skin, in the
+cause of humanity. I saw this as plain as a pikestaff, as, with one of
+her kindest looks, she insisted on my putting on a better happing to
+screen me from the cold, and on my taking something comfortable inwardly
+towards the dispelling of bad consequences. So, after half a minute's
+stand-out, by way of refusal like, I agreed to a cupful of het-pint, as I
+thought it would be a thing Mungo Glen might never have had the good
+fortune to have tasted; and as it might operate by way of a cordial on
+the callant Benjie, who kept aye smally, and in a dwining way. No sooner
+said than done--and off Nanse brushed in a couple of hurries to make the
+het-pint.
+
+After the small beer was put into the pan to boil, we found to our great
+mortification, that there were no eggs in the house, and Benjie was sent
+out with a candle to the hen house, to see if any of the hens had laid
+since gloaming, and fetch what he could get. In the middle of the mean
+time, I was expatiating to Mungo on what taste it would have, and how he
+had never seen anything finer than it would be, when in ran Benjie, all
+out of breath, and his face as pale as a dishclout.
+
+"What's the matter, Benjie, what's the matter?" said I to him, rising up
+from my chair in a great hurry of a fright--"Has onybody killed ye? or is
+the fire broken out again? or has the French landed? or have ye seen a
+ghost? or are--"
+
+"Eh, crifty!" cried Benjie, coming till his speech, "they're a' aff--cock
+and hens and a'--there's naething left but the rotten nest-egg in the
+corner!"
+
+This was an awful dispensation, of which more hereafter. In the midst of
+the desolation of the fire--such is the depravity of human nature--some
+ne'er-do-weels had taken advantage of my absence to break open the
+hen-house door; and our whole stock of poultry, the cock along with our
+seven hens--two of them tappit, and one muffed--were carried away bodily,
+stoop and roop.
+
+On this subject, howsoever, I shall say no more in this chapter, but
+merely observe in conclusion, that as to our het-pint, we were obligated
+to make the best of a bad bargain, making up with whisky what it wanted
+in eggs; though our banquet could not be called altogether a merry one,
+the joys of our escape from the horrors of the fire being damped, as it
+were by a wet blanket, on account of the nefarious pillaging of our
+hen-house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY--MANSIE'S ADVENTURES IN THE SPORTING LINE
+
+
+The situation of me and my family at this time affords an example of the
+truth of the old proverb, that "ae evil never comes its lane"; being no
+sooner quit of our dread concerning the burning, than we were doomed by
+Providence to undergo the disaster of the rookery of our hen-house. I
+believe I have mentioned the number of our stock--to wit, a cock and
+seven hens, eight in all; but I neglected, on account of their size, or
+somehow overlooked, the two bantams, than which two more neat or
+curiouser-looking creatures were not to be seen in the whole
+country-side. The hennie was quite a conceit of a thing, and laid an egg
+not muckle bigger than my thimble; while, for its size, the bit he-ane
+was, for spirit in the fechting line, a perfect wee deevil incarnate.
+
+Most fortunately for my family in this matter, it so happened that, by
+paying in half-a-crown a-year, I was a regular member of a society for
+prosecuting all whom it might concern, that dabbled with foul fingers in
+the sinful and lawless trade of thievery, breaking the eighth commandment
+at no allowance, and drawing on their heads not only the passing
+punishments of this world, by way of banishment to Botany Bay, or hanging
+at the Luckenbooths, but the threatened vengeance of one that will last
+for ever and ever.
+
+Accordingly, putting on my hat about nine o'clock, or thereabouts, when
+the breakfast things were removing from the bit table, I poppit out, in
+the first and foremost instance, to take a vizzy of the depredation the
+flames had made in our neighbourhood. Losh keep us all, what a spectacle
+of wreck and ruination! The roof was clean off and away, as if a
+thunderbolt from heaven had knocked it down through the two floors,
+carrying every thing before it like a perfect whirlwind. Nought were
+standing but black, bare walls, a perfect picture of desolation; some
+with the bit pictures on nails still hanging up where the rooms were
+like; and others with old coats hanging on pins; and empty bottles in
+boles, and so on. Indeed, Jacob Glowr, who was standing by my side with
+his specs on, could see as plain as a pikestaff, a tea-kettle still on
+the fire, in the hearth-place of one of the gable garrets, where Miss
+Jenny Withershins lived, but happened luckily, at the era of the
+conflagration, to be away to Prestonpans, on a visit to some of her
+far-away cousins, providentially for her safety, greviously, at that very
+time, smitten with the sciatics.
+
+Having satisfied my eyes with a daylight view of the terrible
+devastation, I went away leisurely up the street with my hands in my
+breeches-pockets, comparing the scene in my mind with the downfall of
+Babylon the Great, and Sodom and Gomorrah, and Tyre and Sidon, and
+Jerusalem, and all the lave of the great towns that had fallen to decay,
+according to the foretelling of the sacred prophets, until I came to the
+door of Donald Gleig, the head of the Thief Society, to whom I related,
+from beginning to end, the whole business of the hen-stealing. 'Od he
+was a mettle bodie of a creature; far north, Aberdeen-awa like, and
+looking at two sides of a halfpenny; but, to give the devil his due, in
+this instance he behaved to me like a gentleman. Not only did Donald
+send through the drum in the course of half an hour, offering a reward
+for the apprehension of the offenders of three guineas, names concealed,
+but he got a warrant granted to Francie Deep, the sherry-officer, to make
+search in the houses of several suspicious persons.
+
+The reward offered by tuck of drum failed, nobody making application to
+the crier; but the search succeeded; as, after turning everything
+topsy-turvy, the feathers were found in a bag, in the house of an old
+woman of vile character, who contrived to make out a way of living by
+hiring beds at twopence a-night to Eirish travellers--South-country
+packmen--sturdy beggars, men and women, and weans of them--Yetholm
+tinklers--wooden-legged sailors without Chelsea pensions--dumb
+spaewomen--keepers of wild-beast shows--dancing-dog folk--spunk-makers,
+and suchlike pick-pockets. The thing was as plain as the loof of my
+hand; for, besides great suspicion, what was more, was the finding the
+head of the muffed hen, to which I could have sworn, lying in a
+bye-corner; the body itself not being so kenspeckle in its disjasket
+state--as it hung twirling in a string by its legs before the fire, all
+buttered over with swine's seam, and half roasted.
+
+After some little ado, and having called in two men that were passing to
+help us to take them prisoners, in case of their being refractory, we
+carried them by the lug and the horn before a justice of peace.
+
+Except the fact of the stolen goods being found in their possession, it
+so chanced, ye observe, that we had no other sort of evidence whatsoever;
+but we took care to examine them one at a time, the one not hearing what
+the other said; so, by dint of cross-questioning by one who well knew how
+to bring fire out of flint, we soon made the guilty convict themselves,
+and brought the transaction home to two wauf-looking fellows that we had
+got smoking in a corner. From the speerings that were put to them during
+their examination, it was found that they tried to make a way of doing by
+swindling folks at fairs by the game of the garter. Indeed, it was
+stupid of me not to recognise their faces at first sight, having observed
+both of them loitering about our back bounds the afternoon before; and
+one of them, the tall one with the red head and fustian jacket, having
+been in my shop in the fore part of the night, about the gloaming like,
+asking me as a favour for a yard or two of spare runds, or selvages.
+
+I have aye heard that seeing is believing; and that youth might take a
+warning from the punishment that sooner or later is ever tacked to the
+tail of crime, I took Benjie and Mungo to hear the trial; and two more
+rueful faces than they put on, when they looked at the culprits, were
+never seen since Adam was a boy. It was far different with the two
+Eirishers, who showed themselves so hardened by a long course of sin and
+misery, that, instead of abasing themselves in the face of a magistrate,
+they scarcely almost gave a civil answer to a single question which was
+speered at them. Howsoever, they paid for that at a heavy ransom, as ye
+shall hear by and by.
+
+Having been kept all night in the cold tolbooth on bread and water,
+without either coal or candle to warm their toes, or let them see what
+they were doing, they were harled out amid an immense crowd of young and
+old, more especially wives and weans, at eleven o'clock on the next
+forenoon, to the endurance of a punishment which ought to have afflicted
+them almost as muckle as that of death itself.
+
+When the key of the jail door was thrawn, and the two loons brought out,
+there was a bumming of wonder, and maybe sorrow, among the terrible
+crowd, to see fellow-creatures so left alone to themselves as to have
+robbed an honest man's hen-house at the dead hour of night, when a fire
+was bleezing next door, and the howl of desolation soughing over the town
+like a visible judgment. One of them, as I said before, had a red pow,
+and a foraging cap, with a black napkin roppined round his weasand; a
+jean jacket with six pockets, and square tails; a velveteen waistcoat
+with plated buttons; corduroy breeches buttoned at the knees; rig-and-fur
+stockings; and heavy, clanking wooden clogs. The other, who was little
+and round-shouldered, with a bull neck and bushy black whiskers, just
+like a shoebrush stuck to each cheek of his head, as if he had been a
+travelling agent for Macassar, had on a low-crowned, plated beaver hat,
+with the end of a peacock's feather, stuck in the band; a long-tailed old
+black coat, as brown as a berry, and as bare as my loof, to say nothing
+of being out at both elbows. His trowsers, I dare say, had once been
+nankeen; but as they did not appear to have seen the washing-tub for a
+season or two, it would be rash to give any decided opinion on that head.
+In short, they were two awful-like raggamuffins.
+
+Women, however, are aye sympathizing and merciful; so as I was standing
+among the crowd, as they came down the tolbooth stair, chained together
+by the cuffs of the coat, one said, "Wae's me! what a weel-faur'd fellow,
+wi' the red head, to be found guilty of stealing folk's hen-houses."--And
+another one said, "Hech, sirs! what a bonny blackaviced man that little
+ane is, to be paraded through the streets for a warld's wonder!" But I
+said nothing, knowing the thing was just, and a wholesome example;
+holding Benjie on my shoulder to see the poukit hens tied about their
+necks like keeking-glasses. But, puh! the fellows did not give one pinch
+of snuff; so off they set, and in this manner were drummed through the
+bounds of the parish, a constable walking at each side of them with
+Lochaber axes, and the town-drummer row-de-dowing the thief's march at
+their backs. It was a humbling sight.
+
+My heart was sorrowful, notwithstanding the ills they had done me and
+mine, by the nefarious pillaging of our hen-house, to see two human
+creatures of the same flesh and blood as myself, undergoing the righteous
+sentence of the law, in a manner so degrading to themselves, and so
+pitiful to all that beheld them. But, nevertheless, considering what
+they had done, they neither deserved, nor did they seem to care for
+commiseration, holding up their brazen faces as if they had been taking a
+pleasure walk for the benefit of their health, and the poukit hens, that
+dangled before them, ornaments of their bravery. The whole crowd, young
+and old, followed them from one end of the town to the other, liking to
+ding one another over, so anxious were they to get a sight of what was
+going on; but when they came to the gate-end, they stopped and gave the
+ne'er-do-weels three cheers. What think you did the ne'er-do-weels do in
+return? Fie shame! they took off their old scrapers and gave a huzza
+too; clapping their hands behind them, in a manner as deplorable to
+relate as it was shocking to behold.
+
+Their chains--the things, ye know, that held their cuffs together--were
+by this time taken off, along with the poukit hens, which I fancy the
+town-offishers took home and cooked for their dinner; so they shook hands
+with the drummer, wishing him a good-day and a pleasant walk home,
+brushing away on the road to Edinburgh, where their wives and weans, who
+had no doubt made a good supper on the spuilzie of the hens, had gone
+away before, maybe to have something comfortable for their arrival, their
+walk being likely to give them an appetite.
+
+Had they taken away all the rest of the hens, and only left the bantams,
+on which they must have found but desperate little eating, and the muffed
+one, I would have cared less; it being from several circumstances a pet
+one in the family, having been brought in a blackbird's cage by the
+carrier from Lauder, from my wife's mother, in a present to Benjie on his
+birth-day. The creature almost grat himself blind, when he heard of our
+having seen it roasting in a string by the legs before the fire, and
+found its bonny muffed head in a corner.
+
+But let alone likings, the callant was otherwise a loser in its death,
+she having regularly laid a caller egg to him every morning, which he got
+along with his tea and bread, to the no small benefit of his health,
+being, as I have taken occasion to remark before, far from being
+robusteous in the constitution. I am sure I know one thing, and that is,
+that I would have willingly given the louns a crown-piece to have
+preserved it alive, hen though it was of my own; but no--the bloody deed
+was over and done, before we were aware that the poor thing's life was
+sacrificed.
+
+The names of the two Eirishers were John Dochart and Dennis Flint, both,
+according to their own deponement, from the county of Tipperary; and
+weel-a-wat the place has no great credit in producing two such bairns.
+Often, after that, did I look through that part of the Advertizer
+newspapers, that has a list of all the accidents, and so on, just above
+the births, marriages and deaths, which I liked to read regularly.
+Howsoever, it was two years before I discovered their names again, having
+it seems, during a great part of that period, lived under the forged name
+of Alias; and I saw that they were both shipped off at Leith, for
+transportation to some country called the Hulks, for being habit and
+repute thieves, and for having made a practice of coining bad silver.
+The thing, however, that condemned them, was for having knocked down a
+drunk man, in a beastly state of intoxication, on the King's highway in
+broad daylight; and having robbed him of his hat, wig, and neckcloth, an
+upper and under vest, a coat and great-coat, a pair of Hessian boots
+which he had on his legs, a silver watch with four brass seals and a key,
+besides a snuff-box made of boxwood, with an invisible hinge, one of the
+Lawrencekirk breed, a pair of specs, some odd halfpennies, and a
+Camperdown pocket-napkin.
+
+But of all months of the year--or maybe, indeed, of my blessed
+lifetime--this one was the most adventurous. It seemed, indeed, as if
+some especial curse of Providence hung over the canny town of Dalkeith;
+and that, like the great cities of the plain, we were at long and last to
+be burnt up from the face of the earth with a shower of fire and
+brimstone.
+
+Just three days after the drumming of the two Eirish ne'er-do-weels, a
+deaf and dumb woman came in prophesying at our back door, offering to
+spae fortunes. She was tall and thin, an unco witch-looking creature,
+with a runkled brow, sunburnt haffits, and two sharp piercing eyes, like
+a hawk's, whose glance went through ye like the cut and thrust of a
+two-edged sword. On her head she had a tawdry brownish black bonnet,
+that had not improved from two three years' tholing of sun and wind; a
+thin rag of a grey duffle mantle was thrown over her shoulders, below
+which was a checked shortgown of gingham stripe, and a green glazed manco
+petticoat. Her shoon were terrible bauchles, and her grey worsted
+stockings, to hide the holes in them, were all dragooned down about her
+heels. On the whole, she was rather, I must confess, an out-of-the-way
+creature; and though I had not muckle faith in these bodies that pretend
+to see further through a millstone than their neighbours, I somehow or
+other, taking pity on her miserable condition, being still a
+fellow-creature, though plain in the lugs, had not the heart to huff her
+out; more by token, as Nanse, Benjie, and the new prentice Mungo, had by
+this time got round me, all dying to know what grand fortunes waited them
+in the years of their after pilgrimage. Sinful creatures that we are!
+not content with the insight into its ways that Providence affords us,
+but diving beyond our deeps, only to flounder into the whirlpools of
+error. Is it not clear, that had it been for our good, all things would
+have been revealed to us; and is it not as clear, that not a wink of
+sound sleep would we ever have got, had all the ills that have crossed
+our paths been ranged up before our een, like great black towering
+mountains of darkness? How could we have found contentment in our goods
+and gear, if we saw them melting from us next year like snow from a dyke;
+how could we sit down on the elbow-chair of ease, could we see the
+misfortunes that may make next week a black one; or how could we look a
+kind friend in the face without tears, could we see him, ere a month
+maybe was gone, lying streiked beneath his winding sheet, his eyes closed
+for evermore, and his mirth hushed to an awful silence! No, no, let us
+rest content that Heaven decrees what is best for us; let us do our duty
+as men and Christians, and every thing, both here and hereafter, will
+work together for our good.
+
+Having taken a piece of chalk out of her big, greasy, leather pouch, she
+wrote down on the table, "Your wife, your son, and your prentice." This
+was rather curious, and every one of them, a wee thunderstruck like,
+cried out as they held up their hands, "Losh me! did onybody ever see or
+hear tell of the like o' that? She's no canny!"--It was gey droll, I
+thought; and I was aware from the Witch of Endor, and sundry mentions in
+the Old Testament, that things out of the course of nature have more than
+once been permitted to happen; so I reckoned it but right to give the
+poor woman a fair hearing, as she deserved.
+
+"Oh!" said Nanse to me, "ye ken our Benjie's eight year auld; see if she
+kens; ask her how old he is."
+
+I had scarcely written down the question, when she wrote beneath it, "The
+bonny laddie, your only son, is eight year old: He'll be an admiral yet."
+
+"An admiral!" said his mother; "that's gey and extraordinar. I never
+kenned he had ony inkling for the seafaring line; and I thought, Mansie,
+you intended bringing him up to your ain trade. But, howsoever, ye're
+wrong ye see. I tell't ye he wad either make a spoon or spoil a horn. I
+tell't ye, ower and ower again, that he would be either something or
+naething; what think ye o' that noo?--See if she kens that Mungo comes
+from the country; and where the Lammermoor hills is."
+
+When I had put down the question, in a jiffie she wrote down beside it,
+"That boy comes from the high green hills, and his name is Mungo."
+
+Dog on it! this astonished us more and more, and fairly bamboozled my
+understanding; as I thought there surely must be some league and paction
+with the Old One; but the further in the deeper. She then pointed to my
+wife, writing down, "Your name is Nancy"--and turning to me, as she made
+some dumbie signs, she chalked down, "Your name is Mansie Wauch, that
+saved the precious life of an old bedridden woman from the fire; and will
+soon get a lottery ticket of twenty thousand pounds."
+
+Knowing the truth of the rest of what she had said, I could not help
+jumping on the floor with joy, and seeing that she was up to everything,
+as plain as if it had happened in her presence. The good news set us all
+a skipping like young lambs, my wife and the laddies clapping their hands
+as if they had found a fiddle; so, jealousing they might lose their
+discretion in their mirth, I turned round to the three, holding up my
+hand, and saying, "In the name o' Gudeness, dinna mention this to ony
+leeving sowl; as, mind ye, I havena taken out the ticket yet. The doing
+so might not only set them to the sinful envying of our good fortune, as
+forbidden in the tenth commandment, but might lead away ourselves to be
+gutting our fish before we get them."
+
+"Mind then," said Nanse, "about your promise to me, concerning the silk
+gown, and the pair--"
+
+"Wheesht, wheesht, gudewifie," answered I. "There's a braw time coming.
+We must not be in ower great a hurry."
+
+I then bade the woman sit down by the ingle cheek, and our wife to give
+her a piece of cold beef, and a shave of bread, besides twopence out of
+my own pocket. Some, on hearing siccan sums mentioned, would have
+immediately struck work, but, even in the height of my grand
+expectations, I did not forget the old saying, that "a bird in the hand
+is worth two in the bush"; and being thrang with a pair of leggins for
+Eben Bowsie, I brushed away ben to the workshop, thinking the woman, or
+witch, or whatever she was, would have more freedom and pleasure in
+eating by herself.--That she had, I am now bound to say by experience.
+
+ [Picture: James Batter]
+
+Two days after, when we were sitting at our comfortable four-hours, in
+came little Benjie, running out of breath--just at the dividual moment of
+time my wife and me were jeering one another, about how we would behave
+when we came to be grand ladies and gentlemen, keeping a flunkie
+maybe--to tell us, that when he was playing at the bools, on the
+plainstones before the old kirk, he had seen the deaf and dumb spaewife
+harled away to the tolbooth, for stealing a pair of trowsers that were
+hanging drying on a tow in Juden Elshinder's back close. I could
+scarcely credit the callant, though I knew he would not tell a lie for
+sixpence; and I said to him, "Now be sure, Benjie, before ye speak. The
+tongue is a dangerous weapon, and apt to bring folk into trouble--it
+might be another woman."
+
+It was real cleverality in the callant. He said, "Ay, faither, but it
+was her; and she contrived to bring herself into trouble without a tongue
+at a'."
+
+I could not help laughing at this, it showed Benjie to be such a genius;
+so he said,
+
+"Ye needa laugh, faither; for it's as true's death it was her. Do you
+think I didna ken in a minute our cheese-toaster, that used to hing
+beside the kitchen fire; and that the sherry-offisher took out frae
+beneath her grey cloak?"
+
+The smile went off Nanse's cheek like lightning, she said it could not be
+true; but she would go to the kitchen to see. I'fegs it was too true;
+for she never came back to tell the contrary.
+
+This was really and truly a terrible business, but the truth for all
+that; the cheese-toaster casting up not an hour after, in the hands of
+Daniel Search, to whom I gave a dram. The loss of the tin cheese-toaster
+would have been a trifle, especially as it was broken in the handle--but
+this was an awful blow to the truth of the thieving dumbie's grand
+prophecy. Nevertheless, it seemed at the time gey puzzling to me, to
+think how a deaf and dumb woman, unless she had some wonderful gift,
+could have told us what she did.
+
+On the next day, the Friday, I think, that story was also made as clear
+as daylight to us; for being banished out of the town as a common thief
+and vagabond, down on the Musselburgh Road, by order of a justice of the
+peace, it was the bounden duty of Daniel Search and Geordie Sharp to see
+her safe past the kennel, the length of Smeaton. They then tried to make
+her understand by writing on the wall, that if ever again she was seen or
+heard tell of in the town, she would be banished to Botany Bay; but she
+had a great fight, it seems, to make out Daniel's bad spelling, he having
+been very ill yedicated, and no deacon at the pen.
+
+Howsoever, they got her to understand their meaning, by giving her a
+shove forward by the shoulders, and aye pointing down to Inveresk.
+Thinking she did not hear them, they then took upon themselves the
+liberty of calling her some ill names, and bade her good-day as a bad
+one. But she was upsides with them for acting, in that respect, above
+their commission; for she wheeled round again to them, and snapping her
+fingers at their noses, gave a curse, and bade them go home for a couple
+of dirty Scotch vermin.
+
+The two men were perfectly dumfoundered at hearing the tongue-tied wife
+speaking as good English as themselves; and could not help stopping to
+look after her for a long way on the road, as every now and then she
+stuck one of her arms a-kimbo in her side, and gave a dance round in the
+whirling-jig way, louping like daft, and lilting like a grey-lintie.
+From her way of speaking, they also saw immediately that she too was an
+Eirisher.--They must be a bonny family when they are all at home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE--ANENT THE YOUNG CALLANT MUNGO GLEN
+
+
+Perhaps, since I was born, I do not remember such a string of casualties
+as happened to me and mine, all within the period of one short fortnight.
+To say nothing connected with the play-acting business, which was
+immediately before--first came Mungo Glen's misfortune with regard to the
+blood-soiling of the new nankeen trowsers, the foremost of his
+transactions, and a bad omen--next, the fire, and all its wonderfuls, the
+saving of the old bedridden woman's precious life, and the destruction of
+the poor cat--syne the robbery of the hen-house by the Eirish
+ne'er-do-weels, who paid so sweetly for their pranks--and lastly, the
+hoax, the thieving of the cheese-toaster without the handle, and the
+banishment of the spaewife.
+
+These were awful signs of the times, and seemed to say that the world was
+fast coming to a finis; the ends of the earth appearing to have combined
+in a great Popish plot of villany. Every man that had a heart to feel,
+must have trembled amid these threatening, judgment-like, and calamitous
+events. As for my own part, the depravity of the nations, which most of
+these scenes showed me, I must say, fell heavily upon my spirit; and I
+could not help thinking of the old cities of the plain, over the
+house-tops of which, for their heinous sins and iniquitous abominations,
+the wrath of the Almighty showered down fire and brimstone from heaven
+till the very earth melted and swallowed them up for ever and ever.
+
+These added to the number, to be sure; but not that I had never before
+seen signs and wonders in my time. I had seen the friends of the
+people,--and the scarce years,--and the bloody gulleteening over-bye
+among the French blackguards,--and the business of Watt and Downie nearer
+home, at our own doors almost, in Edinburgh like,--and the calling out of
+the volunteers,--and divers sea-fights at Camperdown and elsewhere,--and
+land battles countless,--and the American war, part o't,--and awful
+murders,--and mock fights in the Duke's Parks,--and highway
+robberies,--and breakings of all the Ten Commandments, from the first to
+the last; so that, allowing me to have had but a common spunk of
+reflection, I must, like others, have cast a wistful eye on the ongoings
+of men: and, if I had not strength to pour out my inward lamentations, I
+could not help thinking, with fear and trembling, at the rebellion of
+such a worm as man, against a Power whose smallest word could extinguish
+his existence, and blot him out in a twinkling from the roll of living
+things.
+
+But, if I was much affected, the callant Mungo was a great deal more.
+From the days in which he had lain in his cradle, he had been brought up
+in a remote and quiet part of the country, far from the bustling of
+towns, and from man encountering man in the stramash of daily life; so
+that his heart seemed to pine within him like a flower, for want of the
+blessed morning dew; and, like a bird that has been catched in a girn
+among the winter snows, his appetite failed him, and he fell away from
+his meat and his clothes.
+
+I was vexed exceedingly to see the callant in this dilemmy, for he was
+growing very tall and thin, his chaft-blades being lank and white, and
+his eyes of a hollow drumliness, as if he got no refreshment from the
+slumbers of the night. Beholding all this work of destruction going on
+in silence, I spoke to his friend Mrs Grassie about him, and she was so
+motherly as to offer to have a glass of port-wine, stirred with best
+jesuit's barks, ready for him every forenoon at twelve o'clock; for
+really nobody could be but interested in the laddie, he was so gentle and
+modest, making never a word of complaint, though melting like snow off a
+dyke; and, though he must have suffered both in body and mind, enduring
+all with a silent composure, worthy of a holy martyr.
+
+Perceiving things going on from bad to worse, I thought it was best to
+break the matter to him, as he was never like to speak himself; and I
+asked him in a friendly way, as we were sitting together on the board
+finishing a pair of fustian overalls for Maister Bob Bustle--a riding
+clerk for one of the Edinburgh spirit shops, but who liked aye to have
+his clothes of the Dalkeith cut, having been born, bred, and educated in
+our town, like his forbears before him--if there was anything the matter
+with him, that he was aye so dowie and heartless? Never shall I forget
+the look he gave me as he lifted up his eyes, in which I could see
+visible distress painted as plain as the figures of the saints on old
+kirk windows; but he told me, with a faint smile, that he had nothing
+particular to complain of, only that he would have liked to have died
+among his friends, as he could not live from home, and away from the life
+he had been accustomed to all his days.
+
+'Od, I was touched to the quick; and when I heard him speaking of death
+in such a calm, quiet way, I found something, as if his words were words
+of prophecy, and as if I had seen a sign that told me he was not to be
+long for this world. Howsoever, I hope I had more sense than to let this
+be seen, so I said to him, "Ou, if that be a', Mungo, ye'll soon come to
+like us a' well enough. Ye should take a stout heart, man; and when your
+prenticeship's done, ye'll gang hame and set up for a great man, making
+coats for all the lords and lairds in broad Lammermoor."
+
+"Na, na," answered the callant with a trembling voice, which mostly made
+my heart swell to my mouth, and brought the tear to my eye, "I'll never
+see the end of my prenticeship, nor Lammermoor again."
+
+"Hout touts, man," quo' I, "never speak in that sort o' way; it's
+distrustfu' and hurtful. Live in hope, though we should die in despair.
+When ye go home again, ye'll be as happy as ever."
+
+"Eh, na--never, never, even though I was to gang hame the morn. I'll
+never be as I was before. I lived and lived on, never thinking that such
+days were to come to an end--but now I find it can, and must be
+otherwise. The thoughts of my heart have been broken in upon, and
+nothing can make whole what has been shivered to pieces."
+
+This was to the point, as Dannie Thummel said to his needle; so just for
+speaking's sake, and to rouse him up a bit, I said, "Keh, man, what need
+ye care sae muckle about the country?--It'll never be like our bonny
+streets, with all the braw shop windows, and the auld kirk; and the
+stands with the horn spoons and luggies; and all the carts on the
+market-days; and the Duke's gate, and so on."
+
+"Ay, but, maister," answered Mungo, "ye was never brought up in the
+country--ye never kent what it was to wander about in the simmer glens,
+wi' naething but the warm sun looking down on ye, the blue waters
+streaming ower the braes, the birds singing, and the air like to grow
+sick wi' the breath of blooming birks, and flowers of all colours, and
+wild-thyme sticking full of bees, humming in joy and thankfulness--Ye
+never kent, maister, what it was to wake in the still morning, when,
+looking out, ye saw the snaws lying for miles round about ye on the
+hills, breast deep, shutting ye out from the world, as it were; the foot
+of man never coming during the storm to your door, nor the voice of a
+stranger heard from ae month's end till the ither. See, it is coming on
+o' hail the now, and my mother with my sister--I have but ane--and my
+four brithers, will be looking out into the drift, and missing me away
+for the first time frae their fireside. They'll hae a dreary winter o't,
+breaking their hearts for me--their ballants and their stories will never
+be sae funny again--and my heart is breaking for them."
+
+With this, the tears prap-prapped down his cheeks, but his pride bade him
+turn his head round to hide them from me. A heart of stone would have
+felt for him.
+
+I saw it was in vain to persist long, as the laddie was falling out of
+his clothes as fast as leaves from the November tree; so I wrote home by
+limping Jamie the carrier, telling his father the state of things, and
+advising him, as a matter of humanity, to take his son out to the free
+air of the hills again, as the town smoke did not seem to agree with his
+stomach; and, as he might be making a sticked tailor of one who was
+capable of being bred a good farmer; no mortal being likely to make a
+great progress in any thing, unless the heart goes with the handiwork.
+
+Some folks will think I acted right, and others wrong in this matter; if
+I erred, it was on the side of mercy and my conscience does not upbraid
+me for the transaction. In due course of time, I had an answer from Mr
+Glen; and we got everything ready and packed up, against the hour that
+Jamie was to set out again.
+
+Mungo got himself all dressed; and Benjie had taken such a liking to him,
+that I thought he would have grutten himself senseless when he heard he
+was going away back to his own home. One would not have imagined, that
+such a sincere friendship could have taken root in such a short time; but
+the bit creature Benjie was as warm-hearted a callant as ye ever saw.
+Mungo told him, that if he would not cry he would send him in a present
+of a wee ewe-milk cheese whenever he got home; which promise pacified
+him, and he asked me if Benjie would come out for a month gin simmer,
+when he would let him see all worthy observation along the country side.
+
+When we had shaken hands with Mungo, and, after fastening his comforter
+about his neck, wished him a good journey, we saw him mounted on the
+front of limping Jamie's cart; and, as he drove away, I must confess my
+heart was grit. I could not help running up the stair, and pulling up
+the fore-window to get a long look after him. Away, and away they wore;
+in a short time, the cart took a turn and disappeared; and, when I drew
+down the window, and sauntered, with my arms crossed, back to the
+workshop, something seemed amissing, and the snug wee place, with its
+shapings, and runds, and paper-measurings, and its bit fire, seemed in my
+eyes to look douff and gousty.
+
+Whether in the jougging of the cart, or what else I cannot say, but it's
+an unco story; for on the road, it turned out that poor Mungo was seized
+with a terrible pain in his side; and, growing worse and worse, was
+obliged to be left at Lauder, in the care of a decent widow woman that
+had a blind eye, and a room to let furnished.
+
+It was not for two-three days that we learnt these awful tidings, which
+greatly distressed us all; and I gave the driver of the Lauder coach
+threepence to himself, to bring us word every morning, as he passed the
+door, how the laddie was going on.
+
+I learned shortly, that his father and mother had arrived, which was one
+comfort; but that matters with poor Mungo were striding on from bad to
+worse, being pronounced, by a skeely doctor, to be in a galloping
+consumption--and not able to be removed home, a thing that the laddie
+freaked and pined for night and day. At length, hearing for certain that
+he had not long to live, I thought myself bound to be at the expense of
+taking a ride out on the top of the coach, though I was aware of the
+danger of the machine's whiles couping, if it were for no more than to
+bid him fare-ye-weel--and I did so.
+
+It was a cold cloudy day in February, and everything on the road looked
+dowie and cheerless; the very cows and sheep, that crowded cowering
+beneath the trees in the parks, seemed to be grieving for some disaster,
+and hanging down their heads like mourners at a burial. The rain whiles
+obliged me to put up my umbrella, and there was nobody on the top beside
+me, save a deaf woman, that aye said "ay" to every question I speered,
+and with whom I found it out of the power of man to carry on any rational
+conversation; so I was obliged to sit glowering from side to side at the
+bleak bare fields--and the plashing grass--and the gloomy dull woods--and
+the gentlemen's houses, of which I knew not the names--and the fearful
+rough hills, that put me in mind of the wilderness, and of the
+abomination of desolation mentioned in scripture, I believe in Ezekiel.
+The errand I was going on, to be sure, helped to make me more sorrowful;
+and I could not think on human life without agreeing with Solomon, that
+"all was vanity and vexation of spirit."
+
+At long and last, when we came to our journey's end, and I louped off the
+top of the coach, Maister Glen came out to the door, and bad me haste me
+if I wished to see Mungo breathing. Save us! to think that a poor young
+thing was to be taken away from life and the cheerful sun, thus suddenly,
+and be laid in the cold damp mools, among the moudiewarts and the green
+banes, "where there is no work or device." But what will ye say there?
+it was the will of Him, who knows best what is for his creatures, and to
+whom we should--and must submit. I was just in time to see the last row
+of his glazing een, that then stood still for ever, as he lay, with his
+face as pale as clay, on the pillow, his mother holding his hand, and
+sob-sobbing with her face leant on the bed, as if her hope was departed,
+and her heart would break. I went round about, and took hold of the
+other one for a moment; but it was clammy, and growing cold with the
+coldness of grim death. I could hear my heart beating; but Mungo's heart
+stood still, like a watch that has run itself down. Maister Glen sat in
+the easy chair, with his hand before his eyes, saying nothing, and
+shedding not a tear; for he was a strong, little, blackaviced man, with a
+feeling heart, but with nerves of steel. The rain rattled on the window,
+and the smoke gave a swarl as the wind rummelled in the lum. The hour
+spoke to the soul, and the silence was worth twenty sermons.
+
+They who would wish to know the real value of what we are all over-apt to
+prize in this world, should have been there too, and learnt a lesson not
+soon to be forgotten. I put my hand in my coat-pocket for my napkin to
+give my eyes a wipe, but found it was away, and feared much I had dropped
+it on the road; though in this I was happily mistaken, having, before I
+went to my bed, found that on my journey I had tied it over my neckcloth,
+to keep away sore throats.
+
+It was a sad heart to us all to see the lifeless creature in his white
+nightcap and eyes closed, lying with his yellow hair spread on the
+pillow; and we went out, that the women-folk might cover up the
+looking-glass and the face of the clock, ere they proceeded to dress the
+body in its last clothes--clothes that would never need changing; but,
+when we were half down the stair, and I felt glad with the thoughts of
+getting to the fresh air, we were obliged to turn up again for a little,
+to let the man past that was bringing in the dead deal.
+
+But why weave a long story out of the materials of sorrow? or endeavour
+to paint feelings that have no outward sign, lying shut up within the
+sanctuary of the heart? The grief of a father and a mother can only be
+conceived by them who, as fathers and mothers, have suffered the loss of
+their bairns,--a treasure more precious to nature than silver or gold,
+home to the land-sick sailor, or daylight to the blind man sitting
+beaking in the heat of the morning sun.
+
+The coffin having been ordered to be got ready with all haste, two men
+brought it on their shoulders betimes on the following morning; and it
+was a sight that made my blood run cold to see the dead corpse of poor
+Mungo, my own prentice, hoisted up from the bed, and laid in his
+black-handled, narrow housie. All had taken their last looks, the lid
+was screwed down by means of screw-drivers, and I read the plate, which
+said, "Mungo Glen, aged 15." Alas! early was he cut off from among the
+living--a flower snapped in its spring blossom--and an awful warning to
+us all, sinful and heedless mortals, of the uncertainty of this state of
+being.
+
+In the course of the forenoon, Maister Glen's cart was brought to the
+door, drawn by two black horses with long tails and hairy feet, a tram
+one and a leader. Though the job shook my nerves, I could not refuse to
+give them a hand down the stair with the coffin, which had a fief-like
+smell of death and saw-dust; and we got it fairly landed in the cart,
+among clean straw. I saw the clodhapper of a ploughman aye dighting his
+een with the sleeve of his big-coat.
+
+The mother, Mistress Glen, a little fattish woman, and as fine a homely
+body as ye ever met with, but sorely distracted at this time by sorrow,
+sat at the head, with her bonnet drawn over her face, and her shawl
+thrown across her shoulders, being a blue and red spot on a white ground.
+It was a dismal-like-looking thing to see her sitting there, with the
+dead body of her son at her feet; and, at the side of it, his kist with
+his claes, on the top of which was tied--not being room for it in the
+inside like (for he had twelve shirts, and three pair of trowsers, and a
+Sunday and every day's coat, with stockings and other things)--his old
+white beaver hat, turned up behind, which he used to wear when he was
+with me. His Sunday's hat I did not see; but most likely it was in among
+his claes, to keep it from the rain, and preserved, no doubt, for the use
+of some of his little brothers, please God, when they grew up a wee
+bigger.
+
+Seeing Maister Glen, who had cut his chin in shaving, in a worn-out
+disjasket state, mounted on his sheltie, I shook hands with them both;
+and, in my thoughtlessness, wished them "a good journey,"--knowing well
+what a sorrowful home-going it would be to them, and what their bairns
+would think when they saw what was lying in the cart beside their mother.
+On this the big ploughman, that wore a broad blue bonnet and corduroys
+cutikins, with a grey big-coat slit up behind in the manner I commonly
+made for laddies, gave his long whip a crack, and drove off to the
+eastward.
+
+It would be needless in me to waste precious time in relating how I
+returned to my own country, especially as I may be thankful that nothing
+particular happened, excepting the coach-wheels riding over an old dog
+that was lying sleeping on the middle of the road, and, poor brute,
+nearly got one of his fore-paws chacked off. The day was sharp and
+frosty and all the passengers took a loup off at a yill-house, with a
+Highlandman on the sign of it, to get a dram, to gar them bear up against
+the cold; yet knowing what had but so lately happened, and having the
+fears of Maister Wiggie before my eyes, I had made a solemn vow within
+myself, not to taste liquor for six months at least; nor would I here
+break my word, tho' much made a fool of by an Englisher, and a fou
+Eirisher, who sang all the road; contenting myself, in the best way I
+could, with a tumbler of strong beer and two butter-bakes.
+
+It is an old proverb, and a true one, that there is no rest to the
+wicked; so when I got home, I found business crying out for me loudly,
+having been twice wanted to take the measure for suits of clothes. Of
+course, knowing that my two customers would be wearying, I immediately
+cut my stick to their houses, and promised without fail to have my work
+done against the next Sabbath. Whether from my hurry, or my grief for
+poor Mungo, or maybe from both, I found on the Saturday night, when the
+clothes were sent home on the arm of Tammie Bodkin, whom I was obliged to
+hire by way of foresman, that some awful mistake had occurred--the dress
+of the one having been made for the back of the other, the one being long
+and tall, the other thick and short; so that Maister Peter Pole's cuffs
+did not reach above half-way down his arms, and the tails ended at the
+small of his back, rendering him a perfect fright; while Maister Watty
+Firkin's new coat hung on him like a dreadnought, the sleeves coming over
+the nebs of his fingers, and the hainch buttons hanging down between his
+heels, making him resemble a mouse below a firlot. With some persuasion,
+however, there being but small difference in the value of the cloths, the
+one being a west of England bottle-green, and the other a Manchester
+blue, I caused them to niffer, and hushed up the business, which, had
+they been obstreperous, would have made half the parish of Dalkeith stand
+on end.
+
+After poor Mungo had been beneath the mools, I daresay a good month,
+Benjie, as he was one forenoon diverting himself dozing his top in the
+room where they sleeped, happened to drive it in below the bed, where,
+scrambling in on his hands and feet, he found a half sheet of paper
+written over in Mungo's hand-writing, the which he brought to me; and, on
+looking over it, I found it jingled in metre like the Psalms of David.
+
+Having no skeel in these matters, I sent up the close for James Batter,
+who, being a member of the fifteenpence a-quarter subscription book-club,
+had read a power of all sorts of things, sacred and profane. James, as
+he was humming it over with his specs on his beak, gave now and then a
+thump on his thigh, "Prime, prime, man; fine, prime, good, capital!" and
+so on, which astonished me much, kenning who had written it--a callant
+that had sleeped with our Benjie, and could not have shaped a pair of
+leggins though we had offered him the crown of the three kingdoms.
+
+Seeing what it was thought of by one who knew what was what, and could
+distinguish the difference between a B and a bull's foot, I judged it
+necessary for me to take a copy of it; which, for the benefit of them
+that like poems, I do not scruple to tag to the tail of this chapter.
+
+ Oh, wad that my time were ower but,
+ Wi' this wintry sleet and snaw,
+ That I might see our house again
+ I' the bonny birken shaw!--
+ For this is no my ain life,
+ And I peak and pine away
+ Wi' the thochts o' hame, and the young flow'rs
+ I' the glad green month o' May.
+
+ I used to wauk in the morning
+ Wi' the loud sang o' the lark,
+ And the whistling o' the ploughmen lads
+ As they gaed to their wark;
+ I used to weir in the young lambs
+ Frae the tod and the roaring stream;
+ But the warld is changed, and a' thing now
+ To me seems like a dream.
+
+ There are busy crowds around me
+ On ilka lang dull street;
+ Yet, though sae mony surround me
+ I kenna ane I meet.
+ And I think on kind, kent faces,
+ And o' blythe and cheery days,
+ When I wander'd out, wi' our ain folk,
+ Out-owre the simmer braes.
+
+ Wae's me, for my heart is breaking!
+ I think on my brithers sma',
+ And on my sister greeting,
+ When I came fra hame awa
+ And oh! how my mither sobbi,
+ As she shook me by the hand;
+ When I left the door o' our auld house,
+ To come to this stranger land;
+
+ There's nae place like our ain hame;
+ Oh, I wish that I was there!--
+ There's nae hame like our ain hame
+ To be met wi' ony where!--
+ And oh! that I were back again
+ To our farm and fields so green;
+ And heard the tongues o' my ain folk,
+ And was what I hae been!
+
+That's poor Mungo's poem; which I and James Batter, and the rest, think
+excellent, and not far short of Robert Burns himself, had he been spared.
+Some may judge otherwise, out of bad taste or ill nature; but I would
+just thank them to write a better at their leisure.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO--THE JUNE JAUNT WITH PETER FARREL
+
+
+After Tammie Bodkin had been working with me on the board for more than
+four years in the capacity of foresman, superintending the workshop
+department, together with the conduct and conversation of Joe Breeky,
+Walter Cuff, and Jack Thorl, my three bounden apprentices, I thought I
+might lippen him awee to try his hand in the shaping line, especially
+with the clothes of such of our customers as I knew were not very nice,
+provided they got enough of cutting from the Manchester manufacture, and
+room to shake themselves in. The upshot, however, proved to a moral
+certainty, that such a length of tether is not chancey for youth, and
+that a master cannot be too much on the head of his own business.
+
+It was in the pleasant month of June, sometime, maybe six or eight days,
+after the birth-day of our good old King George the Third--for I
+recollect the withering branches of lily-oak and flowers still sticking
+up behind the signs, and over the lamp-posts,--that my respected
+acquaintance and customer, Peter Farrel the baker, to whom I have made
+many a good suit of pepper-and-salt clothes--which he preferred from
+their not dirtying so easily with the bakehouse--called in upon me,
+requesting me, in a very pressing manner, to take a pleasure ride up with
+him the length of Roslin, in his good-brother's bit phieton, to eat a
+wheen strawberries, and see how the forthcoming harvest was getting on.
+
+That the offer was friendly admitted not of doubt, but I did not like to
+accept for two-three reasons; among which were, in the first place, my
+awareness of the danger of riding in such vehicles--having read sundry
+times in the newspapers of folk having been tumbled out of them, drunk or
+sober, head-foremost, and having got eyes knocked ben, skulls cloured,
+and collar-bones broken; and, in the second place, the expense of feeding
+the horse, together with our feeding ourselves in meat and drink during
+the journey--let alone tolls, strawberries and cream, bawbees to the
+waiter, the hostler, and what not. But let me speak the knock-him-down
+truth, and shame the de'il,--above all, I was afraid of being seen by my
+employers wheeling about, on a work-day, like a gentleman, dressed out in
+my best, and leaving my business to mind itself as it best could.
+
+Peter Farrel, however, being a man of determination, stuck to his text
+like a horse-leech; so, after a great to-do, and considerable
+argle-bargling, he got me, by dint of powerful persuasion, to give him my
+hand on the subject. Accordingly, at the hour appointed, I popped up the
+back loan with my stick in my hand--Peter having agreed to be waiting for
+me on the roadside, a bit beyond the head of the town, near Gallows-hall
+toll. The cat should be let out of the pock by my declaring, that Nanse,
+the goodwife, had also a finger in the pie--as, do what ye like, women
+will make their points good--she having overcome me in her wheedling way,
+by telling me, that it was curious I had no ambition to speel the ladder
+of gentility, and hold up my chin in imitation of my betters.
+
+That we had a most beautiful drive I cannot deny; for though I would not
+allow Peter to touch the horse with the whip, in case it might run away,
+fling, or trot ower fast--and so we made but slow progress--little more
+even than walking; yet, as I told him, it gave a man leisure to use his
+eyes, and make observation to the right and the left; and so we had a
+prime look of Eskbank, and Newbottle Abbey, and Melville Castle, and
+Dalhousie, and Polton, and Hawthornden, and Dryden woods--and the powder
+mills, the paper mills, the bleachfield--and so on. The day was bright
+and beautiful, and the feeling of summer came over our bosoms: the
+flowers blossomed and the birds sang; and, as the sun looked from the
+blue sky, the quiet of nature banished from our thoughts all the poor and
+paltry cares that embitter life, and all the pitiful considerations which
+are but too apt to be the only concerns of the busy and bustling, from
+their awaking in the morning to their lying down on the pillow of evening
+rest. Peter and myself felt this forcibly; he, as he confessed to me,
+having entirely forgot the four pan-soled loaves that were, that morning,
+left by his laddie, Peter Crust, in the oven, and burned to sticks; and
+for my own part, do what I liked, I could not bring myself to mind what
+piece of work I was employed on the evening before, till, far on the
+road, I recollected that it was a pair of mouse-brown spatterdashes for
+worthy old Mr Mooleypouch the mealmonger.
+
+Oh, it is a pleasant thing, now and then, to get a peep of the country!
+To them who live among shops and markets, and stone-walls, and
+butcher-stalls, and fishwives--and the smell of ready-made tripe, red
+herring, and Cheshire cheeses--the sights, and sounds, and smells of the
+country, bring to mind the sinless days of the world before the fall of
+man, when all was love, peace, and happiness. Peter Farrel and I were
+transported out of our seven senses, as we feasted our eyes on the beauty
+of the green fields. The bumbees were bizzing among the gowans and
+blue-bells; and a thousand wee birds among the green trees were
+churm-churming away, filling earth and air with music, as it were a
+universal hymn of gratitude to the Creator for his unbounded goodness to
+all his creatures. We saw the trig country lasses bleaching their
+snow-white linen on the grass by the waterside, and they too were lilting
+their favourite songs, Logan Water, the Flowers of the Forest, and the
+Broom of the Cowdenknowes. All the world seemed happy, and I could
+scarcely believe--what I kent to be true for all that--that we were still
+walking in the realms of sin and misery. The milk-cows were nipping the
+clovery parks, and chewing their cuds at their leisure;--the wild
+partridges whidding about in pairs, or birring their wings with fright
+over the hedges;--and the blue-bonneted ploughmen on the road cracking
+their whips in wantonness, and whistling along amid the clean straw in
+their carts. And then the rows of snug cottages, with their kailyards
+and their goose-berry bushes, with the fruit hanging from the branches
+like ear-rings on the neck of a lady of fashion. How happy, thought we
+both--both Peter Farrel and me--how happy might they be, who, without
+worldly pride or ambition, passed their days in such situations, in the
+society of their wives and children. Ah! such were a blissful lot!
+
+During our ride, Peter Farrel and I had an immense deal of rational
+conversation on a variety of matters, Peter having seen great part of the
+world in his youth, from having made two voyages to Greenland, during one
+of which he was very nearly frozen up--with his uncle, who was the mate
+of a whale-vessel. To relate all that Peter told me he had seen and
+witnessed in his far-away travels, among the white bears, and the frozen
+seas, would take up a great deal of the reader's time, and of my paper;
+but as to its being very diverting, there is no doubt of that. However,
+when Peter came to the years of discretion, Peter had sense enough in his
+noddle to discover, that "a rowing stane gathers no fog"; and, having got
+an inkling of the penny-pie manufacture when he was a wee smout, he yoked
+to the baking trade tooth and nail; and, in the course of years, thumped
+butter-bakes with his elbows to some purpose; so that, at the time of our
+colleaguing together, Peter was well to do in the world--had bought his
+own bounds, and built new ones--could lay down the blunt for his article,
+and take the measure of the markets, by laying up wheat in his granaries
+against the day of trouble--to wit--rise of prices.
+
+"Well, Peter," said I to him, "seeing that ye read the newspapers, and
+have a notion of things, what think ye, just at the present moment, of
+affairs in general?"
+
+Peter cocked up his lugs at this appeal, and, looking as wise as if he
+had been Solomon's nephew, gave a knowing smirk, and said--
+
+"Is it foreign or domestic affairs that you are after, Maister Wauch? for
+the question is a six-quarters wide one."
+
+I was determined not to be beat by man of woman born; so I answered with
+almost as much cleverality as himself, "Oh, Mr Farrel, as to our foreign
+concerns, I trust I am ower loyal a subject of George the Third to have
+any doubt at all about them, as the Buonaparte is yet to be born that
+will ever beat our regulars abroad--to say nothing of our volunteers at
+home; but what think you of the paper specie--the national debt--borough
+reform--the poor-rates--and the Catholic question?"
+
+I do not think Peter jealoused I ever had so much in my noddle; but when
+he saw I had put him to his mettle, he did his best to give me
+satisfactory answers to my queries, saying, that till gold came in
+fashion, it would not be for my own interest, or that of my family, to
+refuse bank-notes, for which he would, any day of the year, give me as
+many quarter loaves as I could carry, to say nothing of coarse flour for
+the prentices' scones, and bran for the pigs--that the national debt
+would take care of itself long after both him and I were gathered to our
+fathers: and that individual debt was a much more hazardous, pressing,
+and personal concern, far more likely to come home to our more immediate
+bosoms and businesses--that the best species of reform was every one's
+commencing to make amendment in their own lives and conversations--that
+poor-rates were likely to be worse before they were better; and that, as
+to the Catholic question,--"But, Mansie," said he, "it would give me
+great pleasure to hear your candid and judicious opinion of Popery and
+the Papists."
+
+I saw, with half an e'e, that Peter was trying to put me to my mettle,
+and I devoutly wished that I had had James Batter at my elbow to have
+given him play for his money--James being the longest-headed man that
+ever drove a shuttle between warp and woof; but most fortunately, just as
+I was going to say, that "every honest man, who wished well to the good
+of his country, could only have one opinion on that subject,"--we came to
+the by-road, that leads away off on the right-hand side down to
+Hawthornden, and we observed, from the curious ringle, that one of the
+naig's fore-shoon was loose; which consequently put an end to the
+discussion of this important question, before Peter and I had time to get
+it comfortably settled to the world's satisfaction.
+
+The upshot was, that we were needcessitated to dismount, and lead the
+animal by the head forward to Kittlerig, where Macturk Sparrible keeps
+his smith's shop; in order that, with his hammer, he might make fast the
+loose nails: and that him and his foresman did in a couple of hurries; me
+and Peter looking over them with our hands in our big-coat pockets, while
+they pelt-pelted away with the beast's foot between their knees, as if we
+had been a couple of grand gentlemen incog.; and so we were to him.
+
+After getting ourselves again decently mounted, and giving Sparrible a
+consideration for his trouble, Peter took occasion, from the horse
+casting its shoe, to make a few apropos moral observations, in the manner
+of the Rev. Mr Wiggie, on the uncertainties which it is every man's lot
+to encounter in the weariful pilgrimage of human life. "There is many a
+slip 'tween the cup and the lip," said Peter.
+
+"And, indeed, Mr Farrel, ye never spoke a truer word," said I. "We are
+here to-day--yonder to-morrow; this moment we are shining like the
+mid-day sun, and on the next, pugh! we go out like the snuff of a candle.
+'Man's life,' as Job observes, 'is like a weaver's shuttle.'"
+
+"But, Maister Waugh," quo' Peter, who was a hearer of the Parish Church,
+"you dissenting bodies aye take the black side of things; never
+considering that the doubtful shadows of affairs sometimes brighten up
+into the cloudless daylight. For instance, now, there was an old
+fellow-apprentice of my father's, who, like myself, was a baker, his name
+was Charlie Cheeper; and, both his father and mother dying when he was
+yet hardly in trowsers, he would have been left without a hame in the
+world, had not an old widow woman, who had long lived next door to them,
+and whose only breadwinner was her spinning-wheel, taken the wee wretchie
+in to share her morsel. For several years, as might naturally have been
+expected, the callant was a perfect dead-weight on the concern, and
+perhaps, in her hours of greater distress, the widow regretted the
+heedlessness of her Christian charity; but Charlie had a winning way with
+him, and she could not find it in her heart to turn him to the door. By
+the time he was seven--and a ragged coute he was as ever stepped without
+shoes--he could fend for himself, by running messages--holding horses at
+shop doors--winning bools and selling them--and so on; so that when he
+had collected half-a-crown in a penny pig, the widow sent him to the
+school, where he got on like a hatter, and in a little while, could both
+read and write. When he was ten, he was bound apprentice to Saunders
+Snaps in the Back-row, whose grandson has yet, as you know, the sign of
+the Wheat Sheaf; and for five years he behaved himself like his betters.
+
+"Well, sir, when his time was out, Charlie had an ambition to see the
+world; and, by working for a month or two as journeyman in the
+Candlemaker-row at Edinburgh, he raked as much together as took him up to
+London in the steerage of a Leith smack. For several years nothing was
+heard of him, except an occasional present of a shawl, or so on, to the
+widow, who had been so kind to him in his helpless years; and at length a
+farewell present of some little money came to her, with his blessing for
+past favours, saying that he was off for good and all to America.
+
+"In the course of time, Widow Amos became frail and sand-blind. She was
+unable to work for herself, and the charity she had shown to others no
+one seemed disposed to extend to her. Her only child, Jeanie Amos, was
+obliged to leave her service, and come home to the house of poverty, to
+guard her mother's grey hairs from accident, and to divide with her the
+little she could make at the trade of mangling; for, with the money that
+Charlie Cheeper had sent, before leaving the country, the old woman had
+bought a calender, and let it out to the neighbours at so much an hour;
+honest poverty having many shifts.
+
+"Matters had gone on in this way for two or three fitful years; and
+Jeanie, who, when she had come home from service, was a buxom and
+blooming lass, although yet but a wee advanced in her thirties, began to
+show, like all earthly things, that she was wearing past her best. Some
+said that she had lost hopes of Charlie's return; and others, that, come
+hame when he liked, he would never look over his left shoulder after her.
+
+"Well, sir, as fact as death, I mind mysell, when a laddie, of the rumpus
+the thing made in the town. One Saturday night, a whole washing of old
+Mrs Pernickity's that had been sent to be calendered, vanished like
+lightning, no one knew where: the old lady was neither to hold nor bind:
+and nothing would serve her, but having both the old woman and her
+daughter committed to the Tolbooth. So to the Tolbooth they went,
+weeping and wailing; followed by a crowd, who cried loudly out at the sin
+and iniquity of the proceeding; because the honesty of the prisoners,
+although impeached, was unimpeachable; the mob were furious; and before
+the Sunday sun arose old Mrs Pernickity awakened with a sore throat,
+every pane of her windows having been miraculously broken during the dead
+hours.
+
+ [Picture: Country lassies bleaching their snow-white linen]
+
+"The mother and the daughter were kept in custody until the Monday; when,
+as they were standing making a declaration of their innocence before the
+justices, who should come in but Francie Deep, the Sheriff-officer, with
+an Irish vagrant and his wife--two tinklers who were lodging in the
+Back-row, and in whose possession the bundle was found bodily, basket and
+all. Such a cheering as the folk set up! it did all honest folk's hearts
+good to hear it. Mrs Pernickity and her lass, to save their bacon, were
+obliged to be let out by a back door; and, as the justices were about to
+discharge the two prisoners, who had been so unjustly and injuriously
+suspected, a stranger forced his way to the middle of the floor, and took
+the old woman in his arms!"
+
+"Charlie Cheeper returned, for a gold guinea," said I.
+
+"And no other it was," said Peter, resuming his comical story. "The
+world had flowed upon him to his heart's desire. Over in Virginia he had
+given up the baking business, and commenced planter; and, after years of
+industrious exertion, having made enough and to spare, he had returned to
+spend the rest of his days in peace and plenty, in his native town."
+
+"Not to interrupt you," added I, "Mr Farrel, I think I could wager
+something mair."
+
+"You are a witch of a guesser I know, Mansie," said Peter; "and I see
+what you are at. Well, sir, you are right again. For, on the very day
+week that Patrick Makillaguddy and his spouce got their heads shaved, and
+were sent to beat hemp in the New Bridgewell on the Caltonhill, Jeanie
+Amos became Mrs Cheeper; the calender and the spinning-wheel were both
+burned by a crowd of wicked weans before old Mrs Pernickity's door,
+raising such a smoke as almost smeaked her to a rizzar'd haddock; and the
+old widow under the snug roof of her ever grateful son-in-law, spent the
+remainder of her Christian life in peace and prosperity."
+
+"That story ends as it ought," said I, "Mr Farrel; neither Jew nor Gentle
+dare dispute that; and as to the telling of it, I do not think man of
+woman born, except maybe James Batter, who is a nonsuch, could have
+handled it more prettily. I like to hear virtue aye getting its ain
+reward."
+
+As these dividual words were falling from my lips, we approached the end
+of our journey, the Roslin Inn house heaving in sight, at the door of
+which me and Peter louped out, an hostler with a yellow striped
+waistcoat, and white calico sleeves, I meantime holding the naig's head,
+in case it should spend off, and capsize the concern. After seeing the
+horse and gig put into the stable, Peter and I pulled up our shirt necks,
+and after looking at our watches, as if time was precious, oxtered away,
+arm-in-arm, to see the Chapel, which surpasses all, and beats
+cock-fighting.
+
+It is an unaccountable thing to me, how the auld folk could afford to
+build such grand kirks and castles. If once gold was like slate stones,
+there is a wearyful change now-a-days, I must confess; for, so to speak,
+gold guineas seem to have taken flight from the land along with the
+witches and warlocks, and posterity are left as toom in the pockets as
+rookit gamblers.
+
+But if the mammon of precious metals be now totally altogether out of the
+world, weel-a-wat we had a curiosity still, and that was a clepy woman
+with a long stick, and rhaemed away, and better rhaemed away, about the
+Prentice's Pillar, who got a knock on the pow from his jealous blackguard
+of a master--and about the dogs and the deer--and Sir Thomas this-thing
+and my Lord tother-thing, who lay buried beneath the broad flag stones in
+their rusty coats of armour--and such a heap of havers, that no throat
+was wide enough to swallow them for gospel, although gey an' entertaining
+I allow. However, it was a real farce; that is certain.
+
+Oh, but the building was a grand and overpowering sight, making man to
+dree the sense of his own insignificance, even in the midst of his own
+handiwork! First, we looked over our shoulders to the grand carved
+roofs, where the swallows swee-swee'd, as they darted through the open
+windows, and the yattering sparrows fed their gorbals in the far boles;
+and syne we looked shuddering down into the dark vaults, where nobody in
+their senses could have ventured, though Peter Farrel, being a rash
+courageous body, was keen on it, having heard less than I could tell him
+of such places being haunted by the spirits of those who have died or
+been murdered within them in the bloody days of the old times; or of
+their being so full of foul air, as to extinguish man's breath in his
+nostrils like the snuff of a candle. Though no man should throw his life
+into jeopardy, yet I commend all for taking timeous recreation--the King
+himself on the throne not being able to live without the comforts of
+life; and even the fifteen Lords of Session, with as much powder on their
+wigs as would keep a small family in loaves for a week, requiring air and
+exercise, after sentencing vagabonds to be first hanged, and then their
+clothes given to Jock Heich, and their bodies to Doctor Monro.
+
+Before going out to inspect the wonderfuls, we had taken the natural
+precaution to tell the goodman of the inn, that we would be back to take
+a smack of something from him, at such and such an hour; and, having had
+our bellyful of the Chapel,--and the Prentice's Pillar,--and the
+vaults,--and the cleipy auld wife with the lang stick,--we found that we
+had still half an hour to spare; so took a stroll into the Kirkyard, to
+see if we could find out any of the martyrs had been buried
+there-away-abouts.
+
+We saw a good few head-stones, you may make no doubt, both ancient and
+modern; but nothing out of the course of nature; so, the day being
+pleasant, Mr Farrell and me sat down on a throughstane, below an old
+hawthorn, and commenced chatting on the Pentland Hills--the river
+Esk--Penicuik--Glencorse--and all the rest of the beautiful country
+within sight. A mooly auld skull was lying among the grass, and Peter,
+as he spoke, was aye stirring it about with his stick.
+
+"I never touched a dead man's bones in my life," said I to Peter, "nor
+would I for a sixpence. Who might that have belonged to, now, I wonder?
+Maybe to a baker or a tailor, in his day and generation, like you and I,
+Peter; or maybe to ane of the great Sinclairs with their coats-of-mail,
+that the auld wife was cracking so crousely about?"
+
+"Deil may care," said Peter; "but are you really frighted to touch a
+skull, Mansie? You would make a bad doctor, I'm doubting, then; to say
+nothing of a resurrection man."
+
+"Doctor! I would not be a doctor for all the gold and silver on the
+walls of Solomon's Temple--"
+
+"Yet you would think the young doctors suck in their trade with their
+mother's milk, and could cut off one another's heads as fast as look at
+you.--Speaking of skulls," added Peter, "I mind when my father lived in
+the under-flat of the three-storey house at the top of Dalkeith Street,
+that the Misses Skinflints occupied the middle story, and Doctor
+Chickenweed had the one above, with the garrets, in which was the
+laboratory.
+
+"Weel, ye observe, in getting to the shop, it was not necessary to knock
+at the Doctor's door, but just proceed up the narrow wooden stairs,
+facing the top of which was the shop-door, which, for light to the
+customer's feet, was generally allowed to stand open.
+
+"For a long time, the Doctor had heard the most unearthly noises in the
+house--as if a thunderbolt was in the habit of coming in at one of the
+sky-lights, and walking down stairs; and the Misses Skinflints had more
+than once nearly got their door carried off the hinges; so they had not
+the life of dogs, for constant startings and surprises. At first they
+had no faith in ghosts; but, in the course of time, they came to be alike
+doubtful on that point; but you shall hear.
+
+"The foundation of the mystery was this. The three mischievous
+laddies--the apprentices--after getting their daily work over, of making
+pills and potions for his Majesty's unfortunate subjects, took to the
+trick of mounting a human skull, like that, upon springs, so that it
+could open its mouth, and setting it on a stand at the end of the
+counter, could make it gape, and turn from side to side, by pulling a
+string.
+
+"The door being left purposely ajee--whenever the rascals saw a fit
+subject, they set the skull a-moving and a-gaping; the consequence of
+which was, that many a poor customer descended without counting the
+number of steps, and after bouncing against Dr Chickenweed's panels,
+played flee down to try the strength of Misses Skinflints'. One of the
+three instantly darted down, behind the evanished patient; and, after
+assisting her or him--whichever it might chance to be--to gain their
+feet, begged of them not to mention what they had seen, as the house was
+haunted by the ghost of an old maiden aunt of their master's who had died
+abroad; and that the thing would hurt his feelings if ever it came to his
+ears."
+
+"Dog on me," said I, "if ever I heard of such a trick since ever I was
+born! What was the upshot?"
+
+"The upshot was, that the thing might have continued long enough, and the
+laboratory been left as deserted as Tadmor in the Wilderness, had not a
+fat old woman fallen one day perfectly through the doctor's door, and
+dislocated her ankle--which unfortunately incapacitated her from making a
+similar attack on that of the Misses Skinflints. The consequence was,
+that the conspiracy was detected--the Doctor's aunt's ghost laid, and the
+fat old woman carried down on a shutter to her bed, where she lay till
+her ankle grew better in the course of nature."
+
+It being near the hour at which we had ordered our dinner to be ready, we
+rose up from the tombstone; and, after taking a snuff out of Peter's box,
+we returned arm-in-arm to the tavern, to lay in a stock of provisions.
+
+Peter Farrel was a warm-hearted, thorough-going fellow, and did not like
+half-measures, such as swollowing the sheep and worrying on the tail; so,
+after having ate as many strawberries as we could well stow away, he
+began trying to fright me with stories of folk taking the elic
+passion--the colic--the mulligrubs--and other deadly maladies, on account
+of neglecting to swallow a drop of something warm to qualify the coldness
+of the fruit; so, after we had discussed good part of a fore-quarter of
+lamb and chopped cabbage--the latter a prime dish--we took first one jug,
+and syne another, till Peter was growing tongue-tied, and as red in the
+face as a bubbly-jock; and, to speak the truth, my own een began to reel
+like merligoes. In a jiffy, both of us found our hearts waxing so brave
+as to kick and spur at all niggardly hesitation; and we leuch and thumped
+on the good-man of the inn-house's mahogany table, as if it had been
+warranted never to break. In fact, we were as furious and obstrapulous
+as two unchristened Turks; and it was a mercy that we ever thought of
+rising to come away at all. At the long and the last, however, we found
+ourselves mounted and trotting home at no allowance, me telling Peter, as
+far as I mind, to give the beast a good creish, and not to be frighted.
+
+The evening was fine and warmer than we could have wished, our cheeks
+glowing like dragons' jackets; and as we passed like lightning through
+among the trees, the sun was setting with a golden glory in the west,
+between the Pentland and the Corstorphine Hills, and flashing in upon us
+through the branches at every opening. About half-way on our road back,
+we foregathered with Robbie Maut, drucken body, with his Shetland
+rig-and-fur hose on, and his green umbrella in his hand, shug-shugging
+away home, keeping the trot, with his tale, and his bit arm shak-shaking
+at his tae side, on his grey sheltie; so, after carhailing him, we
+bragged him to a race full gallop for better than a mile to the toll.
+The damage we did I dare not pretend to recollect. First, we knocked
+over two drunk Irishmen, that were singing "Erin-go-Bragh,"
+arm-in-arm--syne we rode over the top of an old woman with a wheelbarrow
+of cabbages--and when we came to the toll, which was kept by a fat man
+with a red waistcoat, Robbie's pony, being, like all Highlanders, a
+wilful creature, stopped all at once; and though he won the half mutchkin
+by getting through first, after driving over the tollman, it was at the
+expense of poor Robbie's being ejected from his stirrups like a
+battering-ram, and disappearing head-foremost through the toll-house
+window, which was open, hat, wig, green umbrella, and all--the tollman's
+wife's bairn making a providential escape from Robbie's landing on
+all-fours, more than two yards on the far-side of the cradle in which it
+was lying asleep, with its little flannel nightgown on.
+
+At the time, all was war and rebellion with the tollman, assault and
+battery, damages, broken panes, and what not; but with skilful
+management, and a few words in the private ear of Mr Rory Sneckdrawer,
+the penny-writer, we got matters southered up when we were in our sober
+senses; though I shall not say how much it cost us both in preaching and
+pocket, to make the man keep a calm sough as to bringing us in for the
+penalty, which would have been deadly. I think black-burning shame of
+myself to make mention of such ploys and pliskies; but, after all, it is
+better to make a clean breast.
+
+Hame at last we got, making fire flee out of the Dalkeith causey stones
+like mad: and we arrived at our own door between nine and ten at night,
+still in a half-seas-overish state. I had, nevertheless, sense enough
+about me remaining, to make me aware that the best place for me would be
+my bed; so, after making Nanse bring the bottle and glass to the door on
+a server, to give Peter Farrel a dram by way of "doch-an-dorris," as the
+Gaelic folk say, we wished him a good-night, and left him to drive home
+the bit gig, with the broken shaft spliced with ropes, to his own bounds;
+little jealousing, as we heard next morning, that he would be thrown over
+the back of it, without being hurt, by taking too sharp a turn at the
+corner.
+
+After a tremendous sound sleep, I was up betimes in the morning, though a
+wee drumly about the head, anxious to enquire at Tammie Bodkin, the head
+of the business department, me being absent, if any extraordinars had
+occurred on the yesterday; and found that the only particular customer
+making enquiries anent me was our old friend Cursecowl, savage for the
+measure of a killing-coat, which he wanted made as fast as directly.
+Though dreadfully angry at finding me from home, and unco swithering at
+first, he at length, after a volley of oaths enough to have opened a
+stone wall, allowed Tammie Bodkin to take his inches; but, as he swore
+and went on havering and speaking nonsense all the time, Tammie's hand
+shook, partly through fear, and partly through anxiety; and if he went
+wrong in making a nick in the paper here and there in a wrong place, it
+was no more than might have been looked for, from his fright and
+inexperience.
+
+In the twinkle of an eyelid, I saw that there was some mortal mistake in
+the measurement; as, unless Cursecowl had lost beef at no allowance, I
+knew, judging from the past, that it would not peep on his corpus by four
+inches. The matter was, however, now past all earthly remede, and there
+was nothing to be done but trusting to good fortune, and allowing the
+killing-coat to take its chance in the world. How the thing happened, I
+have bothered and beat my brains to no purpose to make out, and it
+remains a wonderful mystery to me to this blessed day; but, by long
+thought on the subject, both when awake and in my bed, and by
+multifarious cross-questionings at Tammie's self concerning the paper
+measurings, I am devoutly inclined to think, that he mistook the nicking
+of the side-seams and the shoulder-strap for the girth of the belly-band.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE--ON CATCHING A TARTAR--CURSECOWL
+
+
+From the first moment I clapped eye on the caricature thing of a coat,
+that Tammie Bodkin had, in my absence, shaped out for Cursecowl the
+butcher, I foresaw, in my own mind, that a catastrophe was brewing for
+us; and never did soldier gird himself to fight the French, or sailor
+prepare for a sea-storm, with greater alacrity, than I did to cope with
+the bull-dog anger, and buffet back the uproarious vengeance of our
+heathenish customer.
+
+At first I thought of letting the thing take its natural course, and of
+threaping down Cursecowl's throat that he must have been feloniously
+keeping in his breath when Tammie took his measure; and, moreover, that
+as it was the fashion to be straight-laced, Tammie had done his utmost
+trying to make him look like his betters; till, my conscience checking me
+for such a nefarious intention, I endeavoured, as became me in the
+relations of man, merchant, and Christian, to solder the matter
+peaceably, and show him, if there was a fault committed, that there was
+no evil intention on my side of the house. To this end I dispatched the
+bit servant wench, on the Friday afternoon, to deliver the coat, which
+was neatly tied up in a brown paper, and directed--"Mr Cursecowl, with
+care," and to buy a sheep's head; bidding her, by the way of being civil,
+give my kind compliments, and enquire how Mr and Mrs Cursecowl, and the
+five little Miss Cursecowl's, were keeping their healths, and trusting to
+his honour in sending me a good article. But have a moment's patience.
+
+Being busy at the time, turning a pair of kuttikins for old Mr
+Molleypouch the mealmonger, when the lassie came back, I had no mind of
+asking a sight of the sheep's head, as I aye like the little blackfaced,
+in preference to the white, fat, fozy Cheviot breed: but, most
+providentially, I catched a gliskie of the wench passing the shop window,
+on the road over to Jamie Coom the smith's, to get it singed, having been
+dispatched there by her mistress. Running round the counter like
+lightning, I opened the sneck, and halooed to her to wheel to the right
+about, having, somehow or other, a superstitious longing to look at the
+article. As I was saying, there was a Providence in this, which, at the
+time, mortal man could never have thought of.
+
+James Batter had popped in with a newspaper in his hand, to read me a
+curious account of a mermaid, that was seen singing a Gaelic song, and
+combing its hair with a tortoise-shell comb, someway terrible far north
+about Shetland, by a respectable minister of the district, riding home in
+the gloaming after a presbytery dinner. So, as he was just taking off
+his spectacles cannily, and saying to me--"And was not that droll?"--the
+lassie spread down her towel on the counter, when, lo and behold! such an
+abominable spectacle, James Batter observing me run back, and turn white!
+put on his glasses again, cannily taking them out of his well-worn
+shagreen case, and, giving a stare down at the towel, almost touched the
+beast's nose with his own.
+
+"And what, in the name of goodness, is the matter?" quo' James Batter;
+"ye seem in a wonderful quandary."
+
+"The matter!" answered I, in astonishment; looking to see if the man had
+lost his sight or his senses--"the matter! who ever saw a sheep's head
+with straight horns, and a visnomy all colours of the rainbow--red, blue,
+orange, green, yellow, white, and black?"
+
+'"Deed it is," said James, after a nearer inspection; "it must be a
+lowsy-naturay. I'm sure I have read most of Buffon's books, and I have
+never heard tell of like. It's gey an' queerish."
+
+'"Od, James," answered I, "ye take every thing very canny; you're a
+philosopher, to be sure; but, I daresay, if the moon was to fall from the
+lift, and knock down the old kirk, ye would say no more than it's gey an'
+queerish!"
+
+"Queerish, man! do ye not see that?" added I, shoving down his head
+mostly on the top of it. "Do ye not see that? awful, most awful!
+extonishing!! Do ye not see that long beard? Who, in the name of
+goodness, ever was an eyewitness to a sheep's head, in a Christian land,
+with a beard like an unshaven Jew crying 'owl clowes,' with a green bag
+over his left shoulder!"
+
+"Dog on it," said James, giving a fidge with his hainches; "Dog on it, as
+I am a living sinner, that is the head of a Willie-goat."
+
+"Willie or Nannie," answered I, "it's not meat for me; and never shall an
+ounce of it cross the craig of my family:--that is as sure as ever James
+Batter drave a shuttle. Give counsel in need, James: what is to be
+done?"
+
+"That needs consideration," quo' James, giving a bit hoast. "Unless he
+makes ample apology, and explains the mistake in a feasible way, it is my
+humble opinion that he ought to be summoned before his betters. That is
+the legal way to make him smart for his sins."
+
+At last a thought struck me, and I saw farther through my difficulties
+than ever mortal man did through a millstone; but, like a politician, I
+minted not the matter to James. Keeping my tongue cannily within my
+teeth, I then laid the head, wrapped up in the bit towel, in a corner
+behind the counter; and turning my face round again to James, I put my
+hands into my breeches-pockets, as if nothing in the world had happened,
+and ventured back to the story of the mermaid. I asked him how she
+looked--what kind of dress she wore--if she swam with her corsets--what
+was the colour of her hair--where she would buy the tortoise-shell
+comb--and so on; when, just as he was clearing his pipe to reply, who
+should burst open the shop-door like a clap of thunder, with burning
+cat's een, and a face as red as a soldier's jacket, but Cursecowl
+himself, with the new killing-coat in his hand,--which, giving a
+tremendous curse, the words of which are not essentially necessary for me
+to repeat, being an elder of our kirk, he made play flee at me with such
+a birr, that it twisted round my neck, and, mostly blinding me, made me
+doze like a tottum. At the same time, to clear his way, and the better
+to enable him to take a good mark, he gave James Batter a shove, that
+made him stotter against the wall, and snacked the good new farthing
+tobacco-pipe, that James was taking his first whiff out of; crying, at
+the same blessed moment--"Hold out o' my road, ye long withered wabster.
+Ye'er a pair of havering idiots; but I'll have pennyworths out of both
+your skins, as I'm a sinner!"
+
+ [Picture: The waiting girl, Jeanie Amos]
+
+What was to be done? There was no time for speaking, for Cursccowl,
+foaming like a mad dog with passion, seized hold of the ell-wand, which
+he flourished round his head like a Highlander's broadsword, and stamping
+about, with his stockings drawn up his thighs, threatened every moment to
+commit bloody murder.
+
+If James Batter never saw service before, he learned a little of it that
+day, being in a pickle of bodily terror not to be imagined by living man;
+but his presence of mind did not forsake him, and he cowered for safety
+and succour into a far corner, holding out a web of buckram before
+him--me crying all the time, "Send for the town officer! will ye not send
+for the town-officer?"
+
+You may talk of your general Moores, and your Lord Wellingtons, as ye
+like; but never, since I was born, did I ever see or hear tell of
+anything braver than the way Tammie Bodkin behaved, in saving both our
+precious lives, at that blessed nick of time, from touch-and-go jeopardy:
+for, when Cursecowl was rampauging about, cursing and swearing like a
+Russian bear, hurling out volleys of oaths that would have frighted John
+Knox, forbye the like of us, Tammie stole in behind him like a wild-cat,
+followed by Joseph Breekey, Walter Cuff, and Jack Thorl, the three
+apprentices on their stocking soles; and, having strong and dumpy arms,
+pinned back his elbows like a flash of lightning, giving the other
+callants time to jump on his back, and hold him like a vice; while,
+having got time to draw my breath, and screw up my pluck, I ran forward
+like a lion, and houghed the whole concern--Tammie Bodkin, the three
+faithful apprentices, Cursecowl and all, coming to the ground like a
+battered castle.
+
+It was now James Batter's time to come up in line, and, though a douce
+man (being savage for the insulting way that Cursecowl had dared to use
+him), he dropped down like mad, with his knees on Cursecowl's breast, who
+was yelling, roaring, and grinding his buck-teeth like a mad bull,
+kicking right and spurring left with fire and fury; and, taking his
+Kilmarnock off his head, thrust it, like a battering-ram, into
+Cursecowl's mouth, to hinder him from alarming the neighbourhood, and
+bringing the whole world about our ears. Such a stramash of tumbling,
+roaring, tearing, swearing, kicking, pushing, cuffing, rugging and riving
+about the floor!! I thought they would not have left one another with a
+shirt on: it seemed a combat even to the death. Cursecowl's breath was
+choked up within him like wind in an empty bladder, and when I got a
+gliskie of his face, from beneath James's cowl, it was growing as black
+as the crown of my hat. It feared me much that murder would be the
+upshot, the webs being all heeled over, both of broad cloth, buckram,
+cassimir, and Welsh flannel; and the paper shapings and worsted runds
+coiled about their throats and bodies like fiery serpents. At long and
+last, I thought it became me, being the head of the house, to sound a
+parley, and bid them give the savage a mouthful of fresh air, to see if
+he had anything to say in his defence.
+
+Cursecowl, by this time, had forcible assurance of our ability to
+overpower him, and finding he had by far the worst of it, was obliged to
+grow tamer, using the first breath he got to cry out, "A barley, ye
+thieves! a barley! I tell ye, give me wind. There's not a man in nine
+of ye."
+
+Finding our own strength, we saw, by this time, that we were masters of
+the field; nevertheless, we took care to make good terms when they were
+in our power; nor would we allow Cursecowl to sit upright, till after he
+had said, three times over, on his honour as a gentleman, that he would
+behave as became one. After giving his breeches-knees a skuff with his
+loof, to dad off the stoure, he came, right foot foremost, to the counter
+side, while the laddies were dighting their brows, and stowing away the
+webs upon their ends round about, saying, "Maister Wauch, how have ye the
+conscience to send hame such a piece o' wark as that coat to ony decent
+man? Do ye dare to imagine that I am a Jerusalem spider, that I could be
+crammed, neck and heels, into such a thing as that? Fye, shame--it would
+not button on yourself, man, scarecrow-looking mortal though ye be!"
+
+James Batter's blood was now up, and boiling like an old Roman's; so he
+was determined to show Cursecowl that I had a friend in court, able and
+willing to keep him at stave's-end. "Keep a calm sough," said James
+Batter, interfering, "and not miscall the head of the house in his own
+shop; or, to say nothing of present consequences, byway of showing ye the
+road to the door, perhaps Maister Sneckdrawer, the penny-writer, 'll give
+ye a caption-paper with a broad margin, to claw your elbow with at your
+leisure, my good fellow."
+
+"Pugh, pugh," cried Cursecowl, snapping his finger and thumb at James's
+beak, "I do not value your threatening an ill halfpenny. Come away out
+your ways to the crown of the causey, and I'll box any three of ye, over
+the bannys, for half-a-mutchkin. But 'od-sake, Batter, my man, nobody's
+speaking to you," added Cursecowl, giving a hack now and then, and a bit
+spit down on the floor; "go hame, man, and get your cowl washed; I dare
+say you have pushioned me, so I have no more to say to the like of you.
+But now, Maister Wauch, just speaking holy and fairly, do you not think
+black burning shame of yourself, for putting such an article into any
+decent Christian man's hand, like mine?"
+
+"Wait a wee--wait a wee, friend, and I'll give ye a lock salt to your
+broth," answered I, in a calm and cool way; for, being a confidential
+elder of Maister Wiggie's, I kept myself free from the sin of getting
+into a passion, or fighting, except in self-defence, which is forbidden
+neither by law nor gospel; and, stooping down, I took up the towel from
+the corner, and, spreading it upon the counter, bade him look, and see if
+he knew an auld acquaintance!
+
+Cursecowl, to be such a dragoon, had some rational points in his
+character; so, seeing that he lent ear to me with a smirk on his rough
+red face, I went on: "Take my advice as a friend, and make the best of
+your way home, killing-coat and all; for the most perfect will sometimes
+fall into an innocent mistake, and, at any rate, it cannot be helped now.
+But if ye show any symptom of obstrapulosity, I'll find myself under the
+necessity of publishing you abroad to the world for what you are, and
+show about that head in the towel for a wonder to broad Scotland, in a
+manner that will make customers flee from your booth, as if it was
+infected with the seven plagues of Egypt."
+
+At sight of the goat's-head, Cursecowl clapped his hand on his thigh two
+or three times, and could scarcely muster good manners enough to keep
+himself from bursting out a-laughing.
+
+"Ye seem to have found a fiddle, friend," said I; "but give me leave to
+tell you, that ye'll may be find it liker a hanging-match than a musical
+matter. Are you not aware that I could hand you over to the sheriff, on
+two special indictments? In the first place, for an action of assault
+and batterification, in cuffing me, an elder of our kirk, with a sticked
+killing-coat, in my own shop; and, in the second place, as a swindler,
+imposing on his Majesty's loyal subjects, taking the coin of the realm on
+false pretences, and palming off goat's flesh upon Christians, as if they
+were perfect Pagans."
+
+Heathen though Cursecowl was, this oration alarmed him in a jiffie, soon
+showing him, in a couple of hurries, that it was necessary for him to be
+our humble servant: so he said, still keeping the smirk on his face,
+"Keh, keh, it's not worth making a noise about after all. Gie me the
+jacket, Mansie, my man, and it'll maybe serve my nephew, young Killim,
+who is as lingit in the waist as a wasp. Let us take a shake of your paw
+over the counter, and be friends. Bye-ganes should be bye-ganes."
+
+Never let it be said that Mansie Wauch, though one of the king's
+volunteers, ever thrust aside the olive branch of peace; so, ill-used
+though I had been, to say nothing of James Batter, who had got his pipe
+smashed to crunches, and one of the eyes of his spectacles knocked out, I
+gave him my fist frankly.
+
+James Batter's birse had been so fiercely put up, and no wonder, that it
+was not so easily sleeked down; so, for a while he looked unco glum, till
+Cursecowl insisted that our meeting should not be a dry one; nor would he
+hear a single word on me and James Batter not accepting his treat of a
+mutchkin of Kilbagie.
+
+I did not think James would have been so doure and refractory--funking
+and flinging like old Jeroboam; but at last, with the persuasion of the
+treat, he came to, and, sleeking down his front hair, we all three took a
+step down to the far end of the close, at the back street, where Widow
+Thamson kept the sign of "The Tankard and the Tappit Hen"; Cursecowl,
+when we got ourselves seated, ordering in the spirits with a loud rap on
+the table with his knuckles, and a whistle on the landlady through his
+fore-teeth, that made the roof ring. A bottle of beer was also brought;
+so, after drinking one another's healths round, with a tasting out of the
+dram glass, Cursecowl swashed the rest of the raw creature into the
+tankard, saying--"Now take your will o't; there's drink fit for a king;
+that's real 'Pap-in.'"
+
+He was an awful body, Cursecowl, and had a power of queer stories, which,
+weel-a-wat, did no lose in the telling. James Batter beginning to
+brighten up, hodged and leuch like a nine-year-old; and I freely confess,
+for another, that I was so diverted, that, I dare say, had it not been
+for his fearsome oaths, which made our very hair stand on end, and were
+enough to open the stone-wall, we would have both sate from that time to
+this.
+
+We got the whole story of the Willie-goat, out and out; it seeming to be,
+with Cursecowl, a prime matter of diversion, especially that part of it
+relating to the head, by which he had won a crown from Deacon Paunch, who
+wagered that the wife and me would eat it, without ever finding out our
+mistake. But, aha, lad!
+
+The long and the short of the matter was this. The Willie-goat, had, for
+eighteen year, belonged to a dragoon marching regiment, and, in its
+better days, had seen a power of service abroad; till, being now old and
+infirm, it had fallen off one of the baggage-carts, and got its leg
+broken on the road to Piershill, where it was sold to Cursecowl, by a
+corporal, for half-a-crown and a dram. The four quarters he had managed
+to sell for mutton, like lightning--this one buying a jigget, that one a
+back-ribs, and so on. However, he had to weather a gey brisk gale in
+making his point good. One woman remarked, that it had an unearthly,
+rank smell; to which he said, "No, no--ye do not ken your blessings,
+friend,--that's the smell of venison, for the beast was brought up along
+with the deers in the Duke's parks." And to another wife, that, after
+smell-smelling at it, thought it was a wee humphed, he replied, "Faith
+that's all the thanks folk gets for letting their sheep crop heather
+among Cheviot Hills"; and such like lies. But as for the head, that had
+been the doure business. Six times had it been sold and away, and six
+times had it been brought back again. One bairn said, that her "mother
+didna like a sheep's head with horns like these, and wanted it changed
+for another one." A second one said, that, "it had tup's een, and her
+father liked wether mutton." A third customer found mortal fault with
+the colours, which, she said, "were not canny, or in the course of
+nature." What the fourth one said, and the fifth one took leave to
+observe, I have stupidly forgotten, though, I am sure, I heard both; but
+I mind one remarked, quite off-hand, as she sought back her money, that
+"unless sheep could do without beards, like their neighbours, she would
+keep the pot boiling with a piece beef, in the meantime." After all
+this, would any mortal man believe it, Deacon Paunch, the greasy Daniel
+Lambert that he is, had taken the wager, as I before took opportunity to
+remark, that our family would swallow the bait? But, aha, he was off his
+eggs there!
+
+James and me were so tickled with Cursecowl's wild, outrageous, off-hand,
+humoursome way of telling his crack, that, though sore with neighering,
+none of the two of us ever thought of rising; Cursecowl chapping in first
+one stoup, and then another, and birling the tankard round the table, as
+if we had been drinking dub-water. I dare say I would never have got
+away, had I not slipped out behind Lucky Thamson's back--for she was a
+broad fat body, with a round-eared mutch, and a full-plaited check
+apron--when she was drawing the sixth bottle of small beer, with her
+corkscrew between her knees; Cursecowl lecturing away, at the dividual
+moment, like a Glasgow professor, to James Batter, whose een were
+gathering straws, on a pliskie he had once, in the course of trade,
+played on a conceited body of a French sicknurse, by selling her a lump
+of fat pork to make beef-tea of to her mistress, who was dwining in the
+blue Beelzebubs.
+
+Ohone, and woes me, for old Father Adam and the fall of man! Poor,
+sober, good, honest James Batter was not, by a thousand miles, a match
+for such company. Everything, however, has its moral, and the truth will
+out. When Nanse and me were sitting at our breakfast next morning, we
+heard from Benjie, who had been early up fishing for eels at the
+water-side, that the whole town-talk was concerning the misfortunate
+James Batter, who had been carried home, totally incapable, far in the
+night, by Cursecowl and an Irish labourer--that sleeped in Widow
+Thamson's garret--on a hand-barrow, borrowed from Maister Wiggie's
+servant-lass, Jenny Jessamine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR--JAMES BATTER & THE MAID OF DAMASCUS
+
+
+On the morning after the debosh with Mr Cursecowl, my respected friend,
+James Batter, the pattern of steadiness and sobriety, awoke in a terrible
+pliskie. The decent man came to the use of his senses as from a trance,
+and scarcely knew either where he was, or whether his head or heels were
+uppermost. He found himself lying without his Kilmarnock, from which he
+might have received deadly damage, being subject to the rheumatics in the
+cuff of the neck; and everything about him was in a most fearful and
+disjaskit state. It was a long time before he could, for the life of
+him, bring his mind or memory to a sense of his condition, having still
+on his corduroy trowsers, and his upper and under vest, besides one of
+his stockings:--his hat, his wig, his neckcloth, his shoes, his coat, his
+snuff-box, his spectacles, and the other stocking, all lying on the
+floor, together with a table, a chair, a candlestick, with a broken
+candle, which had been knocked over;--the snuffers standing upright,
+being sharp in the point, and having stuck in the deal floor.
+
+It was a terrible business! and might have been a life-long lesson to
+every one, of the truth of St Paul's maxim, that "evil communication
+corrupts good manners";--Cursecowl being the most incomprehensible fellow
+that ever breathed the breath of life. To add to his calamities, James
+found, on attempting to rise, that he had, in some way or other, of which
+he had not a shadow of recollection, dismally sprained his left ankle,
+which, to his consternation, was swelled like a door-post, and as blue as
+his apron. There was also a black ugly lump on his brow, as big as a
+pigeon's egg, which was horrible to look at in the bit glass. Many a
+gallant soldier escaped from Waterloo with less scaith--and that they
+did. Poor innocent sowl! I pitied him from the very bottom of my
+heart--as who would not?
+
+Having got an inkling of the town-talk by breakfast time, and knowing
+also that many a one--such is the corruption of human nature--would like
+to have a hair in the neck of James, by taking up an evil report, I
+remembered within myself that a friend in need is a friend indeed, and
+cannily papped up the close, after I had got myself shaved, to see how
+the land lay. And a humbling spectacle it was! James could scarcely yet
+be said to be himself, for his eyes were like scored collops, and his
+stomach was so sick that his face was like ill-bleached linen--pale as a
+dishclout. When he tried to speak, it was between a bock and a hiccup
+with him, and my feeling for his situation was such--knowing, as I did,
+all the ins and outs of the business--that I could not help being very
+wae for him. It therefore behoved me to make Nanse send him a cup of
+well-made tea, to see if it would act as a settler, but his heart stood
+at it, as if it had been 'cacuana, and do as he liked, he could not let a
+drop of it down his craig. When the wife informed me of this, I at last
+luckily remembered the old saying about giving one a hair of the dog that
+bit him; and I made poor James swallow a thimbleful of malt spirits--the
+real unadulterated creatur, with wonderfully good effects. Though then
+in his sixty-first year, James declares on his honour as a gentleman,
+that this was the first time he ever had fallen a victim to the
+barley-fever!
+
+How could we do otherwise! it afforded Nanse and I great pleasure--and no
+mistake--in acting the part of good Samaritans, by pouring oil and wine
+into his wounds; I having bound up his brow with a Sunday silk-napkin,
+and she having fomented his unfortunate ankle with warm water and hog's
+lard. The truth is, that I found myself in conscience bound and
+obligated to take a deep interest in the decent man's distresses, he
+having come to his catastrophe in a cause of mine, and having fallen a
+victim to the snares and devices of Cursecowl, instead of myself, for
+whom the vagabond's girn was set. Providence decided that, in this
+particular case, I should escape; but a better man, James Batter, was
+caught in it by the left ankle. What will a body say there?
+
+The web of Lucky Caird, which James had promised to carry home to her on
+the Saturday night, was still in the loom, and had I been up to the
+craft, I would not have hesitated to have driven the shuttle myself till
+I had got it off hand for him; but every man to his trade; so afraid of
+consequences, I let the batter and the bobbin-box lie still, trusting to
+Lucky Caird's discretion, and my friend's speedy recovery. But the
+distress of James Batter was not the business of a day. In the course of
+the next night, to be sure, he had some natural sleep, which cleared his
+brain from the effects of that dangerous and deluding drink, the
+"Pap-in"; but his ankle left him a grievous lameter, hirpling on a staff;
+and, although his brown scratch and his Kilmarnock helped to hide the
+bump upon his temple, the dregs of it fell down upon his e'e-bree, which,
+to the consternation of everybody, became as green as a docken leaf.
+
+My friend, however, be it added to this, was not more a sufferer in body
+than in estate; for the illness, being of his own bringing on, he could
+not make application to the Weavers' Society--of which he had been a
+regular member for forty odd years--for his lawful sick-money. But,
+being a philosopher, James submitted to his bed of thorns without a
+murmur; Nanse and I soothing his calamities, as we best could, by a bowl
+of sheep-head broth; a rizzar'd haddock; a tankard of broo-and-bread; a
+caller egg; a swine's trotter; and other circumstantialities needless to
+repeat--as occasion required.
+
+As for Cursecowl, the invincible reprobate, so ashamed was he of his
+infamous conduct, that he did not dare, for the life in his body, to show
+himself before my shop-window--far less in my presence--for more than a
+week; yet, would ye believe it! he made a perfect farce of the whole
+business among his own wauf cronies; and, instead of repentance, I verily
+believe, would not have cared twopence to have played me the same pliskie
+that he did my douce and worthy friend. But away with him! he is not
+worth speaking about; and ye'll get nothing from a sow but--grumph!
+
+Being betimes on mending order, James sent down, one forenoon, to
+request, with his compliments, that I would hand him up by the bearer old
+Taffy with the Pigtail's bundle of old papers,--as having more leisure in
+his hands than either he liked, or well knew how to dispose of, it might
+afford him some diversion to take a reading of them, for the purpose of
+enquiring farther into the particulars of the Welsh gentleman's
+history--which undoubtedly was a wee mysterious; consisting of matters
+lying heads and thraws; and of odds and ends, that no human skill could
+dovetail into a Christian consistency.
+
+On the night of the next day--I mind it weel, for it was on that dividual
+evening that Willie, the minister's man, married Mysie Clouts, the keeper
+of the lodging-house called the Beggars' Opera--it struck me, seeing the
+general joy of the weans on the street, and the laughing, daffing, and
+hallabuloo that they were making, that poor James must be lonely at his
+ingle side, and that a drink of porter and a crack would do his old heart
+good. Accordingly, I made Nanse send the bit lassie, our servant, Jenny
+Heggins, for a couple of bottles of Deacon Jaffrey's best brown stout,
+asking if he could pawn his word anent its being genuine, as it was for a
+gentleman in delicate health. So, brushing the saw-dust off the doup of
+one of them, and slipping it into my coat pocket, which was gey an'
+large, I popped at leisure up the close to pay my neighbour a friendly
+visit.
+
+ [Picture: Peter Farrel]
+
+'Od, but comfort is a grand thing. If ever ye saw an ancient patriarch,
+there was one. James was seated in his snug old easychair by the
+fireside, as if he had been an Edinburgh Parliament House lawyer,
+studying his hornings, duplies, and fugie warrants, with his left leg
+paraded out on a stool, with a pillow smoothed down over it, and all the
+Welshman's papers docketed on the bit table before him. The cat was
+lying streaked out on the hearth, pur-purring away to herself, and the
+kettle by the fire cheek was singing along with her, as if to cheer the
+heart of their mutual master. As for Mr Batter, he looked as prejinct as
+a pikestaff, and so taken up was he with his papers, that, when I asked
+him how he felt, his answer, to my wonderment, was, that "in the Song of
+Songs Solomon had likened the nose of his beloved to the tower of
+Lebanon, which looketh towards Damascus." So brown was he in his
+studies, that, for a while, I feared the fall had produced some crack in
+his pan, and that his seven senses had gone a wool-gathering; but the
+story will out, as ye will hear, and being naturally a wee-camstairie, I
+gave him time to gather the feet of his faculties before pressing him too
+hard; but even the sight of the bottle of porter toasting by the cheek of
+the fire, hardly brought him at once to his right mind.
+
+Mr Batter's noddle, however, after a little patience, clearing up, we
+leisurely discussed between us the porter, which was in prime condition,
+with a ream as yellow as a marigold; together with half-a-dozen of
+butter-bakes, crimp and new-baked, it being batch-day with Thomas
+Burlings, who, like his father and grandfather before him, have been
+notorious in the biscuit department. It soon became clear to me, that
+the dialogue about Lebanon and Damascus, which was followed up with a
+clishmaclaver anent dirks, daggers, red cloaks, and other bloody weapons
+which made all my flesh grue, had some connexion with Taffy's papers on
+the table--out of which James had been diverting himself by reading bits
+here and there, at random like.
+
+In the course of our confab, he told me a monstrous heap about them; but,
+in general, the things were so out of the course of Providence, and so
+queer and leeing-like, that I, for one, would not believe them without
+solemn affidavy. Indeed, I began at length to question within
+myself--for the subject naturally resolved itself into two heads;
+firstly, whether Taffy's master might not have had a bee in his bonnet;
+or, secondly, whether he was a person not over-scrupulous regarding the
+matter of truth. As for James, he declared him a nonsuch, and said, that
+although poor, he would not have hesitated to have given him sixpence for
+a lock of his hair, just to keep beside him for a keepsake; (did anybody
+ever hear such nonsense?) Before parting, he insisted that I should bear
+with him, till he read me over the story he had just finished as I came
+in, and which had been running in his noddle. At such a late hour, for
+it was now wearing on to wellnigh ten o'clock, I was not just clear about
+listening to anything bloody; but not to vex the old boy, who, I am sure,
+would not have sleeped a wink through the night for disappointment, had
+he not got a free breast made of it, I at long and last
+consented--provided his story was not too long. My chief particularity
+on this point, as I should mention, was, that it was past Benjie's
+bedtime, and the callant had a hoast, which required all his mother's as
+well as my own good doctoring--having cost us two bottles of Dantzic
+black beer, with little effect; besides not a few other recommendations
+of friends and skielly acquaintances.
+
+It was best, therefore, to consent with a good grace; so, after clearing
+his windpipes, James wiped the eyes of his spectacles with the corner of
+his red-check pocket-napkin; and thereafter fixing them on his beak, he
+commenced preaching away in grand style at some queer outlandish stuff,
+which fairly baffled my gumption. I must confess, however, both in
+fairness to Taffy and to James, that, as I had been up since five in the
+morning (having pawned my word to send home Duncan Imrie, the
+heel-cutter's new duffle great-coat by breakfast time, as he had to go
+into the Edinburgh leather-market by eleven), my een were gathering
+straws; and it was only at the fearsome parts that I could for half a
+moment keep them sundry. "Many men," however, "many minds," as the
+copy-line book says; and as every one has a right to judge for himself, I
+requested James to copy the concern out for me; and ye here have it, word
+for word, without substraction, multiplication, or addition.
+
+
+
+The Maid Of Damascus
+
+
+In the reign of the Greek Emperor Heraclius, when the beautiful city of
+Damascus was at the height of its splendour and magnificence, dwelt
+therein a young noble, named Demetrius, whose decayed fortunes did not
+correspond with the general prosperity of the times. He was a youth of
+ardent disposition, and very handsome in person: pride kept him from
+bettering his estate by the profession of merchandise, yet more keenly
+did he feel the obscurity to which adverse fates had reduced him, that in
+his lot was involved the fortune of one dearer than himself.
+
+It so happened that, in that quarter of the city which faces the row of
+palm-trees, within the gate Keisan, dwelt a wealthy old merchant, who had
+a beautiful daughter. Demetrius had by chance seen her some time before,
+and he was so struck with her loveliness, that, after pining for many
+months in secret, he ventured on a disclosure, and, to his delighted
+surprise, found that Isabelle had long silently nursed a deep and almost
+hopeless passion for him also; so, being now aware that their love was
+mutual, they were as happy as the bird that, all day long, sings in the
+sunshine from the summits of the cypress-trees.
+
+True is the adage of the poet, that "the course of true love never did
+run smooth"; and, in the father of the maiden, they found that a
+stumbling-block lay in the path of their happiness, for he was of an
+avaricious disposition, and they knew that he valued gold more than
+nobility of blood. Their fears grew more and more, as Isabelle, in her
+private conversations, endeavoured to sound her father on this point; and
+although the suspicions of affection are often more apparent than real,
+in this they were not mistaken; for, without consulting his child--and as
+if her soul had been in his hand--he promised her in marriage to a rich
+old miser, ay, twice as rich, and nearly as old as himself.
+
+Isabelle knew not what to do; for, on being informed by her father of the
+fate he had destined for her, her heart forsook her, and her spirit was
+bowed to the dust. Nowhere could she rest, like the Thracian bird that
+knoweth not to fold its wings in slumber--a cloud had fallen for her over
+the fair face of nature--and, instead of retiring to her couch, she
+wandered about weeping, under the midnight stars, on the terrace on the
+house-top--wailing over the hapless fate, and calling on death to come
+and take her from her sorrows.
+
+At morning she went forth alone into the garden; but neither could the
+golden glow of the orange-trees, nor the perfumes of the rosiers, nor the
+delicate fragrance of the clustering henna and jasmine, delight her; so
+she wearied for the hour of noon, having privately sent to Demetrius,
+inviting him to meet her by the fountain of the pillars at that time.
+
+Poor Demetrius had, for some time, observed a settled sorrow in the
+conduct and countenance of his beautiful Isabelle--he felt that some
+melancholy revelation was to be made to him; and, all eagerness, he came
+at the appointed hour. He passed along the winding walks, unheeding of
+the tulips streaked like the ruddy evening clouds--of the flower
+betrothed to the nightingale--of the geranium blazing in scarlet
+beauty,--till, on approaching the place of promise, he caught a glance of
+the maid he loved--and, lo! she sate there in the sunlight, absorbed in
+thought; a book was on her knee, and at her feet lay the harp whose
+chords had been for his ear so often modulated to harmony.
+
+He laid his hand gently on her shoulder, as he seated himself beside her
+on the steps; and seeing her sorrowful, he comforted her, and bade her be
+of good cheer, saying, that Heaven would soon smile propitiously on their
+fortunes, and that their present trials would but endear them the more to
+each other in the days of after years. At length, with tears and sobs,
+she told him of what she had learned; and, while they wept on each
+other's bosoms, they vowed over the Bible, which Isabelle held in her
+hand, to be faithful to each other to their dying day.
+
+Meantime the miser was making preparations for the marriage ceremony, and
+the father of Isabelle had portioned out his daughter's dowery; when the
+lovers, finding themselves driven to extremity, took the resolution of
+escaping together from the city.
+
+Now, it so happened, in accordance with the proverb, which saith that
+evils never come single, that, at this very time, the city of Damascus
+was closely invested by a mighty army, commanded by the Caliph Abubeker
+Alwakidi, the immediate successor of Mahomet; and, in leaving the walls,
+the lovers were in imminent hazard of falling into their cruel hands;
+yet, having no other resource left, they resolved to put their perilous
+adventure to the risk.
+
+'Twas the Mussulman hour of prayer Magrib: the sun had just disappeared,
+and the purple haze of twilight rested on the hills, darkening all the
+cedar forests, when the porter of the gate Keisan, having been bribed
+with a largess, its folding leaves slowly opened, and forthwith issued a
+horseman closely wrapt up in a mantle; and behind him, at a little space,
+followed another similarly clad. Alas! for the unlucky fugitives, it so
+chanced that Derar, the captain of the night-guard, was at that moment
+making his rounds, and observing what was going on, he detached a party
+to throw themselves between the strangers and the town. The foremost
+rider, however, discovered their intention, and he called back to his
+follower to return. Isabelle--for it was she--instantly regained the
+gate which had not yet closed, but Demetrius fell into the hands of the
+enemy.
+
+As wont in those bloody wars, the poor prisoner was immediately carried
+by an escort into the presence of the Caliph, who put the alternative in
+his power of either, on the instant, renouncing his religion, or
+submitting to the axe of the headsman. Demetrius told his tale with a
+noble simplicity; and his youth, his open countenance, and stately
+bearing, so far gained on the heart of Abubeker, that, on his refusal to
+embrace Mahomedism, he begged of him seriously to consider of his
+situation, and ordered a delay of the sentence, which he must otherwise
+pronounce, until the morrow.
+
+Heart-broken and miserable, Demetrius was loaded with chains, and carried
+to a gloomy place of confinement. In the solitude of the night-hours he
+cursed the hour of his birth--bewailed his miserable situation--and
+feeling that all his schemes of happiness were thwarted, almost rejoiced
+that he had only a few hours to live.
+
+The heavy hours lagged on towards daybreak, and, quite exhausted by the
+intense agony of his feelings, he sank down upon the ground in a profound
+sleep, from which a band, with crescented turbans and crooked
+sword-blades, awoke him. Still persisting to reject the Prophet's faith,
+he was led forth to die; but, in passing through the camp, the Soubachis
+of the Caliph stopped the troop, as he had been commanded, and Demetrius
+was ushered into the tent, where Abubeker, not yet arisen, lay stretched
+on his sofa. For a while the captive remained resolute, preferring death
+to the disgrace of turning a renegado; but the wily Caliph, who had taken
+a deep and sudden interest in the fortunes of the youth, knew well the
+spring, by the touch of which his heart was most likely to be affected.
+He pointed out to Demetrius prospects of preferment and grandeur, while
+he assured him that, in a few days, Damascus must to a certainty
+surrender, in which case his mistress must fall into the power of a
+fierce soldiery, and be left to a fate full of dishonour, and worse than
+death itself; but, if he assumed the turban, he pledged his royal word
+that especial care should be taken that no harm should alight on her he
+loved.
+
+Demetrius paused, and Abubeker saw that the heart of his captive was
+touched. He drew pictures of power, and affluence, and domestic love,
+that dazzled the imagination of his hearer; and while the prisoner
+thought of his Isabelle, instead of rejecting the impious proposal, as at
+first he had done, with disdain and horror, his soul bent like iron in
+the breath of the furnace flame, and he wavered and became irresolute.
+The keen eye of the Caliph saw the working of his spirit within him, and
+allowed him yet another day to form his resolution. When the second day
+was expired, Demetrius craved a third; and on the fourth morning
+miserable man, he abjured the faith of his fathers, and became a
+Mussulman.
+
+Abubeker loved the youth, assigning him a post of dignity, and all the
+mighty host honoured him whom the Caliph delighted to honour. He was
+clad in rich attire, and magnificently attended, and, to all eyes,
+Demetrius seemed a person worthy of envy; yet, in the calm of thought,
+his conscience upbraided him, and he was far less happy than he seemed to
+be.
+
+Ere yet the glow of novelty had entirely ceased to bewilder the
+understanding of the renegade, preparations were made for the assault;
+and after a fierce but ineffectual resistance, under their gallant
+leaders Thomas and Herbis, the Damascenes were obliged to submit to their
+imperious conqueror, on condition of being allowed, within three days, to
+leave the city unmolested.
+
+When the gates were opened, Demetrius, with a heart overflowing with love
+and delight, was among the first to enter. He enquired of every one he
+met of the fate of Isabelle; but all turned from him with disgust. At
+length he found her out, but what was his grief and surprise--in a
+nunnery! Firm to the troth she had so solemnly plighted, she had
+rejected the proposition of her mercenary parent; and, having no idea but
+that her lover had shared the fate of all Christian captives, she had
+shut herself up from the world, and vowed to live the life of a vestal.
+
+The surprise, the anguish, the horror of Isabelle, when she beheld
+Demetrius in his Moslem habiliments, cannot be described. Her first
+impulse, on finding him yet alive, was to have fallen into his arms; but,
+instantly recollecting herself, she shrank back from him with loathing,
+as a mean and paltry dastard. "No, no," she cried, "you are no longer
+the man I loved; our vows of fidelity were pledged over the Bible; that
+book you have renounced as a fable; and he who has proved himself false
+to Heaven, can never be true to me!"
+
+Demetrius was conscience-struck; too late he felt his crime, and foresaw
+its consequences. The very object for whom he had dared to make the
+tremendous sacrifice had deserted him, and his own soul told him with how
+much justice; so, without uttering a syllable, he turned away
+heart-broken, from the holy and beautiful being whose affections he had
+forfeited for ever.
+
+When the patriots left Damascus, Isabelle accompanied them. Retiring to
+Antioch, she lived with the sisterhood for many years; and, as her time
+was passed between acts of charity and devotion, her bier was watered
+with many a tear, and the hands of the grateful duly strewed her grave
+with flowers. To Demetrius was destined a briefer career. All-conscious
+of his miserable degradation, loathing himself, and life, and mankind, he
+rushed back from the city into the Mahomedan camp; and entering, with a
+hurried step, the tent of the Caliph, he tore the turban from his brow,
+and cried aloud--"Oh, Abubeker! behold a God-forsaken wretch. Think not
+it was the fear of death that led me to abjure my religion--the religion
+of my fathers--the only true faith. No; it was the idol of Love that
+stood between my heart and heaven, darkening the latter with its shadow;
+and had I remained as true to God, as I did to the Maiden of my love, I
+had not needed this." So saying, and ere the hand of Abubeker could
+arrest him, he drew a poniard from his embroidered vest, and the
+heart-blood of the renegade spouted on the royal robes of the successor
+of Mahomet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So grandly had James spooted this bloody story, that notwithstanding my
+sleepiness, his words whiles dirled through my marrow like quicksilver,
+and set all my flesh a grueing. In the middle of it, he was himself so
+worked up, that twice he pulled his Kilmarnock from his head,
+silk-napkin, bandage and all, and threw them down with a thump on the
+table, which once wellnigh capsized a candlestick.
+
+The porter and the stabbing, also, very nearly put me beside myself; and
+I felt so queerish and eerie when I took my hat to wish him a
+good-night--knowing that baith Nanse and Benjie would be neither to hold
+nor bind, it being now half-past ten o'clock--that, had it not been for
+the shame of the thing, and that I remembered being one of the King's
+gallant volunteers, I fear I would have asked James for the lend of his
+lantern, to show me down the dark close.
+
+The reader will thus perceive that the adventure of the killing-coat,
+stuck alike in the measurement and in the making by Tammie Bodkin, was
+destined, in the great current of human events, to form a prominent
+feature, not only in my own history, but in that of worthy James Batter.
+To me it might be considered as a passing breeze--having been accustomed
+to see and suffer a vast deal; but my friend, I fear much, will bear
+marks of it to his grave. Yet I cannot blame myself with a safe
+conscience for James having fallen the victim to Cursecowl. I had tried
+everything to solder up matters which the heart of man could suggest; and
+knowing that it was a catastrophe which would bring down open war and
+rebellion throughout the whole parish, my thoughts were all of peace, and
+how to stave off the eruption of the bloody heathen. I had thought over
+the thing seriously in my bed; and, reckoning plainly that Cursecowl was
+not one likely soon to hold out a flag of truce, I had come to the
+determination within myself to sound a parley--and offer either to take
+back the coat, or refund part of the purchase-money. I may add, that
+having an unbounded regard for his judgment and descretion, I had, in my
+own mind, selected James Batter to be sent as the ambassador. The same
+day, however, brought round the extraordinary purchase of the
+Willie-goat's head, and gave a new and unexpected turn to the whole
+business.
+
+Folk, moreover, should never be so over-proud as not to confess when they
+are in fault; and from what happened, I am free to admit, that James,
+harmless as a sucking dove, was no match in such a matter for the like of
+Cursecowl, who was a perfect incarnation, for devilry and cunning, of the
+old Serpent himself.
+
+My intentions, however, were good, and those of a Christian; for, had
+Cursecowl accepted the ten shillings by way of blood-money, which it was
+thus my intention to have offered, this fearful and bloody stramash would
+have been hushed up without the world having become a whit the wiser.
+But "there is many a slip," as the proverb says, "between the cup and the
+lip"; and the best intentions often fall to the ground, like the
+beggarman between the two stools.
+
+The final conclusion of the whole tradegy was, as it behoves me to
+mention, that Cursecowl, in consideration of a month's gratis work in the
+slaughter-house, made a brotherly legacy of the coat to his nephew, young
+Killim. The laddie was a perfect world's wonder every Sunday, and would
+have been laughed at out of his seven senses, had he not at last rebelled
+and fairly thrown it off. I make every allowance for the young man; and
+am sorry to confess that it was indeed a perfect shame to be seen. At
+Dalkeith, where one is well known, anything may pass; but I was always in
+bodily terror, that, had he gone to Edinburgh, he would have been taken
+up by the police, on suspicion of being either a Spanish pawtriot or a
+highway robber.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE--CATCHING A PHILISTINE IN THE COAL-HOLE
+
+
+Years wore on after the departure and death of poor Mungo Glen, during
+the which I had a sowd of prentices, good, bad, and indifferent, and who
+afterwards cut, and are cutting, a variety of figures in the world.
+Sometimes I had two or three at a time; for the increase of business that
+flowed in upon me with a full stream was tremendous, enabling me--who say
+it that should not say it--to lay by a wheen bawbees for a sore head, or
+the frailties of old age. Somehow or other, the clothes made on my
+shopboard came into great vogue through all Dalkeith, both for neatness
+of shape and nicety of workmanship; and the young journeymen of other
+masters did not think themselves perfected, or worthy a decent wage, till
+they had crooked their houghs for three months in my service. With
+regard to myself, some of my acquaintances told me, that if I had gone
+into Edinburgh to push my fortune, I could have cut half the trade out of
+bread, and maybe risen, in the course of nature, to be Lord Provost
+himself; but I just heard them speak, and kept my wheisht. I never was
+overly ambitious; and I remembered how proud Nebuchadnaazer ended with
+eating grass on all-fours. Every man has a right to be the best judge of
+his own private matters; though, to be sure, the advice of a true friend
+is often more precious than rubies, and sweeter than the Balm of Gilead.
+
+It was about the month of March, in the year of grace _anno Domini_
+eighteen hundred, that the whole country trembled, like a giant ill of
+the ague, under the consternation of Buonaparte, and all the French
+vagabonds emigrating over, and landing in the Firth. Keep us all! the
+folk, doitit bodies, put less confidence than became them in what our
+volunteer regiments were able and willing to do; yet we had a remnant
+among us of the true blood, that with loud laughter laughed the creatures
+to scorn; and I, for one, kept up my pluck, like a true Highlander. Does
+any living soul believe that Scotland--the land of the Tweed, and the
+Clyde, and the Tay--could be conquered, and the like of us sold, like
+Egyptian slaves, into captivity? Fie, fie--I despise such haivers. Are
+we not descended, father and son, from Robert Bruce and Sir William
+Wallace, having the bright blood of freemen in our veins, and the
+Pentland Hills, as well as our own dear homes and firesides, to fight
+for? The rascal that would not give cut-and-thrust for his country as
+long as he had a breath to draw, or a leg to stand on, should be tied
+neck and heels, without benefit of clergy, and thrown over Leith pier, to
+swim for his life like a mangy dog!
+
+Hard doubtless it is--and I freely confess it--to be called by sound of
+bugle, or tuck of drum, from the counter and the shopboard--men, that
+have been born and bred to peaceful callings, to mount the red-jacket,
+soap the hair, buckle on the buff-belt, load with ball-cartridge, and
+screw bayonets; but it's no use talking. We were ever the free British;
+and before we would say to Frenchmen that we were their humble servants,
+we would either twist the very noses off their faces, or perish in the
+glorious struggle.
+
+It was aye the opinion of the Political folk, the Whigs, the Black-nebs,
+the Radicals, the Papists, and the Friends of the People, together with
+the rest of the clan-jamphrey, that it was a done battle, and that
+Buonaparte would lick us back and side. All this was in the heart and
+heat of the great war, when we were struggling, like drowning men, for
+our very life and existence, and when our colours--the true British
+flag--were nailed to the mast-head. One would have thought these rips
+were a set of prophets, they were all so busy prophesying, and never
+anything good. They kent (believe them) that we were to be smote hip and
+thigh; and that to oppose the vile Corsican was like men with
+strait-jackets out of Bedlam. They could see nothing brewing around them
+but death, and disaster, and desolation, and pillage, and national
+bankruptcy--our brave Highlanders, with their heads shot off, lying on
+the bloody field of battle, all slaughtered to a man; our sailors,
+handcuffed and shackled, musing in a French prison on the bypast days of
+Camperdown, and of Lord Rodney breaking through the line; with all their
+fleets sunk to the bottom of the salt sea, after being raked fore and aft
+with chain-shot; and our timber, sugar, tea and treacle merchants, all
+fleeing for safety and succour down to lodgings in the Abbey Strand, with
+a yellow stocking on the ae leg and a black one on the other, like a
+wheen mountebanks. Little could they foresee, with their spentacles of
+prophecy, that a battle of Waterloo would ever be fought, to make the
+confounded fugies draw in their horns, and steek up their scraighing gabs
+for ever. Poor fushionless creatures!
+
+I do not pretend to be a politician,--having been bred to the tailoring
+line syne ever I was a callant, and not seeing the Adverteezer
+Newspapers, or the Edinburgh Evening Courant, save and except at an orra
+time,--so I shall say no more, nor pretend to be one of the
+thousand-and-one wise men, able and willing to direct his Majesty's
+Ministers on all matters of importance regarding Church or State. One
+thing, however, I trust I ken, and that is, my duty to my King as his
+loyal subject, to old Scotland as her unworthy son, and to my family as
+their prop, support, and breadwinner;--so I shall stick to all three
+(under Heaven) as long as I have a drop of blood in my precious veins.
+But the truth is--and I will let it out and shame the de'il--that I could
+not help making these general observations (as Maister Wiggie calls the
+spiritualeezing of his discourses), as what I have to relate might well
+make my principles suspected, were they not known to all the world to be
+as firm as the foundations of the Bass Rock. Ye shall nevertheless judge
+for yourselves.
+
+It was sometime in the blasty month of March, the weather being rawish
+and rainy, with sharp frosty nights that left all the window-soles
+whitewashed over with frost rind in the mornings, that as I was going out
+in the dark, before lying down in my bed, to give a look into the
+hen-house, and lock the coal-cellar, so that I might hang the bit key on
+the nail behind our room window-shutter, I happened to give a keek in,
+and, lo and behold! the awful apparition of a man with a yellow jacket,
+lying sound asleep on a great lump of parrot-coal in a corner!
+
+In the first hurry of my terror and surprise, at seeing a man with a
+yellow jacket and a green foraging-cap in such a situation, I was like to
+drop the good twopenny candle, and faint clean away; but, coming to
+myself in a jiffie, I determined, in case it might be a highway robber,
+to thraw about the key, and, running up for the firelock, shoot him
+through the head instantly, if found necessary. In turning round the
+key, the lock, being in want of a feather of oil, made a noise, and
+wakened the poor wretch, who, jumping to the soles of his feet in
+despair, cried out in a voice that was like to break my heart, though I
+could not make out one word of his paraphernally. It minded me, by all
+the world, of a wheen cats fuffing and fighting through ither, and whiles
+something that sounded like "Sugar, sugar, measure the cord," and "dabble
+dabble." It was worse than the most outrageous Gaelic ever spoken in the
+height of passion by a Hieland shearer.
+
+"Oho!" thinks I, "friend, ye cannot be a Christian from your lingo,
+that's one thing poz; and I would wager tippence you're a Frenchy. Who
+kens, keep us all, but ye may be Buonaparte himself in disguise, come
+over in a flat-bottomed boat to spy the nakedness of the land. So ye may
+just rest content, and keep your quarters good till the morn's morning."
+
+It was a wonderful business, and enough to happen to a man in the course
+of his lifetime, to find Mounseer from Paris in his coal-neuk, and have
+the enemy of his country snug under lock and key; so, while he kept
+rampauging, fuffing, stamping, and _diabbling_ away, I went in and
+brought out Benjie, with a blanket rowed round him, and my journeyman,
+Tommy Staytape--who, being an orphan, I made a kind of parlour-boarder
+of, he sleeping on a shake-down beyond the kitchen-fire--to hold a
+consultation, and be witness of the transaction.
+
+I got my musket, and Tommy Staytape armed himself with the goose--a
+deadly weapon, whoever may get a clour with it--and Benjie took the poker
+in one hand, and the tongs in the other; and out we all marched briskly,
+to make the Frenchman, that was locked up from the light of day in the
+coal-house, surrender. After hearkening at the door for a while, and
+finding all quiet, we gave a knock to rouse him up, and see if we could
+bring any thing out of him by speering cross-questions. Tommy and Benjie
+trembled from top to toe, like aspen leaves, but fient a word could we
+make common sense of at all. I wonder who educates these foreign
+creatures? it was in vain to follow him, for he just gab-gabbled away,
+like one of the stone masons at the Tower of Babel. At first I was
+completely bamboozled, and almost dung stupid, though I kent one word of
+French which I wanted to put to him, so I cried through, "Canna you speak
+Scotcha, Mounseer?"
+
+He had not the politeness to stop and make answer, but just went on with
+his string of haivers, without either rhyme or reason, which we could
+make neither top, tail, nor main of.
+
+It was a sore trial to us all, putting us to our wit's end, and how to
+come on was past all visible comprehension; when Tommy Staytape, giving
+his elbow a rub, said, "Od, maister, I wager something that he's broken
+loose frae Penicuik. We have him like a rotten in a fa'."
+
+On Penicuik being mentioned, we heard the foreign creature in the
+coal-house groaning out, "och," and "ochone," and "parbleu," and "Mysie
+Rabble,"--that I fancy was his sweetheart at home, some bit French quean,
+that wondered he was never like to come from the wars and marry her. I
+thought on this, for his voice was mournful, though I could not
+understand the words; and kenning he was a stranger in a far land, my
+bowels yearned within me with compassion towards him.
+
+I would have given half-a-crown at that blessed moment to have been able
+to wash my hands free of him; but I swithered, and was like the cuddie
+between the two bundles of hay. At long and last a thought struck me,
+which was to give the deluded simple creature a chance of escape;
+reckoning that, if he found his way home, he would see the shame and
+folly of fighting against us any more; and, marrying Mysie Rabble, live a
+contented and peaceful life, under his own fig and bay tree. So wishing
+him a sound sleep, I cried through the door, "Mounseer, gooda nighta";
+decoying away Benjie and Tommy Staytape into the house. Bidding them
+depart to their beds, I said to them after shutting the door, "Now,
+callants, we have the precious life of a fellow-creature in our hand, and
+to account for. Though he has a yellow jacket on, and speaks nonsense,
+yet, nevertheless, he is of the same flesh and blood as ourselves. Maybe
+we may be all obliged to wear green foraging-caps before we die yet!
+Mention what we have seen or heard to no living soul; for maybe, if he
+were to escape, we would be all taken up on suspicion of being spies, and
+hanged on a gallows as high as Haman."--After giving them this wholesome
+advice, I dispatched them to their beds like lamplighters, binding them
+to never fash their thumbs, but sleep like tops, as I would keep a sharp
+look-out till morning.
+
+As soon, howsoever, as I heard them sleeping, and playing on the pipes
+through their noses, I cried first "Tommy," and syne "Benjie," to be
+sure; and, glad to receive no answer from either, I went to the aumrie
+and took out a mutton-bone, gey sair pyked, but fleshy enough at the
+mouse end; and, putting a penny row beside it, crap out to the coal-house
+on my tiptaes. All was quiet as pussie,--so I shot them through the hole
+at the corner made for letting the gaislings in by; and giving a tirl,
+cried softly through, "Halloa, Mounseer, there's your suppera fora youa;
+for I dara saya you are yauppa."
+
+The poor chiel commenced again to grunt and grane, and groan and yelp,
+and cry ochone;--and make such woful lamentations, that heart of man
+could not stand it; and I found the warm tears prap-prapping to my een.
+Before being put to this trial of my strength, I thought that, if ever it
+was my fortune to foregather with a Frenchman, either him or me should do
+or die; but, i'fegs, one should not crack so crouse before they are put
+to the test; and, though I had taken a prisoner without fighting at
+all--though he had come into the coal-hole of the Philistines of his own
+accord as it were, and was as safe as the spy in the house of Rahab at
+Jericho--and though we had him like a mouse beneath a firlet, snug under
+custody of lock and key, yet I considered within myself, with a pitiful
+consideration, that, although he could not speak well, he might yet feel
+deeply; that he might have a father and mother, and sisters and brothers,
+in his ain country, weeping and wearying for his return; and that his
+true love Mysie Rabble might pine away like a snapped flower, and die of
+a broken heart.
+
+Being a volunteer, and so one of his Majesty's confidential servants, I
+swithered tremendously between my duty as a man and a soldier; but, do
+what you like, nature will aye be uppermost. The scale weighed down to
+the side of pity. I hearkened to the scripture that promises a blessing
+to the merciful in heart; and determined, come of it what would, to let
+the Frenchy take his chance of falling into other hands.
+
+Having given him a due allowance by looking at my watch, and thinking he
+would have had enough of time to have taken his will of the mutton-bone
+in the way of pyking, I went to the press and brought out a bottle of
+swipes, which I also shoved through the hole; although, for lack of a
+tanker, there being none at hand, he would be obliged to lift it to his
+head, and do his best. To show the creature did not want sense, he
+shoved, when he was done, the empty plate and the toom bottle through
+beneath the door, mumbling some trash or other which no living creature
+could comprehend, but which I dare say, from the way it was said, was the
+telling me how much he was obliged for his supper and poor lodging. From
+my kindness towards him, he grew more composed; but as he went back to
+the corner to lie down, I heard him give two-three heavy sighs.--I could
+not thole't, mortal foe though the man was of mine; so I gave the key a
+canny thraw round in the lock, as it were by chance; and, wishing him a
+good-night, went to my bed beside Nanse.
+
+At the dawn of day, by cock-craw, Benjie and Tommy Staytape, keen of the
+ploy, were up and astir, as anxious as if their life depended on it, to
+see that all was safe and snug, and that the prisoner had not shot the
+lock. They agreed to march sentry over him half an hour the piece, time
+about, the one stretching himself out on a stool beside the kitchen fire,
+by way of a bench in the guard-house, while the other went to and fro
+like the ticker of a clock. I dare say they saw themselves marching him
+after breakfast time, with his yellow jacket, through a mob of weans with
+glowering een and gaping mouths, up to the Tolbooth.
+
+The back window being up a jink, I heard the two confabbing. "We'll draw
+cuts," said Benjie, "which is to walk sentry first; see, here's two
+straws, the longest gets the choice."--"I've won," cried Tommy; "so gang
+you in a while, and if I need ye, or grow frightened, I'll beat
+leather-ty-patch wi' my buckles on the back-door. But we had better see
+first what he is about, for he may be howking a hole through aneath the
+foundations; thae fiefs can work like moudiwarts."--"I'll slip forret,"
+said Benjie, "and gie a peep."--"Keep to a side," cried Tommy Staytape,
+"for, dog on it, Moosey'll maybe hae a pistol; and, if his birse be up,
+he would think nae mair o' shooting ye as dead as a red herring, than I
+would do of taking my breakfast."
+
+"I'll rin past, and gie a knock at the door wi' the poker to rouse him
+up?" asked Benjie.
+
+"Come away then," answered Tommy, "and ye'll hear him gie a yowl, and
+commence gabbling like a goose."
+
+As all this was going on, I rose and took a vizzy between the chinks of
+the window-shutters; so, just as I got my neb to the hole, I saw Benjie,
+as he flew past, give the door a drive. His consternation, on finding it
+flee half open, may be easier imagined than described; especially, as on
+the door dunting to again, it being soople in the hinges, they both
+plainly heard a fistling within. Neither of them ever got such a fleg
+since they were born; for expecting the Frenchman to bounce out like a
+roaring lion, they hurried like mad into the house, couping the creels
+over one another, Tommy spraining his thumb against the back-door, and
+Benjie's foot going into Tommy's coat-pocket, which it carried away with
+it, like a cloth-sandal.
+
+At the noise of this stramash, I took opportunity to come fleeing down
+the stair, with the gun in my hand; in the first place, to show them I
+was not frightened to handle fire-arms; and, in the second, making
+pretence that I thought it was Mounseer with his green foraging-cap
+making an attempt at housebreaking. Benjie was in a terrible pickle;
+and, though his nose was blooding with the drive he had come against
+Tommy's teeth, he took hold of my arm like grim death, crying, "Take
+tent, faither, take tent; the door is open, and the Penicuiker hiding
+himself behind it. He'll brain some of us with a lump of coal--and will
+he!"
+
+I jealoused at once that this was nonsense; judging that, by all means of
+rationality, the creature would be off and away like lightning to the
+sea-shore, and over to France in some honest man's fishing boat, down by
+at Fisherrow; but, to throw stoure in the een of the two callants, I
+loaded with a wheen draps in their presence; and, warily priming the pan,
+went forward with the piece at full-cock.
+
+Tommy and Benjie came behind me, while, pushing the door wide open with
+the muzzle, as I held my finger at the tricker, I cried, "Stand or be
+shot"; when young Cursecowl's big ugly mastiff-dog, with the bare mutton
+bone in its teeth, bolted through between my legs like a fury, and with
+such a force as to heel me over on the braid of my back, while I went a
+dunt on the causey that made the gun go off, and riddled Nanse's best
+washing-tub, in a manner that laid it on the superannuated list as to the
+matter of holding in water. The goose that was sitting on her eggs,
+among clean straw, in the inside of it, was also rendered a lameter for
+life.
+
+What became of the French vagrant was never seen or heard tell of, from
+that day to this. Maybe he was catched, and, tied neck and heels,
+hurried back to Penicuik as fast as he left it; or maybe--as one of the
+Fisherrow oyster-boats was amissing next morning--he succeeded in giving
+our brave fleets the slip, and rowing night and day against wind and
+tide, got home in a safe skin: but this is all matter of surmise--nobody
+kens.
+
+On making search in the coal-house at our leisure afterwards, we found a
+boxful of things with black dots on them, some with one, some with two,
+and four, and six, and so on, for playing at an outlandish game they call
+the dominoes. It was the handiwork of the poor French creature, that had
+no other Christian employment but making these and suchlike, out of
+sheep-shanks and marrow bones. I never liked gambling all my life, it
+being contrary to the Ten Commandments; and mind of putting on the back
+of the fire the old pack of cards, with the Jack of Trumps among them,
+that the deboshed journeymen tailors, in the shop with me in the
+Grassmarket, used to play birkie with when the maister's back was turned.
+This is the first time I have acknowledged the transaction to a living
+soul; had they found me out at the time, my life would not have been
+worth a pinch of snuff. But as to the dominoes, considering that the
+Frenchy must have left them as a token of gratitude, and as the only
+payment in his power for a bit comfortable supper, it behoved me--for so
+I thought--not to turn the wrong side of my face altogether on his
+present, as that would be unmannerly towards a poor stranger.
+
+Nevertheless, and notwithstanding all these reasons, the dominoes, after
+everything that can be said of good anent them, were a black sight, and
+for months and months produced a scene of riot and idleness after working
+hours, that went far to render our housie that was before a picture of
+decorum and decency a tabernacle of confusion and a hell upon earth.
+Whenever time for stopping work came about, down we regularly all sat,
+night after night, the wife, Benjie, and Tommy Staytape, and myself,
+playing for a ha'penny the game, and growing as anxious, fierce, and keen
+about it, as if we had been earning the bread of life. After two or
+three months' trial, I saw that it would never do, for all subordination
+was fast coming to an end in our bit house, and, for lack of looking
+after, a great number of small accounts for clouting elbows, piecing
+waistcoats, and mending leggins, remained unpaid; a great number of wauf
+customers crowding about us, by way of giving us their change, but with
+no intention of ever paying a single fraction. The wife, that used to
+keep everything bein and snug, behaving herself like the sober mother of
+a family, began to funk on being taken through hands, and grew
+obstrapulous with her tongue. Instead of following my directions--who
+was his born maister in the cutting and shaping line--Tommy Staytape
+pretended to set up a judgment of his own, and disfigured some
+ploughmen's jackets in a manner most hideous to behold; while, to crown
+all, even Absalom, the very callant Benjie, my only bairn, had the
+impudence to contradict me more than once, and began to think himself as
+clever as his father. Save us all! it was a terrible business, but I
+determined, come what would, to give it the finishing stitch.
+
+Every night being worse than another, I did not wait long for an
+opportunity of letting the whole of them ken my mind, and that, whenever
+I chose, I could make them wheel to the right about. So it chanced, as
+we were playing, that I was in prime luck, first rooking the one and syne
+the other, and I saw them twisting and screwing their mouths about as if
+they were chewing bitter aloes. Finding that they were on the point of
+being beaten roop and stoop, they all three rose up from the chairs,
+crying with one voice, that I was a cheat.--An elder of Maister Wiggie's
+kirk to be called a cheat! Most awful!!! Flesh and blood could not
+stand it, more especially when I thought on who had dared to presume to
+call me such; so, in a whirlwind of fury, I swept up two nievefuls of
+dominoes off the table, and made them flee into the bleezing fire; where,
+after fizzing and cracking like a wheen squeebs, the whole tot, except
+about half-a-dozen which fell into the porritch-pot, which was on boiling
+at the time, were reduced to a heap of grey aizles. I soon showed them
+who was the top of the tree, and what they were likely to make of
+undutiful rebellion.
+
+So much for a Mounseer's legacy; being in a kind of doubt whether,
+according to the Riot Act and the Articles of War, I had a clear
+conscience in letting him away, I could not expect that any favour
+granted at his hands was likely to prosper. In fighting, it is well kent
+to themselves and all the world, that they have no earthly chance with
+us; so they are reduced to the necessity of doing what they can, by
+coming to our firesides in sheep's clothing, and throwing ram-pushion
+among the family broth. They had better take care that they do not get
+their fingers scadded.
+
+Having given the dominoes their due, and washed my hands free of gambling
+I trust for evermore, I turned myself to a better business, which was the
+going, leaf by leaf, back through our bit day-book, where I found a
+tremendous sowd of wee outstanding debts. I daresay, not to tell a lee,
+there were fifty of them, from a shilling to eighteenpence, and so on;
+but small and small, reckoned up by simple addition, amount to a round
+sum; while, to add to the misery of the matter, I found we were
+entangling ourselves to work to a wheen ugly customers, skemps that had
+not wherewithal to pay lawful debts, and downright rascal-raggamuffins,
+and ne'er-do-weels. According to the articles of indenture drawn up
+between me and Tommy Staytape, by Rory Sneckdrawer the penny-writer, when
+he was bound a prentice to me for seven years, I had engaged myself to
+bring him up to be a man of business. Though now a journeyman, I
+reckoned the obligation still binding; so, tying up two dockets of
+accounts with a piece of twine, I gave one parcel to Tommy, and the other
+to Benjie, telling them by way of encouragement, that I would give them a
+penny the pound for what silver they could bring me in by hook or crook.
+
+ [Picture: An old Dalkeith body]
+
+After three days' toil and trouble, wherein they mostly wore their shoon
+off their feet, going first up one close and syne down another, up
+trap-stairs to garrets and ben long trances that led into dirty
+holes--what think ye did they collect? Not one bodle--not one coin of
+copper! This one was out of work;--and that one had his house-rent to
+pay;--and a third one had an income in his nose;--and a fourth was
+bedridden with rheumatics;--and a fifth one's mother's auntie's cousin
+was dead;--and a sixth one's good-brother's nevoy was going to be married
+come Martymas;--and a seventh one was away to the back of beyond to see
+his granny in the Hielands;--and so on. It was a terrible business, but
+what wool can ye get by clipping swine?
+
+The only rational answers I got were two; one of them, Geggie Trotter, a
+natural simpleton, told Tommy Staytape, "that, for part-payment, he would
+give me a prime leg of mutton, as he had killed his sow last week."--And
+what, said I to Benjie, did Jacob Truff the gravedigger tell ye by way of
+news? "He just bad me tell ye, faither, that hoo could ye expect he
+cou'd gie ye onything till the times grew better; as he hadna buried a
+living soul in the kirkyard for mair nor a fortnight."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX--ANENT BENJIE IN HIS THIRTEENTH YEAR
+
+
+It is a most wonderful thing to the eye of a philosopher, to make
+observation how youth gets up, notwithstanding all the dunts and tumbles
+of infancy--to say nothing of the spaining-brash and the teeth-cutting;
+and to behold the visible changes that the course of a few years
+produces. Keep us all! it seemed but yesterday to me, when Benjie, a wee
+bit smout of a wean, with long linty locks and docked petticoats, toddled
+but and ben, with a coral gumstick tied round his waist with a bit
+knitten; and now, after he had been at Dominie Threshem's for four years,
+he had learned to read Barrie's Collection almost as well as the master
+could do for his lugs; and was up to all manner of accounts, from simple
+addition and the multiplication-table, even to vulgar fractions, and all
+the lave of them.
+
+At the yearly examination of the school-room by the Presbytery and
+Maister Wiggie, he aye sat at the head of the form, and never failed
+getting a clap on the head and a wheen carvies. They that are fathers
+will not wonder that this made me as proud as a peacock; but when they
+asked his name, and found whose son he was, then the matter seemed to
+cease being a business of wonder, as nobody could suppose that an only
+bairn, born to me in lawful wedlock, could be a dult. Folk's
+cleverness--at least I should think so--lies in their pows; and, that
+allowed, Benjie's was a gey droll one, being of the most remarkable sort
+of a shape ye ever saw; but, what is more to the purpose both here and
+hereafter, he was a real good-hearted callant, though as gleg as a hawk
+and as sharp as a needle. Everybody that had the smallest gumption
+prophesied that he would be a real clever one; nor could we grudge that
+we took pains in his rearing--he having been like a sucking-turkey, or a
+hot-house plant from far away, delicate in the constitution--when we saw
+that the debt was likely to be paid with bank-interest, and that, by his
+uncommon cleverality, the callant was to be a credit to our family.
+
+Many and long were the debates between his fond mother and me, what trade
+we would breed him up to--for the matter now became serious, Benjie being
+in his thirteenth year; and, though a wee bowed in the near leg, from a
+suppleness about his knee-joint, nevertheless as active as a hatter, and
+fit for any calling whatsoever under the sun. One thing I had determined
+in my own mind, and that was, that he should never with my will go
+abroad. The gentry are no doubt philosophers enough to bring up their
+bairns like sheep to the slaughter, and dispatch them as cadies to Bengal
+and the Cape of Good Hope, as soon as they are grown up; when, lo and
+behold! the first news they hear of them is in a letter, sealed with
+black wax, telling how they died of the liver complaint, and were buried
+by six blacks two hours after.
+
+That was one thing settled and sealed, so no more need be said about it;
+yet, notwithstanding of Nanse's being satisfied that the spaewife was a
+deceitful gipsy, perfectly untrustworthy, she would aye have a finger in
+the pie, and try to persuade me in a coaxing way. "I'm sure," she would
+say, "ane with half an e'e may see that our son Benjie has just the
+physog of an admiral. It's a great shame contradicting nature."
+
+"Po, po," answered I, "woman, ye dinna ken what ye're saying. Do ye
+imagine that, if he were made a sea-admiral, we could ever live to have
+any comfort in the son of our bosom? Would he not, think ye, be obliged
+with his ship to sail the salt seas, through foul weather and fair; and,
+when he met the French, to fight, hack, and hew them down, lith and limb,
+with grape-shot and cutlass; till some unfortunate day or other, after
+having lost a leg and an arm in the service, he is felled as dead as a
+door-nail, with a cut and thrust over the crown, by some furious rascal
+that saw he was off his guard, glowring with his blind e'e another
+way?--Ye speak havers, Nanse; what are all the honours of this world
+worth? No worth this pinch of snuff I have between my finger and thumb,
+no worth a bodle, if we never saw our Benjie again, but he was aye
+ranging and rampauging far abroad, shedding human blood; and when we
+could only aye dream about him in our sleep, as one that was wandering
+night and day blindfold, down the long, dark, lampless avenue of
+destruction, and destined never more to visit Dalkeith again, except with
+a wooden stump and a brass virl, or to have his head blown off his
+shoulders, mast high, like ingan peelings, with some exploding earthquake
+of combustible gunpowder.--Call in the laddie, I say, and see what he
+would like to be himsell."
+
+Nanse ran but the house, and straightway brought Benjie, who was playing
+at the bools, ben by the lug and horn. I had got a glass, so my spirit
+was up. "Stand there," I said; "Benjie, look me in the face, and tell me
+what trade ye would like to be."
+
+"Trade?" answered Benjie; "I would like to be a gentleman."
+
+Dog on it, it was more than I could thole, and I saw that his mother had
+spoiled him; so, though I aye liked to give him wholesome reproof rather
+than lift my fist, I broke through this rule in a couple of hurries, and
+gave him such a yerk in the cheek with the loof of my hand, as made, I am
+sure, his lugs ring, and sent him dozing to the door like a peerie.
+
+"Ye see that," said I, as the laddie went ben the house whingeing; "ye
+see what a kettle of fish ye have made o't?"
+
+"Weel, weel," answered Nanse, a wee startled by my strong, decisive way
+of managing, "ye ken best, and, I fancy, maun tak' the matter your ain
+way. But ye can have no earthly objection to making him a lawyer's
+advocatt?"
+
+"I wad see him hanged first," answered I. "What! do you imagine I would
+set a son of mine to be a sherry-offisher, ganging about rampauging
+through the country, taking up fiefs and robbers, and suspicious
+characters, with wauf looks and waur claes; exposed to all manner of evil
+communication from bad company, in the way of business; and rouping out
+puir creatures that cannot find wherewithal to pay their lawful debts, at
+the Cross, by warrant of the Sherry, with an auld chair in ae hand and a
+eevery hammer in the ither? Siccan a sight wad be the death o' me."
+
+"What think ye then of the preaching line?" asked Nanse.
+
+"The preaching line!" quo' I--"No, no, that'll never do. Not that I want
+respect for ministers, who are the servants of the Most High; but the
+truth is, that unless ye have great friends and patronage of the like of
+the Duke down by, or Marquis of Lothian up by, or suchlike, ye may preach
+yoursell as hoarse as a corbie, from June to January, before onybody will
+say, 'Hae, puir man, there's a kirk.' And if no kirk casts up--which is
+more nor likely--what can a young probationer turn his hand to? He had
+learned no trade, so he can neither work nor want. He daurna dig nor
+delve, even, though he were able, or he would be hauled by the cuff of
+the neck before his betters in the General Assembly, for having the
+impudence to go for to be so bold as dishonour the cloth; and though he
+may get his bit orra half-a-guinea whiles, for holding forth in some bit
+country kirk, to a wheen shepherds and their dogs, when the minister
+himself, staring with the fat of good living and little work, is lying
+ill of a bile fever, or has the gout in his muckle toe, yet he has aye
+the miseries of uncertainty to encounter; his coat grows bare in the
+cuffs, greasy in the neck, and brown between the shouthers; his jawbones
+get long and lank, his een sunk, and his head grey wi' vexation, and what
+the wise Solomon calls 'hope deferred'; so at long and last, friendless
+and penniless, he takes the incurable complaint of a broken heart, and is
+buried out of the gate, in some bit strange corner of the kirkyard."
+
+"Stop, stop, gudeman," cried Nanse, half greeting, "that's an awfu'
+business; but I daresay it's owre true. But mightna we breed him a
+doctor? It seems they have unco profits; and, as he's sae clever, he
+might come to be a graduit."
+
+"Doctor!" answered I--"Keh, keh, let that flee stick i' the wa'; it's a'
+ye ken about it. If ye was only aware of what doctors had to do and see,
+between dwining weans and crying wives, ye would have thought twice
+before ye let that out. How de ye think our callant has a heart within
+him to look at folk blooding like sheep, or to sew up cutted throats with
+a silver needle and silk thread, as I would stitch a pair of trowsers; or
+to trepan out pieces of coloured skulls, filling up the hole with an iron
+plate; and pull teeth, maybe the only ones left, out of auld women's
+heads, and so on, to say nothing of rampauging with dark lanterns and
+double-tweel dreadnoughts, about gousty kirkyards, among humlock and long
+nettles, the haill night over, like spunkie--shoving the dead corpses,
+winding-sheets and all, into corn-sacks, and boiling their bones, after
+they have dissected all the red flesh off them, into a big caudron, to
+get out the marrow to make drogs of?"
+
+"Eh, stop, stop, Mansie!" cried Nanse holding up her hands.
+
+"Na," continued I, "but it's a true bill--it's as true as ye are sitting
+there. And do ye think that any earthly compensation, either gowpins of
+gowd by way of fees, or yellow chariots to ride in, with a black servant
+sticking up behind, like a sign over a tobacconist's door, can ever make
+up for the loss of a man's having all his feelings seared to iron, and
+his soul made into whinstone, yea, into the nether-millstone, by being
+art and part in sic dark and devilish abominations? Go away wi' siccan
+downright nonsense. Hearken, to my words, Nanse, my dear. The happiest
+man is he that can live quietly and soberly on the earnings of his
+industry, pays his day and way, works not only to win the bread of life
+for his wife and weans, but because he kens that idle-set is sinful;
+keeps a pure heart towards God and man; and, caring not for the fashion
+of this world, departs from it in the hope of going, through the merits
+of his Redeemer, to a better."
+
+"Ye are right, after a'," said Nanse, giving me a pat on the shouther;
+and finding who was her master as well as spouse--"I'll wad it become me
+to gang for to gie advice to my betters. Tak' your will of the business,
+gudeman; and if ye dinna mak' him an admiral, just mak' him what ye
+like."
+
+Now is the time, thought I to myself, to carry out my point, finding the
+drappikie I had taken with Donald M'Naughton, in settling his account for
+the green jacket, still working in my noddle, and giving me a power of
+words equal to Mr Blouster, the Cameronian preacher,--now is the time,
+for I still saw the unleavened pride of womankind wambling within her
+like a serpent that has got a knock on the pow, and been cast down but
+not destroyed; so taking a hearty snuff out of my box, and drawing it up
+first one nostril, then another, syne dighting my finger and thumb on my
+breek-knees, "What think ye," said I, "of a sweep? Were it not for
+getting their faces blacked like savages, a sweep is not such a bad trade
+after a'; though, to be sure, going down lums six stories high,
+head-foremost, and landing upon the soles of their feet upon the
+hearth-stone, like a kittlin, is no just so pleasant." Ye observe, it
+was only to throw cold wayter on the unthrifty flame of a mother's pride
+that I said this, and to pull down uppishness from its heathenish temple
+in the heart, head-foremost. So I looked to her, to hear how she would
+come on.
+
+"Haivers, haivers," said Nanse, birsing up like a cat before a cooley.
+"Sweep, say ye? I would sooner send him up wi' Lunardi to the man of the
+moon; or see him banished, shackled neck and heels, to Botany Bay."
+
+"A weel, a weel," answered I, "what notion have ye of the packman line?
+We could fill his box with needles, and prins, and tape, and hanks of
+worsted, and penny thimbles, at a small expense; and, putting a stick in
+his hand, send him abroad into the wide world to push his fortune."
+
+The wife looked dumfoundered. Howsoever--"Or breed him a rowley-powley
+man," continued I, "to trail about the country frequenting fairs; and
+dozing thro' the streets selling penny cakes to weans, out of a basket
+slung round the neck with a leather strap; and parliaments, and quality,
+brown and white, and snaps well peppered, and gingerbread nits, and so
+on. The trade is no a bad ane, if creatures would only learn to be
+careful."
+
+"Mansie Wauch, Mansie Wauch, hae ye gane out o' yere wuts?" cried
+Nanse--"are ye really serious?"
+
+I saw what I was about, so went on without pretending to mind her. "Or
+what say ye to a penny-pie-man? I'fegs, it's a cozy birth, and ane that
+gars the cappers birl down. What's the expense of a bit daigh, half an
+ounce weight, pirled round wi' the knuckles into a case, and filled half
+full o' salt and water, wi' twa or three nips o' braxy floating about
+in't? Just naething ava;--and consider on a winter night, when
+iceshackles are hinging from the tiles, and stomachs relish what is warm
+and tasty, what a sale they can get, if they go about jingling their
+little bell, and keep the genuine article. Then ye ken in the afternoon,
+he can show that he has two strings to his bow; and have a wheen cookies,
+either new baked for ladies' teaparties, or the yesterday's auld
+shopkeepers' het up i' the oven again--which is all to ae purpose."
+
+"Are ye really in your seven natural senses--or can I believe my ain een?
+I could almost believe some warlock had thrown glamour into them," said
+Nanse staring me broad in the face.
+
+"Take a good look, gudewife, for seeing's believing," quo' I; and then
+continued, without drawing breath or bridle, at full birr--
+
+"Or if the baking line does not please ye, what say ye to binding him
+regularly to a man-cook? There he'll see life in all its variorums.
+Losh keep us a', what an insight into the secrets of roasting,
+brandering, frying, boiling, baking, and brewing--nicking of geese's
+craigs--hacking the necks of dead chickens, and cutting out the tongues
+of leeving turkeys! Then what a steaming o' fat soup in the nostrils;
+and siccan a collection o' fine smells, as would persuade a man that he
+could fill his stomach through his nose! No weather can reach such
+cattle: it may be a storm of snow twenty feet deep, or an even-down pour
+of rain, washing the very cats off the house tops; when a weaver is
+shivering at his loom, with not a drop of blood at his finger nails, and
+a tailor like myself, so numb with cauld, that instead of driving the
+needle through the claith, he brogs it through his ain thumb--then, fient
+a hair care they; but, standing beside a ranting, roaring, parrot-coal
+fire, in a white apron and gingham jacket, they pour sauce out of ae pan
+into another, to suit the taste of my Lord this, and my Lady that,
+turning, by their legerdemain, fish into fowl, and fowl into flesh; till,
+in the long run, man, woman, and wean, a' chew and champ away, without
+kenning more what they are eating than ye ken the day ye'll dee, or
+whether the Witch of Endor wore a demity falderal, or a manco petticoat."
+
+"Weel," cried Nanse, half rising to go ben the house, "I'll sit nae
+langer to hear ye gabbling nonsense like a magpie. Mak' Benjie what ye
+like; but ye'll mak' me greet the een out o' my head."
+
+"Hooly and fairly," said I; "Nanse, sit still like a woman, and hear me
+out;" so, giving her a pat on the shouther, she sat her ways down, and I
+resumed my discourse.
+
+"Ye've heard, gudewife, from Benjie's own mouth, that he has made up his
+mind to follow out the trade of a gentleman;--who has put such outrageous
+notions in his head I'm sure I'll not pretend to guess at. Having never
+myself been above daily bread, and constant work--when I could get it--I
+dare not presume to speak from experience: but this I can say, from
+having some acquaintances in the line, that, of all easy lives, commend
+me to that of a gentleman's gentleman. It's true he's caa'd a flunky,
+which does not sound quite the thing; but what of that? what's in a name?
+pugh! it does not signify a bawbee--no, nor that pinch of snuff: for, if
+we descend to particulars, we're all flunkies together, except his
+Majesty on the throne.--Then William Pitt is his flunky--and half the
+house of Commons are his flunkies, doing what he bids them, right or
+wrong, and no daring to disobey orders, not for the hair in their
+heads--then the Earl waits on my Lord Duke--Sir Something waits on my
+Lord Somebody--and his tenant, Mr So-and-so, waits on him--and Mr
+So-and-so has his butler--and the butler has his flunky--and the
+shoeblack brushes the flunky's jacket--and so on. We all hang at one
+another's tails like a rope of ingans--so ye observe, that any such
+objection in the sight of a philosopher like our Benjie, would not weigh
+a straw's weight.
+
+"Then consider, for a moment--just consider, gudewife--what company a
+flunky is every day taken up with, standing behind the chairs, and
+helping to clean plates and porter; and the manners he cannot help
+learning, if he is in the smallest gleg in the uptake, so that, when out
+of livery, it is the toss up of a halfpenny whether ye find out the
+difference between the man and the master. He learns, in fact,
+everything. He learns French--he learns dancing in all its branches--he
+learns how to give boots the finishing polish--he learns how to play at
+cards, as if he had been born and bred an Earl--he learns, from pouring
+the bottles, the names of every wine brewed abroad--he learns how to
+brush a coat, so that, after six months' tear and wear, one without
+spectacles would imagine it had only gotten the finishing stitch on the
+Saturday night before; and he learns to play on the flute, and the
+spinnet, and the piano, and the fiddle, and the bagpipes; and to sing all
+manner of songs, and to skirl, full gallop, with such a pith and birr,
+that though he was to lose his precious eyesight with the small-pox, or a
+flash of forked lightning, or fall down a three-story stair dead drunk,
+smash his legs to such a degree that both of them required to be cut off,
+above the knees, half an hour after, so far all right and well--for he
+could just tear off his shoulder-knot, and make a perfect fortune--in the
+one case, in being led from door to door by a ragged laddie, with a
+string at the button-hole, playing 'Ower the Border,' 'The Hen's March,'
+'Donald M'Donald,' 'Jenny Nettles,' and such like grand tunes, on the
+clarinet; or, in the other case, being drawn from town to town, and from
+door to door, on a hurdle, like a lord, harnessed to four dogs of all
+colours, at the rate of two miles in the hour, exclusive of
+stoppages.--What say ye, gudewife?"
+
+Nanse gave a mournful look, as if she was frighted I had grown demented,
+and only said, "Tak' your ain way, gudeman; ye'se get your ain way for
+me, I fancy."
+
+Seeing her in this Christian state of resignation, I determined at once
+to hit the nail on the head, and put an end to the whole business as I
+intended. "Now, Nanse," quo' I, "to come to close quarters with ye, tell
+me candidly and seriously what ye think of a barber? Every one must
+allow it's a canny and cozy trade."
+
+"A barber that shaves beards!" said Nanse. "'Od Mansie, ye're surely
+gaun gyte. Ye're surely joking me all the time?"
+
+"Joking!" answered I, smoothing down my chin, which was gey an'
+rough--"Joking here or joking there, I should not think the settling of
+an only bairn in an honourable way of doing for all the days of his
+natural life, is any joking business. Ye dinna ken what ye're saying,
+woman. Barbers! i'fegs, to turn up your nose at barbers! did ever living
+hear such nonsense! But to be sure, one can blame nobody if they speak
+to the best of their experience. I've heard tell of barbers, woman,
+about London, that rode up this street, and down that other street, in
+coaches and four, jumping out to every one that halooed to them, sharping
+razors both on stone and strap, at the ransome of a penny the pair; and
+shaving off men's beards, whiskers and all, stoop and roop, for a
+three-ha'pence. Speak of barbers! it's all ye ken about it. Commend me
+to a safe employment, and a profitable. They may give others a nick, and
+draw blood, but catch them hurting themselves. They are not exposed to
+colds and rheumatics, from east winds and rainy weather; for they sit, in
+white aprons, plaiting hair into wigs for auld folks that have bell-pows,
+or making false curls for ladies that would fain like to look smart in
+the course of nature. And then they go from house to house, like
+gentlemen in the morning; cracking with Maister this or Madam that, as
+they soap their chins with scented-soap, or put their hair up in marching
+order either for kirk or playhouse. Then at their leisure, when they're
+not thrang at home, they can pare corns to the gentry, or give
+ploughmen's heads the bicker-cut for a penny, and the hair into the
+bargain for stuffing chairs with; and between us, who knows--many
+rottener ship has come to land--but that some genty Miss, fond of plays,
+poems, and novels, may fancy our Benjie when he is giving her red hair a
+twist with the torturing irons, and run away with him, almost whether he
+will or not, in a stound of unbearable love!"
+
+Here making an end of my discourse, and halting to draw breath, I looked
+Nanse broad in the face, as much as to say, "Contradict me if ye daur,"
+and, "What think ye of that now?"--The man is not worth his lugs, that
+allows his wife to be maister; and being by all laws, divine and human,
+the head of the house, I aye made a rule of keeping my putt good. To be
+candid, howsoever, I must take leave to confess, that Nanse, being a
+reasonable woman, gave me but few opportunities of exerting my authority
+in this way. As in other matters, she soon came, on reflection, to see
+the propriety of what I had been saying and setting forth. Besides, she
+had such a motherly affection towards our bit callant, that sending him
+abroad would have been the death of her.
+
+To be sure, since these days--which, alas, and woe's me! are not
+yesterday now, as my grey hair and wrinkled brow but too visibly remind
+me--such ups and downs have taken place in the commercial world, that the
+barber line has been clipped of its profits and shaved close, from a
+patriotic competition among its members, like all the rest. Among other
+things, hair-powder, which was used from the sweep on the lum-head to the
+king on the throne, is only now in fashion with the Lords of Session and
+valy-deshambles; and pig-tails have been cut off from the face of the
+earth, root and branch. Nevertheless, as I have taken occasion to make
+observation, the foundations of the cutting and shaving line are as sure
+as that of the everlasting rocks; beards being likely to roughen, and
+heads to require polling, as long as wood grows and water runs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN--"PUGGIE, PUGGIE"--A STORY WITHOUT A TAIL
+
+
+The welfare of the human race and the improvement of society being my
+chief aim, in this record of my sayings and doings through the pilgrimage
+of life, I make bold at the instigation of Nanse, my worthy wife, to
+record in black and white a remarkably curious thing, to which I was an
+eye-witness in the course of nature. I have little reluctance to
+consent, not only because the affair was not a little striking in
+itself--as the reader will soon see--but because, like AEsop's Fables, it
+bears a good moral at the end of it.
+
+Many a time have I thought of the business alluded to, which happened to
+take place in our fore-shop one bonny summer afternoon, when I was
+selling a coallier wife, from the Marquis of Lothian's upper hill, a yard
+of serge at our counter-side. At the time she came in, although busied
+in reading an account of one of Buonaparte's battles in the Courant
+newspaper, I observed at her foot a bonny wee doggie, with a bushy black
+tail, of the dancing breed--that could sit on its hind-legs like a
+squirrel, cast biscuit from its nose, and play a thousand other most
+diverting tricks. Well, as I was saying, I saw the woman had a pride in
+the bit creature--it was just a curiosity like--and had belonged to a
+neighbour's son that volunteered out of the Berwickshire militia (the
+Birses, as they were called), into a regiment that was draughted away
+into Egypt, Malta, or the East Indies, I believe--so, it seems, the lad's
+father and mother thought much more about it, for the sake of him that
+was off and away--being to their fond eyes a remembrancer, and to their
+parental hearts a sort of living keepsake.
+
+After bargaining about the serge--and taking two or three other things,
+such as a leather-cap edged with rabbit-fur for her little nevoy--a dozen
+of plated buttons for her goodman's new waistcoat, which was making up at
+Bonnyrig by Nicky Sharpshears, my old apprentice--and a spotted silk
+napkin for her own Sunday neck wear--I tied up the soft articles with
+grey paper and skinie, and was handing over the odd bawbees of change,
+when, just as she was lifting the leather-cap from the counter, she said
+with a terrible face, looking down to the ground as if she was short
+sighted, "Pity me! what's that"?
+
+I could not imagine, gleg as I generally am, what had happened; so came
+round about the far end of the counter, with my spectacles on, to see
+what it was, when, lo and behold! I perceived a dribbling of blood all
+along the clean sanded floor, up and down, as if somebody had been
+walking about with a cut finger; but, after looking around us for a
+little, we soon found out the thief--and that we did.
+
+The bit doggie was sitting cowering and shivering, and pressing its back
+against the counter, giving every now and then a mournful whine, so we
+plainly saw that everything was not right. On the which, the wife,
+slipping a little back, snapped her finger and thumb before its nose, and
+cried out--"Hiskie, poor fellow!" but no--it would not do. She then
+tried it by its own name, and bade it rise, saying, "Puggie, Puggie!"
+when--would ever mortal man of woman born believe it?--its bit black,
+bushy, curly tail, was off by the rump--docked and away, as if it had
+been for a wager.
+
+"Eh, megstie!" cried the woman, laying down the leather-cap and the
+tied-up parcel, and holding out both her hands in astonishment. "Eh, my
+goodness, what's come o' the brute's tail? Lovyding! just see, it's
+clean gane! Losh keep me! that's awfu'! Div ye keep rotten-fa's about
+your premises, Maister Wauch? See, a bonny business as ever happened in
+the days of ane's lifetime!"
+
+As a furnishing tailor, as a Christian, and as an inhabitant of Dalkeith,
+my corruption was raised--was up like a flash of lightning, or a cat's
+back. Such doings in an enlightened age and a civilized country!--in a
+town where we have three kirks, a grammar school, a subscription library,
+a ladies' benevolent society, a mechanics' institution, and a debating
+club! My heart burned within me like dry tow; and I could mostly have
+jumped up to the ceiling with vexation and anger--seeing as plain as a
+pikestaff, though the simple woman did not, that it was the handiwork of
+none other than our neighbour Reuben Cursecowl, the butcher. Dog on it,
+it was too bad--it was a rascally transaction; so, come of it what would,
+I could not find it in my heart to screen him. "I'll wager, however,"
+said I, in a kind of off-hand way, not wishing exactly, ye observe, to be
+seen in the business, "that it will have been running away with
+beef-steaks, mutton-chops, sheep feet, or something else out of the
+booth; and some of his prentice laddies may have come across its
+hind-quarters accidentally with the cleaver."
+
+"Mistake here, or mistake there," said the woman, her face growing as red
+as the sleeve of a soldier's jacket, and her two eyes burning like live
+coals--"'Od the butcher, but I'll butcher him, the nasty, ugly,
+ill-faured vagabond; the thief-like, cruel, malicious, ill-hearted,
+down-looking blackguard! He would go for to offer for to presume for to
+dare to lay hands on an honest man's son's doug! It sets him weel, the
+bloodthirsty Gehazi, the halinshaker ne'er-do-weel! I'll gie him sic a
+redding up as he never had since the day his mother boor him!" Then
+looting down to the poor bit beast, that was bleeding like a sheep--"Ay,
+Puggie, man," she said in a doleful voice, "they've made ye an unco
+fright; but I'll gie them up their fit for't; I'll show them, in a couple
+of hurries, that they have catched a Tartar!"--and with that out went the
+woman, paper-parcel, leather-cap and all, randying like a tinkler from
+Yetholm; the wee wretchie cowering behind her, with the mouse-wabs
+sticking on the place I had put them to stop the bleeding; and looking,
+by all the world, like a sight I once saw, when I was a boy, on a visit
+to my father's half-cousin, Aunt Heatherwig, on the Castle-hill of
+Edinburgh--to wit, a thief going down Leith Walk, on his road to be
+shipped for transportation to Botany Bay, after having been pelted for a
+couple of hours with rotten eggs in the pillory.
+
+Knowing the nature of the parties concerned, and that intimately on both
+sides, I jealoused directly that there would be a stramash; so not
+liking, for sundry reasons, to have my nebseen in the business, I shut to
+the door, and drew the long bolt; while I hastened ben to the room, and,
+softly pulling up a jink of the window clapped the side of my head to it;
+that, unobserved, I might have an opportunity of overhearing the
+conversation between Reuben Cursecowl and the coallier wife; which,
+weel-a-wat, was likely to become public property.
+
+"Hollo! you man, de ye ken onything about that?" cried the randy
+woman;--but wait a moment, till I give a skiff of description of our
+neighbour Reuben.
+
+By this time--it was ten years after James Batter's tragedy--Mr Cursecowl
+was an oldish man--he is gathered to his fathers now--and was
+considerably past his best, as his wife, douce, honest woman, used to
+observe. His dress was a little in the Pagan style, and rendered him
+kenspeckle to the eye of observation. Instead of a hat, he generally
+wore a long red Kilmarnock nightcap, with a cherry on the top of it,
+through foul weather and fair; and having a kind of trot in his walk,
+from a bink forward in his knees, it dang-dangled behind him, like the
+cap of Mr Merry-man with the painted face, the showfolk's fool. On the
+afternoon alluded to, he was in full killing-dress, having on an auld
+blue short coatie, once long, but now docked in the tails, so that the
+pocket-flaps and hainch buttons were not above three inches from the
+place where his wife had snibbed it across by; and, from long use in his
+blood-thirsty occupation, his sleeves flashed in the daylight as if they
+had been double japanned. Tied round his beer-barrel-like waist was a
+stripped apron, blue and white; and at his left side hung a bloody gaping
+leather pouch, as if he had been an Israelite returned from the slaughter
+of the Philistines, filled with steels and knives, straight and crooked,
+that had done ample execution in their day I'll warrant them. Up his
+thighs were rolled his coarse rig-and-fur stockings, as if it were to
+gird him for the battle, and his feet were slipped into a pair of
+bauchles--that is, the under part of auld boots cut from the legs. As to
+his face, lo, and behold! the moon shining in the Nor-west--yea, the sun
+blazing in his glory--had not a more crimson aspect than Reuben. Like
+the pig-eyed Chinese folk on tea-cups, his peepers were diminutive and
+twinkling; but his nose made up for them--and that it did--being portly
+in all its dimensions broad and long, as to colour, liker a radish than
+any other production in nature. In short, he was as bonny a figure as
+ever man of woman born clapped eye on; and was cleaving away most
+devoutly, at a side of black-faced mutton, when the woman, as I said
+before, cried out, "Hollo! you man, do ye ken onything about that?"
+pointing to the dumb animal that crawled and crouched behind her.
+
+"Aweel, what o't?" cried Cursecowl, still hacking and cleaving away at
+the meat.
+
+"What o't? i' faith, billy, that's a gude ane," answered the wife. "But
+ye'll no get aff that way; catch me, my man. My name's no Jenny
+Mathieson an I haena ye afore your betters. I'll learn ye what
+soommenses are."
+
+Looking at her with a look of lightning for a couple of seconds--"Aff wi'
+ye, gin you're wise," quo' Cursecowl, still cleaving away--"or I'll maybe
+bring ye in for the sheep's-head it was trying to make off with its
+teeth. Do ye understand that?" And he gave a girn, that stretched his
+mouth from ear to ear.
+
+This was too much for the subterranean daughter of Eve; it was like
+putting a red-hot poker among the coals of her own pit. "Oh, ye
+incarnate cannibal!" she bawled out, doubling her nieve, and shaking it
+in Reuben's face; "if ye have a conscience at a', think black-burning
+shame o' yoursell! Just look, ye bluidy salvage; just take a look there,
+my bonny man, o' your handiwark now. Isn't that very pretty?"--"Aff wi'
+ye," continued Cursecowl, still cleaving away with the chopping-axe, and
+muttering a volley of curses through the knife, which he held between his
+teeth--"Aff wi' ye; and keep a calm sough."
+
+"The dog's no mine, or I wadna have cared sae muckle. Siccan a like
+beast! Siccan a fright to be seen!!! I'faith I think shame to tak' it
+hame again!! Ay, man, ye're a pretty fellow! Ye've run fast when the
+noses were dealing; ye're a bonny man to hack off the poor dumb animal's
+tail. If it had been a Christian like yoursell, it wad have mattered
+less--but a puir bit dumb harmless animal!"
+
+"Aff wi' ye there, and nane o' your chatter," thundered Reuben, stopping
+in his cleaving, and turning the side of his red face round to the woman.
+"Flee--vanish--and be cursed to ye--baith you and your doug thegither, ye
+infernal limmer! It's well for't, luckie, it was not his head instead of
+its tail. Ye had better steik your gab--cut your stick--and pack off,
+gin ye be wise."
+
+"Think shame--think shame--think black-burning shame o' yoursell, ye born
+and bred ruffian!" roared out the wife at the top story of her
+voice--shaking her doubled nieve before him--stamping her heels on the
+causey--then, drawing herself up, and holding her hands on her
+hainches--"Just look, I tell ye, you unhanged blackguard, at your
+precious handywark! Just look, what think ye of that now? Tak' another
+look now, ower that fief-like fiery nose o' yours, ye regardless Pagan!"
+
+Flesh and blood could stand this no longer; and I saw Cursecowl's anger
+boiling up within him, as in a red-hot fiery furnace.
+
+"Wait a wee, my woman," muttered Cursecowl to himself, as, swearing
+between his teeth, he hurried into the killing-booth.
+
+Furious as the woman, however, was, she had yet enough of common sense
+remaining within her to dread skaith; so, apprehending the bursting
+storm, she had just taken to her heels, when out he came, rampauging
+after her like a Greenland bear, with a large liver in each hand;--the
+one of which, after describing a circle round his head, flashed after her
+like lightning, and hearted her between the shoulders like a clap of
+thunder; while the other, as he was repeating the volley, slipping
+sideways from his fingers while he was driving it with all his force,
+played drive directly through the window where I was standing, and gave
+me such a yerk on the side of the head, that it could be compared to
+nothing else but the lines written on the stucco image of Shakspeare, the
+great playactor, on our parlour chimneypiece,
+
+ "The great globe itself,
+ Yea, all that it inherits, shall dissolve;"
+
+and I lay speechless on the floor for goodness knows the length of time.
+Even when I came to my recollection, it was partly to a sense of torment;
+for Nanse, coming into the room, and not knowing the cause of my
+disastrous overthrow, attributed it all to a fit of the apoplexy; and, in
+her frenzy of affliction, had blistered all my nose with her Sunday
+scent-bottle of aromatic vinegar.
+
+For some weeks after there was a bumming in my ears, as if all the
+bee-skeps on the banks of the Esk had been pent up within my head; and
+though Reuben Cursecowl paid, like a gentleman, for the four panes he had
+broken, he drove into me, I can assure him, in a most forcible and
+striking manner, the truth of the old proverb--which is the moral of this
+chapter that "listeners seldom hear anything to their own advantage."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT--MANSIE WAUCH ON SOME SERIOUS MUSINGS
+
+
+After consultation with friends, and much serious consideration on such a
+momentous subject, it having been finally settled on between the wife and
+myself to educate Benjie to the barber and haircutting line, we looked
+round about us in the world for a suitable master to whom we might
+entrust our dear laddie, he having now finished his education, and
+reached his fourteenth year.
+
+It was visible in a twinkling to us both, that his apprenticeship could
+not be gone through with at home in that first-rate style which would
+enable him to reach the top of the tree in his profession; yet it gave us
+a sore heart to think of sending away, at so tender an age, one who was
+so dear to his mother and me, and whom we had, as it were, in a manner
+made a pet of; so we reckoned it best to article him for a twelvemonth
+with Ebenezer Packwood at the corner, before finally sending him off to
+Edinburgh, to get his finishing in the wig, false-curl, and hair-baking
+department, under Urquhart, Maclachlan, or Connal. Accordingly, I sent
+for Eben to come and eat an egg with me--matters were entered upon and
+arranged--Benjie was sent on trial; and though at first he funked and
+fought refractory, he came, to the astonishment of his master and the old
+apprentice, in less than no time to cut hair without many visible
+shear-marks; and, within the first quarter, succeeded, without so much as
+drawing blood, to unbristle for a wager of his master's, the Saturday
+night's countenance of Daniel Shoebrush himself, who was as rough as a
+badger.
+
+Having thus done for Benjie, it now behoved me to have an eye towards
+myself; for, having turned the corner of manhood, I found that I was
+beginning to be wearing away down the hillside of life. Customers, who
+had as much faith in me as almost in their Bible with regard to
+everything connected with my own department, and who could depend on
+their cloth being cut according to the newest and most approved fashions,
+began now and then to return a coat upon my hand for alteration, as being
+quite out of date; while my daily work, to which in the days of other
+years I had got up blythe as the lark, instead of being a pleasure, came
+to be looked forward to with trouble and anxiety, weighing on my heart as
+a care, and on my shoulders as a burden.
+
+Finding but too severely that such was the case, and that there is no
+contending with the course of nature, I took sweet counsel together with
+James Batter over a cup of tea and a cookie, concerning what it was best
+for a man placed in my circumstances to betake myself to.
+
+As industry ever has its own reward, let me without brag or boasting be
+allowed to state, that in my own case, it did not disappoint my
+exertions. I had sat down a tenant, and I was now not only the landlord
+of my own house and shop, but of all the back tenements to the head of
+the garden, as also of the row of one-story houses behind, facing to the
+loan, in the centre of which Lucky Thamson keeps up the sign of the
+Tankard and Tappit Hen. It was also a relief to my mind, as the head of
+my family, that we had cut Benjie loose from his mother's apron string,
+poor fellow, and set him adrift in an honest way of doing to buffet the
+stormy ocean of life; so, everything considered, it was found that enough
+and to spare had been laid past by Nanse and me to spend the evening of
+our days by the lound dykeside of domestic comfort.
+
+In Tammy Bodkin, to whom I trust I had been a dutiful, as I know I was an
+honoured master, I found a faithful journeyman, he having served me in
+that capacity for nine years; so, it is not miraculous, being constantly,
+during that period, under my attentive eye, that he was now quite a
+deacon in all the departments of the business. As an eident scholar he
+had his reward; for customers, especially during the latter years, when
+my sight was scarcely so good, came at length to be not very scrupulous
+as to whether their cloth was cut by the man or his master. Never let
+filial piety be overlooked:--when I first patronized Tammie, and promoted
+him to the dignity of sitting crosslegged along with me on the
+working-board, he was a hatless and shoeless ragamuffin, the orphan lad
+of a widowed mother, whose husband had been killed by a chain-shot, which
+carried off his head, at the bloody battle of the Nile, under Lord
+Nelson. Tammie was the oldest of four, and the other three were lasses,
+that knew not in the morning where the day's providing was to come from,
+except by trust in Him who sent the ravens to Elijah. By allowing Tammie
+a trifle for board-wages, I was enabled to add my mite to the comforts of
+the family; for he was kind, frugal, and dutiful, and would willingly
+share with them to the last morsel. In the course of a few years he
+became his mother's bread-winner, the lasses being sent to service, I
+myself having recommended one of them to Deacon Burlings, and another to
+Springheel the dancing-master; retaining Katie, the youngest, for
+ourselves, to manage the kitchen, and go messages when required.
+
+ [Picture: The lazy corner, Dalkeith]
+
+Providence having thus blessed Tammie's efforts in the paths of
+industrious sobriety, what could I do better--James Batter being exactly
+of the same opinion--than make him my successor; giving him the shop at a
+cheap rent, the stock in trade at a moderate valuation, and the good-will
+of the business as a gratis gift.
+
+Having recommended Tammie to public patronage and support, he is now, as
+all the world knows, a thriving man; nor, from Berwick Bridge to Johnny
+Groat's, is it in the power of any gentleman to have his coat cut in a
+more fashionable way, or on more moderate terms, than at the sign of the
+Goose and the Pair of Shears rampant.
+
+Leaving Tammie to take care of his own matters, as he is well able to do,
+allow me to observe, that it is curious how habit becomes a second
+nature, and how the breaking in upon the ways we have been long and long
+accustomed to, through the days of the years that are past, is as the
+cutting asunder of the joints and marrow. This I found bitterly, even
+though I had the prospect before me of spending my old age in peace and
+plenty. I could not think of leaving my auld house--every room, every
+nook in it was familiar to my heart. The garden trees seemed to wave
+their branches sorrowfully over my head, as bidding me a farewell; and
+when I saw all the scraighing hens catched out of the hen-house I had
+twenty years before built and tiled with my own hands, and tumbled into a
+sack, to be carried on limping Jock Dalgleish's back up to our new abode
+at Lugton, my heart swelled to my mouth, and the mist of gushing tears
+bedimmed my eyesight. Four of Thomas Burlings' flour carts stood laden
+before the door with our furniture, on the top of which were three of
+Nanse's grand geraniums in flower-pots, with five of my walking-sticks
+tied together with a string; and as I paced through the empty rooms,
+where I had passed so many pleasant and happy hours, the sound of my feet
+on the bare floor seemed in my ears like an echo from the grave. On our
+road to Lugton I could scarcely muster common sense to answer a person
+who wished us a good-day; and Nanse, as we daundered on arm-in-arm, never
+once took her napkin from her een. Oh, but it was a weary business!
+
+Being in this sober frame of mind, allow me to wind up this chapter--the
+last catastrophe of my eventful life that I mean at present to make
+public--with a few serious reflections; as it fears me, that, in much of
+what I have set down, ill-natured people may see a good deal scarcely
+consistent with my character for douceness and circumspection; but if
+many wonderfuls have befallen to my share, it would be well to remember
+that a man's lot is not of his own making. Musing within myself on the
+chances and changes of time, the uncertainties of life, the frail thread
+by which we are tacked to this world, and how the place that now knows us
+shall soon know us no more, I could not help, for two or three days
+previous to my quitting my dear old house and shop, taking my stick into
+my hand, and wandering about all my old haunts and houffs--and need I
+mention that among these were the road down to the Duke's south gate with
+the deers on it, the waterside by Woodburn, the Cow-brigg, up the back
+street, through the flesh-market, and over to the auld kirk in among the
+headstones? For three walks, on three different days, I set out in
+different directions; yet, strange to say! I aye landed in the
+kirkyard:--and where is the man of woman born proud enough to brag, that
+it shall not be his fate to land there at last?
+
+Headstones and headstones around me! some newly put up, and others mossy
+and grey; it was a humbling yet an edifying sight, preaching, as forcibly
+as ever Maister Wiggie did in his best days, of the vanity and the
+passingness of all human enjoyments. Mouldered to dust beneath the tufts
+lay the blithe laddies with whom I have a hundred times played merry
+games on moonlight nights; some were soon cut off; others grew up to
+their full estate; and there stood I, a greyhaired man, among the weeds
+and nettles, mourning over times never to return!
+
+The reader will no doubt be anxious to hear a few words regarding my son
+Benjie, who has turned out just as his friends and the world expected.
+After his time with Ebenezer Packwood in Dalkeith, he served for four
+years in Edinburgh, where he cut a distinguished figure, having shaved
+and shorn lots of the nobility and gentry; among whom was a French
+Duchess, and many other foreigners of distinction. In short, nothing
+went down at the principal hotels but the expertness of Mr Benjamin
+Wauch; and, had he been so disposed, he could have commenced on his own
+footing with every chance of success; but knowing himself fully young,
+and being anxious to see more of the world before settling, he took out a
+passage in one of the Leith smacks, and set sail for London, where he
+arrived, after a safe and prosperous voyage, without a hair of his head
+injured. The only thing I am ashamed to let out about him is, that he is
+now, and has been for some time past, principal shopman in a Wallflower
+Hair-powder and Genuine Macassar Oil Warehouse, kept by three Frenchmen,
+called Moosies Peroukey.
+
+But, though our natural enemies, he writes me that he has found them
+agreeable and chatty masters, full of good manners and pleasant
+discourse, first-rate in their articles, and, except in their language,
+almost Christians.
+
+I aye thought Benjie was a genius; and he is beginning to show himself
+his father's son, being in thoughts of taking out a patent for making
+hair-oil from rancid butter. If he succeeds it will make the callant's
+fortune. But he must not marry Madamoselle Peroukey without my especial
+consent, as Nanse says, that her having a French woman for her
+daughter-in-law would be the death of her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE--CONCLUSION
+
+
+On first commencing this memoir of my life, I put pen to paper with the
+laudable view of handing down to posterity--to our children, and to their
+children's children--the accidents, adventures, and mischances that may
+fall to the lot of a man placed by Providence even in the loundest
+situation of life, where he seemed to lie sheltered in the bield of peace
+and privacy;--and, at that time, it was my intention to have carried down
+my various transactions to this dividual day and date. My materials,
+however, have swelled on my hand like summer corn under sunny showers;
+one thing has brought another to remembrance; sowds of bypast marvels
+have come before my mind's eye in the silent watches of the night,
+concerning the days when I sat working crosslegged on the board; and if I
+do not stop at this critical juncture--to wit, my retiring from trade,
+and the settlement of my dear and only son Benjie in an honourable way of
+doing; as who dares to deny that the barber and hair-cutting line is a
+safe and honourable employment?--I do not know when I might get to the
+end of my tether; and the interest which every reasonable man must take
+in the extraordinary adventures of my early years, might be grievously
+marred and broken in upon through the garrulity of old age.
+
+Perhaps I am going a little too far when I say, that the whole world
+cannot fail to be interested in the occurrences of my life; for since its
+creation, which was not yesterday, I do not believe--and James Batter is
+exactly of the same mind--that there ever was a subject concerning which
+the bulk of mankind have not had two opinions. Knowing this to be the
+case, I would be a great gomeril to expect that I should be the only
+white swan that ever appeared; and that all parties in church and state,
+who are for cutting each other's throats on every other great question,
+should be unanimous only in what regards me. Englishmen, for instance,
+will say that I am a bad speller, and that my language is kittle; and
+such of the Irishers as can read, will be threaping that I have abused
+their precious country; but, my certie, instead of blaming me for letting
+out what I could not deny, they must just learn to behave themselves
+better when they come to see us, or bide at home.
+
+Being by nature a Scotsman--being, I say, of the blood of Robert Bruce
+and Sir William Wallace--and having in my day and generation buckled on
+my sword to keep the battle from our gates in the hour of danger, ill
+would it become me to speak but the plain truth, the whole truth, and
+anything but the truth. No; although bred to a peaceable occupation, I
+am the subject of a free king and constitution; and, if I have written as
+I speak, I have just spoken as I thought. The man of learning, that kens
+no language saving Greek, and Gaelic, and Hebrew, will doubtless laugh at
+the curiosity of my dialect; but I would just recommend him, as he is a
+philosopher, to consider for a wee, that there are other things, in
+mortal life and in human nature, worth a moment's consideration besides
+old Pagan heathens-pot-hooks and hangers--the asses' bridge and the weary
+walls of Troy; which last city, for all that has been said and sung about
+it, would be found, I would stake my life upon it, could it be seen at
+this moment, not worth half a thought when compared with the New Town of
+Edinburgh. Of all towns in the world, however, Dalkeith for my money.
+If the ignorant are dumfoundered at one of their own kidney--a tailor
+laddie, that got the feck of his small education leathered into him at
+Dominie Threshem's school--thinking himself an author, I would just
+remind them that seeing is believing; and that they should keep up a good
+heart, as it is impossible to say what may yet be their own fortune
+before they die. The rich man's apology I would beg; if in this humble
+narrative, this detail of manners almost hidden from the sphere of his
+observation, I have in any instance tramped on the tender toes of good
+breeding, or given just offence in breadth of expression, or vulgarity of
+language. Let this, however, be my apology, that the only value of my
+wonderful history consists in its being as true as death--a circumstance
+which it could have slender pretensions to, had I coined stories, or
+coloured them so as to please my own fancy and that of the world. In
+that case it would have been very easy for me to have made a Sinbad the
+Sailor tale out of it--to have shown myself up a man such as the world
+has never seen except on paper--to have made Cursecowl behave like a
+gentleman, and the Frenchman from Penicuik crack like a Christian. And
+to the poor man, him whom the wise Disposer of all events has seen fit to
+place in a situation similar to that in which I have been placed,
+ordaining him to earn daily bread by the labour of his hands and the
+sweat of his brow, if my adventures shall afford an hour or two's
+pleasant amusement, when, after working hours, he sits by his bleezing
+ingle with a bairn on each knee, whilst his oldest daughter is sewing her
+seam, and his goodwife with her right foot birls round the
+spinning-wheel, then my purpose is gained, and more than gained; for it
+is my firm belief that no man, who has by head or hand, in any way
+lightened an ounce weight of the load of human misery, can be truly said
+to have been unprofitable in his day, or disappointed the purpose of his
+creation. For what more can we do here below? The God who formed us,
+breathing into our nostrils the breath of life, is, in his Almighty power
+and wisdom, far removed beyond the sphere of our poor and paltry offices.
+We are of the clay; and return to the elements from which we are formed.
+He is a Spirit, without beginning of days or end of years. The extent of
+our limited exertions reaches no further than our belief in, and our duty
+towards Him; which, in my humble opinion, can be best shown by us in our
+love and charity towards our fellow-creatures--the master-work of his
+hands.
+
+I would not willingly close this record of my life, without expressing a
+few words of heartfelt gratitude towards the multitude from whom, in the
+intercourse of the world, I have experienced good offices; and towards
+the few who, in the hour of my trials and adversities, remained with
+faces towards me steadfast and unalterable, scorning the fickle who
+scoffed, and the Levite who passed by on the other side. Of old hath it
+been said, that a true friend is the medicine of life; and in the day of
+darkness, when my heart was breaking, and the world with all its concerns
+seemed shaded in a gloom never to pass away, how deeply have I
+acknowledged the truth of the maxim! How shall I repay such kindness?
+Alas! it is out of my power. But all I can do, I do. I think of it on
+my pillow at the silent hour of midnight; my heart burns with the
+gratitude it hath not--may never have an opportunity of showing to the
+world; and I put up my prayer in faith to Him who seeth in secret, that
+he may bless and reward them openly.
+
+Sorrows and pleasures are inseparably mixed up in the cup set for man's
+drinking; and the sunniest day hath its cloud. But I have made this
+observation, that if true happiness, or any thing like true happiness, is
+to be found in this world, it is only to be purchased by the practice of
+virtue. Things will fall out--so it hath been ordained in this scene of
+trial--even to the best and purest of heart, which must carry sorrow to
+the bosom, and bring tears to the eyelids; and then to the wayward and
+the wicked, bitter is their misery as the waters of Marah. But never can
+the good man be wholly unhappy; he has that within which passeth show;
+the anchor of his faith is fixed on the Rock of Ages; and when the dark
+cloud hath glided over--and it will glide--it leaves behind it the blue
+and unclouded heaven.
+
+If, concerning religious matters, a tone of levity at any time seems to
+infect these pages, I cry ye mercy; for nothing was further from my
+intention; yet, though acknowledging this, I maintain that it is a vain
+thing to look on religion as on a winter night, full of terror, and
+darkness, and storms. No one, it strikes me, errs more widely than he
+who supposes that man was made to mourn--that the sanctity of the heart
+is shown by the length of the face--and that mirth, the pleasant mirth of
+innocent hearts, is sinful in the sight of Heaven. I will never believe
+that. The very sun may appear dim to such folks as choose only to look
+at him through green spectacles; as by the poor wretch who is dwining in
+the jaundice, the driven snow could be sworn to as a bright yellow. Such
+opinions, however, lie between man and his Maker, and are not for the
+like of us to judge of. For myself, I have enjoyed a pleasant run of
+good health through life, reading my Bible more in hope than fear; our
+salvation, and not our destruction, being I should suppose its purpose.
+So, when I behold bright suns and blue skies, the trees in blossom, and
+birds on the wing, the waters singing to the woods, and earth looking
+like the abode of them who were at first formed but a little lower than
+the angels, I trust that the overflowing of a grateful heart will not be
+reckoned against me for unrighteousness.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+
+{175} See Dr Jamieson.--P. D.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF MANSIE WAUCH***
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