the middle of March; but it was rather damp, being new plastered,
and it caused me to have a
severe attack of the rheumatics in the
fall of the year.
I should not, in my notations, forget to mark a new
luxury that got
in among the commonality at this time. By the
opening of new roads,
and the
traffic thereon with carts and carriers, and by our young
men that were sailors going to the Clyde, and sailing to Jamaica and
the West Indies, heaps of sugar and coffee-beans were brought home,
while many, among the kail-stocks and cabbages in their yards, had
planted groset and berry bushes; which two things happening
together, the fashion to make jam and jelly, which
hitherto had been
only known in the kitchens and confectionaries of the
gentry, came
to be introduced into the clachan. All this, however, was not
without a plausible pretext; for it was found that jelly was an
excellent medicine for a sore
throat, and jam a
remedy as good as
London candy for a cough, or a cold, or a shortness of
breath. I
could not, however, say that this gave me so much concern as the
smuggling trade, only it occasioned a great fasherie to Mrs
Balwhidder; for, in the berry time, there was no end to the
borrowing of her brass-pan to make jelly and jam, till Mrs Toddy of
the Cross-Keys bought one, which, in its turn, came into request,
and saved ours.
It was in the Martinmas quarter of this year that I got the first
payment of my augmentation. Having no desire to rip up old sores, I
shall say no more anent it, the worst being anticipated in my
chronicle of the last year; but there was a thing happened in the
payment that occasioned a
vexation at the time, of a very
disagreeable nature. Daft Meg Gaffaw, who, from the tragical death
of her mother, was a
privileged subject, used to come to the manse
on the Saturdays for a meal of meat; and so it fell out that as, by
some
neglect of mine, no steps had been taken to
regulate the
disposal of the
victual that constituted the means of the
augmentation, some of the heritors, in an ungracious
temper, sent
what they called the tithe-ball (the Lord knows it was not the
fiftieth!) to the manse, where I had no place to put it. This fell
out on a Saturday night, when I was busy with my
sermon, thinking
not of silver or gold, but of much better; so that I was greatly
molested and disturbed
thereby. Daft Meg, who sat by the kitchen
chimley-lug,
hearing a', said nothing for a time; but when she saw
how Mrs Balwhidder and me were put to, she cried out with a loud
voice, like a soul under the
inspiration of prophecy--"When the
widow's cruse had filled all the vessels in the house, the Lord
stopped the increase. Verily,
verily, I say unto you, if your barns
be filled, and your girnell-kists can hold no more, seek till ye
shall find the tume basins of the poor, and
therein pour the corn,
and the oil, and the wine of your
abundance; so shall ye be
blessedof the Lord." The which words I took for an admonition, and
directing the sacks to be brought into the dining-room and other
chambers of the manse, I sent off the heritors' servants, that had
done me this
prejudice, with an
unexpected thankfulness. But this,
as I afterwards was informed, both them and their masters attributed
to the
greedy grasp of
avarice, with which they considered me as
misled; and having said so, nothing could
exceed their mortification
on Monday, when they heard (for they were of those who had deserted
the kirk) that I had given by the precentor notice to every widow in
the
parish that was in need, to come to the manse and she would
receive her
portion of the partitioning of the augmentation. Thus,
without any offence on my part, saving the strictness of justice,
was a division made between me and the heritors; but the people were
with me; and my own
conscience was with me; and though the fronts of
the lofts and the pews of the heritors were but
thinly filled, I
trusted that a good time was coming, when the
gentry would see the
error of their way. So I bent the head of
resignation to the Lord,
and, assisted by the
wisdom of Mr Kibbock, adhered to the course I
had adopted; but at the close of the year my heart was
sorrowful for
the schism; and my prayer on Hogmanay was one of great
bitterness of
soul, that such an evil had come to pass.
CHAPTER XXIX YEAR 1788
It had been often remarked by
ingenious men, that the Brawl burn,
which ran through the
parish, though a small, was yet a rapid
stream, and had a wonderful capability for damming, and to turn
mills. From the time that the Irville water deserted its channel
this brook grew into
repute, and several mills and dams had been
erected on its course. In this year a proposal came from Glasgow to
build a cotton-mill on its banks, beneath the Witch-linn, which
being on a corner of the Wheatrig, the property of Mr Cayenne, he
not only consented
thereto, but took a part in the profit or loss
therein; and, being a man of great activity, though we thought him,
for many a day, a serpent-plague sent upon the
parish, he proved
thereby one of our greatest benefactors. The cotton-mill was built,
and a
spaciousfabric it was--nothing like it had been seen before
in our day and generation--and, for the people that were brought to
work in it, a new town was built in the
vicinity, which Mr Cayenne,
the same being founded on his land, called Cayenneville, the name of
the
plantation in Virginia that had been taken from him by the
rebellious Americans. From that day Fortune was
lavish of her
favours upon him; his property swelled, and grew in the most
extraordinary manner, and the whole country side was
stirring with a
new life. For, when the mill was set a-going, he got weavers of
muslin established in Cayenneville; and
shortly after, but that did
not take place till the year following, he brought women all the way
from the neighbourhood of Manchester, in England, to teach the
lassie bairns in our old clachan tambouring.
Some of the ancient families, in their turreted houses, were not
pleased with this
innovation, especially when they saw the handsome
dwellings that were built for the weavers of the mills, and the
unstinted hand that supplied the
wealth required for the carrying on
of the business. It sank their pride into insignificance, and many
of them would almost rather have wanted the rise that took place in
the value of their lands, than have seen this incoming of what they
called o'er-sea
speculation. But, saving the building of the
cotton-mill, and the
beginning of Cayenneville, nothing more
memorable happened in this year, still it was
nevertheless a year of
a great activity. The minds of men were excited to new enterprises;
a new
genius, as it were, had descended upon the earth, and there
was an erect and outlooking spirit
abroad that was not to be
satisfied with the taciturn regularity of ancient affairs. Even
Miss Sabrina Hooky, the
schoolmistress, though now waned from her
meridian, was touched with the enlivening rod, and set herself to
learn and to teach tambouring, in such a manner as to supersede by
precept and example that old time-honoured functionary, as she
herself called it, the
spinning-wheel, proving, as she did one night
to Mr Kibbock and me, that, if more money could be made by a woman
tambouring than by
spinning, it was better for her to tambour than
to spin.
But, in the midst of all this commercing and manufacturing, I began
to discover signs of decay in the wonted
simplicity of our country
ways. Among the cotton-spinners and
muslin weavers of Cayenneville
were several unsatisfied and
ambitious spirits, who clubbed
together, and got a London newspaper to the Cross-Keys, where they
were
nightly in the habit of meeting and debating about the affairs
of the French, which were then
gathering towards a head. They were
represented to me as lads by common in
capacity, but with unsettled
notions of religion. They were, however, quiet and
orderly; and
some of them since, at Glasgow, Paisley, and Manchester, even, I am
told, in London, have grown into a topping way.
It seems they did not like my manner of
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preaching, and on that
account absented themselves from public
worship; which, when I
heard, I sent for some of them, to
convince them of their error with
regard to the truth of
divers points of
doctrine; but they
confounded me with their objections, and used my arguments, which
were the old and
orthodox proven opinions of the Divinity Hall, as
if they had been the light sayings of a vain man. So that I was
troubled, fearing that some change would ensue to my people, who had
hitherto lived
amidst the boughs and branches of the gospel
unmolested by the fowler's snare, and I set myself to watch
narrowly, and with a vigilant eye, what would come to pass.