We’ll hap and row, hap and
row,
We’ll hap
and row the feetie o’t.
It is a wee bit weary thing,
I dinnie bide
the greetie o’t.
Provost Creech.
An honest man, close button’d
to the chin,
Broad-cloth without, and a warm
heart within.
Cowper.
This great globe and all that it
inherits shall dissolve,
And, like the baseless fabric of
a vision,
Leave not a rack behind.
Shakspeare.
At the christening of our only bairn,
Benjie, two or three remarkable circumstances occurred,
which it behoves me to relate.
It was on a cold November afternoon;
and really when the bit room was all redd up, the
fire bleezing away, and the candles lighted, every
thing looked full tosh and comfortable. It was
a real pleasure, after looking out into the drift
that was fleeing like mad from the east, to turn one’s
neb inwards, and think that we had a civilized home
to comfort us in the dreary season. So, one
after another, the bit party we had invited to the
ceremony came papping in; and the crack began to get
loud and hearty; for, to speak the truth, we were
blessed with canny friends, and a good neighbourhood.
Notwithstanding, it was very curious, that I had no
mind of asking down James Batter, the weaver, honest
man, though he was one of our own elders; and in papped
James, just when the company had haffins met, with
his stocking-sleeves on his arms, his nightcap on his
head, and his blue-stained apron hanging down before
him, to light his pipe at our fire.
James, when he saw his mistake, was
fain to make his retreat; but we would not hear tell
of it, till he came in, and took a dram out of the
bottle, as we told him the not doing so would spoil
the wean’s beauty, which is an old freak, (the
smallpox, however, afterwards did that;) so, with
much persuasion, he took a chair for a gliff, and began
with some of his drolls for he is a clever,
humoursome man, as ye ever met with. But he
had now got far on with his jests, when lo! a rap came
to the door, and Mysie whipped away the bottle under
her apron, saying “Wheesht, wheesht, for the
sake of gudeness, there’s the minister!”
The room had only one door, and James
mistook it, running his head, for lack of knowledge,
into the open closet, just as the minister lifted the
outer-door sneck. We were all now sitting on
nettles, for we were frighted that James would be
seized with a cough, for he was a wee asthmatic; or
that some, knowing there was a thief in the pantry,
might hurt good manners by breaking out into a giggle.
However, all for a considerable time was quiet, and
the ceremony was performed; little Nancy, our niece,
handing the bairn upon my arm to receive its name.
So, we thought, as the minister seldom made a long
stay on similar occasions, that all would pass off
well enough But wait a wee.
There was but one of our company that
had not cast up, to wit, Deacon Paunch, the flesher,
a most worthy man, but tremendously big, and grown
to the very heels; as was once seen on a wager, that
his ankle was greater than my brans. It
was really a pain to all feeling Christians, to see
the worthy man waigling about, being, when weighed
in his own scales, two-and-twenty stone ten ounces,
Dutch weight. Honest man, he had had a sore
fecht with the wind and the sleet, and he came in with
a shawl roppined round his neck, peching like a broken-winded
horse; so fain was he to find a rest for his weary
carcass in our stuffed chintz pattern elbow-chair
by the fire cheek.
From the soughing of wind at the window,
and the rattling in the lum, it was clear to all manner
of comprehension, that the night was a dismal one;
so the minister, seeing so many of his own douce folk
about him, thought he might do worse than volunteer
to sit still, and try our toddy: indeed, we would
have pressed him before this to do so; but what was
to come of James Batter, who was shut up in the closet,
like the spies in the house of Rahab the harlot, in
the city of Jericho?
James began to find it was a bad business;
and having been driving the shuttle about from before
daylight, he was fain to cruik his hough, and felt
round about him quietly in the dark for a chair to
sit down upon, since better might not be. But,
wae’s me! the cat was soon out of the pock.
Me and the minister were just argle-bargling
some few words on the doctrine of the camel and the
eye of the needle, when, in the midst of our discourse,
as all was wheesht and attentive, an awful thud was
heard in the closet, which gave the minister, who
thought the house had fallen down, such a start, that
his very wig louped for a full three-eighths off his
crown. I say we were needcessitated to let the
cat out of the pock for two reasons; firstly, because
we did not know what had happened; and, secondly,
to quiet the minister’s fears, decent man, for
he was a wee nervous. So we made a hearty laugh
of it, as well as we could, and opened the door to
bid James Batter come out, as we confessed all.
Easier said than done, howsoever. When we pulled
open the door, and took forward one of the candles,
there was James doubled up, sticking twofold like
a rotten in a sneak-trap, in an old chair, the bottom
of which had gone down before him, and which, for
some craize about it, had been put out of the way
by Nanse, that no accident might happen. Save
us! if the deacon had sate down upon it, pity on our
brick-floor.
Well, after some ado, we got James,
who was more frighted than hurt, hauled out of his
hidy-hole; and after lifting off his cowl, and sleeking
down his front hair, he took a seat beside us, apologeezing
for not being in his Sunday’s garb, the which
the minister, who was a free and easy man, declared
there was no occasion for, and begged him to make himself
comfortable.
Well, passing over that business,
Mr Wiggie and me entered into our humours, for the
drappikie was beginning to tell on my noddle, and made
me somewhat venturesome not to say that
I was not a little proud to have the minister in my
bit housie; so, says I to him in a cosh way, “Ye
may believe me or no, Mr Wiggie, but mair than me
think ye out of sight the best preacher in the parish nane
of them, Mr Wiggie, can hold the candle to ye, man.”
“Weesht, weesht,” said
the body, in rather a cold way that I did not expect,
knowing him to be as proud as a peacock “I
daresay I am just like my neighbours.”
This was not quite so kind so
says I to him, “Maybe sae, for many a one thinks
ye could not hold a candle to Mr Blowster the Cameronian,
that whiles preaches at Lugton.”
This was a stramp on his corny toe.
“Na, na,” answered Mr Wiggie,
rather nettled; “let us drop that subject.
I preach like my neighbours. Some of them may
be worse, and others better; just as some of your own
trade may make clothes worse, and some better, than
yourself.”
My corruption was raised. “I
deny that,” said I, in a brisk manner, which
I was sorry for after “I deny that,
Mr Wiggie,” says I to him; “I’ll
make a pair of breeches with the face of clay.”
But this was only a passing breeze,
during the which, howsoever, I happened to swallow
my thimble, which accidentally slipped off my middle
finger, causing both me and the company general alarm,
as there were great fears that it might mortify in
the stomach; but it did not; and neither word nor
wittens of it have been seen or heard tell of from
that to this day. So, in two or three minutes,
we had some few good songs, and a round of Scotch
proverbs, when the clock chapped eleven. We were
all getting, I must confess, a thought noisy; Johnny
Soutter having broken a dram-glass, and Willie Fegs
couped a bottle on the bit table-cloth; all noisy,
I say, except Deacon Paunch, douce man, who had fallen
into a pleasant slumber; so, when the minister rose
to take his hat, they all rose except the Deacon,
whom we shook by the arms for some time, but in vain,
to waken him. His round, oily face, good creature,
was just as if it had been cut out of a big turnip,
it was so fat, fozy, and soft; but at last, after
some ado, we succeeded, and he looked about him with
a wild stare, opening his two red eyes, like Pandore
oysters, asking what had happened; and we got him
hoized up on his legs, tying the blue shawl round
his bull-neck again.
Our company had not got well out of
the door, and I was priding myself in my heart, about
being landlord to such a goodly turn out, when Nanse
took me by the arm, and said, “Come, and see
such an unearthly sight.” This startled
me, and I hesitated; but, at long and last, I went
in with her, a thought alarmed at what had happened,
and my gracious!! there, on the easy-chair,
was our bonny tortoise-shell cat, Tommy, with the red
morocco collar about its neck, bruised as flat as
a flounder, and as dead as a mawk!!!
The Deacon had sat down upon it without
thinking; and the poor animal, that our neighbours’
bairns used to play with, and be so fond of, was crushed
out of life without a cheep. The thing, doubtless,
was not intended, but it gave Nanse and me a very
sore heart.