(Copied and authenticated by the Reverend Mathew Clark, Presbyterian
Minister of Stoneykirk, in Wigtownshire)
Maister Fothergill West and the meenister
say that I maun tell all I can aboot General Heatherstone
and his hoose, but that I maunna say muckle aboot
mysel’ because the readers wouldna care to hear
aboot me or my affairs. I am na sae sure
o’ that, for the Stakes is a family weel kenned
and respecked on baith sides o’ the Border, and
there’s mony in Nithsdale and Annandale as would
be gey pleased to hear news o’ the son o’
Archie Stakes, o’ Ecclefechan.
I maun e’en do as I’m
tauld, however, for Mr. West’s sake, hoping he’ll
no forget me when I chance to hae a favour tae ask.(1)
I’m no able tae write mysel’ because my
feyther sent me oot to scare craws instead o’
sendin’ me tae school, but on the ither hond
he brought me up in the preenciples and practice o’
the real kirk o’ the Covenant, for which may
the Lord be praised!
It way last May twel’month that
the factor body, Maister McNeil, cam ower tae me in
the street and speered whether I was in want o’
a place as a coachman and gairdner. As it fell
oot I chanced tae be on the look oot for something
o’ the sort mysel’ at the time, but I wasna
ower quick to let him see that I wanted it.
“Ye can tak it or leave it,”
says he sharp like. “It’s a guid place,
and there’s mony would be glad o’t.
If ye want it ye can come up tae my office at twa
the morn and put your ain questions tae the gentleman.”
That was a’ I could get frae
him, for he’s a close man and a hard one at
a bargain which shall profit him leetle
in the next life, though he lay by a store o’
siller in this. When the day comes there’ll
be a hantle o’ factors on the left hand o’
the throne, and I shouldna be surprised if Maister
McNeil found himsel’ amang them.
Weel, on the morn I gaed up to the
office and there I foond the factor and a lang,
thin, dour man wi’ grey hair and a face as brown
and crinkled as a walnut. He looked hard at me
wi’ a pair o’ een that glowed like twa
spunks, and then he says, says he:
“You’ve been born in these pairts, I understan’?”
“Aye,” says I, “and never left them
neither.”
“Never been oot o’ Scotland?” he
speers.
“Twice to Carlisle fair,”
says I, for I am a man wha loves the truth; and besides
I kenned that the factor would mind my gaeing there,
for I bargained fur twa steers and a stirk that he
wanted for the stockin’ o’ the Drumleugh
Fairm.
“I learn frae Maister McNeil,”
says General Heatherstone for him it was
and nane ither “that ye canna write.”
“Na,” says I.
“Nor read?”
“Na,” says I.
“It seems tae me,” says
he, turnin’ tae the factor, “that this
is the vera man I want. Servants is spoilt
noo-a-days,” says he, “by ower muckle
eddication. I hae nae doobt, Stakes, that ye will
suit me well enough. Ye’ll hae three pund
a month and a’ foond, but I shall resairve the
right o’ givin’ ye twenty-four hoors’
notice at any time. How will that suit ye?”
“It’s vera different frae my last
place,” says I, discontented-like.
And the words were true enough, for
auld Fairmer Scott only gave me a pund a month and
parritch twice a day.
“Weel, weel,” says he,
“maybe we’ll gie ye a rise if ye suit.
Meanwhile here’s the han’sel shillin’
that Maister McNeil tells me it’s the custom
tae give, and I shall expec’ tae see ye at Cloomber
on Monday.”
When the Monday cam roond I walked
oot tae Cloomber, and a great muckle hoose it is,
wi’ a hunderd windows or mair, and space enough
tae hide awa’ half the parish.
As tae gairdening, there was no gairden
for me tae work at, and the horse was never taken
oot o’ the stables frae week’s end tae
week’s end. I was busy enough for a’
that, for there was a deal o’ fencing tae be
put up, and one thing or anither, forbye cleanin’
the knives and brushin’ the boots and such-like
jobs as is mair fit for an auld wife than for a grown
man.
There was twa besides mysel’
in the kitchen, the cook Eliza, and Mary the hoosemaid,
puir, benighted beings baith o’ them, wha had
wasted a’ their lives in London, and kenned
leetle aboot the warld or the ways o’ the flesh.
I hadna muckle tae say to them, for
they were simple folk who could scarce understand
English, and had hardly mair regard for their ain
souls than the tods on the moor. When the cook
said she didna think muckle o’ John Knox, and
the ither that she wouldna give saxpence tae hear
the discourse o’ Maister Donald McSnaw o’
the true kirk, I kenned it was time for me tae leave
them tae a higher Judge.
There was four in family, the general,
my leddy, Maister Mordaunt, and Miss Gabriel, and
it wasna long before I found that a’ wasna just
exactly as it should be. My leddy was as thin
and as white as a ghaist, and many’s the time
as I’ve come on her and found her yammerin’
and greetin’ all by hersel’. I’ve
watched her walkin’ up and doon in the wood
where she thought nane could see her and wringin’
her honds like one demented.
There was the young gentleman, tae,
and his sister they baith seemed to hae
some trouble on their minds, and the general maist
of a’, for the ithers were up ane day and down
anither; but he was aye the same, wi’ a face
as dour and sad as a felon when he feels the tow roond
his neck.
I speered o’ the hussies in
the kitchen whether they kenned what was amiss wi’
the family, but the cook she answered me back that
it wasna for her tae inquire into the affairs o’
her superiors, and that it was naething to her as
long as she did her work and had her wages. They
were puir, feckless bodies, the twa o’ them,
and would scarce gie an answer tae a ceevil question,
though they could clack lood eneugh when they had
a mind.
Weel, weeks passed into months and
a’ things grew waur instead o’ better
in the Hall. The general he got mair nairvous,
and his leddy mair melancholy every day, and yet there
wasna any quarrel or bickering between them, for when
they’ve been togither in the breakfast room
I used often tae gang round and prune the rose-tree
alongside o’ the window, so that I couldna help
hearin’ a great pairt o’ their conversation,
though sair against the grain.
When the young folk were wi’
them they would speak little, but when they had gone
they would aye talk as if some waefu’ trial ere
aboot to fa’ upon them, though I could
never gather from their words what it was that they
were afeared o’.
I’ve heard the general say mair
than ance that he wasna frighted o’ death,
or any danger that he could face and have done wi’,
but that it was the lang, weary waitin’
and the uncertainty that had taken a’ the strength
and the mettle oot o’ him. Then my leddy
would console him and tell him that maybe it wasna
as bad as he thocht, and that a’ would come
richt in the end but a’ her cheery
words were clean throwed away upon him.
As tae the young folks, I kenned weel
that they didna bide in the groonds, and that they
were awa’ whenever they got a chance wi’
Maister Fothergill West tae Branksome, but the general
was too fu’ o’ his ain troubles tae
ken aboot it, and it didna seem tae me that it was
pairt o’ my duties either as coachman or as
gairdner tae mind the bairns. He should have
lairnt that if ye forbid a lassie and a laddie to dae
anything it’s just the surest way o’ bringin’
it aboot. The Lord foond that oot in the gairden
o’ Paradise, and there’s no muckle change
between the folk in Eden and the folk in Wigtown.
There’s ane thing that I havena
spoke aboot yet, but that should be set doon.
The general didna share his room wi’
his wife, but slept a’ alane in a chamber at
the far end o’ the hoose, as distant as possible
frae every one else. This room was aye lockit
when he wasna in it, and naebody was ever allowed
tae gang into it. He would mak’ his ain
bed, and red it up and dust it a’ by himsel’,
but he wouldna so much as allow one o’ us to
set fût on the passage that led tae it.
At nicht he would walk a’
ower the hoose, and he had lamps hung in every room
and corner, so that no pairt should be dark.
Many’s the time frae my room
in the garret I’ve heard his futsteps comin’
and gangin’, comin’ and gangin’ doon
one passage and up anither frae midnight till cockcraw.
It was weary wark to lie listenin’ tae his clatter
and wonderin’ whether he was clean daft, or whether
maybe he’d lairnt pagan and idolatrous tricks
oot in India, and that his conscience noo was like
the worm which gnaweth and dieth not. I’d
ha’ speered frae him whether it wouldna ease
him to speak wi’ the holy Donald McSnaw, but
it might ha’ been a mistake, and the general
wasna a man that you’d care tae mak’ a
mistake wi’.
Ane day I was workin’ at the
grass border when he comes up and he says, says he:
“Did ye ever have occasion tae fire a pistol,
Israel?”
“Godsakes!” says I, “I never had
siccan a thing in my honds in my life.”
“Then you’d best not begin
noo,” says he. “Every man tae his
ain weepon,” he says. “Now I warrant
ye could do something wi’ a guid crab-tree cudgel!”
“Aye, could I,” I answered blithely, “as
well as ony lad on the Border.”
“This is a lonely hoose,”
says he, “and we might be molested by some rascals.
It’s weel tae be ready for whatever may come.
Me and you and my son Mordaunt and Mr. Fothergill
West of Branksome, who would come if he was required,
ought tae be able tae show a bauld face what
think ye?”
“‘Deed, sir,” I
says, “feastin’ is aye better than fechtin’ but
if ye’ll raise me a pund a month, I’ll
no’ shirk my share o’ either.”
“We won’t quarrel ower
that,” says he, and agreed tae the extra twal’
pund a year as easy as though it were as many bawbees.
Far be it frae me tae think evil, but I couldna help
surmisin’ at the time that money that was so
lightly pairted wi’ was maybe no’ so very
honestly cam by.
I’m no’ a curious or a
pryin’ mun by nature, but I was sair puzzled
in my ain mind tae tell why it was that the general
walked aboot at nicht and what kept him frae
his sleep.
Weel, ane day I was cleanin’
doon the passages when my e’e fell on a great
muckle heap o’ curtains and auld cairpets and
sic’ like things that were piled away in a corner,
no vera far frae the door o’ the general’s
room. A’ o’ a sudden a thocht came
intae my heid and I says tae mysel’:
“Israel, laddie,” says
I, “what’s tae stop ye frae hidin’
behind that this vera nicht and seein’
the auld mun when he doesna ken human e’e is
on him?”
The mair I thocht o’t the mair
seemple it appeared, and I made up my mind tae put
the idea intae instant execution.
When the nicht cam roond I tauld
the women-folk that I was bad wi’ the jawache,
and would gang airly tae my room. I kenned fine
when ance I got there that there was na
chance o’ ony ane disturbin’ me, so
I waited a wee while, and then when a’ was quiet,
I slippit aff my boots and ran doon the ither stair
until I cam tae the heap o’ auld clothes, and
there I lay doon wi’ ane e’e peepin’
through a kink and a’ the rest covered up wi’
a great, ragged cairpet.
There I bided as quiet as a mouse
until the general passed me on his road tae bed, and
a’ was still in the hoose.
My certie! I wouldna gang through
wi’ it again for a’ the siller at the
Union Bank of Dumfries, I canna think o’t noo
withoot feelin’ cauld a’ the way doon
my back.
It was just awfu’ lyin’
there in the deid silence, waitin’ and waitin’
wi’ never a soond tae break the monotony, except
the heavy tickin’ o’ an auld clock somewhere
doon the passage.
First I would look doon the corridor
in the one way, and syne I’d look doon in t’ither,
but it aye seemed to me as though there was something
coming up frae the side that I wasna lookin’
at. I had a cauld sweat on my broo, and my hairt
was beatin’ twice tae ilka tick o’ the
clock, and what feared me most of a’ was that
the dust frae the curtains and things was aye gettin’
doon intae my lungs, and it was a’ I could dae
tae keep mysel’ frae coughin’.
Godsakes! I wonder my hair wasna
grey wi’ a’ that I went through. I
wouldna dae it again to be made Lord Provost o’
Glasgie.
Weel, it may have been twa o’clock
in the mornin’ or maybe a little mair, and I
was just thinkin’ that I wasna tae see onything
after a’ and I wasna very sorry neither when
all o’ a sudden a soond cam tae my ears clear
and distinct through the stillness o’ the nicht.
I’ve been asked afore noo tae
describe that soond, but I’ve aye foond that
it’s no’ vera easy tae gie a clear
idea o’t, though it was unlike any other soond
that ever I hearkened tae. It was a shairp, ringin’
clang, like what could be caused by flippin’
the rim o’ a wineglass, but it was far higher
and thinner than that, and had in it, tae, a kind o’
splash, like the tinkle o’ a rain-drop intae
a water-butt.
In my fear I sat up amang my cairpets,
like a puddock among gowan-leaves, and I listened
wi’ a’ my ears. A’ was still
again noo, except for the dull tickin’ o’
the distant clock.
Suddenly the soond cam again, as clear,
as shrill, as shairp as ever, and this time the general
heard it, for I heard him gie a kind o’ groan,
as a tired man might wha has been roosed oot o’
his sleep.
He got up frae his bed, and I could
make oot a rustling noise, as though he were dressin’
himsel’, and presently his footfa’ as he
began tae walk up and doon in his room.
Mysakes! it didna tak lang for
me tae drap doon amang the cairpets again and
cover mysel’ ower. There I lay tremblin’
in every limb, and sayin’ as mony prayers as
I could mind, wi’ my e’e still peepin’
through the keek-hole, and’ fixed upon the door
o’ the general’s room.
I heard the rattle o’ the handle
presently, and the door swung slowly open. There
was a licht burnin’ in the room beyond, an’
I could just catch a glimpse o’ what seemed
tae me like a row o’ swords stuck alang the
side o’ the wa’, when the general stepped
oot and shut the door behind him. He was dressed
in a dressin’ goon, wi’ a red smokin’-cap
on his heid, and a pair o’ slippers wi’
the heels cut off and the taes turned up.
For a moment it cam into my held that
maybe he was walkin’ in his sleep, but as he
cam towards me I could see the glint o’ the licht
in his e’en, and his face was a’ twistin’,
like a man that’s in sair distress o’
mind. On my conscience, it gies me the shakes
noo when I think o’ his tall figure and his
yelley face comin’ sae solemn and silent doon
the lang, lone passage.
I haud my breath and lay close
watchin’ him, but just as he cam tae where I
was my vera hairt stood still in my breast, for
“ting!” loud and clear, within
a yaird o’ me cam the ringin’, clangin’
soond that I had a’ready hairkened tae.
Where it cam frae is mair than I can
tell or what was the cause o’t. It might
ha’ been that the general made it, but I was
sair puzzled tae tell hoo, for his honds were baith
doon by his side as he passed me. It cam frae
his direction, certainly, but it appeared tae me tae
come frae ower his heid, but it was siccan a thin,
eerie, high-pitched, uncanny kind o’ soond that
it wasna easy tae say just exactly where it did come
frae.
The general tuk nae heed o’t,
but walked on and was soon oot o’ sicht, and
I didna lose a minute in creepin’ oot frae my
hidin’ place and scamperin’ awa’
back tae my room, and if a’ the bogies in the
Red Sea were trapesin’ up and doon the hale
nicht through, I wud never put my heid oot again
tae hae a glimpse o’ them.
I didna say a word tae anybody aboot
what I’d seen, but I made up my mind that I
wudna stay muckle länger at Cloomber Ha’.
Four pund a month is a good wage, but it isna enough
tae pay a man for the loss o’ his peace o’
mind, and maybe the loss o’ his soul as weel,
for when the deil is aboot ye canna tell what sort
o’ a trap he may lay for ye, and though they
say that Providence is stronger than him, it’s
maybe as weel no’ to risk it.
It was clear tae me that the general
and his hoose were baith under some curse, and it
was fit that that curse should fa’ on them
that had earned it, and no’ on a righteous Presbyterian,
wha had ever trod the narrow path.
My hairt was sair for young Miss Gabriel for
she was a bonnie and winsome lassie but
for a’ that, I felt that my duty was tae mysel’
and that I should gang forth, even as Lot ganged oot
o’ the wicked cities o’ the plain.
That awfu’ cling-clang was aye
dingin’ in my lugs, and I couldna bear to be
alane in the passages for fear o’ hearin’
it ance again. I only wanted a chance or
an excuse tae gie the general notice, and tae gang
back to some place where I could see Christian folk,
and have the kirk within a stone-cast tae fa’
back upon.
But it proved tae be ordained that,
instead o’ my saying the word, it should come
frae the general himsel’.
It was ane day aboot the beginning
of October, I was comin’ oot o’ the stable,
after giein’ its oats tae the horse, when I seed
a great muckle loon come hoppin’ on ane leg
up the drive, mair like a big, ill-faured craw than
a man.
When I clapped my een on him I thocht
that maybe this was ane of the rascals that the maister
had been speakin’ aboot, so withoot mair ado
I fetched oot my bit stick with the intention o’
tryin’ it upon the limmer’s heid.
He seed me comin’ towards him, and readin’
my intention frae my look maybe, or frae the stick
in my hand, he pu’ed oot a lang knife frae
his pocket and swore wi’ the most awfu’
oaths that if I didna stan’ back he’d
be the death o’ me.
Ma conscience! the words the chiel
used was eneugh tae mak’ the hair stand straight
on your heid. I wonder he wasna struck deid where
he stood.
We were still standin’ opposite
each ither he wi’ his knife and me
wi’ the stick when the general he
cam up the drive and foond us. Tae my surprise
he began tae talk tae the stranger as if he’d
kenned him a’ his days.
“Put your knife in your pocket,
Corporal,” says he. “Your fears have
turned your brain.”
“Blood an’ wounds!”
says the other. “He’d ha’ turned
my brain tae some purpose wi’ that muckle stick
o’ his if I hadna drawn my snickersnee.
You shouldna keep siccan an auld savage on your premises.”
The maister he frooned and looked
black at him, as though he didna relish advice comin’
frae such a source. Then turnin’ tae me “You
won’t be wanted after to-day, Israel,”
he says; “you have been a guid servant, and
I ha’ naething tae complain of wi’ ye,
but circumstances have arisen which will cause me
tae change my arrangements.”
“Vera guid, sir,” says I.
“You can go this evening,”
says he, “and you shall have an extra month’s
pay tae mak up t’ye for this short notice.”
Wi’ that he went intae the hoose,
followed by the man that he ca’ed the corporal,
and frae that day tae this I have never clapped een
either on the ane or the ither. My money was
sent oot tae me in an envelope, and havin’ said
a few pairtin’ words tae the cook and the wench
wi’ reference tae the wrath tae come and the
treasure that is richer than rubies, I shook the dust
o’ Cloomber frae my feet for ever.
Maister Fothergill West says I maunna
express an opeenion as tae what cam aboot afterwards,
but maun confine mysel’ tae what I saw mysel’.
Nae doubt he has his reasons for this and
far be it frae me tae hint that they are no’
guid ânes but I maun say this, that
what happened didna surprise me. It was just
as I expeckit, and so I said tae Maister Donald McSnaw.
I’ve tauld ye a’ aboot
it noo, and I havena a word tae add or tae withdraw.
I’m muckle obleeged tae Maister Mathew Clairk
for puttin’ it a’ doon in writin’
for me, and if there’s ony would wish tae speer
onything mair o’ me I’m well kenned and
respeckit in Ecclefechan, and Maister McNeil, the
factor o’ Wigtown, can aye tell where I am tae
be foond.
(1) The old rascal was well paid for
his trouble, so he need not have made such a favour
of it. J.F.W.