in which he had no concern; for he had a most irksome nature, and
could not be at rest, so that he was truly a thorn in our side.
Among other of his strange
doings, was the part he took in the
proceedings of the
session, with which he had as little to do, in a
manner, as the man in the moon; but having no business on his hands,
he attended every sederunt, and from less to more, having no self-
government, he began to give his opinion in our deliberations; and
often bred us trouble, by causing
strife to arise.
It happened, as the time of the summer occasion was
drawing near,
that it behoved us to make arrangements about the
assistance; and
upon the
suggestion of the elders, to which I paid always the
greatest deference, I invited Mr Keekie of Loupinton, who was a
sound
preacher" target="_blank" title="n.讲道者,传教士">
preacher, and a great expounder of the kittle parts of the Old
Testament, being a man well versed in the Hebrew and etymologies,
for which he was much reverenced by the old people that
delighted to
search the Scriptures. I had also written to Mr Sprose of Annock, a
preacher" target="_blank" title="n.讲道者,传教士">
preacher of another sort, being a
vehement and powerful thresher of
the word, making the chaff and vain babbling of
corrupt commentators
to fly from his hand. He was not, however, so well liked, as he
wanted that connect method which is needful to the enforcing of
doctrine. But he had never been among us, and it was thought it
would be a godly treat to the
parish to let the people hear him.
Besides Mr Sprose, Mr Waikle of Gowanry, a quiet hewer out of the
image of
holiness in the heart, was
likewise invited, all in
addition to our old stoops from the
adjacentparishes.
None of these three
preacher" target="_blank" title="n.讲道者,传教士">
preachers were in any
estimation with Mr
Cayenne, who had only heard each of them once; and he,
happening to
be present in the
session-house at the time, enquired how we had
settled. I thought this not a very
orderly question, but I gave him
a civil answer,
saying, that, Mr Keekie of Loupinton would
preach on
the morning of the fast-day, Mr Sprose of Annock in the afternoon,
and Mr Waikle of Gowanry on the Saturday. Never shall I or the
elders, while the
breath of life is in our bodies, forget the reply.
Mr Cayenne struck the table like a clap of
thunder, and cried, "Mr
Keekie of Loupinton, and Mr Sprose of Annock, and Mr Waikle of
Gowanry, and all suck trash, may go to--and be -!" and out of the
house he bounced, like a hand-ball stotting on a stone.
The elders and me were confounded, and for some time we could not
speak, but looked at each other,
doubtful if our ears heard aright.
At long and length I came to myself; and, in the strength of God,
took my place at the table, and said, this was an
outrageous impiety
not to be borne, which all the elders agreed to; and we thereupon
came to a
resolve, which I dictated myself,
wherein we debarred Mr
Cayenne from ever after entering, unless summoned, the
session-
house, the which
resolve we directed the
session-clerk to send to
him direct, and thus we vindicated the insulted privileges of the
church.
Mr Cayenne had cooled before he got home, and our paper coming to
him in his appeased blood, he immediately came to the manse, and
made a contrite
apology for his hasty
temper, which I reported in
due time and form, to the
session, and there the matter ended. But
here was an example plain to be seen of the truth of the old
proverb, that as one door shuts another opens; for scarcely were we
in quietness by the
decease of that old light-headed woman, the Lady
Macadam, till a full
equivalent for her was given in this hot and
fiery Mr Cayenne.
CHAPTER XXVII YEAR 1786
From the day of my settlement, I had
resolved, in order to win the
affections of my people, and to
promoteunison among the heritors,
to be of as little expense to the
parish as possible; but by this
time the manse had fallen into a sore state of decay--the doors were
wormed on the hinges--the casements of the windows chattered all the
winter, like the teeth of a person perishing with cold, so that we
had no comfort in the house; by which, at the
urgent instigations of
Mrs Balwhidder, I was obligated to represent our situation to the
session. I would rather, having so much saved money in the bank,
paid the needful
repairs myself, than have done this, but she said
it would be a rank
injustice to our own family; and her father, Mr
Kibbock, who was very long-headed, with more than a common man's
portion of understanding,
pointed out to me, that, as my life was
but in my lip, it would be a wrong thing towards whomsoever was
ordained to be my
successor, to use the heritors to the custom of
the
minister paying for the reparations of the manse, as it might
happen he might not be so well able to afford it as me. So in a
manner, by their
persuasion, and the constraint of the justice of
the case, I made a report of the infirmities both of doors and
windows, as well as of the
rotten state of the floors, which were
constantly in want of cobbling. Over and above all, I told them of
the sarking of the roof, which was as frush as a puddock-stool;
insomuch, that in every blast some of the pins lost their grip, and
the slates came hurling off.
The heritors were
accordingly convened, and, after some
deliberation, they proposed that the house should be seen to, and
whitewashed and painted; and I thought this might do, for I saw they
were terrified at the expense of a
thoroughrepair; but when I went
home and
repeated to Mrs Balwhidder what had been said at the
meeting, and my thankfulness at getting the heritors' consent to do
so much, she was excessively angry, and told me, that all the
painting and whitewashing in the world would avail nothing, for that
the house was as a sepulchre full of
rottenness; and she sent for Mr
Kibbock, her father, to confer with him on the way of getting the
matter put to rights.
Mr Kibbock came, and
hearing of what had passed, pondered for some
time, and then said, "All was very right! the
minister (meaning me)
has just to get tradesmen to look at the house, and write out their
opinion of what it needs. There will be
plaster to mend; so, before
painting, he will get a
plasterer. There will be a slater wanted;
he has just to get a slater's
estimate, and a wright's, and so
forth, and when all is done, he will lay them before the
session and
the heritors, who, no doubt, will direct the reparations to go
forward."
This was very pawkie, counselling, of Mr Kibbock, and I did not see
through it at the time, but did as he recommended, and took all the
different
estimates, when they came in, to the
session. The elders
commended my
prudenceexceedingly for so doing, before going to
work; and one of them asked me what the
amount of the whole would
be, but I had not cast it up. Some of the heritors thought that a
hundred pounds would be sufficient for the
outlay; but judge of our
consternation, when, in counting up all the sums of the different
estimates together, we found them well on towards a thousand pounds.
"Better big a new house at once, than do this!" cried all the
elders, by which I then perceived the draughtiness of Mr Kibbock's
advice. Accordingly, another meeting of the heritors was summoned,
and after a great deal of
controversy, it was agreed that a new
manse should be erected; and,
shortly after, we
contracted with
Thomas Trowel, the mason to build one for six hundred pounds, with
all the
requisite appurtenances, by which a clear gain was saved to
the
parish, by the
foresight of Mr Kibbock, to the
amount of nearly
four hundred pounds. But the heritors did not mean to have allowed
the sort of
repair that his plan comprehended. He was, however, a
far forecasting man; the like of him for natural parts not being in
our country side; and nobody could get the whip-hand of him, either
in a
bargain or an
improvement, when he once was
sensible of the
advantage. He was, indeed, a
blessing to the shire, both by his
example as a farmer, and by his sound and
discreet advice in the
contentions of his neighbours, being a man, as was a
saying among
the commonality, "wiser than the law and the fifteen Lords of
Edinburgh."
The building of the new manse occasioned a heavy cess on the
heritors, which made them overly ready to pick holes in the coats of
me and the elders; so that, out of my
forbearance and
delicacy in