session, than even the Pope of Rome himself; for he came to teach
the flagrant
heresy of Universal Redemption, a most consolatory
doctrine to the
sinner that is loth to
repent, and who loves to
troll his
iniquity like a sweet
morsel under his tongue. Mr Martin
Siftwell, who was the last ta'en on elder, and who had received a
liberal and
judicious education, and was,
moreover, naturally
possessed of a quick penetration, observed, in
speaking of this new
doctrine, that the grossest papist
sinner might have some qualms of
fear after he had bought the Pope's
pardon, and might
thereby be led
to a reformation of life; but that the
doctrine of
universalredemption was a bribe to
commit sin, the wickedest mortal,
according to it, being only
liable to a few thousand years, more or
less, of
suffering, which, compared with
eternity, was but a
momentary pang, like having a tooth drawn for the toothache. Mr
Siftwell is a
shrewd and clear-seeing man in points of
theology, and
I would trust a great deal to what he says, as I have not, at my
advanced age, such a mind for the kittle crudities of polemical
investigation that I had in my younger years, especially when I was
a student in the Divinity Hall of Glasgow.
It will be seen from all I have
herein recorded, that, in the course
of this year, there was a general resuscitation of religious
sentiments; for what happened in my
parish was but a type and index
to the rest of the world. We had, however, one
memorable that must
stand by itself; for although neither death nor
bloodshed happened,
yet was it cause of the fear of both.
A rumour reached us from the Clyde, that a French man-of-war had
appeared in a Highland loch, and that all the Greenock volunteers
had embarked in merchant vessels to bring her in for a prize. Our
volunteers were just jumping and yowling, like chained dogs, to be
at her too; but the
colonel, Sir Hugh, would do nothing without
orders from his superiors. Mr Cayenne, though an aged man above
seventy, was as bold as a lion, and came forth in the old garb of an
American
huntsman, like, as I was told, a Robin Hood in the play is;
and it was just a sport to see him, feckless man,
trying to march so
crousely with his lean, shaking hands. But the whole affair proved
a false alarm, and our men, when they heard it, were as well pleased
that they had been constrained to sleep in their warm beds at home,
instead of lying on coils of cables, like the
gallant Greenock
sharp-shooters.
CHAPTER XLVI YEAR 1805
For some time I had meditated a reformation in the
parish, and this
year I carried the same into effect. I had often noticed with
concern, that, out of a
mistaken notion of paying respect to the
dead, my people were wont to go to great lengths at their burials,
and dealt round short-bread and sugar-biscuit, with wine and other
confections, as if there had been no ha'd in their hands; which
straitened many a poor family, making the
dispensation of the Lord a
heavier temporal
calamity than it should naturally have been.
Accordingly, on consulting with Mrs Balwhidder, who has a most
judicious judgment, it was thought that my
interference would go a
great way to
lighten the evil. I
therefore advised with those whose
friends were taken from them, not to make that amplitude of
preparation which used to be the fashion, nor to continue handing
about as long as the folk would take, but only at the very most to
go no more than three times round with the service. Objections were
made to this, as if it would be thought mean; but I put on a stern
visage, and told them, that if they did more I would rise up, and
rebuke and
forbid the
extravagance. So three services became the
uttermost modicum at all burials. This was doing much, but it was
not all that I wished to do.
I considered that the best reformations are those which proceed step
by step, and stop at that point where the consent to what has been
established becomes general; and so I governed myself, and
thereforeinterfered no farther; but I was determined to set an example.
Accordingly, at the very next dregy, after I partook of one service,
I made a bow to the servitors and they passed on, but all before me
had partaken of the second service; some, however, of those after me
did as I did, so I foresaw that in a quiet canny way I would bring
in the fashion of being satisfied with one service. I
therefore,
from that time, always took my place as near as possible to the
door, where the chief
mourner sat, and made a point of nodding away
the second service, which has now grown into a custom, to the great
advantage of surviving relations.
But in this reforming business I was not
altogether pleased with our
poet; for he took a pawkie view of my endeavours, and indited a
ballad on the subject, in the which he makes a clattering carlin
describe what took place, so as to turn a very
solemn matter into a
kind of
derision. When he brought his verse and read it to me, I
told him that I thought it was overly natural; for I could not find
another term to
designate the cause of the
dissatisfaction that I
had with it; but Mrs Balwhidder said that it might help my plan if
it were made public; so upon her advice we got some of Mr Lorimore's
best writers to make copies of it for
distribution, which was not
without fruit and influence. But a sore thing happened at the very
next burial. As soon as the nodding away of the second service
began, I could see that the
gravity of the whole meeting was
discomposed; and some of the irreverent young chiels almost broke
out into even-down
laughter, which vexed me
exceedingly. Mrs
Balwhidder, howsoever, comforted me by
saying, that custom in time
would make it familiar, and by-and-by the thing would pass as a
matter of course, until one service would be all that folk would
offer; and truly the thing is coming to that, for only two services
are now handed round, and the second is
regularly nodded by.
CHAPTER XLVII YEAR 1806
Mr Cayenne of Wheatrig having for several years been in a declining
way,
partly brought on by the consuming fire of his
furious passion,
and
partly by the decay of old age, sent for me on the evening of
the first Sabbath of March in this year. I was surprised at the
message, and went to the Wheatrig House directly, where, by the
lights in the windows as I gaed up through the
policy to the door, I
saw something
extraordinary was going on. Sambo, the blackamoor
servant, opened the door, and, without
speaking, shook his head; for
it was an
affectionate creature, and as fond of his master as if he
had been his own father. By this sign I guessed that the old
gentleman was thought to be
drawing near his latter end; so I walked
softly after Sambo up the stair, and was shown into the chamber
where Mr Cayenne, since he had been confined to the house, usually
sat. His wife had been dead some years before.
Mr Cayenne was sitting in his easy chair, with a white cotton
nightcap on his head, and a pillow at his shoulders to keep him
straight. But his head had fallen down on his breast, and he
breathed like a panting baby. His legs were swelled, and his feet
rested on a footstool. His face, which was wont to be the colour of
a peony rose, was of a yellow hue, with a patch of red on each cheek
like a wafer; and his nose was shirpit and sharp, and of an
unnatural
purple. Death was
evidently fighting with nature for the
pos
session of the body. "Heaven have mercy on his soul!" said I to
myself, as I sat down beside him.
When I had been seated some time, the power was given him to raise
his head as it were a-jee; and he looked at me with the tail of his
eye, which I saw was glittering and
glassy. "Doctor," for he always
called me doctor, though I am not of that degree, "I am glad to see
you," were his words, uttered with some difficulty.
"How do you find yourself, sir?" I replied, in a sympathising
manner.
"Damned bad," said he, as if I had been the cause of his
suffering.
I was daunted to the very heart to hear him in such an unregenerate
state; but after a short pause I addressed myself to him again,
saying, that "I hoped he would soon be more at ease; and he should
bear in mind that the Lord chasteneth whom he loveth."
"The devil take such love!" was his awful answer, which was to me as