Come, princes of the
ragged regiment,
You of the blood!
PRIGS, my most upright lord,
And these, what name
or title e’er they bear,
JARKMAN, or Patrico,
CRANKE or Clapper-Dudgeon,
Prater or Abram-man I
speak of all.
Beggar’s
Bush.
Although the character of those gipsy
tribes which formerly inundated most of the nations
of Europe, and which in some degree still subsist
among them as a distinct people, is generally understood,
the reader will pardon my saying a few words respecting
their situation in Scotland.
It is well known that the gipsies
were at an early period acknowledged as a separate
and independent race by one of the Scottish monarchs,
and that they were less favourably distinguished by
a subsequent law, which rendered the character of
gipsy equal in the judicial balance to that of common
and habitual thief, and prescribed his punishment accordingly.
Notwithstanding the severity of this and other statutes,
the fraternity prospered amid the distresses of the
country, and received large accessions from among
those whom famine, oppression, or the sword of war
had deprived of the ordinary means of subsistence.
They lost in a great measure by this intermixture
the national character of Egyptians, and became a
mingled race, having all the idleness and predatory
habits of their Eastern ancestors, with a ferocity
which they probably borrowed from the men of the north
who joined their society. They travelled in different
bands, and had rules among themselves, by which each
tribe was confined to its own district. The slightest
invasion of the precincts which had been assigned
to another tribe produced desperate skirmishes, in
which there was often much blood shed.
The patriotic Fletcher of Saltoun
drew a picture of these banditti about a century ago,
which my readers will peruse with astonishment:
’There are at this day in Scotland
(besides a great many poor families very meanly provided
for by the church boxes, with others who, by living
on bad food, fall into various diseases) two hundred
thousand people begging from door to door. These
are not only no way advantageous, but a very grievous
burden to so poor a country. And though the number
of them be perhaps double to what it was formerly,
by reason of this present great distress, yet in all
times there have been about one hundred thousand of
those vagabonds, who have lived without any regard
or subjection either to the laws of the land or even
those of God and nature . . . No magistrate could
ever discover, or be informed, which way one in a
hundred of these wretches died, or that ever they were
baptized. Many murders have been discovered among
them; and they are not only a most unspeakable oppression
to poor tenants (who, if they give not bread or some
kind of provision to perhaps forty such villains in
one day, are sure to be insulted by them), but they
rob many poor people who live in houses distant from
any neighbourhood. In years of plenty, many thousands
of them meet together in the mountains, where they
feast and riot for many days; and at country weddings,
markets, burials, and other the like public occasions,
they are to be seen, both man and woman, perpetually
drunk, cursing, blaspheming, and fighting together.’
Notwithstanding the deplorable picture
presented in this extract, and which Fletcher himself,
though the energetic and eloquent friend of freedom,
saw no better mode of correcting than by introducing
a system of domestic slavery, the progress of time,
and increase both of the means of life and of the
power of the laws, gradually reduced this dreadful
evil within more narrow bounds. The tribes of
gipsies, jockies, or cairds for by all
these denominations such banditti were known became
few in number, and many were entirely rooted out.
Still, however, a sufficient number remained to give,
occasional alarm and constant vexation. Some
rude handicrafts were entirely resigned to these itinerants,
particularly the art of trencher-making, of manufacturing
horn-spoons, and the whole mystery of the tinker.
To these they added a petty trade in the coarse sorts
of earthenware. Such were their ostensible means
of livelihood. Each tribe had usually some fixed
place of rendezvous, which they occasionally occupied
and considered as their standing camp, and in the
vicinity of which they generally abstained from depredation.
They had even talents and accomplishments, which made
them occasionally useful and entertaining. Many
cultivated music with success; and the favourite fiddler
or piper of a district was often to be found in a gipsy
town. They understood all out-of-door sports,
especially otter-hunting, fishing, or finding game.
They bred the best and boldest terriers, and sometimes
had good pointers for sale. In winter the women
told fortunes, the men showed tricks of legerdemain;
and these accomplishments often helped to while away
a weary or stormy evening in the circle of the ‘farmer’s
ha’.’ The wildness of their character,
and the indomitable pride with which they despised
all regular labour, commanded a certain awe, which
was not diminished by the consideration that these
strollers were a vindictive race, and were restrained
by no check, either of fear or conscience, from taking
desperate vengeance upon those who had offended them.
These tribes were, in short, the pariahs of Scotland,
living like wild Indians among European settlers, and,
like them, judged of rather by their own customs,
habits, and opinions, than as if they had been members
of the civilised part of the community. Some hordes
of them yet remain, chiefly in such situations as
afford a ready escape either into a waste country
or into another Jurisdiction. Nor are the features
of their character much softened. Their numbers,
however, are so greatly diminished that, instead of
one hundred thousand, as calculated by Fletcher, it
would now perhaps be impossible to collect above five
hundred throughout all Scotland.
A tribe of these itinerants, to whom
Meg Merrilies appertained, had long been as stationary
as their habits permitted in a glen upon the estate
of Ellangowan. They had there erected a few huts,
which they denominated their ‘city of refuge,’
and where, when not absent on excursions, they harboured
unmolested, as the crows that roosted in the old ash-trees
around them. They had been such long occupants
that they were considered in some degree as proprietors
of the wretched shealings which they inhabited.
This protection they were said anciently to have repaid
by service to the Laird in war, or more frequently,
by infesting or plundering the lands of those neighbouring
barons with whom he chanced to be at feud. Latterly
their services were of a more pacific nature.
The women spun mittens for the lady, and knitted boot-hose
for the Laird, which were annually presented at Christmas
with great form. The aged sibyls blessed the
bridal bed of the Laird when he married, and the cradle
of the heir when born. The men repaired her ladyship’s
cracked china, and assisted the Laird in his sporting
parties, wormed his dogs, and cut the ears of his
terrier puppies. The children gathered nuts in
the woods, and cranberries in the moss, and mushrooms
on the pastures, for tribute to the Place. These
acts of voluntary service, and acknowledgments of
dependence, were rewarded by protection on some occasions,
connivance on others, and broken victuals, ale, and
brandy when circumstances called for a display of
generosity; and this mutual intercourse of good offices,
which had been carried on for at least two centuries,
rendered the inhabitants of Derncleugh a kind of privileged
retainers upon the estate of Ellangowan. ‘The
knaves’ were the Laird’s ‘exceeding
good friends’; and he would have deemed himself
very ill used if his countenance could not now and
then have borne them out against the law of the country
and the local magistrate. But this friendly union
was soon to be dissolved.
The community of Derncleugh, who cared
for no rogues but their own, were wholly without alarm
at the severity of the Justice’s proceedings
towards other itinerants. They had no doubt that
he determined to suffer no mendicants or strollers
in the country but what resided on his own property,
and practised their trade by his immediate permission,
implied or expressed. Nor was Mr. Bertram in
a hurry to exert his newly-acquired authority at the
expense of these old settlers. But he was driven
on by circumstances.
At the quarter-sessions our new Justice
was publicly upbraided by a gentleman of the opposite
party in county politics, that, while he affected
a great zeal for the public police, and seemed ambitious
of the fame of an active magistrate, he fostered a
tribe of the greatest rogues in the country, and permitted
them to harbour within a mile of the house of Ellangowan.
To this there was no reply, for the fact was too evident
and well known. The Laird digested the taunt as
he best could, and in his way home amused himself
with speculations on the easiest method of ridding
himself of these vagrants, who brought a stain upon
his fair fame as a magistrate. Just as he had
resolved to take the first opportunity of quarrelling
with the pariahs of Derncleugh, a cause of provocation
presented itself.
Since our friend’s advancement
to be a conservator of the peace, he had caused the
gate at the head of his avenue, which formerly, having
only one hinge, remained at all times hospitably open he
had caused this gate, I say, to be newly hung and
handsomely painted. He had also shut up with
paling, curiously twisted with furze, certain holes
in the fences adjoining, through which the gipsy boys
used to scramble into the plantations to gather birds’
nests, the seniors of the village to make a short
cut from one point to another, and the lads and lasses
for evening rendezvous all without offence
taken or leave asked. But these halcyon days
were now to have an end, and a minatory inscription
on one side of the gate intimated ‘prosecution
according to law’ (the painter had spelt it
’persecution’ l’un
vaut bien l’autre) to all who should be
found trespassing on these inclosures. On the
other side, for uniformity’s sake, was a precautionary
annunciation of spring-guns and man-traps of such
formidable powers that, said the rubrick, with an emphatic
nota bene ’if a man goes
in they will break a horse’s leg.’
In defiance of these threats, six
well-grown gipsy boys and girls were riding cock-horse
upon the new gate, and plaiting may-flowers, which
it was but too evident had been gathered within the
forbidden precincts. With as much anger as he
was capable of feeling, or perhaps of assuming, the
Laird commanded them to descend; they paid
no attention to his mandate: he then began to
pull them down one after another; they
resisted, passively at least, each sturdy bronzed varlet
making himself as heavy as he could, or climbing up
as fast as he was dismounted.
The Laird then called in the assistance
of his servant, a surly fellow, who had immediate
recourse to his horsewhip. A few lashes sent the
party a-scampering; and thus commenced the first breach
of the peace between the house of Ellangowan and the
gipsies of Derncleugh.
The latter could not for some time
imagine that the war was real; until they found that
their children were horsewhipped by the grieve when
found trespassing; that their asses were poinded by
the ground-officer when left in the plantations, or
even when turned to graze by the roadside, against
the provision of the turnpike acts; that the constable
began to make curious inquiries into their mode of
gaining a livelihood, and expressed his surprise that
the men should sleep in the hovels all day, and be
abroad the greater part of the night.
When matters came to this point, the
gipsies, without scruple, entered upon measures of
retaliation. Ellangowan’s hen-roosts were
plundered, his linen stolen from the lines or bleaching-ground,
his fishings poached, his dogs kidnapped, his growing
trees cut or barked. Much petty mischief was
done, and some evidently for the mischief’s sake.
On the other hand, warrants went forth, without mercy,
to pursue, search for, take, and apprehend; and, notwithstanding
their dexterity, one or two of the depredators were
unable to avoid conviction. One, a stout young
fellow, who sometimes had gone to sea a-fishing, was
handed over to the captain of the impress service
at D ; two children were soundly flogged,
and one Egyptian matron sent to the house of correction.
Still, however, the gipsies made no
motion to leave the spot which they had so long inhabited,
and Mr. Bertram felt an unwillingness to deprive them
of their ancient ‘city of refuge’; so that
the petty warfare we have noticed continued for several
months, without increase or abatement of hostilities
on either side.