The dear years of 1816
and 1817 were now upon us* and they were hard times for the poor, ill
times for everybody. The potatoes were bad and few. Our dinner consisted
of these potatoes, and one or two salt herrings, divided among five or
six of us—all who were at home. My father worked two miles off at the
Skateraw lime kilns; went away every morning before light and came home
after dark, having taken a piece of bread made of oatmeal and a bottle
of milk with him, the usual bread of barley and beans being too hard for
his decaying teeth. This was for his day’s subsistence. Yet upon pueh
fare as that he had the reputation, as 1 have since learned from those
who worked with him, of being one pf the best borers in the limestone
quarry ; and he was certainly by far the best skilled in books of
divinity and general reading, which was of some importance even as
regarded the working of the quarry. The “Marrow of Modern Divinity,” a
favourite book with him, might not be in all respects a substitute for a
marrow bone, but he was strong in conversation or controversy, and kept
his spirits up for hard work on that strength. Another reader in the
quarry was Robert Wallace, whose wife taught him to read after marriage,
and who at the time when my father was in the quarry had read eighteen
different authors on astronomy, besides many others on other subjects.
Robert Wallace had never seen the stars through 9, telescope, but he
knew all that books could tell him of the celestial system. He would
travel twenty miles on a Sunday, and back again, to borrow a book on
astronomy. He was rather deaf and seldom went to church. He would get a
wheaten flour loaf (having no partiality for the hard bean and barley
scones), and would scoop out part of the inside of the loaf, fill the
vacancy with treacle or with sugar, go out on the Sunday mornings and
find a retired spot inside some corn-field, and lie there all day
reading about astronomy and eating his favourite feast of bread and
treacle. The last time I was in that vicinity I saw this lost genius,
aged and frail, raking the mud off the turnpike road, for a very small
sum of wages, near Dunbar. I believe he still lives, and is very poor.
To return to the dear years of 1816 and 1817. I remember that on one
occasion our potatoes had dwindled to very nearly none. Those left lay
in a corner in the pantry behind the door, and my mother never went into
the pantry without drawing a heavy sigh, and saying that she “wondered
what in the world would come of us when they would be all done.” Our
door opened into the straw close where a number of large, hungry, homed
cattle were eating straw. They should have been eating turnips, but the
turnip crop had been a failure that year as well as the potato crop. One
of these animals had, unseen, made his way into the pantry, and was fast
engaged in making a finish of our little stock of potatoes. I and my
sisters Mary and Janet—all children, and the only creatures near, except
our mother, heard a noise in the pantry and ran to see what it was, and
there was our poor mother battling with this horned ox to get him out,
and to save the potatoes, he almost too large to turn, even if he had
been willing to turn ; but he was not willing. His hide and hair were so
thick that he cared nothing for all the blows which our mother could
give him. He kicked out with his hind feet, and kept eating. In
desperation to save the potatoes, my mother got up to his head between
his large horns and the wall, and backed him out with blows of the
tongs, while he butted and tossed his head* It was a dreadful sight to
us; when the brute was dislodged, our poor mother sat down and cried
over the loss of the potatoes. We all cried too, and bitter tears they
were which we shed, one and all of us.
The next epoch in my life was going to schooL This did not occur until I
was in my eighth year, partly because I was taught to read at home,
partly because the school was two miles away, and there were no other
children to accompany me, and take care of me; for a notion prevailed,
not altogether unfounded, that I could not take care of myself. I had
all the appearance of a soft, helpless lad, that could not meet a stone
without stumbling, or a pool without going into it to the knees. But the
chief reason for not being sent sooner to school, I believe, was the
want of elothes, such as the affectionate feelings of my father and
mother wished me to go in— simply something else than rags; and these
were not to be had until 1818, when markets fell, and food being
cheaper, it became possible to get clothes.
My sister Mary was also to go to school for one quarter. We went off one
Monday morning, and our mother with us. I see her now before me with her
red “stamped” gown on, and her shawl, and her velvet bonnet. I see the
gown as if it had never been absent from my eyes. The place of the
school was Bimynows, a hamlet of about twenty houses, forming a kind of
square fifty yards wide, the square filled with pigstyes, dunghills,
stagnant pools, and stacks of firewood. The houses in the square were
all miserable thatched sheds, save one, the house of George Dickison, a
weaver.
Outside the square were two or three better houses an# weavers’ shops.
The thatched hovels were chiefly inhabited by the hinds and other
labourers of the great farmer of the neighbourhood, who at that time
occupied three farms, each of them large. One of the oldest and most
infirm of the thatched houses was the school-room. The school-master was
a lame man, and was a teacher only because he was lame. It was not a
parish school; but he had a local fame as a good teacher, and though* as
will be seen, I have no reason to remember him with much respect, I must
say that, excepting the inordinate and cruel use of the taws for
punishment, his system of teaching was better than that of any of the
parish schools pear us at that time.
My mother saw the schoolmaster in the house of George Dickison, the
weaver, and some of the pupils, pleased to see “new scholars” come, took
us into the school, and so my education, having got a twopenny Spelling
book, began. The first six weeks were consumed in learning to forget to
name the letters as my father and mother had named them; that once
accomplished, I got on pretty well; for though the spelling-books were
made up of lessons with no meaning in them, nr a meaning of sheer
nonsense, I had a desire to know what that nonsense was. In short, I
read as well as I could, and tried to read -better, and ran before the
lesson I was at, to see what the next one said. In this way I was
getting on, and had not got much punishment, not so much as several
other children reading with me, when one day I came in rather late in
the morning. I was instantly called up and questioned as to why I was
too late. The schoolmaster was a very polite man in his own way, but he
had never taught us the polite designation of vulgar things. After some
hesitation, I, in my innocence, gave him an answer which offended him;
upon which he took his great leathern belt, thirty inches long, two and
a half inches broad, which was split half way up into six thongs, the
end1 of each having been burned in the fire to make it hard; the other
end of the belt having a slit in it, into which he put his hand and
wound it round his Wrist. With this instrument, called the taws, he
thrashed me on the hands, head, face, neck, shoulders, back, legs,
everywhere, until I was blistered. He wanted me ta cry, but I would not,
and never did for pain or punishment then nor since, though my flesh is
nervous and extremely sensitive. I have cried when excessive kindness
has been used to me, not when cruelty was used.
I sat sullen and in torture all the day, my poor sister Mary glancing at
me from her book, she not crying, but her heart beating as if it would
burst for me. When we got out of the school to go home, and were away
from all the other scholars on our own lonely road to Thriepland Hill,
she soothed me with kind words, and we cried then, both of us. We could
not tell at home what had happened; our mother would have deeply
grieved, and our father* we supposed, would think it all right what the
schoolmaster had done, for he believed in his infallibility as a
teacher.
My sister went no more to the school than that quarter, having to go to
the fields to help to work for the family bread. When the summer of 1819
came, I left School also, to herd the farmer’s cows. In the winter of
1819 I again went to school, and got into severe trouble with the
teacher on one occasion. It happened thus r some sons of farmers, and
sons of other people who read newspapers, told one another of a terrible
set of men in some part of the kingdom, called radicals, who were
threatening to take the lives and destroy the property of all good
people; that only for the soldiers, who stopped them, the radicals would
have come to Bimynows before that time, and would hare burned it, and
killed every* body. And then one boy would say be was not afraid of the
radicals, for be bad an uncle wbo was a soldier, and another bad a
brother a soldier, and a farmer’s son would say that his father was in
the yeomanry and bad a sword, and saddle with bolster pipes, and pistols
in the bolster pipes, and neither be nor bis father were afraid: he
would get his father to kill all the radicals who offered to touch him,
for they were only ragged weavers, half starved and not able to fight;
and the other boys whose brothers and uncles were soldiers, would say
that they would go to such brother or such uncle, and get him to kill
the radicals that offered to touch them; though, for aught the foolish
boys knew, their military relations might be in the East or the West
Indies, while those people called radicals, were, so far as Scotland was
concerned, located about Glasgow, seventy miles from us.
Perhaps, before I go further, I should tell you who and what the
radicals were. They were people who complained that the country was not
governed as it should be, that the laws were not made by those who
should have made the laws. They were grieved to be excluded from voting
for members of parliament, and they felt at the same time that food was
dear, wages low, and taxation very high. They said that those
circumstances must be altered, and in changing them they must go to the
root of the evil, and effect a radical change; the word radical meaning
“original” or “primitive,” and they meaning by using it that they must
reform the laws of the country by beginning at the beginning, by pulling
down the constitution to the foundation and building up a new one. Many
persons used the term “radical reform,” who did not mean to destroy the
constitution, or existing form of government, but only to lop off such
portions of it as they deemed corrupt. The
great body of the radicals was composed of honest working people; but
there were attached to them a few persons of wealth and high social
station, while all below the working classes, that is to say, the idle,
and dissolute, and the rambling makers of speeches, who went from town
to town exciting the industrious people to rise against the law and
effect a radical reformation, or revolution, by force of guns, pistols,
and pikes, were as a matter of course called, and were proud to be
called radicals. Those last succeeded in getting many of the more honest
men and youths to join them with pikes, pistols, guns, old swords, old
scythes, cudgels, and other weapons of offence, in the neighbourhood of
Glasgow; from which place they marched into the country to do, what,
they hardly knew, and were abandoned by those leaders and instigators
who had given information to the authorities where and when the radicals
were to be met with, and who then slunk away to live on the rewards paid
to them, leaving the radicals with their guns, pistols, pikes, swords,
scythes, and cudgels, to be dispersed, slain, or taken prisoners, some
of them to be afterwards tried, condemned, and hanged, and beheaded
after they were hanged, for high treason.
In other parts of the kingdom, particularly in London and Manchester,
there were radicals rising against the law, and the law was rising
against them. It is probable that there was undue violence on both
sides, and that more forbearance on the side of the law might have been
safely practised. Yet when we look to the position which men, charged
with maintaining the peace of the country were placed in, we need not be
surprised that they adopted every measure which they at the time deemed
the best to deter the rebellious and avert revolution. It is easy for us
to say, when the danger no longer exists, that this other step, and that
other milder course, would have been better, but it was not so easy for
tbe rulers in those times to know what to do. If, however, there is one
thing clearer than another now which they should have done and did not
do, it is that they should have opened the doors of the constitution,
and admitted some of those who were assembled in multitudes at its doors
demanding to be let in. This was done in 1832; the doors were opened by
the Reform Act, and a goodly number were let in. I have no doubt that
the doors will be opened again and again, allowing all to come in
gradually and safely.
But to return to the time of the radicals of 1819,' and the rumours that
came to Bimynows school, that “they were coming.’* The term “ragged
radicals’* was a common one in newspapers of that time, and the boys who
heard their fathers read the newspapers or talk of the news, brought
this name of reproach to the school. It was suggested one day by some of
them, that an excellent play might be got up in the Eel Yards, a meadow
with some large trees in it, if the scholars divided themselves into
soldiers and radicals. As the soldiers were the most respectable in the
eyes of the better dressed sons of farmers and tradesmen, and as they
took the lead in every thing, they made themselves soldiers; and, in
addition to that, took upon themselves to pick out those who were to be
radicals. This was done according to the quality of the clothes worn,
and I, consequently, found myself declared to be a radical. The first
day’s play passed with no greater disasters to me than the brim tom from
an infirm hat which I wore, my trousers split up, all the buttons tom
from my waistcoat, and my neck stretched considerably on the way to
strangulation. For being a radical who seemed inclined to look upon the
treatment I received as too serious for play, I was condemned to be
hanged. It happened that .the clothes I wore were not of the usual
corduroy worn by the sons of farm labourers and always worn by me, save
in that year. Mine had been remade the year before from some cast-off
clothes given a year or two before that to the brother next to me in age
by his master. There was a brown coat which had been reduced in size,
but it was still too large for me; trousers which had once been of a
very light blue or grey ; and the infirm hat already named, which came
to our family I do not remember precisely how; but it had so broad a
brim at first, that my mother cut part of it away to let me see from
below it, and still it was so broad that some of the boys nicknamed me
after some people whom I had never seen nor heard of, but who ^rere said
to wear broad-brimmed hats. These clothes having been old when I got
them, and having been worn by me all the summer in the woods herding the
cows, and all the autumn, they were not in sound condition. But my poor
mother always kept them patched up; and I never once went out then, or
any time, with an open rent or a worn hole in my clothes. As she spun
wool for stockings, and lint for shirts, herself, and my father knitted
stockings at night, and my sisters made shirts, I was equal in those
articles to any one in the school; and I was only so badly clothed
otherwise because the second year was running on between my father and a
master for whom he then worked without a settlement of accounts; the
said master allowing my father to get oats for meal, and barley and
beans for bread, but being sadly embarrassed as a landowner, with his
land mortgaged,—not able at that time to pay up the arrears of wages.
When I went home on that first evening of my ragged radicalship, my poor
mother stood aghast, lifted her hands, and said, in a tone of despair,
“What shall I do with those rags?” They were stripped off, I got an
early supper and was sent to bed, while she began to mend them,—putting
in a piece there and a piece here, sewing up a rent, darning the worn
holes, and ending some hours after midnight, not far from the usual hour
of rising from bed, by sewing the luckless brim upon my infirm hat. Her
motherly affection for me, and natural pride in the good appearance of
her family, had led her to suggest to my father that I should not be
sent again to school until we had got the “siller” we were waiting for
to get new clothes. But my father, though not less affectionate, and not
less anxious about the appearance of his family, was stem upon that
point. “If the laddie lives to be a man,” said he, “he will need his
education, and more than we can give him. If I had got schooling myself,
as I am trying to give to all my sons, it would have helped me through
the world more easily than I have got through. The laddie must go to the
school.”
So I went to the school, my mother begging, of me, with tears in her
eyes, not to get my clothes tom again, else it would kill her to see me
in such rags, and to have to sit up every night to mend them. But
“soldiers and radicals” was again the play, and again I was the radical
upon whom the greatest number of soldiers concentrated their warfare.
They had seen me thrashed by the schoolmaster until I was blistered,
without crying or shedding a tear, which made them think I could stand
any amount of punishment or torment, without feeling it; in short, I was
believed to be a great stubborn lad, who had no feeling in him. Had they
seen me after leaving my mother that morning, and carrying her
injunction with me, in a heart that was bursting with her words, they
would have seen whether I had tears in me or not, and whether they would
not come out.
As soon as I made my appearance, the cry of the "ragged radical” was
raised the soldiers charged on me, and knocked my infirm hat over my
eyes with my head through the crown of it. Some laid hold of me by the
feet to carry me off to he hanged and beheaded, as the real law upon the
real radicals had taught them to imitate in play, I made a violent
effort to free myself, and the rents of yesterday, which my mother had
so carefully sewed, broke open afresh. The hat I raised from where it
had sunk over my face, and saw part of the brim in the hands of a lad
who was a kind of king of the school, or cock of the walk, with some of
my poor mother’s threads hanging from it. He was older than I, and was a
fighter. I had never fought, nor had heard of two human creatures going
together to fight, until I came to that school. Yet neither had I heard
of the divine principle of forbearance and forgiveness, as regards blows
upon the body, and the laceration of feelings worse than blows upon the
body,—my father, who gave me many good precepts, never having
contemplated the possibility of my being a fighting boy. (My child, you
will be brought up where there are policemen and law, lawyers and
magistrates to take your part if you are injured ; never raise your own
hand against any one)' But I was a strong boy for my age, and I had
received very bad treatment. My honour and the remembrance of my
affectionate mother’s toils made me feel like a giant. I amazed the king
of the school by giving him a blow in the face that laid him flat on his
back, and amazed the onlookers by giving several of them as much with
the same results. Not that I escaped without blows myself. I got many,
but they were returned with principle and interest. Some one ran to the
schoolmaster and told that I was thrashing “Master” Somebody, for he
being a gentleman’s son was called “Master,” while I had to submit to a
nickname, derived from the state of my clothes. The school was summoned
in at once, it being near the school hour in the morning. Some of those
whose noses were bleeding ran to school with them in that state to let
their disasters be seen. Another one and myself tried to get water to
wash our faces, for mine was in as bad a condition as the worst of
theirs; but the frost was so hard, that we could not break the ice to
get water, and at last were compelled to obey the repeated summons to
school in the dreadful guise we were then in; my clothes being tom half
off me in .addition to the hideousness of the blood streaming from my
face.
The schoolmaster stood with the taws ready to flagellate the moment I
entered the school. He inquired who began the fight, and every one named
me. He at once ordered me to hold up my right hand, which I did, and
received a violent cut on the edge of it, given with his whole strength.
He ordered my left hand up, and up it went and received a cut of the
same kind; then my right, which got what it got before; next my left,
which also got what it got before; and so on he went until I had got six
cuts (skults we called them) on each hand. He had a way of raising
himself upon his toes when he swung the heavy taws round his head, and
came down upon his feet with a spring, giving the cuts slantingly on the
hand. He saw me resolved to take all he could give without a tear,
whereupon he began to cut at the back of my hands. I drew them behind me
to save them, which seeing, he cut at the open places of my tom clothes,
where my skin was visible; and always as I wriggled to one side to save
those bare places, I exposed other bare places on the other side, which
he aimed at with terrible certainty.
After a time he pushed me before him, still thrashing me on the bare
places, and on the head, until he got me to the farther end of the
school, where the coals lay in a comer. He thrashed me until I got on
the top of the coals. Here he ordered me to sit down and remain until he
gave me liberty to leave that place, which he did not do until evening.
The day was piercing cold. The house was an old place, with no furniture
nor partition in it. I sat at the end farthest from the fire-place, and
near to the door, which was an old door that did not fit its place, and
which allowed the wind to blow freely through. It blew through and about
me as if it had been another schoolmaster, and was as partial to the
farmers’ sons, and as cruel to the ragged boys of farm labourers, as he
was.
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