It must be allowed in the world, that
a man who has thrice reached the highest station of
life in his line, has a good right to set forth the
particulars of the discretion and prudence by which
he lifted himself so far above the ordinaries of his
day and generation; indeed, the generality of mankind
may claim this as a duty; for the conduct of public
men, as it has been often wisely said, is a species
of public property, and their rules and observances
have in all ages been considered things of a national
concernment. I have therefore well weighed the
importance it may be of to posterity, to know by what
means I have thrice been made an instrument to represent
the supreme power and authority of Majesty in the
royal burgh of Gudetown, and how I deported myself
in that honour and dignity, so much to the satisfaction
of my superiors in the state and commonwealth of the
land, to say little of the great respect in which I
was held by the townsfolk, and far less of the terror
that I was to evil-doers. But not to be over
circumstantial, I propose to confine this history
of my life to the public portion thereof, on the which
account I will take up the beginning at the crisis
when I first entered into business, after having served
more than a year above my time, with the late Mr Thomas
Remnant, than whom there was not a more creditable
man in the burgh; and he died in the possession of
the functionaries and faculties of town-treasurer,
much respected by all acquainted with his orderly
and discreet qualities.
Mr Remnant was, in his younger years,
when the growth of luxury and prosperity had not come
to such a head as it has done since, a tailor that
went out to the houses of the adjacent lairds
and country gentry, whereby he got an inkling of the
policy of the world, that could not have been gathered
in any other way by a man of his station and degree
of life. In process of time he came to be in
a settled way, and when I was bound ’prentice
to him, he had three regular journeymen and a cloth
shop. It was therefore not so much for learning
the tailoring, as to get an insight in the conformity
between the traffic of the shop and the board that
I was bound to him, being destined by my parents for
the profession appertaining to the former, and to
conjoin thereto something of the mercery and haberdashery:
my uncle, that had been a sutler in the army along
with General Wolfe, who made a conquest of Quebec,
having left me a legacy of three hundred pounds because
I was called after him, the which legacy was a consideration
for to set me up in due season in some genteel business.
Accordingly, as I have narrated, when
I had passed a year over my ’prenticeship with
Mr Remnant, I took up the corner shop at the Cross,
facing the Tolbooth; and having had it adorned in a
befitting manner, about a month before the summer
fair thereafter, I opened it on that day, with an
excellent assortment of goods, the best, both for taste
and variety, that had ever been seen in the burgh
of Gudetown; and the winter following, finding by
my books that I was in a way to do so, I married my
wife: she was daughter to Mrs Broderip, who kept
the head inn in Irville, and by whose death, in the
fall of the next year, we got a nest egg, that, without
a vain pretension, I may say we have not failed to
lay upon, and clock to some purpose.
Being thus settled in a shop and in
life, I soon found that I had a part to perform in
the public world; but I looked warily about me before
casting my nets, and therefore I laid myself out rather
to be entreated than to ask; for I had often heard
Mr Remnant observe, that the nature of man could not
abide to see a neighbour taking place and preferment
of his own accord. I therefore assumed a coothy
and obliging demeanour towards my customers and the
community in general; and sometimes even with the
very beggars I found a jocose saying as well received
as a bawbee, although naturally I dinna think I was
ever what could be called a funny man, but only just
as ye would say a thought ajee in that way. Howsever,
I soon became, both by habit and repute, a man of popularity
in the town, in so much that it was a shrewd saying
of old James Alpha, the bookseller, that “mair
gude jokes were cracked ilka day in James Pawkie’s
shop, than in Thomas Curl, the barber’s, on a
Saturday night.”