Sabrina, over and above the incomings and Candlemas offerings of
school; insomuch that she saved money, and in the course of three
years had ten pounds to put in the bank.
At the time, these alterations and revolutions in the
parish were
thought a great
advantage; but now when I look back upon them, as a
traveller on the hill over the road he has passed, I have my doubts.
For with
wealth come wants, like a troop of
clamorous beggars at the
heels of a
generous man; and it's hard to tell
wherein the benefit
of
improvement in a country
parish consists, especially to those who
live by the sweat of their brow. But it is not for me to make
reflections; my task and duty is to note the changes of time and
habitudes.
CHAPTER X YEAR 1769
I have my doubts whether it was in the
beginning of this year, or in
the end of the last, that a very
extraordinary thing came to light
in the
parish; but, howsoever that may be, there is nothing more
certain than the fact, which it is my duty to record. I have
mentioned already how it was that the toll, or trust-road, was set
a-going, on
account of the Lord Eaglesham's tumbling on the midden
in the Vennel. Well, it happened to one of the labouring men, in
breaking the stones to make metal for the new road, that he broke a
stone that was both large and
remarkable, and in the heart of it,
which was boss, there was found a living creature, that jumped out
the moment it saw the light of heaven, to the great terrification of
the man, who could think it was nothing but an evil spirit that had
been imprisoned
therein for a time. The man came to me like a
demented creature, and the whole clachan gathered out, young and
old, and I went at their head to see what the
miracle could be, for
the man said it was a fiery
dragon, spewing smoke and flames. But
when we came to the spot, it was just a yird toad, and the laddie
weans nevelled it to death with stones, before I could
persuade them
to give over. Since then, I have read of such things coming to
light in the Scots Magazine, a very
valuable book.
Soon after the affair of "the wee deil in the stane," as it was
called, a sough reached us that the Americas were seized with the
rebellious spirit of the ten tribes, and were snapping their fingers
in the face of the king's government. The news came on a Saturday
night, for we had no newspapers in those days, and was brought by
Robin Modiwort, that fetched the letters from the Irville post.
Thomas Fullarton (he has been dead many a day) kept the
grocery shop
at Irville, and he had been in at Glasgow, as was his
yearly custom,
to settle his
accounts, and to buy a hogshead of
tobacco, with sugar
and other spiceries; and being in Glasgow, Thomas was told by the
merchant of a great rise in
tobacco, that had happened by reason of
the contumacity of the plantations, and it was thought that blood
would be spilt before things were ended, for that the King and
Parliament were in a great
passion with them. But as Charles
Malcolm, in the king's ship, was the only one belonging to the
parish that was likely to be art and part in the business, we were
in a manner little troubled at the time with this first gasp of the
monster of war, who, for our sins, was ordained to
swallow up and
devour so many of our fellow-subjects, before he was bound again in
the chains of mercy and peace.
I had, in the
meantime, written a letter to the Lord Eaglesham, to
get Charles Malcolm out of the clutches of the pressgang in the man-
of-war; and about a month after, his
lordship sent me an answer,
wherein was enclosed a letter from the captain of the ship, saying,
that Charles Malcolm was so good a man that he was
reluctant to part
with him, and that Charles himself was well
contented to remain
aboard. Anent which, his
lordship said to me, that he had written
back to the captain to make a midshipman of Charles, and that he
would take him under his own
protection, which was great joy on two
accounts to us all, especially to his mother; first, to hear that
Charles was a good man, although in years still but a youth; and,
secondly, that my lord had, of his own free-will, taken him under
the wing of his patronage.
But the sweet of this world is never to be enjoyed without some of
the sour. The coal bark between Irville and Belfast, in which
Robert Malcolm, the second son of his mother, was serving his time
to be a sailor, got a
charter, as it was called, to go with to
Norway for deals, which grieved Mrs Malcolm to the very heart; for
there was then no short cut by the canal, as now is, between the
rivers of the Forth and Clyde, but every ship was obligated to go
far away round by the Orkneys, which, although a
voyage in the
summer not overly dangerous, there being long days and short nights
then, yet in the winter it was far
otherwise, many
vessels being
frozen up in the Baltic till the spring; and there was a story told
at the time, of an Irville bark coming home in the dead of the year,
that lost her way
altogether, and was
supposed to have sailed north
into utter darkness, for she was never more heard of: and many an
awful thing was said of what the auld mariners about the shore
thought
concerning the crew of that misfortunate
vessel. However,
Mrs Malcolm was a woman of great faith, and having placed her
reliance on Him who is the orphan's stay and widow's trust, she
resigned her bairn into his hands, with a religious
submission to
his pleasure, though the mother's tear of weak human nature was on
her cheek and in her e'e. And her faith was well rewarded, for the
vessel brought him safe home, and he had seen such a world of
things, that it was just to read a story-book to hear him tell of
Elsineur and Gottenburg, and other fine and great places that we had
never heard of till that time; and he brought me a bottle of Riga
balsam, which for healing cuts was just
miraculous, besides a clear
bottle of Rososolus for his mother, a spirit which for
cordiality
could not be told; for though since that time we have had many a
sort of Dantzic
cordial, I have never tasted any to compare with
Robin Malcolm's Rososolus. The Lady Macadam, who had a knowledge of
such things, declared it was the best of the best sort; for Mrs
Malcolm sent her ladyship some of it in a doctor's bottle, as well
as to Mrs Balwhidder, who was then at the downlying with our
daughter Janet--a woman now in the married state, that makes a most
excellent wife, having been brought up with great pains, and well
educated, as I shall have to record by-and-by.
About the Christmas of this year, Lady Macadam's son having been
perfected in the art of war at a school in France, had, with the
help of his mother's friends, and his father's fame, got a stand of
colours in the Royal Scots
regiment; he came to show himself in his
regimentals to his lady mother, like a dutiful son, as he certainly
was. It happened that he was in the kirk in his scarlets and gold,
on the same Sunday that Robert Malcolm came home from the long
voyage to Norway for deals; and I thought when I saw the soldier and
the sailor from the
pulpit, that it was an omen of war, among our
harmless country folks, like swords and
cannonamidst ploughs and
sickles, coming upon us; and I became laden in spirit, and had a
most weighty prayer upon the occasion, which was long after
remembered, many thinking, when the American war broke out, that I
had been
gifted with a glimmering of
prophecy on that day.
It was during this visit to his lady mother, that young Laird
Macadam settled the
correspondence with Kate Malcolm, which, in the
process of time, caused us all so much trouble; for it was a
clandestine concern: but the time is not yet ripe for me to speak
of it more at large. I should, however, mention, before concluding
this annal, that Mrs Malcolm herself was this winter brought to
death's door by a terrible host that came on her in the kirk, by
taking a kittling in her
throat. It was a terrification to hear her
sometimes; but she got the better of it in the spring, and was more
herself
thereafter than she had been for years before; and her
daughter Effie or Euphemia, as she was called by Miss Sabrina, the
schoolmistress, was growing up to be a gleg and clever quean; she
was, indeed, such a spirit in her way, that the folks called her
Spunkie; while her son William, that was the youngest of the five,
was making a wonderful proficiency with Mr Lorimore. He was indeed