. . . .
One day when we were walking through the little village of Strathdee
we turned the corner of a quiet side street and came suddenly upon
something
altogether strange and unexpected.
A stone
cottage of the
everyday sort stood a
trifle back from the
road and bore over its front door a sign announcing that Mrs. Bruce,
Flesher, carried on her business within; and indeed one could look
through the windows and see ruddy joints
hanging from beams, and
piles of pink-and-white steaks and chops lying neatly on the
counter, crying, `Come, eat me!' Nevertheless, one's first glance
would be arrested neither by Mrs Bruce's black-and-gold sign, nor by
the enticements of her stock-in-trade, because one's attention is
rapped
squarely between the eyes by an
astonishing shape that arises
from the patch of lawn in front of the
cottage, and completely
dominates the scene. Imagine yourself face to face with the last
thing you would expect to see in a
modest front dooryard,--the
figurehead of a ship,
heroic in size,
gorgeous in colour, majestic
in pose! A
femalepersonage it appears to be from the drapery,
which is the only key the artist furnishes as to sex, and a queenly
femalewithal, for she wears a crown at least a foot high, and
brandishes a forbidding sceptre. All this seen from the front, but
the rear view discloses the fact that the lady terminates in the
tail of a fish which wriggles artistically in mid-air and is of a
brittle sort, as it has
evidently been
thrice broken and glued
together.
Mrs Bruce did not leave us long in
suspense, but obligingly came
out,
partly to
comment on the low price of
mutton and
partly to tell
the tale of the
mammoth mermaid. By rights, of course, Mrs. Bruce's
husband should have been the
gallant captain of a bark which
foundered at sea and sent every man to his grave on the ocean-bed.
The ship's figurehead should have been discovered by some
miracle,
brought to the sorrowing widow, and set up in the garden in eternal
remembrance of the dear
departed. This was the story in my mind,
but as a matter of fact the rude effigy was
wrought by Mrs. Bruce's
father for a ship to be called the Sea Queen, but by some mischance,
ship and figurehead never came together, and the old wood-carver
left it to his daughter, in lieu of other property. It has not been
wholly unproductive, Mrs. Bruce fancies, for the
casual passers-by,
like those who came to scoff and remained to pray, go into the shop
to ask questions about the Sea Queen and buy chops out of courtesy
and gratitude.
. . . .
On our way to the bakery, which is a daily walk with us, we always
glance at a little cot in a
grassy lane just off the fore street.
In one half of this
humbledwelling Mrs. Davidson keeps a slender
stock of shop-worn articles,--pins, needles, threads, sealing-wax,
pencils, and sweeties for the children, all disposed attractively
upon a single shelf behind the window.
Across the passage, close to the other window, sits day after day an
old woman of eight-six summers who has lost her kinship with the
present and gone back to dwell for ever in the past. A small table
stands in front of her rush-bottomed chair, the old family Bible
rests upon it, and in front of the Bible are always four tiny dolls,
with which the trembling old fingers play from morning till night.
They are cheap, common little puppets, but she robes and disrobes
them with tenderest care. They are put to bed upon the Bible, take
their walks along its time-worn pages, are married on it, buried on
it, and the direst
punishment they ever receive is to be removed
from its
sacred covers and
temporarilyhidden beneath the dear old
soul's black alpaca apron. She is quite happy with her treasures on
week-days; but on Sundays--alas and alas! the poor old dame sits in
her
lonely chair with the furtive tears dropping on her wrinkled
cheeks, for it is a God-fearing household, and it is neither lawful
nor seemly to play with dolls on the Sawbath!
. . . .
Mrs. Nicolson is the presiding
genius of the bakery, she is more--
she is the bakery itself. A Mr. Nicolson there is, and he is known
to be the baker, but he dwells in the regions below the shop and
only issues at rare intervals, beneath the friendly shelter of a
huge tin tray filled with scones and baps.
If you saw Mrs. Nicolson's kitchen with the firelight gleaming on
its bright
copper, its polished candlesticks, and its snowy floor,
you would think her an
admirablehousewife, but you would get no
clue to those
shrewd and masterful traits of
character which reveal
themselves
chiefly behind the counter.
Miss Grieve had purchased of Mrs. Nicolson a quarter section of very
appetising ginger-cake to eat with our afternoon tea, and I stepped
in to buy more. She showed me a large round loaf for two shillings.
"No," I objected, "I cannot use a whole loaf, thank you. We eat
very little at a time, and like it
perfectly fresh. I wish a small
piece such as my maid bought the other day."
Then ensued a
discourse which I cannot render in the vernacular,
more's the pity, though I understood it all too well for my comfort.
The substance of it was this: that she couldna and wouldna tak' it
in hand to give me a quarter section of cake when the other three-
quarters might gae dry in the bakery; that the reason she sold the
small piece on the former occasion was that her daughter, her son-
in-law, and their three children came from Ballahoolish to visit
her, and she gave them a high tea with no expense spared; that at
this
function they devoured three-fourths of a ginger-cake, and just
as she was mournfully
regarding the
remainder my servant came in and
took it off her hands; that she had kept a bakery for thirty years
and her mother before her, and never had a two-shilling ginger-cake
been sold in pieces before, nor was it likely ever to occur again;
that if I, under Providence, so to speak, had been the fortunate
gainer by the transaction, why not eat my six penny-worth in solemn
gratitude once for all, and not expect a like
miracle to happen the
next week? And finally, that two-shilling ginger-cakes were, in the
very nature of things, designed for large families; and it was the
part of
wisdom for small families to fix their affections on
something else, for she couldna and wouldna tak' it in hand to cut a
rare and
expensive article for a small customer.
The
torrent of logic was over, and I said
humbly that I would take
the whole loaf.
"Verra weel, mam," she responded more affably, "thank you kindly;
no, I couldna tak' it in hand to sell six pennyworth of that ginger-
cake and let one-and-sixpence worth gae dry in the bakery.--A
beautiful day, mam! Won'erful blest in weather ye are! Let me open
your
umbrella for you, mam!"
. . . .
David Robb is the
weaver of Pettybaw. All day long he sits at his
old-fashioned hand-loom, which, like the fruit of his toil and the
dear old greybeard himself, belongs to a day that is past and gone.
He might have work enough to keep an
apprentice busy, but where
would he find a lad
sufficiently behind the times to learn a
humbletrade now banished to the limbo of superseded, almost forgotten
things?
His home is but a poor place, but the rough room in which he works
is big enough to hold a deal of sweet content. It is
cheery enough,
too, to attract the Pettybaw weans, who steal in on wet days and sit
on the floor playing with the thrums, or with bits of coloured
ravellings. Sometimes when they have proved themselves wise and
prudent little virgins, they are even allowed to touch the hanks of
pink and yellow and blue yarn that lie in rainbow-hued
confusion on
the long deal table.
All this time the `heddles' go up and down, up and down, with their
ceaseless
clatter, and David throws the shuttle back and forth as he
weaves his
old-fashioned winceys.
We have grown to be good friends, David and I, and I have been
permitted the signal honour of
painting him at his work.
The loom stands by an eastern window, and the rare Pettybaw sunshine
filters through the branches of a tree, shines upon the dusty