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-<title>THE STICKIT MINISTER'S WOOING</title>
-<meta name="PG.Title" content="The Stickit Minister's Wooing" />
-<meta name="PG.Id" content="49342" />
-<meta name="DC.Title" content="The Stickit Minister's Wooing and Other Galloway Stories" />
-<meta name="DC.Language" content="en" />
-<meta name="PG.Released" content="2015-07-01" />
-<meta name="DC.Creator" content="S. R. Crockett" />
-<meta name="PG.Rights" content="Public Domain" />
-<meta name="DC.Created" content="1900" />
-<meta name="PG.Producer" content="Al Haines" />
-<link rel="coverpage" href="images/img-cover.jpg" />
-
-<link rel="schema.DCTERMS" href="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" />
-<link rel="schema.MARCREL" href="http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.title" content="The Stickit Minister's Wooing&#10;and Other Galloway Stories" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.source" content="/home/ajhaines/wooing/wooing.rst" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.language" scheme="DCTERMS.RFC4646" content="en" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.modified" scheme="DCTERMS.W3CDTF" content="2015-07-01T18:33:13.677075+00:00" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.publisher" content="Project Gutenberg" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.rights" content="Public Domain in the USA." />
-<link rel="DCTERMS.isFormatOf" href="http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/49342" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.creator" content="S. R. Crockett" />
-<meta name="DCTERMS.created" scheme="DCTERMS.W3CDTF" content="2015-07-01" />
-<meta content="width=device-width" name="viewport" />
-<meta content="Ebookmaker 0.4.0a5 by Marcello Perathoner &lt;webmaster@gutenberg.org&gt;" name="generator" />
-</head>
-<body>
-<div class="document" id="the-stickit-minister-s-wooing">
-<h1 class="center document-title level-1 pfirst title"><span class="x-large">THE STICKIT MINISTER'S WOOING</span></h1>
-
-<!-- this is the default PG-RST stylesheet -->
-<!-- figure and image styles for non-image formats -->
-<!-- default transition -->
-<!-- default attribution -->
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
-<div class="clearpage">
-</div>
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
-<div class="container language-en pgheader" id="pg-header" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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 </span><a class="reference internal" href="#project-gutenberg-license">Project Gutenberg License</a><span> included with
-this ebook or online at </span><a class="reference external" href="http://www.gutenberg.org/license">http://www.gutenberg.org/license</a><span>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws
-of the country where you are located before using this ebook.</span></p>
-<p class="noindent pnext"></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<div class="container" id="pg-machine-header">
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>Title: The Stickit Minister's Wooing
-<br /> and Other Galloway Stories
-<br />
-<br />Author: S. R. Crockett
-<br />
-<br />Release Date: July 01, 2015 [EBook #49342]
-<br />
-<br />Language: English
-<br />
-<br />Character set encoding: UTF-8</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-start-line"><span>*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK </span><span>THE STICKIT MINISTER'S WOOING</span><span> ***</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-produced-by"><span>Produced by Al Haines.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span></span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="container titlepage">
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">THE</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold red xx-large">STICKIT MINISTER'S WOOING</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">AND OTHER GALLOWAY STORIES</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">By</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large red">S. R. CROCKETT</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">LONDON
-<br />HODDER AND STOUGHTON
-<br />PATERNOSTER ROW
-<br />MCM</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="container verso">
-<p class="center pfirst"><em class="italics small">Printed by Hazell, Watson, &amp; Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.</em></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="container dedication">
-<p class="center pfirst"><em class="italics small">To
-<br />The Well-Beloved Memory
-<br />of</em></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><em class="italics small">R. L. S.</em></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><em class="italics small">to whom, eight years ago, I
-<br />dedicated the first series of
-<br />the "Stickit Minister" stories</em></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-</div>
-<!-- center large bold
-
-A LOOK BEHIND—AND FORWARD -->
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Eight years ago "The Stickit Minister" stood
-friendless without the door of letters. He knew
-no one within, and feared greatly lest no hand of
-welcome should be held out to him from those
-already within, so that, being encouraged, he too
-might pluck up heart of grace to enter.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet when the time came, the Stickit One found
-not one, but two right hands outstretched to greet
-him, which, after all, is as many as any man may
-grasp at once. One was reached out to me from
-far-away Samoa. The other belonged to a man
-whom, at that time, I knew only as one of the most
-thoughtful, sympathetic, and brilliant of London
-journalists, but who has since become my friend,
-and at whose instance, indeed, this Second Series
-of "The Stickit Minister" stories has been written.
-To these two men, the London man of letters and
-the Samoan exile, I owe the first and greatest
-of an author's literary debts—that of a first
-encouragement.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>They were both men I had never seen; and
-neither was under any obligation to help me.
-Concerning the former, still strenuously and
-gallantly at work among us, I will in this place say
-nothing further. But, after having kept silence
-for eight years lest I should appear as one that
-vaunted himself, I may be permitted a word
-of that other who sleeps under the green tangle of
-Vaea Mountain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Stevenson and I had been in occasional
-communication since about the year 1886, when,
-in a small volume of verse issued during the early
-part of that year, the fragment of a "Transcript
-from the Song of Songs, which is Solomon's,"
-chanced to attract his attention. He wrote
-immediately, with that beautiful natural generosity of
-appreciation of his, to ask the author to finish
-his translation in verse, and to proceed to other
-dramatic passages, some of which, chiefly from
-Isaiah and Job, he specified. I remember that
-"When the morning stars sang together" was
-one of those indicated, and "O, thou afflicted,
-tossed with tempest and not comforted," another.
-"I have tried my hand at them myself," he added
-kindly; "but they were not so good as your
-Shulamite."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After this he made me more than once the
-channel of his practical charity to certain poor
-miner folk, whom disaster had rendered homeless
-and penniless on the outskirts of his beloved
-Glencorse.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A year or two afterwards, having in the intervals
-of other work written down certain countryside
-stories, which managed to struggle into print in
-rather obscure corners, I collected these into a
-volume, under the title of "The Stickit Minister
-and Some Common Men." Then after the volume
-was through the press, in a sudden gulp of
-venturesomeness I penned a dedication.</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span>TO</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span>Robert Louis Stevenson</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span>OF SCOTLAND AND SAMOA,
-<br />I DEDICATE THESE STORIES OF THAT
-<br />GREY GALLOWAY LAND
-<br />WHERE
-<br />ABOUT THE GRAVES OF THE MARTYRS
-<br />THE WHAUPS ARE CRYING—
-<br />HIS HEART REMEMBERS HOW.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Still much fearing and trembling, how needlessly
-I guessed not then, I packed up and despatched
-a copy to Samoa. Whereupon, after due interval,
-there came back to these shores a letter—the
-sense of which reached me deviously—not to
-myself but to his friend, Mr. Sidney Colvin.
-"If I could only be buried in the hills, under the
-heather, and a table tombstone like the martyrs;
-'where the whaups and plovers are crying!' Did
-you see a man who wrote 'The Stickit Minister,'
-and dedicated it to me, in words that brought
-the tears to my eyes every time I looked at
-them? 'Where about the graves of the martyrs
-the whaups are crying—his heart remembers
-how.' Ah, by God, it does! Singular that I
-should fulfil the Scots destiny throughout, and
-live a voluntary exile and have my head filled
-with the blessed, beastly place all the time!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To another friend he added some criticism of
-the book. "Some of the tales seem to me a trifle
-light, and one, at least, is too slender and
-fantastic—qualities that rarely mingle well." (How oft in
-the stilly night have I wondered which one he
-meant!) "But the whole book breathes admirably
-of the soil. 'The Stickit Minister,' 'The Heather
-Lintie,' are two that appeal to me particularly.
-They are drowned in Scotland. They have
-refreshed me like a visit home. 'Cleg Kelly' also
-is a delightful fellow. I have enjoyed his
-acquaintance particularly."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Curiously enough, it was not from Samoa, but
-from Honolulu, that I first received tidings that
-my little volume had not miscarried. It was
-quite characteristic of Mr. Stevenson not to
-answer at once: "I let my letters accumulate
-till I am leaving a place," he said to me more
-than once; "then I lock myself in with them,
-and my cries of penitence can be heard a mile!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In a San Francisco paper there appeared a
-report of a speech he had made to some kindly
-Scots who entertained him in Honolulu, In it
-he spoke affectionately of "The Stickit Minister." I
-have, alas! lost the reference now, but at the
-time it took me by the throat. I could not get
-over the sheer kindness of the thing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then came a letter and a poem, both very
-precious to me:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank you from my heart, and see with what
-dull pedantry I have been tempted to extend your
-beautiful phrase of prose into three indifferent
-stanzas:</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"Blows the wind to-day, and the sun and the rain are flying;</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Blows the wind on the moors to-day, and now,</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>Where about the graves of the martyrs the whaups are crying—</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>My heart remembers how!</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>Grey recumbent tombs of the dead in desert places,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Standing Stones on the vacant, wine-red moor;</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>Hills of sheep, and the howes of the silent vanished races,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>And winds austere and pure!</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>Be it granted me to behold you again in dying,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Hills of home! and to hear again the call—</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>Hear about the graves of the martyrs the pee-wees crying,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>And hear no more at all."</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>To me, in the all too brief days that
-remained to him, he wrote letter after letter of
-criticism, encouragement, and praise (in which
-last, as was his wont, he let his kind heart
-run far ahead of his judgment). It goes to
-my heart now not to quote from these, for
-they are in some wise my poor patent of
-nobility. But, perhaps with more wisdom, I
-keep them by me, to hearten myself withal
-when the days of darkness grow too many and
-too dark.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So much for bush to this second draught of
-countryside vintage—the more easily forgiven that
-it tells of the generosity of a dead man whom I
-loved. But and if in any fields Elysian or grey
-twilight of shades, I chance to meet with Robert
-Louis Stevenson, I know that I shall find him in
-act to help over some ghostly stile, the halt, the
-maimed, and the faint of heart—-even as in these
-late earthly years he did for me—and for many
-another.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>S. R. CROCKETT.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">CONTENTS</span></p>
-<ol class="upperroman simple">
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#id1">THE STICKIT MINISTER'S WOOING</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-stickit-minister-wins-through">THE STICKIT MINISTER WINS THROUGH</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#gibby-the-eel-student-in-divinity">GIBBY THE EEL, STUDENT IN DIVINITY</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#dr-girnigo-s-assistant">DR. GIRNIGO'S ASSISTANT</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-gate-of-the-upper-garden">THE GATE OF THE UPPER GARDEN</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-troubler-of-israel">THE TROUBLER OF ISRAEL</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#carnation-s-morning-joy">CARNATION'S MORNING JOY</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#jaimsie">JAIMSIE</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#beadle-and-martyr">BEADLE AND MARTYR</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-blue-eyes-of-ailie">THE BLUE EYES OF AILIE</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#lowe-s-seat">LOWE'S SEAT</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-suit-of-bottle-green">THE SUIT OF BOTTLE GREEN</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#a-scientific-symposium">A SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-hempie-s-love-story">THE HEMPIE'S LOVE STORY</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-little-fair-man">THE LITTLE FAIR MAN</a><span>—</span></p>
-</li>
-</ol>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>I.—</span><a class="reference internal" href="#seed-sown-by-the-wayside">SEED SOWN BY THE WAYSIDE</a><span>
-<br />II.—</span><a class="reference internal" href="#the-humbling-of-strength-o-airm">THE HUMBLING OF STRENGTH-O'-AIRM</a><span>
-<br />III.—</span><a class="reference internal" href="#the-curate-of-kirkchrist">THE CURATE OF KIRKCHRIST</a></p>
-<ol class="upperroman simple" start="16">
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#my-father-s-love-story">MY FATHER'S LOVE STORY</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-man-of-wrath">THE MAN OF WRATH</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-lass-in-the-shop">THE LASS IN THE SHOP</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#the-respect-of-drowdle">THE RESPECT OF DROWDLE</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#tadmor-in-the-wilderness">TADMOR IN THE WILDERNESS</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#peterson-s-patient">PETERSON'S PATIENT</a></p>
-</li>
-<li><p class="first pfirst"><a class="reference internal" href="#two-humourists">TWO HUMOURISTS</a></p>
-</li>
-</ol>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="id1"><span class="bold large">THE STICKIT MINISTER'S WOOING[#]</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">[#] These stories have been edited chiefly from manuscripts
-supplied to me by my friend Mr. Alexander McQuhirr, M.D.,
-of Cairn Edward in Galloway, of whose personal adventures
-I treated in the volume called "Lad's Love," I have let
-my friend tell his tale in his own way in almost every case.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was in the second year of my college life thai
-I came home to find Robert Fraser, whom a
-whole country-side called the "Stickit Minister,"
-distinctly worse, and indeed, set down upon his
-great chair in the corner as on a place from
-which he would never rise.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A dour, grippy back-end it was, the soil
-stubborn and untoward with early frost. And a
-strange sound it was to hear as I (Alexander
-McQuhirr) came down the Lang Brae, the channel
-stones droning and dinnelling on the ice by the
-third of November; a thing which had not
-happened in our parts since that fell year of the
-Sixteen Drifty Days, which has been so greatly
-talked about.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I walked over to the Dullarg the very night
-I arrived from Edinburgh. I had a new volume
-of Tennyson with me, which I had bought with
-the thought that he would be pleased with it.
-For I loved Robert Fraser, and I will not deny
-that my heart beat with expectation as I went
-up the little loaning with the rough stone dyke
-upon either side—aye, as if it had been the way
-to Nether Neuk, and I going to see my sweetheart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come your ways in, Alec, man," his voice
-came from the inner room, as he heard me pause
-to exchange banter of a rural sort with the servant
-lasses in the kitchen; "I have been waitin' for
-ye. I kenned ye wad come the nicht!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I went in. And there by the little peat fire,
-drowsing red and looking strangely out of place
-behind the ribs of the black-leaded "register"
-grate, I saw the Stickit Minister with a black-and-white
-check plaid about his knees. He smiled
-a strange sweet smile, at once wistful and
-distant, as I entered—like one who waves farewell
-through a mist of tears as the pier slides back
-and the sundering water seethes and widens about
-the ship.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are better, Robert!" I said, smiling too.
-Dully, and yet with dogged cheerfulness, I said
-it, as men lie to the dying—and are not believed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He stretched out his thin hand, the ploughman's
-horn clean gone from it, and the veins blue and
-convex upon the shrunk wrist.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Ave atque vale</em><span>, Alec, lad!" he answered.
-"That is what it has come to with Robert Fraser.
-But how are all at Drumquhat? Ye will be on
-your road ower to the Nether Neuk?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This he said, though he knew different.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have brought you this from Edinburgh,"
-I said, giving him the little, thin, green volume
-of Tennyson. I had cut it to save him trouble,
-and written his name on the blank page before
-the title.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I shall never forget the way he looked at it.
-He opened it as a woman unfolds a new and
-costly garment, with a lingering caress of the
-wasted finger-tips through which I could almost
-see the white of the paper, and a slow soft intake
-of the breath, like a lover's sigh.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His eyes, of old blue and clear, had now a kind
-of glaze over them, a veiling Indian summer mist
-through which, however, still shone, all undimmed
-and fearless, the light of the simplest and manfulest
-spirit I have ever known. He turned the leaves
-and read a verse here and there with evident
-pleasure. He had a way of reading anything he
-loved as it listening inly to the cadences—a little
-half-turn of the head aside, and a still contented
-smile hovering about the lips, like one who catches
-the first returning fall of beloved footsteps.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But all at once Robert Fraser shut the book
-and let his hands sink wearily down upon his knee.
-He did not look at me, but kept his eyes on the
-red peat ash in the "register" grate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It's bonnie," he murmured softly; "and it was
-a kind thing for you to think on me. But it's
-gane frae me, Alec—it's a' clean gane. Tak' you
-the book, Alec. The birdies will never sing again
-in ony spring for me to hear. I'm back upon
-the Word, Alec. There's nocht but That for me
-noo!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He laid his hand on a Bible that was open
-beside him on the stand which held his medicine
-bottles, and a stocking at which his wearied fingers
-occasionally knitted for a moment or two at a time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he gave the little green-clad Tennyson
-back to me with so motherly and lingering a regard
-that, had I not turned away, I declare I know
-not but that I had been clean done for.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yet for a' that, Alec," he said, "do you take
-the book for my sake. And see—cut out the
-leaf ye hae written on and let me keep it here
-beside me."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I did as he asked me, and with the leaf in
-his hand he turned over the pages of his Bible
-carefully, like a minister looking for a text. He
-stopped at a yellowing envelope, as if uncertain
-whether to deposit the inscription in it. Then he
-lifted the stamped oblong and handed it to me
-with a kind of smile.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There, Alec," he said, "you that has (so they
-tell me) a sweetheart o' your ain, ye will like to
-see that. This is the envelope that held the letter
-I gat frae Jessie Loudon—the nicht Sir James
-telled me at the Infirmary that my days were
-numbered!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, Robert!" I cried, all ashamed that he
-should speak thus to a young man like me, "dinna
-think o' that. You will excite yourself—you may
-do yourself a hurt——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But he waved me away, still smiling that slow
-misty smile, in which, strangely enough, there
-was yet some of the humoursomeness of one who
-sees a situation from the outside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Na, Alec, lad," he said, softly, "that's gane too.
-Upon a dark day I made a pact wi' my Maker, and
-now the covenanted price is nearly paid. </span><em class="italics">His</em><span>
-messenger wi' the discharge is already on the road.
-I never hear a hand on the latch, but I look up
-to see Him enter—aye, and He shall be welcome,
-welcome as the bridegroom that enters into the
-Beloved's chamber!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I covered my brows with my palm, and pretended
-to look at the handwriting on the envelope,
-which was delicate and feminine. The Stickit
-Minister went on.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, Alec," he said, meditatively, with his eyes
-still on the red glow, "ye think that ye love the
-lass ye hae set your heart on; and doubtless ye
-do love her truly. But I pray God that there
-may never come a day when ye shall have spoken
-the last sundering word, and returned her the
-written sheets faithfully every one. Ye hae heard
-the story, Alec. I will not hurt your young heart
-by telling it again. But I spared Jessie Loudon
-all I could, and showed her that she must not mate
-her young life with one no better than dead!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Stickit Minister was silent a long time here.
-Doubtless old faces looked at him clear out of
-the red spaces of the fire. And when he began
-to speak again, it was in an altered voice.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nevertheless, because power was given me, I
-pled with, and in some measure comforted her.
-For though the lassie's heart was set on me, it
-was as a bairn's heart is set, not like the heart
-of a woman; and for that I praise the Lord—yes,
-I give thanks to His name!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then after that I came back to an empty
-house—and this!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He caressed the faded envelope lovingly, as a
-miser his intimatest treasure.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I did not mean to keep it, Alec," he went
-on presently, "but I am glad I did. It has been
-a comfort to me; and through all these years
-it has rested there where ye see it—upon the
-chapter where God answers Job out of the
-whirlwind. Ye ken yon great words."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>We heard a slight noise in the yard, the wheels
-of some light vehicle driven quickly. The Stickit
-Minister started a little, and when I looked at
-him again I saw that the red spot, the size of
-a crown-piece, which burned so steadfastly on his
-check-bone had spread till now it covered his
-brow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then we listened, breathless, like men that wait
-for a marvel, and through the hush the peats on
-the grate suddenly fell inward with a startling
-sound, bringing my heart into my mouth. Next
-we heard a voice without, loud and a little thick,
-in heated debate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank God!" cried the Stickit Minister,
-fervently. "It's Henry—my dear brother! For
-a moment I feared it had been Lawyer Johnston
-from Cairn Edward. You know," he added, smiling
-with all his old swift gladsomeness, "I am now
-but a tenant at will. I sit here in the Dullarg
-on sufferance—that once was the laird of acre
-and onstead!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He raised his voice to carry through the door
-into the kitchen.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Henry, Henry, this is kind—kind of you—to
-come so far to see me on such a night!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Stickit Minister was on his feet by this
-time, and if I had thought that his glance had
-been warm and motherly for me, it was fairly on
-fire with affection now. I believe that Robert
-Fraser once loved his betrothed faithfully and well;
-but never will I believe that he loved woman
-born of woman as he loved his younger brother.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And that is, perhaps, why these things fell
-out so.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>I had not seen Henry Fraser since the first year
-he had come to Cairn Edward. A handsome
-young man he was then, with a short, supercilious
-upper lip, and crisply curling hair of a fair colour
-disposed in masses about his brow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He entered, and at the first glimpse of him I stood
-astonished. His pale student's face had grown
-red and a trifle mottled. The lids of his blue eyes
-(the blue of his brother's) were injected. His
-mouth was loose and restless under a heavy
-moustache, and when he began to speak his voice
-came from him thick and throaty.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I wonder you do not keep your people in
-better order, Robert," he said, before he was fairly
-within the door of the little sitting-room. "First I
-drove right into a farm-cart that had been left
-in the middle of the yard, and then nearly broke
-my shins over a pail some careless slut of a
-byre-lass had thrown down at the kitchen-door."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Robert Fraser had been standing up with the
-glad and eager look on his face. I think he had
-half stretched out his hand; but at his brother's
-querulous words he sank slowly back into his
-chair, and the grey tiredness slipped into his face
-almost as quickly as it had disappeared.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am sorry, Henry," he said, simply. "Somehow
-I do not seem to get about so readily as I did, and
-I daresay the lads and lasses take some advantage."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They would not take advantage with me, I
-can tell you!" cried the young doctor, throwing
-down his driving-cape on the corner of the old
-sofa, and pulling a chair in to the fire. He bent
-forward and chafed his hands before the glowing
-peats, and as he did so I could see by a slight
-lurch and quick recovery that he had been
-drinking. I wondered if Robert Fraser noticed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he leaned back and looked at the Stickit
-Minister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, Robert, how do you find yourself
-to-night? Better, eh?" he said, speaking in his
-professional voice.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His brother's face flushed again with the same
-swift pleasure, very pitiful to see.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is kind of you to ask," he said; "I think
-I do feel a betterness, Henry. The cough has
-certainly been less troublesome this last day or
-two."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I suppose there are no better prospects about
-the property," said Dr. Fraser, passing from the
-medical question with no more than the words I
-have written down. I had already risen, and,
-with a muttered excuse, was passing into the outer
-kitchen, that I might leave the brothers alone.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So I did not hear Robert Fraser's reply, but
-as I closed the door I caught the younger's loud
-retort: "I tell you what it is, Robert—say what
-you will—I have not been fairly dealt with in
-this matter—I have been swindled!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So I went out with my heart heavy within me
-for my friend, and though Bell Gregory, the
-bonniest of the farm lasses, ostentatiously drew
-her skirts aside and left a vacant place beside her
-in the ingle-nook, I shook my head and kept
-on my way to the door with rib more than a smile
-and "Anither nicht, Bell."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Gie my love to Nance ower at the Nether
-Neuk," she cried back, with challenge in her tone,
-as I went out.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But even Nance Chrystie was not in my thoughts
-that night. I stepped out, passing in front of the
-straw-thatched bee-hives which, with the indrawing
-days, had lost their sour-sweet summer smell, and
-so on into the loaning. From the foot of the little
-brae I looked back at the lights burning so warmly
-and steadily from the low windows of the Dullarg,
-and my mind went over all my father had told me
-of what the Stickit Minister had done for his
-brother: how he had broken off his own college
-career that Henry might go through his medical
-classes with ease and credit; and how, in spite of
-his brother's rank ingratitude, he had bonded his
-little property in order to buy him old Dr. Aitkin's
-practice in Cairn Edward.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Standing thus and thinking under the beeches
-at the foot of the dark loaning, it gave me quite a
-start to find a figure close beside me. It was
-a woman with a shawl over her head, as is the
-habit of the cotters' wives in our parish.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Tell me," a voice, eager and hurried, panted
-almost in my ear, "is Dr. Fraser of Cairn Edward
-up there?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said in reply, involuntarily drawing
-back a step—the woman was so near me—"he is
-this moment with his brother."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then for God's sake will ye gang up and tell
-him to come this instant to the Earmark cothouses.
-There are twa bairns there that are no like to see
-the mornin' licht if he doesna!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But who may you be?" I said, for I did not
-want to return to the Dullarg. "And why do you
-not go in and tell him for yourself? You can give
-him the particulars of the case better than I!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She gave a little shivering moan.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I canna gang in there!" she said, clasping her
-hands piteously; "I darena. Not though I am
-Gilbert Harbour's wife—and the bairns' mither.
-Oh, sir, rin!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And I ran.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But when I had knocked and delivered my
-message, to my great surprise Dr. Henry Fraser
-received it very coolly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They are only some cotter people," he said,
-"they must just wait till I am on my way back
-from the village. I will look in then. Robert, it
-is a cold night, let me have some whisky before
-I get into that ice-box of a gig again."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Stickit Minister turned towards the
-wall-press where ever since his mother's day the
-"guardevin," or little rack of cut-glass decanters,
-had stood, always hospitably full but quite
-untouched by the master of the house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I was still standing uncertainly by the door-cheek,
-and as Robert Fraser stepped across the little
-room I saw him stagger; and rushed forward to
-catch him. But ere I could reach him he had
-commanded himself, and turned to me with a smile
-on his lips. Yet even his brother was struck by
-the ashen look on his face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sit down, Robert," he said, "I will help myself."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But with a great effort the Stickit Minister set
-the tall narrow dram-glass on the table and
-ceremoniously filled out to his brother the stranger's
-"portion," as was once the duty of country
-hospitality in Scotland.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the Doctor interrupted.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, I say!" he exclaimed, when he saw what
-his brother was doing, "for heaven's sake not that
-thing—give me a tumbler."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And without further ceremony he went to the
-cupboard; then he cried to Bell Gregory to
-fetch him some hot water, and mixed himself a
-steaming glass.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the Stickit Minister did not sit down. He
-stood up by the mantelpiece all trembling. I
-noted particularly that his fingers spilled half the
-contents of the dram-glass as he tried to pour
-them back into the decanter.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, haste ye, Henry!" he said, with a pleading
-anxiety in his voice I had never heard there in
-any trouble of his own; "take up your drink and
-drive as fast as ye can to succour the poor woman's
-bairns. It is not for nothing that she would come
-here seeking you at this time of night!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His brother laughed easily as he reseated himself
-and drew the tumbler nearer to his elbow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That's all you know, Robert," he said; "why,
-they come all the way to Cairn Edward after me
-if their little finger aches, let alone over here. I
-daresay some of the brats have got the mumps,
-and the mother saw me as I drove past. No,
-indeed—she and they must just wait till I get
-through my business at Whinnyliggate!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I ask you, Henry," said his brother eagerly,
-"do this for my sake; it is not often that I ask
-you anything—nor will I have long time now
-wherein to ask!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," grumbled the young doctor, rising and
-finishing the toddy as he stood, "I suppose I must,
-if you make a point of it. But I will just look
-in at Whinnyliggate on my way across. Earmark
-is a good two miles on my way home!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank you, Henry," said Robert Fraser, "I
-will not forget this kindness to me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>With a brusque nod Dr. Henry Fraser strode
-out through the kitchen, among whose merry
-groups his comings and goings always created a
-certain hush of awe. In a few minutes more we
-could hear the clear clatter of the horse's shod
-feet on the hard "macadam" as he turned out
-of the soft sandy loaning into the main road.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Stickit Minister sank back into his chair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank God!" he said, with a quick intake of
-breath almost like a sob.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I looked down at him in surprise.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Robert, why are you so troubled about this
-woman's bairns?" I asked.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He did not answer for a while, lying fallen in
-upon himself in his great armchair of worn horse-hair,
-as if the strain had been too great for his weak
-body. When he did reply it was in a curiously
-far-away voice like a man speaking in a dream.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They are Jessie Loudon's bairns," he said, "and
-a' the comfort she has in life!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I sat down on the hearthrug beside him—a
-habit I had when we were alone together. It
-was thus that I used to read Homer and Horace
-to him in the long winter forenights, and wrangle
-for happy hours over a construction or the turning
-of a phrase in the translation. So now I simply sat
-and was silent, touching his knee lightly with my
-shoulder. I knew that in time he would tell me all
-he wished me to hear. The old eight-day clock in
-the corner (with "</span><em class="italics">John Grey, Kilmaurs, 1791</em><span>"
-in italics across the brass face of it), ticked on
-interminably through ten minutes, and I heard the
-feet of the men come in from suppering the horse,
-before Robert said another word. Then he spoke:
-"Alec," he said, very quietly—he could hardly say
-or do anything otherwise (or rather I thought so
-before that night). "I have this on my spirit—it
-is heavy like a load. When I broke it to Jessie
-Loudon that I could never marry her, as I told you,
-I did not tell you that she took it hard and high,
-speaking bitter words that are best forgotten. And
-then in a week or two she married Gib Barbour,
-a good-for-nothing, good-looking young ploughman,
-a great don at parish dances—no meet
-mate for her. And that I count the heaviest part
-of my punishment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And since that day I have not passed word
-or salutation with Jessie Loudon—that is, with
-Jessie Barbour. But on a Sabbath day, just before
-I was laid down last year—a bonnie day in
-June—I met her as I passed though a bourock fresh
-with the gowden broom, and the 'shilfies' and
-Jennie Wrens singing on every brier. I had been
-lookin' for a sheep that had broken bounds. And
-there she sat wi' a youngling on ilka knee. There
-passed but ae blink o' the e'en between us—ane
-and nae mair. But oh, Alec, as I am a sinful
-man—married wife though she was, I kenned that she
-loved me, and she kenned that I loved her wi'
-the love that has nae ending!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a long pause here, and the clock
-struck with a long preparatory </span><em class="italics">g-r-r-r</em><span>, as if it were
-clearing its throat in order to apologise for the
-coming interruption.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And that," said Robert Fraser, "was the reason
-why Jessie Loudon would not come up to the
-Dullarg this nicht—no, not even for her bairns'
-sake!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-stickit-minister-wins-through"><span class="bold large">THE STICKIT MINISTER WINS THROUGH</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Yet Jessie Loudon did come to the Dullarg that
-night—and that for her children's sake.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Strangely enough, in writing of an evening so
-fruitful in incident, I cannot for the life of me
-remember what happened during the next two
-hours. The lads and lasses came in for the
-"Taking of the Book." So much I do recall.
-But that was an exercise never omitted on any
-pretext in the house of the ex-divinity student.
-I remember this also, because after the brief
-prelude of the psalm-singing (it was the 103rd),
-the Stickit Minister pushed the Bible across to
-me, open at the thirty-eighth chapter of Job. The
-envelope was still there. Though it was turned
-sideways I could see the faintly written address:</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<dl class="docutils">
-<dt class="noindent"><em class="italics">MR. ROBERT FRASER,</em></dt>
-<dd><dl class="docutils first last">
-<dt class="noindent"><em class="italics">Student in Divinity,</em></dt>
-<dd><dl class="docutils first last">
-<dt class="noindent"><em class="italics">50, St. Leonard's Street,</em></dt>
-<dd><p class="first last noindent pfirst"><em class="italics">Edinburgh.</em></p>
-</dd>
-</dl>
-</dd>
-</dl>
-</dd>
-</dl>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Even as I looked I seemed to hear again the
-woman's voice in the dark loaning—"I canna
-gang in </span><em class="italics">there</em><span>!" And in a lightning flash of
-illumination it came to me what the answer to
-that letter had meant to Jessie Loudon, and the
-knowledge somehow made me older and sadder.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then with a shaking voice I read the mighty
-words before me: "When the morning stars
-sang together and all the sons of God shouted for
-joy".... But when I came to the verse which
-says: "Have the gates of death been opened unto
-thee? Or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow
-of death?" I saw the Stickit Minister nod his head
-three times very slightly, and a strange subtle
-smile came over his face as though he could have
-answered: "Yea, Lord, verily I have seen
-them—they have been opened to me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as the lads and lasses filed out in a kind
-of wondering silence after Robert Fraser had
-prayed—not kneeling down, but sitting erect in
-his chair and looking out before him with
-wide-open eyes—we in the little sitting-room became
-conscious of a low knocking, persistent and remote,
-somewhere about the house of Dullarg. We could
-hear Bell Gregory open and then immediately
-close the kitchen door, having evidently found no
-one there. The knocking still continued.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I believe it is somebody at the front door," I
-said, turning in that direction.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And then the Stickit Minister cried out in a
-curious excited voice: "Open to them—open,
-Alec! Quick, man!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And his voice went through me with a kind of
-thrill, for I knew not who it was he expected to
-enter, whether sheriff's officer or angry creditor—or
-as it might be the Angel of the Presence
-Himself come to summon his soul to follow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nevertheless, with quaking heart enough, and
-resolving in future to be a more religious man, I
-made bold to undo the door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The woman I had seen in the lane stood before
-me, as it were, projected out of the dense darkness
-behind, her shawl fallen back from her face, and
-her features all pale and changeful in the flicker of
-the candle I had snatched up to take with me into
-the little hall. For the front door was only used
-on state occasions, as when the parish minister
-came to call, and at funerals.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He has not come—and the bairns are dying!
-So I had to come back!" she cried, more hoarsely
-and breathlessly than I had ever heard woman
-speak. But her eyes fairly blazed and her lips
-were parted wide for my answer.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Dr. Fraser left here more than an hour ago,"
-I stammered. "Has he not been to see the
-children?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No—no, I tell you, no. And they are
-choking—dying—it is the trouble in the throat. They
-will die if he does not come——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I heard a noise behind me, and the next moment
-I found myself put aside like a child, and Robert
-Fraser stood face to face with her that had been
-Jessie Loudon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come in," he said. And when she drew back
-from him with a kind of shudder, and felt uncertainly
-for her shawl, he stepped aside and motioned her
-to enter with a certain large and commanding
-gesture I had never seen him use before. And as
-if accustomed to obey, the woman came slowly
-within the lighted room. Even then, however,
-she would not sit down, but stood facing us both,
-a girl prematurely old, her lips nearly as pale as
-her worn cheeks, her blown hair disordered and
-wispy about her forehead, and only the dark
-and tragic flashing of her splendid eyes telling of
-a bygone beauty.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Stickit Minister stood up also, and as he
-leaned his hand upon the table, I noticed that he
-gently shut the Bible which I had left open, that
-the woman's eye might not fall upon the faded
-envelope which marked the thirty-eighth of Job.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Do I understand you to say," he began, in a
-voice clear, resonant, and full, not at all the voice
-of a stricken man, "that my brother has not yet
-visited your children?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He had not come when I ran out—they are
-much worse—dying, I think!" she answered, also
-in another voice and another mode of speech—yet
-a little stiffly, as if the more correct method had
-grown unfamiliar by disuse.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For almost the only time in his life I saw a look,
-stern and hard, come over the countenance of the
-Stickit Minister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Go home, Jessie," he said; "I will see that he
-is there as fast as horses can bring him!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She hesitated a moment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is he not here?" she faltered. "Oh, tell me
-if he is—I meant to fetch him back. I dare not
-go back without him!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Stickit Minister went to the door with firm
-step, the woman following without question or
-argument.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Fear not, but go, Jessie," he said; "my brother
-is not here, but he will be at the bairns' bedside
-almost as soon as you. I promise you."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank you, Robin," she stammered, adjusting
-the shawl over her head and instantly disappearing
-into the darkness. The old sweethearting name
-had risen unconsciously to her lips in the hour
-of her utmost need. I think neither of them
-noticed it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And now help me on with my coat," said
-Robert Fraser, turning to me. "I am going over
-to the village."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You must not," I cried, taking him by the
-arm; "let </span><em class="italics">me</em><span> go—let me put in the pony; I
-will be there in ten minutes!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have no pony now," he said gently and a
-little sadly, "I have no need of one. And besides,
-the quickest way is across the fields."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was true. The nearest way to the village,
-by a great deal, was by a narrow foot-track that
-wound across the meadows. But, fearing for his
-life, I still tried to prevent him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It will be your death!" I said, endeavouring
-to keep him back. "Let me go alone!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If Henry is where I fear he is," he answered,
-calmly, "he would not stir for you. But he will
-for me. And besides, I have passed my word
-to—to Jessie!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The details of that terrible night journey I will
-not enter upon. It is sufficient to say that I bade
-him lean on me, and go slowly, but do what I
-would I could not keep him back. Indeed, he
-went faster than I could accompany him—for,
-in order to support him a little, I had to walk
-unevenly along the ragged edges of the little
-field-path. All was dark gray above, beneath, and to
-the right of us. Only on the left hand a rough
-whinstone dyke stood up solidly black against the
-monotone of the sky. The wind came in cold
-swirls, with now and then a fleck of snow that
-stung the face like hail. I had insisted on the
-Stickit Minister taking his plaid about him in
-addition to his overcoat, and the ends of it flicking
-into my eyes increased the difficulty.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I have hardly ever been so thankful in my life,
-as when at last I saw the lights of the village
-gleam across the little bridge, as we emerged
-from the water-meadows and felt our feet firm
-themselves on the turnpike road.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>From that point the Stickit Minister went faster
-than ever. Indeed, he rushed forward, in spite
-of my restraining arm, with some remaining
-flicker of the vigour which in youth had made
-him first on the hillside at the fox-hunt and first
-on the haystacks upon the great day of the
-inbringing of the winter's fodder.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It seemed hardly a moment before we were at
-the door of the inn—the Red Lion the name of it,
-at that time in the possession of one "Jeems"
-Carter. Yes, Henry Fraser was there. His horse
-was tethered to an iron ring which was fixed in
-the whitewashed wall, and his voice could be heard
-at that very moment leading a rollicking chorus.
-Then I remembered. It was a "Cronies'" night.
-This was a kind of informal club recruited from
-the more jovial of the younger horsebreeding
-farmers of the neighbourhood. It included the
-local "vet.," a bonnet laird or two grown lonesome
-and thirsty by prolonged residence upon the edges
-of the hills, and was on all occasions proud and
-glad to welcome a guest so distinguished and
-popular as the young doctor of Cairn Edward.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Loose the beast and be ready to hand me the
-reins when I come out!" commanded the Stickit
-Minister, squaring his stooped shoulders like the
-leader of a forlorn hope.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So thus it happened that I did not see with my
-own eyes what happened when Robert Fraser
-opened the door of the "Cronies'" club-room.
-But I have heard it so often recounted that I
-know as well as if I had seen. It was the Laird
-of Butterhole who told me, and he always said
-that it made a sober man of him from that day
-forth. It was (he said) like Lazarus looking out
-of the sepulchre after they had rolled away the
-stone.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly in the midst of their jovial chorus
-some one said "</span><em class="italics">Hush</em><span>!"—some one of themselves—and
-instinctively all turned towards the door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And lo! there in the doorway, framed in the
-outer dark, his broad blue bonnet in his hand, his
-checked plaid waving back from his shoulders,
-stood a man, pale as if he had come to them
-up through the Valley of the Shadow of Death.
-With a hand white as bone, he beckoned to his
-brother, who stood with his hands on the table
-smiling and swaying a little with tipsy gravity.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why, Robert, what are you doing here——?"
-he was beginning. But the Stickit Minister
-broke in.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come!" he said, sternly and coldly, "the
-children you have neglected are dying—if they
-die through your carelessness you will be their
-murderer!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And to the surprise of all, the tall and florid
-younger brother quailed before the eye of this
-austere shade.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, I will come, Robert—I was coming in a
-moment anyway!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And so the Stickit Minister led him out.
-There was no great merriment after that in the
-"Cronies'" club that night. The members conferred
-chiefly in whispers, and presently emptying
-their glasses, they stole away home.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But no mortal knows what Robert Fraser said
-to his brother during that drive—something
-mightily sobering at all events. For when the
-two reached the small cluster of cothouses lying
-under the lee of Earmark wood, the young man,
-though not trusting himself to articulate speech,
-and somewhat over-tremulous of hand, was yet
-in other respects completely master of himself.
-I was not present at the arrival, just as I had
-not seen the startling apparition which broke up
-the "Cronies'" club. The doctor's gig held only
-two, and as soon as I handed Robert Fraser the
-reins, the beast sprang forward. But I was limber
-and a good runner in those days, and though
-the gray did his best I was not far behind.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There is no ceremony at such a house in time
-of sickness. The door stood open to the wall. A
-bright light streamed through and revealed the
-inequalities of the little apron of causewayed
-cobblestones. I entered and saw Henry Fraser
-bending over a bed on which a bairn was lying.
-Robert held a candle at his elbow. The mother
-paced restlessly to and fro with another child in
-her arms. I could see the doctor touch again
-and again the back of the little girl's throat with
-a brush which he continually replenished from a
-phial in his left hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Upon the other side of the hearthstone from the
-child's bed a strong country lout sat, sullenly
-"becking" his darned stocking feet at the clear
-embers of the fire. Then the mother laid the first
-child on the opposite bed, and turned to where
-the doctor was still operating.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly Henry Fraser stood erect. There was
-not a trace of dissipation about him now. The
-tradition of his guild was as a mantle of dignity
-about him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is all right," he said as he took his brother's
-hand in a long clasp. "Thank you, Robert, thank
-you a thousand times—that you brought me
-here in time!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nay, rather, thank God!" said Robert Fraser,
-solemnly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And even as he stood there the Stickit Minister
-swayed sidelong, but the next moment he had
-recovered himself with a hand on the bed-post.
-Then very swiftly he drew a handkerchief from
-his pocket and set it to his lips.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His brother and I went towards him with a quick
-apprehension. But the Stickit Minister turned
-from us both to the woman, who took two swift
-steps towards him with her arms outstretched, and
-such a yearning of love on her face as I never
-saw before or since. The sullen lout by the fire,
-drowsed on unheeding.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Jessie!</em><span>" cried the Stickit Minister, and with
-that fell into her arms. She held him there a long
-moment as it had been jealously, her head bent
-down upon his. Then she delivered him up to
-me, slowly and reluctantly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Henry Fraser put his hand on his heart and
-gave a great sob.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My brother is dead!" he said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Jessie Loudon did not utter a word.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="gibby-the-eel-student-in-divinity"><span class="bold large">GIBBY THE EEL, STUDENT IN DIVINITY</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Naturalists have often remarked how little
-resemblance there is between the young of certain
-animals and the adult specimen. Yonder tottering
-quadrangular arrangement of chewed string,
-remotely and inadequately connected at the upper
-corners, is certainly the young of the horse. But
-it does not even remotely suggest the war-horse
-sniffing up the battle from afar. This irregular
-yellow ball of feathers, with the steel-blue mask set
-beneath its half-opened eyelids, is most ridiculously
-unlike the magnificent eagle, which (in books) stares
-unblinded into the very eye of the noonday sun.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In like manner the young of the learned
-professions are by no means like the full-fledged
-expert of the mysteries. If in such cases the
-child is the father of the man, the parentage is
-by no means apparent.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To how many medical students would you
-willingly entrust the application of one square inch
-of sticking-plaster to a cut finger, or the care of a
-half-guinea umbrella? What surgeon would you
-not, in an emergency, trust with all you hold dear?
-You may cherish preferences and even prejudices,
-but as a whole the repute of the profession is
-above cavil.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There is, perhaps, more continuity above the
-legal profession, but even there it is a notable fact
-that the older and more successful a lawyer is,
-the more modest you find him, and the more
-diffident of his own infallibility. Indeed, several
-of the most eminent judges are in this matter
-quite as other men.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But of all others, the divinity student is perhaps
-the most misunderstood. He is wilfully
-misrepresented by those who ought to know him best.
-Nay, he misrepresents himself, and when he doffs
-tweeds and takes to collars which fasten behind and
-a long-skirted clerical coat, he is apt to disown his
-past self; and often succeeds in persuading himself
-that as he is now, diligent, sedate, zealous of good
-works, so was he ever.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Only sometimes, when he has got his Sunday
-sermons off his mind and two or three of the
-augurs are gathered together, will the adult clerk
-in holy orders venture to lift the veil and chew
-the cud of ancient jest and prank not wholly
-sanctified.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now there ought to be room, in a gallery which
-contains so many portraits of ministers, for one
-or two Students of Divinity, faithfully portrayed.[#]</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>[#] These studies I wrote down during certain winters,
-when, to please my mother, I made a futile attempt to
-prepare myself "to wag my head in a pulpit." Saving a
-certain prolixity of statement (which the ill-affected call
-long-windedness), they were all I carried away with me when I
-resolved to devote myself to the medical profession.—A. McQ.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And of these the first and chief is Mr. Gilbert
-Denholm, Master of Arts, Scholar in Theology—to
-his class-fellows more colloquially and generally
-known as "Gibby the Eel."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At college we all loved Gilbert. He was a
-merry-hearted youth, and his mere bodily presence
-was enough to make glad the countenances of his
-friends. His father was a minister in the West
-with a large family to bring up, which he effected
-with success upon a stipend of surprising tenuity.
-So it behoved Gilbert to keep himself at college
-by means of scholarships and private tuition. His
-pupils had a lively time of it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet his only fault obvious to the world was
-a certain light-headed but winsome gaiety, and a
-tendency to jokes of the practical kind. I used
-often to restrain Gilbert's ardour by telling him
-that if he did not behave himself and walk more
-seemly, he would get his bursary taken from him
-by the Senatus.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This would recall Gilbert to himself when almost
-everything else had failed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Part of Gilbert's personal equipment was the
-certain lithe slimness of figure which gained him
-the title of "Gibby the Eel," and enabled him to
-practise many amusing pranks in the class-room.
-He would have made an exceptionally fine burglar,
-for few holes were too small and no window too
-secure for Gilbert to make his exits and entrances
-by. Without going so far as to say that he could
-wriggle himself through an ordinary keyhole, I
-will affirm that if anybody ever could, that person
-was Gilbert Denholm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>One of the most ordinary of his habits was that
-of wandering here and there throughout the
-classroom during the hour of lecture, presuming upon
-the professor's purblindness or lack of attention.
-You would be sitting calmly writing a letter,
-drawing caricatures in your note-book, or
-otherwise improving your mind with the most laudable
-imitation of attention, when suddenly, out of the
-black and dusty depths about your feet would
-arise the startling apparition of Gibby the Eel.
-He would nod, casually inquire how you found
-yourself this morning, and inform you that he only
-dropped in on his way up to Bench Seventeen
-to see Balhaldie, who owed him a shilling.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, so long!" Again he would nod
-pleasantly, and sink into the unknown abyss
-beneath the benches as noiselessly and
-unobtrusively as a smile fades from a face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Sometimes, however, when in wanton mood, his
-progress Balhaldie-wards could be guessed at by
-the chain of "</span><em class="italics">Ouchs</em><span>" and "</span><em class="italics">Ohs</em><span>" which indicated
-his subterranean career. The suddenness with
-which Gilbert could awaken to lively interest the
-most somnolent and indifferent student, by means
-of a long brass pin in the calf of the leg, had
-to be felt to be appreciated. Thereupon ensued
-the sound of vigorous kicking, but generally by
-the time the injured got the range of his unseen
-foe, Gilbert could be observed two or three forms
-above intently studying a Greek Testament wrong
-side up, and looking the picture of meek
-reproachful innocence.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In no class could Gilbert use so much freedom
-of errancy as in that of the venerable Professor
-Galbraith. Every afternoon this fine old gentleman
-undertook to direct our studies in New Testament
-exegesis, and incidentally afforded his students an
-hour of undisturbed repose after the more exciting
-labours of the day.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>No one who ever studied under Dr. Simeon
-Galbraith will forget that gentle droning voice
-overhead, that full-orbed moon-like countenance,
-over which two smaller moons of beamy spectacle
-seemed to be in perpetual transit, and in especial
-he will remember that blessed word "Hermeneutics,"
-of which (it is said) there was once one
-student who could remember the meaning. He
-died young, much respected by all who knew him.
-Dreamily the great word came to you, soothing
-and grateful as mother's lullaby, recurrent as the
-wash of a quiet sea upon a beach of softest sand.
-"Gentlemen, I will now proceed to call your
-attention ... to the study of Hermeneutics
-... Hermeneut ... Gegenbauer has affirmed
-... but in my opeenion, gentlemen
-... Hermeneutics...!" (Here you passed from the
-subconscious state into Nirvana.)</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And so on, and so on, till the college bell clanged
-in the quadrangle, and it was time to file out for
-a wash and brush-up before dinner in hall.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Upon one afternoon every week, Professor
-Galbraith read with his students the "Greek
-Oreeginal." He prescribed half-a-dozen chapters
-of "Romans" or "Hebrews," and expected us to
-prepare them carefully. I verily believe that he
-imagined we did. This shows what a sanguine
-and amiable old gentlemen he was. The beamy
-spectacle belied him not.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The fact was that we stumbled through our
-portions by the light of nature, aided considerably
-by a class copy of an ingenious work known by
-the name of "Bagster," in which every Greek word
-had the English equivalent marked in plain figures
-underneath, and all the verbs fully parsed at the
-foot of the page.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The use of this was not considered wicked,
-because, like the early Christians, in Professor
-Galbraith's class we had all things common.
-This was our one point of resemblance to the
-primitive Church.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>One day the Doctor, peering over his brown
-leather folio, discerned the meek face and beaming
-smile of Gilbert the Eel in the centre of Bench
-One, immediately beneath him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah! Mr. Denholm, will you read for us this
-morning—beginning at the 29th verse—of the
-chapter under consideration?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And he subsided expectantly into his lecture.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Up rose Gilbert, signalling wildly with one hand
-for the class "Bagster" to be passed to him, and
-meantime grasping at the first Testament he could
-see about him. By the time he had read the
-Greek of half-a-dozen verses, the sharpness of
-the trouble was overpast. He held in his hands
-the Key of Knowledge, and translated and parsed
-like a Cunningham Fellow—or any other fellow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Vairy well, Mr. Denholm; vairy well indeed.
-You may now sit down while I proceed to expound
-the passage!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Whereupon Gibby the Eel ungratefully pitched
-the faithful "Bagster" on the bench and
-disappeared under the same himself on a visit to
-Nicholson McFeat, who sat in the middle of the
-class-room.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For five minutes—ten—fifteen, the gentle voice
-droned on from the rostrum, the word "Hermeneutics"
-discharging itself at intervals with the
-pleasing gurgle of an intermittent spring. Then
-the Professor returned suddenly to his Greek
-Testament.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Mr. Denholm, you construed </span><em class="italics">vairy</em><span> well last
-time. Be good enough to continue at the place
-you left off. Mr. Denholm—where is
-Mister—Mister Den—holm?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And the moon-like countenance rose from its
-eclipse behind six volumes of Owen (folio edition),
-while the two smaller moons in permanent transit
-directed themselves upon the vacant place in
-Bench One, from which Gibby the Eel had construed
-so glibly with the efficient aid of "Bagster."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Mister—Mist—er Denholm?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Professor knew that he was absent-minded,
-but (if the expression be allowable) he could have
-sworn——.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am here, sir!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby the Eel, a little shame-faced and rumpled
-as to hair, was standing plump in the very middle
-of the class-room, in the place where he had been
-endeavouring to persuade Nick McFeat to lend
-him his dress clothes "to go to a conversazione
-in," which request Nick cruelly persisted in refusing,
-alleging first, that he needed the garments himself,
-and secondly, that the Eel desired to go to no
-"conversazione," but contrariwise to take a certain
-Madge Robertson to the theatre.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At this moment the fateful voice of the Professor
-broke in upon them just as they were rising to
-the height of their great argument.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Mister—Den—holm, will you go on where
-you left off?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby rose, signalling wildly for "Bagster," and
-endeavouring to look as if he had been a plant
-of grace rooted and grounded on that very spot.
-Professor Galbraith gazed at Gibby </span><em class="italics">in situ</em><span>, then at
-the place formerly occupied by him, tried hard
-to orient the matter in his head, gave it up, and
-bade the translation proceed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But "Bagster" came not, and Gilbert did not
-distinguish himself this time. Indeed, far from it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Will you parse the first verb, Mr. Denholm—no,
-not that word! That has usually been
-considered a substantive, Mr. Denholm—the next
-word, ah, yes!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The first aorist, active of—</span><em class="italics">confound you fellows,
-where's that 'Bagster'? I call it dashed mean—*yes,
-sir, it is connected with the former clause by
-the particle—*have you not found that book yet?
-Oh, you beasts!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>(The italics, it is hardly necessary to say, were
-also spoken in italics, and were not an integral
-part of Gibby's examination as it reached the ear
-of Professor Galbraith.)</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah, that will do, Mr. Denholm—not so well—not
-quite so well, sir—yet" (kindly) "not so vairy
-ill either."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Gilbert sat down to resume the discussion
-of the dress clothes. By this time, of course, he
-considered himself quite safe from further molestation.
-The Professor had never been known to call
-up a man thrice in one day. So, finding Nick
-McFeat obdurate in the matter of the dress suit,
-Gilbert announced his intention of visiting Kenneth
-Kennedy, who, he said pointedly, was not a selfish
-and unclean animal of the kind abhorred by Jews,
-but, contrariwise, a gentleman—one who would
-lend dress clothes for the asking. And Kennedy's
-were better clothes, any way, and had silk linings.
-Furthermore, Nick need not think it, he (Mr. Gilbert
-Denholm) would not demean himself to put
-on his (Mr. McFeat's) dirty "blacks," which had
-been feloniously filched from a last year's
-scarecrow that had been left out all the winter. And
-furthermore, he (the said Gilbert) would take Madge
-Robertson to the theatre in spite of him, and what
-was more, cut Nick McFeat out as clean as a leek.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At this the latter laughed scornfully, affirming
-that the grapes had a faintly sub-acid flavour,
-and bade Gibby go his way.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby went, tortuously and subterraneously
-worming his way to the highest seats in the
-synagogue, where Kenneth Kennedy, M.A., reposed at
-full length upon a vacant seat, having artistically
-bent a Highland cloak over a walking-stick to
-represent scholastic meditation, if perchance the
-kindly spectacle of the Professor should turn in his
-direction. Gibby gazed rapturously on his friend's
-sleep, contemplating him, as once in the Latmian
-cave Diana gazed upon Endymion. He was
-proceeding to ink his friend's face preparatory to
-upsetting him on the floor, when he remembered
-the dress suit just in time to desist.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Eel, you are a most infamous pest—can't you
-let a fellow alone? What in the world do you
-want now?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Whereupon, with countenance of triple brass,
-Gibby entered into the question of the dress suit
-with subtlety and tact. There never was so good
-a chap as Kennedy, never one so generous. He
-(G.D.) would do as much for him again, and
-he would bring it back the next day, pressed by
-a tailor.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Kennedy, however, was not quite so enthusiastic.
-There are several points of view in matters of
-this kind. Kenneth Kennedy did not, of course,
-care "a dump" about Madge Robertson, but he
-had the best interests of his silk-lined dress coat
-at heart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That's all very well, Eel," he said, raising
-himself reluctantly to the perpendicular; "but you
-know as well as I do that the last time I lent
-it to you, you let some wax drop on the waistcoat,
-right on the pocket, and I have never been
-able to get it out since——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly the pair became conscious that the
-gentle hum of exegetical divinity from the rostrum
-had ceased. The word "Hermeneutics" no longer
-soothed and punctuated their converse at intervals
-of five minutes, like the look-out's "All's well"
-on a ship at sea.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah, Mis—ter Den—holm, perhaps you have
-recovered yourself by this time. Be good enough
-to continue where you left off—Mis—ter
-Den—holm—Mister Denholm—where in the world is
-Mr. Denholm?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The spectacles were hardly beaming now. A
-certain shrewd suspicion mixed with the wonder in
-their expression, as Dr. Galbraith gazed from the
-Eel's position One to position Two, and back
-again to position One. Both were empty as the
-cloudless empyrean. His wonder culminated when
-Gilbert was finally discovered in position Three,
-high on the sky-line of Bench Twenty-four!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>How Gilbert acquitted himself on this occasion
-it is perhaps better not to relate. I will draw a
-kindly veil over the lamentable tragedy. It is
-sufficient to say that he lost his head completely—as
-completely even as the aforesaid Miss Madge
-Robertson could have wished.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And all though the disastrous exhibition the
-Professor did not withdraw his gaze from the
-wretched Eel, but continued to rebuke him, as
-it seemed, for the astral and insubstantial nature
-of his body.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>No better proof can be adduced that the Eel
-had become temporarily deranged, than the fact
-that even now, when it was obvious that the long
-latent suspicions of the Gentle Hermeneut were
-at last aroused, he refused to abide in his breaches;
-but, scorning all entreaty, and even Kennedy's
-unconditioned promise of the dress suit, he proceeded
-to crawl down the gallery steps, in order to regain
-position Number One, in the front seat under the
-Professor's very nose.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><em class="italics">Quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat.</em></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Meanwhile the class, at first raised to a state of
-ecstatic enjoyment by the Eel's misfortunes, then
-growing a little anxious lest he should go too far,
-was again subsiding to its wonted peaceful hum,
-like that of a vast and well-contented bumble-bee.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly we became aware that the Professor
-was on his feet in the midst of a stern and
-awful silence.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My eye has fallen," he began solemnly, "on
-what I do not expect to see. I hope the—gentleman
-will remember where he is—and who I am!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>During the pronouncement of this awful
-allocution the professorial arm was extended, and a
-finger, steady as the finger of Fate, pointed directly
-at the unhappy Gibby, who, prone in the dust,
-appeared to be meditating a discourse upon the
-text, "I am a worm and no man!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His head was almost on the level of the floor
-and his limbs extended far up the gallery stairs.
-To say that his face was fiery-red gives but a faint
-idea of its colour, while a black streak upon his
-nose proved that the charwomen of the college
-were not a whit more diligent than the students
-thereof.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>What happened after this is a kind of maze. I
-suppose that Gibby regained a seat somewhere,
-and that the lecture proceeded after a fashion;
-but I do not know for certain. Bursts of unholy
-mirth forced their way through the best linen
-handkerchiefs, rolled hard and used as gags.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But there grew up a feeling among many that
-though doubtless there was humour in the case, the
-Eel had gone a little too far, and if Professor
-Galbraith were genuinely angered he might bring
-the matter before the Senatus, with the result
-that Gilbert would not only lose his bursary, but
-be sent down as well, to his father's sorrow and
-his own loss.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So when the class was at last over, half-a-dozen
-of us gathered round Gibby and represented to
-him that he must go at once to the retiring-room
-and ask the Professor's pardon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At first and for long the Eel was recalcitrant.
-He would not go. What was he to say? We
-instructed him. We used argument, appeal,
-persuasion. We threatened torture. Finally, yielding
-to those heavier battalions on the side of which
-Providence is said to fight, Gibby was led to the
-door with a captor at each elbow. We knocked;
-he entered. The door was shut behind him, but
-not wholly. Half-a-dozen ears lined the crack at
-intervals, like limpets clinging to a smooth streak
-on a tidal rock. We could not hear the Eel's
-words. Only a vague murmur reached us, and I
-doubt if much more reached Professor Galbraith.
-The Eel stopped and there was a pause. We
-feared its ill omen.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Poor Eel, the old man's going to report him!"
-we whispered to each other.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And then we heard the words of the Angelical
-Scholiast.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Shake hands, Mr. Denholm. If, as ye say, this
-has been a lesson to you, it has been no less a
-lesson to me. Let us both endeavour to profit by
-it, unto greater diligence and seemliness in our
-walk and conversation. We will say no more
-about the matter, if you please, Mr. Denholm."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>We cheered the old man as he went out, till he
-waved a kindly and tolerant hand back at us, and
-there was more than a gleam of humour in the
-kindly spectacles, as if our gentle Hermeneut were
-neither so blind nor yet so dull in the uptake as
-we had been accustomed to think him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As for the Eel, he became a man from that day,
-and, to a limited extent, put away childish
-things—though his heart will remain ever young and
-fresh. His story is another story, and so far as
-this little study goes it is enough to say that when
-at last the aged Professor of Hermeneutics passed
-to the region where all things are to be finally
-explicated, it was Gilbert Denholm who got up the
-memorial to his memory, which was subscribed to
-by every student without exception he had ever
-had. And it was he who wrote Dr. Galbraith's
-epitaph, of which the last line runs:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"GENTLE, A PEACE-MAKER, A LOVER OF
-GOOD AND OF GOD."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="dr-girnigo-s-assistant"><span class="bold large">DOCTOR GIRNIGO'S ASSISTANT</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"Off, ye lendings!" said Gibby the Eel to his
-heather-mixture knicker-bocker suit, on the day
-when his Presbytery of Muirlands licensed him
-to preach the gospel.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And within the self-same hour the Reverend
-Gilbert Denholm, M.A., Probationer, in correct
-ministerial garb, had the honour of dining with the
-Presbytery, and of witnessing the remarkable
-transformation which overtakes that august body
-as soon as it dips its collective spoon in the
-official soup.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I knew a Presbytery once which tried to lunch
-on cold coffee and new bread. The survivors
-unanimously took to drink.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the Presbytery of Muirlands were sage
-fathers and brethren, and they knew better than
-that. They dined together in a reasonable manner
-at the principal inn of the place. An enthusiast,
-who suggested that they should transfer their
-custom to the new Temperance Hotel up near the
-railway station, was asked if he had sent in his
-returns on Life and Work—and otherwise severely
-dealt with.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert had been remitted to the Presbytery
-of Muirlands from his own West Country one of
-Burnestown, because he had been appointed
-assistant to the Reverend Doctor Girnigo of
-Rescobie; and it was considered more satisfactory
-that the Presbytery within whose bounds he was
-to labour, should examine him concerning his
-diligence and zeal.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So they asked him all the old posers which
-had made the teeth of former examinees of the
-Presbytery of Muirlands chatter in their heads.
-But the Eel's teeth did not chatter. He had got
-a rough list from a friend who had been that way
-before, and so passed the bar with flying colours.
-The modest way in which the new brother (unattached)
-behaved himself at dinner completed
-Gibby's conquest of the Brethren—with the single
-but somewhat important exception of the Reverend
-Doctor Joseph Girnigo of Rescobie, Gilbert's future
-chief.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was the cross of Dr. Girnigo's life that his
-session compelled him to engage an assistant.
-Dr. Girnigo felt that here were three hundred
-pieces of silver (or more accurately, £60 sterling)
-which ought to have been given to the poor—that is,
-to the right breeches' pocket of Joseph Girnigo—instead
-of being squandered in providing such a thorn
-in the flesh within the parish as a licensed assistant.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Girnigo was in the habit of saying, whenever
-he had made it too hot for his acting assistant,
-that he would rather look after three parishes than
-one probationer. At first the engaging and
-dismission of these unfortunate young men had been
-placed unreservedly in the Doctor's hands; but as
-the affair assumed more and more the appearance
-and proportions of a mere procession to and from
-the railway station, the members of Session were
-compelled to assume the responsibility themselves.
-So long as the Doctor's sway continued
-unchallenged, the new assistant usually arrived in
-Nether Balhaldie's "machine" on Saturday night,
-and departed on Tuesday morning very early in the
-gig belonging to Upper Balhaldie. He preached
-on Sabbath, and Monday was spent in Dr. Girnigo's
-study, where it was explained to him: first, that
-he knew nothing; secondly, that what he thought
-he knew was worse than nothing; thirdly, that
-there is nothing more hateful than a vain pretence
-of earthly learning; and fourthly, that Paul and
-Silas knew nothing of "Creeticism." No, they
-were better employed—aye, and it would be telling
-the young men of the day—the conclusion of the
-whole matter being that the present victim would
-never do at all for the parish of Rescobie and had
-better go.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He went, in Upper Balhaldie's gig, and Watty
-Learmont, the tenant thereof, who could be
-trusted to know, said that the rejected probationers
-very seldom engaged in prayer (to call prayer) on
-the road to the station. I do not know what
-Watty meant to insinuate, but that is what he
-said. He had that mode of speech to perfection
-which consists in saying one thing and giving the
-impression that the speaker means another.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But it was felt that this was a state of affairs
-which could not continue. It amounted, indeed, to
-nothing less than a scandal that the Session should
-be paying £60 for an assistant, and that at the end
-of the year eight of these should only have spent
-exactly twenty-seven days in the parish, while the
-remaining three hundred and thirty-eight days had
-been occupied by the Doctor in filling the vacancies
-he had himself created. Besides, since he always
-insisted on a week's trial without salary when he
-engaged his man (in order, as he said, to discover
-where there was a likelihood of the parties being
-mutually satisfied), the shrewd business men of the
-Session saw more than a probability of their good
-and hardly gathered sixty "notes" still remaining
-intact in the possession of their minister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was, however, the affair of the prayer-meeting
-which brought the matter to a head. For after all,
-such hard-headed bargain-makers as Learmont,
-Senior of Balhaldie, and his coadjutors on the
-Session, could not help having a sort of respect
-for the Doctor's business qualities. But they
-could not bear to be made a laughing stock of in
-the market of Drumfern.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What's this I hear aboot your new helper's
-prayer-meetin' up at Rescobie?" Cochrane of
-Tatierigs cried one Wednesday across the mart
-ring to Upper Balhaldie. "Is't true that that
-minister o' yours broke it up wi' a horse-whup?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>No, it was not true. But there was enough of
-truth in it to make the members of Rescobie
-Session nervous of public appearances for a long
-time, indeed till the affair was forgotten.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The truth was that during the Doctor's absence
-at the house of his married son in Drumfern,
-Mr. Killigrew, a soft-voiced young man, who, being
-exceedingly meek, had been left in charge of the
-parish, thought it would be a surprise for his chief
-if he started a prayer-meeting on Wednesday
-evenings in the village schoolhouse. He pictured
-to himself his principal's delight when he should
-hand over the new departure as a going concern.
-So he made a house-to-house visitation of Rescobie
-village and neighbourhood, this young man with
-the soft voice. The popular appeal was favourable.
-He went round and saw the school-mistress.
-She was fond of young men with soft voices
-(and hats). She readily consented to lend her
-harmonium, and to lead the singing from a
-certain popular hymn-book.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The first meeting was an unqualified success,
-and the young man promptly began a series of
-rousing addresses on the "Pilgrim's Progress." There
-were to be thirty in all. But alas, for the
-vanity of human schemes, the second address (on
-the Slough of Despond) was scarcely under weigh
-when, like an avenging host, or Cromwell entering
-the Long Parliament, the Doctor strode into the
-midst, booted and spurred, as he had ridden over
-all the way from Drumfern. He had a riding-whip
-in his hand, which was the foundation of
-the Tatierigs story, but there is no record that
-he used it on any in the meeting.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The services closed without the benediction, and
-as the Doctor wrath fully clicked the key in the
-lock, he said that he would see the school-mistress
-in the morning.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he turned to the young man in the soft
-hat. The remains left Rescobie early next
-morning in Upper Balhaldie's gig.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Since this date it was enough to call out to
-a Rescobie man, "Ony mair Pilgrims up your
-way?" in order to have him set his dogs on you or
-wrathfully bring down his herd's crook upon
-your crown.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Being thus stirred to action, the Session wrestled
-with Dr. Girnigo, and prevailing by the unanswerable
-argument of the purse-strings, it took the
-appointment and dismission of the "helpers" into
-its own hands.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So Dr. Girnigo had to try other tactics. Usually
-he gave the unfortunate "helper" delivered into
-his hands no peace night nor day, till in despair
-he threw up his appointment, and shook the
-Rescobie dust off the soles of his feet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>First (under the new regime) came Alexander
-Fairbody, a thoughtful, studious lad, whom the
-Doctor set to digging top-dressing into his garden
-till his hands were blistered. He would not allow
-him to preach, and as to praying, if he wanted
-to do that he could go to his bedroom. So
-Mr. Fairbody endured hardness for ten days, and
-then resigned in a written communication, alleging
-as a reason that he had come to Rescobie as to
-work in a spiritual and not in a material vineyard.
-The Doctor burked the document, and the Reverend
-Robert Begg reigned in the stead of Alexander
-Fairbody, resigned for cause.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Begg was athletic. Him Dr. Girnigo set
-to the work of arranging his old sermons, seven
-barrels full. He was to catalogue them under
-eighteen heads, and be prepared to give his reasons
-in every case. The first three classes were—"Sermons
-Enforcing the Duty of Respect for
-Ecclesiastical Superiors," "Sermons upon Christian
-Giving," and "Sermons Inculcating Humility in
-the Young." The Reverend Robert Begg would
-have enjoyed the digging of the garden. He
-stood just one full week of the sermon-arranging.
-He declared that sixteen of the eighteen classes
-were cross divisions, and that the task of looking
-through the written matter permanently enfeebled
-his intellect. Sympathetic friends consoled him
-with the reflection that nobody would ever find
-out.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On the second Wednesday after his appointment
-he departed, uttering sentiments which were a
-perfect guarantee of good faith (but which were
-manifestly not for publication) to Watty Learmont
-as he journeyed to the railway station in the
-Upper Balhaldie gig.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A new sun rose upon Rescobie with the coming
-of Gibby the Eel. He had known both of his
-predecessors at college, and he had pumped them
-thoroughly upon the life and doctrine of their
-former chief. In addition to which Gilbert had
-taken to him a suit of tweeds and a fishing-rod,
-and with a piece of bread and cheese in his pocket,
-and guile in his heart, he had gone up the Rescobie
-water, asking for drinks at the farmhouses on the
-way, much as he used to perambulate Professor
-Galbraith's class-room in his old, abandoned,
-unregenerate, sans-dog-collar days.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Hitherto the helper, a mere transient bird-of-passage,
-had lodged with Mistress Honeytongue,
-the wife of Hosea Honeytongue, the beadle and
-minister's man of Rescobie. This brought the
-youth, as it were, under the shadow of the manse,
-and what was more to the point, under the
-eye of the minister. But Gilbert Denholm had
-other aims.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He took rooms in the village, quite
-three-quarters of a mile from the manse, with one
-Mrs. Tennant, the widow of a medical man in
-the neighbourhood who had died without making
-adequate provision for his family. She had never
-taken a lodger before, but since his investiture in
-clericals the Eel had filled out to a handsome
-figure, and he certainly smiled a most irresistible
-smile as he stood on the doorstep.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert arrived late one Friday night in
-Rescobie, and speculation was rife in the parish
-as to whether he would preach on Sabbath or
-not. Most were of the negative opinion, but
-Watty Learmont, for reasons of his own, offered
-to wager a new hat that he would.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On Saturday morning Gilbert put on his longest
-tails and his doggiest collar and marched boldly
-up to the front door of the manse, with the general
-air of playing himself along the road upon war
-pipes. Perhaps, however, he was only whistling
-silently to keep his courage up.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is Miss Girnigo at home?" said he to the
-somewhat stern-visaged personage who opened
-the door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">I</em><span> am Miss Girnigo," said a sepulchral voice.
-(Miss Girnigo was suffering from the summer cold
-which used to be called a "hay fever.")</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Indeed—I might have known; how delightful!"
-said the Eel, now, alas! transformed into an old
-serpent; "I am so glad to find you at home!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am always at home!" returned Miss Girnigo,
-keeping up a semblance of severity, but secretly
-mollified by the homage of Gibby's smile.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I hope you will let me come here very
-often. I shall find it lonely in the village, but I
-thought it better to be near my work," said
-Gilbert; "I am staying with Mrs. Tennant, the
-doctor's widow. Do you know Mrs. Tennant?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, yes," said Miss Girnigo, smiling for the
-first time; "she is one of my dearest friends. I
-often go there to tea."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I love tea," said Gilbert, with enthusiasm;
-"Mrs. Tennant has invited me to take tea in her parlour
-in the afternoon as often as I like, but I was
-not expecting such a reward as this!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Miss Girnigo was considerably over forty, but
-she was even more than youthfully amenable to
-flattery and to the Eel's beaming and boyish face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are the new assistant," she said, "Mister—ah——!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Denholm!" said Gilbert, smiling; "it is a
-nice name. Don't you think so?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have not thought anything about the matter,"
-said Miss Girnigo, bridling, yet with the ghost of
-a blush. "I do not charge my mind with such
-things. Have you come to see my father?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, after a while. But just at present I
-would rather see your plants!" said the Serpent,
-who had been well coached. (No wonder Watty
-Learmont smiled when he asserted that the New
-Man would preach on Sunday.)</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now Miss Girnigo lived chiefly for her flowers.
-The Serpent had a list of them, roughly but
-accurately compiled from the lady's seed-merchant's
-ledger by a friend in the business. He had also
-a fund of information respecting "plants," very
-recently acquired, on his mind.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"How did you know I was fond of flowers?"
-asked Miss Girnigo.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Could any one doubt it?" cried Gilbert, with
-enthusiasm. "Who was the Jo——" (he was on the
-brink of saying "Johnny") "g—gentleman of whom
-it was said: 'If you want to see his monument,
-look around'—Sir Christopher Wren, wasn't it?
-Well, I looked around as I came up the street!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Gilbert took in the whole front of the
-manse with his glance. It certainly was very
-pretty, covered from top to bottom with rambler
-roses and Virginia cress.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert entered, and as they passed in front of
-the minister's study door Miss Girnigo almost
-skittishly made a sign for silence, and Gilbert
-tip-toed past with an exaggeration of caution
-which made his companion laugh. They found
-themselves presently in the drawing-room, where
-again the flower-pots were everywhere, but specially
-banked round the oriel window. Gilbert named
-them one after the other like children at a
-baptism, with a sort of easy certainty and
-familiarity. His friend the nurseryman's clerk
-had not failed him. Miss Girnigo was delighted.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," she said, "it </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> pleasant to have some
-one who knows Ceterach Officinarum from a
-kail-stock. We shall go botanising together!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ye-es," said Gilbert, a little uncertainly, and
-with less enthusiasm than might have been
-expected.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Good heavens," he was saying, "how shall I
-grind up the beastly thing if I have to live up
-to all this?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Miss Girnigo was in high good-humour,
-though her pleasure was sadly marred by the
-incipient cold in her head, which she was conscious
-prevented her from doing herself justice. At
-forty, eyes that water and a nose tipped with
-pink do not make for maiden beauty.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have a dreadful cold coming on,
-Mr. Denholm," she said; "I really am not fit to
-be seen. I wonder what I was thinking of to
-ask you in!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Try this," said Gilbert, pulling a kind of
-india-rubber puff-ball out of his pocket; "it is
-quite good. It makes you sneeze like the
-very—ahem—like anything. Stops a cold in no
-time—won't be happy till you get it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't dare to—how does it work?" demurred
-Miss Girnigo.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert illustrated, and began to sneeze promptly,
-as the snuff titillated his air passages.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now you try!" he said, and smiled.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert held it insinuatingly to the lady's nostrils
-and pumped vigorously.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">A-tish—shoo!</em><span>" remarked the lady, as if he
-had touched a spring.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">A-tish—shoo-oo-ooh!</em><span>" replied Gilbert.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After that they responded antiphonally, like
-Alp answering Alp, till the door opened and
-Dr. Girnigo appeared with a half-written sheet
-of sermon paper in his hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The guilty pair stood rooted to the ground—at
-least, spasmodically so, for every other moment
-a sneeze lifted one of them upon tiptoe.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What is this, Arabella, what is this? What is
-this young man doing here?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Don't be—</span><em class="italics">a-tish—oo</em><span>—stupid, papa! You know
-very well—</span><em class="italics">shoo</em><span>—it is Mr. Denholm, the new
-Assist—</span><em class="italics">aroo</em><span>!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sir!" said Dr. Girnigo, turning upon his
-junior and angrily stamping his foot.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert held out his hand, and as the Doctor
-did not take it he waggled it feebly in the air
-with a sort of impotent good-fellowship.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"All right," he said; "better presently—only
-c-curing Miss—Miss Girni—</span><em class="italics">goo-ahoo—arish-chee-hoo</em><span>—of
-a cold!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I do not know any one of that name, sir!"
-thundered the Doctor, not wholly unreasonably.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No?" said Gilbert, anxiously; "I understood
-that this—</span><em class="italics">a-tishoo</em><span>—lady was Miss Girnigo, though
-I thought she was too young for a daughter—your
-granddaughter, perhaps, Doctor?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And the smile once more took in Miss Girnigo
-as if she had been a beautiful picture.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>By this time Miss Girnigo had somewhat recovered.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Papa," she said, sharply, "Mr. Denholm is going
-to be such an acquisition. He is a botanist—a
-Fellow of the Linnæan Society, I understand——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Of Pittenweem," muttered Gilbert between
-his teeth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And he is going to preach on Sunday. You
-have had a lot to worry you this week and
-need a rest. Besides, your best shirts are not
-ironed—-not dry indeed. The weather has been
-so bad!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I had made up my mind to preach on Sabbath
-myself," said Dr. Girnigo, who, though a tyrant
-untamed without, was held in considerable
-subjection to the higher power within the bounds of
-his own house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nonsense, papa—I will not allow you to think
-of such a thing!" cried Miss Girnigo. "Besides,
-Mr. Denholm is coming to supper to-night, and we
-will talk botany all the time!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Which was why the Eel, falling off his bicycle
-at 1.45 p.m. that same day in front of my house
-in Cairn Edward (sixteen miles away), burst into
-my consulting-room with the following demand,
-proclaimed in frenzied accents: "Lend me your
-Bentley's Botany, or something—not that beastly
-jaw-breaking German thing you are so fond of, but
-something plain and easy, with the names of all
-the plants in. I have the whole thing to get up
-by eight o'clock to-night, and I'll eat my head if
-I can remember what a cotyledon is!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It is believed that on the way back the Eel
-studied Bentley, cunningly adjusted on the
-handlebar, with loops of string to keep the pages from
-fluttering. (He was a trick-rider of repute.) At
-any rate, he did not waste his time, and arrived
-at the manse so full of botanical terms that he had
-considerable difficulty in making himself intelligible
-to the maid, who on this occasion, being cleaned
-up, opened the door to him in state.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This was the beginning of the taming of the
-tiger. Gilbert preached the next forenoon, and
-pleased the Doctor greatly by the excellent taste
-of his opening remarks upon his text, which was,
-"To preach the gospel ... and not to boast
-in another man's line of things made ready to
-our hand."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The preacher, as a new and original departure,
-divided his subject into three heads, as followeth:
-First, "The Duty of Respect for Ecclesiastical
-Superiors"; second, "The Duty of Christian
-Liberality" (he had to drag this in neck and
-crop); and thirdly, "The Supreme Duty of
-Humility in the Young with respect to their
-Elders."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>While he was looking it over on Sunday morning
-Gilbert heartily confounded his friend Begg for
-forgetting the other fifteen divisions of
-Dr. Girnigo's sermons.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I could have made a much better appearance
-if that fellow Begg had had any sense!" he said
-to himself. "But" (with a sigh) "I must just do
-the best I can with these."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nevertheless, Dr. Girnigo considered that Gibby
-had surpassed himself in his application. He
-showed how any good that he might do in the
-parish must not be set down to his credit, but to that
-of Another who had so long laboured among them;
-and how that he (the preacher), being but "as one
-entering upon another man's line of things," it
-behoved him above all things not to be boastful.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A very sound address—quite remarkable in
-one so young!" was the Doctor's verdict as
-he met the Session after the close of Gilbert's
-first service.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Session and congregation, however, did not
-approve quite so highly, having had a surfeit of
-similar teaching during the past forty years.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Walter Learmont, senior (sad to tell it
-of an Elder), winked the sober eye and remarked
-to his intimates: "Bide a wee—he kens his way
-aboot, thon yin. He wad juist be drawin' the
-auld man's leg!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At any rate, certain it is that after this auspicious
-beginning Gibby the Eel (M.A.) remained longer
-in Rescobie than all his predecessors put together.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But it was to Jemima Girnigo that he owed this.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-gate-of-the-upper-garden"><span class="bold large">THE GATE OF THE UPPER GARDEN</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>For the first six months that Gibby the Eel,
-otherwise the Reverend Gilbert Denholm, M.A.,
-acted as "helper" to Dr. Joseph Girnigo in the
-parish of Rescobie, he was much pleased with
-himself. He laughed with his friend and
-classmate, Robertland, over the infatuation of the
-doctor's old maid daughter. The parish, reading
-the situation like a book, smiled broadly when the
-"helper" and Miss Jemima Girnigo were discerned
-on an opposite braeface, botanising together, or,
-with heads bent over some doubtful bloom, stood
-silhouetted against the sunlit green of some glade
-in Knockandrews wood.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>During this period Gibby hugged himself upon
-his cleverness, but the time came when he began to
-have his doubts. What to him was a lightheart
-prank, an "Eel's trick," like his college jest of
-squirming secretly under class-room benches, was
-obviously no jest to this pale-eyed, sharp-featured
-maiden of one-and-forty.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Jemima Girnigo had never been truly young.
-Repressed and domineered over as a child, she
-had been suddenly promoted by her mother's death
-to the care of a household and the responsibility
-of training a bevy of younger brothers, all now
-out in the world and doing for themselves. Her life
-had grown more and more arid and self-contained.
-She had nourished her soul on secret penances,
-setting herself hard household tasks, and doing
-with only one small, untaught, slatternly maid from
-the village, in order that her father might be able to
-assist his sons into careers. She read dry theology
-to mortify a liking for novels, and shut up her soul
-from intercourse with her equals, conscious, perhaps,
-that visitors would infallibly discover and laugh at
-her father's meannesses and peculiarities.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Only her flowers kept her soul sweet and a
-human heart beating within that
-buckram-and-whalebone-fenced bosom.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, all suddenly came Gilbert Denholm with
-his merry laugh, his light-heart ways (which she
-openly reproved, but secretly loved), his fair curls
-clustering about his brow, and his way of throwing
-back his head as if to shake them into place.
-Nothing so young, so winsome, or so gay had
-ever set foot within that solemn dreich old manse.
-It was like a light-heart city beauty coming to
-change the life and disturb the melancholy of
-some stern woman-despising hermit. But Jemima
-Girnigo's case was infinitely worse, in that she
-was a woman and the disturber of her peace little
-better than a foolish boy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Gilbert Denholm, kindly lad though he was,
-saw no harm. He was only, he thought, impressing
-himself upon the parish. He saw himself daily
-becoming more popular. No farmer's party was
-considered to be anything which wanted his ready
-wit and contagious merriment. Already there was
-talk among the Session of securing him as permanent
-assistant and successor. There were fairways
-and clear sunlit vistas before Gilbert Denholm;
-and he liked his professional prospects all the better
-that he owed them to his own wit and knowledge
-of the world. He was a good preacher. He made
-what is called an excellent appearance in the pulpit.
-He did not "read." His fluency of utterance held
-sleepy ploughmen in a state of blinking
-attention for the better part of an hour. Even
-Dr. Girnigo commended, and Gibby who had no
-more abundant or direct "spiritual gifts" than are
-the portion of most kind-hearted, well-brought-up
-Scottish youths, was unconscious of his lack of
-any higher qualifications for the Christian ministry.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Gibby was like hundreds, aye, thousands
-more, who break the bread and open unto men the
-Scriptures in all the churches. His office meant
-to him a career, not a call. His work was the
-expression of hearty human goodwill to all
-men—and so far helpful and godlike; but he had
-never tasted sorrow, never drunken of the cup
-of remorse as a daily beverage, never "dreed"
-the common weird of humanity. Sorely he needed
-a downsetting. He must endure hardness, be
-driven out of self to the knowledge that self is
-nowise sufficient for a sinful man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Even Jemima Girnigo was a far better servant
-of God than the man who had spent seven years
-in preparation for that service. In the shut deeps
-of her heart there were locked up infinite treasures
-of self-sacrifice. Love was pitifully ready to look
-forth from those pale eyes at whose corners the
-crow's feet were already clutching. And so it
-came to pass that, knowing her folly (and yet, in
-a way, defying it), this old maid of forty-one loved
-the handsome youth of four-and-twenty, the only
-human love-compelling thing that had ever come
-into her sombre life.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet there were times when Jemima Girnigo's
-heart was bitter within her, even as there were
-seasons when the crowding years fell away and
-she seemed almost young and fair. Jemima had
-never been either very pretty or remarkably
-attractive, but now when the starved instincts of
-her lost youth awoke untimeously within her, she
-unconsciously smiled and tossed her head, to the
-full as coquettishly as a youthful beauty just
-becoming conscious of her own power.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was all very pitiful. But Gibby passed on
-his heedless way and saw not, neither recked of
-his going.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Yet a time came when his eyes were opened.
-A new paper-mill had come to Rescobie, migrating
-from somewhere in the East country, where the
-Messrs. Coxon had had a serious quarrel with their
-ground landlord. From being a quiet hamlet the
-village of Rescobie began rapidly to put on the
-airs of a growing town. Tall houses of three
-storeys, with many windows and outside stairs,
-usurped the place of little old-fashioned
-"but-and-bens." Red brick oblongs of mill frontage rose
-along the valley of the Rescobie Water, which,
-dammed and weired and carried along countless
-lades, changed the cheerful brown limpidity of its
-youthful stream for a frothy mud colour below
-the mills.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The new immigrants were mostly a sedate and
-sober folk, as indeed, nearly all paper-makers are.
-To the easy-going villagers their diligence seemed
-phenomenal. They were flocking into the mill
-gates by six in the morning. It was well nigh
-six in the evening before the tide flowed back
-toward the village. Among the youths and men
-there was night-shift and day-shift, and a new and
-strange pallor began to pervade the street and show
-itself, carefully washed, in the gallery of Rescobie
-Kirk. The village girls, finding that they could
-make themselves early independent, took their
-places in the long "finishing saal," while elderly
-women, for whom there had been no outlook
-except the poorhouse, found easy work and a
-living wage in Coxon's rag-house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The increase of the congregation in the second
-year of Gilbert Denholm's assistantship compelled
-the Session to bethink themselves of some more
-permanent and satisfactory arrangement. Finally,
-after many private meetings they resolved to beard
-the lion in his den and lay before Dr. Girnigo
-the proposal that Gilbert should be officially called
-and ordained as the old man's "colleague and
-successor."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was the ruling elder, called, after the name
-of his farm, Upper Balhaldie, who belled the cat
-and made the fateful proposition. In so doing
-that shrewd and cautious man was considered to
-have excelled himself. But Dr. Girnigo was far
-from being appeased.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sirs," he said, "I have been sole minister of
-the parish of Rescobie for forty years, and sole
-minister of it I shall die!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Mr. Denholm will be to you as a son!"
-suggested Balhaldie.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have sons of my body," said the old minister,
-looking full at the quiet men before him, who sat
-on the edges of their several chairs fingering the
-brims of their hats; "did I make any of them a
-minister? Nay, sirs, and for this reason: because
-the parish of Rescobie has been so near my heart
-that I would not risk even the fruit of my body
-coming between me and it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"We have sounded Mr. Denholm," said Balhaldie,
-quietly ignoring the sentimental, "and you
-may rest assured that you will not be disturbed
-in your tenancy of the manse. Mr. Denholm has
-no thought at present of changing his condition,
-and is quite content with his lodging—and an
-eident carfu' woman is his landlady the doctor's
-weedow!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, she is that!" concurred several of the
-Session, speaking for the first time. It was a
-relief to have something concrete to which they
-could assent.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Girnigo looked at his Session. They
-seemed to shrink before him. Nervousness
-quivered on their countenances. They tucked
-their heavily-booted feet beneath the chairs on
-which they sat, to be out of the way. The brims
-of their hats were rapidly wearing out. Surely
-such men could never oppose him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Dr. Girnigo knew better. Underneath
-that awkward exterior, in spite of those embarrassed
-manners, that air of anxious self-effacement,
-Dr. Girnigo was well aware that there abode inflexible
-determination, shrewd common sense and abounding
-humour—chiefly, however, of the ironic sort.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Are ye all agreed on this?" he asked.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I speak in name of the Session!" said Upper
-Balhaldie succinctly, looking around the circle.
-And as he looked each man nodded slightly,
-without, however, raising his eyes from the
-pattern on the worn study carpet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor sighed a long sigh. He knew that
-at last his trial was come upon him, and nerved
-himself to meet it like a man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is well," he said; "I shall offer no objection
-to the congregation calling Mr. Denholm, and I
-can only hope that he will serve you as faithfully
-as I have done! I wish you a very good day,
-gentlemen!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And with these words the old minister went
-out, leaving the Session to find their way into the
-cold air as best they might.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The day after the interview between the Session
-and the Doctor, Gilbert Denholm called at the
-manse. He came bounding up the little avenue
-between the lilac and rhododendron bushes.
-Jemima Girnigo heard his foot long ere he had
-reached the porch. Nay, before he had set foot
-on the gravel she caught the click of the gate
-latch, which was loose and would only open one
-way. This Gibby always forgot and rattled it
-fiercely till he remembered the trick of it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then when she heard the </span><em class="italics">rat-tat-tat</em><span> of Gibby's
-ash-plant on the panels of the door, she caught
-her hand to her heart and stood still among her
-plants.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a bell, but Gibby was always in too
-great a hurry to ring it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Perhaps he has come to——" She did not
-finish the sentence, but the blood, rising hotly to
-her poor withered cheeks, finished it for her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, Miss Jemima!" cried Gibby, bursting in;
-"I came up to tell you first. I owe it all to
-you—every bit of it. They are going to call me to
-be colleague—and—and—we can botanise any
-amount. Isn't it glorious?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He held her hand while he was speaking; and
-Jemima had been looking with hope into his frank,
-enkindled, boyish eyes. Her eyelids fell at his
-announcement.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," she faltered after a pause, "we can
-botanise!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And they wanted to know if I would like to
-have the manse—as if I would turn you out, who
-have been my best friend here ever since I came
-to Rescobie! Not very likely!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert had an honest liking for Jemima Girnigo,
-a feeling, however, which was not in the least akin
-to love. Indeed, he would as soon have thought
-of marrying his grandmother or any other of the
-relationships in the table of prohibited degrees
-printed at the beginning of the Authorised Version,
-which he sometimes looked at furtively when
-Dr. Girnigo was developing his "fourteenthly."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are happy where you are?" said Jemima,
-smiling a little wistfully.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, yes," cried Gibby enthusiastically; "my
-landlady makes me perfectly comfortable. She
-thinks I am a lost soul, I am afraid, but in the
-meantime she comforts me with apples—first-rate
-they are in dumplings, too, I can tell you!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>While he spoke Jemima Girnigo was much
-absorbed over a plant in a remote corner, and
-more than one drop of an alien dew glistened upon
-its leaves ere she turned again to the window.
-Gibby's enthusiasm was a little damped by her
-seeming indifference.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Are you not glad?" he asked anxiously; "I
-came to tell you first. I thought what good times
-we should have. We must go up Barstobrick
-Hill for the parsley fern before it gets too late."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, yes," said Jemima Girnigo, holding out her
-hand, "I am very glad. No one is as glad as
-I—I want you to believe that!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course I do!" cried Gibby; "you always
-were a good fellow, Jemima! We'll go up to
-Barstobrick to-morrow. Mind you are ready by
-nine. I have to be back for a meeting in the
-afternoon early. It is a hungry place. Put some
-'prog' in the </span><em class="italics">vasculum</em><span>!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as from the parlour window she watched
-him down the gravel, he turned around and wrote
-"9 A.M." in large letters on the gravel with his
-ash-plant, tossed his hand up at her in a gay
-salute, and was gone.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>But Gilbert Denholm and Jemima Girnigo did
-not climb Barstobrick for parsley fern on the
-morrow, and the "9 A.M." stood long plain upon
-the gravel as a monument of the frail and futile
-intents of man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For before the morrow's morn had dawned there
-had fallen upon Rescobie the dreaded scourge of
-all paper-making villages. Virulent small-pox
-had broken out. There were already four
-undoubted cases, all emanating from the rag-house
-of Coxon's mills.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>About the streets and close-mouths stood
-awe-struck groups of girls, uncertain whether to go on
-with their work or return home. There was none
-of the usual horse-play among the lads of the
-day-shift as they went soberly mill-ward with their cans.
-Grave elders, machinemen and engineers, shook their
-heads and recalled the date at which (a fortnight
-before) a large consignment of Russian rags had
-been received and immediately put in hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was whispered, on what authority did not
-appear, that the disease was of the malignant
-"black" variety, and that all smitten must surely
-die. Fear ran swift and chilly up each outside
-staircase and entered unbidden every "land" in
-Rescobie. It was the first time such a terror had
-been in the village, and those who had opposed
-the settlement of the mills, staid praisers of ancient
-quiet, lifted their hands with something of jubilation
-mixed with their fear. "Verily, the judgment of
-God has fallen," they said, "even as in a night it
-fell on Babylon—as in fire and brimstone it came
-upon the Cities of the Plain."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Girnigo retired to his study, feeling that if
-the Session had allowed him his own way, things
-would not have been as they were. He had a
-sermon to write. So he mended a quill pen, took
-out his sermon-paper (small quarto ruled in blue),
-and set to work to improve the occasion. He said
-to himself that since the parish had now a young
-and active minister, it was good for Gilbert
-Denholm to bear the yoke in his youth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And, indeed, none was readier for the work
-than that same Gilbert. He was shaving when
-his landlady, the doctor's widow, cried in the
-information through the panels of his closed door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank God," murmured Gibby, "that I have
-none to mourn for me if I don't get through this!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he thought of his father, but, as he well
-knew, that fine old Spartan was too staunch a
-fighter in the wars of grace to discourage his son
-from any duty, however dangerous. He thought
-next of—well, one or two girls he had known—and
-was glad now that it had gone no further.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He did not know yet what was involved in the
-outbreak or what might be demanded of him.
-Gilbert Denholm may have had few of the peculiar
-graces of spiritual religion, but he was a fine,
-manly, upstanding young fellow, and he resolved
-that he would do his duty as if he had been
-heading a rush of boarders or standing in the
-deadly imminent breach. More exactly, perhaps,
-he did not resolve at all. It never occurred to
-him that he could do anything else.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As soon as he had snatched a hasty breakfast
-and thrown on his coat, he hurried up to the house
-of Dr. Durie. A plain blunt man was John
-Durie—slim, pale, with keen dark eyes, and a
-pointed black beard slightly touched with gray.
-The doctor was not at home. He had not been
-in all night and the maid did not know where
-he was to be found.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To the right-about went Gilbert, asking all and
-sundry as he went where and when they had seen
-the doctor. Thomas Kyle, with his back against
-the angle of the Railway Inn, averred that he had
-seen him "an 'oor syne gangin' gye fast into Betty
-McGrath's—but they say Betty is deid or this!"
-he added, somewhat irrelevantly. Chairles Simson,
-tilting his bonnet over his brows in order to scratch
-his head in a new and attractive spot, deponed
-that about ten minutes before he had noticed "the
-tails o' the doctor's coat gaun roond the Mill-lands'
-corner like stoor on a windy day."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby tried Betty McGrath's first. Yes,
-Dr. Durie had ordered everybody out except the
-sick woman, who was tossing on her truckle bed,
-calling on the Virgin and all the saints in a shrill
-Galway dialect, and her daughter Bridget, a
-heavy-featured girl of twenty, who stood disconsolately
-looking out at the window as if hope had wholly
-forsaken her heart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby inquired if the doctor had been there
-recently.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, yes," said Bridget; "as ye may see if ye'll
-be troubled lookin' in the corner. He tore down
-all thim curtains off the box-bed. It'll break the
-ould woman's heart, that it will, if ever the craitur
-gets over this."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At the door Gibby met Father Phil Kavannah,
-a tall young man with honest peasant's eyes and
-a humorous mouth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You and I, surr, will have to see this through
-between us," said Father Phil, grasping his hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is a bad business," responded Gilbert; "I
-fear it will run through the mills."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Worse than ye think," said the priest very
-gravely, "ten times worse—three-fourths of the
-workers have no relatives here, and there will
-be no one to nurse them. They've talked lashin's
-about the new village hospital, and raised all
-Tipperary about where it is to stand and what
-it is to cost, but that's all that's done about
-it yet."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert whistled a bar of "Annie Laurie," which
-he kept for emergencies.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," he said slowly, "it will be like serving
-a Sunday-school picnic with half a loaf and one
-jar of marmalade—but we'll just need to see
-how far we can make ourselves go round!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Right!" said Father Phil with a wave of his
-hand as he stood with his fingers on the latch of
-Betty McGrath's door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert found the doctor in the great "saal" at
-the mills. He had his coat off and was scraping
-at bared arms for dear life. At each door stood a
-pair of stalwart sentinels, and several hundred
-mill workers were grouped about talking in
-low-voiced clusters. Only here and there one more
-diligent than the rest, or with quieter nerves, deftly
-passed sheets of white paper from hand to hand
-as if performing a conjuring trick.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The doctor spied Gilbert as he entered. They
-were excellent friends. "Man," he cried across the
-great room, looking down again instantly to his
-work, "run up to the surgery for another tube of
-vaccine like this. It is in B cabinet, shelf 6. And
-as you come back, wire for half-a-dozen more.
-You know where I get them!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Gilbert sped upon his first errand. After
-that he deserted his own lodgings, and he and
-Dr. Durie took hasty and informal meals when
-they could snatch a moment from work. Sundry
-cold edibles stood permanently on the doctor's
-oaken sideboard, and of these Gilbert and his
-host partook without sitting down. Then on
-a couch, or more often on a few rugs thrown
-on the floor, one or the other would snatch a
-hurried sleep.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There were twenty-six cases on Saturday—fifty-eight
-by the middle of the following week. Within
-the same period nine had terminated fatally, and
-there were others who could not possibly recover.
-Nurses came in from the great city hospitals, as
-they could be spared, but the demand far exceeded
-the supply, and Gilbert was indefatigable. Yet his
-laugh was cheery as ever, and even the delirious
-would start into some faint consciousness of
-pleasure at the sound of his voice.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But one day the young minister awoke with a
-racking head, a burning body, a dry throat, and
-the chill of ice in his bones.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This is nothing—I will work it off," said Gibby;
-and, getting up, he dressed with haste and went
-out without touching food. The thought of eating
-was abhorrent to him. Nevertheless, he did his
-work all the forenoon, and went here and there
-with medicine and necessaries. He relieved a
-nurse who had been two nights on duty, while she
-slept for six hours. Then after that he set off
-home to catch Dr. Durie before he could be
-out again. For he had heard his host come in
-and throw himself down on the couch while he
-was dressing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As he passed the front of Rescobie Manse,
-he looked up to wave a hand to Jemima, as he
-never forgot to do. Her father was still
-"indisposed," and Miss Girnigo was understood to be
-taking care of him. Yes, there she was among
-her flowers, and Gibby, hardly knowing what he
-did—being light-headed and racked with pain—openly
-kissed his hand to her within sight of
-half-a-score of Rescobie windows.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, his feet somehow tangling themselves and
-his knees failing him, he fell all his length in the
-hot dust of the highway.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>When Gilbert Denholm came to himself he
-found a white-capped nurse sitting by the window
-of a room he had never before seen. There was
-a smell of disinfectants all about, which somehow
-seemed to have followed him through all the
-boundless interstellar spaces across which he had
-been wandering.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Where am I?" said Gibby, as the nurse came
-toward the bed. "I have not seen Betty McGrath
-this morning, and I promised Father Phil that
-I would."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You must not ask questions," said the nurse
-quietly. "Dr. Durie will soon be here."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And after that with a curious readiness Gibby
-slipped back into a drowsy dream of gathering
-flowers with Jemima Girnigo; but somehow it
-was another Jemima—so young she seemed, so
-fair. Crisp curls glanced beneath her hat brim.
-Young blood mantled in changeful blushes on
-her cheeks. Her pale eyes, which had always
-been a little watery, were now blue and bright
-as a mountain tarn on a day without clouds. He
-had never seen so fair and joyous a thing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Jemima," he said, or seemed to himself to
-say, "what is the matter with you? You are
-different somehow."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is all because you love me, Gilbert," she
-answered, and smiled up at him. "Ever since
-you told me that, I have grown younger every
-hour; and, do you know, I have found the Grass
-of Parnassus at last. It grows by the Gate into
-the Upper Garden?"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"Hello, Denholm, clothed and in your right
-mind, eh? That's right!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was the cheerful voice of his friend,
-Dr. Durie, as he stood by Gibby's bedside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What has been the matter with me, Durie?"
-said Gilbert, though in his heart he knew.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You have had bad small-pox, my boy; and
-have had a hot chance to find out whether you
-have been speaking the truth in your sermons."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby could hardly bring his lips to frame the
-next question. He was far from vain, but to a
-young man the thought was a terrible one.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Shall I be much disfigured?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, a dimple or two—nothing to mar you
-on your marriage day. You have been well
-looked after."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You have saved my life, doctor."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Gibby strove to reach a feeble hand
-outward, which, however, the doctor did not seem
-to see.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Not I—you owe that to some one else."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The nurse who went out just now?" queried Gibby.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, she has just been here a few clays, after
-all danger had passed."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gilbert strove to rise on his elbow and the red
-flushed his poor face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The doctor restrained him with a strong and
-gentle hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Lie back," he said, "or I will go away and
-tell you nothing."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He sat down by the bedside, and with a soft
-sponge touched the convalescent's brow. As he
-did so he spoke in a low and meditative tone
-as though he had been talking to himself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There was once a foolish young man who
-thought that he could take twenty shillings out
-of a purse into which he had only put half a
-sovereign. He fell down one day on the street.
-A woman carried him in and nursed him through
-a fortnight's delirium. A woman caught him as
-he ran, with only a blanket about him, to drown
-himself in the Black Pool of Rescobie Water.
-Night and day she watched him, sleepless, without
-weariness, without murmuring——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And this woman—who saved my life—what
-was—her name?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gibby's voice was very hoarse.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Jemima Girnigo!" said the doctor, sinking his
-voice also to a whisper.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Where is she—I want to see her—I want to
-thank her?" cried Gibby. He was actually upon
-his elbow now.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Dune forced him gently back upon the pillows.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, yes," he said soothingly, "so you shall—if
-all tales be true; but for that you must wait."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why—why?" cried impatient Gibby. "Why
-cannot I see her now? She has done more for
-me than ever I deserved——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That is the way of women," said the doctor,
-"but you cannot thank her now. She is dead."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Dead—dead!" gasped Gilbert, stricken to the
-heart; "then she gave her life for me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Something like it," said the doctor, a trifle
-grimly. For though he was a wise man, the ways
-of women were dark to him. He thought that
-Gilbert, though a fine lad, was not worth all this.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Dead," muttered Gibby, "and I cannot even
-tell her—make it up to her——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She left you a message," said the doctor
-very quietly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What was it?" cried Gibby, eagerly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, nothing much," said Dr. Durie; "there
-was no hope from the first, and she knew it. Her
-mind was clear all the three days, almost to the
-last. She may have wandered a little then, for
-she told me to tell you——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What—what—oh, what? Tell me quickly.
-I cannot wait."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That the flowers were blooming in the Upper
-Garden, and that she would meet you at the Gate!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>The Reverend Gilbert Denholm never married.
-He bears a scar or two on his open face—a face
-well beloved among his people. There is a grave
-in Rescobie kirkyard that he tends with his own
-hands. None else must touch it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It is the resting-place of a woman whom love
-made young and beautiful, and about whose feet
-the flowers of Paradise are blooming, as, alone but
-not impatient, she waits his coming by the Gate.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-troubler-of-israel"><span class="bold large">THE TROUBLER OF ISRAEL</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Unless you happen to have made one of a group
-of five or six young men who every Sunday
-morning turned their steps towards the little
-meeting-house in Lady Nixon's Wynd, it is safe
-to say that you did not know either it or the
-Doctor of Divinity. That is to say, not unless you
-were born in the Purple and expert of the mysteries
-of the Kirk of the Covenants.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The denomination was a small one, smaller even
-and poorer than is the wont of Scottish sects. By
-the eternal process of splitting off, produced by the
-very faithfulness of the faithful, and the remorseless
-way in which they carried out their own logic, by
-individual pretestings and testifyings, by the yet
-sadder losses inflicted by the mammon of
-unrighteousness, when some, allured by social wealth
-and position, turned aside to worship in some
-richer or more popular Zion, the Kirk of the
-Covenants worshipping in Lady Nixon's Wynd
-had become but the shadow of its former self.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Still, however, by two infallible signs you might
-know the faithful. They spoke of the "Boady"
-and of the "Coavenants" with a lengthening of
-that </span><em class="italics">O</em><span> which in itself constituted a shibboleth, and
-their faces—grim and set mostly—lit up when
-you spoke of the "Doctor."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But one—they had but one—Dr. Marcus Lawton
-of Lady Nixon's Wynd. He was their joy, their
-pride, their poetry; the kitchen to their sour
-controversial bread, the mellow glory of their
-denomination. (Again you must broaden the </span><em class="italics">a</em><span>
-indefinitely.) He had once been a professor, but
-by the noblest of self-denying ordinances he had
-extruded himself from his post for conscience sake.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was but one fly in their apothecary's
-ointment-pot when my father grew too stiff to
-attend the Kirk of the Covenants even once a year,
-and that was that the Doctor, unable to live and
-bring up a family on a sadly dwindling stipend
-(though every man and woman in the little kirk
-did almost beyond their possible to increase it), had
-been compelled to bind himself to spend part of
-the day in a secular pursuit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At least to the average mind his employment
-could hardly be called "secular," being nothing
-more than the Secretaryship of the Association for
-the Propagation of Gospel Literature; but to the
-true covenant man this sonorous society was
-composed of mere Erastians, or what was little
-better, ex-Erastians and common Voluntaries.
-They all dated from 1689, and the mark of the
-beast was on their forehead—that is to say, the
-seal of the third William, the Dutchman, the
-revolutionary Gallio. Yet their Doctor, with his
-silver hair, his faithful tongue, his reverence, wisdom,
-and weight of indubitable learning, had to sit silent
-in the company of such men, to take his orders
-from them, and even to record their profane
-inanities in black and white. The Doctor's office
-was at the corner of Victoria Street as you turn
-down towards the Grassmarket. And when any
-of his flock met him coming or going thither, they
-turned away their heads—that is, if he had passed
-the entrance to Lady Nixon's Wynd when they
-met him. So far it was understood that he </span><em class="italics">might</em><span>
-be going to write his sermon in the quiet of the
-vestry. After that, there was no escape from the
-damning conclusion that he was on his way to the
-shrine of Baal—and other Erastian divinities. So
-upon George Fourth Bridge the Covenant folk turned
-away their heads and did not see their minister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now this is hardly a story—certainly not a
-tale. Only my heart being heavy, I knew it
-would do me good to turn it upon the Doctor.
-Dr. Marcus Lawton was the son of Dr. Marcus
-Lawton. When first he succeeded his father, which
-happened when he was little more than a boy,
-and long before I was born, he was called "young
-Maister Lawton." Then it was that he lectured on
-"The Revelation" on Sabbath evenings, his father
-sitting proudly behind him. Then the guttering
-candles of Lady Nixon's looked down on such an
-array as had never been seen before within her
-borders. College professors were there, ministers
-whose day's work was over—as it had been, Cretes
-and Arabians, heathen men and publicans. Edward
-Irving himself came once, in the weariful days before
-the great darkness. The little kirk was packed
-every night, floor and loft, aisle and pulpit stairs,
-entrance hall and window-sill, with such a crowd of
-stern, grave-visaged men as had never been gathered
-into any kirk in the town of Edinburgh, since a
-certain little fair man called Rutherford preached
-there on his way to his place of exile in Aberdeen.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So my father has often told me, and you may
-be sure he was there more than once, having made
-it a duty to do his business with my lord's factor
-at a time when his soul also might have dealings
-with the most approven factors of Another Lord.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>These were great days, and my father (Alexander
-McQuhirr of Drumwhat), still kindles when he
-tells of them. No need of dubious secretaryships
-then, or of the turning away of faithful heads at
-the angle of the Candlemaker-row. No young
-family to be provided for, Doctorate coming at
-the Session's close from his own university,
-Professorship on the horizon, a united Body of the
-devout to minister to! And up there in the pulpit
-a slim young man with drawing power in the
-eyes of him, and a voice which even then was
-mellow as a blackbird's flute, laying down the
-law of his Master like unto the great of old who
-testified from Cairntable even unto Pentland, and
-from the Session Stane at Shalloch-on-Minnoch
-to where the lion of Loudon Hill looks defiant
-across the green flowe of Drumclog.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But when I began to attend Lady Nixon's
-regularly, things were sorely otherwise. The kirk
-was dwindled and dwindling—-in membership, in
-influence, most of all in finance. But not at all
-in devotion, not in enthusiasm, not in the sense
-of privilege that those who remained were thought
-worthy to sit under such faithful ministrations as
-those of the Doctor. There was no more any
-"young Maister Lawton." Nor was a comparison
-pointed disparagingly by a reference to "the Auld
-Doctor, young Dr. Marcus's faither, ye ken."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>From the alert, keen-faced, loyal-hearted precentor
-(no hireling he) to the grave and dignified
-"kirk-officer" there were not two minds in all
-that little body of the faithful.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>You remember MacHaffie-a steadfast man
-Haffie—no more of his name ever used. Indeed,
-it was but lately that I even knew he owned the
-prefatory Mac. He would give you a helpful
-hint oftentimes (after you had passed the plate),
-"It's no himsel' the day!" Or more warningly
-and particularly, "It's a student." Then Haffie
-would cover your retreat, sometimes going the
-length of making a pretence of conversation with
-you as far as the door, or on urgent occasions (as
-when the Doctor was so far left to himself as to
-exchange with a certain "popular preacher") even
-taking you downstairs and letting you out secretly
-by a postern door which led, in the approven
-manner of romances, into a side street down which,
-all unseen, you could escape from your fate. But
-Haffie always kept an eye on you to see that you
-did not abstract your penny from the plate. That
-was the payment he exacted for his good offices;
-and as I could not afford two pennies on one
-Sunday morning, Haffie's "private information"
-usually drove me to Arthur's Seat, or down to
-Granton for a smell of the salt water; and I can
-only hope that this is set down to Haffie's account
-in the books of the recording angel.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But all this was before the advent of Gullibrand.
-You have heard of him, I doubt not—Gullibrand
-of Barker, Barker, &amp; Gullibrand, provision
-merchants, with branches all over the three
-kingdoms. His name is on every blank wall.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Gullibrand was not an Edinburgh man. He
-came, they say, from Leicester or some Midland
-English town, and brought a great reputation with
-him. He had been Mayor of his own city, a
-philanthropist almost by profession, and the light
-and law-giver of his own particular sect always.
-I have often wondered what brought him to Lady
-Nixon's Wynd. Perhaps he was attracted by the
-smallness of our numbers, and by the thought that,
-in default of any congregation of his own peculiar
-sect in the northern metropolis, he could "boss" the
-Kirk of the Covenants as he had of a long season
-"bossed" the Company of Apocalyptic Believers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was said, with I know not what truth, that
-the first time Mr. Gullibrand came to the Kirk of
-the Covenants, the Doctor was lecturing in his
-ordinary way upon Daniel's Beast with Ten Horns.
-And, if that be so, our angelical Doctor had reason
-to rue to the end of his life that the discourse
-had been so faithful and soul-searching. Though
-Gullibrand thought his interpretation of the ninth
-horn very deficient, and told him so. But he was
-so far satisfied that he intimated his intention of
-"sending in his lines" next week.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At first it was thought to be a great thing that
-the Kirk of the Covenants in Lady Nixon's Wynd
-should receive so wealthy and distinguished an
-adherent.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Quite an acquisition, my dear," said the
-hard-pressed treasurer, thinking of the ever increasing
-difficulty of collecting the stipend, and of the
-church expenses, which had a way of totalling
-up beyond all expectation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Bide a wee, Henry," said his more cautious
-wife; "to see the colour o' the man's siller is
-no to ken the colour o' his heart."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And to this she added a thoughtful rider.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And after a', what does a bursen Englishy
-craitur like yon ken aboot the Kirk o' the
-Co-a-venants?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as good Mistress Walker prophesied as
-she took her douce way homeward with her husband
-(honorary treasurer and unpaid precentor) down
-the Middle Meadow Walk, even so in the fulness
-of time it fell out.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Jacob Gullibrand gave liberally, at which
-the kindly heart of the treasurer was elate within
-him. Mr. Jacob Gullibrand got a vacant seat in
-the front of the gallery which had once belonged
-to a great family from which, the faithful dying
-out, the refuse had declined upon a certain
-Sadducean opinon calling itself Episcopacy; and
-from this highest seat in the synagogue Mr. Jacob
-blinked with a pair of fishy eyes at the Doctor.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then in the fulness of time Mr. Jacob became
-a "manager," because it was considered right that
-he should have a say in the disposition of the
-temporalities of which he provided so great a part.
-Entry to the Session was more difficult. For the
-Session is a select and conservative body—an inner
-court, a defenced place set about with thorns and
-not to be lightly approached; but to such a man
-as Gullibrand all doors in the religious world open
-too easily. Whence cometh upon the Church
-of God mockings and scorn, the strife of tongues—and
-after the vials have been poured out, at the
-door One with the sharp sword in His hand,
-the sword that hath two edges.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So after presiding at many Revival meetings
-and heading the lists of many subscriptions, Jacob
-Gullibrand became an elder in the Kirk of the
-Covenants and a power in Lady Nixon's Wynd.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He had for some time been a leading Director
-of the Association for the Propagation of Gospel
-Literature; and so in both capacities he was the
-Doctor's master. Then, having gathered to him
-a party, recruited chiefly from the busybodies in
-other men's matters and other women's characters,
-Jacob Gullibrand turned him about, and set
-himself to drive the minister and folk of the Kirk
-of the Covenant as he had been wont to drive his
-clerks and shop-assistants.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He went every Sabbath into the vestry after
-service to reprove and instruct Dr. Marcus Lawton.
-His sermons (so he told him) were too old-fashioned.
-They did not "grip the people." They
-did not "take hold of the man on the street." They
-were not "in line with the present great
-movement." In short, they "lacked modernity."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Marcus answered meekly. Man more
-modest than our dear Doctor there was not in
-all the churches—no, nor outside of them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am conscious of my many imperfections,"
-he said; "my heart is heavy for the weakness
-and unworthiness of the messenger in presence of
-the greatness of the message; but, sir, I do the
-best I can, and I can only ask Him who hath
-the power, to give the increase."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But how," asked Jacob Gullibrand, "can you
-expect any increase when I never see you preaching
-in the market-place, proclaiming at the
-street-corners, denouncing upon a hundred platforms the
-sins of the times? You should speak to the times,
-my good sir, you should speak to the times."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"As worthy Dr. Leighton, that root out of a
-dry ground, sayeth," murmured our Doctor with a
-sweet smile, "there be so many that are speaking
-to the times, you might surely allow one poor
-man to speak for eternity."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the quotation was thrown away upon
-Jacob Gullibrand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I do not know this Leighton—and I think
-I am acquainted with all the ministers who have
-the root of the matter in them in this and in
-other cities of the kingdom. And I call upon you,
-sir, to stir us up with rousing evangelical addresses
-instead of set sermons. We are asleep, and we
-need awakening."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am all too conscious of it," said the Doctor;
-"but it is not my talent."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then if you do know it, if your conscience
-tells you of your failure, why not get in some
-such preachers as Boanerges Simpson of Maitland,
-or even throw open your pulpit to some earnest
-merchant-evangelist such as—well, as myself?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Mr. Gullibrand had gone a step too far.
-The Doctor could be a Boanerges also upon
-occasion, though he walked always in quiet ways
-and preferred the howe of life to the mountain tops.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, sir," he said firmly; "no unqualified or
-unlicensed man shall ever preach in my pulpit
-so long as I am minister and teaching elder of
-a Covenant-keeping Kirk!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"We'll see about that!" said Jacob Gullibrand,
-thrusting out his under lip over his upper half-way
-to his nose. Then, seizing his tall hat and
-unrolled umbrella, he stalked angrily out.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>And he kept his word. He did see about it.
-In Lady Nixon's Wynd there was division. On
-the one side were ranged the heads of families
-generally, the folk staid and set in the old
-ways—"gospel-hardened" the Gullibrandites called them.
-With the Doctor were the old standards of the
-Kirk, getting a little dried, maybe, with standing
-so long in their post-holes, but, so far as in them
-lay, faithful unto death.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the younger folk mostly followed the new
-light. There were any number of Societies, Gospel
-Bands, Armies of the Blue Ribbon, and of the
-White—all well and better than well in their
-places. But being mostly imported wholesale from
-England, and all without exception begun, carried
-on, and ended in Gullibrand, they were out of
-keeping with the plain-song psalms of the Kirk
-of the Martyrs. There were teas also at "Mount
-Delectable," the residence of Gullibrand, where,
-after the singing of many hymns and the superior
-blandishments of the Misses Gullibrand, it was
-openly said that if the Kirk in Lady Nixon's
-Wynd was to be preserved, the Doctor must
-"go." He was in the way. He was a fossil. He had
-no modern light. He took no interest in the
-"Work." He would neither conduct a campaign
-of street-preaching nor allow an unordained
-evangelist into his pulpit. The Doctor must
-go. Mr. Gullibrand was sure that a majority of
-the congregation was with him. But there were
-qualms in many hearts which even three cups of
-Gullibrand's Coffee Essence warm could not cure.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After all, the Doctor was the Doctor—and he had
-baptised the most part of those present. Besides,
-they minded that time when Death came into their
-houses—and also that Noble Presence, that saintly
-prayer, that uplifted hand of blessing; but in
-the psychological moment, with meet introduction
-from the host, uprose the persecuted evangelist.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If he was unworthy to enter the pulpits of
-Laodicean ministers, men neither cold nor hot,
-whom every earnest evangelist should" (here he
-continued the quotation and illustrated it with
-an appropriate gesture) "he at least thanked God
-that he was no Doctor of Divinity. Nor yet of
-those who would permit themselves to be dictated
-to by self-appointed and self-styled ministers."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And so on, and so on. The type does not vary.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The petition or declaration already in Gullibrand's
-breast pocket was then produced, adopted,
-and many signatures of members and adherents
-were appended under the influence of that stirring
-appeal. Great was Gullibrand. The morning light
-brought counsel—but it was too late. Gullibrand
-would erase no name.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You signed the document, did you not? Of
-your own free will? That is your handwriting?
-Very well then!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>The blow fell on the Sabbath before the summer
-communion, always a great time in the little
-Zion in Lady Nixon's Wynd.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A deputation of two, one being Jacob Gullibrand,
-elder, waited on Dr. Marcus Lawton after the first
-diet of worship. They gave him a paper to read
-in which he was tepidly complimented upon his
-long and faithful services, and informed that the
-undersigned felt so great an anxiety for his health
-that they besought him to retire to a well-earned
-leisure, and to permit a younger and more vigorous
-man to bear the burden and the heat of the day.
-(The choice of language was Gullibrand's.) No
-mention was made of any retiring allowance, nor
-yet of the manse, in which his father before him
-had lived all his life, and in which he himself had
-been born. But these things were clearly enough
-understood.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What need has he of a manse or of an allowance
-either?" said Gullibrand. "His family are
-mostly doing for themselves, and he has no doubt
-made considerable savings. Besides which, he
-holds a comfortable appointment with a large
-salary, as I have good reason to know."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But," he added to himself, "he may not hold
-that very long either. I will teach any man
-living to cross Jacob Gullibrand!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>The Doctor sat in the little vestry with the tall
-blue scroll spread out before him. The light of
-the day suddenly seemed to have grown dim, and
-somehow he could hardly see to smooth out the
-curled edges.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is surely raining without," said the Doctor,
-and lighted the gas with a shaking hand. He
-looked down the list of names of members and
-adherents appended to the request that he should
-retire. The written letters danced a little before
-his eyes, and he adjusted his glasses more firmly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"William Gilmour, elder," he murmured; "ah,
-his father was at school with me; I mind that
-I baptised William the year I was ordained. He
-was a boy at my Bible-class, a clever boy, too. I
-married him; and he came in here and grat like a
-bairn when his first wife died, sitting on that chair.
-I called on the Lord to help William Gilmour—and
-now—he wants me away."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Jacob Gullibrand, elder."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor passed the name of his persecutor
-without a comment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Christopher Begbie, manager. He was kind
-to me the year the bairns died."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>(Such was Christopher's testimony. The year
-before I went to Edinburgh the Doctor had lost
-a well-beloved wife and two children, within a
-week of each other. He preached the Sabbath
-after on the text, "All thy waves have gone over
-me!" Christopher Begbie, manager, had been
-kind then. Pass, Christopher!)</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Robert Armstrong, manager. Mine own
-familiar friend in whom I trusted," said the Doctor,
-and stared at the lozenges of the window till
-coloured spots danced before his kind old eyes.
-"Robert Armstrong, for whose soul I wrestled
-even as Jacob with his Maker; Robert Armstrong
-that walked with me through the years together,
-and with whom I have had so much sweet
-communion, even Robert also does not think
-me longer fit to break the bread of life among
-these people!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Pass, Robert! There is that on the blue foolscap
-which the Doctor hastened to wipe away with his
-sleeve. But it is doubtful if such drops are ever
-wholly wiped away.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"John Malcolm—ah, John, I do not wonder.
-Perhaps I was over faithful with thee, John. But
-it was for thy soul's good. Yet I did not think
-that the son of thy father would bear malice!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Margaret Fountainhall, Elizabeth Fountainhall—the
-children of many prayers. Their mother
-was a godly woman indeed; and you, too,
-Margaret and Elizabeth, would sit under a younger
-man. I mind when I prepared you together for
-your first communion!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor sighed and bent his head lower
-upon the paper. "Ebenezer Redpath, James
-Bannatyne, Samuel Gardiner"—he passed the names
-rapidly, till he came to one—"Isobel Swan."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor smiled at the woman's name. It
-was the first time he had smiled since they
-gave him the paper and he realised what was
-written there.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah, Isobel," he murmured, "once in a far-off
-day you did not think as now you think!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And he saw himself, a slim stripling in his
-father's pew, and across the aisle a girl who
-worshipped him with her eyes. And so the Doctor
-passed from the name of Isobel Swan, still
-smiling—but kindly and graciously, for our Doctor had
-it not in him to be anything else.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He glanced his eye up and down the list. He
-seemed to miss something.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Henry Walker, treasurer—I do not see thy
-name, Henry. Many is the hard battle I have
-had with thee in the Session, Henry. Dost thou
-not want thine old adversary out of thy path once
-and for all? And Mary, thy wife? Tart is thy
-tongue, Mary, but sweet as a hazel-nut in the
-front of October thy true heart!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thomas Baillie—where art thou, true Thomas?
-I crossed thee in the matter of the giving out of
-the eleventh paraphrase, Thomas. Yet I do not
-see thy name. Is it possible that thou hast
-forgotten the nearer ill and looked back on the days
-of old when Allan Symington with Gilbert his
-brother, and thou and I, Thomas Baillie, went to
-the house of God in company? No, these things
-are not forgotten. I thank God for that. The
-name of Thomas Baillie is not here."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And the Doctor folded up the blue crackling
-paper and placed it carefully between the "leds"
-of the great pulpit Bible.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is the beginning of the week of Communion,"
-he said; "it is not meet that I should mingle
-secular thoughts with the memory of the broken
-body and the shed blood. On your knees, Marcus
-Lawton, and ask forgiveness for your repining
-and discriminating among the sheep of the flock
-whom it is yours to feed on a coming Lord's
-day; and are they not all yours—your responsibility,
-your care, aye, Marcus—even—even Jacob
-Gullibrand?"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was the Sabbath of High Communion in the
-Kirk of the Covenants. Nixon's Wynd, ordinarily
-so grim and bare, so gritty underfoot and so narrow
-overhead, now seemed to many a spacious way to
-heaven, down which walked the elect of the Lord
-in a way literally narrow, and literally steep, and
-literally closed with a gate at which few, very
-few, went in.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A full hour too soon they began to arrive,
-strange quaint figures some of them, gathered from
-the nooks and corners of the old town. They
-arrived in twos and threes—the children's children
-of the young plants of grace who saw Claverhouse
-ride down the West Bow on his way to Killiecrankie.
-As far as Leith walk you might know
-them, bent a little, mostly coopers in the Trongate,
-wrights in the Kirk Wynd, ships' carpenters at the
-Port. They had their little "King's Printer" Bibles
-in the long tails of their blue coats—for black had
-not yet come in to make uniform all the congregations
-of every creed. But the mistress, walking a
-little behind, carried her Bible decently wrapped in a
-white napkin along with a sprig of southern-wood.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All that Sabbath day there hung, palpable and
-almost visible, about Nixon's Wynd a sweet savour
-as of "Naphtali," and the Persecutions, and Last
-Testimonies in the Grassmarket; but in the
-shrine itself there was nothing grim, but only
-graciousness and consolation and the sense of the
-living presence of the Hope of Israel. For our
-Doctor was there sitting throned among his elders.
-The sun shone through the narrow windows, and
-just over the wall, it it were your good fortune to
-be near those on the left-hand side, you could see
-the top of the Martyrs' monument in the kirkyard
-of Old Greyfriars.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was great to see the Doctor on such days,
-great to hear him. Beneath, the white cloths
-glimmered fair on the scarred bookboards, bleached
-clean in honour of the breaking of holy bread.
-The silver cups, ancient as Drumclog and Shalloch,
-so they said, shone on the table of communion,
-and we all looked at them when the Doctor said
-the solemn and mysterious words, "wine on the
-lees well refined."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For there are no High Churchmen so truly high
-as the men of the little protesting covenanting
-remnants of the Reformation Kirk of Scotland;
-none so jealous in guarding the sacraments; none
-that can weave about them such a mantle of awe
-and reverence.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor was concluding his after-table
-address. Very reverend and noble he looked, his
-white hair falling down on his shoulders, his hands
-ever and anon wavering to a blessing, his voice
-now rising sonorous as a trumpet, but mostly of
-flute-like sweetness, in keeping with his words.
-He never spoke of any subject but one on such a
-day. That was, the love of Christ.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Fifty-one summer communions have I been
-with you in this place," so he concluded, "breaking
-the bread and speaking the word. Fifty-one years
-to-day is it since my father took me by the hand
-and led me up yonder to sit by his side. Few
-there be here in the flesh this day who saw that.
-But there are some. Of such I see around me
-three—Henry Walker, and Robert Armstrong, and
-John Malcolm. It is fitting that those who saw
-the beginning should see the end."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At these words a kind of sough passed over the
-folk. You have seen the wind passing over a field
-of ripe barley. Well, it was like that. From my
-place in the gallery I could see set faces whiten,
-shoulders suddenly stoop, as the whole congregation
-bent forward to catch every word. A woman
-sobbed. It was Isobel Swan. The white faces
-turned angrily as if to chide a troublesome child.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It has come upon me suddenly, dear friends,"
-the Doctor went on, "even as I hope that Death
-itself will. Sudden as any death it hath been, and
-more bitter. For myself I was not conscious of
-failing energies, of natural strength abated. But
-you, dear friends, have seen clearer than I the needs
-of the Kirk of the Covenants. One hundred and
-six years Marcus Lawtons have ministered in this
-place. From to-day they shall serve tables no
-more. Once—and not so long ago, it seems,
-looking back—I had a son of my body, a plant reared
-amid hopes and prayers and watered with tears.
-The Lord gave. The Lord took. Blessed be
-the name of the Lord."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There ensued a silence, deep, still—yet somehow
-also throbbing, expectant. Isobel Swan did not
-sob again. She had hidden her face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And now my last word. After fifty-one years
-of service in this place, it is hard to come to the
-end of the hindmost furrow, to drop the hand
-from the plough, never more to go forth in the
-morning as the sower sowing precious seed."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">No—no—no!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was not only Isobel Swan now, but the
-whole congregation. Here and there, back and
-forth subdued, repressed, ashamed, but irresistible,
-the murmur ran; but the doctor's voice did not
-shake.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Fifty-one years of unworthy service, my
-friends—what of that?—a moment in the eternity
-of God. Never again shall I meet you here as
-your minister; but I charge you that when we
-meet in That Day you will bear me witness
-whe her I have loved houses or lands, or father or
-mother or wife or children better than you! And
-now, fare you well. The memory of bygone
-communions, of hours of refreshment and prayer
-in this sacred place, of death-beds blessed and
-unforgotten in your homes shall abide with me as
-they shall abide with you. The Lord send among
-you a worthier servant than Marcus Lawton, your
-fellow-labourer and sometime minister. Again,
-and for the last time, fare you well!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was a strange communion. The silver cups
-still stood on the table, battered, but glistening.
-The plates of bread that had been blessed were
-beside them. The elders sat around. A low
-inarticulate murmur of agony travelled about the
-little kirk as the Doctor sat down and covered
-his face with his hands, as was his custom after
-pronouncing the benediction.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then in the strange hush uprose the tall angular
-form of William Gilmour from the midst of the
-Session, his bushy eye-brows working and twitching.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, sir," he said, in forceful jerks of speech,
-"dinna leave us. I signed the paper under a
-misapprehension. The Lord forgive me! I
-withdraw my name. Jacob Gullibrand may
-dischairge me if he likes!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He sat down as abruptly as he had risen.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then there was a kind of commotion all over
-the congregation. One after another rose and
-spoke after their kind, some vehemently, some
-with shamed faces.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I!" "And I!" "And I!" cried a
-dozen at a time. "Bide with us, Doctor! We
-cannot want you! Pray for us!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then Henry Walker, the white-haired, sharp-featured
-treasurer and precentor of Nixon's Wynd,
-stretched out his hand. The Doctor had been
-speaking, as is the custom, not from the pulpit,
-but from the communion table about which the
-elders sat. He had held the Gullibrand manifesto
-in his hand; but ere he lifted them up in his
-final blessing he had dropped it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Henry Walker took it and stood up.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is it your will that I tear this paper? Those
-contrary keep their seats—those agreeable
-STAND UP!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As one man the whole congregation stood up.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All, that is, save Jacob Gullibrand. He sat a
-moment, and then amid a silence which could be
-felt, he rose and staggered out like a man suddenly
-smitten with sore sickness. He never set foot in
-Nixon's Wynd again.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Henry Walker waited till the door had closed
-upon the Troubler of Israel, the paper still in
-his hand. Then very solemnly he tore it into
-shreds and trampled them under foot.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He waited a moment for the Doctor to speak,
-but he did not.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And you, also, will withdraw your resignation
-and stay with us?" he said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor could not answer in words; but he
-nodded his head. It was, indeed, the desire of his
-heart. Then in a loud and surprising
-voice—jubilant, and yet with a kind of godly anger in it,
-Henry Walker gave out the closing psalm.</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"All people that on earth do dwell,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice;</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>Him serve with mirth, His praise forthtell,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Come ye before Him and rejoice!"</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="carnation-s-morning-joy"><span class="bold large">CARNATION'S MORNING JOY</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>This is the story of the little white-washed cottage
-at the top of the brae a mile or so before you
-come into Cairn Edward. It is a love story, a
-simple and uneventful one, quickly told.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The cottage is not now what it was—I fear to
-say how many years ago—when I was wont to drive
-in to the Cameronian Kirk on summer Sabbaths in
-the red farm cart. Then not only I, but every
-one used to watch from far for the blue waft of
-reek going up as we sighted the white
-gable-end far away.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation's Cottage!" we used to call it, and
-even my father, Cameronian elder as he was, smiled
-when he passed it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was so named because a girl once lived there
-whose fame for worth and beauty had travelled
-very far. Her name was Carnation Maybold, a
-combination which at once tells its tale of no
-countryside origin. Carnation's father was a
-railroad engineer who had come from England
-and married a farmer's daughter in a neighbouring
-parish. Then when Carnation's mother died in
-childbirth, he had called his one daughter by
-the name of his wife's favourite flower.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What for do ye no caa' her Jessie like her
-mither?" said the ancient dame who had come
-to keep his house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Because I never want to hear that name
-again!" Engineer Maybold had said. For he had
-been wrapped up in his wife.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Carnation Maybold lost her father, the imaginative
-man and second-rate engineer, when she was
-thirteen, a tall slim slip of a girl, with a face like
-a flower and a cheek that already had upon it the
-blush of her name. Old Tibbie Lockhart dwelt
-with her, and defenced the orphan maid about more
-securely than a city set with walls. The girl went
-a mile to the Cairn Edward Academy, where she
-was already in the first girls' class, and John
-Charles Morrison carried the green bag which held
-her books. In addition to this, being strongly built,
-he thrashed any boy who laughed at him for
-doing so. John Charles was three years older
-than his girl friend, and had the distinct beginnings
-of a moustache in days when Carnation still
-wore her hair in a long plaited tail down her
-back—for in those days Gretchen braids were
-the fashion.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It is curious to remember that, while all the
-other girls were Megs and Katies, Madges and
-Jennies, Carnation Maybold's first name knew
-no diminutive. She was, and has remained, just
-Carnation. That is enough. She was fifteen
-when John Charles was sent to college. After
-that she carried her own books both ways. She
-had offers from several would-be successors to
-the honourable service, but she accepted none.
-Besides, she was thinking of putting her hair up.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When John Charles came home in the windy
-close of the following March, the first thing he
-did was to put the little box which contained his
-class medal into his vest pocket, and hasten down
-the road to meet Carnation. His father was at
-market. His mother (a peevish, complaining,
-prettyish woman) was in bed with sick headache,
-and not to be disturbed. But there remained
-Carnation. The returned scholar asked no better.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The heart of John Charles beat as he kept
-the wider side of the turns of the road that he
-might the sooner spy her in front of him. She
-was only a slip of a school girl and he a penniless
-student—but nevertheless his heart beat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Did he love her? No, he knew that he had
-never uttered the word in her hearing, and that if
-he had, she was too young to know its meaning.
-She was just Carnation—and—and, how his
-heart beat!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But still the wintry trees stood gaunt and
-spectral on either hand. He passed them as in
-a dream, his soul bent on the next twist of the
-red-gray sandy ribbon of road, that was flung
-so unscientifically about among the copses and
-pastures.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There she was at last—taller, lissomer than
-ever, her green bag swinging in her hand and
-a gay lilt of a tune upon her lips.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She did not answer him by any word. Instead,
-she stood silent with the song stilled mid-flight
-upon her lips. She smiled happily, however, as
-he came near.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation!" he cried again. And there was
-something shining in the lad's eyes which she
-had never seen there before.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She held out the green bag. Then she turned
-her elbow towards him with a certain defensive
-instinct.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Here, take my books, John Charles!" she
-said, as if he had never been away; and with
-no more than that they began to walk homeward
-together.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Are you not glad to see me?" he asked presently.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, yes, indeed—very glad!" she answered,
-looking at the ground; "you will be able to
-carry my books again, you see!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who has carried them while I have been away?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carried them myself!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"For true?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Honour!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>John Charles breathed so long a breath that
-it was almost a sigh. Carnation looked at him
-curiously.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why, you have grown a moustache," she said,
-smiling a quick, radiant smile.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And you—you are different too. What is it?"
-he returned, gazing openly at her, as indeed he
-had been doing ever since they met. She turned
-her face piquantly towards him. It was like a
-flower. A faint perfume seemed to breathe about
-the boy, making his brain whirl.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Not grown a moustache, anyway," Carnation
-said, tauntingly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And she roguishly twirled imaginary tips
-between her finger and thumb.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Let me see!" said John Charles, drawing
-nearer as if to examine into the facts.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, no," said Carnation hastily, fending him
-off with a glance, "I'm grown up now, and it's
-different! Besides——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And she glanced behind her along the red-gray
-ribbon of dusty road, along which for lack of
-company the March dust was dancing little jigs of
-its own.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why different?" began John Charles, thrusting
-his hands deep into his pockets.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, don't you see, stupid?" she gave her head
-a pretty coquettish turn, "I've got my hair up!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>After this they walked somewhat moodily along
-a while. Or, at least the young man was moody
-and silent, while Carnation only smiled sedately,
-and something, perhaps a certain bitter easting
-in the wind, made her cheeks more fiowerlike
-and reminiscent of her name than ever.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation," he said at last, "why are we not
-to be friends any more? Why have you grown
-away from me? You are three years younger—and
-yet—you seem older somehow to-day—years
-and years older."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, what more do you want—aren't you
-carrying my bag?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Tell me about yourself—what have you been
-doing?" He changed the subject.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Going to school—let me see, six twenties are
-a hundred and twenty. Coming back another
-hundred and twenty times. Two hundred and
-forty trudges, and the bag growing heavier all
-the time! It is quite time you came back,
-John Charles!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation, dear," with trepidation he ventured
-the adjective, "I have something to show you
-that nobody has seen—what will you give me
-if I show it you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I shan't give you anything; but you can
-show me and see," was the somewhat
-inconsequent reply.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come here then, by the end of the house."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>They had arrived at Carnation's cottage, and
-the consciousness of the eye of Tibbie Lockhart
-out of the kitchen window was upon the youth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I shan't—show it to me here!" said Carnation,
-swinging the bag of books through the open front
-door in a casual and school-girlish manner.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I can't. I don't want Tibbie to know about
-it—nobody but you must see it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Are you sure nobody has seen it—no girl in
-Edinburgh—nobody in Cairn Edward?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No one at all—not even my mother, not since
-I got it. I kept it for you, Carnation."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is it </span><em class="italics">very</em><span> pretty?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, very pretty! Come in here; you will
-be sorry if you don't!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, I will come—just for a moment!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>They went round to the gable of the cottage
-where, being sheltered from the wind, a couple of
-sentinel Irish yews grew tall and erect. Between
-them there was a little bower. John Charles took
-the little flat box out of his pocket and opened it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A gold class medal lay within, not fitting very
-well on account of a thin blue ribbon which the
-proprietor had strung through a clasp at the top.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh," said Carnation with a gasp, "it </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> lovely.
-Is it gold? Why, it has your name on. It is
-the medal of the class. How proud your father
-and mother will be!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And she clasped her hands and gazed, but did
-not offer to take it in her fingers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, indeed, that they won't," said John Charles
-grimly; "they won't ever know, and if they did
-they wouldn't care. I am not going to tell them
-or any one. I won it for you. All the time
-I was working I kept saying to myself, 'If I win
-the medal I shall give it to Carnation to wear
-round her neck on a blue ribbon—because blue
-is her colour——'"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, but I could not!" cried the girl, going
-back a step or two, "I dare not! Any one might
-see and read—what is written on it."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You needn't wear it outside, Carnation," he
-pleaded, in a low tone; "see, I put the ribbon
-through it that you might."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> pretty"—her face had a kind of inner
-shining upon it, and her eyes glittered darkly—"it
-was very nice of you to think about me—not
-that I believe for a moment you really did. But,
-indeed, indeed, I can't take it——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The face of John Charles Morrison fell. His jaw,
-a singularly determined one, began to square itself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Very well," he said, flirting the ribbon out
-of the clasp and throwing the box on the ground,
-"do you see that pond down there? As sure
-as daith" (he used the old school-boy oath of
-asseveration) "I'll throw it in that pond if ye
-dinna tak' it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Something very like a sob came into the lad's
-throat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I worked so hard for it. And I thought
-you would have liked it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I do like it—I do—I do!" cried Carnation,
-agonised and affrayed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, you don't!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Give it me, then—don't look!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She turned her back upon him, and for a long
-moment her fingers were busy about her neck.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Now!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She faced about, the light of a showery April
-in her eyes. She was smiling and blushing at
-the same time. There was just a faint gleam of
-blue ribbon where the division of the white collar
-came in front of her throat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>John Charles recognised that the moment for
-which he had striven all through the winter had
-come. He stooped and kissed her where she
-stood. Then he turned on his heel and walked
-silently away, leaving her three times Carnation
-and a school-girl no more.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She watched him out of sight, the vivid blush
-slowly fading from her face, and then went
-demurely within.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Where gat ye that ribbon wi' the wee guinea
-piece at the end o't?" said guardian Tibbie that
-night, suggestively.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I know; but I promised not to tell!" quoth
-the witch, who indeed, twisted the shrewish-tongued
-old woman round her finger.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But I think I can guess," said Tibbie shrewdly;
-"gin that blue ribbon wasna coft in Edinbra toon,
-I'se string anither gowden guinea upon it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Carnation Maybold only smiled and pouted
-her lips, as if at a pleasant memory.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>From sixteen to twenty-six is more than a full
-half of the period of life to which we give the
-name of girlhood. But at twenty-six Carnation
-Maybold was Carnation Maybold still. Yet there
-had been no breaking off, no failure in the
-steadfastness of that early affection which had sent
-John Charles along the dusty road to carry the
-school-bag of green baize.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the medallist never returned to college.
-During the early falling twilight of the next
-Hint-o'-Hairst (or end of harvest), his father,
-Gawain Morrison, driving homeward from market
-all too mellow, brake neck-bone over the crags of
-the Witch's pool.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So, his mother being a feeble woman, though
-still young and buxom, John Charles had perforce
-to bide at home and shoulder the responsibilities of
-a farm of two thousand pastoral acres and a rent of
-£800, payable twice a year in Cairn Edward town.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was a sore burden for such young shoulders,
-but John Charles had grit in him, and, what made
-his heart glad, he could do most of his work, by
-lea rig and pasturage, within sight of a certain
-cottage where dwelt the maid with a ribbon of
-blue about her neck.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was no possibility of any marriage, nor,
-indeed, talk of any between them, and that for two
-good reasons: Gawain Morrison had died in debt.
-He was "behindhand at the Bank," and his farm
-and stock were left to his widow at her own
-disposition, unless she should marry again, in
-which case they were willed to his son John
-Charles Morrison, presently student of arts in
-the University of Edinburgh. The will had been
-made during the one winter that son had spent
-away from home.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>John Charles' bitter hour in the bank at Cairn
-Edward was sweetened by the sympathy and
-kindliness of Henry Marchbanks, who, being one
-of the best judges of character in Scotland, saw
-cause to give this young man a chance to
-discharge his father's liabilities.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At twenty-five John Charles was once more
-a free man, and there was a substantial balance
-to his mother's credit in the bank of Cairn Edward.
-Penny of his own he had not received one for
-all his five years' work.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Mrs. Morrison was that most foolish of
-womankind—an old woman striving to appear
-young. She had taken a strong dislike to the
-girl mistress of the white cottage at her gates,
-and was never tired of railing at her pretensions
-to beauty, at her lightheadedness, and at the
-suitors who stayed their horses for a word or
-a flower from across the cropped yew hedge of
-Carnation Maybold's cottage.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But John Charles, steadfast in all things, was
-particularly admirable in his silences. He let
-his mother rail on, and then, at the quiet hour
-of e'en stole down to the dyke-side for a "word." He
-never entered Carnation's dwelling, nor did
-he even pass the girdling hedge of yew and privet.
-But there was one place where the defences were
-worn low. Behind the well curb occurred this
-breach of continuity in the dead engineer's hedges,
-and to this place night after night through the
-years, that quiet steadfast lover, John Charles
-Morrison, came to touch the hand of his mistress.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She did not always meet him. Sometimes she
-had girl friends with her in the cottage, sometimes
-she had been carried off to a merry-making in
-Cairn Edward, to return under suitable escort
-in the evening.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But even then Carnation had a comfortable
-sense of safety, for ever since one unforgotten
-night, Carnation knew that in any danger she
-had only to raise her voice to bring to her rescue
-a certain tall broad-shouldered ghost, which with
-attendant collies haunted the gray hillsides.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That night was one on which a tramp, denied
-an alms, had seized the girl by the arm within
-half a mile of her home. And at the voice of
-her sharp crying, a different John Charles from
-any she had ever seen had swung himself over
-the hillside dyke, and descended like an avenging
-whirlwind upon the assailant.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet so secretive is the country lover, that few
-save an odd shepherd or two of his own suspected
-the comradeship which existed between these two.
-Carnation was in great request at concerts and
-church bazaars in the little neighbouring town;
-she even went to a local "assembly" or two every
-winter, under the sheltering wing of a school friend
-who had married early.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>John Charles did not dance, so he was not
-asked to these. He was thought, indeed, to be
-rather a grave young fellow, busied with his farm
-and his books. No one connected his name with
-that of his fair and sprightly neighbour.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet somehow, in spite of many opportunities,
-Carnation Maybold did not marry. She was
-bright, cultivated, winsome, and certainly the
-prettiest girl for miles around.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Are you waiting for a prince?" little Mrs. George
-Walter, her friend of the assemblies, had
-said to her more than once.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," smiled Carnation, "the true Prince!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I suppose that is why you always wear a
-ribbon of true blue?" retorted her friend. "Do let
-me see what is at the end of it—ah, you will not.
-I think you are very mean, Carnation. All is over
-between us from this moment. I'm sure I came
-and told </span><em class="italics">you</em><span> as soon as ever George spoke!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But perhaps," said Carnation quietly, "</span><em class="italics">my</em><span>
-George has not yet spoken!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, if he hasn't, why don't you make him,"
-said her friend with vehemence, "or else why
-have eyes like those been thrown away upon you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have worn this nearly ten years!" said
-Carnation, a little wistfully.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation Maybold," said her friend indignantly,
-"you ought to be ashamed! And so it was
-for the sake of that school-girl's split sixpence
-that you refused Harry Foster, whose father has
-an estate of his own, and Kenneth Walker, the
-surveyor, as well as—oh, I have no patience with
-such silly sentiment!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Carnation smiled even more quietly than usual.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Gracie," she said, "if I am content, I don't
-see what difference it can make to you."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You ought to be married—you oughtn't to
-live alone with only an old woman to look after
-you. You are wasting the best years of your
-life——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Gracie, dear," said Carnation, "you mean to
-be kind; but I ask you not to say any more
-about this. There are worse things that may
-happen to a woman, than that she should wait and
-wait—aye, even if she should die waiting!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was the evening of the August day on which
-Mrs. Walter had spoken thus to Carnation that
-John Charles came cottagewards slowly and
-gloomily. He had been thinking bitter thoughts,
-and at last had taken a resolve that was likely
-to cost him dear.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In the warm light of evening the girl, who stood
-at the farther side of the gap, seemed wondrously
-beautiful. The school-girl look had long since
-passed away. Only the fresh rose on the cheeks, the
-depths in the eyes (as if a cloud shadowed them),
-the lissom bend of the young body towards him
-were the same. But the hair was waved and
-plaited about the head in a larger and nobler
-fashion. The contours were a little fuller, and
-the lips, perfect as ever in shape, were stiller,
-and the smile on them at once more assured and
-more sedate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation, I cannot hold you any longer to
-your promise!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And why not, John; are you tired of me?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am not one of those who grow tired, dear,"
-the young man's voice was so low none could hear
-it but the one listener. "I will never grow
-tired—you know that. But I waste the best years
-of your life. You are beautiful, and the time is
-passing. You might marry any one——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Have you any particular one in your mind?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The question at once spurred and startled him.
-He moved his feet on the soft grass of the meadow
-with a certain embarrassment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, Carnation; my mother was speaking
-to me to-night of Harry Foster of Carnsalloch.
-His father has told her of his love for you. She
-says I am keeping you from accepting him. I
-have come to release you from any promise,
-Carnation, spoken or implied."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There is no promise, John—save that I love
-you, and will never marry any one else."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But if I went away you might—you might
-change your mind. I am thinking of West
-Australia! I am making nothing of it here. All
-is as much my mother's as it was the day my
-father died! I can get her a good 'grieve' to
-take charge, and go in the spring!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The girl winced a little, but did not speak for
-a while.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," she said at last, "you must do as you
-think best. I shall wait all the same. Thank
-God, there is no law against a woman waiting."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation, do you mean it?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The gap was a gap still; but both the lovers
-were on one side of it, and the night was
-dark about them. Indeed, they were so close
-each to the other that there was no need of
-light.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If I go, I shall make a home for you!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"However long it is, I shall be ready when
-you want me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"John!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And so, as it was in the beginning, the old, old
-tale was retold beneath the breathing rustle of
-the orchard trees.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet their hearts were sore when they parted,
-because the springtime was so near, and the home
-they longed for seemed so very far.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Carnation slept in a little garret room with a
-gable window. She had chosen it, because she
-liked to look down on John Charles' fields and
-on the low place in the hedge where he always
-stood waiting for her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The waning moon had risen late, and Carnation
-undressed without a candle. Having said her
-prayers, she stole into bed. But sleep would not
-come, and, her heart being right sore within her,
-the tears forced up her eyelids instead, as it is
-woman's safety that they should.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She lay and sobbed her heart out because John
-was going away. But through the tears that wet
-her pillow certain words she had been singing
-in the choir on Sunday forced themselves:—</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"Weeping may endure for a night,</span></div>
-<div class="line"><span>But joy cometh in the morning."</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Nevertheless, Carnation must have sobbed herself
-to sleep, for it was nigh the dawn when she was
-awakened by something that flicked her lattice at
-regular intervals. It could not be a bird. It
-was too sharp and regular for that.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Could it be——?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Impossible!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He had never come before at such a time!
-If it were indeed he, there must be some terrible
-news to tell.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Carnation rose hastily, and threw a loose cloak
-about her shoulders. Then she went and opened
-the little French lattice with the criss-cross
-diamond panes. The dawn was coming slowly
-up out of the east, and the gray fields were turning
-rosy beneath her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A dark figure filled up the low place in the hedge.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation, I had something to tell you!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is it bad news? I cannot bear it, if it is."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, the best of news! I am not going at
-Whitsunday to Australia. My mother told me
-last night that she is to be married at the New
-Year. He is a rich man—Harry Foster's father.
-She is going to live at Carnsalloch."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well?" said Carnation, doubtfully, not seeing
-all that this sudden change meant to them both.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why, then, dearest," the voice of John Charles
-Morrison shook with emotion, "we can be married
-as soon as we like after that. The farm and
-everything on it is ours—yours and mine!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Carnation's brain reeled, and she found herself
-without a word to say. Only the sound of the
-happy singing ran in her head:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Joy cometh in the morning—joy cometh in the
-morning!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why don't you speak, Carnation? Are you
-not glad?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The voice down at the gap was anxious now.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am too far away from you to say anything,
-but I am glad, very glad, dear John!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You will be ready by Whitsunday?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I shall be ready by Whitsunday!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a pause. The light came clearer
-in the east. John Charles could see the girl's
-fresh complexion thrown up by the dark cloak,
-an edging of lace, white and dainty, just showing
-beneath.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnation, I wish I could kiss you!" he said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Will this do instead?" she answered him,
-smiling through the wetness of her eyes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And she lifted up the old worn class medal
-she had carried so long on its blue ribbon, and
-kissed it openly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And that had perforce to "do" John Charles—at
-least, for that time of asking.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="jaimsie"><span class="bold large">JAIMSIE</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>As I drove home the other day I saw that old
-lazybones Jacob Irving seated in the sun with
-a whole covey of boys round him. He had his
-pocket-knife in his hand, and was busy mending
-a "gird." The "gird," or wooden hoop,
-belonged to Will Bodden, and its precedence in
-medical treatment had been secured by Will's
-fists. There was quite a little hospital ward
-behind, of toys all awaiting diagnosis in strict
-order of primacy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Here was Dick Dobie with a new blade to put into
-his shilling knife. A shilling knife, Jacob assured
-him, is not fitted for cutting down fishing rods.
-It is however, excellent as a saw when used on
-smaller timber. Next came Peter Cheesemonger,
-who was in waiting with a model schooner, the
-rising of which had met with an accident. And
-there hurrying down from the cottage on the
-Brae, was one of the younger Allan lasses with
-her mother's "wag-at-the-wa'" clock. The
-pendulum had wagged to such purpose that it had
-swung itself out of its right mind.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After I had left behind me this vision of old
-Jacob Irving seated on the wall of the boys'
-playground at the village school, I fell into a
-muse upon the narrowness of the line which in
-our Scottish parishes, divides the "Do-Everythings"
-from the "Do-Nothings."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I could give myself the more completely to this
-train of thought that I had finished my rounds
-for the day, and had now nothing to do except to
-look forward to seeing Nance, and to the excellent
-dinner for which the shrewd airs of the moorland
-were providing internal accommodation of quite
-a superior character.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The conditions of Scottish life are generally
-so strenuous, and the compulsions of "He that
-will not work, neither shall he eat" so absolute
-that we cannot afford more than one local Do-Nothing
-in a village or rural community. Equally
-certainly, however, one is necessary. The business
-of the commonwealth could not be carried on
-without him. Besides, he is needed to point the
-indispensable moral.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There's that guid-for-naething Jacob Irvin'
-sittin' wi' a' the misleared boys o' the neighbourhood
-aboot him!" I can hear a douce goodwife
-say to her gossip. "Guid peety his puir wife
-and bairns! Guidman, lay ye doon that paper
-an awa' to your wark, or ye'll sune be nae better—wi'
-your Gledstane and your speeches and your
-smokin'! Think shame o' yersel', guidman."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As the community grows larger, however, there
-is less and less room for the amiable Do-Nothing.
-He is, indeed, only seen to perfection in a village
-or rural parish. In Cairn Edward, for instance
-which thinks itself quite a town, he does not
-attain the general esteem and almost affectionate
-reprobation which, in my native Whinnyliggate,
-follow Jacob Irving about like his shadow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In a town like Cairn Edward a local Do-Nothing
-is apt to attach himself to a livery stable, and
-there to acquire a fine coppery nose and a
-permanent "dither" about the knees. He is spoken
-of curtly and even disrespectfully as "that waister
-Jock Bell." In cities he becomes a mere matter
-for the police, and the facetious reporter chronicles
-his two-hundredth appearance before the magistrate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But in Whinnyliggate, in Dullarg, in
-Crosspatrick, and in the surrounding parishes, the
-conditions for the growth of the Do-Nothing
-approach as near perfection as anything merely
-mundane can be expected to do. Jacob Irving
-is hardly a typical specimen, for he has a trade.
-The genuine Do-Nothing should have none. It
-is true that Jacob's children might reply, like the
-boy when asked if his father were a Christian,
-"Yes, but he does not work at it much!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Jacob is a shoe-maker—or rather shoe-mender.
-For I have never yet been able to trace an entire
-pair of Jacob's foot-gear on any human extremities.
-It does not fit his humour to be so utilitarian.
-He has, however, made an excellent toy pair for
-the feet of little Jessie Lockhart's doll, with soles,
-heels, uppers, tongues, and lacing gear all complete.
-He spent, to my personal knowledge, an entire
-morning in showing her (on the front step of her
-father's manse) how to take them off and put them
-on again. And in the future he will never meet
-Jessie on the King's highway without stopping and
-gravely asking her if any repairs are yet requisite.
-When such are necessary they will, without doubt,
-receive his best attention.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I had not, however, made a study of Jacob
-Irving for any considerable period without
-exploding the vulgar opinion that the parish
-Do-Nothing is an idle or a lazy man. Nay, to repeat
-my initial paradox, the Do-Nothing is the only
-genuine Do-Everything.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When on a recent occasion I gave Jacob, in
-return for the pleasure of his conversation, a
-"lift" in my doctor's gig, he talked to me very
-confidentially of his "rounds." At first I imagined
-in my ignorance that, like the tailors of the
-parishes round about, he went from farm to farm
-prosecuting his calling and cobbling the shoes of
-half the countryside. I was buttressed in this
-opinion by his expressed pity or contempt for
-wearers of "clogs."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Here's anither puir body wi' a pair o' clogs on
-his feet," Jacob would say; "and to think that for
-verra little mair than the craitur paid for them, I wad
-fit him wi' as soond a pair o' leather-soled shoon
-as were ever ta'en frae amang tanners' bark!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I had also seen him start out with a thin-bladed
-cobbler's knife and the statutory piece of "roset"
-or resin wrapped in a palm's-breadth of soft leather.
-But, alas, all was a vain show. The knife was to
-be used in delicate surgical work upon the deceased
-at a pig-killing, and the resin was for splicing
-fishing-rods.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After a while I began by severe study to get
-to the bottom of a Do-Nothing's philosophy. To
-do the appointed task for the performance of which
-duty calls, man waits, and money will be paid,
-that is work to be avoided by every means—by
-procrastination, by fallacious promise, by prevarication,
-and (sad to have to say it) by the plainest
-of plain lying.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Whatever brings in money in the exercise of a
-trade, whatever must be finished within a given
-time, that needs the co-operation of others or
-prolonged and consecutive effort on his own part, is
-merely anathema to the Do-Nothing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On the other hand, no house in the parish is
-too distant for him to attend at the "settin' o'
-the yaird" (the delving must, however, be done
-previously). On such occasions the Do-Nothing
-revels in long wooden pins with string wrapped
-mysteriously about them. He can turn you out
-the neatest shaped bed of "onions" and "syboes,"
-the straightest rows of cabbages, and potato drills
-so level that the whole household feels that it must
-walk the straight path in order not to shame them.
-The wayfaring man though a fool, looks over the
-dyke, and says: "Thae dreels are Jacob's—there's
-nane like them in the countryside!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This at least is Jacob's way of it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But though all this is by the way of introduction
-to the particular Do-Nothing I have in my
-eye, it is not of Jacob that I am going to write.
-Jacob is indeed an enticing subject, and from the
-point of view of his wife, might be treated very
-racily. But, though I afterwards made Margate
-Irving's acquaintance (and may one day put her
-opinions on record), I have other and higher game
-in my mind.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This is none other than the Reverend James
-Tacksman, B.A., licentiate of the Original Marrow
-Kirk of Scotland. In fact, a clerical Do-Nothing
-of the highest class.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now, to begin with, I will aver that there is
-no scorn in all this. "Jaimsie" is more to me
-than many worthy religious publicists, beneficed,
-parished, churched, stipended, and sustentationed
-to the eyes. He was not a very great man. He
-was in no sense a successful man, but—he was
-"Jaimsie."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I admit that my zeal is that of the pervert. It
-was not always thus with me when "Jaimsie" was
-alive, and perhaps my enthusiasm is so full-bodied
-from a sense that it is impossible for the gentle
-probationer to come and quarter himself upon Nance
-and myself for (say) a period of three months in
-the winter season, a thing he was quite capable of
-doing when in the flesh.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In the days before I was converted to higher
-views of human nature as represented in the person
-of "Jaimsie," I was even as the vulgar with regard
-to him. I admit it. I even openly scoffed, and
-retailed to many the story of Jamie and my father,
-Saunders McQuhirr of Drumquhat, with which I
-shall conclude. I used to tell it rather well at
-college, the men said. At least they laughed
-sufficiently. But now I shall not try to add, alter,
-amend, or extenuate, as is the story-teller's wont
-with his favourites. For in sackcloth and ashes
-I have repented me, and am at present engaged
-in making my honourable amend to "Jaimsie."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For almost as long as I can remember the
-Reverend James Tacksman, B.A., was in the habit
-of coming to my father's house, and the news that
-he was in view on the "far brae-face" used to put
-my mother into such a temper that "dauded" heads
-and cuffed ears were the order of the day. The
-larger fry of us cleared out promptly to the barn
-and stack-yard till the first burst of the storm
-was over. Even my father, accustomed as he was
-to carry all matters ecclesiastical with a high
-hand, found it convenient to have some harness
-to clean in the stable, or the lynch-pin of a cart
-to replace in the little joiner's shop where he
-passed so much of his time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll no hae the craitur aboot the hoose," my
-mother would cry; "I telled ye sae the last time
-he was here—sax weeks in harvest it was—and
-then had maist to be shown the door. (Haud oot
-o' my road, weans! Can ye no keep frae rinnin'
-amang my feet like sae mony collie whaulps?
-Tak' ye that!) Hear ye this, guidman, if ye
-willna speak to the man, by my faith I wull.
-Mary McQuhirr is no gaun to hae the bread ta'en
-oot o' the mooths o' her innocent bairns——(Where
-in the name o' fortune, Alec, are ye gaun wi'
-that soda bannock? Pit it doon this meenit, or
-I'll tak' the tings to ye!). Na, nor I will be run
-aff my feet to pleesure ony sic useless,
-guid-for-naething seefer as Jaimsie Tacksman!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At this moment a faint rapping made itself
-audible at the front door, never opened except
-on the highest state occasions, as when the minister
-called, and at funerals.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My mother (I can see her now) gave a hasty
-"tidy" to her gray hair and adjusted her
-white-frilled "mutch" about her still winsome brow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">And hoo are ye the day, Maister Tacksman,
-an' it's a lang, lang season since we've had the
-pleasure o' a veesit frae you!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Could that indeed be my mother's voice, so
-lately upraised in denunciation over a stricken
-and cowering world? I could not understand it
-then, and to tell the truth I don't quite yet. I
-have, however, asked her to explain, and this
-is what she says:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Weel, ye see, Alec, it was this way" (she is
-pleased when I require any points for my "scribin',"
-though publicly she scoffs at them and declares
-it will ruin my practice if the thing becomes
-known), "ye see I had it in my mind to the last
-minute to deny the craitur. But when I gaed to
-open the door, there stood Jaimsie wi' his wee bit
-shakin' hand oot an' his threadbare coatie hingin'
-laich aboot his peetifu' spindle shanks, and his
-weel-brushit hat, an' the white neck-claith that
-wanted doin' up. And I kenned that naebody
-could laundry it as weel as me. My fingers juist
-fair yeukit (itched) to be at the starchin' o't. And
-faith, maybes there was something aboot the craitur
-too—he was sae cruppen in upon himsel', sae
-wee-bookit, sae waesome and yet kindly aboot the e'en,
-that I juist couldna say him nay."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That is my mother's report of her feelings in
-the matter. She does not add that the ten minutes
-or quarter of an hour in which she had been
-able to give the fullest and most public expression
-to her feelings had allowed most of the steam of
-indignation to blow itself off. My father, who was
-a good judge, gave me, early in my married life,
-some excellent advice on this very point, which
-I subjoin for the edification of the general public.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Never bottle a woman up, Alec," he said,
-meditatively. "What Vesuvius and Etna and thae
-ither volcanoes are to this worl', the legeetimate
-exercise o' her tongue is to a woman. It's a
-naitural function, Alec. Ye may bridle the ass or
-the mule, but—gie the tongue o' a woman (as
-it were) plenty o' elbow-room! Gang oot o' the
-hoose—like Moses to the backside o' the wilderness
-gin ye like, and when ye come in she will be as
-quaite as pussy; and if ever ye hae to contradick
-your mairried wife, Alec, let it be in deeds, no in
-words. Gang your road gin ye hae made up
-your mind, immovable like the sun, the mune, and
-the stars o' heeven in their courses—but, as ye
-value peace dinna be aye crying' 'Aye,' when your
-wife cries 'No'!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Which things may be wisdom. But to the tale
-of our Jaimsie.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Sometimes, moreover, even the natural man in
-my kindly and long-suffering father uprose against
-the preacher. Jaimsie knew when he was
-comfortable, and no mere hint of any delicate sort
-would make him curtail his visit by one day.
-I can remember him creeping about the farm of
-Drumquhat all that summer, a book in his hand,
-contemplating the works of God as witnessed
-chiefly in the growth of the "grosarts." (We
-always blamed him—quite unjustly, I believe—for
-eating the "silver-gray" gooseberries on the sly.)
-Now he would stand half an hour and gaze up
-among the branches of an elm, where a cushat was
-tirelessly </span><em class="italics">coorooring</em><span> to his mate. Anon you would
-see him apparently deeply engaged in counting the
-sugar-plums in the orchard. After a little he
-would be found seated on the red shaft of a cart
-in the stackyard, jotting down in a shabby
-notebook ideas for the illustrations of sermons never
-to be written; or if written, doomed never to
-be preached. His hat was always curled up at
-the back and pulled down at the front, and till
-my mother made down an old pair of my father's
-Sunday trousers for him (and put them beside
-his bed while he slept), you could see in a good
-light the reflection of your hand on the knees of
-his "blacks." It is scarcely necessary to say that
-Jaimsie never referred to the transposition, nor,
-indeed, in all probability, so much as discovered it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Jaimsie was used to conduct family worship
-morning and evening in the house of his sojourn,
-as a kind of quit-rent for his meal of meat and his
-prophet's chamber. To the ordinary reading of
-the Word he was wont to subjoin an "exposeetion"
-of some disputed or prophetical passage.
-The whole exercises never took less than an hour,
-if Jaimsie were left to the freedom of his own
-will—which, as may be inferred, was extremely awkward
-in a busy season when the corn was dry in the
-stock or when the scythes flashed rhythmically like
-level silver flames among the lush meadow grass.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Finally, therefore, a compromise had to be
-effected. My father took the morning diet of
-worship, but Jaimsie had his will of us in the
-evening. I can see them yet—those weariful
-sederunts, when even my father wrestled with
-sleep like Samson with the Philistines, while
-my mother periodically nodded forward with
-a lurch, and, recovering herself with a start, the
-next moment looked round haughtily to see
-which of us was misbehaving. Meanwhile the
-kitchen was all dark, save where before Jaimsie
-the great Bible lay open between two candles,
-and on the hearth the last peat of the evening
-glowed red.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Many is the fine game of draughts I have had
-with my brother Rob and Christie Wilson our
-herd lad, by putting the "dam-brod" behind the
-chimney jamb where my father and mother could
-not see it, and moving the pieces by the light
-of the red peat ash. I am ashamed to think on
-it now, but then it seemed the only thing to do
-which would keep us from sleep.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And meantime Jaimsie prosed on, his gentle
-sing-song working its wicked work on mother
-like a lullaby, and my father sending his nails
-into the palms of his hands that he might not
-be shamed before us all.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I remember particularly how Jaimsie addressed
-us for a whole week on his favourite text in he
-Psalms, "The hill of God is as the hill of
-Bashan—an high hill, as the hill of Bashan."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And in the pauses of crowning our men and
-scuffling for the next place at the draught board,
-we could catch strange words and phrases which
-come to me yet with a curious wistful thrilling
-of the heart. Such are "White as snow on
-Salmon"—"That mount Sinai in Arabia"—"Ye
-mountains of Gilboa, let there be no dew, neither
-let there be rain upon you, nor fields of offering."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as a concluding of the whole matter we
-sang this verse out of Francis Roos's psalter:</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"Ye mountains great, wherefore was it</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>That ye did skip like rams?</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>And wherefore was it, little hills,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>That ye did leap like lambs?"</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was all double-Dutch to me then, but now
-I can see that Jaimsie must have been marshalling
-the mountains of Scripture to bear solemn
-witness against an evil and exceedingly
-somnolent generation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Once when my mother snored audibly Jaimsie
-looked up, but at that very moment she awoke,
-and with great and remarkable presence of mind
-promptly cuffed Rob, who in his turn knocked
-the draught-board endways, just as I had his last
-man cornered, to our everlasting disgrace.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My mother asked us next day pointedly where
-we thought we were going to, and if we were of
-opinion that there would be any dam-brods in
-hell. I offered no remarks, but Rob—who was
-always an impudent boy—got on the other side
-of the dyke from my mother and answered that
-there would be no snorers there either.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>From an early age he was a lad of singularly sound
-judgments, my brother Rob. He stayed out in the
-barn till after my mother was asleep that night.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At last, however, even my father grew tired
-of Jaimsie. He stayed full three months on this
-occasion. Autumnal harvest fields were bared of
-stooks, the frost began to glisten on the stiff turnip
-shaws, the wreathed nets were put up for the
-wintering sheep, and still the indefatigable Jaimsie
-stayed on.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I remember yet the particular morning when,
-at long and last, Jaimsie left us. All night almost
-there had been in the house the noise as of a
-burn running over hollow stones, with short solid
-interruptions like the sound of a distant mallet
-stricken on wood. It came from my father's and
-mother's room. I knew well what it meant. The
-sound like running water was my mother trying to
-persuade my father to something against his will,
-and the far-away mallet thuds were his
-mono-syllabic replies.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This time it was my mother who won.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After the harvest bustle was over, Jaimsie had
-resumed his practice of taking worship in the
-mornings, but any of us who had urgent work
-on hand could obtain, by proper representation,
-a dispensing ordinance. These were much sought
-after, especially when Jaimsie started to tackle
-the Book of Daniel "in his ordinary," as he
-phrased it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But this Monday morning, to the general surprise,
-my father sat down in the chair of state himself
-and reached the Bible from the shelf.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will take family worship this morning,
-Mr. Tacksman," he said, with great sobriety.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then we knew that something extraordinary
-was coming, and I was glad I had not "threeped"
-to my mother that I had seen some of the Nether
-Neuk sheep in our High Park—which would have
-been quite true, for I had put them there myself
-on purpose the night before.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was during the prayer that the blow fell.
-My father had a peculiarly distinct and solemn
-way with him in supplication; and now the
-words fell distinct as hammer strokes on our ear.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He prayed for the Church of God in all
-covenanted lands; for all Christian peoples of every
-creed (here Jaimsie, faithful Abdiel, always said
-"Humph"); for the heathen without God and
-without hope; for the family now present and for
-those of the family afar off. Then, as was his
-custom, he approached the stranger (who was no
-stranger) within our gates.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And do Thou, Lord, this day vouchsafe journeying
-mercies to Thy servant who is about to leave us.
-Grant him favourable weather for his departure,
-good speed on his way, and a safe return to his
-own country!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A kind of gasping sigh went all about the
-kitchen. I knew that my mother had her eye
-on my father to keep him to his pledged word
-of the night season. So I dared not look round.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But we all ached to know how Jaimsie would
-take it, and we all joined fervently in the
-supplication which promised us a couple of hours more
-added to our day.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the Amen, and all rose to their
-feet. Jaimsie seemed a little dazed, but took
-the matter like a scholar and a gentleman.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He held out his hand to my father with his
-usual benevolent smile.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I did not know that I had mentioned it,"
-he said, "but I was thinking of leaving you
-to-day."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And that was all he said, but forthwith went
-upstairs to pack his shabby little black bag.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My father stood a while as if shamed; then,
-when we heard Jaimsie's feet trotting overhead,
-he turned somewhat grimly to my mother. On
-his face was an expression as if he had just
-taken physic.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," he said, "you will be easier in your
-mind now, Mary." This he said, well knowing
-that the rat of remorse was already getting his
-incisors to work upon his wife's conscience. She
-stamped her foot.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Saunders McQuhirr," she said in suppressed
-tones, "to be a Christian man, ye are the maist
-aggrevatin'——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But at that moment my father went out through
-the door, saying no further word.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My mother shooed us all out of the house like
-intrusive chickens, and I do not know for certain
-what she did next. But Rob, looking through
-the blind of the little room where she kept her
-house-money, saw her fumbling with her purse.
-And when at last Jaimsie, having addressed his
-bag to be sent with the Carsphairn carrier into
-Ayrshire (where dwelt the friends next on his
-visiting list), came out with his staff in one hand,
-he was dabbing his eyes with a clean handkerchief.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, after that, all that I remember is the
-pathetic figure of the little probationer lifting up
-a hand in silent blessing upon the house which
-had sheltered him so long; and so taking his
-lonely way over the hillside towards the northern
-coach road.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When my father came in from the sheep at
-mid-day, he waited till grace was over, and then,
-looking directly at my mother, he said: "Weel,
-Mary, how mony o' your pound notes did he
-carry away in his briest-pocket this time?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I shall never forget the return and counter
-retort which followed. My mother was vexed—one
-of the few times that I can remember seeing
-her truly angered with her husband.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I would give you one advice, Saunders
-McQuhirr," she said, "and that is, from this forth,
-to be mindful of your own business."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will tak' that advice, Mary," he answered
-slowly; "but my heart is still sore within me
-this day because I took the last advice you gied
-me!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>And it was destined to be yet sorer for that
-same cause. Jaimsie never was within our doors
-again. He abode in Ayrshire and the Upper
-Ward all that winter and spring, and it was not
-till the following back-end, and in reply to a
-letter and direct invitation from my conscience-stricken
-father, that he announced that, all being
-well and the Lord gracious, he would be with
-us the following Friday.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But on the Thursday night a great snow storm
-came on, and the drift continued long unabated.
-We all said that Jaimsie would doubtless be safely
-housed, and we did not look for him to arrive
-upon the day of his promise. However, by
-Monday, when the coach was again running, my
-mother began to be anxious, and all the younger
-of us went forth to try and get news of him. We
-heard that he had left Carsphairn late on the
-Thursday forenoon, meaning to stop overnight
-at the shepherd's shieling at the southern end
-of Loch Dee. But equally certainly he had never
-reached it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was not till Tuesday morning early that
-Jaimsie was found under a rock near the very
-summit of the Dungeon hill, his plaid about him
-and his frozen hand clasping his pocket Bible.
-It was open, and his favourite text was thrice
-underscored.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">The hill of God is as the hill of Bashan; an
-high hill, as the hill of Bashan.</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Well, there is no doubt that the little forlorn
-"servant of God" has indeed gotten some new
-light shed upon the text, since the dark hour when
-he sat down to rest his weary limbs upon the
-snow-clad summit of the Dungeon of Buchan.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="beadle-and-martyr"><span class="bold large">BEADLE AND MARTYR</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>I sometimes give it as a reason for a certain
-lack of uniformity in church attendance, that I
-cannot away with the new-fangled organs, hymns,
-and chaunts one meets with there. I love them
-not, in comparison, that is, with the old psalm
-tunes. They do not make the heart beat quicker
-and more proudly, like Kilmarnock and Coleshill,
-Duke Street and Old 124th.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance, however, is so far left to herself as to
-say that this is only an excuse, and that my
-real reason is the pleasure I have in thinking that
-all the people must perforce listen to a sermon,
-while I can put my feet upon another chair and
-read anything I like. This, however, is rank
-insult, such as only wives long wedded dare to
-indulge in. Besides, it shows, by its imputation
-of motives, to what lengths a sordid and
-ill-regulated imagination will go.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Moreover, I have never grown accustomed to
-the hours of town churches, and I consider, both
-from a medical and from a spiritual point of view,
-that afternoon services in town churches are
-directly responsible for the spread of indigestion,
-as well as of a spirit of religious infidelity
-throughout our beloved land.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>(Nance is properly scandalised at this last
-remark, and says that she hopes people will
-understand that I only believe about half of what
-I put down on paper when I get a pen in my
-hand. She complains that she is often asked
-to explain some of my positions at afternoon teas.
-I say it serves her right for attending such gatherings
-of irresponsible gossip, tempered with boiled
-tannin. It is easy to have the last word with
-Nance—here.)</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But after all the chief thing that I miss when
-I go to church is just Willie McNair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The sermon is nowadays both shorter and
-better. The singing is good of its kind, and
-I can always read a psalm or a paraphrase if
-the hymn prove too long, or, as is often the case,
-rather washy in sentiment. The children's address
-is really designed for children, and the prayers
-do not exceed five minutes in length. But—I
-look in vain for Willie McNair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Alas! Willie lies out yonder on the green
-knowe, his wife Betty by his side, and four feet
-of good black mould over his coffin-lid.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie was just our beadle, and he had a story.
-When I am setting down so many old things, if
-I forget thee, Willie McNair, may my right hand
-forget his cunning.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Ah, Willie, though you never were a "church-officer,"
-though you never heard the Word, it is
-you, you alone that I miss. I just cannot think
-of the kirk without you. Grizzled, gnarled,
-bow-shouldered of week-days, what a dignity of port,
-what a solemnising awe, what a processional
-tread was thine on Sabbaths! We had only one
-service in the Kirk on the Hill in my youth.
-But, speaking in the vulgar tongue, that one
-was a "starcher."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It included the "prefacing" of a psalm, often
-extending over quite as long a period of time as
-an ordinary modern sermon, a "lecture," which
-as a rule (if "himsel'" was in fettle) lasted about
-three quarters of an hour. Then after that the
-sermon proper was begun without loss of time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now I cannot say, speaking "from the heart
-to the heart" (a favourite expression of Willie's),
-that I regret the loss of all this. I was but a boy,
-and the torment of having to sit still for from
-two hours and a half to three hours on a hard
-seat, close-packed and well-watched to keep me
-out of mischief, has made even matrimony seem
-light and easy. How mere Episcopalians and
-other untrained persons get through the sorrows
-and disappointments incident to human life I do
-not know.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was not till the opening of the Sabbath-school
-by Mr. Osbourne, however, that I came to know
-Willie well. Hitherto he had been as inaccessible
-and awestriking as the minister's neckcloth. And
-of that I have a story to tell. I think what made
-me a sort of advanced thinker in these early
-days, was once being sent by my father to the
-lodgings of the minister who was to "supply" on
-a certain Sabbath morning. The manse must
-have been shut for repairs and "himsel'" on his
-holidays. At any rate, the minister was stopping
-with Miss Bella McBriar in the little white house
-below the Calmstone Brig. Miss Bella showed
-me in with my missive, and there, on the morning
-of the Holy Day, before a common unsanctified
-glass tacked to a wall, with a lathery razor in his
-hand, in profane shirt-sleeves, stood the minister,
-shaving himself! His neckcloth, that was to
-appear and shine so glorious above the cushions
-of the pulpit, hung limp and ignominious over
-the back of a chair. A clay pipe lay across the
-ends of it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This was the beginning of the mischief, and
-if I ever take to a criminal career, here was the
-first and primal cause.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Shortly after I went to Sabbath-school, and
-having been well trained by my father in
-controversial divinity, and drilled by my mother in
-the Catechism, I found myself in a fair way of
-distinguishing myself; but for all that, I cannot
-truly say that I ever got over the neckcloth on
-the back of Miss McBriar's chair. When I aired
-my free-thinking opinions before my father, and
-he shut me off by an appeal to authority, I kept
-silence and hugged myself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That may be a good enough argument," I
-said to myself, "but—I have seen a minister's
-neckcloth hung over the back of a chair, and
-shaving-soap on his chafts on Sabbath morning.
-How can you believe in revealed religion after
-that?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But I had so much of solid common-sense,
-even in these my salad days, that I refrained from
-saying these things to my father. Indeed, I would
-not dare to say them now, even if I believed them,
-Willie McNair regarded the Sabbath-school
-much as I did. To both of us it was simply
-an imposition.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie thought so for two reasons—first and
-generally, because it was an innovation; and
-secondly, because he had to clean up the kirk
-after it. I agreed with him, because I was
-compelled to attend—the farm cert being delayed a
-whole hour in order that I might have the privilege
-of religious instruction by the senior licensed
-grocer of the little town. This gentleman had
-only one way of imparting knowledge. That was
-with the brass-edged binding of his pocket Bible.
-Even at that time I preferred the limp Oxford
-morocco. And so would you, if something so
-unsympathetic as brass corners were applied to
-the sides of your head two or three times every
-Sunday afternoon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After several years of this experience, I passed
-into Henry Marchbank's class and was happy.
-But that is quite another chapter, and has nothing
-to do with Willie McNair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now, Sabbath-school was over about three
-o'clock, and our conveyance did not start till
-four. That is the way I became attached to
-Willie. I used to stay and help him to clean the
-kirk. This is the way he did it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>First, he unfrocked himself of his broadcloth
-dignity by hanging his coat upon a nail in the
-vestry. Then he put on an apron which covered
-him from gray chin-beard to the cracks in the
-uppers of his shining shoes. Into the breast of
-this envelope he thrust a duster large enough for
-a sheet. It was, in fact, a section of a departed
-pulpit swathing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, muttering quite scriptural maledictions,
-and couching them in language entirely Biblical,
-Willie proceeded to visit the pews occupied by
-each class, restoring the "buiks" he had
-previously piled at the head of each seat to their
-proper places on the book-board in front, and
-scrutinising the woodwork for inscriptions in
-lead-pencil. Then he swept the crumbs and apple-cores
-carefully off the floor and delivered judgment at
-large.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I dinna ken what Maister Osbourne was
-thinkin' on to begin sic a Popish whigmaleery as
-this Sabbath-schule! A disgrace an' a mockin'
-in the hoose o' God! What kens the like o'
-Sammle Borthwick aboot the divine decrees?
-When I, mysel', that has heard them treated on
-for forty year under a' the Elect Ministers o' the
-Land, can do no more than barely understand
-them to this day! And a wheen silly lasses, wi'
-gum-floo'ers in their bonnets to listen to bairns
-hummerin' ower 'Man's Chief End'! It's eneuch
-to gar decent Doctor Syminton turn in his grave!
-'Man's Chief End'—faith—it's wumman's chief
-end that they're thinkin' on, the madams; they
-think I dinna see them shakin' their gum-floo'ers
-and glancing their e'en in the direction o' the
-onmarriet teacher bodies——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And such are all they that put their trust in
-them!" concluded Willie, somewhat irrelevantly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Laddie, come doon out o' the pulpit. I canna
-lippen (trust) ony body to dust that, bena mysel'!
-Gang and pick up the conversation lozengers aff
-the floor o' the Young Weemen's Bible Cless!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Printed words can give small indication of the
-intense bitterness and mordant satire of Willie's
-speech as he uttered these last words.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet Willie was far from being a hater of women
-kind. Indeed, the end of all his moralising was
-ever the same.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There's my ain guid wife—was there ever a
-woman like her? Snod as a new preen, yet nocht
-gaudy, naething ken-speckle. If only the young
-weemen nooadays were like Betty, they wad hae
-nae need o' gum-floo'ers an' ither abominations.
-Na, nor yet Bible clesses! Faith, set them up!
-It wad better become them to sit them doon wi'
-their Bibles in their laps and the grace o' God
-in their hearts, an' tak' a lesson to themsel's
-oot o' Paaal!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Here Willie dusted the pulpit cushions, vigorously
-shaking them as a terrier does a rat, and then
-carefully brushing them all in one direction, in
-order that, as he said, "the fell may a' lie the
-yae way."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie was no eye servant. No spider took
-hold with her hands and was in the Palace of
-Willie's King. Dust had no habitation there,
-and if a man did not clean his boots on the mat
-before entering, Willie went to him personally and
-told him his probable chances of a happy hereafter.
-These were but few and evil.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then having got the "shine" to fall as he
-wanted it, and the dark purple velvet overhang,
-pride of his heart, to sit to a nicety, Willie lifted
-up the heavy tassels, and at the same time resumed
-the thread of his discourse, standing there in the
-pulpit with the very port of a minister, and in his
-speech a point and pith that was all his own.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, Paul," (he always pronounced it </span><em class="italics">Paaal</em><span>)—"aye,
-Paaal, it's a peety ye never marriet and left
-nae faim'ly that we ken o'. For we hae sair need
-o' ye in thae days. But ye kenned better than
-to taigle yersel' wi' silly lasses. It was you that
-bade the young weemen to be keepers at hame—nae
-Bible clesses for Paaal—na, na!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And you mind Peter—oh, Peter was juist as
-soond on gum-floo'ers an' weemen's falderals as
-Paaal, 'Whose adorning, let it not be the outward
-adorning of plaiting the hair, and wearing of gold,
-and putting on of apparel, but the ornament of
-a meek and quiet speerit——'"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He stopped in the height of his discourse and
-waggled his hand down at me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Here, boy!" he cried, "what did ye do wi'
-thae conversation lozengers?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I indicated that I had them still in my pocket,
-for I had meant to solace the long road home
-with the cleaner of them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Let me see them!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Somewhat unwillingly I handed them up to
-Willie as he stood in the pulpit, a different Willie,
-an accusing Willie, Nathan the Prophet with a
-large cloth-brush under his arm.</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"When this you see, remember me!"</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>He read the printed words through his glasses
-deliberately.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye," he sneered, "that wad be Mag Kinstrey.
-I saw Rob Cuthbert smirkin' ower at her when
-the minister was lookin' up yon reference to
-Melchisadek. Aye, Meg, I'll remember ye—I'll
-no forgot ye. And if ye mend not your
-ways——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie did not conclude the sentence, but
-instead, he shook his head in the direction of the
-door of the Session house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He picked out another.</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"The rose is red—the violet's blue,</span></div>
-<div class="line"><span>But fairer far, my love, are you!"</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Willie opened the door of the pulpit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Preserve me, what am I doin'? It's fair
-profanation to be readin' sic balderdash in a place
-like this. Laddie, hear ye this, whatever ye hae
-to say to a lass, gang ye and say it to hersel', by
-yoursel'. For valenteens are a vain thing, and
-conversation lozengers a mock and an abomination."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie threatened me a moment with uplifted
-finger, and then added his stereotyped conclusion:
-"And so are all such as put their trust in them!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And through life I have acted strictly on Willie's
-advice, and I am bound to admit that I have found
-it good.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>About this period, also, I began to take tea,
-not infrequently, with Willie, and occasionally, but
-not often, I saw his wife, the incomparable Betty,
-whose praises Willie was never tired of singing.
-I am forced to say that, after these harangues,
-Betty disappointed me. She sat dumb and
-appeared singularly stupid, and this to a lad
-accustomed to a housewife like my mother, with her
-woman's wit keen as a razor, and a speech pointed
-to needle fineness, appeared more than strange.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Willie's affection was certainly both lovely
-and lovable. He was a gnarled grey old man
-with a grim mouth, but for Betty he ran like
-a young lover, and served her with meat and
-drink, as it had been on bended knee. His smile
-was ready whenever she looked at him, and he
-watched her with anxious eyes, dwelling on her
-every word and movement with a curious
-perturbation. If she happened not to be in when he
-came to the door, he would fall to trembling like
-a leaf, and the bleached look on his face was
-sad to see.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie McNair dwelt in a rickety old house at
-the bottom of the kirk hill, separated from the
-other village dwellings by the breadth of a field.
-There was a garden behind it, and a heathery
-common behind that, with whins growing to the
-very dyke of Willie's kail yard.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The first time that Betty was not in the house
-when we went home, it was to the hill behind
-that Willie ran first. Under a broom bush he
-found her, after a long search, and lifting her up
-in his arms he carried her to the house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Poor Betty," he cried over his shoulder as he
-went before me down the walk; "she shouldna
-gang oot on sic a warm day. The sun has been
-ower muckle for her. See, boy, rin doon to the
-Tinkler's well for some caller water. The can's
-at the gable end."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When I returned Betty was quietly in bed;
-and Willie had made the tea with ordinary water.
-He was somewhat more composed, but I could
-see his hand shake when he tried to pour out
-the first cup. He "skailed" it all over the cloth,
-and then was angered with himself for what he
-called his "trimlin' auld banes."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But I never knew or suspected Willie's secret
-till that awful Sabbath day, when the cross that
-he had borne so long hidden from the eyes of
-men, was suddenly lifted high in air.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then all at once Willie towered like a giant,
-and the bowed shoulders seemed to support a
-grey head about which had become visible an
-apparent aureole.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was the day of High Communion, and the
-solemn services were drawing to a yet more solemn
-close. The elements had been dispensed and
-the elders were back again in their places.
-Mr. Osbourne had Dr. Landsborough of Portmarnock
-assisting him that day—a tall man with a gracious
-manner, and the only man who could give an
-after-communion address without his words being
-resented as an intrusion.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is always difficult," he said, "to disturb the
-peculiarly sacred pause which succeeds the act of
-communion by any words of man——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He had got no farther when he stopped, and the
-congregation regarded him with the strained
-attention which a beautiful voice always compels. The
-beadle was sitting in all the reasonable pride of his
-dignity in the first pew to the right of the Session.
-When Dr. Landsborough stopped, the congregation
-followed the direction of his eyes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The door at the back of the kirk was seen to
-be open and a woman stood there, dishevelled,
-wild-eyed, a black bottle in her shaking hand, a
-red shawl about her head.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was Betty McNair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Willie!" she cried aloud in the awful silence,
-"Willie, come forth—you that lockit me in the
-back kitchin, an' thocht to stop me frae the
-saicrament—I hae deceived ye, Willie McNair, clever
-man as ye think yersel'!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I was in the corner pew opposite Willie (being,
-of course, a non-communicant at that date), so that
-I could see his face. At the first sound of that
-voice his countenance worked as if it would change
-its shape, but in a moment I saw him grip the
-book-board and stand up. Then he went quietly
-down the aisle to where his wife stood, gabbling
-wild and wicked words, and laughing till it turned
-the blood cold to hear her in that sacred place,
-and upon that solemn occasion.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Firmly, but very gently, Willie took the woman
-by the arm, and led her out. She went like a
-lamb. He closed the door behind him, and after
-a quaking and dreadful pause, Dr. Landsborough
-took up the interrupted burden of his discourse.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I was a great lad of twelve or thirteen at the
-time and unused to tears for many years. But I
-know that I wept all the time till the service was
-ended, thinking of Willie and wondering where he
-was and what he would be doing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That same night I heard my father telling my
-mother about what came next.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Session were in their little square room after
-the service, counting the tokens. The minister was
-sitting in his chair waiting to dismiss them with the
-benediction, when a rap came to the door. My
-father opened it, being nearest, and there without
-stood Willie McNair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I wish to speak with the Session," he said, firmly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come in—come your ways in, William," said
-the minister, kindly, and the elders resumed their
-seats, not knowing what was to happen.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Moderator and ruling elders of this congregation,"
-said Willie, who had not served tables so
-long without knowing the respect due to his
-spiritual superiors, "I have come before you in
-the day of my shame to demit the office I have
-held so long among you. Gentlemen, I do not
-complain, I own I am well punished. These
-twenty years I have lived for my pride. I have
-lied to each one of you—to the minister, to you
-the elders, and to the hale congregation, making
-a roose of my wife, and sticking at nothing to
-hide the shame of my house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sirs, for these lying words, it behoves that ye
-deal strictly with me, and I will submit willingly.
-But believe me, sirs, it was through a godly
-jealousy that I did it, that the Kirk of the New
-Testament might not be made ashamed through
-me and mine. But for a' that I have done wrong,
-grievous wrong. I aye kenned in my heart that
-it would come—though, God helping me, I never
-thocht that it would be like this!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But noo I maun gang awa'," here he broke
-into dialect, "for I could never bear to see anither
-man carry up the Buiks and open the door for
-you, sir, to enter in. Forty years has William
-McNair been a hewer of wood and a drawer of
-water in this tabernacle. Let there be pity in
-your hearts for him this day. He hath borne
-himself with pride, and for that the Lord hath
-brought him very low. And, oh! sirs, pray for
-her—flesh of my flesh, and bone of my bone,
-come to what ye saw this day! Tell me that
-He will forgie—be sure to tell me that He will
-forgie Betty—for what she has dune this day!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The minister reassured him in affectionate
-words, and the whole Session tried to get Willie
-to withdraw his decision. But in vain. The old
-man was firm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No," he said, "Betty is noo my chairge. The
-husband of a drunkard is not a fit person to serve
-tables in the clean and halesome sanctuary. I
-will never leave Betty till the day she dees!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>And neither he did. It was not long. Willie
-nursed his wife with unremitting tenderness,
-breaking himself down as he did so. I did not
-see him again till the day of Betty's funeral. I
-went with my father, feeling very important, as
-it was the first function I had been at in my
-new character of a man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When they were filling in the grave, Willie
-stood at the head with his hat in his hand, and
-his grey locks waving in the moderate wind.
-His lips were tremulous, but I do not think there
-were tears in his eyes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I went up to try to say something that might
-comfort him. I knew no better then. But I
-think he did not wish me to speak about Betty,
-for with a strange uncertain kind of smile he
-lifted up his eyes till they rested upon the golden
-fields of ripening corn all about the little kirkyard.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I think it will be an early harvest," he said,
-in a commonplace tone.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then all suddenly he broke into a kind of
-eager sobbing cry—a heart-prayer of ultimate
-agony.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, my God! my God! send that it be an
-early harvest to puir Willie McNair."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>And it was, for before a sheaf of that heartsome
-yellow corn was gathered into barn, they laid
-Willie beside the woman he had watched so long,
-and sheltered so faithfully behind the barriers
-of his love.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-blue-eyes-of-ailie"><span class="bold large">THE BLUE EYES OF AILIE</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>When first I went to Cairn Edward as a medical
-man on my own account, I had little to do
-with the district of Glenkells. For one thing,
-there was a resident doctor there, Dr. Campbell—Ignatius
-Campbell—and in those days professional
-boundaries were more strictly observed than they
-have been in more recent years. But in time,
-whether owing to the natural spread of my practice,
-or through some small name which I got in the
-countryside, owing to a successful treatment of
-tubercular cases, I found myself oftener and oftener
-in the Glenkells. And, indeed, ever since I began
-to be able to keep a stated assistant, it has been
-my custom to take day about with him on the
-Glenkells round.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But in what follows I speak of the very early
-years when I had still little actual connection
-with the district. The Glenkells folk are always
-in the habit of referring to themselves as a
-community apart. They may, indeed, in extreme
-cases include the rest of the United Kingdom—but,
-as it were, casually. Thus, "If the storm
-continues it will be a sair winter in Glenkells,
-</span><em class="italics">and the rest o' the country</em><span>!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Or when some statesman conspicuously
-blundered, or a foreign nation involved themselves
-in superfluous difficulties, you could not go into
-a farmhouse or traverse the length of the main
-street of the Clachan without hearing the words:
-"The like o' that could never hae happened i'
-the Glenkells!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So there arose a proverb which, though of local
-origin, was not without a certain wider acceptation:
-"As conceity as Glenkells," or, in a more diffuse
-form: "Glenkells cocks craw aye croosest an' on
-a muckler midden!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Glenkells wotted little of such slurs, or if
-it minded at all took them for compliments with
-a solid and irrefutable foundation. On the other
-hand, it retorted upon the rest of the world in
-characteristic fashion, visiting the sins of the
-fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth
-generation. As thus: "Tak' care o' him. He's no
-to be trustit. His grandfaither cam' frae Borgue!" Or,
-more allusively: "Aye, a Nicholson aye needs
-watchin'. They a' come frae Kirkcudbright, </span><em class="italics">where
-the jail is</em><span>!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>One peculiarity of the speech of this country
-within a country struck me more than all the
-others—perhaps because it came in the line of
-my own profession.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>More than once an applicant for my services
-would say, in answer to my question: "Have you
-called in the doctor?" "Oh, no, it has no been so
-serious as that!" Succeedantly I would find that
-Dr. Ignatius Campbell had been in attendance for
-some time, and that I ought to have consulted
-with him before, as it were, jumping his claim.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Campbell was a queer, dusty, smoky old
-man who, when seen abroad, sat low in a kind
-of basket-phaeton—as it were, on the small of
-his back, and visited his patients in a kind of
-dreamy exaltation which many put down to drink.
-They were wrong. The doctor was something
-much harder to cure—an habitual opium-eater.
-Somehow Dr. Campbell had never taken the
-position in the Glenkells to which his abilities
-entitled him. He came from the North, and that
-was against him. More than that, he sent in his
-bills promptly, and saw that they were settled.
-Worst of all, he took no interest in imaginary
-diseases.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He openly laughed at calomel—which in the
-Glenkells was looked upon as a kind of blaspheming
-of the Trinity. But he was a duly certified
-graduate of Edinburgh like myself. His name
-was on the Medical List, and only his unfortunate
-habit and the dreamy idleness engendered by it
-kept him from making a very considerable name
-for himself in his profession. I found, for instance,
-after his death (he left his books, papers, and
-instruments to me) that he had actually anticipated
-in his vague theoretical way some of the most
-applauded discoveries of more recent times, and
-that he was well versed in all the foreign literature
-of such subjects as interested him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Dr. Ignatius Campbell with his great pipe,
-his low-crowned hat, his seedy black clothes with
-the fluff sticking here and there upon them, was
-not the man to impress the Glenkells. For in
-Galloway the minister may go about in
-fishing-boots, shooting-jacket, and deerstalker if he
-will—nobody thinks the worse of him for it. The
-lawyer may look as if he bought his clothes from
-a slopshop. The country gentleman may wear
-a suit of tweeds for ten years, till the leather
-gun-patch on the shoulder threatens to pervade
-the whole man, back and front. But the doctor,
-if he would be successful, must perforce dress
-strictly by rule. Sunday and Saturday he must
-go buttoned up in his well-fitting surtout. His
-hat must be glossy, no matter what the weather
-may be (for myself I always kept a spare one
-in the box of the gig), and the whole man upon
-entering a sick-room must bring with him the
-fragrance of clean linen, good clothes, and
-personal exactitude. And though naturally a little
-rebellious at first, I hereby subscribe to the
-Galloway view of the case.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance converted me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is that a clean collar?—no, sir, you don't!
-Take it off this instant! I think this tie will suit
-you better. It is a dull day and something light
-becomes you. I have ironed your other hat. See
-that you put it on! Let me look at your cuffs.
-Mind that you turn down your trousers before you
-come in sight of the house. John" (this to my
-driver), "see that Dr. McQuhirr turns down his
-trousers and puts on his hat right side first.
-There is a dint at the back that I cannot quite
-get out!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It is no wonder that I succeeded in Galloway,
-having such a—I mean being endowed with such
-professional talents!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I had not, however, been long in Glenkells before
-I found out that there was another medical adviser
-on the scene—a kind of Brownie who did
-Dr. Campbell's work while he slept or dreamed his
-life away over his pipe and his coloured diagrams,
-whose very name was never mentioned, to me at
-least—perhaps from some idea that as an orthodox
-professional man I might resent the Brownie's
-intrusion.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But matters came to a head one day when I
-found the bottle of medicine I had sent up from
-the Cairn Edward apothecary standing untouched
-on the mantelpiece, while another and wholly
-unlicensed phial stood at the bed-head with a glass
-beside it, in which lingered a few drops of
-something which I knew well that I had not prescribed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What is this?" I demanded. "Why have you
-not administered the medicine I sent you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The woman put her apron to her lips in some
-embarrassment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, doctor—ye see the way o't was this," she
-said. "Jeems was ta'en that bad in the nicht that
-I had to caa' in—a neebour o' oors—an' he brocht
-this wi' him."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I lifted my hat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Good morning, Mrs. Landsborough," I said,
-with immense dignity; "I am sorry that I must
-retire from the case. It is impossible for me to
-go on if you disregard my instructions in that
-manner. No doubt Dr. Campbell——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The good woman lifted up her hands in amazement
-and appeal. Even Jeems turned on his bed
-in quick alarm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Deed, Dr. Ma Whurr!" she cried, "it wasna
-Dr. Cawmell ava. We wadna think on sic a
-thing——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Your faither's son will never gang oot o' a
-MacLandsborough's hoose in anger, surely?" said
-Jeems, making the final Galloway appeal to the
-clan spirit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This was conjuring with a name I could not
-disavow, and strongly against my first intentions
-I continued to attend the case. Jeems got rapidly
-better, and my bottle diminished steadily day by
-day. But whether it went down Jeems's throat
-or mended the health of the back of the grate,
-it was better, perhaps, that I did not inquire too
-closely. On my way home I considered my own
-prescription, and recalled the ingredients which
-by taste and smell I discovered in the intruding
-bottle.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am not sure but what—well, it might have
-been better. I wonder who the man is?" This
-was as much as I could be brought to admit in
-those days, even to myself. The doctor, who in
-the first years of his practice does not think
-more of the sacredness of his diagnosis than of
-his married wife and all his family unto cousins
-six times removed, is not fit to be trusted—not
-so much as with the administering of one
-Beecham's pill.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet I own the matter troubled me. I had a rival
-who—no, he did not understand more of the case
-than myself. But all the same, I wanted to find
-him out—in the interests of the Medical Register.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the riddle was resolved one day about a
-week afterwards in a rather remarkable manner.
-I was proceeding up the long main street of
-the Clachan, looking for a house in which
-Dr. Campbell (with whom of late I had grown
-strangely intimate) had told me that he would
-be found at a certain hour.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As I went I noticed, what I had never seen
-before, a little house, white and clean without,
-the creepers clambering all over it. This agreed,
-so far, with the doctor's description. I turned
-aside and went up two or three carefully reddened
-steps. A brass knocker blinked in the evening
-sunshine. I lifted it and knocked.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is the doctor in?" I said to a tall gaunt
-woman who opened the door an inch or two. As
-it was I could only see a lenticular section of her
-person, so that in describing her I draw upon
-later impressions. She hesitated a second or two,
-and then, rather grudgingly as I thought, opened
-the door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come in," she said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>With no more greeting than that she ushered
-me into a small room crowded with books and
-apparatus. The table held a curious microscope,
-evidently home-made in most of its fittings.
-Pieces of mechanism, the purpose of which I
-could not even guess, were strewn about the floor.
-Castings were gripped angle-wise in vices, and at
-the end of an ordinary carpenter's bench stood
-a small blacksmith's furnace, with bellows and
-anvil all complete. In the recess, half hidden
-by a screen, I could catch a glimpse of a lathe.
-There was no carpet on the floor.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The door opened and a small spare man stood
-before me, the deprecation of an offending dog
-in his beautiful brown eyes. He did not speak
-or offer to shake hands, but only stood shyly
-looking up at me. It was some time before
-I could find words. Nance often tells me that I
-need a push behind to enable me to take the
-lead in any conversation—except with herself,
-that is, and then I never get a chance.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I beg your pardon, doctor," said I, "I was
-seeking my friend Campbell. I did not know
-you had settled amongst us, or I should have
-been to call on you before this."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I held out my hand cordially, for the man
-appealed to me somehow. But he did not seem
-to notice it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, not 'doctor,'" he said, speaking in a
-quick agitated way. "Mister—Roger is my
-name."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I beg your pardon, I am sure," I stammered;
-"in that case I do not know how to excuse
-my intrusion. I asked for the doctor, meaning
-Dr. Campbell, and your servant——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My mother, sir!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was pride as well as challenge in the
-brown eyes now, and I found myself liking the
-young man better than ever.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I beg your pardon—Mrs. Roger showed me
-in by mistake, I fear."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It was no mistake—I am sometimes called
-so in this place, though not by my own will;
-I have no right to the title!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," I said, as I looked round the room.
-"won't you shake hands with me? You don't
-know what a pleasure it is to meet a man of
-science, as it is evident you are, here in these
-forlorn uplands!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Will you pardon me a moment till I inform
-you exactly of my status?" he said, "and when
-you clearly understand, if you still wish to shake
-my hand—well, with all my heart."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He stood silent a moment, and then, suddenly
-recollecting himself, "Will you not sit down?"
-he said. "Pray forgive my discourtesy."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I sat down, displacing as I did so a box of tools
-which had been planted on the green rep of the
-easy-chair cover.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You may well be astonished that I wish
-to speak to you, Dr. McQuhirr," he said,
-beginning restlessly to pace the room, mechanically
-avoiding the various obstacles on the floor as
-he did so; "but I have long wished to put
-myself right with a member of the profession,
-and now that chance has thrown us together, I
-feel that I must speak——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But there is Dr. Campbell—surely it cannot
-be that two men of such kindred tastes, in
-a small place like this, should not know each
-other!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He flushed painfully, and turning to a stand
-near the window, played with the flywheel of a
-small model, turning it back and forward with
-his finger.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Dr. Campbell is the victim of a most unfortunate
-prejudice," he murmured softly, and for a
-space said no more. It was so still in the room
-that through the quiet I could hear the tall
-eight-day clock ticking half-way up the stairs.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He resumed his narrative and his pacing to
-and fro at the same moment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am," he went on, "at heart of your
-profession. I have attended all the classes and
-earned the encomiums of my professors in the
-hospitals. I stood fairly well in the earlier
-written examinations, but at my first oral I
-broke down completely—a kind of aphasia came
-over me. My brain reeled, a dreadful shuddering
-took hold of my soul, and I fell into a dead
-faint. For months they feared for my reason,
-and though ultimately I recovered and completed
-my course of study, I was never able to sit down
-at an examination-table again. After my father's
-death my mother settled here, and gradually
-it has come about that in any emergency I have
-been asked to visit and prescribe for a patient.
-I believe the poor people call me 'doctor' among
-themselves, but I have never either countenanced
-the title, or on any occasion failed to rebuke the
-user. Neither have I ever accepted fee or reward,
-whether for advice or medicine!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I held out my hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I care not a brass farthing about professional
-etiquette," said I; "it is my opinion that you are
-doing a noble work. And I know of one case, at
-least, where your diagnosis was better than mine!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>More I could not say. He flushed redly and
-took my hand, shaking it warmly. Then all at
-once he dropped the somewhat strained elevation
-of manner in which he had told his story, and
-began to speak with the innocent confidence and
-unreserve of a child. He was obviously much
-pleased at my inferred compliment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah!" he said, "I know what you mean. But
-then, you see, you did not know James
-MacLandsborough's life history. He was my father's
-gardener. I knew his record and the record of
-his father before him. It was nothing but an
-old complaint, for which I had treated him over
-and over again—working, that is, on the basis of
-a recent chill. In your place and with your data
-I should have done what you did. In fact, I
-admired your treatment greatly."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>We talked a long while, so long, indeed, that I
-forgot all about Dr. Campbell, and it was dusk
-before I found myself at Mr. Roger's door saying
-"Good-night."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If I might venture to say so," he stammered,
-holding my hand a moment in his quick nervous
-grasp, "I would advise you not to mention your
-visit here to your friend, Dr. Campbell."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am afraid I must," I replied; "I had an
-appointment with him which I have unfortunately
-forgotten in the interest of our talk!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I much fear that it is not 'Good-night'
-but 'Good-bye' between us!" he murmured sadly,
-and went within.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And even as he had prophesied so it was.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"Sir," said Dr. Campbell, "I shall be sorry to
-lose your society, but you must choose between
-that house and mine. I have special and family
-reasons why I cannot be intimate with any visitor
-to Mr.——ah, Roger!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I had found the doctor lying on his couch, as
-was his custom, his curious Oriental tray beside
-him, and an acrid tang in the air; but at my
-first words about my visit he shook off his dreamy
-abstraction and sat up.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To tell you the truth, Campbell," I said, as
-calmly as possible, for, of course, I could not allow
-any one (except Nance) to dictate to me, "I was
-singularly interested in the young man, and—he
-told his tale, as it seemed to me, quite frankly. If
-I am not to call upon him, I must ask you as to
-your reasons for a request so singular."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is not a request, McQuhirr," said the doctor,
-passing his hand across his brow as if to clear
-away moisture. "It is only a little information
-I give you for your guidance. If you wish to
-visit this young man—well, I am deeply grieved,
-but I cannot receive you here, or have any
-intercourse with you professionally."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That is saying too much or too little," I replied;
-"you must tell me your reasons."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he hesitated, looking from side to side
-in a semi-dazed way.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I would rather not—they are family reasons!"
-he stammered, as he spoke.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There is such a thing as the seal of the
-profession," I reminded him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," he said at last, "I will tell you. That
-young man is my nephew, the son of my elder
-brother. His name is not Roger, but Roger
-Campbell. His mother was my poor brother's
-housekeeper. He married her some time after
-his first wife's death. This boy was their child,
-and, like a cuckoo in the nest, he tried from the
-first to oust his elder brother—the child of the
-dead woman. Indeed, but for my interference
-his mother and he would have done it between
-them; for my brother was latterly wholly in
-their hands.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Finally this lad went to college, and coming
-here one summer after the breaking up of the
-classes he must needs fall in love with Ailie—my
-daughter, that is. What?—You never knew that
-I had a daughter! Ah, Alec, I was not always
-the man you see me—I too have had ambitions.
-But after—well, what use is there to speak of
-it? At any rate, young Roger Campbell fell
-in love with my Ailie, and she, I suppose, liked
-it well enough, but like a sensible girl gave him
-no immediate answer. Then after that came his
-half-brother, who was heir to the little property
-on Loch Aweside, and he too fell in love with
-Ailie. There was no girl like her in all the Glen
-of Kells; and as for him, he was a tall, handsome,
-fair lad, not crowled and misshapen like this one.
-Well, Ailie and he fell in love, and then Roger's
-mother moved heaven and earth to disinherit
-Archie. It was for this cause that I went up
-to Inchtaggart and watched my brother during
-the last weeks of his life. The woman fought
-like a wild cat for her son, but I and Archie
-watched in turns. It was I who found the will
-by which Archie inherited all. In three months
-Ailie and he were married. Roger Campbell
-failed in his examinations the same year, and the
-next mother and son came back here to her native
-village to live on their savings.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The mere choice of this place showed their
-spite against me, but that is not the worst. Ever
-since that day they have devoted themselves to
-discrediting me in my profession. And you, who
-know these people, know to what an extent they
-have succeeded. My practice has shrunk to
-nothing—almost. Even the patients I have, when they
-do call me in, send secretly for my enemy before
-my feet are cold off the doorstep. Yet I have no
-redress, for I have never been able to bring a
-case of taking fees home to him. Ah! if only
-I could!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Ignatius fell back exhausted, for towards
-the last he had been talking with a vehemence
-that shook the casements and set the prisms of
-the little old chandelier a-tingling.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And that is why I say you must choose between
-us," he said. "Is it not enough? Have I asked
-too much?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is enough for me," I said; "I will do as
-you wish!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now I did not see anything in his story very
-much against the young man; but, after all, the
-lad was nothing to me, and I had known
-Dr. Ignatius a long time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So I asked him how it came that the young
-man was called Roger and not Campbell.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh!" he said, "that is the one piece of
-decent feeling he has shown in the whole affair.
-He called himself Campbell Roger when he came
-here. You are the only person who knows that
-he is my nephew."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>I was glad afterwards that I had made him the
-promise he asked for. I never saw him in life
-again. Dr. Ignatius Campbell died two days after,
-being found dead in bed with his tiny pipe clutched
-in his hand. I went up that same day, and in
-conjunction with Dr. John Thoburn Brown of
-Drumfern, found that our colleague had long
-suffered from an acute form of heart disease, and
-that it was wonderful how he had survived so long.
-The body was lying at the time in the room
-where he died. The maid-servant had gone to
-stay with relatives in the village, not being willing
-to remain all night in the house alone; for which,
-all things considered, I did not greatly blame her.
-I asked if there was anything I could do, but was
-informed that all arrangements for the funeral
-had been made. It was to be on the Friday,
-two days after.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I drove up the glen early that morning, and found
-a tall young man in the house, opening drawers
-and rummaging among papers. I understood at
-once that this was Mr. Archibald Campbell of
-Inchtaggart. I greeted him by that name, and
-he responded heartily enough.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are Dr. McQuhirr," he said; "my father-in-law
-often spoke about you and how kind you
-were to him. You know that he has left all his
-books, papers, and scientific apparatus to you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I did not know," I said; "that is as unexpected
-as it is undeserved, and I hope you will
-act precisely as if such a bequest had not existed.
-You must take all that either you or your wife
-would care to possess."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh!" he cried lightly, "Ailie could not come.
-She has been ill lately, and as for me, I would not
-touch one of the beastly things with a ten-foot
-pole. Come into the garden and have a smoke."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There Mr. Archibald Campbell told me that
-he had arranged for a sale of the doctor's house
-and all his effects as soon as possible.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Better to have it over," he said, "so you had
-as well bring up a conveyance and cart off all the
-scientific rubbish you care about. I want all
-settled up and done with within the month."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He departed the night after the funeral, leaving
-the funeral expenses unpaid. He was a hasty,
-though well-meaning young man, and no doubt he
-forgot. When I came up on the Monday of the
-week following, I discovered that the account had
-been paid.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>After I had made my selection of books and
-instruments, besides taking all the manuscripts
-(watched from room to room by the Drumfern
-lawyer's sharp eye), I strolled out, and my steps
-turned involuntarily towards the little house
-covered with creepers where I had seen the young
-man Roger. I felt that death had absolved me
-from my promise, and with a quick resolve I
-turned aside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The same woman opened the door an inch or
-two. I lifted my hat and asked if her son was in.
-She held the door open for me without speaking
-a word and ushered me into the model-strewn
-little parlour. I cast my eyes about. On the
-table lay the discharged account for the funeral
-expenses of Dr. Ignatius Campbell!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In another moment the door opened and the
-young man came in, paler than before, and with
-the slight halt in his gait exaggerated.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"How do you do, Mr. Campbell?" I said quietly,
-holding out my hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He gave back a step, almost as if I had struck
-him. Then he smiled wanly. "Ah! he told you.
-I expected he would; and yet you have come?" He
-spoke slowly, the words coming in jerks.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I held out my hand and said heartily: "Of
-course I came."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I did not think it necessary to tell him
-anything about my agreement with Dr. Campbell.
-He, on his part, had quietly possessed himself
-of John Ewart's bill for the funeral expenses.
-We had a long talk, and I stayed so late that
-Nance had begun to get anxious about me before
-I arrived home. But not one word, either in
-justification of himself or of accusation against
-his uncle, did he utter, though he must have
-known well enough what his uncle had said of him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nor was it till a couple of months afterwards
-that Roger Campbell adverted again to the
-subject. I had been to the churchyard to look at
-the headstone which had been erected, as I knew,
-at his expense. He had asked me to write the
-inscription for it, and I had done so.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Coming home, he had to stop several times on
-the hill to take breath. When we got to the
-door he said: "I have but one thing to pray for
-now, Dr. McQuhirr, and that is that I may
-outlive my mother. Give me your best skill and
-help me to do that."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His prayer was answered. He lived just two
-days after his mother. And I was with him most
-of the time, while Nance stayed with my people
-at Drumquhat. It was a beautiful Sabbath
-evening, and the kirk folk were just coming home.
-Most who suffer from his particular form of phthisis
-imagine themselves to be getting better to the
-very last, but he knew too much to have any
-illusions. I had put the pillows behind him,
-and he was sitting up making kindly comment
-on the people as they passed by, Bible in hand.
-He stopped suddenly and looked at me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Doctor," he said, "what my uncle told you
-about me never made any difference to you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No," I said, rather shamefacedly, "no difference
-at all!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No," he went on, meditatively, "no difference.
-Well, I want you to burn two documents for me,
-lest they fall into the wrong hands—as they might
-before these good folk go back kirkward again."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He directed me with his finger, at the same
-time handing me a key he wore upon his watch-chain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Even my poor mother up there," he said,
-pointing to the room above, "has never set eyes
-on what I am going to show you. It is weak
-of me; I ought not to do it, doctor, but I will
-not deny that it is some comfort to set myselt
-right with one human soul before I go."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I took out of a little drawer in a bureau a
-miniature, a bundle of letters, and a broadly
-folded legal-looking document.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I offered them to Roger, but he waved them away.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I do not want to look upon them—they are
-here!" He touched his forehead. "And one
-of them is here!" He laid his hand on his heart
-with that freedom of gesture which often comes
-to the dying, especially to those who have
-repressed themselves all their lives.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I looked down at the miniature and saw the
-picture of a girl, very pretty, beautiful indeed,
-but with that width between the eyes which, in
-fair women, gives a double look.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ailie, my brother's wife!" he said, in answer
-to my glance. "These are her letters. Open
-them one by one and burn them."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I did as he bade me, throwing my eyes out
-of focus so that I might not read a word. But
-out of one fluttered a pressed flower. It was
-fixed on a card with a little lock of yellow hair
-arranged about it for a frame, fresh and crisp.
-And as I picked it up I could not help catching
-the prettily printed words:</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"TO DARLING ROGER, FROM HIS OWN AILIE."</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>There was also a date.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Let me look at that!" he said quickly. I
-gave it to him. He looked at the flower—a
-quick painful glance, but as he handed me back
-the card he laughed a little.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is a 'Forget-me-not,'" he said. Then in
-a musing tone he added: "</span><em class="italics">Well, Ailie, I never
-have!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So one by one the letters were burnt up, till
-only a black pile of ashes remained, in ludicrous
-contrast to the closely packed bundle I had taken
-from the drawer.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now burn the ribbon that kept them together,
-and look at the other paper."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I unfolded it. It was a will in holograph, the
-characters clear and strong, signed by Archibald
-Ruthven Campbell, of Inchtaggart, Argyleshire,
-devising all his estate and property to his son Roger,
-with only a bequest in money to his elder son!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I was dazed as I looked through it, and my lips
-framed a question. The young man smiled.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My father's last will," he said, "dated a month
-before his death. She never knew it." (Again he
-indicated the upper room where his mother's body
-lay.) "</span><em class="italics">They</em><span> never knew it." (He looked at the
-girl's picture as it smiled up from the table where I
-had laid it.) "My brother Archie succeeded on a
-will older by twenty years. But when I lost Ailie, I
-lost all. Why should she marry a failure? Besides,
-I truly believe that she loves my brother, at least
-as well as ever she loved me. It is her nature.
-That she is infinitely happier with him, I know."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then you were the heir all the time and
-never told it—not to any one!" I cried, getting
-up on my feet. He motioned me towards the
-grate again.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Burn it," he said, "I have had a moment of
-weakness. It is over. I ought to have been
-consistent and not told even you. No, let the picture
-lie. I think it does me good. God bless you,
-Alec! Now, good-night; go home to your Nance."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>He died the next forenoon while I was still on
-my rounds. And when I went in to look at him,
-the picture had disappeared. I questioned the old
-crone who had watched his last moments and
-afterwards prepared him for burial.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He had something in his hand," she answered,
-"but I couldna steer it. His fingers grippit it
-like a smith's vice."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I looked, and there from between the clenched
-fingers of the dead right hand the eyes of Ailie
-Campbell smiled out at me—blue and false as
-her own Forget-me-not.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="lowe-s-seat"><span class="bold large">LOWE'S SEAT</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Elspeth did not mean to go to Lowe's Seat.
-She had indeed no business there. For she was
-the minister's daughter, and at this time of the
-day ought to have been visiting the old wives
-in the white-washed "Clachan" on the other side
-of the river, showing them how to render their
-patchwork quilts less hideous, compassionating
-them on their sons' ungrateful silence (letters
-arrive so seldom from the "States"). Yet here
-was Elspeth Stuart under the waving boughs,
-seated upon the soft grassy turf, and employed
-in nothing more utilitarian than picking a gowan
-asunder petal by petal. It was the middle of
-an August afternoon, and as hot as it ever is
-in Scotland.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Why then had Elspeth gone to Lowe's Seat?
-It seemed a mystery. It was to the full as
-pleasant on the side of the river where dwelt
-her father, where complained her maiden aunt,
-and where after their kind racketed and stormed
-her roving vagabond bird-nesting brothers. On
-the Picts' Mound beside the kirk (an ancient
-Moothill, so they say, upon which justice of the
-rudest and readiest was of old dispensed) there
-were trees and green depths of shade. She might
-have stayed and read there—the "Antiquary"
-perhaps, or "Joseph Andrews," or her first favourite
-"Emma," all through the long sweet drowsing
-summer's afternoon. But somehow up at Lowe's
-Seat, the leaves of the wood laughed to a different
-tune and the Airds woods were dearer than all
-sweet Kenside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So in spite of all Elspeth Stuart had crossed
-in her father's own skiff, which he used for his
-longer ministerial excursions "up the water," and
-her brothers Frank and Sandy for perch-fishing
-and laying their "ged" lines. There was indeed
-a certain puddock in a high state of decomposition
-in a locker which sadly troubled Elspeth
-as she bent to the oars. And now she was at
-Lowe's Seat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It is strange to what the love of poetry will
-drive a girl. Elspeth tossed back the fair curls
-which a light wind persisted in flicking ticklingly
-over her brow. With a coquettish, blushful,
-half-indignant gesture she thrust them back with her
-hand, as if they ought to have known better than
-to intrude upon a purpose so serious as hers in
-coming to Lowe's Seat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Here was the place," she murmured to herself,
-explanatorily, "where the poor boy hid himself to
-write his poem—a hundred years ago! Was it
-really a hundred years ago?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She looked about her, and the wind whispered
-and rustled and laughed a little down among the
-elms and the hazels, while out towards the river and
-on a level with her face the silver birches shook
-their plumes daintily as a pretty girl her wandering
-tresses, bending saucily toward the water as they
-did so. Then Elspeth said the first two verses of
-"Mary's Dream" over to herself. The poem was
-a favourite with her father, a hard stern man with
-a sentimental base, as is indeed very common
-in Scotland.</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"The moon had climbed the highest hill</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>That rises o'er the source of Dee,</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>And from the eastern summit shed</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Her silver light on tower and tree.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>When Mary laid her down to sleep,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Her thoughts on Sandy far at sea,</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="line"><span>There soft and low a voice was heard,</span></div>
-<div class="inner line-block">
-<div class="line"><span>Saying, 'Mary, weep no more for me!'"</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Elspeth was young and she was not critical.
-Lowe's simple and to the modern mind somewhat
-obvious verse, seemed to her to contain the
-essence of truth and feeling. But on the other
-hand she looked adorable as she said them. For,
-strangely enough, a woman's critical judgment is
-generally in inverse ratio to her personal attractions—though
-doubtless there are exceptions to the rule.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As has been said, she did not go to Lowe's
-Seat for any particular purpose. She said so to
-herself as many as ten times while she was
-crossing in the skiff, and at least as often when she
-was pulling herself up the steep braeface by the
-supple hazels and more stubborn young oaks.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So Elspeth Stuart continued to hum a vagrant
-tune, more than half of the bars wholly silent,
-and the rest sometimes loud and sometimes soft,
-as she glanced downwards out of her green
-garret high among the leaves.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>More than once she grew restive and pattered
-impatiently with her fingers on her lap as if
-expecting some one who did not come. Only
-occasionally she looked down towards the river.
-Indeed, she permitted her eyes to rove in every
-direction except immediately beneath her, where
-through a mist of leaves she could see the Dee
-kissing murmuringly the rushes on its marge.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A pretty girl—yes, surely. More than that,
-one winsome with the wilful brightness which takes
-men more than beauty. And being withal only
-twenty years of her age, it may well be believed
-that Elspeth Stuart, the only daughter of the
-parish minister of Dullarg, did not move far
-without drawing the glances of men after her as
-a magnet attracts steel filings.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet a second marvel appeared beneath. There
-was a young man moving along by the water's
-edge and he did not look up. To all appearance
-Lowe's Seat might just as well not have existed
-for him, and its pretty occupant might have been
-reading Miss Austen under the pines of the Kirk
-Knowe on the opposite side of Dee Water.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Elspeth also appeared equally unconscious. Of
-course, how otherwise? She had plucked a spray
-of bracken and was peeling away the fronds,
-unravelling the tough fibres of the root and
-rubbing off the underleaf seeds, so that they showed
-red on her fingers like iron rust. Wondrous
-busy had our maid become all suddenly. But
-though she had not smiled when the youth came
-in sight, she pouted when he made as if he would
-pass by without seeing her. Which is a strange
-thing when you come to think of it, considering
-that she herself had apparently not observed him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly, however, she sang out loudly, a
-strong ringing stave like a blackbird from the
-copse as the sun rises above the hills. Whereat
-the young man started as if he had been shot.
-Hitherto he had held a fishing-rod in his hand
-and seemed intent only on the stream. But at the
-sound of Elspeth's voice he whirled about, and
-catching a glimpse of bright apparel through the
-green leaves, he came straight up through the tangle
-with the rod in his hand. Even at that moment it
-did not escape Elspeth's eye that he held it
-awkwardly, like one little used to Galloway burn-sides.
-She meant to show him better by-and-by.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Having arrived, the surprise and mutual
-courtesies were simply overpowering. Elspeth
-had not dreamed—the merest impulse had led
-her—she had been reading Lowe's poem the night
-before. It was really the only completely sheltered
-place for miles, where one could muse in peace.
-He knew it was, did he not?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But we must introduce this young man. If
-he had possessed a card it would have said: "The
-Rev. Allan Syme, B.A."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He was the new minister of the Cameronian
-Kirk at Cairn Edward. He has just been "called,"
-chiefly because the other two on the short leet
-had not been considered sufficiently "firm" in
-their views concerning an "Erastian Establishment,"
-as at the Kirk on the Hill they called the
-Church of Scotland nationally provided for by
-the Revolution Settlement.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In his trial discourses, however, Mr. Syme had
-proved categorically that no good had ever come
-out of any state-supported Church, that the
-ministers of the present establishment were little
-better than priests of the Scarlet Woman who
-sitteth on the Seven Hills, and that all those
-who trusted in them were even as the moles and
-the bats, children of darkness and travellers on
-the smoothly macadamised highway to destruction.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nevertheless, at that free stave of Elspeth's carol
-Allan Syme went up hill as fast as if he had
-never preached a sermon on the text, "And
-Elijah girded up his loins and ran before Ahab
-unto the entering in of Jezreel."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At half-past eleven by the clock the minister
-of the Cameronian Kirk sat down beside this
-daughter of an Erastian Establishment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Have you heard the leaves of beech and birch
-laugh as they clash and rustle? That is how the
-wicked summer woods of Airds laughed that day
-about Lowe's Seat.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Half a mile down the river there is a ferry boat
-which at infrequent intervals pushes a flat duck's
-bill across Dee Water. It is wide enough to take
-a loaded cart of hay, and long enough to accommodate
-two young horses tail to tail and yet leave
-room for the statutory flourishing of heels.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Bess MacTaggart could take it across with any
-load upon it you pleased, pushing easily upon an
-iron lever. They use a wheel now, but it was much
-prettier in the old days when all for a penny
-you could watch Bess lift the toothed lever with
-a sharp movement of her shapely arm, wet and
-dripping from the chain, as it slowly dredged
-itself up from the river bed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was half-past four when, in reply to repeated
-hails, the boat left the Dullarg shore with a
-company of three men on board, and in addition
-the sort of person who is called a "single lady."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Two of the men stood together at one end
-of the ferry-boat, and after Bess had bidden one of
-them sharply to "get out of her road," she called
-him "Drows" to make it up, and asked him if he
-were going over to the lamb sale at Nether Airds.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If it's the Lord's wull!" Drows replied, with
-solemnity.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Both he and his companion had commodious,
-clean-shaven "horse" faces, with an abundance
-of gray hair standing out in a straggling
-semi-circular aureole underneath the chin. Cameronian
-was stamped upon their faces with broad strong
-simplicity. The blue bonnet, already looking
-old-world among the universal "felts" common
-to most adult manhood—the deep serious eyes,
-as it were withdrawn under the penthouse of
-bushy brows, and looking upon all things (even
-lamb sales) as fleeting and transitory—the long
-upper lip and the mouth tightly compressed—these
-marked out John Allanson of Drows and
-Matthew Carment of Craigs as pillars of that
-Kirk which alone of all the fragments of
-Presbytery is senior to the Established Church of
-Scotland.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On the other side of the boat and somewhat
-apart stood Dr. Hector Stuart, gazing gloomily
-at the black water as it rippled and clappered
-under the broad lip of the ferry-boat. A proud
-man, a Highland gentleman of old family, was
-the minister of Dullarg. He kept his head
-erect, and for any notice he had taken of the
-Cameronian elders, they might just as well not
-have been on the boat at all. And in their turn
-the elders of the Cameronian Kirk compressed
-their lips more firmly and their eyes seemed deeper
-set in their heads when their glances fell on this
-pillar of Erastianism. For nowhere is the racial
-antipathy of north and south so strong as in
-Galloway. There, and there alone, the memory
-of the Highland Host has never died out, and
-every autumn when the hills glow red with
-heather from horizon to horizon verge, the story
-is told to Galloway childhood of how Lag and
-Clavers wasted the heritage of the Lord, and how
-from Ailsa to Solway all the west of Scotland is
-"flowered with the blood of the Martyrs."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The thin nervous woman kept close to the
-minister's elbow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I tell you I saw her cross the water, Hector," she
-was saying as Dr. Stuart looked ahead, scanning
-keenly the low sandy shores they were nearing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The boat is gone and she has not returned.
-It is a thing not proper for a young lady and
-a minister's daughter to be so long absent from
-home!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My daughter has been too well brought up
-to do aught that is improper!" said Dr. Stuart,
-with grave sententious dignity. "You need not
-pursue the subject, Mary!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was just enough likeness between them
-to stamp the pair as brother and sister. As the
-boat touched the edge of the sharply sloping
-shingle bank, the hinged gang-plank tilted itself
-up at a new angle. The passengers paid their
-pennies to Bess MacTaggart and stepped sedately
-on shore. The boat-house stands in a water-girt
-peninsula, the Ken being on one side broad and
-quiet, the Black Water on the other, sulky and
-turbulent. So that for half a mile there was but
-one road for this curiously assorted pair of pairs.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as they approached them the woods of Airds
-laughed even more mockingly, with a ripple of
-tossing birch plumes like a woman when she is
-merry in the night and dares not laugh aloud.
-And the beeches responded with a dryish cackle
-that had something of irony in it. Listen and you
-will hear how it was the next time a beech-tree
-shakes out his leaves to dry the dew off them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The two elders came to a quick turn of the road.
-There was a stile just beyond. A moment before
-a young man had overleaped it, and now he was
-holding up his hands encouragingly to a girl who
-smiled down upon him from above. It was a
-difficult stile. The dyke top was shaky. Two
-of the bottom steps; were missing altogether. All
-who have once been young know the kind of stile—verily,
-a place of infinite danger to the unwary.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So at least thought Elspeth Stuart, as for a
-long moment she stood daintying her skirts about
-her ankles on the perilous copestone, and drawing
-her breath a little short at the sight of the steep
-descent into the road.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The elders also stood still, and behind them
-the other pair came slowly up. And surely some
-wicked tricksome Puck laughed unseen among
-the beech leaves.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Elspeth Stuart had taken the young man's hand
-now. He was lifting her down. There—it was
-done. And—yes, you are right—something else
-happened—just what would have happened to you
-and me, twenty, thirty, or is it forty years ago?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then with a clash and a rustle the beeches told
-the tale to the birches over all the wooded slopes
-of the hill of Airds.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"Elspeth!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Elspeth Stuart!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Maister Syme!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The names came from four pairs of horrified lips
-as the parties to the above mentioned transaction
-fell swiftly asunder, with sudden stricken horror
-on their faces. The first cry came shrill and
-keen, and was accompanied by an out-throwing
-of feminine hands. The second fell sternly from
-the mouth of one who was at once a parent and
-a minister of the Establishment outraged in his
-tenderest feelings. But indubitably the elders had
-it. For one thing, they were two to one, and
-as they said for the second time with yet deeper
-gravity "</span><em class="italics">Maister Syme!</em><span>" it appeared at once
-that they, and only they, were able adequately
-to deal with the unprecedented situation. But
-the others did what they could.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mistress Mary Stuart, the minister's maiden
-sister, flew forward with an eager cry, the
-"scraich" of a desperate hen when she is on the
-wrong side of the fence and sees the "daich"
-disappearing down a hundred hungry throats.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She clutched her niece by the arm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come away this moment!" she cried, "do you
-know who this young man is?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Elspeth did not answer. She was looking
-at her father, Dr. Stuart, whose eyes were bent
-upon the young man. Very stern they were,
-the fierce sudden darkness of Celtic anger in
-them. But the young Cameronian minister knew
-that he had far worse to face than that, and met
-the frown of paternal severity with shame indeed
-mantling on his cheek and neck, but yet with
-a certain quiet of determination firming his heart
-within him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sir," he said, "that of which you have been
-witness was no more than an accident—the
-fault of impulse and young blood. But I own I
-was carried away. I ask the young lady's pardon
-and yours. I should have spoken to you first,
-but now I will delay no longer. Sir, I love
-your daughter!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then came for the first time a slight smile upon
-the pale face of his fellow-culprit. She said in
-her heart, "Ah, Allan, if ye had spoken first to
-my father, feint a kiss would ye ever have gotten
-from Elspeth Stuart!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But at the manful words of the young Cameronian
-the face of her father grew only the more stern,
-the two elders watching and biding their time
-by the roadside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>They knew that it would come before long.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At last after a long silence Dr. Stuart spoke.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sir," he said grimly, "I do not bandy words
-with a stranger upon the public highway. I
-myself have nothing to say to you. I forbid you
-ever again to speak to my daughter. Elspeth,
-follow me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And with no more than this he turned and
-stalked away. But his daughter also had the
-high Highland blood in her veins. She shook
-off with one large motion of her arm the stringy
-clutch of her aunt's fingers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Heed you not, Allan," she said, speaking very
-clearly, so that all might hear, "when ye want
-her, Elspeth Stuart will come the long road and
-the straight road to speak a word with you."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was a bold avowal to make, and a moment
-before the girl had not meant to say anything
-of the kind. But they had taken the wrong way
-with her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, unmaidenly—most unmaidenly!" cried her
-aunt, "come away—ye are mad this day, Elspeth
-Stuart—he has but a hunder a year of stipend,
-and may lose that ony day!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Elspeth did not answer. She was holding
-out her hand to Allan Syme. He bent quickly
-and kissed it. This young man had had a
-mother who taught him gracious ways, not at
-all in keeping with the staid manners of a son
-of the covenants.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"And now, sir," said John Allanson of Drows,
-turning grimly upon his minister, who stood
-watching Elspeth's girlish figure disappear round
-the curve of the green-edged track, "what have
-you to say to us?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then Allan Syme's pulses leaped quick and
-light, for he knew that of a surety the time of
-his visitation was at hand. Yet his heart did not
-fail within him. At the last it was glad and high.
-"For after all" (he smiled as he thought it),
-"after all—well, they cannot </span><em class="italics">take</em><span> that from me."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sir," said Matthew Carment, in a louder tone,
-"heard ye the quastion that your ruling elder
-hath pitten till ye?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"John and Matthew," said the young man,
-gently, "ye are my elders, and I will not answer
-you as I did Dr. Stuart."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The priest of Midian!" said Matthew Carment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The forswearer of covenants!" said John Allanson.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But I will speak with you as those who have
-been unto me as Aaron and Hur for the
-upholding of mine hands——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Say, rather," said John Allanson, sternly, "as
-Phineas the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron, the
-priest who thrust through the Midianitish woman
-in sight of all the congregation of Israel, as they
-stood weeping before the door of the tabernacle!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So the plague was stayed from the children
-of Israel," quoted Matthew Carment, gravely,
-finishing his friend's sentence.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Allan Syme winced. The words had been his
-Sunday's text.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I tell you, gentlemen," he said quickly, "since
-God gave Eve to Adam there has not been on
-earth a sweeter, truer maid than this. You have
-heard me declare my love for her. Well, I love
-her more than I dare trust my tongue to utter!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And how about your love for the Covenants?
-And for the Faithful Remnant of the persecuted
-Kirk of the Martyrs?" said Drows, with a certain
-dreary persistence that wore on Allan Syme like
-prolonged toothache.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then Matthew Carment, who, though slower
-than the ruling elder, but was not less sure, gave
-in his contribution.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Like unto Eve,' said ye? A true word—verily,
-a most true word! For did not we with our own
-eyes see ye with her partake of the forbidden
-fruit? But there is a difference—</span><em class="italics">your</em><span> eyes, young
-man, have not yet been opened!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Allan Syme began to grow angry.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am a free agent," he said fiercely. "I am
-not a child under bonds. You are not my tutors
-and governors by any law, human or divine.
-Nor am I answerable to you whom I shall woo,
-or whom I shall wed!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ye are answerable to God and the Kirk!"
-cried the two with one voice.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And to this Matthew Carment again added
-his say. The three were now walking slowly in
-the direction of the lamb sale.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Sir, I mind how ye well described the so-called
-ministers of the establishment—'locusts on
-the face of our land,' these were your words,
-'instruments of inefficiency, the plague spot upon
-the nation, the very scorn of Reformation, and a
-scandal to Religion!' Ye said well, minister;
-and the spawn of Belial is like unto Belial!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Allan Syme was now angry exceedingly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"God be my judge," he cried, "she whom I
-love is more Christian than the whole pack of
-you. Never has she spoken an ill word of any,
-ever since I have known her!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And wherefore should she?" said John Allanson
-of Drows, as dispassionately as a clerk
-reading an indictment. "Hath she not been
-clothed in fine linen and fared sumptuously every
-day? Hath she not eaten of the fine flour and
-the honey and the oil? Hath she not been
-adorned with broidered work and shod with
-badger skin, and, even as her sisters Aholah and
-Aholibah of old, hath not power been given unto
-her to lead even the hearts of the elect captive?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then Allan Syme broke forth furiously.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Your tongues are evil!" he said, "ye are not
-fit to take her name on your lips. She is to me
-as the mother of our Lord—yes, as Mary, the
-wife of Joseph, the carpenter!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And indeed I never thocht sae muckle o' that
-yin either," said Matthew of Craigs, "the Papishes
-make ower great a to-do about her for my liking!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Matthew Carment and John Allanson, I bid
-you hearken to me," cried the young minister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, Allan Syme, we will hearken!" they
-answered, fronting him eye to eye.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"God judge between you and me," he said.
-"He hath said that for this cause shall a man
-leave father and mother, and cleave unto his wife.
-Now, I know well that if ye like, you two can take
-from me my kirk and all my living. But I have
-spoken, and I will adhere. I have promised, and
-I will keep. Take this my parting message. Do
-your duty as it is revealed to you. I will go forth
-freely and willingly. Naked I came among
-you—naked will I go. The hearts of my people are
-dearer to me than life. Ye can twine them from
-me if you will. Ye can out me from my kirk,
-send me forth of my manse—cast me upon the
-world as a man disgraced. But, as I am a sinner
-answerable to God, there are two things you
-cannot do, ye cannot make me break my plighted
-word nor make me other than proud of the love I
-have won from God's fairest creature upon earth."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And with these words he turned on his heel
-and strode straight uphill away from them in the
-direction of his distant home.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The two men stood looking after him. Drows
-stroked his shaggy fringe of beard. Matthew
-Carment put his hand to his eyes and gazed
-under it as if he had been looking into the sunset.
-There was a long silence. At last the two turned
-and looked at each other.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Weel, what think ye?" said Drows, ruling elder
-and natural leader in debate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a still longer pause, for Matthew
-Carment was a man slow by nature and slower
-by habit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He's a fine lad!" he said at last.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Drows broke a twig elaborately from the hedge
-and chewed the ends.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I was thinkin'!" he answered.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I had it in my mind at the time he was
-speakin'," began Matthew, and then hesitated.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, what was in your mind?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I was thinkin' on the days when I courted Jean!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, man!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was another long silence.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was Draws who broke it this time, and he
-said, "I—I was thinkin' too, Mathy! Aye, man,
-I was thinkin'!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aboot Marget?" queried Matthew Carment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Na, no aboot Marget!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>They were silent again. The ruling elder
-settled to another green sprig of hedge-thorn.
-It seemed palatable. He got on well with it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Man," he said at last, "do ye ken, Mathy—when
-he turned on us like yon, I was kind o'
-prood o' him. My heart burned within me. It
-was maybe no verra like a minister o' the Kirk.
-But, oh man, it was awesome human!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I judge we'll say nae mair aboot it!"
-said Matthew Carment, turning towards the farm
-where the lamb sale was by this time well under
-weigh. "Hoo mony are ye thinkin' o' biddin'
-for the day, Drows?"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-suit-of-bottle-green"><span class="bold large">THE SUIT OF BOTTLE GREEN</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>At the Manse of Dullarg things did not go over
-well. Dr. Stuart, being by nature a quick,
-passionate, and imperious Celt, had first of all
-ordered his daughter to promise never again to hold
-any communication with the young Cameronian
-minister of Cairn Edward. It was thus that he
-himself had been taught to understand family
-discipline. He was the head of the clan, as his
-father had been before him. He claimed to be
-Providence to all within his gates. His hand of
-correction was not withheld from his boys, Frank
-and Sandy, until the day they ran away from home
-to escape him. He could not well adopt this plan
-to the present case, but when Elspeth refused point
-blank to give any promise, her father promptly
-convoyed his daughter to her own room and
-locked her up there. She would stay where she
-was till she changed her mind. Her aunt would
-take up her meals, and he himself would undertake
-to inform her as to her duties and responsibilities
-at suitable intervals. There was not the least
-doubt in the mind of Dr. Stuart as to the result
-of such a course of treatment. Had he not willed
-it? That was surely enough.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But his sister was not so sure, though she did
-not dare to say so to the Doctor more than once.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She is a very headstrong girl, Murdo," she
-said, tremulously, as she gathered Elspeth's scanty
-breakfast on a tray next morning, "it might drive
-her to some rash act!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nonsense," retorted her brother, sharply, "did
-not our father do exactly the same to you, to keep
-you from marrying young Campbell of Luib?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mary Stuart's wintry-apple face twitched and
-flushed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes—yes," she fluttered, with a quaver in
-her voice, as if deprecating further allusion to
-herself, "but Elspeth is not like me, Murdo. She
-has more of your spirit."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Let me hear no more of the matter," said her
-brother, turning away, "</span><em class="italics">I</em><span> wish it, and besides, I
-have my sermon to write."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But when the maiden aunt knocked at the door
-and entered with Elspeth's breakfast, she was
-astonished to find the girl sitting by the window
-dressed exactly as she had been on the previous
-evening. Her face was very pale, but her lips
-were compressed and her eyes dry.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Elspeth," she said uncertainly, her woman's
-intuition in a moment detecting that which a man
-might not have discovered at all, "you have not
-had off your clothes all night. You have never
-been to bed!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, Aunt Mary!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But what will the Doctor say—think of
-your father——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I do not care what he will say. Let him come
-and compel me if he can. He can thrash me as
-he does Frank."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But—oh, Elspeth—Elspeth, dear," the old lady
-trembled so much that she just managed to
-lay the tray down on the untouched bed opposite
-the window, "what will God say?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Like as a father pitieth his children,' isn't
-that what it says?" The words came out of the
-depths of the bitterness of that young heart,
-"well, if that be true, God will say nothing; for
-if He is like my father, He will not care!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The old lady sat down on an old rocking-chair
-which Elspeth liked to keep in the window to
-sit in and read, half because it had been her
-mother's, and half (for Elspeth was not usually
-a sentimental young woman) because it was
-comfortable.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She put her hands to her face and sobbed into
-them. Then for the first time Elspeth looked
-at her. Hitherto she had been staring straight
-out at the window. So she had seen the day pass
-and the night come. So she had seen and not
-seen, heard and not heard the shadow of night
-sweep across the broad river, the stars come out,
-the cue owls mew as they flashed past silent as
-insects on the wing, and last of all, the rooks
-clamour upwards from the tall trees at break
-of day.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now, however, she watched her aunt weeping
-with that curious sense of detachment which comes
-to the young along with a first great sorrow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why should </span><em class="italics">she</em><span> weep?" Elspeth was asking
-herself, "she had nothing to cry for. There can
-be no sorrow in the world like my sorrow and
-shame—and </span><em class="italics">his</em><span>, that is, if he really cares. Perhaps
-he does not care. They say in books that men
-often pretend. But no—he at least never could
-do that. He is too true, too simple, too
-direct—and he loves me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So she watched her aunt rock to and fro and
-sob without any pity in her heart, but only with
-a growing wonderment—much as a condemned
-man might look at a companion who was
-complaining of toothache. The long vigil of the night
-had made the girl's heart numb and dead within
-her. At twenty sorrow and joy alike arrive in
-superlatives.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then quite suddenly a spasm of pity of a
-curious sort came to Elspeth Stuart. After all,
-it was worth while to love. </span><em class="italics">He</em><span> was suffering too.
-Aunt Mary had no one to love her—to suffer with
-her. Poor Aunt Mary! So she went quickly across
-and laid her hand on the thin shoulder. It felt
-angular even through the dress. The sobs shook it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Do not cry, auntie," she said, softly and
-kindly. "I am sorry I vexed you. I did not know."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The old lady looked up at her niece. Elspeth
-started at the sight of a tear stealing down a
-wrinkle. Tears on young faces are in place.
-They can be kissed away, but this seemed wrong
-somehow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She patted the thin cheek which had already
-begun to take on the dry satiny feel of age, which
-is so different from the roseleaf bloom of youth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then you will obey your father?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The words came tremulously. The pale lips
-"wickered." The tear had trickled thus far now,
-but Aunt Mary did not know it. It is only youth
-that tastes its own tears. And generally rather
-likes the flavour.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Elspeth did not stop petting her aunt. She
-stroked the soft hair, thinning now and silvering.
-Then she smiled a little.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No," she said, "I will </span><em class="italics">not</em><span> obey my father,
-Aunt Mary. I am no child to be put in the
-corner. I am a woman, and know what I want."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet it was only during the past night watches
-that she had known it for certain. But yesterday
-her desire to see Allan Syme had been no more
-than a little ache deep down in her heart. Now
-it had become all her life. So fertile a soil
-wherein to grow love is injudicious opposition.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But at any rate you will take your breakfast?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To please you I will try, aunt!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Aunt Mary plucked up heart at once. This
-was better. She had made a beginning. The
-rest would follow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When she went downstairs her brother came out
-of his study to get the key of his daughter's room.
-She told him how that Elspeth had never gone to
-bed, and had barely picked at her breakfast.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Stuart made no remark. He turned and
-went into his study again to work at his sermon.
-He too thought that all went well. He held that
-belief which causes so much misery in the world,
-that woman's will must always bend before man's.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So it does—provided the man is the right man.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>On the third day of her confinement Elspeth
-Stuart wrote a letter. It began without ceremony,
-and ended without signature:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You told me that you loved me. Tell it me
-again—on paper. I am very unhappy. My father
-keeps me locked up to make me promise never to
-speak to you or write to you. I do not mind
-this, except that I cannot go to Lowe's Seat.
-But I must be assured that you continue to love
-me. I know you do, but all the same I want to
-be told it. If you address, 'Care of the Widow
-Barr, at the Village of Crosspatrick,' Frank will
-bring it safely."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was a simple epistle, without lofty aspirations
-or wise words. But it was a loving letter, and
-admirably adapted to prove satisfactory to its
-recipient. And had Allan Syme known what was
-on its way to him he would have lifted up his
-heart. He was completing his pastoral visitation,
-and with a sort of fixed despair awaiting the
-next meeting of Session. For neither his ruling
-elder nor yet that slow-spoken veteran, Matthew
-Carment, had passed a word more to him concerning
-the vision they had seen upon the fringes
-of the Airds woods, on the day that had proved
-such a day of doom to his sweetheart and
-himself.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Frank Stuart, keenly sympathetic with Elspeth's
-sufferings though notably contemptuous of their
-cause, willingly performed what was required of
-him. Being as yet untouched by love, he thought
-Elspeth extremely silly. He had no interest
-ministers. If Elspeth had fallen in love with a
-soldier now—he meant to be a sailor himself, but
-a soldier was at least somebody in the scheme
-of things. Of course, his father was a minister—but
-then people must have fathers. This was
-different. However, it was not his business: girls
-were all silly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And on this broad principle Master Frank
-took his stand. With equal breadth of view he
-conveyed the letter to the "Weedow's" at
-Crosspatrick, en route for the Cameronian manse at
-Cairn Edward.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But before he set out, he must have his grumble.
-He was beneath the window of his sister's room
-at the time. His father had been under
-observation all the morning, and was now safely off on
-his visitations. By arrangement with Aunt Mary,
-Elspeth was allowed the run of the whole upper
-story of the Dullarg Manse during Dr. Stuart's
-daily absences. So, on parole, she came to this
-little window in the gable end, where Frank
-and she could commune without fear of foreign
-observation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What for could ye no have promised my father
-onything—and then no done it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The suggestion betrayed Master Frank's own
-plan of campaign, and renders more excusable
-the Doctor's frequent appeal to the argument of
-the hazel.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>After this there ensued for Elspeth a long and
-weary time. Every day Frank, detaching himself
-from the untrustworthy Sandy, slid off down the
-waterside to Crosspatrick. Every day he returned
-empty-handed and contemptuous.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This it was to love a minister, and one who
-was not even a "regular." Why had not Elspeth,
-if she must fall in love, chosen a sailor?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In those days there was no regular postal
-delivery on the remoter country districts. The
-mails came in an amateurish sort of way by coach
-to Cairn Edward, and thereafter distributed themselves,
-as it were, automatically. When the postage
-was paid, the authorities had no more care in the
-matter. Yet there was a kind of system in the
-thing, too.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was understood that any one being in Cairn
-Edward on business should "give a look in" at the
-Post Office, and if there were any letters for his
-neighbourhood, and he happened to have in his pocket
-the necessary spare "siller" at the moment, he would
-pay the postage and bring them to the "Weedow
-Barr's" shop in the village of Crosspatrick.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It may be observed that there were elements
-of uncertainty inseparable from such an arrangement.
-And these told hard on our poor prisoner
-of fate during these great endless midsummer
-days. She pined and grew pale, like a woodland
-bird shut suddenly in a close cage at that season
-when mate begins to call to mate through all the
-copses of birch and alder.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He does not love me—oh, he cannot love
-me!" she moaned. But again, as she thought
-of the stile on the way to Lowe's Seat—"But
-he does love me!" she said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, sudden as a falling star, Fear fell on that
-green summer world. There came a weird sough
-through all the valley, a crying of folk to each
-other across level holms, shrill answerings of herd
-to herd on the utmost hills. The scourge of God
-had come again! The Cholera—the Cholera!
-Dread word, which we in these times have almost
-forgot the thrill of in our flesh. Mysteriously and
-inevitably the curse swept on. It was at Leith
-at Glasgow—at Dumfries—at Cairn Edward. It
-was coming! coming! coming! Nearer, nearer
-ever nearer!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And men at the long scythe, sweeping the lush
-meadow hay aside with that most prideful of all
-rustic gestures, fell suddenly chill and shuddered
-to their marrows. The sweat of endeavour dried
-on them, and left them chill, as if the night wind
-had stricken them. Women with child swarfed
-with fear at their own door cheeks, and there
-was a crying within long ere the posset-cup could
-be made ready. Neighbour looked with sudden
-suspicion at neighbour, and men at friendly talk
-upon the leas manoeuvred to get to windward
-of each other.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Death was coming—had come! And in his
-study, grim and unmoved, Dr. Murdo Stuart
-sat preparing his Sabbath's sermon on the text,
-"Therefore ... because I will do this unto thee,
-prepare to meet thy God, O Israel!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But in the shut chamber above Elspeth waited
-and watched, the hope that is deferred making
-her young heart sicker and ever sicker. Still she
-had not heard. No answering word had reached
-her, and it was now the second week. He did
-not love her—he could not.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><em class="italics">But still!</em></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>They had told her nothing, and, indeed, during
-that first time of fear and uncertainty, they knew
-nothing for certain, away up by themselves in the
-wide wild moor parish of Dullarg. There were
-no market days in Cairn Edward any more. So
-much the farmers knew. The men of the landward
-parishes set guards with loaded guns upon
-every outgoing road. There was no local authority
-in those days, and men in such cases had to look
-to themselves. The infected place, be it city,
-town, or village, farm-steading or cottage, was
-completely and bitterly isolated. None might
-come out or go in. Provisions, indeed, were left
-in a convenient spot; but secretly and by night.
-And the bearer shot away again, bent half to
-the ground with eagerness, fear, and speed, a
-cloth to his mouth, for the very wind that passed
-over him was Death. It was not so much a
-disease as a certain Fate. Whoso was smitten was
-taken. In fact, to all that rustic world it was
-the Visitation of Very God.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In the main street of Cairn Edward grass
-grew; yet the place was not unpopulous. With
-the revival of trade and industry during the later
-years of the great war a cotton mill had been
-erected in a side street. The houses of the work
-folk were strung out from it. Then parallel with
-this there was a more ancient main street of low
-beetle-browed houses, many of them entering
-by a step down off the uneven causeway. At
-the upper end, near the Cross, were some
-better-class houses, some of them of two stories, a
-change-house or two, and down on the damp
-marshy land towards the loch, the cluster of
-huts which had formed the original nucleus of
-the village—now fallen into disrepute and
-disrepair, and nominated, from the nationality of
-many of its inhabitants, "Little Dublin."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In ten days a third of the inhabitants of this
-suburb had died. There was but one minister
-within the strait bounds of the straggling village.
-The parish church and manse lay two miles away
-out on a braeface overlooking yellowing widths
-of corn-land. And the minister thereof abode in
-his breaches, every day giving God thank that
-he was not shut up within those distant white
-streets, from which, day by day, the housewifely
-reek rose in fewer and fewer columns.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Allan Syme was within, and could not
-pause to marry or to give in marriage, to preach
-or to pray, so full of his Master's business was
-he. For he must nurse and succour by day and
-bury by night, week day and Holy Day. He
-it was who upheld the dying head. He swathed
-the corpse while it was yet warm. He tolled
-the death-bell in the steeple. He harnessed the
-horse to the rude farm-cart. Sometimes all alone
-he dug the grave in the soft marshy flow, and
-laid the dead in the brown peat-mould. For
-it was no time to stand upon trifles this second
-time that the Scourge of God had come to
-Cairn Edward.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To the outer limit of the cordon of watchers
-came the carriers and the farmers, the country
-lairds' servants, and less frequently the bien
-well-stomached meal millers. In silence they deposited
-their goods, for the most part with no niggard hand.
-In silence they took the fumigated pound notes,
-smelling of sulphur, or the silver coin of the realm,
-with the crumbles of quick-lime still sticking to
-the milling of the edges.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So across a kind of neutral zone, fearful
-country and infected town stood glowering at
-each other like embattled enemies, musket laid
-ready in the crook of elbow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And when one mad with the Fear tried to
-cross, he was hunted like a wild beast, or shot
-at like a rabbit running for its burrow. And the
-townsmen did in like manner. For ill as it
-might fare with them, there was deadlier yet to
-fear. In Cairn Edward they had the White
-Cholera, as it was called. The Black was at
-Dumfries—so, at least, the tale ran.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as he went about his work, Allan Syme
-called upon his God, and thought of Elspeth. But
-her letter never reached him, and he knew nothing
-of her vigils. The day before he might have
-known the Fear fell, and the door was shut.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was on Saturday afternoon that the tidings
-came to Elspeth Stuart, lonely watcher and loving
-heart. It was her brother Sandy who brought
-them. He knew nothing of Elspeth's matters,
-being young and by nature unworthy of trust. He
-had been down to Crosspatrick on some errand, and
-now, having arrived back within hailing distance,
-he was retailing his experiences to his brother
-Frank.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I got yon letter back frae the Weedow—an',
-as I wasna gangin' hame, I gied it to my faither."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">What letter?</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Elspeth could hear the sudden angry alarm in
-Frank's voice; but she herself had no premonition
-of danger.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The letter ye took doon to Crosspatrick for
-Elspeth ten days syne. Ye'll catch it, my man!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The girl's heart sank, and then leapt again
-within her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Her father had her letter—he would read it.
-It was plainly addressed in her handwriting to
-Allan Syme. What should she do?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But wait—there was something else. With a
-quick back-spang came the countering joy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But then he has never got my letter. He
-knows nothing of my unhappiness. He has not
-forgotten me. He loves me still. What care I
-for aught else but that?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There came up from the courtyard a sound of
-blows, and then Sandy's wail.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll tell my faither on ye, that I will. How
-was I to ken aboot Elspeth's letter? And they
-say the minister-man it was wrote to is dead, at
-ony rate!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Elspeth heard unbelievingly. Dead—Allan
-dead! And she not know. Absurd! It was
-only one of Sandy's lies to irritate his brother
-because he had been thrashed. She knew Sandy.
-Nevertheless she threw up the window. Sandy
-was again at his parable.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They buried twenty-five yesterday in the moss.
-The minister was there wi' the last coffin, and fell
-senseless across it. He never spoke again. He
-is to be buried the morn if they can get the
-coffin made!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, so soon as she was convinced that Sandy
-was not inventing, and that he had only repeated the
-gossip of the village, a kind of cold calmness took
-hold of Elspeth. She called Frank in to her, and
-when he came, lo! his face was far whiter than hers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She made him tell her all they had kept from
-her—of the dread plague that had fallen so sudden
-and swift upon the townlet to which Allan had
-carried her heart. Then she thought awhile
-fiercely, not wavering in her purpose, but only
-trying this way and that, like one who thrusts with
-his staff for the safest passage over a dangerous
-bog. Frank watched her keenly, but could make
-nothing of her intent. At last she spoke:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Go and get me the key of your box."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What do ye want with the key of my box?"
-queried her brother, astonished.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Never heed that," said Elspeth, clipping her
-words imperiously, as, in seasons of stress, she
-had a way of doing; "do as I bid you!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And being accustomed to such obediences, and
-albeit sorry for her, Frank went out, only remarking
-ominously that he would have a job, for that
-Aunt Mary carried it on her bunch.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He came back in exactly ten minutes, and threw
-the key on the floor.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Easier than I expected," he said, triumphantly;
-"the old buzzer was asleep!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Give me the key," said Elspeth, still in a brown
-study by the window.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But this was too much for Frank.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Pick it up for yourself, Els," he said, "and
-mind you are to swear you found it on the floor!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Frank knew very well that if one is going to
-lie back and forth (as he intended to do when
-questioned), it is well to be prepared with occasional
-little scraps of truth. They cheer one up so.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Elspeth took the key, and hid it in her pocket.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now you can go," she said, and sat down on
-the bed, staring out at the broad river quietly
-slipping by.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, you might at least have said 'thank
-you——'" began Frank. But catching the
-expression of her face, he suddenly desisted, and
-went out without another word.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>No, Allan Syme was not dead. But he staggered
-home that night certainly more dead than alive.
-All day long he had moved in an atmosphere
-of the most appalling pestilence. The reek of
-mortality seemed to solidify in his nostrils, and
-his heart for the first time fainted within him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He knew that there would be no welcome for
-him in the dark and lonely manse; no meal, no
-comfort, no living voice; not so much as a dog
-to lick his hand. His housekeeper, a mere hireling,
-had fled at the first alarm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was dusk as he thrust the key into the
-latch, as he did so staggering against the lintel
-from sheer weariness. He stood a little while in
-the passage, shuddering with the oncomings of
-mortal sickness. Then with flint, steel, and
-laborious tinder box he coaxed a light for the
-solitary taper on the hall table. This done, he
-turned aside into the little sitting-room on the
-right hand, where he kept his divinity books.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A slight figure came forward to meet him, with
-upturned face and clasped petitionary hands.
-The action was a girl's, but the dress and figure
-were those of a boy. Upon the threshold the
-minister stopped dead. He thought that this was
-the first symptom of delirium—he had seen it in
-so many, and had watched for it in himself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the lad still came forward, and laid a hand
-on his arm. He wore a suit of bottle green with
-silver buttons, a world too wide for his slim form.
-Knee breeches and buckled shoes completed his
-attire. Allan Syme stared wide-eyed, uncomprehending,
-his hand pressed to his aching brow in
-the effort to see truly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are not dead. Thank God!" said the
-boy, in a voice that took him by the throat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who—who are you?" The words came dry
-and gasping from the minister's parched lips.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">I am Elspeth—do you not know me?</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Elspeth—Elspeth—why did you come here—and thus?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They told me you were dead—and my father
-locked me up! And—what chance had a girl
-to pass the guards? They fired at me—see!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And lifting a wet curl from her brow, she
-showed a wound.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Elspeth—Elspeth—what is all this? What
-have they done to you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nothing—nothing—it is but a scratch. The
-man almost missed me altogether."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Beloved, what have you done with your hair?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I cut it off, that I might the better deceive
-them!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Elspeth—you must go back! This is no
-place for you!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will not go back home. I will die first!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But, Elspeth, think if any one saw you—what
-would they say?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That I came to help you—to nurse you! I
-do not care what they would say."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My dear—my dear, you cannot bide here.
-I would to God you could; but you cannot. I
-must think how to get you away. I must
-think—I must think!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The minister, sick unto death, stood with his hand
-still pressed to his brow. At sight of him, and
-because, after all she had gone through for him, he
-had given her neither welcome nor kiss, a swift
-spasm of anger flashed up into Elspeth's eyes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are ashamed of me, Allan Syme—let
-me go. I will never see you more. You do
-not love me! I will not trouble you. Open
-the door!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"God knows I love you better than my soul!"
-said Allan; "but let me think. Father in
-heaven—I cannot think! My brain runs round."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He gave a slight lurch like a felled ox, and
-swayed forward.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Instantly, as a lamp that the wind blows out,
-all the anger went out of Elspeth Stuart's eyes.
-She caught Allan in her strong young arms and
-laid him on the worn couch, displacing with a
-sweep of her hand a whole score of volumes as
-she laid him down.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He lay a moment stiff and still. Then a
-spasm of pain contorted his features. He opened
-his eyes, and looked into his sweetheart's eyes.
-Then, with the swift astonishing clearness of the
-mortally stricken, he saw what must be done.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Allan, Allan, what is the matter—what shall
-I do for you?" she mourned over him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Do this," answered the minister. "Take the
-cloak out of that cupboard there. I have never
-worn it. Go straight to John Allanson. He
-is my Ruling Elder. He bides at his daughter's
-house close by the cotton mill. Tell him all,
-and bid him come to me."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The dreadful man who was so angry—that
-day at Lowe's Seat!" she objected, not fearing
-for herself, but for him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He is not a dreadful man. Do as I bid you,
-childie; I am sick, but I judge not unto death!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But you may die before I return!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Do as I bid you, Elspeth," said the minister,
-waving her away; "not a hundred choleras can
-deprive me of one minute God has appointed mine!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She bent over quickly, and kissed him on lips
-and brow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There—and there! Now if you die, I will
-die too. Remember that! And I do not care
-now. I will go!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Saying this, she rushed from the room.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was a strange visitor who came to the house
-of the Elder's daughter that evening, as the gloaming
-fell darker, her feet making no sound on the
-deserted and grass-grown streets.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A young laddie wants to see you, father," said
-John Allanson's married daughter, with whom he
-had been lodging for a night when the plague
-came, in a single hour putting a great gulf between
-town and country. Then, finding his minister
-alone, he was not the man to leave him to fight
-the battle single-handed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Shamefacedly Elspeth crept in. The old man
-and his daughter were by themselves, the husband
-not yet home from the joiner's shop, where the
-hammers went </span><em class="italics">tap-tap</em><span> at the plain deal coffins all
-day and all night.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The minister is dying—come and help him
-or he will die!" she cried, as they sat looking
-curiously at her in the clear, leaping red of the
-firelight.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who are you, laddie?" said the elder.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am no laddie," said Elspeth, redder than the
-peat ashes. "Oh, I am shamed—I am shamed!
-But I could not help it. And I am not sorry!
-They told me he was dead. I am Elspeth Stuart,
-of the Dullarg Manse."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The elder sat gazing at her, open-mouthed,
-leaning forward, his hands on his knees. But
-his daughter, with the quick sympathy of woman,
-held out her arms.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My puir lassie!" she said. She had once lost
-a bairn, her only one.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Elspeth wept on her bosom.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The daughter waved her father to the door with
-one hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She will tell me easier!" she said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And straightway the old man went out into
-the dark.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It did not take long to tell, with Allan Syme
-lying so near to the gates of death. Almost in
-less time than it needs to write it, Elspeth was
-arrayed, so far at least as outer seeming went,
-in the garments of her sex. A basket was filled
-with the necessities which were kept ready for
-such an emergency in every house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Come, father," the loving wife cried at the
-door; "I will tell you as we gang!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And before she had won third way through
-her story, John Allanson had taken Elspeth's
-hand in his.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My bairn! my bairn!" he said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In this manner Elspeth came the second time
-to the Manse of Allan Syme.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>But the third time was as the mistress thereof.
-For she and the elder's daughter nursed Allan
-Syme through into safety. For the very day that
-Allan was stricken, a great rain fell and a great
-wind blew. The birds came back to the gardens
-of Cairn Edward, and the plague lifted. In time,
-too, Dr. Stuart submitted with severe grace to
-that which he could not help.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Indeed, it was all my fault, father," Elspeth
-said; "I made Allan come back by the stile. I
-had made up my mind that he should. I knew
-he would kiss me there!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I can only hope," answered her father,
-severely, lifting up his gold-knobbed cane and
-shaking it at her to emphasise his point, "that
-by this time your husband has learned the secret
-of making you obey him. It is more than ever
-your father did!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="a-scientific-symposium"><span class="bold large">A SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">(</span><em class="italics small">Being some Hitherto Unobserved Phenomena of Feminine
-Psychology from the notebook of A. McQuhirr,
-M.D. Edin.</em><span class="small">)</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>These papers of mine have been getting out of
-hand of late. I am informed from various quarters
-that they are becoming so exceedingly popular
-and discursive in their character, that they are
-enough to ruin the reputation of any professing
-man of science. I will therefore be severe with
-myself (and, incidentally, with my readers), and
-occupy one or two papers with a consideration
-of some of the minor characteristics common to
-the female sex. Indeed, upon a future occasion
-I may even devote an entire work to this subject.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I have mentioned before that my wife's younger
-sister was called the "Hempie,"[#] which, being
-interpreted, signifies a wild girl. This had certainly
-been her character at one time; and though she
-deserves the name less now than of yore, all her
-actions are still marked by conspicuous decision
-and independence.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">[#] Some of the earlier and less reputable of the "Hempie's"
-adventures may be found in a certain unscientific work
-entitled "Lad's Love."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>For instance, the year after Nance and I were
-married, the Hempie abruptly claimed her share
-of her mother's money, and departed to Edinburgh
-"to get learning."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now it was a common thing enough in our
-part of the country for boys to go out on such
-a quest. It was unheard of in a girl. And the
-parish would have been shocked if the emigrant
-had been any other than the Hempie. But Miss
-Elizabeth Chrystie, daughter of Peter of Nether
-Neuk, was a young woman not accustomed to
-be bound by ordinary rules. In person she had
-grown up handsome rather than pretty, and was
-so athletic that she stood in small need of the
-ordinary courtesies which girls love—hands over
-stiles, and so forth. Eyes and hair of glossy jet,
-the latter crisping naturally close to her head,
-a healthy colour in her cheeks, an ironic curl to
-her firm fine lips,—that is how our Hempie came
-back to us.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Of her career in the metropolis, of the boarding-school
-dames, strait-laced and awful, whom she
-scandalised, the shut ways of learning which
-somehow were opened before her, I have no room here
-to tell. It is sufficient to say that out of all this
-the Hempie came home to Nether Neuk, and at
-once established herself as the wonder of the
-neighbourhood.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance was gone, Grace going; Clemmy Kilpatrick,
-the unobtrusive little woman whom Peter
-Chrystie had married as a kind of foot-warmer, had
-been laid aside for six weeks with an "income" on
-her knee. The maidservants naturally took
-advantage. Every individual pot and pan in the house
-cumbered the back kitchen unwashed and begrimed.
-In the byres you did not walk—you waded. The
-ploughmen hung about the house half the morning,
-gossiping with the half-idle maidens. The very
-herds on the hill eluded Peter's feeble judicature,
-and lay asleep behind dyke-backs, while the
-week-weaned lambs, with many tail-wagglings, rejoined
-their mothers on the pastures far below.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Upon this confusion enter the New Hempie.
-And with her gown pinned up and a white apron
-on that met behind her shapely figure, she set
-to and helped the servants.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In six days she had the farm town of Nether
-Neuk in such a state of perfection as it had not
-known since my own Nance left it. For Grace,
-though a good girl enough, cared not a jot for
-house work. Her sphere was the dairy and
-cheese-room, where in an atmosphere of simmering curds
-and bandaged cheddars she reigned supreme.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So much to indicate to those who are not
-acquainted with Miss Elizabeth Chrystie the kind
-of girl she was.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For the rest, she despised love and held wooers
-in contempt, as much as she had done in the old
-days when she ascended the roofs of the pigstyes,
-and climbed into the beech-tree tops in the
-courtyard of Nether Neuk, rather than meet me face to
-face as I went to pay my court to her eldest sister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Love——" she said, scornfully, when I
-questioned her on the subject the first time she
-came to see us at Cairn Edward, "</span><em class="italics">love</em><span>—have
-Nance and you no got ower sic nonsense yet?
-</span><em class="italics">Love</em><span>——" (still more scornfully); "as if I hadna
-seen as much of that as will serve me for my
-lifetime, wi' twa sisters like Grace and Nance
-there!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It did not take us much by surprise, therefore,
-when one morning, while we sat at breakfast,
-the Hempie dropped in with the announcement
-that she could not stand her father any longer,
-and that she had engaged herself to be governess
-in the house of a certain Major Randolph Fergus
-of Craignesslin.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To a young lady so determined there was
-no more to be said. Besides which, the Hempie
-was of full age, perfectly independent as far as
-money went, and more than independent in
-character.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now," she said, "I have just fifteen minutes
-to catch my train: how am I to get my bag up
-to the station?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If you wait," I said, "the gig will be round
-at the door in seven minutes. I have a case, or
-I should go up with you myself."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who is driving the gig?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Tad Anderson," said I.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Hempie picked up a pair of tan gloves
-and straightened her tall lithe figure.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Good-morning," she said; "give me a lift
-with my box and wraps to the door. I would
-not trust Tad Anderson to get to the station
-in time if he had seven hours to do it in!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At the door a boy was passing with a grocer's
-barrow. The Hempie swung her box upon it
-with a deft strong movement.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Take that to the station, boy," she commanded,
-"and tell Muckle Aleck that Elizabeth Chrystie
-of the Nether Neuk will be up in ten minutes."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But—but," stammered the boy, astonished,
-"I hae thae parcels to deliver."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then deliver them on your road down!"
-said the Hempie. And her right hand touched
-the boy's left for an instant.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A' richt, mem!" he nodded, and was off.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Don't trouble, Alec. Nance, bide where you
-are—I have three calls to make on the way up.
-Good-morning!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And the Hempie was off. We watched her
-through the little oriel window, Nance nestling
-against my coat sleeve pleasantly, and, in the
-shadow of the red stuff curtain, even surreptitiously
-kissing my shoulder—a thing I had often
-warned her against doing in public. So I reproved
-her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nance, mind what you are about, for heaven's
-sake! Suppose anyone were to see you. It is
-enough to ruin my professional reputation to
-have you do that on a market day in your own
-front window."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, please may I hold your hand?" (Then,
-piteously, and, if I might call it so,
-"Nancefully") "You know I shall not see you all day."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The Hempie would not do a thing like that!"
-I answer, severely.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance watches the supple swing of her sister's
-figure, from the stout-soled practical boots to the
-small erect head, with its short black curls and
-smart brown felt hat with the silver buckle at
-the side.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No," she said, "she wouldn't." Then, after a
-sigh, she added, "Poor Hempie!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That was the last we saw of our sister for
-more than a year. Elizabeth Chrystie did not
-come back even for Grace's marriage to the laird
-of Butterhole.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am of more use where I am," she wrote.
-"Tell Grace I am sending her an alarm clock!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Whether this was sarcasm on the Hempie's part,
-I am not in a position to say. Grace had always
-been the sleepy-head of the family. If, however,
-it was meant ironically, the sarcasm was wasted,
-for Grace was delighted with the present.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is so useful, you know," the Mistress of
-Butterhole told Nance. "I set it every morning
-for four o'clock. It is so nice to turn over and
-know that you do not need to get up till eight!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>As suddenly as she had gone away, so suddenly
-the Hempie returned, giving reasons to no man.
-I am obliged to say that even I would never
-have known the true story of the adventures
-which follows had I not shamefully played the
-eavesdropper.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It happened this way.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My study, where I try upon occasion to do a
-little original work and keep myself from dropping
-into the rut of the pill-and-potion practitioner so
-common in rural districts, is next the little room
-where Nance sits reading, or sewing at the
-garmentry, white and mysterious, which some women
-seem never to be able to let out of their reach.
-Here I have a small wall-press, in which I keep
-my microscopes and preparations. It is divided
-by a single board from a similar one belonging
-to Nance on the other side. When both doors
-are open you can hear as well in one room as
-in the other. I often converse with Nance without
-rising, chiefly as to how long it will be till
-dinner-time, together with similar important and
-soul-elevating subjects. But it never seems to strike
-her that I can hear as easily what is said in
-her room when I am not expected to hear.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now, if you are an observant man, you have
-noticed, I daresay, that so soon as women are
-alone together, they begin to talk quite
-differently from what they have done when they had
-reason to know of your masculine presence. Yes, it
-is true—especially true of your nearest and dearest.
-Men do something of the same kind when women
-go out after dinner. But quite otherwise. A
-man becomes at once broader and louder, more
-unrestrained in quotation, allusion, illustration,
-more direct in application. His vocabulary
-expands. In anecdote he is more abounding
-and in voice altogether more natural. But with
-women it is not so. They do not look blankly
-at the tablecloth or toy with the stem of a
-wineglass, as men do when the other sex vanishes.
-They glance at each other. A gentle smile
-glimmers from face to face, in which is a world
-of irony and comprehension. It says, "They
-are gone—the poor creatures. We can't quite
-do without them; but oh, are they not funny
-things?" Then they exchange sighs equally
-gentle. If you listen closely you can hear a little
-subdued rustle. That is the chairs being moved
-gently forward nearer each other—not dragged,
-mark you, as a man would do. A man has no
-proper respect for a carpet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, dear——?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And then they begin really to talk. They have
-only "conversed" so far. How do I know all
-this? Well, that's telling. As I say, I
-eavesdropped part of it—in the interests of science.
-But the facts are true, in every case.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Hempie came in one Saturday morning.
-It was in August, and a glorious day. There was
-nothing pressing. I had been out early at the
-only case which needed to be seen to till I went
-on my afternoon round.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance was upstairs giving a wholly supererogatory
-attention to a certain young gentleman who
-had already one statutory slave to anticipate his
-wants. He was getting ready to be carried into
-the garden. I could detect signs from the
-basement that cook also was tending nursery-wards.
-The shrine would have its full complement of
-devout worshippers shortly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was thus that I came to be the first to
-welcome the Hempie upon her return. She
-opened the glass door and walked in without
-ceremony, putting her umbrella in the rack and
-hanging her hat on a peg like a man, not bringing
-them in to cumber a bedroom as a woman does.
-These minor differences of habit in the sexes have
-never been properly collated and worked out. As
-I said before, I think I must write a book on the
-subject.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At any rate, the Hempie's action was the
-exception which proved the rule.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then she strolled nonchalantly into my study
-and flung herself into a chair without shaking
-hands. I leaped to my feet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Hempie," I cried, "I am dreadfully glad to
-see you." And I stooped to kiss her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To my utter astonishment she took the salute as
-a matter of course, a thing she had never done before.
-Yes, somehow the Hempie was startlingly different.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What," she said, "are you as glad as all that?
-What a loving brother!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But I think she was pleased all the same.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Where's Nance?" The question was shot
-out rather than asked.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I indicated the upper regions of the house
-with my thumb, and inclined my ear to direct her
-attention.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A high voice of wonderful tone and compass
-(if a little thin) was lifted up in a decimating howl.
-Ensued a gentle confused murmur: "</span><em class="italics">Didums,
-then? Was it, then?</em><span>" together with various lucid
-observations of that kind.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A change passed over the Hempie's face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now we are in for it," I thought. "She will
-leave the house and never enter it again. The
-Hempie hates babies. She has always been
-particularly clear on that point."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Why</em><span> did you never tell me, Alec?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Because—because—we thought you would not
-care to hear. I understood you didn't like——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Is it a boy or a girl?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Boy."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a sudden uprising from the depths
-of the easy-chair, a rustle of skirts, the clang of
-a door, hasty footsteps on the stairs, a clamour
-of voices from which, after a kind of confused
-climax as the hope of the house blared his woes
-like a young bull of Bashan, there finally emerged
-the following remarkable sentiments:—</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, the darling! Isn't he a </span><em class="italics">pet</em><span>? Give him
-to me. Was they bad to him? Then—well then!
-They shan't—no, indeed they shan't! Now, then!
-Didums, then!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And </span><em class="italics">da capo</em><span>.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I could not believe my ears. The words were
-the words of Nance, but the voice was undoubtedly
-the voice of the Hempie. It was half an hour
-and more before they descended the stairs, the
-Hempie still carrying young "Bull of Bashan,"
-now pacifically sucking his thumb and gazing
-serenely through and behind his nurse in the
-disconcerting way which is common to infants of the
-human species—and cats.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Hempie passed out across the little strip
-of garden we had at the back. The sunlight
-checkered the grass, and the new nurse carried
-her charge as if she had never done anything else
-all her life. Every moment she would stop to
-coo at him. Then she would duck her head like
-a turtle-dove bowing to his mate; and finally,
-as if taken by some strange contortive disease,
-she would bend her neck suddenly and nuzzle
-her whole face into the child's, as a pet pony does
-into your hand—a hot, fatiguing, and wholly
-unscientific proceeding on an August day.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I called Nance back on pretext of matters
-domestic.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What's the matter with the Hempie?" I said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Matter with the Hempie?" repeated Nance,
-trying vainly to look blank. "Why, what should
-be the matter with the Hempie?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Don't try that on with me, you little fraud.
-There </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> something! What is it?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have not the least idea."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Have you kissed her?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, she never looked at me—only at the
-baby, </span><em class="italics">of course</em><span>."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then go and kiss her."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance went off obediently, and the sisters
-walked a while together. Presently the baby
-took the red thumb out of his mouth, and through
-the orifice thus created issued a bellow. The
-nurse came running. Nance took him in her
-arms, replaced the thumb, and all was well. Then
-she handed him back to the Hempie and kissed
-her as she did so. The Hempie raised her head
-into position naturally, like one well accustomed
-to the operation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance came slowly back and rejoined me.
-She was unusually thoughtful.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well?" I said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She nodded gravely and shook her head.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> true," she murmured, as if convinced
-against her will; "there is something. She is
-different."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nance," said I, triumphantly, for I was pleased
-with myself, "the Hempie is in love at last.
-You must find out all about it and tell me."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She looked at me scornfully.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will do no such thing——" she began.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is not curiosity—as you seem to think,"
-I remarked with dignity. "It is entirely in the
-interests of science," I said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Rats!" cried Nance, rudely.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As I have had occasion to remark more than
-once before, she does not show that deference to
-her husband to which his sterling worth and many
-merits entitle him. Indeed, few wives do—if any.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, I will find out for myself," I said,
-carelessly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">You!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Scorn, derision, challenge were never more
-briefly expressed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, I."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll wager you a new riding-whip out of my
-house money that you don't find out anything
-about it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Done!" said I.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For I remembered about the little wall-press
-where I kept my microscope. Not that I am by
-nature an eavesdropper; but, after all, a scientific
-purpose—and a new riding-whip, make some
-difference.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I was busy mounting my slides when I heard
-them come in. Instantly I needed some Canada
-balsam out of the wall-press—in the interests of
-science. I heard Nance go to the door to listen
-"if baby was asleep." I have often represented
-to her that she does not require to do this, because
-the instant baby is awake he advertises the fact
-to the whole neighbourhood, as effectually as if
-he had been specially designed with a steam
-whistle attachment for the purpose. But I have
-never succeeded.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You think you are a doctor, Alec," is the
-answer, "but you know nothing about babies!
-You know you don't!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Which shows that I must have spent a
-considerable part of my medical curriculum in vain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There ensued the soft muffled hush of chairs
-being pushed into the window. Then came the
-first </span><em class="italics">click-click, jiggity-click</em><span> of a rocking-chair,
-which Nance had bought for me "when you are
-tired, dear"—and has used ever since herself. I
-did not regret this, for it left the deep-seated
-chintz-covered one free. They are useless things,
-anyway: a man cannot go to sleep on a rocking-chair,
-or strike a match under the seat, or stand
-on it to put up a picture—or, in fact, do any of
-the things for which chairs are really designed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now when a woman goes to sleep in a chair, she
-always wakes up cross. All that stuff in romances
-about kissing the beloved awake in the dear old
-rose-scented parlour, and about the lids rising sweetly
-from off loving and happy eyes, is, scientifically
-considered, pure nonsense. Believe me, if she
-greets you that way the lady has not been asleep
-at all, and was waiting for you to do it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But when she, on the other hand, wakes with
-a start and opens her eyes so promptly that you
-step back quickly (having had experience); when
-she speaks words like these, "Alec, I have a great
-mind to give you a sound box on the ear—coming
-waking me up like that, when you know I didn't
-have more than an hour's good sleep last night!"—this
-is the genuine article. The lady was asleep
-that time. The other kind may be pretty enough
-to read about, but that is its only merit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was Nance who spoke first. I heard her
-drop the scissors and stoop to pick them up.
-I also gathered from the tone of her first words
-that she had a pin in her mouth. Yet she goes
-into a fit if baby tries to imitate her, and wonders
-where he can learn such habits. This also is
-incomprehensible.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Have you left Craignesslin for good?" said
-Nance, using a foolish expression for which I have
-often reproved her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am going back," said the Hempie. I am
-not so well acquainted with the </span><em class="italics">nuances</em><span> of the
-Hempie's voice and habit as I am with those of
-her sister, but I should say that she was leaning
-back in her chair with her hands clasped behind
-her head, and staring contentedly out at the
-window.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I thought perhaps the death of the old major
-would make a difference to you," said Nance. I
-knew by the mumbling sound that she was biting
-a thread.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It does make a difference," said the Hempie,
-dreamily, "and it will make a greater difference
-before all be done!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance was silent for a while. I knew she was
-hurt at her sister's lack of communicativeness.
-The rocking-chair was suddenly hitched sideways,
-and the stroking rose from fifty in the minute to
-about sixty or sixty-five, according, as it were, to
-the pressure on the boiler.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Still the Hempie did not speak a word.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The rocking-chair was doing a good seventy
-now—but it was a spurt, and could not last.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Elizabeth," said Nance, suddenly, "I did not
-think you could be so mean. I never behaved
-like this to you."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No?" said the Hempie, with serene interrogation,
-but did not move, so far as I could make out.
-The rocking-chair ceased. There was a pause,
-painful even to me in my little den. The strain
-on the other side of the wall must have been
-enormous.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When Nance spoke it was in a curiously altered
-voice. It sounded even pleading. I wish the
-Hempie would teach me her secret.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who is it?—tell me, Hempie," said Nance, softly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I did not catch the answer, though obviously
-one was given. But the next moment I heard the
-unbalanced clatter of the abandoned rocker, and
-then Nance's voice saying: "No, it is impossible!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Apparently it was not, however, for presently
-I heard the sound of more than one kiss, and I
-knew that my dear Mistress Impulsive had her
-sister in her arms.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then you know all about it now, Hempie?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"All about what?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Don't pretend,—about love. You do love
-him very much, don't you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't know. I have never told him so!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Hempie!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It is true, Nance!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then why have you come home?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To get married!" said the Hempie, calmly.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-hempie-s-love-story"><span class="bold large">THE HEMPIE'S LOVE STORY</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>This is the somewhat remarkable story the Hempie
-told my wife as she sat sewing in the little parlour
-overlooking the garden, the day Master Alexander
-McQuhirr, Tertius, cut his first tooth.[#]</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">[#] This, however, was not discovered till afterwards, and
-was then acclaimed as the reason why he cried so much
-on the arrival of his aunt Elizabeth. To his nearest relative
-on the father's side, however, the young gentleman's
-performances seemed entirely normal.—A. McQ.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Elizabeth Chrystie was a free-spoken young
-woman, and she told her tale generally in the
-English of the schools, but sometimes in the plain
-countryside talk she had spoken when, a barefoot
-bare-legged lass, she had scrieved the hills, the
-companion of every questing collie and scapegrace
-herd lad, 'twixt the Bennan and the Butt o'
-Benerick.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"When I first got to Craignesslin," said the
-Hempie, "I thought I had better turn me about
-and come right back again. And if it had not
-been for pride, that is just what I should have
-done."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Were they not kind to you?" asked Nance.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Kind? Oh, kind enough—it was not that. I
-could easily have put an end to any unkindness
-by walking over the hill. But I could not. To
-tell the truth, the place took hold of me from
-the first hour.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Craignesslin, you know, is a great house, with
-many of the rooms unoccupied, sitting high up on
-the hills, a place where all the winds blow, and
-where the trees are mostly scrubby scrunts of
-thorn, turning up their branches like skeleton
-hands asking for alms, or shrivelled birches and
-cowering firs all bent away from the west.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"When first I saw the place I thought that I
-could never bide there a day—and now it looks
-as if I were going to live there all my life.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The hired man from the livery stables in
-Drumfern set my box down on the step of the
-front door, and drove off as fast as he could.
-He had a long way before him, he said, the first
-five miles with not so much as a cottage by the
-wayside. He meant a public-house.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He was a rude boor. And when I told him
-so he only laughed and said: 'For a' that ye'll
-maybe be glad to see me the next time I come—even
-if I bring a hearse for ye to ride to the
-kirkyaird in!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with that he cracked his whip and drove
-out of sight. I was left alone on the doorstep
-of the old House of Craignesslin. I looked up at
-the small windows set deep in the walls. Above
-one of them I made out the date 1658, and over
-the door were carven the letters W.F.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I minded the tales my father used to
-tell in the winter forenights, of Wicked Wat Fergus
-of Craignesslin, how he used to rise from his bed
-and blow his horn and ride off to the Whig-hunting
-with Lag and Heughan, how he kept a tally on
-his bed-post of the men he had slain on the moors,
-making a bigger notch all the way round for
-such as were preachers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And while I was thinking all this, I stood
-knocking for admission. I could not hear a living
-thing move about the place. The bell would not
-ring. At the first touch the brass pull came away
-in my hands, and hung by the wire almost to the
-ground.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yet there was something pleasant about the
-place too, and if it had not been for the uncanny
-silence, I would have liked it well enough. The
-hills ran steeply up on both sides, brown with
-heather on the dryer knolls, and the bogs yellow and
-green with bracken and moss. The sheep wandered
-everywhere, creeping white against the hill-breast
-or standing black against the skyline. The
-whaups cried far and near. Snipe whinnied up
-in the lift. Magpies shot from thorn-bush to
-thorn-bush, and in the rose-bush by the
-door-cheek a goldfinch had built her nest.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Still no one answered my knocking, and at
-last I opened the door and went in. The door
-closed of its own accord behind me, and I found
-myself in a great hall with tapestries all round,
-dim and rough, the bright colours tarnished with
-age and damp. There were suits of armour on
-the wall, old leathern coats, broad-swords
-basket-hiked and tasselled, not made into trophies, but
-depending from nails as if they might be needed
-the next moment. Two ancient saddles hung
-on huge pins, one on either side of the antique
-eight-day clock, which ticked on and on with a
-solemn sound in that still place.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I did not see a single thing of modern sort
-anywhere except an empty tin which had held
-McDowall's Sheep Dip.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Nance, you cannot think how that simple thing
-reassured me. I opened the door again and pulled
-my box within. Then I turned into the first
-room on the right. I could see the doors of
-several other rooms, but they were all dark and
-looked cavernous and threatening as the mouths
-of cannon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But the room to the right was bright and
-filled with the sunshine from end to end, though
-the furniture was old, the huge chairs uncovered
-and polished only by use, and the great oak table
-in the centre hacked and chipped. From the
-window I could see an oblong of hillside with
-sheep coming and going upon it. I opened the
-lattice and looked out. There came from somewhere
-far underneath, the scent of bees and honeycombs.
-I began to grow lonesome and eerie.
-Yet somehow I dared not for the life of me
-explore further.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It was a strange feeling to have in the daytime,
-and you know, Nance, I used to go up to the
-muir or down past the kirkyaird at any hour
-of the night.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I did not take off my things. I did not sit
-down, though there were many chairs, all of plain
-oak, massive and ancient, standing about at all
-sorts of angles. One had been overturned by
-the great empty fireplace, and a man's worn
-riding-glove lay beside it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I stood by the mantelpiece, wondering
-idly if this could be Major Fergus's glove, and
-what scuffle there had been in this strange place
-to overturn that heavy chair, when I heard a
-stirring somewhere in the house. It was a curious
-shuffling tread, halting and slow. A faint tinkling
-sound accompanied it, like nothing in the world
-so much as the old glass chandelier in the room
-at Nether Neuk, when we danced in the parlour
-above.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The sound of that shuffling tread came nearer,
-and I grew so terrified, that I think if I had
-been sure that the way to the door was clear,
-I should have bolted there and then. But just
-at that moment I heard the foot trip. There was
-a muffled sound as of someone falling forward.
-The jingling sound became momentarily louder
-than ever, to which succeeded a rasping and a
-fumbling. Something or someone had tripped
-over my box, and was now examining it in a
-blind way.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I stood turned to stone, with one hand on
-the cold mantelpiece and the other on my heart
-to still the painful beating.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I heard the shuffling coming nearer
-again, and presently the door lurched forward
-violently. It did not open as an intelligent being
-would have opened a door. The passage was
-gloomy without, and at first I saw nothing. But
-in a moment, out of the darkness, there emerged
-the face and figure of an old woman. She wore
-a white cap or 'mutch,' and had a broad and
-perfectly dead-white face. Her eyes also were
-white—or rather the colour of china ware—as
-though she had turned them up in agony and
-had never been able to get them back again.
-At her waist dangled a bundle of keys; and that
-was the reason of the faint musical tinkling I
-had heard. She was muttering rapidly to herself
-in an undertone as she shuffled forward. She
-felt with her hands till she touched the great
-oaken table in the centre.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"As soon as she had done so, she turned
-towards the window, and with a much brisker
-step she went towards it. I think she felt the
-fresh breeze blow in from the heather. Her
-groping hand went through the little hinged
-lattice I had opened. She started back.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Who has opened the window?' she said.
-'Surely he has not been here! Perhaps he has
-escaped! Walter—Walter Fergus—come oot!' she
-cried. 'Ah, I see you, you are under the table!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with surprising activity the blind old
-woman bent down and scrambled under the table.
-She ran hither and thither like a cat after a
-mouse, beating the floor with her hands and
-colliding with the legs of the table as she did so.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Once as she passed she rolled a wall-white
-eye up at me. Nance, I declare it was as if
-the week-old dead had looked at you!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then she darted back to the door, opened
-it, and with her fingers to her mouth, whistled
-shrilly. A great surly-looking dog of a brown
-colour lumbered in.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Here, Lagwine, he's lost. Seek him, Lagwine!
-Seek him, Lagwine!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And now, indeed, I thought, 'Bess Chrystie,
-your last hour is come.' But though the dog
-must have scented me—nay, though he passed
-me within a foot, his nose down as if on a hot
-trail—he never so much as glanced in my
-direction, but took round the room over the tumbled
-chairs, and with a dreadful bay, ran out at the
-door. The old woman followed him, but most
-unfortunately (or, as it might be, fortunately) at
-that moment my foot slipped from the fender,
-and she turned upon me with a sharp cry.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Lagwine, Lagwine, he is here! He is here!'
-she cried.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And still on all fours, like a beast, she rushed
-across the floor straight at me. She laid her
-hand on my shoe, and, as it were, ran up me
-like a cat, till her skinny hands fastened
-themselves about my throat. Then I gave a great
-cry and fainted.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"At least, I must have done so, for when I
-came to myself a young man was bending over
-me, with a white and anxious face. He had on
-velveteen knickerbockers, and a jacket with a
-strap round the waist.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Where is that dreadful old woman?' I cried,
-for I was still in mortal terror."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">I</em><span> should have died," said Nance. And from
-the sound of her voice I judged that she had
-given up the attempt to continue her seam in
-order to listen to the Hempie's tale, which not
-the most remarkable exposition of scientific truth
-on my part could induce her to do for a moment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'It's all my fault—all my fault for not being
-at home to meet the trap,' I heard him murmur,
-as I sank vaguely back again into
-semi-unconsciousness. When I opened my eyes I found
-myself in a pleasant room, with modern furniture
-and engravings on the wall of the 'Death of
-Nelson' and 'Washington crossing the Delaware.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"As soon as I could speak I asked where I
-was, and if the horrible old woman with the white
-eyes would come back. The young man did
-not answer me directly, but called out over his
-shoulder, 'Mother, she is coming to.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And the next moment a placid, comfortable-looking
-lady entered, with the air of one who
-has just left the room for a moment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'My poor lassie,' she said, bending over me,
-'this is a rough home-coming you have got to
-the house of Craignesslin. But when you are
-better I will tell you all. You are not fit to
-hear it now.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But I sat up and protested that I was—that
-I must hear it all at once, and be done with it."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course," cried Nance, "you felt that you
-could not stay unless you knew. And I would
-not have stopped another minute—not if they
-had brought down the Angel Gabriel to explain."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Not if Alec had been there?" queried the
-Hempie, smiling.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Alec!" cried Nance, in great contempt.
-"Indeed, if Alec had been in such a place, I
-would have made Alec come away inside of three
-minutes—yes, and take me with him if he had
-to carry me out on his back! Stop there for
-Alec's sake? No fear!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That is the way my married wife speaks of
-me behind my back. But, so far as I can see,
-there is no legal remedy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Go on, Hempie; you are dreadfully slow."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So," continued the Hempie, placidly, "the
-nice matronly woman bade me lie down on a
-sofa, and put lavender-water on my head. She
-petted me as if I had been a baby, and I lay there
-curiously content—me, Elizabeth Chrystie, that
-never before let man or woman lay a hand on
-me——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Exactly," said Nance; "was he very nice-looking?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The young man in the velveteen suit, of
-course."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't know what you mean."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I mean, was he better-looking than Alec?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Better-looking than Alec? Why, of course,
-Alec isn't a bit——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Hempie!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a pause, and then, to relieve the
-strain, the Hempie laughed. "Are you never
-going to get over it, Nance?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Get on with your story, and be sensible." I
-could hear a thread bitten through.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So the lady began to talk to me in a quiet
-hushed tone, like a minister beside a sick bed.
-She told me how some years ago her poor husband,
-Major Fergus, had hart a dreadful accident. He
-was not only disfigured, but the shock had affected
-his brain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'At first,' she said, 'we thought of sending
-him to an asylum, but we could not find one
-exactly suited to his case. Besides which, his
-old nurse, Betty Hearseman, who had always had
-great influence with him, was wild to be allowed
-to look after him. She is not quite right in the
-head herself, but most faithful and kind. She cried
-out night and day that they were abusing him
-in the asylum. So at last he was brought here
-and placed in the old wing of the house, into
-which you penetrated by misadventure to-day.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'But the dog?' I asked; 'do they hunt the
-patient with a fierce dog like that?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Ah, poor Lagwine,' she sighed, 'he is devoted
-to his old master. He would not hurt a hair of
-his head or of anybody's head. Only sometimes,
-when he finds the door open, my poor Roger will
-slip out, and then nobody else can find him on
-these weariful hills.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I asked her of the younger children
-whom I had been engaged to teach.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'They are my grandchildren,' she said; 'you
-can hear them upstairs.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And through the clamour of voices, that of
-the young man I had seen rang loudest of all.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'They are playing with their father?' I said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She shook her head. 'They are the children
-of my daughter Isobel,' she said. 'She married
-Captain Fergus, of the Engineers, her own cousin,
-and died on her way out to the West Indies.
-So Algernon brought them home, and here they
-are settled on us. And what with my husband's
-wastefulness before he was laid aside, and the
-poor rents of the hill farms nowadays, I know
-not what we shall do. Indeed, if it were not for
-my dear son Harry we could not live. He takes
-care of everything, and is most scrupulous and
-saving.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So when she had told me all this, I lay still
-and thought. And the lady's hand went slower
-and slower across my head till it ceased altogether.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I cannot expect you to remain with us after
-this, Miss Chrystie,' she said, 'and yet I know
-not what I shall do without you. I think we
-should have loved one another.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I told her that I was not going away—that
-I was not afraid at all.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'But, to tell you the truth, my dear,' she said,
-'I do not rightly see where your wages are to
-come from.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'That does not matter in the least, if I like
-the place in other ways,' I said to her."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He must be </span><em class="italics">very</em><span> good-looking!" interjected
-Nance.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I told her I would like to see the children.
-She went up to call them, and presently down
-they came—a girl of six and a little boy of four.
-They had been having a rough-and-tumble, and
-their hair was all about their faces. So in a little
-we were great friends. They went up to the
-nursery with their grandmother, and I was following
-more slowly, when all at once, Harry—I mean
-the young man—came hurrying in, carrying a tray.
-He had an apron tied about him, and the bottom
-hem of it was tucked into the string at the waist.
-As soon as he saw me he blushed, and nearly
-dropped the tray he was carrying. I think he
-expected me to laugh, but I did not——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course not," coincided Nance, with decision.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I just opened the top drawer in the sideboard
-and took out the cloth and spread it, while he
-stood with the tray still in his arms, not knowing,
-in his surprise, what to do with it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I thought you had gone upstairs with my
-mother,' he said. 'Old John Hearseman is out on
-the hill with the lambs, and we have no other
-servants except the children's little nurse.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And so—and so," said the Hempie, falteringly,
-"that is how it began."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I could hear a little scuffle—which, being
-interpreted, meant that Nance had dropped her
-workbasket and sewing on the floor in a heap
-and had clasped her sister in her arms.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Darling, cry all you want to!" My heart
-would know that tone through six feet of
-kirkyard mould—aye, and leap to answer it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am not crying—I don't want to cry." It
-was the Hempie's voice, but I had never heard
-it sound like that before. Then it took a stronger
-tone, with little pauses where the tears were
-wiped away.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I found out that night from the children
-how good he was—how helpful and strong. He
-had to be out before break of day on the hills
-after the sheep. Often, with a game-bag over
-his shoulder, he would bring in all that there was
-for next day's dinner. Then when Betsy, the small
-maid, was busy with his mother, he would bath
-Algie and Madge, and put them to bed. For
-Mrs. Fergus, though a kind woman in her way,
-had been accustomed all her life to be waited on,
-and accepted everything from her son's hands
-without so much as 'Thank you.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I did not say a word, but got up early
-next morning and went downstairs. And what
-do you think I found that blessed Harry
-doing—</span><em class="italics">blacking my boots</em><span>!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was again a sound like kissing and
-quiet crying, though I cannot for the life of me
-tell why there should have been. Perhaps the
-women who read this will know. And then the
-Hempie's voice began again, striving after its
-kind to be master of itself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, of course, what could I do when his
-father died? He and I were with him night
-and day. For Betty Hearseman being blind
-could not handle him at all, and Harry's mother
-was of no use. Indeed, we did not say anything
-to alarm her till the very last morning. No, I
-cannot tell even you, Nance what it was like.
-But we came through it together. That is all."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nance had not gone back to her sewing. So I
-could not make out what was her next question.
-It was spoken too near the Hempie's ear. But
-I heard the answer plainly enough.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A month next Wednesday was what we
-thought of. It ought to be soon, for the
-children's sake, poor little things."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, yes," echoed Nance, meaningly, "for
-the children's sake, of course."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The Hempie ignored the tone of this remark.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Harry is having the house done up. The
-old part is to be made into a kitchen. Old John
-and Betty Hearseman are to have a cottage down
-the glen."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And you are to be all alone," cried Nance,
-clapping her hands, "with only the old lady to
-look after. That will be like playing at house."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," said the Hempie, ironically, "it
-would—without the playing. Oh no, I am going to
-have a pair of decent moorland lasses to train
-to my ways, and Harry will have a first-rate
-herd to help him on the hill."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then she laughed a little, very low, to herself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The best of it is that he still thinks I am
-poor," she said. "I have never told him about
-mother's money, and I mean to ask father to give
-me as much as he gave you and Grace."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course," said Nance, promptly. "I'll come
-up and help you to make him."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a cheerful prospect in front of
-Mr. Peter Chrystie, of Nether Neuk, if he did not
-put his hand in his breeches' pocket to some
-purpose.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Will Alec let you come?" queried the Hempie,
-doubtfully. "He will miss you."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, I'll tell him it is for the sake of baby's
-health," said Nance; "and, besides, husbands are
-all the better for being left alone occasionally.
-They are so nice when they get you back again."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What!" cried the Hempie, "you don't mean
-to say that Alec has fits of temper? I never
-would have believed it of him."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Hush!" said Nance. There was again that
-irritating whispered converse, from which emerged
-the Hempie's clear voice:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, but my Harry will never be like that."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wait—only wait," said Nance. "Hempie,
-they are all alike. And besides, they write you
-such nice letters when they are away. I suppose
-you get one every day? Yes, of course. What,
-he walks six miles over the hill to post it? That
-is nice of him. Alec once came all the way
-from Edinburgh, and went back the next day,
-just because he thought I was cross with him——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, but my Harry never, never——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>(Left speaking.)</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="seed-sown-by-the-wayside"><span id="the-little-fair-man"></span><span class="bold large">THE LITTLE FAIR MAN.</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I.—SEED SOWN BY THE WAYSIDE</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Notable among my father's papers was one
-bundle quite by itself which he had always looked
-upon with peculiar veneration. The manuscripts
-which composed it were written in crabbed
-handwriting on ancient paper, very much creased at
-the folds, and bearing the marks of diligent
-perusal in days past. My father could not read
-these, but had much reverence for them because
-of the great names which could be deciphered
-here and there, such as "Mr. D. Dickson,"
-"Mr. G. Gillespie," and in especial "Mr. Samuel
-Rutherfurd."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>How these came into the possession of my
-father's forbears, I have no information. They
-were always known in the family as "Peden's
-Papers," though so far as I can now make out,
-that celebrated Covenanter had nothing to do with
-them—or, at least, is never mentioned in them
-by name. On the other hand I find from the family
-Bible, written as a note over against the entry
-of my great-grandmother's death, "Aprile the
-seventeene, 1731," the words, "Cozin to Mr. Patrick
-Walker, chapman, of Bristo Port, Edinburgh."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The letters and narratives are in many hands
-and vary considerably in date, some being as
-early as the high days of Presbytery, about 1638,
-whilst others in a plainer hand have manifestly
-been copied or rewritten in the first decade of
-last century.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now after I came from college and before my
-marriage, I had sometimes long forenights with
-little to do. So having got some insight into
-ancient handwriting from my friend Mr. James
-Robb, of the College of Saint Mary, an expert
-in the same—a good golfer also, and a better
-fellow—I set me to work to decipher these
-manuscripts both for my own satisfaction and
-for the further pleasure of reading them to my
-father on Saturday nights, when I was in the
-habit of driving over to see my mother at
-Drumquhat on my way from visiting my patients
-in the Glen of Kells.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That which follows is from the first of these
-documents which I read to my father. He was
-so much taken by it that he begged me to publish
-it, as he said, "as a corrective to the sinful
-compliances and shameless defections of the
-times." And though I am little sanguine of any good
-it may do from a high ecclesiastic point of view,
-the facts narrated are interesting enough in
-themselves. The manuscript is clearly written out in
-a tall copy-book of stout bluish paper, without
-ruled lines, and is bound in a kind of grey
-sheepskin. The name "Harry Wedderburn" is
-upon the cover here and there, and within is a
-definitive title in floreated capitals, very ornately
-inscribed:</span></p>
-<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 72%" id="figure-11">
-<span id="inscription"></span><img class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="Inscription" src="images/img-235.jpg" />
-<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
-<span class="italics">Inscription</span></div>
-</div>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The Story of the Turning of me, Harry
-Wedderburn, from Darkness to Light, by the means
-and instrument of Mr. Samuel Rutherfurd of
-Anwoth, Servant of God."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Then the manuscript proceeds:—</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The Lord hath spared me, Harry Wedderburn,
-these many years, delaying the setting of my sun
-till once more the grass grows green where I saw
-the blood lie red, and I wait in patience to lay
-my old head beneath the sod of a quiet land.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This is my story writ at the instance of good
-Mr. Patrick Walker, and to be ready at his next
-coming into our parts. The slack between hay
-and harvest of the Year of Deliverance, 1689, is
-the time of writing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I, Harry Wedderburn, of Black Craig of Dee,
-in the country of Galloway, acknowledging the
-mercies of God, and repenting of my sins, set
-these things down in my own hand of write.
-Sorrow and shame are in my heart that my sun
-was so high in the heavens before I turned me
-from evil to seek after good.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"We were a wild and froward set in those days
-in the backlands of the Kells. It was not long,
-indeed, since the coming of a law stronger than
-that of the Strong Hand. Our fathers had driven
-the cattle from the English border—yea, even
-out of the fat fields of Niddisdale, and over the
-flowe of Solway. And if a man were offended
-with another, he went his straightest way home
-and took gun and whinger to lie in wait for his
-enemy. Or he met him foot to foot with
-staff on the highway, if he were of ungentle heart
-and possessed neither pistol nor musketoon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I mind well that year 1636, more than fifty
-years bygone—I being then in the twenty-second
-year of my age, a runagate castaway loon, without
-God and without hope in the world. My father
-had been in his day a douce sober man, yet he
-could do little to restrain myself or my brother
-John, who was, they said, 'ten waurs' than I.
-For there was a wild set in the Glen of Kells in
-those days, Lidderdale of Slogarie and Roaring
-Raif Pringle of Kirkchrist being enough to poison
-a parish. We four used to forgather to drink
-the dark out and the light in, two or three times
-in the week at the change house of the Clachan.
-Elspeth Vogie keeped it, and no good name it
-got among those well-affected to religion—aye,
-or Elspeth herself either.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But these are vain thoughts, and I have had
-of a long season no pleasure in them. Yet will
-I not deny that Elspeth Vogie, though in some
-things sore left to herself, was a heartsome quean
-and well-favoured of her person.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So at Elspeth's some half-dozen of us were
-drinking down the short dark hours of an August
-night. It was now the lull between the
-hay-winning and the corn-shearing. For hairst was
-late that year, and the weather mostly backward
-and dour. There had come, however, with the
-advent of the new month, a warm drowsy spell
-of windless days, the sun shining from morn to
-even through a kind of unwholesome mist, and
-the corn standing on the knowes with as little
-motion as the grey whinstane tourocks and granite
-cairns on the hilltaps. The farmers and cottiers
-looked at their scanty roods of ploughland, and
-prayed for a rousing wind from the Lord to
-winnow away the still dead easterly mist, and gar
-the corn reestle ear against ear so that it might
-fill and ripen for the ingathering.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But we that were hand-fasted to sin and bonded
-to iniquity, young plants of wrath, ill-doers and
-forlorn of grace, cared as little for the backward
-year as we did for the sad state of Scotland and
-the strifes that were quickly coming upon that
-land. So long as our pint-stoup was filled, and
-plack rattled on plack in the pouch, sorrow the
-crack of the thumb we cared for harvest or
-sheep-shearing, king or bishop, Bible or incense-pot.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To us sitting thus on the Sabbath morning
-(when it had better set us to have been sleeping
-in our naked beds) there came in one Rab Aitkin
-of Auchengask, likeminded with us. Rab was
-seeking his 'morning' or eye-opening draught of
-French brandy, and to us bleared and leaden-eyed
-roisterers, he seemed to come fresh as the dew on
-the white thorn in the front of May. For he had
-a clean sark upon him, a lace ruffle about his neck,
-and his hair was still wet with the good well water
-in which he had lately washen himself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Whither away, Rab?' we cried; 'is it to visit
-fair Meg o' the Glen so early i' the mornin'?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'He is on his way to holy kirk!' cried another,
-daffingly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'If so—'tis to stand all day on the stool of
-repentance!' declared another. Then in the
-precentors whining voice he added: 'Robert
-Aitkin, deleted and discerned to compear at both
-diets of worship for the heinous crime of—and so
-forth!' This was an excellent imitation of the
-official method of summoning a culprit to stand
-his rebuke. It was Patie Robb of Ironmannoch
-who said this. And this same Patie had had the
-best opportunities for perfecting himself in the
-exercise, having stood the session and received the
-open rebuke on three several occasions—two of
-them in one twelve-month, which is counted a
-shame even among shameless men.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'No, Patie,' said Rab in answer, 'I am indeed
-heading for the kirk, but on no siccan gowk's errand
-as takes you there twice in the year, my man. I
-go to hear the Gospel preached. For there is to be
-a stranger frae the south shore at the Kirk of Kells
-this day, and they say he has a mighty power of
-words; and though ye scoff and make light o'
-me, I care not. I am neither kirk-goer nor
-kirk-lover, ye say. True, but there is a whisper in my
-heart that sends me there this day. I thank ye,
-bonny mistress!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He took the pint-stoup, and with a bow of his
-head and an inclination of his body, he did
-his service to Mistress Elspeth. For that lady,
-looking fresh as himself, had just come forth from
-her chamber to relieve Jean McCalmont, who, poor
-thing, had been going to sleep on her feet for
-many weary hours.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then Roaring Raif Pringle cried out, 'Lads,
-we will a' gang. I had news yestreen of this
-ploy. The new Bishop, good luck to him, has
-outed another of the high-flying prating
-cushion-threshers. This man goes to Edinburgh to be
-tried before his betters. He is to preach in Kells
-this very morn on the bygoing, for the minister
-thereof is likeminded with himself. We will
-all gang, and if he gets a hearin' for his rebel's
-cant—why, lads, you are not the men I tak
-you for!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So they cried out, 'Weel said, Roaring Raif!'
-and got them ready to go as best they could.
-For some were red of face and some were ringed
-of eye, and all were touched with a kind of
-disgust for the roysterous spirit of the night. But
-a dabble in the chill water of the spring and a
-rub of the rough-spun towel brought us mostly
-to some decent presentableness. For youth easily
-recovers itself while it lasts, though in the latter
-end it pays for such things twice over.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"We partook of as mickle breakfast as we
-could manage, and that was no great thing after
-such a night. But we each drank down a
-stirrup-cup and with various good-speeds to Elspeth
-Vogie and Jean her maid, we wan to horseback
-and so down the strath to the Kirk of Kells.
-It sits on the summit of a little knowe with the
-whin golden about it at all times of the year,
-and the loch like a painted sheet spread below.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"We could see the folk come flocking from far
-and near, from their mailings and forty-shilling
-lands, their farm-towns and cot-houses in
-half-a-dozen parishes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'We are in luck's way, lads,' cried Lidderdale,
-called Ten-tass Lidderdale because he could
-drink that number of stoups of brandy neat; 'it
-is a great gathering of the godly. Lads, the
-shutting of this man's mouth will make such a
-din as will be heard of through all Galloway!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And so to our shame and my sorrow we made
-it up. We were to go the rounds of the meeting,
-and gather together all the likely lads who
-would stand with us. There were sure to be
-plenty such who had no goodwill to preachings.
-And with these in one place we could easily
-shut the mouth of this fanatic railer against law
-and order. For so in our ignorance and folly
-we called him. Because all this sort (such as
-I myself was then) hated the very name of religion,
-and hoped to find things easier and better for
-them when the king should have his way, and
-when the bishops would present none to parishes
-but what we called 'good fellows'—by which
-we meant men as careless of principle as
-ourselves—loose-livers and oath-swearers, such as in truth
-they mostly were themselves.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But when we arrived that August morning at
-the Kirk of Kells, lo! there before us was
-outspread such a sight as my eyes never beheld.
-The Kirk Knowe was fairly black with folk.
-A little way off you could see them pouring
-inward in bands like the spokes of a wheel.
-Further off yet, black dots straggled down hill
-sides, or up through glens, disentangling
-themselves from clumps of birches and scurry thorns
-for all the world like the ants of the wise king
-gathering home from their travels.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then we were very well content and made it our
-business to go among the gay young blades who
-had come for the excitement, or, as it might be,
-because all the pretty lasses of the countryside
-were sure to be there in their best. And with
-them we arranged that we should keep silence
-till the fanatic minister was well under way
-with his treasonable paries. Then we would rush
-in with our swords drawn, carry him off down the
-steep and duck him for a traitorous loon in the
-loch beneath.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To this we all assented and shook hands upon
-the pact. For we knew right sickerly what would
-be our fate, if in the battle which was coming on
-the land, the Covenant men won the day.
-Perforce we must subscribe to deeds and religious
-engagements, attend kirks twice a day, lay aside
-gay colours, forswear all pleasant daffing with such
-as Elspeth Vogie and Jean her maid (not that
-there was anything wrong in my own practice
-with such—I speak only of others). The merry
-clatter of dice would be heard no more. The
-cartes themselves, the knowledge of which then
-made the gentleman, would be looked upon as the
-'deil's picture-books.' A good broad oath would
-mean a fine as broad. Instead of chanting loose
-catches we should have to listen to sermons five
-hours long, and be whipt for all the little pleasing
-transgressions that made life worth living.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So 'Hush,' we said—'we will salt this preacher's
-kail for him. We will drill him, wand-hand and
-working-hand, so that he cannot stir. We will
-make him drink his fill of Kells Loch this day!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"All this while we knew not so much as the name
-of the preacher—nor, indeed, cared. He came
-from the south, so much we knew, and he had a
-great repute for godliness and what the broad-bonnets
-called 'faithfulness,' which, being interpreted,
-signified that he condemned the king and
-the bishops, and held to the old dull figments about
-doctrine, free grace, and the authority of Holy Kirk.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The man had not arrived when we reached
-the Kirk of Kells. Indeed, it was not long before
-the hour of service when up the lochside we saw
-a cavalcade approach. Then we were angry. For,
-as we said, 'This spoils our sport. These are
-doubtless soldiers of the king who have been sent
-to put a stop to the meeting. We shall have no
-chance this day. Our coin is spun and fallen
-edgewise between the stones. Let us go home!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But I said: 'There may be some spirity work
-for all that, lads. Better bide and see!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So they abode according to my word.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But when they came near we could see that
-these were no soldiers of the king, nor, indeed, any
-soldiers at all, though the men were armed with
-whingers and pistolets, and rode upon strong
-slow-footed horses like farmers going to market. There
-was a gentleman at the head of them, very tall
-and stout, whom Roaring Raif, in an undertone,
-pointed out as Gordon of Earlstoun, and in the
-midst, the centre of the company, rode a little
-fair man, shilpit and delicate, whom all deferred
-to, clad in black like a minister. He rode a
-long-tailed sheltie like one well accustomed to the
-exercise and bore about with him the die-stamp
-of a gentleman.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This was the preacher, and these other riders
-were mostly his parishioners, come to convoy him
-through the dangerous and ill-affected districts
-to the great Popish and Prelatic city of Aberdeen,
-where for the time being he was to be interned.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then Roaring Raif whispered amongst us that
-we had better have our swords easy in the sheath
-and our pistols primed, for that these men in the
-hodden grey would certainly fight briskly for their
-minister.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Gordon of Cardoness is there also,' he said, 'a
-stout angry carle. Him in the drab is Muckle
-Ninian Mure of Cassencarry. Beyond is Ugly
-Peter of Rusco, and that's Bailie Fullerton o'
-Kirkcudbright, the man wi' the wame swaggin' and
-the bell-mouthed musket across his saddle-bow.
-There will be a rare tulzie, lads. This is indeed
-worth leavin' Elspeth's fireside for. We will let
-oot some true blue Covenant bluid this holy day!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And when the Little Fair Man dismounted there
-was a rush of the folk and some deray. But we
-of the other faction kept in the back part and
-bided our time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the Little Fair Man went up into the
-pulpit, which was a box on great broad, creaking,
-ungreased wheels, which they had brought out
-from the burial tool-house as soon as they saw
-that the mighty concourse could in no wise be
-contained in the kirk—no, not so much as a tenth
-part of them!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"After that there was a great hush which lasted
-at least a minute as the minister kneeled down
-with his head in his hands. Then at last he rose
-up and gave out the psalm to be sung. It was the
-one about the Israelites hanging their harps on the
-trees of Babylon. And I mind that he prefaced
-it with several pithy sayings which I remembered
-long afterwards, though I paid little heed to them
-at the time. 'This tree of Babylon is a strange
-plant,' he said; 'it grows only in those backsides
-of deserts where Moses found it, or by Babel
-streams where men walk in sorrow and exile. It
-is an ever-burning bush, yet no man hath seen
-the ashes of it.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the people sang with a great voice,
-far-swelling, triumphant, and the Little Fair Man led
-them in a kind of ecstasy. I do not mind much
-about his prayer. I was no judge of prayers in
-those days. All I cared about them was that they
-should not be too long and so keep me standing
-in one position. But I can recall of him that
-he inclined his face all the time he was speaking
-towards the sky, as if Someone Up There had been
-looking down upon him. At that I looked also,
-following the direction of his eyes. And so did
-several others, but could see nothing. But I think
-it was not so with the Little Fair Man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now it was not till the sermon was well begun
-that we were to break in and 'skail' the
-conventicle with our swords in our hands. I could
-hear Lidderdale behind me murmuring, 'How
-much longer are we to listen to this treason-monger?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Let us give him five minutes by the watch
-lads!' I said, 'the same as a man that is to be
-hanged hath before the topsman turns him off.
-And after that I am with you.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then Roaring Raif said in my ear, 'We have
-them in the hollow of our hand. This will be a
-great day in the Kells. We will put the broad
-bonnets to rout, so that no one of them after this
-shall be able to show face upon the causeway of
-Dumfries. There are at least fifty staunch lads,
-good honest swearing blades, in and about the
-kirkyard of Kells this day!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"For even so we delighted to call ourselves in
-our ignorance and headstrong folly—as the Buik
-sayeth, glorying in our shame.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And according to my word we waited five
-minutes on the minister. He had that day a
-text that I will always mind, 'God is our refuge
-and our strength,' from the 46th Psalm—one that
-was ever afterwards a great favourite with me.
-And when at first he began, I thought not muckle
-about what he said, but only of the great ploy and
-bloody fray that was before me. For we rejoiced
-in suchlike, and called it among ourselves a
-'bloodletting of the whey-faced knaves!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the Little Fair Man began to warm to
-his work, and just when the five minutes drew on
-to their end, he was telling of a certain Friend
-that he had, One that loved him, and had been
-constantly with him for years—so that his married
-wife was not so near and dear. This Friend had
-delivered him, he said, from perils of great waters,
-and from the edge of the sword. He had also
-put up with all the evil things he had done to
-Him. Ofttimes he had cast this Friend off and
-buffeted Him, but even then He would not go
-away from him or leave him desolate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, as I had never heard of such strange friendship,
-I was in a great sweat to find out who this
-Friend might be, so different from the comrades I
-knew, who drew their swords at a word and gave
-buffet for buffet as quick as drawing a breath.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I whispered again, 'Give him another five
-minutes!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I could hear them growl behind me, Tam
-Morra of the Shields, called Partan-face Tam,
-Glaikit Gib Morrison, and the others—'What for
-are ye waitin'? Let the grey-breeks hae it noo!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But since I was by much the strongest there,
-and in a manner the leader, they did not dare
-to counter me, fearing that I might give them
-'strength-o'-airm' as I did once in the vennel
-of Dumfries to Mathew Aird when he withstood
-me in the matter of Bonny Betty Coupland—a
-rencontre which was little to my credit from any
-point of view.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And then the Little Fair Man threw himself
-into a rapture like a man going out of the body,
-and his voice sounded somehow uncanny and
-of the other world. For there was a 'scraich'
-in it like the snow-wind among the naked trees
-of the wood at midnight. Yet for all it was not
-unpleasant, but only eery and very affecting to
-the heart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He told us how that he had shamed and grieved
-his Friend, how he had oftentimes wounded Him
-sore, and once even crucified Him——</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then when he said that I knew what the man
-was driving at, and if I had been left to myself
-I would have fallen away and thought no more
-of the matter. But at that moment, with a sudden
-calm, there fell a hush over the people. They
-seemed to be waiting for something. Then the
-Little Fair Man leaned out of the pulpit and
-stretched his arm toward me, where I stood like
-Saul, taller by a head than any about me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'There is a great strong young man there,' he
-said, 'standing by the pillar, that hitherto has used
-his strength for the service of the devil, but from
-this forward he shall use it for the Lord. Even
-now he is plotting mischief. He, too, hath wounded
-my Friend, even Jesus Christ, and smitten Him
-on the cheekbone. But to-day he shall stand
-in the breach and fight for Him. Young man, I
-bid you come forward!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with that he continued, pointing at me
-with his finger a little crooked. At first I was
-angry, and could have made his chafts ring with
-my neive had I been near enough. But presently
-something uprose in my heart—great, and terrible,
-and melting all at once. I took a step forward.
-But my companions held me back. I could feel
-Lidderdale and Roaring Raif with each a hand
-on a coat tail.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Harry,' they said, 'do not mind him—cry
-the word and we will fall on and pull the wizard
-down by the heels!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Come hither!' said the Little Fair Man again,
-in a stronger voice of command. 'Come up hither,
-friend. Thou didst come to this place to do evil;
-but the Spirit hath thee now by the head, though
-well do I see that a pair of black deils have thee
-yet by the tail. Come hither, friend, resist not
-the Spirit!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then there arose a mighty flame in my heart,
-the like of which I never felt before. It was a
-very gale of the Spirit—a breaking down of dams
-that imprisoned waters might flow free. And
-before I knew what I did I took my hand and
-dealt a buffet right and left, so that Roaring Raif
-roared amain. And as for Jock Lidderdale, I
-know not what became of him, for they carried
-him over the heads of the crowd and laid him
-under a tree to come to himself again.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Thou shalt know a Friend to-day, young
-man,' the minister said, when, being thus enlarged,
-I came near. 'Thou shall be the firstfruits to
-the Lord in the Kells this day. There is to be
-a great ingathering of sheaves here, though some
-of them shall yet have bloody shocks. But thou,
-young sir, shalt be the first of all and shalt stand
-the longest!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then on the outskirts of the crowd there arose
-a mighty turmoil. For all those that had been
-of my party made a rush forward, that they might
-rescue me from what they thought was rank
-witchcraft.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Overturn! Overturn!' they cried, 'ding
-doon the wizard! He hath bewitched "Harry
-Strength-o'-Airm"! Fight, Harry—for thine own
-hand, and we will rescue thee!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And so ardent was their onset that they had
-well-nigh opened a way to where the Little Fair
-Man stood, as unmoved and smiling as if he had
-been sitting in his own manse. So great became
-the crowd that the very preaching-box rocked.
-The men of the cavalcade drew their swords
-and met the assailants hand to hand. In another
-minute there had been bloodshed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But by some strange providence there came
-into my hand the pole of a burying bier, whereon
-men bear coffins to the kirkyard. I know not
-how it came there, unless, peradventure, they had
-used it to roll out the preaching-box. But, in any
-case, it made a goodly and a gruesome weapon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the Spirit of the Lord came upon me,
-and I shouted aloud: 'I am on the Little Fair
-Man's side—and on the side of his Friend! Peace!
-Peace!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with that I laid about me as the Lord
-gave me strength, and I heard more than one
-sword snap, and more than one head crack.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then, again, I cried louder than before: 'Let
-there be peace—and God help ye if ye come in
-Harry Wedderburn's road this day—all ye that
-are set on mischief!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And lo! by means of the bier-pole, a way
-was opened, a large and an effectual, before me;
-and, like Samson, I smote and smote, and stayed
-not, till I was weary. For none could stand
-against me, and such as could, ran out to their
-horses. But the most part of them, I, with my
-grave-pole, caused to remain—that they, too,
-might be turned to the Lord by the Word of
-the preacher.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So they came back, and I bade the Little Fair
-Man preach to them, while I kept guard. And
-at that he smiled and said: 'Did I not say that
-thou also shouldst be a soldier of God? Thine arm
-this day hath been indeed an arm of flesh. But thou
-shalt yet wield in thy time the sword of the Spirit,
-which is the word of God!' And of a truth,
-there was a great work and an effectual that day
-in the Kells. For they say that more than four
-score turned them from their evil way, and many
-of these blessed me thereafter for the breaking
-of their heads—yes, even upon their dying beds.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now I have myself backslidden since that,
-but have not altogether fallen away or shamed my
-first love. And when the cavalcade rode away up
-the muir road, I heard them tell that the Little
-Fair Man, who had called me out of my heady
-folly, was no other than the famous Mr. Samuel
-Rutherfurd, minister of Anwoth, on his way to
-his place of exile in Aberdeen, for conscience sake.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"That these things are verity I vouch for with
-my soul. The truth is thus, neither less nor more.
-Which is the testimony of me, Harry Wedderburn,
-written in this year of Grace and a freed
-Israel, 1689."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-humbling-of-strength-o-airm"><span class="bold large">THE LITTLE FAIR MAN</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II.—THE HUMBLING OF STRENGTH-O'-AIRM</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><em class="italics small">The continuation of the Adventure of Mr. Harry Wedderburn,
-called "Strength-o'-Airm" written by himself, and
-transcribed by Alexander McQuhirr, M.D.</em></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"All this fell out exceeding well, and the fact was
-much bruited abroad throughout all the
-southland of Galloway, how that with the tram of a
-bier I convertit thirty-three men, in and about
-the kirkyaird of Kells, in one day. But (what
-was not so good) the first man that I brak the
-head of was Roaring Raif Pringle of Kirkchrist—and,
-I was engaged in the bands of affection with
-his sister Rachel, expecting indeed to wed her
-with the first falling of the leaf.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now Roaring Raif was so worshipfully smitten
-on the pate, that before he could sit up to hearken
-to the voice of the Little Fair Man,
-Mr. Rutherfurd had ridden northwards on his way
-and all his folk with him. Now when at last
-Raif sat up and drew his hand across his brow
-he asked who had done this, and when they told
-him that it was his friend Harry Wedderburn of
-the Black Craig who had broke his own familiar
-head with the tram of the dead bier, who but
-Raif Pringle was a wild man, and swore in his
-unhallowed wrath to shoot me if ever I came
-anigh the house of Kirkchrist, either to see his
-sister or for any other purpose!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now I was not anxious about Rachel herself.
-I knew that when it came to the point, she cared
-not a doit either for Roaring Raif or for Slee
-Todd Pringle, her cunning father. She was a
-fell clever lass, and had always been a great
-toast among us—though continually urging me
-to forswear sitting drinking at the wine with wild
-runagates in public places and change houses, if
-I hoped to stand well in her favour. But once,
-having been with her and Roaring Raif at
-Dumfries, it was my good fortune to carry her
-across the ford at Holywood when Nith Water
-was rising fast, and since that day somehow she
-had always thought better than well of me. For
-we left the Roaring One on the Dumfries shore.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I will go over and bring him hither on my
-back,' said I. And would have plunged in again
-to do it. For I thought nothing of perils of
-waters, being tall and a good swimmer to boot.
-But this Rachel would in no wise permit. She
-caught me by the arm and would not let me
-go back.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"''Deed will you do somewhat less, Harry
-Wedderburn; if Raif thinks so little of his sister
-as to convoy her home disguised in liquor, e'en
-let him stand there on the shore, or else take his
-way home by the Brig of Dumfries!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And this I was very content to do, delivering
-Rachel into the hands of her uncle, Lancelot
-Pringle of Quarrelwood, in due time—but a longer
-time mayhap than in ordinary circumstances it
-takes to traverse the distance between the fords
-of Holywood over against Netherholm and the
-mansion house of Quarrelwood. For the pleasure
-that I had in carrying of Rachel Pringle through
-the water had gone to my head some little, and
-I was perhaps not so clear about my way as I
-might have been.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, minding me on that heartsome and memorable
-night, together with other things more recent,
-I was not perhaps very anxious about the
-affection of Rachel Pringle. For I thought that it
-would take more than the word of Roaring Raif
-to change the heart of that little Rachel whom
-I had carried in my arms over the swellings of
-Nith Water. I minded me how tight she had
-held to me, and how, when we got over, she
-whispered in my ear, before I set her down,
-'Harry, I like strong men!' Which saying
-somewhat delayed my putting of her down, for
-the ground grew exceedingly boggy and unstable
-just at that spot.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, on the evening of the day after I had
-forsaken my ill courses at the bidding of the
-Little Fair Man, I set out from the onsteading
-of Black Craig of Dee, leaving all there in the
-keeping of my brother John, a stark upstanding
-lad, and in those of Gilbert Grier, my chief hired
-herd. I told them not where I was going, but I
-think they knew well enough. For John brought
-me my father's broadsword, which he had sharpened
-instead of my own smaller whinger, and Gib the
-herd took the pistols out of my belt and saw
-to their priming anew. They were always very
-loyal and sib to my heart, these two, and sped
-me on my love adventures without a word.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now the turn or twist that I gat at the outdoor
-service before the Kirk of Kells was strange
-enough. It may seem that the conduct of a man
-can only be turned by the application of reason
-or argument. But it was not so with me. The
-Little Fair Man crooked his finger and said:
-'Come!' and I came. So also was it with the
-others who were convertit that day, aided maybe
-somewhat by my black quarter-staff. But I
-have since read in the Book that even so did
-Mr. Rutherfurd's Friend, when on the shores of
-the sea He called to Him his disciples. 'Come!'
-He said to the fishermen, and forthwith they
-left all and followed Him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now my call did not cause me to follow the
-Little Fair Man. It was not of such a sort. He did
-not bid me to that of it. But those who have been
-my neighbours will bear me witness that I never
-was the same man again, but through many shortcomings
-and much warring of the flesh against the
-spirit, have ever sought after better things, during
-all the fifty-and-one years since that day.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So out I set on my road to Kirkchrist with
-a rose in my coat, the covenanted work of
-reformation in my heart—and my pistols primed.
-I knew it would need all three to win bonny
-Rachel Pringle out of the hand of the Slee Tod
-and his son Raif, the Roaring One.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now Kirkchrist is one of the farm-towns of
-Galloway, many of which in the old days have
-been set like fortilices high on every defenced hill.
-Indeed, the ancient tower still stands at one angle
-of the square of houses, where it is used for a
-peat-shed. But by an outside stair it is possible
-to get on the roof and view the country for miles
-round. On one side the Cooran burn runs down
-a deep ravine full of hazel copses feathering to
-the meadow-edges, where big bumble bees have
-their bykes, and where I first courted Rachel,
-sitting behind a cole of hay on the great day of
-the meadow ingathering. On the other three sides
-the approach to Kirkchrist is as bare as the palm
-of my hand, all short springy turf, with not so
-much as a daisy on it, grazed over by Slee Tod's
-sheep, and cast up in places by conies, whose white
-tails are for ever to be seen bunting about here
-and there among the warreny braes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now somehow it never struck me that Roaring
-Raif would bear malice. What mattered a broken
-head that he should take offence at his ancient
-friend? Had I not had my own sconce broke a
-score of times, and ever loved the breaker better,
-practising away with John and Gib till I could
-break his for him in return? Why not thus Raif
-Pringle? It was true that he had gotten an
-uncouth clour from the bier-tram of Kells, but I
-was willing to give him his revenge any day in
-the week—and, for my part, bore no malice.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So in this frame of mind I strolled up towards
-Kirkchrist, when the reek of the peat fires was
-just beginning to go up into a still heaven from
-the cot-house in the dell, and the good cottier
-wives were putting on their pots to make their
-Four-Hours. I was at peace with all the world,
-for since the Kirk of Kells there had been a
-marvellous lightening of my spirit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Rachel is yonder, I thought within me, as I
-went up the hillside towards the low four-square
-homestead of Kirkchrist. Her hand will be laying
-the peat and blowing up the kindling. She will
-be looking out for me somewhere, most likely at
-yonder window in the gable end.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, so she was. For as I came in view of the
-yard gate I saw a white thing waved vehemently,
-and then suddenly withdrawn.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Dear lass,' I thought, 'she is watching; and
-thinks thus to bid me welcome. She has
-doubtless made my peace with the Roaring One.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I smiled within myself, like a vain fool,
-well-content and secure.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Also I quickened my steps a little, so that I
-might arrive in time for the meal, being
-hunger-sharpened with my travel, and having out of
-expectance and forgetfulness taken but little nooning
-provender with me from the Black Craig of Dee.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I watched the window eagerly, as I came nearer,
-for another glint of the kerchief. But not the beck
-of a head or the flutter of a little hand intimated
-that one of the bonniest lasses in Galloway was
-waiting within. Yet it struck me as strange that
-there were no clamorous dogs about, or indeed
-any sound of life whatever. And ever and anon
-I seemed to hear my name called, but yet, when
-I stopped and listened, all was still again on the
-moment.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now the entrance into the courtyard or inner
-square of Kirkchrist was by a 'yett' or strong
-gate, closed when any raiders or doubtful characters
-were in the neighbourhood, as well as in the night
-season. But now this 'yett' stood wide open, and
-I could see the yellow straw in the yard all freshly
-spread, the stray ears yet upon it—which last,
-together with the empty look of the crofts, told
-me that the oats had been gathered in that day.
-Where, then, were the men who had done the
-work? It was a thing unheard of that they
-should depart without making merry in the house-place,
-and drinking of the home-brewed ale, laced
-with a tass of brandy to each tankard.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The sun was low behind my back, and I was
-looking towards the onstead of Kirkchrist, when
-suddenly I saw something glisten in one of the
-little three-cornered wicket-windows of the barn.
-It was bright, and shone like polished metal—a
-steel pistol stock belike. But, nevertheless, I went
-on in the same dead, uncanny silence.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Suddenly '</span><em class="italics">Blaff! Blaff! Blaff!</em><span>' Three or
-four shots went off in front of me and to the
-right. I heard the smooth hissing sound of lead
-bullets and the whistle of slugs. Something
-struck me on the muscle of the forearm, stunning
-me like a blow, then I felt a kind of ragged tear or
-searing of the flesh as with a hot iron. I cannot
-describe it better—not very painful at first, but
-rather angering, and inclining me, but for my recent
-conversion, to stamp and swear like a king's
-trooper.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This, however, I had small time to do, even
-if I had wished it; for, after one glance at the
-barn, through the three-cornered wicks of which,
-as through the portholes of a ship in action, white
-wreaths of the smoke of gunpowder were curling,
-my right arm fell to my side, and I turned to
-run. Even as I did so, a little cloud of
-men—perhaps half-a-dozen—came rushing out of the
-mickle 'yett' with a loud shout, and made for
-me across the level sward. Foremost of them
-was Roaring Raif. Then I was advertised indeed
-that he had not forgiven the clour on the head he
-had gotten. I knew him by his height and by the
-white clout that was bound like a mutch about
-his brows.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Harry,' said I to myself, when I saw them
-thus take after me, 'the Black Craig will never
-see you more. Ye are as a dead man. You
-cannot run far with that arm draining the life
-from you, and there is no shelter within miles.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I heard the brainge of breaking glass
-behind me, and a voice: 'The linn—the linn,
-Harry Wedderburn; flee to the linn! It is your
-only chance. They are mad to kill you, Harry!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And even then I was glad to hear the voice
-of my lass, for to know that her heart and her
-prayers were with me. So I turned at the word,
-and ran redwud for the Linn of Kirkchrist—a
-wild steep place, all cliffs and screes and slithery
-spouts of broken slate. I felt my strength fast
-leaving me as I ran, and ever the enemy shouted
-nearer to my back.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Kill him! Shoot him! Put a bullet into him!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wondrous stimulating I found such remarks as
-these, made a hundred or two yards to leeward,
-with an occasional pistol bullet whistling by to
-mark the sense, as in a printed book. This made
-me run as I think I never ran before. For, though
-I was a changed man, I did not want to die and
-go straight to that Abraham's bosom, of which
-the Little Fair Man had spoken as one that had
-lain there of a long season. I did not surmise
-that the accommodation would suit me so well.
-No, not yet awhile, with Rachel Pringle praying
-for my life half-a-mile behind. So I ran and better
-ran, till the sweat of my brow ran into my eyes
-and well nigh blinded me. Now in those days I
-was very young and limber. And I am none so
-stiff yet for my age.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"At all events, when I came to the taking off
-of the linn I saw that there was nothing for it
-but my callant's monkey trick of letting myself
-down like a wheel. I had often practised it on
-the heathery slopes of the Black Craig of Dee,
-so I caught myself behind the knees, and, with
-my head bent like a hoop, flung myself over the
-edge. Presently I felt myself tearing through the
-copses and plunging into little darksome dells.
-I rebounded from tree trunks and bruised myself
-against rocks. Stones I had started span whizzing
-about my ears, and I heard the risp and rattle
-of shot fired after me from the margin of the
-linn. My wounded arm seemed as if drawn from
-its socket. Then I felt the cool plash of water,
-and I knew no more.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I might very well have been drowned in
-Kirkchrist Linn that day, but it had not been to
-be. For it so chanced that I fell into the deepest
-pool for miles, and was carried downwards by the
-strongest current into the place that is now called
-the 'Harry's Jaws.' This is a darksome spot,
-half-cavern, half-bridge, under the gloomy arch
-of which the brown peat-water foams white as
-fresh-poured ale, and the noise of its thundering
-deafens the ear. When I came to myself I was
-lying half out of the water and half in, on the
-verge of a great fall where the burn takes a leap
-thirty or forty feet into a black pool. I looked
-over, and there beneath me, with one of my own
-pistols in his hand, was Roaring Raif, a terrifying
-sight, with his bloody clout all awry about his
-head. He was looking at the pistol, dripping wet
-as it had gone over the fall when I came down like
-a runaway cart wheel into the Linn of Kirkchrist.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'He's farther doon the water, boys,' I heard
-him cry, and the sound was sweet to my ear.
-'Here's the pistol he has left behint him! Scatter,
-boys, and a braw sheltie to the man that first
-puts an ounce o' lead into him!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A pleasant forgiving nature had this same
-Roaring One. And I resolved that, though a
-converted man, I would deal with him accordingly
-when I gat him into my clutches.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The place where I found me was not
-uncommodious. To make the most of it I crawled
-backwards till I came to the end of the rocks.
-Here was a little strip of sand, and over that a
-dry recess almost large enough for a cave. Some
-light filtered in from unseen crevices above, so
-that I think it was not roofed with solid rock
-overhead. Rather it was some falling in of the
-sides of the linn which had made the hiding-place.
-Here I was safe enough so long as the burn did not
-rise suddenly, for I knew well from the 'glet' on
-the stones and the bits of stick and dried rushes
-that the waters of the linn filled all the interior in
-time of flood.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I made what shift I could to bind up
-my arm. I was already faint from loss of blood,
-but I bound a band tight about my upper arm,
-twisting it with a stick till I almost cried out
-with the greatness of the pain. Then I tied a
-rag, torn from my shirt, about the wound itself,
-which turned out to be in the fleshy part, very
-red and angry. However, it had bled freely,
-which, though it made me faint at the time,
-together with the washing in the water of the
-linn, was probably the saving of me. There was
-a soft fanning air as the night drew on, and, in
-my wet clothes, I shivered, now hot, now cold.
-My head was throbbing and over-full; and I began
-to see strange lights about me as the cave
-alternately grew wide and high as the firmament,
-and anon contracted to the size of a hazel-nut.
-That was the little touch of fever which always
-comes after a gunshot wound.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So after a while fell the darkness, or, rather,
-if there had not been a full moon, the darkness
-would have fallen. But, being thirsty with my
-wound, I crawled down to the water's edge and
-bent my head to drink, with the drumming of the
-fall loud in my ears. And, lo! in the pool I saw
-the round of the moon reflected. I was at the
-mouth of the little cave, and there, to the north,
-the Plough hung as from a nail in the August
-sky, while a little higher I saw one prong of
-silvery Cassiopeia's broken-legged 'W.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The stars looked so remote and lonesome, so
-safe and careless up there. They minded so
-little that I was wounded and helpless, that if I
-had not been a changed man, I declare I could
-have cursed them in my heart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But suddenly from above came a sound that
-made all my heart beat and quiver. It was a
-woman's cry. All you who have never heard
-how soft a woman can make her speech when she
-fears for her true man's life, take this word.
-There is no sound so sweet, so low, so
-far-searching in the world.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Harry! Harry Wedderburn!' it said. And
-I knew that in the midnight Rachel Pringle
-was searching and calling for me. Though there
-might be danger, I could not bear that she
-should pass away from me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I am here,' I answered as softly as I could.
-But the noise of the waterfall drowned my voice,
-though my ears, grown accustomed to the roar,
-had caught hers easily enough.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, steadying me on the crutch of a tree that
-grew perilously over the fall, I went out and
-stood in the full light of the moon, taking my
-life in my hand if it had so chanced that any of
-my enemies were in ambush round about.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Rachel saw me instantly, and I could see her
-clasp her hands over her heart as she stood on
-the margin of the cleuch, black against the indigo
-sky of night.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Harry—Harry Wedderburn!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Here—dear love—here! By the waterfall.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"In an instant she was flying down the slope,
-having lifted her skirt, and, as we say, 'kilted'
-it, so that she might go the lighter. She wore a
-white gown, and I could see her flit like a moth
-through the covert of birk and hazel to the
-water-edge. In another moment, without stopping either
-for direction or to draw breath, she was coming
-towards me, her face to the precipice, swiftly,
-fearlessly, clinging to the little ragged rock-rifts,
-from which scarce a wind-wafted seed would grow
-or a tuft of gilly-flower protrude about which to
-clasp her fingers. But Rachel Pringle came as
-lightly and easily as if she had been ascending
-the steps of her father's ha'.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Go back,' she whispered, 'go back, dear
-love! They may see you. I am coming—I know
-the way!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with that I stepped back out of the
-moonlight, obedient to her word. Yet I stood near
-enough to the wall of the cliff to reach my arm
-over for her to take, so that she might have
-something to hold by during the last and most difficult
-steps of the goats' path, the roaring linn being
-above, the pool deep and black below.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, either by chance or because it was the
-one which could reach farthest, I tendered Rachel
-my wounded arm, and as soon as she clasped my
-hand so rude a stound ran up my wrist that it
-seemed as though I had been pierced through and
-through with a hot iron. So when at last Rachel
-leaped lightly upon the wet rock, I was ready to
-droop like a blown windlestrae in a December gale
-into her arms—yes, I, that was the strong man,
-called Strength-o'-Airm, laid my head on her
-shoulder, and she drew me within the shelter of
-the cave's mouth, crooning over me as wood doves
-do to their mates, and whispering soft words to
-me as a mother doth to a bairn that hath fallen
-down and hurt itself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But in a little the stound of pain passed away,
-what with the happiness of her coming, the plash
-of the nearer waters, and the coolness of the night
-winds which blew to and fro in our refuge place
-as through a tunnel.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then Rachel told me that she had run from
-the house while they were all searching for me
-everywhere. Roaring Raif and his brother Peter,
-together with Gib Maxwell of Slagnaw, Paul
-Riddick of the Glen, and Black-Browed Macclellane
-of Gregorie, Will of Overlaw, and Lancelot
-Lindesay, the tutor of Rascarrel—as bloodthirsty
-a crew as ever raked the brimstony by-roads
-of hell.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Very well I knew that if they lighted on us
-together there was no hope for me. But Rachel
-allayed my fear a little by telling me that she
-did not believe that any in the house knew of
-the cave beneath the tumble of rocks save only
-herself. It had long been her custom to seek it
-for quiet, when the Roaring One brought his crew
-about the house of Kirkchrist, and none had ever
-tracked her thither.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So she examined my wound in the light of the
-moon, which shone in at one end as we sat on the
-inmost crutch of the tree. Now Rachel had much
-skill in wounds, for, indeed, her house was never
-free of them, her brothers, Peter and the Roaring
-One, never both being skin-whole at the same time.
-And so, with a handsbreadth torn from her white
-underskirt, she bathed and bandaged the wound,
-telling me for my comfort that the shot appeared
-to have gone through the fleshy part without
-lodging, so that most likely the wound would come
-together sweetly and heal by the first intention.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then, after this was done, we arrived at our
-first difference. For Rachel vowed that she would
-in no wise go back to the onstead of Kirkchrist,
-but would stop and nurse me here in the linn;
-which thing, indeed, would have been mightily
-pleasant to the natural man. But, being mindful
-of that which the Little Fair Man had said, and
-also of the censorious clatter of the countryside,
-I judged this to be impossible, and told Rachel
-so; who, in her turn, received it by no means
-with meekness, but rose and stamped her little
-foot, and said that she would go and never
-return—that she was sorry to her heart she had ever
-come where she was so little thought of, with
-many other speeches of that kind, such as spirity
-maids use when they are affronted and in danger
-of not getting their own sweet way with the
-men of their hearts.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now it went sore against the grain thus to deal
-with Rachel. And yet I could think of no way
-of appeasing her, but to feign a dwalm of faintness
-and pain from my wound. So when I staggered
-and appeared to hold myself up by the rock
-with difficulty, she stayed in the full flood of her
-reproaches, and faltered, 'What is the matter,
-Harry?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then, because I made no answer, she kneeled
-down beside me, and, taking my head in both of
-her hands, she kissed my brow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I did not mean it—indeed, I did not, Harry,'
-she said, with that delicious contrition which at
-all times sat so well on her—even after we were
-married, which is a strange thing and very uncommon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I touched her cheek with my fingers and
-forgave her, as a man who has been in the wrong
-forgives a loving woman who has not. (There is
-ever a touch of superiority in a man's forgiving—in
-a woman's there is only love and the desire
-for peace).</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Then I may stay with you?' she said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I will not deny but she tempted me sore.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But swift as the sunbeam that strikes from
-cloud to hilltop, a thought came to me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Listen to me, Rachel,' I said. 'At the break
-of day or thereby all will be quiet. The Roaring
-One and his crew will be snoring in bed——'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Or on the floor,' said Rachel, with a quick
-and dainty sniff of distaste.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Either will suffice,' I said. 'Then will we go
-down and call up the minister. We will cause
-him to marry us, and then we will fear neither
-traitor nor slanderer.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'But he will not!' she cried. 'Donald Bain is
-a bishop's hireling, and, besides, our Raif's boon
-companion.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I drew my dirk and held it aloft, so that
-the moonlight ran like molten silver down the
-blade.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'See,' said I, 'dear Rachel, if this does not gar
-the curate of Kirkchrist marry us to a galloping
-tune, Harry Wedderburn kens not the breed, that
-is all.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Content!' said she. 'I will do what you say,
-Harry; only I will not go back to Kirkchrist nor
-will I part from you now when I have gotten you.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Which thing I was most glad to hear from her
-fair and loving lips. And I thought, smilingly,
-that Rachel's manner of speaking these words
-became her very well.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So there in the din of the water-cavern and
-under the wheeling shafts of silver light as the
-moon swung overhead, we two abode well content,
-waiting for the dawn.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And so, in this manner, and for all my brave
-words, the witch got her way."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><em class="italics">But how—we shall see.</em></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-curate-of-kirkchrist"><span class="bold large">THE LITTLE FAIR MAN</span></p>
-<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">III.—THE CURATE OF KIRKCHRIST</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"The manse of Kirkchrist parish was less than a
-mile down the glen. It had only a week or two
-before been taken possession of by one Donald
-Bain, an ignorant fellow, so they said, intruded
-upon us by the new bishop. For Mr. Gilbert, our
-old and tried minister and servant of God, had
-been removed, even as Mr. Rutherfurd had been
-put out of Anwoth, and at about the same time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Thither, then, we took our way, my dear
-betrothed and I, with my wounded arm carried
-across me, the sleeve being pinned to my coat front
-so that I could not move my hand.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"We kept entirely to the thickets by the waterside,
-Rachel leading the way. For she had played
-all her life at the game which had now become
-earnest and deadly. But we need not have
-troubled. For as we went, from far away, light as
-a waft of wind blown athwart a meadow, we heard
-the chorus of the roisterers in the house of
-Kirkchrist, and emergent from the servile ruck, the
-voice of her brother, the Roaring One, urging
-good fellows all to 'come drink with him.' Somewhat
-superfluously, indeed, to all appearance, for
-the good fellows all had apparently been 'come-drink-ing'
-all night to the best of their ability and
-opportunities.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"After this Rae and I went a little more openly
-and swiftly. This chiefly for my sake, because
-the uneven ground and the little branches of the
-hazel bushes caught and whipped my wounded
-arm, making me more than once to wince with
-the pain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And Rachel kept a little beneath me on the
-brae, and bade me lean my well hand on her
-shoulder, saying that I could not press over-hard,
-and that the more I did so, the more would she
-know that I loved her. In this not unpleasing
-fashion we came to the house of the curate that
-had so lately been intruded upon the manse of
-godly Mr. Gilbert.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The place was all dark, and the shutters put
-over the windows for fear of shots from without.
-Then with my sword hilt I began to knock, and the
-noise of the blows resounded through the house
-hollow and loud. For the Highlandman had as
-yet put little furniture into it, save as they said a
-sheave or two of rushes for a bed for himself, and
-another for the wench that keeped house to
-him—his sister, as he averred.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"In no long space of time his reverence set a
-shock head out of the window to ask what was
-the din. The which he did in a bold manner, as
-though he were the lord and master of the
-neighbourhood. But I tamed him, for I bade him do his
-curate's coat upon him, and bring his service book,
-for that he was to marry two people there and then.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Who be you that seek to be married so
-untimeous?' he asked. 'Cannot ye be content
-till the morning?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'That is just why we cannot be content,' I
-answered; 'we must be far away by then!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So in a little he rose up grumbling and came down.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Have you not also a maid in the house?' I
-asked of him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Aye,' said he, very dried like, 'my sister Jean!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Bid her rise. We have need of a witness!'
-I bade him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'And I, of someone to hold the candle!' he added.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It was about four of the clock, and the east
-little more than greying, as we four stood in
-front of the manse of Kirkchrist. Had any
-been abroad to see us we had seemed a curious
-company. The curate in his white gown and
-black bands, his shambling nightgear peeping out
-above and under—a red peaked nightcap on his
-head, the tassel of which nodded continually over
-his right eye in a most ludicrous manner (only
-that none thought of mirth that night). Beside
-him, a dripping candle in her hand, stood his
-sister, a buxom quean, blowsed with health and
-ruddy as the cherry.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Before these two I stood, 'a black towering
-hulk with one arm in a sling' (Rachel's words),
-and beside me, my sweet bride, dainty and light
-as a butterfly at poise on a flower's lip.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Overhead among the trees the wind began to
-move, blowing thin and chill before the dawn.
-And even as the curate thumbed and mumbled
-beneath the flicker of the candle, I saw the light
-break behind the Black Craig of Dee, and wondered
-if ever Rae and I should dwell in peace and content
-in the lee of it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And because neither Rachel nor I knew that
-form of words, Jean Bain kept us right, prompting
-us how to kneel here, and what to answer there,
-here to say our names over, and there promise
-to love each other—the last not necessary, for if
-we had not done that already, we had hardly
-been at the manse of Kirkchrist at four of the
-August morning in order to be wed by an alien
-and uncovenanted priest.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But scarcely had the blessing of Donald Bain
-made us man and wife, when we heard the
-roysterers' chorus again abroad on the hills, and
-Jean Bain came rushing upon us wild with alarm.
-She guessed well enough who we were. For the
-searchers had been at the manse the night before
-swearing to have my life.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Flee,' she said; 'take to the heather for your
-lives. They have sworn to kill your husband!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This I knew well enough; but the perversity
-of fate which at that time clung to me, made
-me ready to faint.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I cannot go—I am dizzy with my wound!' I
-said, and would have fallen but that Rachel and the
-young Highland woman held me up in their arms.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"All this time the shouting and hallooing like
-the crying of hunters on the hills came nearer,
-and the day was breaking fast.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Rachel and I were, indeed, in a strait place.
-I bethought me on the Little Fair Man, and
-almost repented that his counsels had brought me
-to this. But even then, and in the house of the
-Philistine, help came.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Come in with you both,' said Jean Bain in
-a fierce voice, as if daring contradiction. 'Donald,
-aff wi' your surplice and on wi' your coat. You
-must meet them, and hold them in parley. It
-shall not be said that a bridegroom was slaughtered
-like an ox upon our doorstep within an hour of his
-wedding.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"With that she bustled us upstairs to her own
-room. Truly enough, there was but one broad
-pallet of heather covered with rushes spread on
-the floor, and no other furniture whatever.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Near the bed-head there was the low door of a
-little closet or deep cupboard. Into this she
-bade us enter, and told us that she would hang
-her clothing over it upon the wooden pegs which
-were there for the purpose. Since no better
-might be we entered, for my head was running
-round with my loss of blood and the pain in my
-wounded arm. I was glad to lie down anywhere.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then through the buzzing bees' byke in my
-skull I could hear Jean Bain giving her last orders
-to the curate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Hear ye, Donald, lee to them weel. Ye hae
-seen nocht—ken nocht; and if they offer to bide,
-tell them that it is the hour when ye engage
-in family worship. That will flit them if nocht
-else will!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And though I could hear the raucous voice of
-that gomeril brother-in-law of mine at the bottom
-of the stairs, I could not help laying my head
-on Rachel's shoulder, and whispering in her ear
-the words, 'Little wife!' To which she
-responded with no more than 'Hush!' So there we
-abode, crouching and cowering in that dark
-cupboard while a score of raging demons turned
-the curate's house upside down, crying for jugs
-of brandy and tasses of aquavity, while Jean Bain
-shrilly declared that no brandy could they expect
-in such a poverty-stricken land, but good
-home-brewed ale—and even that they should not have
-unless they behaved themselves more seemly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But ever as I lay the darkness seemed to stretch
-far above me, the walls to mount and then
-swiftly come together again; now I was upheaved
-on delicious billows of caller air, and anon
-I fell earthward again through the illimitable vault
-of heaven. Yet every now and then I would awake
-for a moment to find my head on a sweeter than
-Abraham's bosom, and so fall to contemning
-my folly. But ere I had time to realise my
-happiness I was off again ranging the universe,
-or at converse with hundreds and hundreds of
-mocking spirits that mopped and mowed about
-my path. For I was just falling into a fever,
-and my dear lass had to put her skirt about my
-mouth to keep the man-hunters from hearing me
-moan and struggle in my phantasy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"By nine of the clock they had drunken all
-that was in the curate's house, and poor Donald
-Bain had gone to convoy them on their way.
-They were going (so they swore) to the Black
-Craig o' Dee to rout me out of my den. And
-this made Rachel very sore afraid, for she knew
-well that if we were to go back to the damp
-cave in the linn I would never rise from my bed
-alive. And now, as she thought, the way was
-shut to our only port of refuge. Also she feared
-for John, my brother—not being acquaint with
-John, and conceiving tnat they might do him a
-mischief, together with the innocent plough lads
-and herds in the house. But this need not have
-troubled her, for indeed no one about the Black
-Craig o' Dee desired anything better than that
-Roaring Raif and his crew should come near at
-hand to receive the welcome prepared for him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But in the very hour of the storm-breaking there
-appeared a bieldy dyke-back to shelter two poor
-lost wandering lambs. For no sooner was Donald
-Bain out of the house with all the ungodly crew
-than Jean, his sister, flew upstairs to us, with her
-gown all pulled awry as she had escaped from
-the hands of the roysterers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Come your ways out, you puir young things,'
-she cried; 'they are gane, and the foul fiend ride
-ahint them. May they never come this road
-again, that kenned neither how to behave
-themselves seemly in a manse nor how to conduct
-them before a decent lass. Faith, they little
-jalloused how near they were to gettin' a durk
-between the ribs!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But by the time Rachel and Jean Bain got me
-out of that darksome closet I was fairly beside
-myself. The fever ran high, and I raved about
-rivers of waters and the sound of great floods, and
-threeped with them that I saw the Little Fair Man
-coming on the wings of seraphims and cherubims
-and lifting me up out of the mire.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And as soon as Jean Bain heard the yammer
-and yatter of my foolish running on, she went
-to the closet for some simple herbs, and put
-them in a pot over the fire to steam. Then she
-bade Rachel help me down to the minister's
-chamber, and between them they undressed me,
-cutting the sleeve from my coat so as to save the
-poor wounded arm. They got me finally between
-the blankets, and made me drink of this herb-tea
-and that, willy-nilly. For which, as I heard
-afterwards, I called them 'witch-wives,' 'black crows
-of a foul nest,' with many other names. But Jean
-Bain held me by the arm that was whole, while
-Rachel fleeched with me through her streaming
-tears; and so in time they gat me to take down
-the naughty-tasting brew. Nevertheless, in a little
-it soothed me as a mother's lullaby doth a fractious
-wean, and in time I fell on a refreshing sleep.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yet Rachel would not be comforted, but mourned
-for me greatly, till Jean Bain told her of the yet
-sorer case in which she and Donald had but lately
-been. To which my lass rejoined, proud of her
-exceedingly recent wifehood! 'Ah, but he is your
-brother—not your man! I would not care what
-became of Raif, not if they hanged him on the
-Gallows hill, and the craws pyked his banes!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"For she was angry with her brother.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then all suddenly Jean Bain set her head
-between her hands, and began to greet as if her
-poor heart were near the breaking.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'He </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> my man—he </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> my man!' she cried.
-"And I wish we were back again in bonny Banff,
-him a herd-laddie an' me a herd-lassie, and that
-we could hear again the waves break amang the
-rocks at Tarlair!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Wedded—aye, that are we, firm and staunch,—but
-Donald daurna let on, or Bishop Sydserf
-wad turn him awa'. He will hae nae wedded
-priests amang them that he sets ower his parochins.
-But, as he says, men kinless and cumberless that
-are neither feared to stand and fight or mount
-and ride. It came aboot this gate. When Donald
-was comin' awa' to get his lear, I was fair
-broken-hearted. For we had herded lang thegether on
-the gowden braes, and lain mony a simmer day
-amang the broom wi' our een on the sheep, but
-our hearts verra close the yin to the ither. The
-bishop was o' our clan and country-side, and he
-made Donald graund offers—siccan fat parishes
-as there were in the Lawlands—stipend—house
-and gear—guid faith, he dazzled a' the weel-doin'
-laddies there-aboot. And Donald gied his word
-to be a curate, for he was weel-learned, and had
-been to the schule as mony as four winters, me
-gangin wi' him, and carryin' his books when I
-could win clear o' my mither.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'So since I couldna bide frae him, Donald
-brocht me here to this cauld, ill, ootland place,
-where we bide amang fremit and unco folk that
-hate us. But we were married first and foremost
-by the minister o' Deer, that was a third cousin o'
-Donald's aunt's—and a solid man that can keep
-his tongue safe and siccar ahint his teeth.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'But oh—this place that we thocht to be a
-garden o' a delichts and an orchard o' gowden
-fruit is hard and unkindly and bare. The gear
-and plenishin' of this manse are nocht but the
-heather beds that our ain fingers pu', and the
-blankets we brocht wi' us. And for meat we hae
-the fish o' the stream an' the birds that Donald
-whiles shoots wi' his gun—paitricks and wild
-ducks on the ponds. For no a penny's worth o'
-steepend will they pay. And the bishop's
-warrandice runs nae farther than the range o' the
-guns o' his bodyguard.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, after this explanation, the two women
-mourned together as they tended me, and presently
-the poor curate, Donald Bain, came back to find
-them thus, and me raving at large, and trying to
-tear off the bandages from my arm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So here in this house, ill-furnished and cheerless,
-this kindly couple kept us safely hid till the blast
-had overblown and the bitterest of the shower
-slacked. Five weeks we abode there before I
-could be moved, and even then I was still as weak
-as water. But for the last fortnight we lived in more
-comfort. For the curate went over on a sheltie
-which, as he said, he 'had fand in a field,' to the
-Black Craig of Dee, and there held a long parley
-with my brother in the gate, while John had all his
-work to keep Gib Grier and his herd-laddies from
-shooting the curate for a black hoodie craw o'
-Prelacy, as they named him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And John came back with his visitor to the
-manse of Kirkchrist on a beast with store of
-provend upon it, together with good French wines
-and other comforts, for the upbuilding of the sick.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I declare I will never speak against a curate
-again,' said John, when he heard that which we
-had to tell him. And he kissed his new sister
-Rachel with great and gracious goodwill, for John
-was ever fond of a bonnie lass. Besides, we had
-had no woman body about the Black Craig ever
-since our mother died, when we were but wild
-laddies herding the craws off the corn in the long
-summer days, and hiding lest we should be made
-to go with the funeral that wimpled over the moor
-to the Kirkyaird of Kells.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Likewise also he saluted Jean Bain, or she
-him—I am not sure which. For Jean was in no wise
-backward in affection, but of a liberal, willing,
-softish nature; fond of a talk with a lad over a
-'yett,' and fond, too, of a kiss at parting. Which
-last she gave to John with hearty goodwill, and
-that, too, in the presence of the curate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And as we went slowly back over the heather,
-John walked on one side of the horse which carried
-me, and Rachel rode on the sheltie on the other.
-John was silent for a long while, and then he all
-at once said: 'Dod, but I think I could fancy
-that Heelant lass mysel'!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So Rachel began to tell him how it was with
-Donald Bain the curate and Jean his wife. For
-with a woman's love for a fair field and no favour
-in matters of love, she did not wish John to spend
-himself on that which could never be his. Then
-was John very doleful for a space.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But in time he, too, changed his mind, and
-was most kind to poor Donald Bain and his wife
-when in the year 1638 he was outed from his
-parish in the same month that Sydserf, his master,
-was set aside by the parliament and the people
-of Scotland. Then great evil might have befallen
-him but that, being long fully recovered from my
-wound, Gib Grier and I set out for the manse
-of Kirkchrist, and brought them both, Donald and
-Jean, to the Black Craig of Dee, where in the
-midst of our great moors and black moss-hags
-they were safe even as I had been in their house.
-And in our spare chamber, too, was born to them
-a babe, a thing which, had it been kenned, would
-have caused great scandal all over the land for
-the wickedness of the curates. But none knew
-(save John and Gib, who were sworn to secrecy)
-till we gat them convoyed away to the north
-again, where they did very well, and Donald
-became chaplain to my Lord of Sutherland.
-And every year for long and long the Edinburgh
-carrier brought us a couple of haunches of venison
-well smoked, which served us till Yule or Pasch,
-and very toothsome and sweet it was. This was
-a memorial from Donald Bain and Jean his wife.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Douce and sober we lived, Rachel and I, we
-who had been so strangely joined. For the Slee
-Tod of Kirkchrist was glad enough to have his
-daughter wed to one who asked neither dower
-nor wedding-gift, tocher nor house linen; and
-as for Roaring Raif, he broke his neck-bone over
-the linn coming home one night from the rood-fair
-of Dumfries. But I kept my mind steadfastly
-set to make my new life atone for the faults of
-the old—which may be bad theology, but is good
-sound fact. And Rachel, like a valiant housewife,
-aided me in that as in all things. So that I became
-in time a man of mark, and was chosen an elder
-by the Session of the parish. But nevertheless the
-old Adam was not dead within me, but only kept
-close behind bars waiting to be quits with me. For
-as the years went by I was greatly taken up with
-my own righteousness, and so in excellent case
-to backslide.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now it chanced that, being one day in the
-change house of the clachan, I heard one speak
-lightly of our daughter Anne, that was now of
-marriageable age, and of a most innocent and
-merry heart. So anger took hold of me, and,
-unmindful of my great strength, I dealt the young
-man such a buffet on the side of his head that
-he was carried out for dead, and indeed lay long
-at his father's house between life and death.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now this was a mighty sorrow to me and to
-Rachel my wife. And though little was said
-because of the provocation I had (which all had
-heard), I thought it my duty to resign my office
-of the eldership, confessing my hastiness and sin
-to my brethren, and offering public contrition.
-But for all that I gat no ease, but was under
-a great cloud of doubt, feeling myself once again
-without God and without hope in the world.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then it came to me that if I could but see
-the Little Fair Man again he would tell me what
-I should do. I knew that he had been of a long
-season regent of a college in the town of Sanct
-Anders. So I gave myself no rest day nor night
-till my good wife, after vainly trying to settle me
-by her loving words, made all preparation of
-provend in saddle-bags, and guineas in pouch, and
-set me on a good beast at the louping-on stone
-by our door. It was the first year of the restored
-King Charles, the Second of that name, and the
-darkness was just thickening upon the land, a
-darkness greater than the first, when I set out to
-see Mr. Rutherfurd.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"For the early part of my travel all went well,
-but when I was passing through the town of
-Hamilton, certain soldiers set upon me, asking
-for my pass, and calling me 'Westland Whig' and
-'canting rebel.' They would have taken from me
-all that I had, having already turned my
-saddle-bags outside in, and one of them even came near
-to thrust his hand into my pocket, when a coach
-drove up with six horses and outriders mired to
-the shoulders. Then a pair of grand servants
-sprang down from behind, and cried: 'Room for
-my Lord Bishop!' And at this the soldiers
-desisted from plundering me to do their obeisance.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then there came forth first a rosy buxom
-woman, breathing heavily, and holding out a
-plump hand to the man-servant.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But when she saw me with a soldier at either
-side, she took one long look, and then cried out
-in a hearty voice: 'What's this—what's this—my
-friend Harry Wedderburn in the gled's claws?
-Let be, scullions! Donald, here's our host frae
-the Black Craig o' Dee!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And forthwith, the soldiers falling back abashed,
-the bishop's lady, she that had been poor Jean
-Bain, came at me in her old reckless way, and
-flung her arms about my neck, kissing me soundly
-and heartily—as I had not been kissed of a long
-season by any save Rachel, me being no more
-a young man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And the bishop was no other than Donald
-himself, the same who had been curate of
-Kirkchrist—and a right reverend prelate he looked.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then nothing would do Jean and Donald but
-I must get into the carriage with them, and have
-one of their men-servants ride my beast into
-Edinburgh. Neither excuse nor nay-say would
-my lady bishop take. So in this manner we
-travelled very comfortably, I sitting beside her,
-and at Edinburgh we parted, I to Sanct Anders,
-they to a lodging near my Lord of Sutherland's
-house, to whose influence with the king they owed
-their advancement. For they were hand and glove
-with him. And the morning I was to ride away
-came their carriage to the door, and lo! my lady
-again—this time with a safe-conduct and letter of
-certification from the Privy Council setting forth
-that I was a person notably well-affected and
-staunch; that none were to hinder or molest me
-or mine in body or estate under penalty of the
-King's displeasure. Which thing in the troublous
-times to come more than once or twice stood
-me in great stead.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But when I came to Sanct Anders, the first
-thing I heard was that Mr. Rutherfurd lay a-dying
-in his college of St. Mary's. I betook me thither,
-and lo! a guard of soldiers was about the doors,
-and would in no wise permit me pass. They were
-burning a pile of books, and I heard say that it
-was done by order of the parliament, and that
-thereafter Mr. Rutherfurd was to be carried out,
-alive or dead, and his bed set in the open street.
-</span><em class="italics">Lex Rex</em><span> was the name of the book I saw them
-turning this way and that with sticks, so as to
-make the leaves burn faster. I know not why
-it was so dour to catch, for out of curiosity I got
-me a copy afterwards, and the Lord knows it was
-dry enough—at least to my taste.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But after a while, showing the officer my Privy
-Council letter, I prevailed on him that I had a
-mandate from government to see Mr. Rutherfurd,
-and that I had come directly and of purpose from
-Edinburgh to oversee the affair, and report on
-those who were diligent. So at long and last
-they let me go up the stair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And at the top I found many doors closed, but
-one open, and the sound of a voice I knew well
-speaking within.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And still it was telling the praises of the
-Friend—yes, after a lifetime of struggle and suffering.
-Nor do I think that, save for taking rest in sleep,
-the voice had ever been silent on that theme.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So though none knew me, I passed straight
-through the little company to the deathbed of
-the man who spoke. He was the Little Fair Man
-no longer. But his scant white hair lay soft as
-silk on the pillow. His face was pale as ivory,
-his cheeks fallen in, only his eyes glowed like live
-coals deep-sunken in his head.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'So, friend—you have come to see an old man
-die,' he said, when his eyes lighted on me; 'what,
-a bairn of mine, sayst thou—not after the flesh
-but after the spirit. Aye, I do mind that day at
-Kells. A gale from the Lord blew about us that
-day. So you are Harry of the Rude Hand, and
-you have fallen into sin. Ah, you must not come
-to me—you must to the Master! You had
-better have gone to your closet, and worn the
-whinstone a little with the knees of your breeks.
-And yet I ken not. None hath been a greater
-sinner or known greater mercy than Samuel
-Rutherfurd. I am summoned by the Star
-Chamber—I go to the chamber of Stars. I will
-see the King. I will carry Him your message,
-Harry. Fear not, the young man you smote will
-recover. He will yet bless you for laying a hand
-on him, even as this day you acknowledge the
-unworthy servant who on the green sward of Kells
-called you out of darkness into His marvellous light.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Sir, fare you well. Go home to your wife,
-nothing doubting. This night shall close the door.
-At five of the morning I will fasten my anchor
-within the veil.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And even as he said so it was. He passed
-away, and, as for me, secure that he would carry my
-message to the Alone Forgiver of Sins I returned
-home to find the youth recovered and penitent. He
-afterwards became a noted professor and field
-preacher, and died sealing his testimony with
-his blood on the victorious field of Loudon Hill.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This is the testimony of me, Harry Wedderburn,
-sometime called Strength-o'-Airm, who now in
-the valley of peace and a restored Israel wait
-the consummation of all things. Being very
-lonely, I write these things out to pass the time
-till I, too, cast mine anchor within the veil. And I
-cheer myself with thinking that two shall meet me
-there, one on either side of the gate—Rachel, my
-heart's dear partner, and the Little Fair Man,
-who will take by either hand and lead into the
-presence of the Friend, poor unworthy Harry
-Wedderburn, sometime bond-slave of sin, but now
-servant most unprofitable of the Lord."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>(Note by Mr. John Wedderburn.—"</span><em class="italics">My father
-departed this life on the morning after finishing this
-paper, sleeping quietly away about five of the clock.</em><span>")</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="my-father-s-love-story"><span class="bold large">MY FATHER'S LOVE STORY</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>When I am putting together family stories, new
-and old, I may as well tell my father's. Sometimes
-we of a younger day thought him stiff, silent, out
-of sympathy with our interests and amusements;
-but the saving salt of humour that was in him
-made this only seeming. In reality tolerance and
-kindliest understanding beaconed from under the
-covert of his bushy grey eyebrows.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was the savour of an infinite discernment
-in the slow "Aye?" with which he was wont to
-receive any doubtful statement. My mother said
-ever ten words for his one, and it was his wont
-to listen to her gravely and unsmilingly, as if
-giving the subject the profoundest attention, while
-all the time his thoughts were far away—a fact
-well understood and much resented by his wife.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What am I talkin' aboot, Saunders?" she
-would say, pausing in the midst of a commination
-upon some new and garish fashion in dress, or
-the late hours kept by certain young men not a
-thousand miles away.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, breaking the second commandment, as
-usual," he would reply; "discoursing of the
-heavens above, the earth beneath, and the waters
-under the earth!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Havers," she would reply, her face, however,
-glancing at him bright as a new-milled shilling,
-"your thochts were awa' on the mountains o'
-vainity! Naething richt waukens ye up but a
-minister to argue wi'!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And, indeed, that was a true word. For though
-an unusually silent man, my father, Alexander (or
-Saunders) McQuhirr, liked nothing better than a
-minister to argue with—if one of the Kirk of
-Scotland, well and good. There was the Revolution
-Settlement, the Headship of Christ, the Power of
-the Civil Magistrate. My father enjoyed himself
-thoroughly, and if the minister chanced to be
-worthy, so did he. But it took a Cameronian or an
-Original Secession divine really to rouse within him,
-what my mother called "his bowels of wrath."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There is a distinct Brownist strain in your
-opinions, Alexander," Mr. Osbourne would
-say—his own minister from the Kirk on the Hill.
-"Your father's name was not Abel for nothing!"[#]</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">[#] "Abel," "Jacob," "Abraham" were not common names
-in Scotland, and such as occurred in families during last
-century might generally be traced to the time of Cromwellian
-occupation. David and Samuel were the only really
-common Old Testament names at that time.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Mr. Osbourne generally reminded him of this
-when he had got the worse of some argument on
-the true inwardness of the Marrow Controversy.
-He did not like to be beaten, and my father was
-a dour arguer. Once it is recorded that the
-minister brought all the way up to Drumquhat
-on a Communion Friday—the "off-day" as it were
-of the Scottish Holy Week—the great Dr. Marcus
-Lawton himself from Edinburgh. It happened
-to be a wettish day in the lull between hay and
-harvest. My father was doing something in the
-outhouse where he kept his joinering tools, and
-the two ministers joined him there early in the
-forenoon. They were well into "Freewill" before
-my father was at the end of the board he had been
-planing. "Predestination" was the overword of
-their conversation at the noonday meal, which all
-three seemed to partake of as dispassionately as if
-they had been stoking a fire—this to the great
-indignation of my mother, who having been warned
-of the proposed honour, had given herself even more
-completely to hospitality than was habitual with her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Osbourne, indeed, made a pretext of talking
-to her about the price of butter, and how her
-hens were laying. But she saw through him
-even as he spoke.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For, as she said afterwards, describing the scene,
-"I saw his lug cockit for what the ither twa were
-saying, and if it hadna been for the restrainin'
-grace o' God, I declare I wad hae telled him
-that butter was a guinea a pound in Dumfries
-market, and that my hens were laying a score
-o' eggs apiece every day—he never wad hae
-kenned that I was tellin' him a lee!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All day the great controversy went on. Even
-now I can remember the echoes of it coming to
-me through the wet green leaves of the mallows
-my mother had planted along the south-looking
-wall. To this day I can hear the drip of the
-water from the slates mingling with such phrases
-as "the divine sovereignty," the "Covenant of
-Works," "the Adamic dispensation." I see the
-purple of the flowers and smell the sweet smell
-of the pine shavings. They seemed to my childish
-mind like three Titans hurling the longest words
-in the dictionary at each other. I know nothing
-wherewith to express the effect upon my mind of
-this day-long conflict save that great line in the
-fifth book of </span><em class="italics">Paradise Lost</em><span>:</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<div>
-<div class="line-block outermost">
-<div class="line"><span>"Thrones, dominations, princedoms, vertues, powers!"</span></div>
-<div class="line"> </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was years after when first I read it, but
-instantly I thought of that wet summer day in
-Lammastide, when my father wrestled with his
-peers concerning the deep things of eternity, and
-was not overcome.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My mother has often told me that he never slept
-all that night—how waking in the dawn and
-finding his place vacant, she had hastily thrown
-on a gown and gone out to look for him. He
-was walking up and down in the little orchard
-behind the barn, his hands clasped behind his
-back. And all he said in answer to her reproaches
-was: "It's vexin', Mary, to think that I only
-minded that text in Ephesians about being 'sealed
-unto the day of redemption' after he was ower
-the hill. It wad hae ta'en the feet clean frae
-him if I had gotten hand o' it in time."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What can ye do wi' a man like that?"
-she would conclude, summing up her husband's
-character, mostly in his hearing.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But remember, Mary, the pit from which I
-was digged!" he would reply, reaching down the
-worn old leather-bound copy of Boston's </span><em class="italics">Fourfold
-State</em><span> out of the wall-press and settling himself
-to re-peruse a favourite chapter.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>My father's father, Yabel McQuhirr, was a
-fierce hard man, and seldom showed his heart,
-ruling his house with a rod of iron, setting each
-in his place, wife, child, man-servant and
-maid-servant, ox and ass—aye, and the stranger within
-his gates.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My father does not talk of these things, but
-my mother has often told me of that strange
-household up among the granite hills, to which,
-as a maid of nineteen, she went to serve. In
-those days in all the Galloway farm-towns, master
-and servant sat down together to meals. The
-head of the house was lawgiver and potentate,
-priest and parent to all beneath his roof. And
-if Yabel McQuhirr of Ardmannoch did not
-exercise the right of pit and gallows, it was about
-all the authority he did not claim over his own.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yabel had a family of strong sons, silent,
-dour—the doctrine of unquestioning obedience driven into
-them by their father's right arm and oaken staff.
-But their love was for their mother, who drifted
-through the house with a foot light as a falling
-leaf, and a voice attuned to the murmuring of a hill
-stream. There was no daughter in the household,
-and Mary McArthur had come partly to supply
-the want. She had brought a sore little heart
-with her, all because of a certain ship that had
-gone over the sea, and the glint of a sailor lad's
-merry blue eyes she would see no more.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She had therefore no mind for love-making, and
-Thomas and Abel, the two eldest sons, got very
-short answers for their pains when they "tried their
-hand" on their mother's new house-lass. Tom,
-the eldest, took it well enough, and went
-elsewhere; but Abel was a bully by nature, and would
-not let the girl alone. Once he kissed her by
-force as, hand-tied, she carried in the peats from
-the stack. Whereupon Alexander, the silent third
-brother, found out the reason of Mary's red eyes,
-and interviewed his brother behind the barn to
-such purpose that his face bore the marks of
-fraternal knuckles for a week. Also Alexander
-had his lip split.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ye hae been fechtin' again, ye blakes,"
-thundered their father. "Mind ye, if this happens
-again I will break every bane in your bodies. I
-will have you know that I am a man of peace!
-How did you get that black eye, Yabel?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I trippit ower the shaft o' a cairt!" said Abel,
-lying glibly in fear of consequences.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And you, Alexander—where gat ye that lip?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I ran against something!" said the defender
-of innocence, succinctly. And stuck to it
-stubbornly, refusing all amplification.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," said their father, grimly, "take considerably
-more heed to your going, both of ye, or you
-may run against something more serious still!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he whistled on his dogs, and went up
-the dyke-side towards the hill.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>After this, Alexander always carried in the
-peats for Mary McArthur, and, in spite of the
-taunts and gibes of his brothers, did such part
-of her work as lay outside the house. On winter
-nights and mornings he lighted the stable lantern
-for her before she went to milk the kye, and
-then when she was come to the byre he took his
-mother's stool and pail and milked beside her
-cow for cow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All these things he did without speaking a word
-of love, or, indeed, saying a word of anything
-beyond the commonplaces of a country life. He
-never told her whether or no he had heard about
-the sailor lad who had gone over seas.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Indeed, he never referred to the subject throughout
-a long lifetime. All the same, I think he
-must have suspected, and with natural gentleness
-and courtesy set himself to ease the girl's
-heart-sore burden.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Sometimes Mary would raise her eyes and catch
-him looking at her—that was all. And more often
-she was conscious of his grave staid regard when
-she did not look up. At first it fretted her a
-little. For, of course, she could never love
-again—never believe any man's word. Life was ended
-for her—ended at nineteen! So at least Mary
-McArthur told herself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But all the same, there—a pillar for support,
-a buckler for defence, was Alexander McQuhirr,
-strong, undemonstrative, dependable. One day
-she had cut her finger, and he was rolling it up
-for her daintily as a woman. They were alone in
-the shearing field together. Alexander had the
-lint and the thread in his pocket. So, indeed, he
-anticipated her wants silently all his life.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It had hurt a good deal, and before he had
-finished the tears stood brimming in her eyes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I think you must get tired of me. I bring all
-my cut fingers to you, Alec!" she said, looking
-up at him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He gave a kind of gasp, as if he were going
-to say something, as a single drop of salt water
-pearled itself and ran down Mary's cheek; but
-instead he only folded the lint more carefully in at
-the top, and went on rolling the thread round it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She is learnin' to love me!" he thought, with
-some pleasure, but he was too bashful and diffident
-to take advantage of her feeling. He contented
-himself with making her life easier and sweeter
-in that hard upland cantonment of more than
-military discipline, from whose rocky soil Yabel
-and his sons dragged the bare necessities of life,
-as it were, at the point of the bayonet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All the time he was thinking hard behind his
-broad forehead, this quiet Alexander McQuhirr.
-He was the third son. His father was a poor
-man. He had nothing to look for from him. In
-time Tom would succeed to the farm. It was
-clear, then, that if he was ever to be anything,
-he must strike out early for himself. And, as
-many a time before and since, it was the tears
-in the eyes of a girl that brought matters to the
-breaking point.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yes, just the wet eyes of a girl—that is, of
-Mary McArthur, as she looked up at him
-suddenly in the harvest-field among the serried lines
-of stocks, and said: "I bring all my cut fingers
-to you, Alec!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Something, he knew not exactly what, appealed
-to him so strongly in that word and look, that
-resolve came upon him sudden as lightning, and
-binding as an oath—the man's instinct to be all
-and to do all for the woman he loves.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He was unusually silent during the rest of the
-day, so that Mary McArthur, walking beside him
-down the loaning to bring home the cows, said:
-"You are no vexed wi' me for onything, Alec?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But it was the man's soul of Saunders McQuhirr
-which had come to him as a birthright—born out
-of a glance. He was a boy no longer. And that
-night, as his father Yabel stood looking over his
-scanty acres with a kind of grim satisfaction in
-the golden array of corn stooks, his son Alexander
-went quietly up to him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Father," he said, "next week I shall be
-one-and-twenty!" In times of stress they spoke the
-English of the schools and of the Bible.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His father turned a deep-set irascible eye upon
-him. The thick over-brooding brows lowered
-convulsively above him. A kind of illuminating
-flash like faint sheet lightning passed over the
-stern face. A week ago, nay, even twenty-four
-hours ago, Saunders McQuhirr would have trembled
-to have his father look at him thus. But—he had
-bound up a girl's finger since then, and seen her
-eyes wet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, what of that?" The words came fiercely
-from Yabel, with a rising anger in them, a kind
-of trumpet blare heralding the storm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am thinking of taking a herd's place at the
-term!" said Alexander, quietly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yabel lifted his great body off the dyke-top,
-on which he had been leaning with his elbows.
-He towered a good four inches above his son,
-though my father was always considered a tall man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You—you are going to take a herd's place—at
-the term—-you?" he said, slowly and incredulously.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," answered his son; "you will not need
-me. There is no outgate for me here, and I have
-my way to make in the world."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And what need have you of an outgate, sir?"
-cried his father. "Have I housed you and schooled
-you and reared you that, when at last you are of
-some use, you should leave your father and mother
-at a word, like a day-labourer on Saturday night?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A day-labourer on Saturday night gets his
-wages—I have not asked for any!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At this answer Yabel stood tempestuously
-wrathful for a moment, his hand and arm uplifted
-and twitching to strike. Then all suddenly his
-mood changed. It became scornfully ironic.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I see," he said, dropping his arm, "there's a
-lass behind this—that is the meaning of all the
-peat-carrying and byre-milking and handfasting in
-corners. Well, sirrah, I give you this one night.
-In the morning you shall pack. From this instant
-I forbid you to touch aught belonging to me, corn
-or fodder, horse or bestial. Ye shall tramp, lad,
-you and your madam with you. The day is not
-yet, thank the Lord, when Abel McQuhirr is not
-master in his own house!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But the son that had been a boy was now a
-man. He stood before his father, giving him back
-glance for glance. And an observer would have
-seen a great similarity between the two, the same
-attitude to a line, the massive head thrown back,
-the foot advanced, the deep-set eye, the
-compressed mouth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Very well, father!" said Alexander McQuhirr,
-and he went away, carrying his bonnet in his hand.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>And on the morning that followed the sleepless
-night of thinking and planning, Alexander
-McQuhirr went forth to face the world, his plaid
-about his shoulders, his staff in his hand, his
-mother's blessing upon his head—and, what was
-most of all to a young man, his sweetheart's kiss
-upon his lips:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For in this part of his mandate Yabel had
-reckoned without his host. His wife, long trained
-to keep silence for the sake of peace, had turned
-and openly defied him—nay, had won the victory.
-The "Man of Wrath" knew exactly how far it
-was wise to push the doctrine of unquestioning
-wifely obedience. Mary McArthur was to bide
-still where she was, till—well, till another home
-was ready for her. And though her eyes were
-red, and there was no one to tie up her cut
-fingers any more, there was a kind of pride upon
-her face too. And the image of the young
-sailor-man over seas utterly faded away.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At ten by the clock, Yabel McQuhirr, down
-in his harvest-field, saw his son set out. He
-gave no farewell. He waved no hand. He said
-no word. All the same, he smiled grimly to
-himself behind the obedient backs of Tom and
-Abel the younger.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There's the best stuff o' the lot in that fule
-laddie," he growled; "even so for a lass's sake
-left I my father's house!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And of all his children, this dour, hard-mouthed,
-gnarl-fisted man loved best the boy who for the
-sake of a lass had outcasted himself without fear
-and without hesitation.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was to a herd's house, shining white on a
-hillside, a burnie trilling below, the red heather
-surging about the garden dyke on all sides,
-that Alexander McQuhirr took his wife Mary,
-a year later. And there in the fulness of time
-my brother Willie was born—the child of the
-cot-house and of the kailyaird. In time followed
-other, if not better things—first a small
-holding, then a farm—then I, Alexander the second.
-And still, thank God, we, the children of Mary
-McArthur, run with our cut fingers to that
-steadfast, loving, silent man, Saunders McQuhirr,
-son of Yabel, the Man of Violence and Wrath.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-man-of-wrath"><span class="bold large">THE MAN OF WRATH</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>A man of wrath was my grandfather, Yabel
-McQuhirr, from his youth up. And I am now
-going to tell the story of how by a strange
-providence he was turned aside from the last sin
-of Judas, and how he became in his latter days
-a man of peace and a lover of young children.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He was my father's father, and I have already
-told how that son of his to whom I owe my life,
-went forth to make a new hearthstone warm and
-bright for the girl who was to be my mother. But
-after the departure of that third son, darker and
-darker descended the gloom upon the lonely
-uplying farm. Fiercer and ever fiercer fell the
-angers of Yabel McQuhirr upon his remaining
-children, Thomas and Abel—the latter named
-after his father, but whose Christian name never
-acquired the antique and preliminary "Y" that
-marks the border-line between the old and the new.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>One dismal Monday morning in the back-end
-of the year there were bitter words spoken in the
-barn at the threshing, between Thomas and his
-father. Retort followed retort, till, with knotted
-fist, the father savagely felled the youth to the
-ground. There was blood upon the clean yellow
-straw when he rose. Thomas went indoors, opened
-his little chest, took from it all the money he had,
-shook hands silently with his mother, and took
-his way over the Rig of Bennanbrack, never to
-be heard of more.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And after this ever closer and closer Yabel
-McQuhirr shut the door of his heart. He hardened
-himself under the weight of his wife's gentle
-sufferance and reproachful silences. He gripped his
-hands together when, with the corner of an eye
-that would not humble itself to look, he saw the
-tear trickling down the wasted cheek. He uttered
-no word of sorrow for the past, nor did the name
-of either of his departed sons pass his lips.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nevertheless, he grew markedly kinder in deed
-to Abel, the one son who remained—not much
-kinder in word perhaps, for still that loud and angry
-voice could be heard coming from field and meadow,
-barn or byre, till the fearful mother would steal
-silent-footed to the kitchen-door lest the last part
-of her threefold sorrow should indeed have come
-upon her. But not in this manner was the blow
-to fall.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Abel was the least worthy but greatly the
-handsomest of the sons of Yabel McQuhirr. He
-had a large visiting acquaintance among the
-farm-towns, and often did not seek his garret-bed till
-the small hours of the morning. Then his mother,
-awake and vigilant, would incline her ear on the
-pillow to hear whether her husband was asleep
-beside her.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now, oftentimes Yabel, her husband, slept not,
-yet for his wife's sake, and perhaps because Abel,
-with his bright smile and clean-limbed figure,
-reminded him of a wild youth he had long put
-behind him, he bore with the lad, even to giving
-him in one short year more money to spend than
-had been his brothers' portion during all the time
-they had faithfully served their father.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And this was not good for a young man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So that early one spring, the wild oat crop that
-Abel had been sowing began to appear with braird
-and luxuriant shoot. A whisper overran the
-parish swifter than the moor-burn when the
-heather is dry on the moors. Two names were
-coupled, not unto honour. And on a certain wild
-March morning, Yabel McQuhirr, having called
-his son three times, clambered fiercely up to the
-little garret stair to find an open skylight, a
-pallet-bed not slept in, and a home that was now
-childless from flagged hearth to smoke-browned
-roof-tree.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Yabel rode to market upon Mary Grey, his old
-rough-fetlocked mare, once badger-grey, but now
-white as the sea-gulls that fluttered and settled
-upon his springtime furrows. He heard no word
-of the story of Abel his son and the gypsy lass,
-for none durst tell him—till one Rob Girmory of
-Barscob, bolder or drunker than the rest, blurted
-it out with an oath and a scurvy jest. The next
-moment he was smitten down, and Yabel
-McQuhirr stood over him with his riding-whip
-clubbed in his hand, the fierce irascible eyebrows
-twitching, and wide nostrils blown out with the
-breath of the man's wrath.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But certain good friends, strong-armed men
-of peace, held him back, and got Girmory away
-to a quiet cartshed, where, on a heap of straw, he
-could sleep off his stupor and awake to wonder
-what had given him that lump, great as a hen's
-egg, over his right eye.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As for Yabel McQuhirr he saddled Mary Grey
-and took the road homeward lest any should
-bring the story first to his wife. For Jen, his
-Jen, was the kernel of that rough-husked,
-hard-shelled heart. And as he rode, he cursed Girmory
-with the slow studied anathema of the Puritan
-which is not swearing, but something sterner,
-solemner, more enduring. Sometimes he would
-cheat himself by saying over and over that there
-was nothing in the story. Abel had gone in his
-best clothes to a neighbouring town—he knew
-the lad had a pound or two that burnt a hole
-in his spendthrift pocket. He would return
-penitent when it was finished. And the old man
-found himself already "birsing" with anger, and
-thinking of what he would say to the returned
-prodigal when he caught sight of him—a greeting
-which would certainly not have run upon the
-lines of the parable.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, as he went on and on, fear began to enter
-in, and he set his spurless heels grimly to Mary
-Grey's well-padded ribs. Never had that sober
-steed gone home at such a pace, and on brown
-windy braefaces ploughmen stood wiping their
-brows and watching and wondering. Shepherds,
-high on the hills, set their palms horizontally
-above their brows and murmured, "What's takin'
-auld Yabel hame at sic a pelt this day, as if the
-Ill Yin himsel' were after him?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But for all his haste, some one had forestalled
-him. The busybody in other men's matters, the
-waspish gossip to whom the carrying of ill tidings
-is a chief joy, had been before him. Mary Grey
-had sweated in vain. There was no one to be
-heard stirring as he tramped eagerly in—no one
-flitting softly to and fro in milk-house or dairy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But within Yabel McQuhirr found his wife
-fallen by the bake-board near the window, where
-she had been at work when the Messenger of
-Evil entered to do her fell work. Her eyes were
-closed, her hands limp and numb. With a
-hoarse inarticulate cry of rage Yabel raised his
-wife and carried her to the neatly-made bed
-with the patchwork quilt upon it. There he
-laid her down.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Jen," he said, more gently than one could
-have believed the rough harsh man of wrath could
-have spoken, "Jen, waken, lassie. It's maybe no
-true. I tak' it on my soul it's no true!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But on his wife's face there remained a strange
-fixed smile, and her eyes, opening slowly, began
-to follow him about wistfully, and seemed
-somehow to beckon him. Then with infinite care
-Yabel removed his wife's outer garments,
-cutting that which would not loosen otherwise, till
-the stricken woman reposed at ease beneath the
-coverlet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, Jen," he said, "I maun ride to the town
-for a doctor. Will I tell Allison Brown to come
-and look after you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The wistful following eyes expressed neither
-yea nor nay.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then will I send in Jean Murray frae the Boreland?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The eyes were still indifferent. There was no
-desire for the help of any of human kind in the
-stricken woman's heart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Her husband watched her keenly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Or wad ye like Martha Yeatman ower frae
-the Glen?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then all suddenly the dull eyes flashed, glowed,
-almost flamed, so fierce was the "No" that was
-in them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yabel shut down his upper lip upon his nether.
-He nodded his head.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I will bring the doctor, and nurse you
-mysel'," he answered. But within him he said:
-"So it was Martha o' the Glen. For this thing
-will I reckon with Martha Yeatman."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was fortunate for Mary Grey that the distance
-was not long, for, like Jehu the son of Nimshi,
-Yabel McQuhirr drave furiously. But at the bend
-of the highway called the Far-away Turn, just
-at the point at which the road dives down under
-a tangle of birch and alder, the old white mare was
-pulled suddenly up. For there was Dr. Brydson,
-riding cautiously on his little round-barrelled sheltie,
-his saddle-bags in front of him, and a silver-headed
-Malacca cane held in his hand like a riding-whip.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was no long time before the good old doctor
-was raising the lax head of Yabel McQuhirr's
-wife. The strange distant smile was still in her
-eyes, and the left corner of her mouth twitched.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She has had a shock," said Dr. Brydson,
-slowly, when Yabel and he had withdrawn a little.
-He was pulling his chin meditatively, and not
-thinking much of the husband.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A stroke!" said Yabel, and the tone of his
-voice was so strange and terrible that the doctor
-turned quickly—"but not unto death! You can
-cure her—surely you can cure her?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And he caught the doctor by the arm and
-shook it vehemently.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Take your hands away, sir, and calm yourself!"
-said the physician. "If I am to do anything,
-we must have none of this."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Say that she will not die!" he cried. And
-the deep-set angry eyes flamed down upon the
-physician, the great fists of iron were clenched.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Brydson was a little man, but a long course of
-being deferred to had given him great local dignity.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will say nothing of the kind, sir," he retorted.
-"I will do what I can; but this thing is the
-visitation of God, and human skill avails but little.
-Stand away from my patient, sir."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But at that moment a sudden and wondrous
-change passed over the face of Yabel McQuhirr.
-The physician was startled. It was like an
-earthquake rifting and changing a landscape while one
-looks. In the twinkling of an eye the fashion of
-Yabel's countenance was altered. He would have
-wept, yet stood gasping like one who knows not
-the way to weep. Instead he uttered a hoarse
-and terrible cry, and flung himself upon his knees
-by the bed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Jen," he cried, "Jen—speak to me, Jen—to your
-ain man Yabel! Say that this man lies! Tell
-me ye are no gaun to dee, Jen—Jen, my Jen!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And at the voice of that strange crying the doctor
-stood back, for he knew that no earthly physician
-had power to stay a soul's agony.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, like a tide that wells up full to the
-flood-mark, the slow love rose in the eyes of his wife.
-Her lips moved. He bent his head eagerly.
-They seemed to form his name.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, yes," he said eagerly, "'Yabel, Yabel,' I
-hear that! What mair? Tell me—oh, tell me,
-ye are no gaun to leave me!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He bent his head lower, holding his breath and
-laying his hand on his own heart as if to still its
-dull, thick beating. But though the pallid lips
-seemed to move, no words came, and Yabel
-McQuhirr heaved up his head and struck his
-palm upon his brow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I canna hear!" he wailed. "She will dee,
-and no speak to me!" Then he turned fiercely
-upon the doctor, as if he did not know him.
-"Who are you that spies on my grief, standing
-there and doing nothing? Get oot o' my hoose,
-lest I do ye a hurt."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And the indignant little man went at the word,
-mounting his sheltie and riding away across the
-moors without once turning his head, the "Penang
-lawyer" tapping unwontedly upon the rounded
-indignant flank of his little mare.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When Yabel turned again to his wife there were
-tears in her eyes, and the heart of the Man of
-Wrath was softened within him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am a fool," he said, "an angry fool. I have
-driven him away that came to do her good. I
-will call him back."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But though he made the hills to echo, and the
-startled sheep to run together into frightened
-bunches, the insulted little doctor upon the sheltie
-never turned in his saddle.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Vain is the help of man," said Yabel, as he
-turned to go in, "and if God will not help me,
-I will renounce Him also."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He sat awhile by Janet's side, and it was very
-quiet, save for the clock ticking out the moments
-of a woman's life. A hen cackled without in the
-yard with sudden joy over an egg safely nested.
-Yabel started up angrily and laid his hand on his
-gun in the rack above the smoked mantel-board.
-But the woman's eyes called him to desist, and
-he sat down again beside her with a sigh.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What is it, Jen? Can ye no speak to me?" The
-eyes seemed to compel him yet lower—upon
-his knees.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To pray—I canna pray, Jen; I winna pray.
-If the Lord tak's you, I will arise and curse Him
-to His face."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The direction of the gaze changed. It was
-upon the family Bible on the shelf, where it
-lay with Boston's </span><em class="italics">Fourfold State</em><span> and a penny
-almanack, the entire family library.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Am I to read?" said Yabel, reaching it down.
-"What am I to read?" He ran down the table
-of contents with his great stub-nailed fingers,
-"Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus." But the speaking
-eyes did not check him till he came to the Psalms.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He turned them over till he came to the twenty-third.
-The will in his wife's glance stopped him
-again. He read the psalm slowly, kneeling on
-his knees by the bedside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At the fourth verse his voice changed. "</span><em class="italics">Yea,
-though I walk through the valley of the shadow
-of death, I will fear no evil, for Thou art with
-me——</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And at the sound of these words the unstricken
-left hand of his wife wavered upward uncertainly.
-It lay a moment, with something in its touch
-between a caress and a blessing, upon his head.
-Then it dropped lightly back upon the coverlet.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Yabel McQuhirr sat till the gloaming by the
-side of his dead wife, a terrible purpose firming
-itself in his heart. His children had risen up
-against him. God had cast him off. Well, he,
-Yabel McQuhirr, would cast Him off. At His
-very Judgment Seat he would dare Him, and so
-be thrown unrepenting into the pit prepared for
-the impenitent.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He had done that which was needful to the
-body of his helpmeet of many years. There was
-no more to do—save one thing. He rose and
-was going out, when his bloodshot eye fell on the
-great family Bible from which he had read eve
-and morn for forty years. A spasm of anger
-fierce as a blast from a furnace came over the
-man. That Book had lied! It had deceived
-him. He lifted it in one strong hand and threw
-it upon the fire.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he walked across the yard to the stable
-to get a coil of cart rope. He stumbled rather than
-stepped as he went, the ground somehow meeting
-his feet unexpectedly. He could not find the rope,
-and found himself exclaiming savagely at the
-absent and outcast Abel who had mislaid it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At last he found it among some stable litter,
-lying beneath the peg on which it ought to have
-hung. Gathering the coils up in his hand, he
-crossed the straw-strewn yard again to the barn.
-There were sound open beams in the open space
-between mow and mow.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">It</em><span> had best be done there," he muttered.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was a rustling among the straw as he
-pushed back the upper half of the divided door—rats,
-as he would have thought at another time.
-Now he only wondered if he could reach the
-beams by standing on the corn bushel.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As he made the knot firm and noosed the rope
-through the loop, his eyes fell on the further door
-of the barn—the one through which, in bygone
-golden Septembers, he had so often pitchforked
-the sheaves of corn.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was something moving between him and
-the orchard door. In the dull light it looked like
-a young child. And then the heart of Yabel
-McQuhirr, who was not afraid to meet God face
-to face, was filled with a great fear.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A faint moaning whimper came to his ear.
-He dropped the coil of rope and ran back to
-the house for the stable lantern. He lighted the
-candle with a piece of red peat-ash, tossing the
-unconsumed Bible off the fire. Only the rough
-calf-skin cover was singed, and its smouldering
-had filled the house with a keen acrid smell.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yabel went out again with the lantern in his
-hand. Without entering, he held it over the lower
-half of the barn door which had swung to after
-him. A young woman, clad in the habit of a
-"gypsy" or "gaun body," lay huddled on the
-straw, while over her, whimpering and nosing
-like a puppy, crawled the most beautiful child
-Yabel had ever seen. As the light broke into
-the darkness of the barn the little fellow stood
-up, a golden-haired boy of two years of age.
-He smiled and blinked, then, with his hands
-outstretched, he came running across the floor
-to Yabel.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Mither willna speak to Davie," he said. "Up—up,
-Mannie, tak' wee Davie up!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A sob, or something like it, rose in the stern
-old man's throat. He could forfeit life, he could
-defy God, he could abandon all his possessions;
-but to leave this little shining innocent to
-starve—no, he could not do it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He opened the door and went in. The child
-insisted fearlessly on being taken in his arms. He
-lifted him up, and the boy hid his face gladly on
-his shoulder. Yabel put his hand on the woman's
-breast; she was stone-cold, and had been so
-for hours. Death had been busy both without
-and within the little hill-farm that snell March
-afternoon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He covered her decently up with a pair of
-corn-sacks, and as he did so a scrap of paper
-showed between her fingers, white in the light of
-the lantern.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Mither will soon be warm noo," said the child,
-from the safe covert of Yabel's shoulder. And in
-the clasping of the baby fingers the evil spirit
-passed quite out of the heart of Yabel McQuhirr.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And when by the open door of the lantern he
-smoothed out the paper that had been in the dead
-woman's fingers, he read these words:—</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"This is to bear testimony that I, Abel McQuhirr
-the younger, take Alison Baillie to be my wedded
-wife. Done in the presence of the undersigned
-witnesses</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<dl class="docutils">
-<dt class="noindent"><span>"Abel McQuhirr. May 3rd, 18—.</span></dt>
-<dd><p class="first last noindent pfirst"><span>"RO GRIER. }
-<br />"JOHN LORRAINE. } Witnesses."</span></p>
-</dd>
-</dl>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>So in the day when Yabel McQuhirr defied
-his Maker and hardened his heart, God sent unto
-him His mercy in the shape of a young child.
-Then, after the grave had claimed its dead, the
-heart of Yabel was wondrously softened, and
-these two dwelt on in the empty house in great
-content. And in the rescued Book, with its
-charred calf-skin cover, the old man reads to
-the boy morning and evening the story of One
-Other who came to sinful men in the likeness of a
-Young Child. But though his heart takes comfort
-in the record, Yabel never can bring himself to
-read aloud that verse which says: "</span><em class="italics">Inasmuch as
-ye did it unto one of the least of these ... ye did
-it unto Me</em><span>."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am not worthy. He can never mean Yabel
-McQuhirr," he says, and shuts the Book.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-lass-in-the-shop"><span class="bold large">THE LASS IN THE SHOP</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>In Galloway, if you find an eldest son of the same
-name as his father, search the mother's face for the
-marks of a tragedy. An eldest son is rarely called
-by his father's Christian name, and when he is,
-usually there is a little grave down in the kirkyard
-or a name that is seldom spoken in the house—a
-dead Abel or a wandering Cain, at any rate a
-first-born that was—and is not.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now I am called Alexander McQuhirr. My
-father also is Alexander McQuhirr. And the
-reason is that a link has dropped out. I remember
-the day I found out that you could make my
-mother jump by coming quietly behind her and
-calling "Willie." It was Willie McArthur I was
-after—he had come over from Whinnyliggate to
-play with me. We were busy at "hide-and-seek."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Willie!" I cried, sharp as one who would
-wake an echo.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My mother dropped a bowl and caught at her side.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It is only recently that she told me the whole
-story.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The truth was that with twelve years between
-our ages and Willie away most of the time, I
-had no particular reason to remember my elder
-brother. For years before I was born my mother
-had been compassionated with by the good wives
-of the neighbourhood, proud nursing mothers of
-ten or eleven, because she could boast of but one
-chicken in her brood. She has confessed to me
-what she suffered on that account. And though
-now I have younger brothers and the reproach
-was wiped away in time, there are certain Job's
-comforters whom my mother has never forgiven.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>She would be sure to spoil Willie,—one child in
-a house was always spoilt. So the tongues went
-ding-dong. It was foolish to send him to school
-at Cairn Edward, throwing away good siller,
-instead of keeping him at home to single the
-turnips. Thus and thus was the reproach of my
-mother's reluctant maternity rubbed in—and to
-this day the rubbers are not forgotten. It will
-be time enough to forgive them, thinks my mother,
-when she comes to lie on her death-bed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet from all that I can gather there was some
-truth in what they said, and probably this is what
-rankles in that dear, kindly, ever vehement bosom.
-Willie was indeed spoilt. He was by all accounts
-a handsome lad. He had his own way early, and
-what was worse—money to spend upon it. At
-thirteen he was bound apprentice to good honest
-Joseph Baillieson of the Apothecaries' Hall in
-Cairn Edward. Joseph was a chemist of the old
-school, who, when a more than usually illegible
-line occurred in the doctors' prescriptions of the
-day, always said: "We'll caa' it barley-water.
-That'll hairm naebody." All Joseph's dispensing
-was of the eminently practical kind.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To Mr. Baillieson, therefore, Willie was made
-apprentice, and if he would have profited, he could
-not have been in better hands, and this story
-never had been written. But the fact was, he
-was too early away from home. He was my
-mother's eye-apple, and as the farm was doing
-well during these years, an occasional pound note
-was slipped him when my mother was down on
-Market Monday. Now this is a part of the
-history she has never told me. I can only piece
-it together from hints and suggestions. But it
-is a road I know well. I have seen too many
-walk in it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mainly, I do not think it was so much bad
-company as thoughtlessness and high spirits.
-Sweetmeats and gloves to a girl more witty than
-wise, neckties and a small running account yonder,
-membership of the rowing club and a small
-occasional stake upon the races—not much in
-themselves, perhaps, but more than enough for
-an apprentice with two half-crowns a week of
-pocket money. So there came a time when honest
-Joseph Baillieson, with many misgivings and grave
-down-drawings of upper lip, as I doubt not, took
-my father into the little back shop where the
-liniments were made up and the pills rolled.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>What they said to each other I do not know,
-but when Alexander McQuhirr came out his face
-was marvellously whitened. He waited for Willie
-at his lodgings, and brought him home that night
-with him. He stayed just a week at the farm,
-restlessly scouring the hills by day and coming
-in to his bed late at night.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After a time, by means of the minister, a place
-was found for him in Edinburgh, and he set off
-in the coach with his little box, leaving what
-prayerful anxious hearts behind him only those
-who are fathers and mothers know.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He was to lodge with a good old woman in
-the Pleasance, a regular hearer of Dr. Lawton's
-of Lady Nixon's Wynd. For a small wage she
-agreed to mend his socks and keep a motherly
-eye on his morals. He was to be in by ten, and
-latch-keys were not allowed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now I do not doubt that it was lonely for
-Willie up there in the great city. And in all
-condemnation, let the temptation be weighed and
-noted.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>May God bless the good folk of the Open
-Door who, with sons and daughters of their own,
-set wide their portals and invite the stranger
-within where there is the sound of girlish laughter,
-the boisterous give-and-take of youthful wit,
-and—yes, as much as anything else, the clatter of
-hospitable knives and forks working together.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Such an Open Door has saved many from
-destruction, and in That Day it shall be counted
-to that Man (or, more often, that Woman) for
-righteousness.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For consider how lonely a lad's life is when
-first he comes up from the country. He works
-till he is weary, and in the evening the little
-bedroom is intolerably lonely and infinitely stuffy.
-If the Door of Kindness be not opened for him—if
-he lack the friend's hand, the comrade's slap
-on the back, the modest uplift of honest maidenly
-eyes—take my word for it, the Lad in the Garret
-will soon seek another way of it. There are
-many that will show him the guide-posts of that
-road. Other doors are open. Other laughter
-rings, not mellow and sweet, but as the crackling
-of thorns under a pot. If a youth be cut off
-from the one, he will have the other—that is, if
-the blood course hot and quick in his veins.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And so, good folk of the city, you bien and
-comfortable householders, you true mothers in
-Israel, fathers and mothers of brisk lads and
-winsome lasses, do not forget that you may save
-more souls from going down to the Pit in one
-year than a score of ministers in a lifetime. And
-I, who write these things, know.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Many a foot has been stayed on the Path called
-Perilous simply because "a damsel named Rhoda"
-came to answer a knock at a door. The time
-is not at all bygone when "Given to hospitality"
-is also a saving grace. And in the Day of Many
-Surprises, it shall be said of many a plain man
-and unpretending housewife: "</span><em class="italics">Inasmuch as ye
-did it unto one of the least of these, ye did it
-unto Me!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>But so it was not with Willie my brother.
-There was none to speak the word, and so he
-did after his kind. How much he did or how far
-he went I cannot tell. Perhaps it is best not
-to know. But, at all events, I can remember his
-home-coming to Drumquhat one Saturday night
-after he had been a year or fifteen months in
-Edinburgh. He came unexpectedly, and I was
-sleeping in a little crib set across the foot of my
-parents' bed in the "ben" room.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>My mother was a light sleeper all her days,
-and, besides, I judge her heart was sore. For
-never breeze tossed the trees or rustled the
-beech-leaves, but she thought of her boy so far away.
-In a moment she was up, and I after her, all
-noiseless on my bare feet, though the tails of my
-night gear flapped like a banner in the draughty
-passage. The dogs upon the hearthstone never
-so much as growled.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wha's there?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It's me, mither!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Willie!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was indeed Willie, a tall lad with a white
-face, a bright colour high-set on his cheek-bone,
-a dancing light in his eyes, and, at sight of his
-mother, a smile on his lips. He was dressed in
-what seemed to me a style of grandeur such as
-I had never beheld, probably no more than a suit
-of town-cut tweeds, a smart tie, and a watch-chain.
-But then my standard was grey home-spun and
-home-dyed—as often as not home-tailored too.
-And Solomon in all his glory did not seem to
-be arrayed one half so nobly as my elder brother
-Willie.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I do not mind much about the visit, except that
-Willie let me wear his watch-chain, which was of
-gold, for nearly half-an-hour, and promised that the
-next time he came back he would trust me with
-the watch, as well. But the following afternoon
-something happened that I do remember. After
-dinner, which was at noon as it had been ever
-since the beginning of time, my father sat still
-in his great corner chair instead of going to the
-barn. My mother sent me out to play.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And bide in the yaird till I send for ye,
-mind—and dinna let me see your face till tea-time!"
-was her command, giving me a friendly cuff on
-the ear by way of speeding the parting guest.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>By this I knew that there was something she
-did not want me to hear. So I went about the
-house to the little window at which my father
-said his prayers. It stood open as always, like
-Daniel's, towards Jerusalem. I could not hear
-very well; but that was no fault of mine. I did
-my best.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Willie was speaking very fast, telling his father
-something—something to which my mother
-vehemently objected. I could hear her interruptions
-rising stormily, and my father trying to
-calm her. Willie spoke low, except now and
-then when his voice broke into a kind of scream.
-I remember being very wae for him, and feeling
-in my pocket for a dirty half-sucked brandy ball
-which I resolved to give him when he came out.
-It had often comforted me in times of trouble.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Siclike nonsense I never heard!" cried my
-mother, "a callant like you! A besom—a
-designing madam, nocht else—that's what she
-is! I wonder to hear ye, Willie!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wheesh, wheest—Mary!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I could hear my father's voice, grave and sober
-as ever. Then Willie's vehement rush of words
-went on till I heard my mother break in again.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Marriage! Marriage! Sirce, heard ye ever
-the like? A bairn to speak to me o' mairrying
-a woman naebody kens ocht aboot—a 'lass in
-a shop,' ye say; aye, I'se warrant a bonny
-shop——!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then there came the sound of a chair pushed
-vehemently back, the crash of a falling dish. My
-father's voice, deep and terrible so that I trembled,
-followed. "Sir, sit down on your seat and
-compose yourself! Do not speak thus to your
-mother!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will not sit down—I will not compose
-myself—I will never sit down in this house
-again—I will marry Lizzie in spite of you all!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And almost before I could get round to the
-front yard again Willie had come whirling all
-disorderedly out of the kitchen door, shutting it
-to with a clash that shook the house. Then with
-wild and angry eyes he strode across the straw-littered
-space, taking no notice of me, but leaping
-the gate and so down the little loaning and
-up towards the heather like a man walking in
-his sleep.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I remember I ran after him, calling him to
-come back; but he never heeded me till I pulled
-him by the coat tails. It was away up near the
-march dyke, and I could hardly speak with
-running so fast. He stared as if he did not
-know me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, dinna—dinna—come back!" I cried (and
-I think I wept); "dinna vex my mither!—And—there's
-'rummelt tawties'{#} to the supper!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">[#] "Rummelt tawties," </span><em class="italics small">i.e.</em><span class="small">, a sort of </span><em class="italics small">purée</em><span class="small"> of potatoes,
-made in the pot in which they have been boiled, with sweet
-milk, butter, and sometimes a little flavouring of cheese. All
-hands are expected to assist in the operation of "champing,"
-that is, pounding and stirring them to a proper consistency
-of toothsomeness.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>But Willie would not stop for all I could say
-to him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>However, he patted me on the head.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Bide at hame and be Jacob," he said; "they
-have cast out this Esau."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For he had been well learned in the Bible, and
-once got a prize for catechism at the day school
-at Whinnyliggate. It was Boston's </span><em class="italics">Fourfold
-State</em><span>, so, though there were three copies in the
-house, I never tried to read it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So saying, he took the hillside like a goat,
-while I stood open-mouthed, gazing at the lithe
-figure of him who was my brother as it grew
-smaller, and finally vanished over the heathery
-shoulder of the Rig of Drumquhat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That night I heard my father and mother talking
-far into the morning, while I made a pretence
-of sleeping.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I will never own him!" said my father, who
-was now the angry one.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm feared he doesna look strong!" answered
-my mother in the darkness.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He shall sup sorrow for the way he spoke to
-the father that begat him and the mother that bore
-him!" said my father.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Dinna say that, guidman!" pled my mother;
-"it is like cursin' oor ain firstborn. Think how
-proud ye were the time he grippit ye by the
-hand comin' up the loanin' an' caa'ed ye 'Dadda!'"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After this there was silence for a space, and
-then it was my mother who spoke.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, Alexander, you shallna gang to Edinbra
-to bring him hame. Gin yin o' us maun gang,
-let it be me. For ye wad be overly sore on the
-lad. But oh, the madam—the Jezebel, her that
-has wiled him awa' frae us, wait till I get my
-tongue on her!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And this is how my mother carried out her
-threat, told in her own words.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"Oh, that weary toon!" she said afterwards.
-"The streets sae het and dry, the blawin' stoor, the
-peetifu' bairns in the gutter, and the puir
-chapman's joes standin' at the close-mouths wi' their
-shawls aboot their heads! I wondered what yin
-o' them had gotten haud o' my Willie. But at
-last I cam' to the place where he lodged. It was
-at a time o' the day when I kenned he wad be
-at his wark. It was a hoose as muckle as three
-kirks a' biggit on the tap o' yin anither, an' my
-Willie bode, as it were, in the tapmaist laft.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It was an auld lame woman wi' a mutch on
-her head that opened the door. I askit for Willie.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'He's no here,' says she; 'an' what may ye
-want wi' him?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I'm his mither,' says I, and steppit ben. She
-was gye thrawn at the first, but I sune tamed her.
-She was backward to tell me ocht aboot Willie's
-ongangin's, but nane backward to tell me that
-his 'book' hadna been payit for six weeks, and
-that she was sore in need o' the siller. So I
-countit it doon to her shillin' by shillin', penny by
-penny.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'An' noo,' says I, 'tell me a' ye ken o' this
-madam that has bewitched my bairn, her that's
-costin' him a' this siller—for doubtless he is wearin'
-it on the Jezebel—an' breakin' his mither's heart.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the landlady's face took on anither cast
-and colour. She hummed an' hawed a whilie.
-Then at last she speaks plain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'She's nane an ill lass,' she says, ''deed, she
-comes o' guid kin, and—she's neither mair nor
-less than sister's bairn to mysel'!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wi' that I rises to my feet. 'If she be in this
-hoose, let me see her. I will speak wi' the woman
-face to face. Oh, if I could only catch them
-thegither I wad let her ken what it is to twine a
-mither and her boy!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The auld lame guidwife opens the door o' a
-bit closet wi' a bed in it and a chair or twa.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Gang in there,' she says, 'an' ye shall hae
-your desire. In a quarter o' an hour Lisbeth will
-be comin' hame frae the shop where she serves,
-and its mair than likely that your son will be
-wi' her!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And wi' that she snecks the door wi' a brainge.
-For I could see she was angry at what I had said
-aboot her kith an' kin. And I liked her the
-better for that.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So there I sat thinkin' on what I wad say to
-the lass when she cam' in. And aye the mair I
-thocht, the faster the words raise in my mind, till
-I was fair feared I wad never get time to utter a
-tenth-part o' my mind. It needna hae troubled
-me, had I only kenned.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then there was the risp o' a key in the lock,
-for in thae rickles o' stane an' lime that they rin
-up noo a days, ye can hear a cat sneeze ower a
-hale 'flat.' I heard footsteps gang by the door o'
-the closet an' intil the front room. And I grippit
-the handle, bidin' my time to break oot on them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But there was something that held me. A
-lassie's voice, fleechin' and fleechin' wi' the lad she
-loves as if for life or death. Hoo did I ken
-that?—Weel, it's nae business o' yours, Alec, hoo I
-kenned it. But yince hear it and ye'll never
-forget it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Willie,' it said, 'tak' the siller, I dinna need it.
-Put it back before they miss it—and oh, never,
-never gang to thae races again!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I sat stane-cauld, dumb-stricken. It was an
-awesome thing for a mither to hear. Then Willie
-answered.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"''Lizzie,' he said, and, I kenned he had been
-greeting, 'Lizzie, I canna tak' the money. I
-would be a greater hound than I am if I took
-the siller ye hae saved for the house and the
-marriage braws—and——'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Oh, Will,' she cried, and I kenned fine she
-was greetin' too, an' grippin' him aboot the neck,
-'I dinna want to be mairried—I dinna want a
-hoose o' my ain—I dinna want ony weddin' braws,
-if only ye will tak' the siller—and—be my ain
-guid lad and never break your mither's heart—an'
-mine! Oh, promise me, Willie! Let me hear
-ye promise me!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, she said that—an' me hidin' there ready
-to speak to her like a tinkler's messan.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I opens the door an' gaed in. Willie had
-some pound notes grippit in his hand, and the lassie
-was on her knees thankin' God that he had ta'en
-her hard-earned savin's as she asked him, and
-that he had promised to be a guid boy.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Mither!' says Willie, and his lips were white.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And at the word the lassie rises, and I could
-see her legs tremble aneath her as she cam' nearer
-to me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Dinna be hard on him,' she says; 'he has
-promised——'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'What's that in your hand?' says I, pointing
-at the siller.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'It's money I have stolen!' says Willie, wi'
-a face like a streikit corpse.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Oh no, no,' cries the lass, 'it's his ain—his
-an' mine!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And if ever there was a lee markit doon in
-shinin' gold in the book o' the Recordin' Angel
-it was that yin. She was nae great beauty to
-look at—a bit slip o' a fair-haired lass, wi' blue
-een an' a ringlet or twa peepin' oot where ye
-didna expect them. But she looked bonny
-then—aye, as bonny as ever your Nance did.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Gie the pound notes back to the lass!' says
-I, 'and syne you and me will gang doon and
-speak with your maister that ye hae robbit!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And wi' that the lass fell doon at my feet
-and grippit me, and fleeched on me, and kissed
-my hands, and let the warm tears rin drap—drap
-on my fingers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Oh dinna, dinna do that,' she cried, 'let him
-pit them back. He only took them for a loan.
-Let him pit them back this nicht when his maister
-is awa hame for his tea. He is a hard man,
-and Willie is a' I hae!'"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"Weel," my mother would conclude, "may be
-it wasna juist richt—but I couldna resist the lass.
-So Willie did as she said, and naething was
-kenned. But I garred him gie in his notice the
-next day, and I took him hame, for it was clear
-as day that the lad was deein' on his feet. And
-I brocht the lass hame wi' me too. And if Willie
-had leeved—but it wasna to be. We juist keepit
-him till November. And the last nicht we sat
-yin on ilka side o' the bed, her haudin' a hand
-and me haudin' a hand, neither jealous o' the
-ither, which was a great wonder. An' I think
-he kind o' dovered an' sleepit—whiles wanderin'
-in his mind and syne waukin' wi' a strange look
-on his face. But ower in the sma' hours when
-the wind begins to rise and blaw caulder, and
-the souls o' men to slip awa, he started up. It
-was me he saw first, for the candle was on
-my side.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Mither,' he said, 'where's Lizzie?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And when he saw her sit by him, he drew
-away the hand that had been in mine and laid
-it on hers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Lizzie,' he said, 'dinna greet, my bonnie: I
-promise! I will be your ain guid lad!'"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>"And the lass?" I queried.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, she gaed back to the shop, and they say
-she has chairge o' a hale department noo, and is
-muckle thocht on. But she has never mairried,
-and, though we hae askit her every year, she
-wad never come back to Drumquhat again!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And that," said my mother, smiling through
-her tears, "is the story how my Willie was led
-astray by the Lass in the Shop."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="the-respect-of-drowdle"><span class="bold large">THE RESPECT OF DROWDLE</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Most folk in the West of Scotland know the
-parish of Drowdle, at least by repute. It is a
-great mining centre, and the inhabitants are not
-counted among the peaceable of the earth.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If ye want your head broken, gang doon to
-Drowdle on a Saturday nicht" is an advice often
-given to the boastful or the bumptious. Drowdle
-is a new place too, and the inhabitants, instead
-of being, like ordinary Scottish Geordies, settled
-for generations in one coal-field and with whole
-streets of relatives within stonethrow, are composed
-of all the strags and restless ne'er-do-weels of such
-as go down into the earth, from Cornwall even
-to the Hill-o'-Beith.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Most, I say, know Drowdle by repute. I myself,
-indeed, once acted as </span><em class="italics">locum tenens</em><span> for the
-doctor there during six hot and lively summer
-weeks, and gained an experience in the treatment
-of contusions, discolorations, and abrasions of the
-skull and frontal bones which has been of the
-greatest possible use to me since. The younger
-Drowdleites, however, had at that time a habit
-of stretching a cord across the threshold about
-a foot above the step, which interfered
-considerably with professional dignity of exit—that
-is, till you were used to it. But after one has
-got into the habit of scouting ahead with a spatula
-ground fine and tied to a walking-stick on darkish
-nights, Drowdle began to respect you. Still
-better if (as I did) you can catch a couple of
-the cord-stretchers, produce an occipital contusion
-or two on your own account, and finish by
-kicking the jesters bodily into Drowdle Water.
-Then the long rows of slated brick which
-constitute the mining village agree that "the new
-doakter kens his business—a smart lad, yon!
-Heard ye what he did to thae twa deils, Jock
-Lee an' Cockly Nixon? He catchit them
-trippin' him wi' a cairt rape at Betty Forgan's
-door, and, faith, he threw them baith into Drowdle
-Water!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Such being the way to earn the esteem of
-Drowdle, it would have saved the telling of this
-story if, when young Dairsie Gordon received a
-call to be minister of the recently established
-mission church there, he had had any one to
-enlighten him on the subject.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He was so young that he was ashamed when
-any one asked him his age. They had called him
-"Joanna" at college, and sent him recipes along
-the desk for compelling a beard and moustache
-to grow under any conditions of soil and climate,
-however unfavourable.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dairsie Gordon was very innocent, very learned,
-very ignorant, and—the only son of a well-to-do
-mother, who from a child had destined him for the
-ministry. The more was the pity!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As a child he was considered too delicate for
-the rough-and-tumble of school. He had a tutor,
-a mild-faced young man who seldom spoke above
-his breath, and never willingly walked more than
-a mile at a time, and then with a book in his hand
-and a flute in his tail pocket. Under his instruction,
-however, Dairsie became an excellent classic, and
-his verse gained the approval of Professor Jupiter
-Olympus when he went up to the University of
-Edinburgh, where Latin verse was a rare accomplishment
-in those days, and Greek ones as extinct
-as the dodo.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When her son went to college, Mrs. Gordon
-came up herself from the country to settle Dairsie
-in the house of a friend of her own, the widow
-of a deceased minister who had married an old
-maid late in life. This excellent lady possessed
-much experience of bazaars and a good working
-knowledge of tea-meetings, but she knew nothing
-of young men.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So, being placed in authority over Dairsie, she
-insisted that he should come straight back to Rose
-Crescent from his classes, take dinner in the middle
-of the day alone with his hostess, and then—as a
-treat—accompany her while she made a call or
-two on other clerical widows who had married
-late in life. Then she took him home to open
-his big lexicons and pore over crabbed
-constructions till supper-time. This feast consisted
-of plain bread and butter with the smallest morsel
-of cheese, because much cheese is not good for
-the digestion at night. A glass of milk
-accompanied these delicacies. It also was plain and
-blue, because the cream (a doubtful quantity at
-best) had been skimmed off it for Mrs. McSkirmish's
-tea in the morning.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After that Dairsie was sent to bed. He was
-allowed ten minutes to take off his clothes and
-say his prayers. Then the gas was turned out
-at the meter. If he wanted time for more study
-and reading he could have it in the morning. It
-is good for youth to rise betimes and study the
-Hebrew Scriptures with cold feet and fingers that
-will not turn the leaves of Gesenius till they are
-blown upon severally and individually. In this
-fashion, varying in nothing, save that on alternate
-Sundays there was something hot for supper,
-because Mrs. McSkirmish's minister—a severe and
-faithful divine—came to interview Dairsie and
-report on his progress to his mother, the future
-pastor passed seven winter sessions.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Scholastically his victories were many. Bursaries
-seemed purposely created for him to take—and
-immediately resign in favour of his </span><em class="italics">proxime accessit</em><span>,
-who needed the money more. The class never
-queried as to who would be first in the "exams.,"
-but only wrangled concerning who would come
-next after Gordon—and how many marks below.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In summer Dairsie went quietly down to his
-mother's house in the country, where his neck was
-fallen upon duly, and four handmaids (with little
-else to do) worshipped him—especially when for the
-first time he took the "Book" at family worship.
-There was a wood before the door, in which he
-passed most of his time lying on his back reading,
-and his old tutor came to stay with him for a
-month at a time.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Thus was produced the Reverend Dairsie
-Gordon, B.D., without doubt the first student
-of his college, Allingham Fellow, and therefore
-entitled to go to Germany for a couple of years
-by the terms of his Fellowship.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But by one of these interpositions of Providence,
-which even the most orthodox denominate
-"doubtful," there was at this time a vacancy in
-the pastoral charge of the small Mission Church
-at Drowdle. The late minister had accepted a
-call to a moorland congregation of sixty members,
-where nothing had happened within the memory
-of man, more stirring than the wheel coming off
-a cart of peats opposite the manse.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dairsie Gordon preached at Drowdle. His
-voice was sweet and cultivated and musical, so
-that it fell pleasantly on the ears of the kirkgoers
-of Drowdle, over whose heads had long blared
-a voice like to the trumpets at the opening of
-the seventh seal in the book of the Revelation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So they elected him unanimously. Also he
-was "well-to-do," and it was understood in the
-congregation that his salary would not be a
-consideration. The minister elect immediately
-resigned his fellowship, considering this a direct
-call to the work.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In this fashion Dairsie Gordon went to his
-martyrdom. Ignorant of the world as a child
-of four, never having been elbowed and buffeted
-and brow-beaten by circumstances, never cuffed
-at school, snubbed at college, and so variously and
-vicariously licked and kicked into shape, he found
-himself suddenly pitchforked into the spiritual
-charge of one of the most difficult congregations
-in Scotland.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The new minister was introduced socially at
-a tea-meeting on the evening of the ordination,
-and then and there he had his first taste of the
-Drowdelian quality. There were plenty of douce
-and sober folk in the front pews of the little
-kirk, but at the back reckless, unmarried Geordies
-were sandwiched between a militant and ungodly
-hobbledehoyhood. Paper bags that had contained
-fruit exploded in the midst of the most solemn
-addresses. Dairsie's own remarks were fairly
-punctuated with these explosions, and by the
-flying shells of Brazil nuts. Bone buttons at the
-end of knitting needles clicked and tapped at
-windows, and a shutter fell inward with a crash.
-It was thus that Dairsie returned thanks.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"My dear people," (a penny trumpet blew an
-obligato accompaniment under the bookboard of
-a pew,) "I have been led to the oversight of this
-flock" (pom-pom-pom) "after prayer and under
-guidance. I shall endeavour to teach
-you—" ("Catch-the-Ten!" "All-Fours!" "Quoits!") "some
-of those things which I have devoted my
-life to acquiring. I am prepared for some little
-difficulty at first, till we know one another——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The remainder of the address was inaudible
-owing to cries of, "Rob Kinstry has stole my
-bag!" "Ye're a liar!" All which presently
-issued in the general turmoil of a free fight toward
-the rear of the church.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mrs. Gordon had come up to be present on
-the occasion of her son's ordination, and that
-night in the little manse mother and son mingled
-their tears. It all seemed so wrong and pitiful
-to them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Dairsie, with a fine hopefulness on his
-delicate face, lifted his head from his mother's
-shoulder, smiling like a girl through his own
-tears.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But after all, this is the work to which I have
-been called, mother. And you know if it is His
-will that I am to labour here, in time He will give
-the increase."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So somewhat heartened, mother and son kneeled
-down together, prayed, and went to bed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On the forenoon of the next day two of the
-elders, decent pitmen, who happened to be on
-the night-shift, called in to give their verdict and
-to drop a word of advice.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A graund meetin'," said Pate Tamson, the
-oversman of No. 4; "what for didna ye tak' your
-stick and gie some o' the vaigabonds a clour on
-the lug? It wad hae served them weel!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I could not think of doing such a thing," said
-Dairsie. "I desire to wield a spiritual, not a
-carnal influence!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Carnal influence here, carnal influence there,"
-cried Robin Naysmith, stamping his foot till the
-little study trembled, "if ye are to succeed in
-this village o' Drowdle, ye maun pit doon your
-fit—like that, sir, like that!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And he stamped on the new Brussels carpet
-till the plaster began to come down in flakes from
-the ceiling. Dairsie tried to imagine himself
-stamping like that, but could not. For one thing, he
-had always worn single-soled shoes, with silk ties
-and woollen 'soles' (which he had promised his
-mother to take out and dry whenever he came
-in), a fact which has more bearing on the main
-question than appears on the surface.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A man has to assert hissel' in this toon, or he
-is thocht little on," said Pate Tamson, the oversman.
-"Noo, there's MacGrogan, the Irish priest—I dinna
-agree wi' his releegion, an' dootless he will hae
-verra little chance at the Judgment. But, faith,
-when he hears that there's ony o' his fowk drinkin'
-ower lang aboot Lucky Moat's, in he gangs wi'
-a cudgel as thick as your airm, and the great
-solemn curses, fair rowlin' aff the tongue o'
-him—and faith, he clears Lucky's faster than a hale raft
-of polissmen! Aye, he does that!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye," assented the junior elder, Robin
-Naysmith, he whose feet had put the plaster in
-danger, "what we need i' Drowdle is a man o'
-poo'er—a man o' wecht——!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'</span><em class="italics">Quit ye like men—be strong!</em><span>' saith the
-Scriptures," summed up the oversman. Then
-both of them waited for Dairsie, to see what he
-had got to say.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I—I am sure I shall endeavour to do my
-best," said the young minister, "but I fear I have
-underestimated the difficulties of the position."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The oversman shook his head as he went out
-through the manse gate.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And I am some dootfu' that we hae made a mistak'!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If we hae," rejoined Naysmith, the strong
-man, "we maun keep it frae the knowledge o'
-Drowdle. But the lad is young—young. And
-when he has served his 'prenticeship to sorrow,
-he will maybes come oot o' the furnace as silver
-that is tried!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Now, neither Drowdle nor its inhabitants meant
-to be unkind. In case of illness or accident
-among themselves, none gave material help more
-liberally. What belonged to one was held in a
-kindly communism to be the right of all. But
-Drowdle was not to be handled delicately. It
-was a nettle to be grasped with gloves of untanned
-leather.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Dairsie Gordon opened his first Sunday-school
-at three in the afternoon. At a quarter to four
-as he stood up on the platform to give his closing
-address, he found boys scuttling and playing
-"tig" between his legs. He laid down his
-hymn-book, and on lifting it to read the closing verses,
-discovered that a certain popular bacchanalian
-collection entitled "Songs of the Red, White, and
-Blue," had mysteriously taken its place.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The young minister had other and graver trials
-also. The pitmen passed him on the road with
-a surly grunt, and he did not know it was only
-because they were trudging home dog-tired from
-their long shift. The hard-driving managers and
-sub-managers, men without illusions and as blatantly
-practical as a Scottish daily paper, passed him
-by contemptuously, as if he had been a tract thrust
-under their doors. The schoolmaster, a cleverish
-machine-made youth of inordinate conceit, openly
-scoffed. He was a weakling, this minister, and
-he had better know it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And, indeed, in these days, Dairsie gave them
-plenty of scope for complaint. His sermons might
-possibly have edified a company of the unfallen
-angels, if we can fancy such being interested in
-heathen philosophy and the interpretation of the
-more obscure Old Testament Scriptures. But to this
-gritty, ungodly, crass-natured, rasp-surfaced village
-of Drowdle, the young man merely babbled in his
-pulpit as the summer brooks do over the pebbles.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>An itinerant evangelist, who shook the fear
-of hell-fire under their noses with the fist of a
-pugilist, and claimed in ancient style the power
-to bind and the power to loose, might conceivably
-have succeeded in Drowdle, but as it was, Dairsie
-Gordon proved a failure of the most absolute sort.
-And Drowdle, having no false modesty, told him
-plainly of it. At informal meetings of Session
-the question of their minister's shortcomings was
-discussed with freedom and point, only the
-overs-man and Robin Naysmith pleading suspension of
-judgment on account of the young man's years.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For there were sympathetic hearts here and
-there among the folk of Drowdle. Women with
-the maternal instinct yet untrampled out of them,
-came to their doors to look after the tall slim
-"laddie" who was so like the sons they had
-dreamed of when the maiden's blush still tinged
-their cheeks.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He's a bonnie laddie to look on," they said
-to each other as, palm on hip, they stood looking
-after him. "It's a peety that he is sae feckless!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet Dairsie was always busy. He was no
-neglecter of duty. He worked with eager strained
-hopefulness. No matter how deep had been his
-depression of the evening, the morning found him
-contemplating a day of work with keen anticipation
-and unconquerable desire to succeed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To-day, at last, he would begin to make an
-impression. He would visit the remainder of
-Dickson's Row, and perhaps—who knew?—it
-might be the turning of the tide. So he sat
-down opposite his mother at breakfast, smiling
-and rubbing his hands.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"To-day I am going to show them, mother,"
-he would say.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Show them what, Dairsie dear?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">That I am a man!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But within him he was saying, "Work while
-it is day!" And yet deeper in his heart, so deep
-that it became almost a prayer for release, he
-was wont to add—"</span><em class="italics">The night cometh when no
-man can work!</em><span>" Then to this he added, as he
-took his round soft hat and went out, "O Lord,
-help me to do something worthy before I
-die—something to make these people respect me."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>It was a hot September afternoon. Drowdle
-was a-drowse from Capersknowe to the Back Raw.
-Here and there could be heard a dull recurring
-thud, which was the </span><em class="italics">dunt dunt</em><span> of the roller on
-the dough of the bake-board as some housewife
-languidly rolled out her farles of oatcake. For
-the rest, there was no sound save the shout of
-a callant fishing for minnows in the backwaters
-of Drowdle, and the buzz of casual bluebottles
-on the dirty window-panes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly there arose a cry, dominant and
-far-reaching. No words were audible, but the tone
-was enough. Women blenched and dropped the
-crockery they were carrying. The men of the
-night-shift, asleep on their backs in the hot and
-close-curtained wall-beds, tumbled into their grimy
-moleskins with a single movement.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Number Four pit's a-fire! The pit's a-fire!
-Number Fower!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was a mile to the particular colliery where
-the danger was. The rows of houses emptied
-themselves simultaneously upon the white dusty
-road, women running with men and barefooted
-children speeding between, a little scared, but,
-on the whole, rather enjoying the excitement.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As they came nearer, the great high-mounted
-head-wheels of pit Number Four were spinning
-furiously, and over the mounds which led to it
-little ant-like figures were hurrying. A thin
-far-spreading spume of brownish smoke rose sluggishly
-from the pithead. At sight of it women cried out:
-"Oh God, my Jock's doon there!" And more
-than one set her hand suddenly upon her side and
-swung away from the rush into the hedge-root.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>A hundred questions were being fired at the
-steadfast engineer, men and women all shouting
-at once. He answered such as he could, but with
-his hand ever upon the lever and his eye upon
-the scale which told at what point the cage stood
-in the long incline of the "dook."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The fire's in the main pit-shaft," he said.
-"They are trying to get doon by the second exit;
-but it's half fu' o' steam pipes to drive the bottom
-engine."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wha's gane doon?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Pate Tamson and Muckle Greg are in the
-cage tryin' to put the fire oot wi' the hose——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They micht as weel spit on't if it's gotten ony
-catch!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And Robin Naysmith and the minister are
-tryin' the second exit——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">The minister——</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The cry was very scornful. The minister,
-indeed—what good could "a boy like him" do down
-there where strong men were dying helplessly?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So for half-an-hour Walter McCartney the
-pithead engineer stood at his post watching the
-cage index, and listening for the tinkle of the
-bell which signalled "up" or "down."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly the faces of such as could see the
-numbers blanched. And a murmur ran round
-the crowd at the long </span><em class="italics">t-r-r-r-r-r-r</em><span> which told that
-the cage was coming to the surface.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Had all hope been abandoned, that the rescue
-party were returning so unexpectedly? A woman
-shrieked suddenly on the edges of the crowd.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Who's that?" queried the manager, turning
-sharply. And when he was answered, "Take
-her away—don't let her come near the shaft!"
-was his order.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Out of the charred and dripping cage came
-Pate Tamson and his mate, blackened and wet
-from head to foot.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The cage is to be sent empty to the
-dook-bottom!" they said. "Somebody has managed
-to get doon the second exit."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>With a quick switch of levers and a humming
-hiss of woven wire from the headwheels, down
-sank the cage into the belching brown smother
-of the deadly reek.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then there was a long pause. The index sank
-till it pointed to the pit-bottom. The cage had
-passed through the fire safely. It had yet to be
-proved that living men could also pass.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Tinkle—tink!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was the bell for lifting. Walter McCartney
-compressed his lips on receiving the signal, and
-pulled down the shiny cap over his forehead, as
-if he himself were about to face that whirlwind
-of fire six hundred feet down in the bowels of
-the earth. He drew a long breath and opened
-the lever for "Full Speed Up." The cage must
-have passed the zone of flame like a bird rising
-through a cloud. The folk silenced themselves as
-it neared the surface. Then a great cry arose.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The minister sat in the cage with a couple
-of boys in his arms. The rough wet brattice
-cloths that had been placed over them were charred
-almost to a cinder. Dairsie Gordon's face was
-burnt and blackened.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He handed the boys out into careful hands.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am going down again," he said; "unless
-I do the men will not believe that it is possible
-to come alive through the fire. Are you ready,
-Walter? Let her go!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So a second time the young minister went
-down through the furnace. Presently the men
-began to be whisked up through the fire, and as
-each relay arrived at the pit-bank they sang the
-praises of Dairsie Gordon, telling with Homeric
-zest how he had crawled half-roasted down the
-narrow throat of the steam-pipe-filled shaft, how
-he had argued with them that the fire could be
-passed, and at last proved it with two boys for
-volunteer passengers. Dairsie Gordon, B.D., was
-the last man to leave the pit, and he fainted with
-pain and excitement when all Drowdle cheered
-him as they carried him home to his mother.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And when at last he came to himself, swathed
-in cotton wool to the eyes, he murmured, "</span><em class="italics">Do
-you not think they will respect me now, mother?</em><span>"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="tadmor-in-the-wilderness"><span class="bold large">TADMOR IN THE WILDERNESS</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>The calm and solemn close of a stormy day—that
-is the impression which the latter years of the life
-of Bertram Erskine made on those who knew him
-best. Though I was young at the time, I well
-remember his solitary house of Barlochan, a small
-laird's mansion to which he had added a tiny
-study and a vast library, turning the whole into an
-externally curious, but internally comfortable
-conglomerate of architecture. The house stood near a
-little green depression of the moorland, shaped like
-the upturned palm of a hand. In the lowest part
-was the "lochan" or lakelet from which the place
-had its name, while the mansion with its
-white-washed gables and many chimneys rose on the
-brow above—and, facing south, overlooked well
-nigh a score of parishes. There was also a garden,
-half hidden behind a row of straggling poplars.
-A solitary "John" tended it, who, in the time
-of Mr. Erskine's predecessor, had doubled his
-part of gardener with that of butler at the family's
-evening meal.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Few people in the neighbourhood knew much
-about the "hermit of Barlochan." Yet he had
-borne a great part in the politics of twenty years
-before. He had been a minister of the Queen, a
-keen and vehement debater, a dour political
-fighter, as well as a man of some distinction in
-letters; he had suddenly retired from all his offices
-and emoluments without a day's warning. The
-reason given was that he had quite suddenly lost
-an only and much beloved daughter.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After a few years he had bought, through an
-Edinburgh lawyer, the little estate of Barlochan,
-and it was reported that he meant to settle in the
-district. Upon which ensued a clatter of masons
-and slaters, joiners and plasterers, all sleeping in
-stable-lofts, and keeping the scantily peopled
-moorland parish in a turmoil with their midnight
-predatory raids and madcap freaks.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then came waggon-load after waggon-load of
-books—two men (no less) to look after them and
-set them in their places on the shelves. After that,
-the advent of a housekeeper and a couple of staid
-maid-servants with strange English accents. Last
-of all arrived Bertram Erskine himself, a tall figure
-in grey, stepping out of a high gig at his own door,
-and the establishment of an ex-minister of the
-Crown was complete.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That is, with one exception—for John McWhan,
-gardener to the ancient owners of Barlochan,
-was digging in the garden when Mr. Erskine went
-out on the first morning after his arrival.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Good-morning!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>John looked up from his spade, put his hand
-with the genuine Galloway reluctance to his
-bonnet, and remarked, "I'm thinkin' we'll hae
-a braw year for grosarts, sir!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The new proprietor smiled, and as John said
-afterwards, "</span><em class="italics">Then</em><span> I kenned I was a' richt!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You are Mr. McCulloch's gardener?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Na, na, sir; I am your ain gardener, sir,"
-answered John McWhan promptly. "Coarnel
-(Colonel) McCulloch pat everything intil my hand
-on the day he gaed awa' to the wars—never to set
-fit on guid Scots heather mair!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Erskine nodded quietly, like one who
-accepts a legal obligation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have heard of you, John," he said. "I will
-take you with the other pendicles of the estate.
-You are satisfied with your former wages?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Aye, sir, aye—a bonny-like thing that I should
-hae been satisfied wi' thretty pound and a
-cot-hoose for five-and-forty year, and begin to
-compleen at this time o' the day."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But I am somewhat peculiar, John," said Mr. Erskine,
-smiling. "I see little company: I desire
-to see none at all. If you remain with me, you
-must let nothing pass your lips regarding me or
-my avocations."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ye'll find that John McWhan can haud his
-tongue to the full as well as even a learned man
-like yoursel', sir!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I have an uncertain temper, John!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Faith, then ye hae gotten the verra man for
-ye, sir," cried John, slapping his knee delightedly.
-"Lord keep us, ye will be but as a bairn at the
-schule to what Maister McCulloch was. I tell
-ye, when the Coarnel's liver was warslin' wi' him,
-it was as muckle as your life was worth to gang
-within bowshot o' him. But yet he never hairmed
-John. He miscaaed him—aya, he did that—till
-the ill names cam' back oot o' the wood ower bye,
-as if the wee green fairies were mockin' the sinfu'
-angers o' man. But John never heeded. And in
-a wee, the Coarnel wad be calm as a plate o'
-parritch, and send me into the hoose for his muckle
-pipe, saying, 'John, that has dune me guid, I think
-I'll hae a smoke.' Na, na, ye may be as short
-in the grain as ye like, but after Coarnel
-McCulloch——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At this point of his comparison John felt the
-inadequacy of further words and could only
-ejaculate, "Hoots awa, man!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So in this fashion John McWhan stayed on as
-"man" upon the policies of Barlochan.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That night at dinner it was John who carried
-in the soup tureen and deposited it before his
-new master, a very much scandalised table-maid
-following in the wake of the victor.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I hae brocht ye your kail, Maister Areskine,"
-he said, setting the large vessel down with a
-flourish, "as I hae dune in this hoose for
-five-and-forty year. This trimmie (though Guid forgie
-me, I doubt na that she is a decent lass, for an
-Englisher) may set the glesses and bring ben the
-kickshaws, but the kail and the roast are John
-McWhan's perquisite—as likewise the cleanin'
-o' the silver. And I wad thank ye kindly, sir, to
-let the hizzie ken your mind on that same!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>With these words, John stood at attention with
-his hands at his sides and his lips pursed, gazing
-solemnly at his master. Mr. Erskine turned
-round on his chair, his napkin in his hand. His
-eyes encountered with astonishment a tall figure,
-gaunt and angular, clad in an ancient livery coat
-of tarnished blue and gold; knee breeches, black
-stockings, and a pair of many-clouted buckled
-shoes completed an attire which was certainly a
-marvellous transformation from John's ordinary
-labouring moleskins.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>With a word quiet and sedate, Mr. Erskine
-satisfied John's pride of place, and with another
-(the latter accompanied with a certain humorous
-twinkle of the eye) he soothed the ruffled Jane.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After that the days passed quietly and
-uneventfully enough at Barlochan. Mr. Erskine's
-habits were regular. He rose early, he read much,
-he wrote more. The mail he received, the book
-packets the carrier brought him, the huge sealed
-letters he sent off, were the wonder of the
-countryside—for a month or two. Then, save for the
-carters who drove the coal from the town, or
-brought in the firewood for Mr. Erskine's own
-library fire (for there he burned wood only), and
-the boxes of provisions ordered from Cairn
-Edward by his prim housekeeper Mrs. Lambert,
-Barlochan was silent and without apparent
-distraction.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All the same there were living souls and busy
-brains about it. The massive intellect of the
-master worked at unknown problems in the
-library. Busy Mrs. Lambert hurried hither and
-thither contriving household comforts, and developing
-the scanty resources of a moorland cusine to
-their uttermost. Jane and Susan obeyed her beck,
-while out in the garden John McWhan dug and
-raked, pruned and planted, his hand never idle,
-while his brain busied itself with his master.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It's a michty queer thing he doesna gang to
-the kirk," said John to himself, "a terrible queer
-thing—him bein' itherwise sic a kindly weel-learned
-gentleman. I heard some word he was eddicated
-for the kirk himsel'. Oh, that we had amang us a
-plant o' grace like worthy Master Hobbleshaw
-doon at the Nine-Mile-Burn, that can whup the
-guts oot o' a text as gleg and clever as cleanin' a
-troot. Faith, I wad ask him to come wi' me to
-oor bit kirk at Machermore, had we a man there
-that could do mair than peep and mutter. I
-wonder what we hae dune that we should be
-afflicted wi' siccan a reed shaken wi' the wun' as
-that feckless bit callant, Hughie Peebles. He
-can preach nae mair than my cat Tib—and as for
-unction——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Here again John's words failed him under the
-press of his own indignant comminations. He
-could only drive the "graip" into the soil of the
-Barlochan garden, with a foot whose vehemence
-spoke eloquently of his inward heat. For the pulpit
-of the little Dissenting kirk which John McWhan
-supported by his scanty contributions (and abundant
-criticisms), was occupied every Sabbath day by
-that saddest of all labourers, a minister who has
-not fulfilled his early promise, and of whom his
-congregation desire to be rid.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No but what we kind o' like the craitur, too,"
-John explained to his master, as he paused near
-him in one of his frequent promenades in the
-garden. "He has his points. He is a decent
-lad, and wi' some sma' gift in intercessory prayer.
-But he gangs frae door to door amang the fowk,
-as if he were comin' like a beggar for an awmous
-and were feared to daith o' the dog. Noo what the
-fowk like is a man that walks wi' an air, that speaks
-wi' authority, that stands up wi' some presence
-in the pulpit, and gies oot the psalm as if he
-war kind o' prood to read words that the guid
-auld tune o' Kilmarnock wad presently carry to
-the seeventh heevens!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And your minister, John, with whom you are
-dissatisfied—how came you to choose him?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Weel, sir," said the old man, palpably
-distressed, "it was like this—ye see fowk are no
-what they used to be, even in the kirk o' the
-Marrow. In auld days they pickit a minister
-for the doctrine and smeddom that was in him.
-'Was he soond on the fundamentals?' 'Had
-he a grip o' the fower Heads?' 'Was he faithfu'
-in his monitions?' Thae were the questions they
-askit. But nooadays they maun hae a laddie
-fresh frae the college, that can leather aff a blatter
-o' words like a bairn's lesson. I'm tellin' ye the
-truth, sir—Sant Paul himsel', after he had had
-the care o' a' the churches for a generation, wadna
-hae half the chance o' a bare-faced, aipple-cheekit
-loon in a black coatie and a dowg-collar. An' as
-for Peter, he wad hae had juist nae chance ava.
-He wad never hae gotten sae muckle as a smell
-o' the short leet."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And how would Saint Peter have had no
-chance? Wherein was his case worse than
-Paul's?" said Mr. Erskine, smiling.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Because he was a mairriet man, sir. It's a'
-thae feckless weemen fowk, sir. A man o'
-wecht and experience has little chance, though
-he speak wi' the tongue o' men and o' angels—a
-mairriet man has juist nae chance ava.' It's my
-solemn opeenion that, when it comes to electin'
-a new minister, only respectable unmairriet men
-o' fifty years an' upwards should be allowed to
-vote. It's the only thing that will stop thae
-awfu' weemen frae ruling the kirk o' God. Talk
-o' the Session—faith, it's no the Session that
-bears rule ower us in things speeritual—na, na,
-it's juist thae petticoated randies that got us
-turned oot' o' Paradise at the first, and garred
-me hae to grow your honour's veegetables in the
-sweet o' my broo!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But why only unmarried men of over fifty?"
-said Mr. Eskine, humouring his servitor.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"For this reason,"—John laid down the points
-of his argument on the palm of one hand with
-the crooked forefinger of the other, his foot
-holding the "graip" steady in the furrow all
-the while. "The young unmairriet men wad
-be siccan fules as to do what the young lasses
-wanted them to do, and the mairriet men o' a'
-ages (as say the Scriptures) wad necessarily vote
-as their wives bade them, for the sake o' peace
-and to keep doon din!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, John," said Mr. Erskine, "I will go down
-to the kirk with you next Sunday morning, and
-see what I can advise. It is a pity that in this
-small congregation and thinly-peopled district you
-should be saddled with an unsuitable minister!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Eh, sir, but we wad be prood to see ye at
-Machermore Marrow Kirk," cried John, dusting
-his hands with sheer pleasure, as if he were about
-to shake hands with his master on the spot. "I
-only wish it had been Maister MacSwatter o'
-Knockemdoon that was gaun to preach. He
-fairly revels in Daniel and the Revelations. He
-can gie ye a screed on the ten horns wi' faithfu'
-unction, and mak' a maist affectin' application
-frae the consideration o' the wee yin in the middle.
-But oor Maister Peebles—he juist haes nae
-'fushion' in him, ony mair than a winter-frosted
-turnip in the month o' Aprile!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In accordance with his promise to his factotum,
-on the following Sabbath morning, Mr. Erskine
-walked down to the little Kirk of Machermore.
-It was a fine harvest day and the folk had turned
-out well, as is usually the case at that season of
-the year. John McWhan was too old a servant
-to dream of walking with his master to the kirk.
-He had "mair mainners," as he would have said
-himself. All the same, he had privately
-communicated with several of the elders, and so
-ensured Mr. Erskine a reception suited to his
-dignity.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The ex-minister of State was received at the
-little kirk door by Bogrie and Muirkitterick,
-two tenants on a large neighbouring property.
-These were the leading Marrow men in the
-district, and much looked up to, as both coming
-in their own gigs to the kirk. Bogrie it was who
-opened the inner door for him, and Muirkitterick
-conducted him to the seat of honour in the
-mountain Zion, being the manse pew, immediately
-to the right of the pulpit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was not for some time that Mr. Erskine
-perceived that he did not sit alone. Being a
-little short-sighted until he got his glasses
-adjusted, the faces of any audience or congregation
-were always a blur to him. Then all at once
-he noticed a slim girlish figure in a black dress
-almost shrinking from observation in the opposite
-corner. The service began immediately after he
-sat down.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The minister was tall, of good appearance and
-presence, but Mr. Erskine shuddered at the first
-grating notes of the clerical falsetto, which
-Mr. Peebles had adopted solely because it had been
-the fashion at college in his time; but it was
-not until the short prayer before the sermon that
-anything occurred to fix the politician's wandering
-attention.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then, as he bent forward, he heard a voice near
-him saying, in an intense inward whisper: "</span><em class="italics">O
-God, help my Hughie!</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He glanced about him in astonishment. It
-was the girl in the black dress. She had knelt
-in the English fashion when all the rest of the
-congregation were merely bending forward "on
-their hunkers," or, as in the case of not a few
-ancient standards of the Faith, standing erect and
-protestant against all weak-hammed defection.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>When the girl arose again Mr. Erskine saw that
-her lips were trembling and that she gazed
-wistfully about at the set and severe faces of the
-congregation. The minister began his sermon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was not in any sense a good discourse.
-Rather, with the best will in the world, the hearer
-found it feeble, flaccid, unenlivened by illustration,
-unfirmed by doctrine, unclinched by application.
-Yet all the time Mr. Erskine was saying to
-himself: "What a fool that young man is! He has
-a good voice and presence—how easily he might
-study good models, and make a very excellent
-appearance. It cannot be so difficult to please
-a few score country farmers and ditchers!" But
-he ended with his usual Gallio-like reflection that
-"After all, it is none of my business;" and so
-forthwith removed his mind from the vapidity
-of the discourse, to a subject connected with his
-own immediate work.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But as he issued out of the little kirk, he passed
-quite close to the vestry door. The girl who had
-sat in the pew beside him was coming out with the
-minister. He could not help hearing her words,
-apparently spoken in answer to a question: "It
-was just beautiful, Hughie; you never preached
-better in your life." And in the shadow of the
-porch, before they turned the corner, Mr. Erskine
-was morally certain that the young minister gave
-the girl's arm an impulsive little hug.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But his own heart was heavy, for as he walked
-away there came a thought into his heart. A
-resemblance that had been haunting him suddenly
-flashed up vividly upon him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If Marjorie had lived she would have been
-about that girl's age—and like her, too, pale and
-slim and dark."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So all the way to his lonely mansion of Barlochan
-the ex-minister of the Crown thought of the
-young girl who had faded from his side, just as
-she was becoming a companion for the man who,
-for her sake, had put his career behind him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>In the afternoon Mr. Erskine sat in the arbour,
-while John in his Sunday best tried to
-compromise with his conscience as to how much
-gardening could be made to come under the
-catechistic heading, "Works of Necessity and
-Mercy." He solved this by watering freely,
-training and binding up sparingly, pruning in a
-furtive and shamefaced manner (when nobody
-was looking), but strictly abstaining from the
-opener iniquities of weeding, digging, or knocking
-in nails with hammers. In the latter emergency
-John kept for Sunday use the ironshod heel of
-an old boot, and in no case did he ever so far
-forget himself as to whistle. On that point he
-was adamant.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At last, after hovering nearer and nearer, he
-paused before the arbour and addressed his master
-directly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Thon</em><span> juist settles it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Erskine slowly put down his book, still,
-however, marking the place with his finger.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I do not understand—what do you mean by </span><em class="italics">thon</em><span>?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The sermon we had the day, sir. It was
-fair affrontin'. The Session are gaun up to ask
-Maister Peebles to consider his resignation. The
-thing had neither beginning o' days nor end o'
-years. It was withoot form and void. It's a
-kind o' peety, too, for the laddie, wi' that young
-Englishy wife that he has ta'en, on his hand.
-I'm feared she is no the kind that will ever help
-to fill his meal-ark!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am very sorry to hear you say so, John," said
-Mr. Erskine; "can nothing be done, think you?
-Why don't they give the young man another
-chance? Can no one speak to him? There were
-some things about the service that I liked very
-much. Indeed, I found myself feeling at home
-in a church for the first time for years."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Did ye, sir? That's past a' thinkin'! A'
-Machermore was juist mournin' and lamentin'.
-What micht the points be that ye liket? I will
-tell the elders. It micht do some guid to the
-puir lad!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Erskine was a little taken aback. He
-could not say that what pleased him most in the
-service had sat in the manse-seat beside him,
-had worn a plain black dress, and possessed a
-pair of eyes that reminded him of a certain young
-girl who had taken walks with him over the
-hills of Surrey, when the blackbirds were singing
-in the spring.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nevertheless, he managed to convey to John
-a satisfaction and a hopefulness that were all the
-more helpful for being a little vague. To which
-he added a practical word.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"If you think it would do any good, John, I
-might see one or two of the members of Session
-themselves."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ye needna trouble yoursel', thank ye kindly,
-sir," said John, "I will undertak' the job. Though
-my infirmity at orra times keeps me frae acceptin'
-the eldership (I hae been twice eleckit), I may
-say that John McWhan's influence in the testifyin'
-and Covenant-keeping Kirk o' the Marrow at
-the Cross-roads o' Machermore has to be reckoned
-wi'—aye, it has to be reckoned wi'!"</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Nevertheless, the agitation for a change of
-ministry continued to increase rather than to
-diminish. It took the form of a petition to the
-Rev. Hugh Peebles to consider the spiritual needs
-of the congregation and forthwith to remove
-himself to another sphere of labour.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now, John McWhan's Zion was not one of the
-greater and richer denominations into which
-Presbytery in Scotland is unhappily divided. It
-was but a small and poor "body" of the faithful,
-and such changes of ministry as that proposed
-were frequent enough. The operative cause might
-be inability to pay the minister's "steepend" if
-it happened to be a bad year. Or, otherwise, and
-more frequently, a "split"—a psalm tune misplaced,
-an overplus of fervour in prayer for the Royal
-Family (a very deadly sin), or a laxity in dealing
-with a case of discipline—and, lo! the minister
-trudged down the glen with his goods before him in
-a red cart, to fight his battle over again in another
-glen, and among a people every whit as difficult
-and touchy. But one day there was an intimation
-read out in the Machermore Kirk of the Marrow
-to the following effect: "The Annual Sermon
-of the Stewartry Branch of the British and Foreign
-Bible Society will be preached in the Townhill
-Kirk at Cairn Edward, on Sabbath next, at 6 p.m.,
-by the Rev. Hugh Peebles of the Marrow Kirk,
-Machermore."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Peebles read this through falteringly, as
-if it concerned some one else, and then added
-a doubtful conclusion: "In consequence of this
-honour which has been done me, I know not why,
-there will be no service here on the evening of
-next Lord's Day!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was observed by the acute that Mrs. Peebles
-put her face into her hands very quickly as her
-husband finished reading the intimations.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Praying for him, was she?" said the Marrow
-folk, grimly, as they went homeward; "aye, an'
-she had muckle need!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>To say that the congregation of Machermore
-was dumfounded is wholly to underestimate the
-state of their feelings. They were aghast. For
-the occasion was a most notable one.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All the wale of the half-dozen central Galloway
-parishes, which were canvassed as one district by
-the agents of the Bible Society, would be
-there—the professional sermon-tasters of twenty
-congregations. At least a dozen ministers of all
-denominations (except the Episcopalian) would
-be seated in an awe-inspiring quadrilateral about
-the square elders' pew. The Townhill Kirk, the
-largest in Galloway, would be packed from floor
-to ceiling, and the sermon, published at length
-in the local paper, would be discussed in all its
-bearings at kirk-door and market-ring for at least
-a month to come.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And all these things must be faced by their
-"reed shaken with the wind," their feckless shadow
-of a minister, weak in doctrine, ineffective in
-application, utterly futile in reproof. Hughie
-Peebles, and he alone, must represent the high
-ancient liberties of the Marrow Kirk before Free
-Kirk Pharisee and Erastian Sadducee.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Considering these things, Machermore hung
-its head, and the wailing of its eldership was
-heard afar. Only John McWhan, as he had
-promised, kept his counsel, and went about with
-a shrewd twinkle in his eye. He continued to
-bring in the soup at Barlochan—indeed, he now
-waited all through dinner, and, though there was
-nothing said that he could definitely take hold
-upon, John had a shrewd suspicion that it was not
-for nothing that the young minister had been
-closeted with his master for two or three hours, six
-days a week, for the last month. But though it
-went sorely to his heart that he could not even
-bid Machermore and the folk thereof—"Wait till
-next Sabbath at six o'clock, an' ye'll maybes hear
-something!" he loyally refrained himself.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>At last the hour came and the man. Mr. Erskine,
-having ordered a carriage from the town,
-drove the minister and his wife down to Cairn
-Edward in style. John McWhan held the reins,
-the urban "coachman" sitting, a silent and
-indignant hireling, on the lower place by his side.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On the front seat within sat Mr. Peebles, very
-pale, and with his hands gripping each other
-nervously. But when he looked across at the
-calm face of Mr. Erskine, a sigh of relief broke
-from him. The Townhill Kirk was densely
-crowded. There was that kind of breathing hush
-over all, which one only hears in a country kirk
-on a very solemn occasion. Places had been kept
-for young Mrs. Peebles and Mr. Erskine in the
-pew of honour near the elders' seat, but the
-ex-minister of State, after accompanying
-Mrs. Peebles to her destination, went and sat
-immediately in front of the pulpit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Wondrous weel the laddie looks," said one
-of the judges as Hugh Peebles came in, boyish
-in his plain black coat, "though they say he is
-but a puir craitur for a' that!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Appearances are deceitful—beauty is vain!"
-agreed her neighbour, in the same unimpassioned
-whisper.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was nothing remarkable about the
-"preliminaries," as the service of praise and prayer
-was somewhat slightingly denominated by these
-impatient sermon-lovers.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Sap, but nae fushion!</em><span>" summed up Mistress
-Elspeth Milligan, the chief of these, after the
-first prayer.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The preliminaries being out of the way, the
-great congregation luxuriously settled itself down
-to listen to the sermon. Machermore, which
-had hidden itself bodily in a remote corner
-of one of the galleries, began to perspire with
-sheer fright.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They'll throw the psalm-buiks at him, I wadna
-wunner—siccan grand preachers as they hae doon
-here in Cairn Edward!" whispered the ruling
-elder to a friend. He had sneaked in after all
-the others, and was now sitting on one of the
-steps of the laft. It was John McWhan who
-occupied the corner seat beside him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Maybe aye, an' maybe no!" returned John,
-drily, keeping his eye on the pulpit. The hush
-deepened as Hugh Peebles gave out his text.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">And he built Tadmor in the Wilderness.</em><span>"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Whereupon ensued a mighty rustling of turned
-leaves, as the folk in the "airy" and the three
-"galleries" pursued the strange text to its lair
-in the second book of Chronicles. It sounded like
-the blowing of a sudden gust of wind through
-the entire kirk.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the final stir of settling to attention
-point, and the first words of Hugh Peebles' sermon.
-Machermore, elder and kirk-member, adherent and
-communicant, young and old, bond and free,
-crouched deeper in their recesses. Some of the
-more bashful pulled up the collars of their coats
-and searched their Bibles as if they had not yet
-found the text. The seniors put on their glasses
-and stared hard at the minister as if they had
-never seen him before. They did not wish it
-to appear that he belonged to them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But when the first notes of the preacher's voice
-fell on their astonished ears, it is recorded that
-some of the more impulsive stood up on their feet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That was never their despised minister, Hughie
-Peebles. The strong yet restrained diction, the
-firmness of speech, the resonance of voice in
-the deeper notes—all were strange, yet somehow
-curiously familiar. They had heard them all
-before, but never without that terrible alloy of
-weakness, and the addition of a falsetto
-something that made the preacher's words empty
-and valueless.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And the sermon—well, there never had been
-anything like it heard in the Ten Parishes before.
-There was, first of all, that great passage where
-the preacher pictured the Wise King sending out
-his builders and carpenters, his architects and
-cunning workmen—those very men who had
-caused the Temple to rise on Moriah and set up
-the mysterious twin pillars thereof—to build in
-that great and terrible wilderness a city like to
-none the world had ever seen. There was his
-gradual opening up of the text, and applying
-it to the sending of the Word of God to the
-heathen who dwelt afar off—without God and
-without hope in the world.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the searching personal appeal, which
-showed to each clearly that in his own heart
-there were wilderness tracts—as barren, as deadly,
-as apparently hopeless as the ground whereon
-Solomon set up his wonder-city—Tadmor,
-Palmyra, the city of temples and palaces and
-palm-trees.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And above all, the preacher's application was
-long remembered, his gradual uprising from the
-picture of the earthly king, "golden-robed in
-that abyss of blue," to the Great King of all
-the worlds—"He who can make the wilderness,
-whether that of the heathen in distant lands and
-far isles of the sea, or that other more difficult,
-the wilderness in our own breasts, to blossom as
-the rose!" These things will never be forgotten
-by any in that congregation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Once only Hugh Peebles faltered. It was but
-for a moment. He gasped and glanced down to
-the first seat in the front of the church. Then in
-another moment he had gripped himself and
-resumed his argument. Some there were who
-said that he did this for effect, to show emotion,
-but there were two men in that congregation who
-knew better—the preacher and Mr. Erskine.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>All Machermore went home treading on the
-viewless air. They hardly talked to each other
-for sheer joy and astonishment. "Dinna look
-as if we were surprised, lads! Let on that we
-get the like o' that every day in oor kirk!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>That was John McWhan's word, which passed
-from lip to lip. And Machermore and the Marrow
-Kirk thereof became almost insufferably puffed up.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll no say a word mair," said the ruling elder,
-"gin he never preaches anither decent word till
-the day o' his death."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This was, indeed, the general sense of the
-congregation. But Hugh Peebles, though perhaps he
-never reached the same pinnacle of fame, certainly
-preached much better than of old. With his
-wonderful success, too, he had gained a certain
-confidence in himself; added to which he was
-almost as often at Barlochan as before the
-missionary sermon.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>His wife came with him sometimes in the
-evenings to dinner, and then Mr. Erskine's eyes
-would dwell on her with a kind of gladness. For
-now she had a colour in her cheek and a proud
-look on her face, which had not been there on the
-day when he had first heard her pray: "O God,
-help my Hughie!" in the square manse pew.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>God had indeed helped Hughie—as He mostly
-does, through human agency. And Mr. Erskine
-was happier too. He had found an object in life,
-and, on the whole, his pupil did him great credit.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He also inserted a clause in his will, which
-ensures that Hugh and his wife shall not be
-dependent in their old age upon the goodwill of
-a faithful but scanty flock.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And as for Hugh Peebles, probable plagiarist, he
-writes his own sermons now, though he always
-submits them before preaching to his wise friend
-up at Barlochan. But it is for his first success
-that he is always asked when he goes from home.
-There is a never-failing postscript to any
-invitation from a clerical brother upon a sacramental
-occasion: "The congregation will be dreadfully
-disappointed if you do not give us 'Tadmor in
-the Wilderness.'"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Hugh Peebles never disappoints them.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="peterson-s-patient"><span class="bold large">PETERSON'S PATIENT</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>When I go out on the round of a morning I
-generally take John with me. John is my "man,"
-and of course it is etiquette that he should drive
-me to my patients' houses. But sometimes I tell
-him to put in old Black Bess for a long
-round-about journey, and then, in that case, I can
-drive myself.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For Black Bess is a real country doctor's horse.
-She will stand at a loaning foot with the reins
-hitched over a post—that is, if you give her a
-yard or so of head liberty, so that she may solace
-herself with the grass and clover tufts on the
-bank. Even without any grass at all, she will
-stand by a peat-stack in as profound a meditation
-as if she were responsible for the diagnosis of
-the case within. I honestly believe Bess is more
-than half a cow, and chews the cud on the sly.
-So whenever I feel a trifle lazy, I take the outer
-round and Black Bess, leaving the town and
-what the ambitious might call its "suburbs" to
-Dr. Peterson, my assistant. Not that this helps
-me much in the long run, because I have to
-keep track of what is going on in Peterson's head
-and revise his treatment. For, though his zeal
-and knowledge are always to be counted on,
-Peterson is apt to be lacking in a certain tact which
-the young practitioner only acquires by experience.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For instance, to take the important matter of
-diagnosis, Peterson used to think nothing of
-standing silent five or ten minutes making up his mind
-what was the matter with a patient. I once told
-him about this.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why," he replied, with, I must say, some
-slight disrespect for his senior, "you often do
-that yourself. You said this very morning that
-it took you twenty minutes to make up your
-mind whether to treat Job Sampson's wife for
-scarlet fever or for diphtheria!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I retorted, "I told you so, but I didn't
-stand agape all the time I was thinking it out.
-I took the temperature of the woman's armpits,
-and the back of her neck, and between her toes.
-I asked her about her breakfast, and her dinner,
-and her supper of the day before. Then I took
-a turn at her sleeping powers, and whether she
-had been eating too many vegetables lately. I
-inquired if she had had the measles, and the
-whooping-cough, and how often she had been
-vaccinated. I was just going to begin on her
-father, mother, and collateral relatives in order
-to trace hereditary tendencies, when I made up
-my mind that it would be safest to treat the
-woman for scarlet fever."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," said Peterson, drily, "Job was praising
-you up to the skies this very day. 'There never
-was sic a careful doctor,' he swears; 'there wasna
-a blessed thing that he didna speer into, even
-unto the third and fourth generation.'"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"There, you hear, Peterson," I said, with sober
-triumph, "that is the first step in your profession.
-You must create confidence. Never let them
-think for a moment you don't know everything.
-Why, old Ned Harper sent for me to-day—said
-you didn't understand the case, because you
-declined to prescribe."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He is malingering," cried Peterson, hotly;
-"he only wants to draw full pay out of his two
-benefit societies. The man is a fraud, open and
-patent. I wouldn't have anything to do with him."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, Peterson," I said, very seriously, "once
-for all, this is my practice, 'not yours. You are
-my salaried assistant. That is what you have
-to attend to. You are not revising auditor of
-the local benefit societies. If you do as you did
-with old Harper a time or two, you will lose me
-my appointment as Society's doctor, and not
-that one appointment alone. They all follow each
-other like a flock of sheep jumping through a
-slap in a dyke. Besides, the Benefit Society
-officials don't thank you, not a bit! They expect
-Harper to do as much for them the next time
-they feel like taking a holiday between the sheets!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What would you do then?" cried this furious
-young apostle of righteousness. "You surely
-would not have me become art and part in a
-swindle."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I patted him on the shoulder.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Temper your zeal with discretion, my friend,"
-I said. "I have found a rising blister between
-the shoulder-blades very efficacious in such cases."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet my immaculate assistant, had he only
-known it, was to go further and fare worse.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Meanwhile to pass the time I told him the
-story of old Maxwell Bone. Peterson was clearly
-getting restive, and it is not good for young men
-of the medical profession to think that they know
-everything at five-and-twenty. Maxwell was an
-aged hedger-and-ditcher, who lived in a tumble-down
-cottage at the upper end of Whinnyliggate.
-Of that parish I was (and still am) parish doctor,
-and Maxwell being in receipt of half-a-crown a
-week as parochial supplement to his scanty earnings,
-I was, </span><em class="italics">ipso facto</em><span>, responsible for Maxwell's
-state of health, and compelled in terms of my
-contract to obey any reasonable summons I might
-receive from him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Upon several occasions I had prescribed for
-the old ruffian, chiefly for rheumatism and the
-various internal pains and weaknesses affected
-by ancient paupers. When I was going away
-on one occasion Maxwell asked me for an order
-on the Inspector of Poor for a bottle of brandy
-"for outward application only." I refused him
-promptly, telling him with truth that he was far
-better without it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Weel, doctor," he said, shaking his head,
-"dootless ye ken best. But there's nocht like
-brandy when thae stammack pains come on me.
-It micht save ye a lang journey some cauld snawy
-nicht. The guard o' the late train will tak' doon
-ony message frae the junction, and if I dinna get
-the brandy to hae at hand to rub my legs wi' ye
-micht hae a lang road to travel! But gin ye
-let me hae it, doctor, it micht save ye a heap o'
-trouble——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The old wretch!" cried Peterson. "Of course
-you did not let him have it?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Peterson," I replied, sententiously, "I decline
-to answer you. Wait till you have been a winter
-here and know what a thirty-mile drive in a
-raging snowstorm to the head-end of the parish of
-Whinnyliggate means. Then you will not have
-much doubt whether Maxwell got his brandy or not."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now Peterson was really a very excellent fellow,
-and when he had run his head against the requisite
-number of stone walls, and learned to bite hard on
-his tongue when tempted to over-hasty speech, he
-made a capital assistant. I shall be sorry to lose
-him when the time comes.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For one thing Nance is fond of him, especially
-since he fell in love, and that goes for a great deal
-in our house. Peterson performed the latter feat
-quite suddenly and unexpectedly, as he did
-everything. It happened thuswise.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I had had a hard winter, and Nance was
-needing a change, so, about Easter, I took her
-south, for a few weeks in the mild and recuperative
-air of the Regent Street bonnet shops. I have
-noted more than once that in Nance's case the
-jewellers' windows along Bond Street possess tonic
-qualities, quite unconnected with going inside to
-buy anything, as also the dark windows of certain
-merchant tailors in which the patient can see her
-new dress and hat reflected as in a mirror. As for
-me, I enjoyed the British Medical Club and the
-Scientific Museums—which, of course, was what I
-came for.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But when we went back home we found that
-Peterson's daily report of cases had not conveyed
-all the truth. Peterson himself was changed. So
-far as I could gather, he seemed to have done his
-work very well and to have given complete
-satisfaction. He had even added the names of
-several new patients to my list. One of these
-was that of a somewhat large proprietor in a
-neighbouring parish, who was said to be exceedingly
-eccentric, but of whom I knew nothing save by the
-vaguest report.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"How did you get hold of old Bliss Bulliston?"
-I asked my assistant, as I glanced over the list
-he handed me. We were sitting smoking in the
-study while Nance was unpacking upstairs and
-spreading her new things on the bed, amid the
-rapturous sighs and devotionally clasped hands of
-Betty Sim, our housemaid.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Peterson turned away towards the mantelpiece
-for another spill. He appeared to have a difficulty
-with his pipe.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, I don't exactly know," he said at last,
-when the problem was solved; "it just came about
-somehow. You know how these things happen."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"They generally happen in our profession by
-the patient sending for the physician," I remarked,
-drily. "I hope you have not been poaching on
-anyone else's preserves, Peterson. Did Bulliston
-send for you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Peterson stooped for a coal to light his pipe.
-It had gone out again. Perhaps it was the exertion
-that reddened his handsome face.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No," he said, slowly, "he did not send for
-me. I went of my own accord."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I started from my seat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Why, man," I cried, "you'll get me struck
-off the register, not to speak of yourself. You
-don't mean to say that you went to the house
-touting for custom?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Now don't get excited," he said, smoking
-calmly, "and I'll tell you all about it."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>I became at once violently calm. Nevertheless,
-in spite of this, it took some time to get him
-under way.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," he said at last, "Bulliston has got a
-daughter."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh," said I, "so you were called in to attend
-on Mrs. Bulliston."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"When I say he has a daughter, I mean a
-grown-up daughter, not an infant!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Peterson seemed quite unaccountably ruffled
-by my innocent remark. I thought of pointing
-out to him the advantages of habitual clearness of
-speech, but, on the whole, decided to let him tell his
-story, for I was really very anxious about Bulliston.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," I said soothingly, "did Miss Bulliston
-call you in?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It might be looked at that way," he said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What was the case?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A nest of peregrine's eggs near the top of
-Carslaw Craig."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Peterson!" I exclaimed, somewhat sternly,
-"don't forget that I am talking to you seriously!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But he continued smoking.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I am perfectly serious," he said, and stopped.
-After he had thought a while he continued: "It
-happened at the end of the first week you were
-away. I had left John at home. I had old Black
-Bess with me—you know she will stand anywhere.
-I took the long round, and was coming home a
-little tired. As I drove past the end of Carslaw
-Hill, happening to look up I saw something
-sticking to the sheer face of the cliff like a fly
-on a wall. At first I could not believe my eyes,
-for when I came nearer I saw it was a girl.
-She seemed to be calling for help. So of course
-I jumped down and tied old Bess to a post by
-the roadside. Then I began to climb up towards
-her, but I soon saw that I could not help the
-girl that way—to do her any good, that is. So
-I shouted to her to hold on and I would get at
-her over the top.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I ran up an easier place, where the hill slopes
-away to the left, and came down opposite where
-the girl was. She had got to within ten feet of
-the top, but could not get a bit higher to save
-her life. It looked almost impossible, but luckily,
-right on top there was a hazel-bush, and I caught
-hold of the lower boughs—three or four of
-them—and lowered my legs down over the edge.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Catch hold of my ankles,' I shouted, 'and
-I'll pull you up.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Can't; they're too thick!' the girl cried; and
-from that I judged she must be a pretty cool one.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Then catch hold of one of them in both
-hands!' I shouted.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Right!' she said, and gripped.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And it was as well that she did not take my
-first offer, for, as it turned out, I had all I could
-do to get her up, jamming the toe of my other
-boot in the crevices and barking my knee against
-the hazel roots. Still, I managed it finally."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Whereupon she promptly fainted away in
-your arms," I interjected, "and you recovered her
-with some smelling-salts and sal volatile you
-happened to have brought in your tail-coat pockets
-in view of such emergencies."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Not at all," said Peterson, quite unabashed;
-"she didn't faint—never thought of such a thing.
-Instead, she got behind the hazel-bush I had been
-hanging on to.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Stop where you are a moment,' she spluttered;
-'till I get rid of these horrid eggs. Then I'll
-talk to you.'"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Tears of beauty!" I cried; "emotion hidden
-behind a hazel-bush. 'Alfred, you have saved
-my life—accept my hand.' That was what she
-really said to you—you know it was, Peterson."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Not much," said Peterson. "She was back
-again in a trice, and, if you'll believe me, started
-in to give it me hot and strong for smashing her
-blissful birds' eggs.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Here I've been watching this peregrine for
-weeks, and I'd got two beauties, and just because
-I got stuck a bit on the cliff you must come
-along and jolt me so that I have broken both
-of them—one was in my mouth, and the other
-I had tied up in a handkerchief.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But I told the girl that I knew where I could
-get her another pair and also a rough-legged
-buzzard's nest, and that did a lot to comfort her.
-She was a pretty girl, though I don't believe she had
-ever given it a thought; and she was dead on to
-getting enough birds' eggs to beat her brother,
-who had said that a girl could never get as good
-a collection as a boy, because of her petticoats!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And where are you going to get those eggs?"
-I said to Paterson. "If you think that hunting
-falcons' eggs for roving schoolgirls comes within
-your duties as my assistant—well, I shall have
-to explicate your responsibilities to you, that's
-all, young man!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Peterson laid his finger lightly on his cheek,
-not far from the bridge of his nose.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You know old Davie Slimmon, the keeper
-up at the lodge? You remember I doctored
-his foot when he got it bitten with an adder.
-Well, anyway, he would do anything for me. I've
-had Davie on the egg-hunt ever since."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And the girl thinks you are getting them all
-yourself," I said, with some severity. "Peterson,
-this is both unbecoming and unscientific. More
-than that, you are a blackguard."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh," said Peterson, lightly, "it's all right. I
-go regularly to see the old boy. He is a patient
-properly on the books, and when all is over, you
-can charge him a swingeing fee. Well, to begin
-at the beginning, each time I saw the girl I took
-her all the eggs I could pick up in the interval.
-I got them properly blown and labelled—particulars,
-habitat, how many in the clutch, whether
-the nest was oriented due east and west, whether
-made of sticks or weeds or curl-papers, the size
-of the shell in fractions of a millimetre——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Peterson," I said, sternly, "I don't believe you
-have the remotest idea what a millimetre is!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No more I have," answered Peterson, stoutly,
-not in the least put out; "but then, no more
-has she. And it looks well—thundering well!"
-he added, after a ruminant consideration of the
-visionary labelled egg. "You've no idea what
-a finish these tickets give to the collection."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So this was Miss Bulliston," I said, to bring
-him back to the point in which I was most
-immediately interested. "That's all very well,
-but what was the matter with old Bliss, her
-father?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Peterson looked as if he would have winked
-if he had dared, but the sternness in my eye
-checked him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Something nervous," he said, gazing at me
-blankly. "Truda kept stirring him up till the
-poor old boy nearly fretted himself into a fever,
-and so had me sent for. Oh, I was properly enough
-called in. You needn't look like that, McQuhirr.
-You've no gratitude for my getting you a good
-paying patient. I tell you the old man was so
-frightened that Truda——"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It had got to 'Truda,' had it?" I interjected,
-bitterly. But Peterson took no notice, going
-composedly on with his story.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"... Truda ran all the way to the lodge gates,
-where I was waiting with two kestrels' and a
-marsh-harrier, unblown, but all done up in cotton
-wool."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What!" I cried, "the birds?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"No, the eggs, of course," said Peterson; "and
-she said: 'What have you got there?' So I told
-her two kestrels' and a marsh-harrier. Then she
-said: 'Is that all? I thought you would have got
-that kite's you promised me by this time. But
-come along and cure my father of the cholera, and
-the measles, and the distemper, and the spavin!
-He's got them all this morning, besides several
-other things I've forgot the names of. Come
-quick! Cousin Jem from London is with him.
-He'll frighten him worse than anybody. I'll take
-you up through the shrubbery. Give me your hand!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So she took my hand, and we ran up together
-to the house."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Peterson," I said, "you and I have a monthly
-engagement. On this day month I shall have no
-further occasion for your services. Suppose
-anyone had seen you! What would they have
-thought of Dr. McQuhirr's assistant?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I never gave it a thought," he said, waving
-the interruption away; "and anyway, if all tales
-are true, you did a good deal of light skirmishing
-up about Nether Neuk in your own day!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Now this was a most uncalled-for remark, and
-I answered: "That may be true or not, as the
-case may be. But, at all events, I was no one's
-</span><em class="italics">locum tenens</em><span> at that time."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh," he said, "it's no use making a fuss now,
-McQuhirr. Nobody saw us, and as soon as we
-got to the open part near the house, Truda said:
-'Now I'm going to get these eggs fixed into their
-cases. So you trot round and physic up the old
-man. And mind and ask to see his collection
-of dog-whips. It is the finest in the world. We
-all collect something here. Pa is crazy about
-dog-whips. And if you can't find anything else
-wrong with him, tell him that his corns want
-cutting. They always do!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'But I haven't a knife with me,' I objected.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'I'll lend you a ripper.' (Truda had an answer
-ready every time.) 'I keep it edged like a razor.
-It is a cobbler's leather knife. It will make the
-shavings fly off dad's old corns, I tell you!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'But I never pared a corn in my life,' I said.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Then you've jolly well got to now, my friend,'
-she said, 'for I've yarned it to him that his life
-may depend on it, and that only a trained surgeon
-can operate on his sort. So don't you give me
-away, or he may let you have the contents of a
-shot-gun as you go out through the front window.
-And what will happen to me, I don't know. Now
-go on!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with that she vanished in the direction
-of the stables."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"A most lively young lady!" I cried, with
-enthusiasm.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Um-m," grunted Peterson (I have often had
-cause to remark Peterson's gruffness). "Lively,
-you think? Well, she nearly got me into a pretty
-mess with her liveliness. The butler put me into
-a waiting-room out of the hall. It was all sparred
-round with fishing-rods, and had crossed trophies
-of dog-whips festooned about the walls. I waited
-here for a quarter of an hour, listening to the
-rumbling bark of an angry voice in the distance,
-and wondering what the mischief Truda had let
-me in for.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Presently the girl came round to the open
-window, and as the sill was a bit high she gave
-a sort of sidelong jump and sat perched on the
-ledge outside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'You are a great donkey,' she said, looking
-in at me; 'both the kestrels' are set as hard as
-a rock—here, take them!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And with that she threw the eggs in at me
-one after another through the open sash of the
-window. One took me right on the pin of my
-tie and dripped on to my waistcoat. Smell? Well,
-rather! Just then the old butler came in, looking
-like a field-marshal and archbishop rolled in one,
-and there was I rubbing the abominable yolk from
-my waistcoat. Truda had dropped off the window-sill
-like a bird, and the old fellow looked round
-the room very suspiciously. I think he thought I
-must have been pocketing the spoons or something.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Mr. Bliss Bulliston waits!' he said, as if he
-were taking me into the presence-chamber of
-royalty. And so he was, by George! I was
-shown into a large library-looking room where
-two men were sitting. One was a little Skye-terrier
-of a man, with bristly grey hair that stood
-out everyway about his head. He was lying in
-a long chair, half reclining, a rug over his knees
-though the day was warm. The other man sat
-apart in the window, a quiet fellow to all
-appearance, bald-headed, and rather tired-looking.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'You are the doctor from Cairn Edward my
-daughter has been pestering me to see,' snapped
-the elder man. 'My case is a very difficult and
-complicated one, and quite beyond the reach of
-an average local practitioner, but I understand
-from my daughter that you have very special
-qualifications.' Whereupon I bowed, and said that
-I was your assistant."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Good heavens!" I cried. "Peterson, had you
-no sense? Why on earth did you bring my name
-into the affair? I shall never get over it!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh," he answered, lightly; "wait a bit. I
-cleared you sufficiently in the end. Just listen.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I was in a tight place, you will admit, but I
-thought it was best to put on my most impressive
-manner, and after a look or two at the old fellow,
-I resolved to treat him for nervous exhaustion.
-It was a dead fluke, but I had been reading
-Webb-Playfair's article on Neurasthenia just before
-I went out, and though men don't often have
-it, I thought it would do as well for old Bulliston
-as anything else.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I yarned away to him about his condition
-and symptoms, emaciated physical state, and so
-forth. Well, when I was getting pretty well warmed
-up I saw the young man with the hair thin-sown
-on top rise and go quietly over to another window.
-I put this down to modesty on his part. He wished
-to leave me alone with my patient. So I became
-more and more confidential to old Bulliston."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>("Peterson," I moaned, "all is over between
-us from this moment!")</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"But the old ruffian would not allow Mr. Baldhead
-to remove himself quietly," said Peterson,
-continuing his tale calmly.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'James,' he cried, sharply, 'stop where you
-are. All this should be very interesting to you.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'So it is,' said the young man, smiling in
-the rummest way, 'very interesting indeed!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So, somewhat elated, I went on prescribing
-rest, massage, the double-feeding dodge, and, above
-all, no intercourse with his own family. When I
-got through my rigmarole, the old fellow cocked his
-head to the side like a blessed dicky-bird, and
-remarked: 'It shows what wonderful similarity there
-is between the minds of you men of science. Talk
-of the transference of ideas! Why, that is just
-what my nephew was saying before you came
-in—almost in the same words. Let me introduce you
-to my nephew, Dr. Webb-Playfair, of Harley Street.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"You could have knocked me down with a
-straw. I could hardly return the fellow's very
-chilly nod. I heartily confounded that little
-bird-nesting minx who had got me into such a
-scrape. But I had an idea.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Perhaps, sir,' I said, 'if you would allow me
-to consult Dr. Webb-Playfair we might be able
-to assist one another.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Certainly,' cried the little old man, speaking
-as sharply as a Skye-terrier yelps; 'be off into the
-library. Jem, you know the way!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"I tell you what, McQuhirr, I did not feel
-particularly chirpy as I followed that fellow's shiny
-crown into the next room. He sat down on a
-table, swinging one leg and looking at me without
-speaking. For a moment I could not find words
-to begin, but his eyes were on me with a kind of
-twinkle in them.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Well?' he said, as if he had a right to
-demand an explanation. That decided me. I
-would make a clean breast of it.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So I told him the whole story—how I had
-first met Truda, of our bird-nesting, and how
-Truda wanted me to be able to come often to the
-house—because of the eggs.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"The bald young man began to laugh as I went
-on with my narrative, though it was no laughing
-matter to me, I can tell you. And especially
-when I confessed that I did not think there was
-anything the matter with his uncle, and that
-Neurasthenia was the first thing that came into
-my head, because I had been reading his own
-article in the </span><em class="italics">Lancet</em><span> before I came out. He
-thought that was the cream of the joke. He was
-all of a good fellow, and no mistake.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'So,' he said, 'to speak plainly, you are in love
-with my cousin, and you plotted to keep the father
-in bed in order that you might make love to the
-daughter! That is the most remarkable recent
-application of medical science I have heard of!'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Oh no,' I cried, 'I assure you it was
-Truda who——!</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Ah,' he said, quietly, 'it was Truda, was it?
-I can well believe that.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Then he thought a long while, and at last he
-said, 'Well, it will do the old man a great deal of
-good to stay in bed and not worry his own family
-and the whole neighbourhood with his whimsies.
-Moreover, milk diet is a very soothing thing. We
-will let it go at that. You can settle your own
-affairs with my cousin Gertrude, Dr. Peterson; I
-have nothing to do with that. Indeed, I would
-not meddle with that volcanic young person's
-private concerns for all the wealth of the Indies!
-Let us go back to my uncle.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"So," concluded Peterson, knocking the ashes
-out of his pipe on the bars of the grate, "the old
-fellow has been in bed ever since and has drunk
-his own weight in good cow's milk several times
-over. He is putting on flesh every day, and his
-temper is distinctly improving. He can be trusted
-with a candlestick beside him on the stand now,
-without the certainty of his throwing it at his
-nurse."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"And Truda?" I suggested, "what did she say?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, of course I told her how her cousin
-had said that I had ordered the father to bed,
-in order that I might make love to the daughter.
-She and I were in the waterside glade beyond the
-pond at the time. You know the place. We
-were looking for dippers' nests. She stopped and
-said:</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Jem Playfair said that, did he?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Yes, these were his very words,' I said, with
-a due sense of their heinousness.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'He said you sent my father to bed that you
-might make love to me?'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'Yes.'</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"She looked all about the glade, and then up
-at me.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"'</span><em class="italics">Well, did you?</em><span>' she said."</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>This is Peterson's story exactly as he told it
-to me on my return. That is some time ago
-now, but there is little to add. Mr. Bliss Bulliston
-is now much better both in health and in temper,
-and there is every reason to believe that I shall
-lose my assistant some of these days. The young
-couple are talking of going out to British Columbia.
-No complete collection of the eggs of that Colony
-has ever been made, and Peterson says that the
-climate is so healthy there, that for some years
-there will be nothing for him to do but to help
-Truda with her collecting.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This is all very well now, in the first months
-of an engagement, but as a family man myself,
-I have my doubts as to the permanence of such
-an arrangement.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst" id="two-humourists"><span class="bold large">TWO HUMOURISTS</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>Our gentle humourist is Nathan Monypenny.
-No man ever heard him laugh aloud, yet as few
-had ever seen him without a gleam of something
-akin to kindly humour in his eye. Even now,
-when the bitterness of life and its ultimate
-loneliness are upon him, it is a pleasure to be next
-Nathan, even at a funeral. During that dreadful
-ten minutes when the black-coated, crinkle-trousered
-company waits outside for the "service"
-to be over, his company is universally considered
-"as good as a penny bap and a warm drink." In
-former days, within the memory of my father,
-he had a friend and fellow-humourist in the village,
-one "Doog" (that is, Douglas) Carnochan.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The contrast between the two companions was
-remarkable. They both lived in the same street
-of our little country hamlet. Indeed, necessarily
-so, for Whinnyliggate has but one street, strictly
-so called. The few cottages along the "Well-road,"
-and the more pretentious cluster of upstarts
-which keeps the Free Kirk in countenance on
-the braeface, have never arrogated to themselves
-the name of a street.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So at one end of the Piccadilly-cum-Regent-street
-of Whinnyliggate—the upper end—lived
-Nathan Monypenny, and at the other end dwelt
-his rival, Doog, also, though less worthily,
-denominated "humourist." They were thus
-separated by something considerably less than a
-quarter of a mile of honest unpavemented king's
-highway. But, though they were personally
-friends, green oceans and trackless continents lay
-between their several characters and dispositions.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nathan, at the upper end, was a bachelor,
-hale, fresh, and hearty as when he had finished
-his 'prenticeship. Doog at forty possessed several
-children, all that remained of a poor, over-worked,
-downtrodden wife, and a countenance so marled
-and purpled with drink, that he looked an old
-man before his time. Nathan's shop was his
-own, and he was understood to have already a
-"weel-filled stocking-fit up the lum," or, in the
-modern interpretation, a comfortable balance down
-at Cairn Edward Bank, and a quiet old age
-assured to him by a life of industrious self-denial.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Doog never had a penny to bless himself with,
-later in the week than Tuesday; and, indeed,
-often enough very few to bless his wife withal
-even on Saturday nights, when, as was his custom,
-he staggered homewards with the poor remnants
-of his week's wage in his pocket.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nathan's wit was of the kind which goes best
-with the sedate tapping of a snuffmull, or the
-tinkling of brass weights into counter-scales—Doog's
-rang loudest to the jingling of toddy tumblers.
-Nathan loved to gossip doucely at the door of
-even-tide with the other tradesmen of the village, with
-Bob Carter the joiner, his apron twisted about his
-scarred hands, with bluff prosperous Joe Mitchell
-the mason, and with Peter Miles the tailor, as he
-sat on the low seat outside his door picking the
-last basting threads out of a new waistcoat.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Doog's witticisms, on the other hand, were
-chiefly launched in the "Golden Lion," amid the
-uproarious laughter of Jake McMinn, the "cattle
-dealer frae Stranraer," Leein' Tam, the local
-horse-doctor (without diploma), and "Chuckie" Orchison,
-the village ne'er-do-weel and licensed sponger for
-drinks upon the neighbourhood.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet there existed a curious and inexplicable
-liking between the two men. There was never
-a day that Nathan, the douce and respectable,
-did not leave his quiet white cottage at the head
-of the brae, where he dwelt all alone with his
-groceries, and step sedately down, stopping every
-twenty yards to gossip, or drop a word, flavoured
-with one of his kindly smiles, with every passer-by.
-He never seemed to be going anywhere in
-particular, yet he always visited Doog Carnochan's
-house before he returned. And many a night did
-Nathan, finding the husband not at home, pursue
-and recapture the truant, and bring him back to
-the tumble-down shanty, where the five ill-fed
-children and the one weary-faced woman furnished
-a tragic comment upon the far-renowned convivial
-humours of the husband and father.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The tale of Nathan and Doog is one which
-wants not examples in all ages of the earth's
-history. It is the story of a woman's mistake.
-Once Dahlia Ogilvy had been a bright frolicsome
-girl, winding the young fellows of the parish
-round her fingers with arch mischief, granting
-a favour here and denying one there, with
-that pleasant and innocent abuse of power which
-comes so suddenly to a girl who, in any rank
-of life, awakes to find herself beautiful.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There was nothing of the wilful beauty now
-about Dahlia Carnochan. A stronger woman
-might have mastered her fate, a weaker would have
-fled from it; but she only accepted the inevitable,
-and, like one who knows beforehand that her
-task is hopeless, she did what she could with
-silent resignation, waiting clear-eyed for that death
-which alone would bring her to the end of her pain.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yet at the time it had seemed natural enough
-that Dahlia should prefer the handsome debonair
-Douglas Carnochan, to quiet Nathan Monypenny,
-who had so little to say for himself, and so seldom
-said it. Besides, Dahlia had always known that
-she could with a word send Nathan to the ends
-of the earth, whilst there were certain wild ways
-about the other even then, which had, for a
-foolish ignorant maid, all the attraction of the
-unknown. She was a little afraid of Doog
-Carnochan, and there is no better subsoil whereon to
-grow love in a girl's heart, than just the desire
-of conquest mixed with a little fear.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So it came to pass that, though Nathan had
-carried little Dahlia's school-bag and fought her
-battles ever since she could toddle across from
-one cottage to the other, it was not he who, in
-the fulness of time, when the blossom came to its
-brightest and most beautiful, gathered it and set
-it on his bosom. It ought to have been, but it
-was not.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>As a young man Doog Carnochan was bright
-and clever. Most people in the village prophesied
-a brilliant future for him—that is, those who knew
-not the "unstable as water" which was written
-like a legend across his character. He was the
-son of a small crofter in the neighbourhood, but
-he companied habitually with those above him in
-rank, with the sons of large farmers and rich
-stock-breeders. Some of these, his cronies and
-boon companions, would be sure to assist him, so
-every one said. They would set him up as a
-"dealer"—they would put him in charge of a
-"led" farm or two. Doog's fortune was as good
-as made.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>So, at least, injudicious flatterers assured him.
-So he himself believed. So he told the innocent,
-lily-like Dahlia Ogilvy at the time of year when
-the Sweet William gave forth his evening perfume,
-when the dew was on the latest wall-flowers, and
-the scarlet lightning spangled the dusky places
-beneath the hedgerows where the lovers were wont
-to sit. But the blue cowled bells of the poisonous
-monkshood in the cottage flower-beds they did
-not see, though with some premonition of fate,
-Dahlia shivered and nestled to her betrothed as
-the breeze swept over them chill and bitter from
-the east.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And Nathan Monypenny, leaning on the gate-post
-that he might sigh out his soul towards
-the cottage of his beloved, by chance heard their
-words; and, therewith being stricken well-nigh
-to the death, softly withdrew, and left them
-alone.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After that night Nathan sought the company
-of Doog Carnochan more than ever.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Friends warned him that Doog was no fit
-companion for such as he. They insisted that
-he was neglecting his business. They said all
-those useful and convincing things which friends
-keep in stock for such occasions. Yet Nathan
-did not desist, till he had arranged the marriage
-of Dahlia Ogilvy and Douglas Carnochan beyond
-all possibility of retractation.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He it was who accompanied the swain to put
-up the banns. He it was who paid the five-shilling
-fee that the pair should be thrice cried
-on one Sabbath day, and the wedding hastened
-by a whole fortnight.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Perhaps he wished to shorten his own pain.
-Perhaps, he told himself, when once Dahlia was
-Douglas Carnochan's wife, he would think no
-more of her. At any rate, something strong
-and moving wrought in the reticent heart of the
-young tradesman. He approved the house which
-Doog took for his bride. He also guaranteed the
-rent. He lent the money for the furniture, and
-looked after Doog on the day of the marriage,
-that he might be brought soberly and worthily
-to the altar.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was a plain-song altar indeed, for, of course,
-the pair were married in the little white cottage
-next to Nathan's, where Dahlia had lived all her
-life. When he saw her in bridal white, Nathan
-remembered with a sudden gulp a certain little
-toddling thing in white pinafores, whom he used
-to lift over the hedge that he might feed her with
-the earliest ripe gooseberries.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Every one said that they made a handsome
-pair as they stood up before the minister, who,
-with his back to the fire, did not know that he was
-singeing his Geneva gown. For, being yet young
-to these occasions, he wore that encumbrance
-because it gave him an opportunity of displaying
-the hood of his college degree.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The young women smiled covertly at the
-contrast afforded by the bridegroom and his
-"best-man," as they stood up together. They
-did not wonder at Dahlia's preference. Any of
-them would have done the same thing, if she had
-had the chance.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"What a fine grey suit!—how well it fits!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, and that pale blue tie, how it matches
-the flower in his coat!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Thus they gossiped, all unaware that it was
-the hard-earned money of the plain-favoured and
-shy "best-man" which had bought all that wedding
-raiment, paid for that sky-blue tie, and that even
-the flower in the bridegroom's button-hole had
-grown in Nathan Monypenny's garden, and had
-been plucked and affixed by his hands.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Thus it was that the story began, and this was
-the reason why Nathan sought carefully day by
-day, if by any means he might yet withdraw his
-friend's erring feet out of fearful pit and miry
-clay.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Never a morning dawned for Nathan, waking,
-as he had done all his life, with the hum of the
-ranged bee-hives under his window in his ear, or
-else listening to the pattering of the winter storms
-on his lattice, that he did not bethink himself:
-"It is I who am responsible. I must help him." Then
-he would add with a sigh: "And her."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And so help he did, for the most part in ways
-hidden and secret. For he dared not give money
-to Doog. He knew all too well where that would
-have gone. Neither for very pride's sake, and in
-reverence for the secret of his heart, could he bring
-himself to give money to Dahlia. Nevertheless,
-as by some unseen hand, the tired heartsick woman
-found her burden in many directions marvellously
-eased.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Sticks were stacked in the little wood-shed
-which Doog had set up in the first virtuous glow
-of husbandhood—and never been inside since. No
-hens laid like Dahlia's—and the strange thing was
-that they invariably laid in the night, sometimes
-a dozen at a time, all in one nest. Her children,
-playing in the hot dusk of her little garden,
-had more than once turned up a sovereign or a
-crownpiece wrapped in paper and run with it to
-their mother.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>From Nathan's shop, also, there came flitches
-of bacon which were never ordered by Dahlia
-Carnochan—flour and meal, too, in times of stress.
-And it nearly always was a time of stress with Doog.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Twice a year Nathan, with much circumlocution,
-would extract a reluctant shilling or two from
-Doog on a flush pay-night, taking care that some
-of his cronies should hear the colloquy. Then in
-the morning he would send round the six months'
-account duly and completely receipted.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But more often than not the crony would put it
-all round the village that Nathan Monypenny had
-been dunning poor Doog Carnochan the night
-before; and so, among the unthinking, Nathan got
-the reputation of being a hard man.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He doesna do onything for nocht! Na, sune or
-syne, Nathan likes to see the colour o' his siller,"
-was said of him behind his back. And Doog's
-generous kindness of heart was dwelt upon as a
-foil to his friend's niggardliness.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"He micht hae letten puir Doog owe him the bit
-shillin' or twa and never missed it!" represented
-the general sense of the community.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But Doog himself, be his faults what they might,
-allowed none to speak ill of Nathan Monypenny.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Did he not half choke the life out of Davie
-Hoatson for some hinted comment (it was never
-clearly understood what), till they had to be
-separated by kindly violence, Doog being yet
-unappeased? Furthermore, did he not seek the
-jester for three whole days, all the time breathing
-fire and fury, with intent to choke the other half of
-a worthless life out of him?</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>This was the state of the case when Nathan
-Monypenny's life temptation came upon him. It
-was a grim and notable January night—the fourth
-day of the great thaw. The rain had gusted and
-blown and threshed and pelted upon those window-panes
-of Whinnyliggate which looked towards the
-west, till there was not a speck of dirt upon them
-anywhere, except on the inside. The snow had
-melted fast under the pitiless downpour, and the
-patient sheep stood about behind dyke-backs, or
-with the courage of despair pushed through holes
-in bedraggled hedges, to take a furtive nibble
-at the brown stubble of last year's cornfields.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was half-past nine when Nathan went to his
-door to look out. Nathan Monypenny had built
-himself a lobby, and so was thought to be
-"upsetting." At that time for a man to wear a
-white collar on weekdays, or to walk with his
-hands out of his pockets, for a woman to be
-"dressed" in the forenoon, or to wear gloves
-except when actually entering the kirk door, for
-a householder to whitewash his premises oftener
-than once in five years, or to erect a porch to his
-dwelling, was held to be "upsetting"—that is, he
-(or she) was evidently setting up to be better than
-their neighbours—an iniquity as unpopular in
-Whinnyliggate as elsewhere in the world.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>From this "upsetting" porch, then, Nathan
-looked out. A dash of rain, solid as if the little
-house had shipped a sea in a perilous ocean
-passage, took Nathan about the ankles and
-rebuked him in a very practical fashion for coming
-to the door, as is Galloway custom, in his
-"stocking-feet." It had blown in from a broken
-"roan" pipe, which Nathan had been intending
-to mend as soon as the snow went off the root.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nathan shut the door and went within. He
-had seen little through the blackness save the
-bright lights of the "Golden Lion," and heard
-nothing above the long-drawn </span><em class="italics">whoo</em><span> of the storm
-save the noisy chorus of the drinking song which
-Doog Carnochan was singing. Nathan knew it
-was Doog's voice. About this he could make no
-mistake. Had he not listened to it long ago,
-when Doog sang in the village choir, knowing all
-the while, full well, that he was singing his Dahlia's
-heart out of her bosom? Nathan Monypenny
-sighed and thought of that desolate house down
-at the other end of the street where that same
-Dahlia would even then be putting her children to
-bed. He knew just the faintly wearied look there
-would be on the face from which the youthful
-roses had long since faded. He would have given
-all he possessed in the world to sit and watch
-her thus, to comfort her in her loneliness; but,
-resolutely putting the temptation aside, he drew
-the great Bible that had been his father's off its
-shelf and laid it on the table.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then he brought a new candle from the shop
-and lighted it. But, so great was the storm
-without that even in that comfortable inner room
-the draught blew the flame about and the words
-seemed to dance on the printed page.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Again and again during his reading Nathan
-lifted his head and listened. The "wag-at-the-wa'"
-clock struck ten with enormous birr and
-clatter, beginning with a buzz of anticipation five
-minutes too soon, and continuing to emit applausive
-"curmurrings" of internal satisfaction for full five
-minutes after the actual stroke of the hour had
-died on the ear.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nathan paused in his reading to listen for
-the sound of the roysterers' feet going homeward
-from the "Golden Lion." Doog would be one
-of those, most likely the drunkest and the
-noisiest. He must be half-way down the street
-by now, stumbling along with trippings and foul,
-irresponsible words. Now Dahlia would be opening
-the door to him—Nathan knew the look on her
-face. When he shut his eyes he could see it
-even more clearly. In the middle dark of the
-night, when he lay sleepless, staring at the ceiling,
-he could see it most clearly of all.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For this reason he was in no hurry to finish
-and put out the light; but it had to be done at
-last. And then with his head on the pillow
-Nathan Monypenny bethought himself with small
-satisfaction of his wasted life. Of what use was
-his house, his money in the bank, his eldership,
-the praise of men, the satisfactory state of his
-ledger? After all, he was a lonely man, and out
-there in the rain, dank and dripping, leafless and
-forlorn, shivered the hedge over which in golden
-weather he had lifted Dahlia Ogilvy. At the
-rose-bush in the corner she had once let him
-kiss her. Ah! but he must not think of that.
-She was Dahlia Carnochan, and her drunken
-husband had just reeled home to her. Yet as
-he sat and stared at the red peats on the hearth
-Nathan Monypenny could think of nothing else,
-and how her hair had had a flower-like scent as
-he drew her to him that night when (for once
-in his grey and barren life) the roses bloomed red
-and smelled sweet.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But there was something else which kept
-Nathan's nerves on the stretch, something that
-was not summed up in his thoughts of Dahlia—an
-apprehension of impending disaster. Even
-after he had gone to bed he lifted his head more
-than once from the pillow, for his heart, stounding
-and rushing in his ears, shut out all other noises.
-Then he sat up and listened. He seemed to
-hear a cry above the roar and swelter of the
-storm—a man's cry for help in mortal need.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nathan rose and drew on his clothes hurriedly,
-yet buttoning with his accustomed carefulness
-an overcoat closely about him. Then, leaving
-a lighted candle on the table, he opened the door
-and stepped out into the darkness. The wind
-met him like a wall. The rain assailed his cheeks
-and stunned his ears like a volley of bullets.
-For a full minute he stood exposed to the broad
-fury of the tempest, slashed by the driving sleet,
-beaten and deafened into bewilderment by a
-turmoil of buffeting gusts. Then, recovering
-himself a little, he turned aside the lee of the gable
-of his cottage, which looked towards the north-east.
-Here he was more sheltered, and though
-the winds still sang stridently overhead, and the
-swirls of lashing rain occasionally beat upon
-him like "hale water," he could listen with some
-composure for a repetition of the sound which
-had disturbed him.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>There—there it was again! A hoarse cry,
-ending in a curious gasp and gurgle of extinction.
-Nathan almost thought that he could distinguish
-his own name.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He put his hands to his mouth funnel-wise, to
-form a sort of rough-speaking trumpet. "Haloo!"
-he shouted. "Where are you?"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But it was an appreciable interval before any
-voice replied, and then it seemed more like a
-dying man's moan of anguish than any human
-tones.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"It's somebody in the water!" Nathan cried,
-and rushed down the little strip of garden which
-separated his cottage from the Whinnyliggate
-Burn. This was ordinarily a clear little rivulet,
-running lucidly brown and pleasantly at prattle
-over a pebbly bed. Boys fished for "bairdies"
-in its three-foot-deep pools. Iris and water-lily
-fringed the swamps where it expanded into broad
-sedgy ponds. But in spite of its apparent
-innocence, Whinnyliggate Lane was a stream of
-a dangerous reputation. Its ultimate source was
-a deep mountain lake high among the bosoming
-hills of Girthon, and when the rains descended and
-the floods came, it sometimes chanced that the
-inhabitants of the village awoke to find that their
-prattling babe had become a giant, and that the
-burn, which the night before had scarce covered
-the pebbles in its bed, was now roaring wide and
-strong, thirty feet from bank to bank, crumbling
-their garden walls, and even threatening with
-destruction the sacred Midtoon Brig itself, from
-time immemorial the Palladium of the liberties and
-the Parliament House of the gossip of the village.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The part of the bank down which Nathan ran
-was used by the village smith for the important
-work of "hooping wheels," or shrinking the iron
-"shods" on the wheels of the red farm carts.
-There were always a few rusty spare "hoops"
-of solid iron scattered about, while a general </span><em class="italics">débris</em><span>
-of blacksmithery, outcast and decrepit, cumbered
-the burnside.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Before Nathan had gone far he found himself
-splashing in the rising water.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Loch Girthon has broken its dam!" he
-murmured; "God help the puir soul that fa's
-intil Whinnyliggate Lane this nicht!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was nearly pitch dark, and Nathan Monypenny,
-standing up to his knees in the swirl of the
-flood, called aloud, but got no reply from any
-human voice. The forward hurl of the storm
-whooping overhead, the roar of the icy torrent
-fighting with the caving banks beneath, were the
-only sounds he could distinguish.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>He was indeed on the point of leaving the water
-edge and regaining his comfortable cottage, when,
-wading through a shallow extension of the stream
-near the bridge, his foot struck something soft,
-which carried with it a curiously human suggestion.
-He stopped and laid his hand on the rough cloth
-and sodden sock which covered a man's ankle.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Though not great of stature, Nathan Monypenny
-was both strong and brave. He stooped and
-endeavoured to disentangle the boot from the iron
-hoop in which it was caught. Succeeding in this,
-he next endeavoured to pull the drowning man
-out of the water. But the head and upper part
-of the body hung over the bank, and were drawn
-down by the whole force of the torrent.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Again and again Nathan strove with all his
-might, but the water wrenched and wrestled till
-the body was almost snatched from his grasp.
-More than once, indeed, Nathan came very near
-going over the verge himself and sharing the fate
-of the unfortunate whom he was endeavouring
-to rescue.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>At last, however, by dint of exertions almost
-superhuman, he succeeded in getting the man
-to the edge of the water, and immediately sank
-exhausted on the sodden grass. By-and-bye,
-however, he staggered up, and without ever thinking
-of going to seek for help, he succeeded in balancing
-the unconscious burden upon his shoulders and
-carrying it staggeringly to his own door.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>The candle he had lighted was still burning,
-though it seemed to Nathan that he must have
-been a very long time away. He let the body
-fall upon the settle bed, and then, catching sight
-of the pale features, dripping ghastly under the
-flicker of the farthing dip, he sank dismayed on
-a chair.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>It was Doog Carnochan—Dahlia Carnochan's
-husband. The story was plain enough. Stumbling
-homeward from the "Golden Lion," he had missed
-his drunken way, and wandered down by the
-"hooping" place to the water's edge.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Nathan stared open-mouthed. What should he
-do?—go for assistance? That perhaps had been
-wisest—yet, to leave a man in whom there might
-be some faint spark of life! He rose and stretched
-Doog's arms out over his head and back again
-time after time, as he had once seen a doctor
-do on the ice after a curling accident.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But there was no drawing of breath, nor could
-he distinguish the least beating of the heart. He
-took down the little hand-mirror, which had satisfied
-the frugal demands of his toilet all these years,
-and put it close to the drowned man's lips.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Yes—no—it could not be, yet it was just possible
-that there might be a faint dimming of the surface
-of the mirror.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>Then a hot wondrous thought leaped up in
-Nathan Monypenny's heart—the devil in the garb
-of an angel of light.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>What if he were simply to hold his hand—the
-man was as good as dead already.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And what then? There rose up before Nathan
-Monypenny a vision of the woman whom he had
-loved more than life, of a pale and weary face
-upon which he would rejoice to bring out the
-roses as in the days of old. Happiness would
-do it, he knew. And, like all true lovers, he
-believed that he alone could make that one woman
-happy. Douglas Carnochan? What was he but
-a drunkard who had blighted two lives? If a hand
-were stirred to help him now, he would simply
-go on and finish the fell work of the years. His
-Dahlia's face would grow yet more weary, her
-shoulders more bent, and her eyes would less
-seldom be raised from the ground till on a
-thrice-welcome day the grave should be opened
-before her. Nathan knew it all by heart.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And this man—why did he deserve to live?
-Had not he (Nathan) afforded him every chance?
-Had he not obtained situation after situation for
-him? Had he not, in fact, kept Doog Carnochan
-and his family for years? Surely God did not
-require from him this great final sacrifice. It
-was certainly a chance to do lasting good—a
-happy woman, a happy man, a happy home!
-Better, too, (so Nathan told himself) for Douglas
-Carnochan's children. He would be a father to
-them—that which this their own father had never
-been. He would train, instruct, place them in
-the world. </span><em class="italics">But—he would be a murderer!</em></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><span>*      *      *      *      *</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<p class="pfirst"><span>After an hour's hard work Doog Carnochan
-sighed. Five minutes more and he opened his
-eyes. They twinkled blackly up at his preserver
-with a kind of ironical appreciation of the situation,
-and he smiled.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah, Nathan," he murmured, "sae it's you
-that has drawn me oot o' the black flood water!
-Man, ye had better hae let weel alane!"</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>On this occasion Doog was not a humourist
-only. He was also a true prophet. For, from
-every point of view save that of the Eternal
-Decrees, it would indeed have been infinitely
-better if Nathan had let well alone, and not
-wrested back the unstable and degraded spirit
-of Douglas Carnochan from the rushing waters
-of Whinnyliggate Lane, that January night when
-Loch Girthon burst its bounds.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>For, as Nathan had forecast, even so it was.
-Doog promptly returned to his wallowing in the
-mire, without even making a pretence of amending
-his restored life. Duly he brought down his
-wife's too early grey hairs in sorrow to the grave.
-His children, left to run wild, divided their time
-between the "Golden Lion" and the country
-gaol. Doog drank himself into an unhonoured
-grave. Only Nathan Monypenny remains, an
-old man now, yet holding firm-lipped to a
-conviction that God has explanations of the working
-of His laws which He refuses to us on this
-Hither Side, but which will be granted in full
-to us when we "know as also we are known."</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>After Doog's death Nathan bought and
-immediately razed to the ground the cottage at the
-foot of the street where Dahlia Carnochan's life
-tragedy had been enacted. He has planted a
-garden of flowers there, to the scorn and scandal
-of the whole village, which is cut to its utilitarian
-heart to see so much good potato land wasted—simply
-wasted.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>And every night before Nathan goes to bed
-he steps quietly to the low place in the privet
-hedge, over which he lifted little Dahlia Ogilvy
-more than fifty years ago. He does nothing when
-he gets there. He does not even pray. He has
-none to pray for, and he wants nothing for himself
-save God's ultimate gift, easeful death, and that,
-he knows, cannot long be delayed.</span></p>
-<p class="pnext"><span>But if you watch him closely, you may see
-him lift his hand and rest it gently upon the
-stem of an ancient rose-tree, as if he had laid
-it in benediction upon a young child's head.</span></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em">
-</div>
-<p class="center pfirst"><em class="italics small">Printed by Hazell, Watson, &amp; Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.</em></p>
-<div class="vspace" style="height: 6em">
-</div>
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
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