Sweet are the influences
of the August morning as we plough in foamy furrows our pathway down the
Frith; The brown Castle rock is already in our wake, steeped from base
to summit in the slant radiance of the early day. Around us, in ripples
of light, spreads the ample bosom of the estuary, with the heights of
Cardross and Kilmalcolm swelling beautifully on either hand; while far
awav in our front rises the bold girdle of hills, which seem to*bar the
channel of the waters, and lend to the river the aspect of a mighty
lake. How rich are the effects of light and shade on the everchanging
features of the scene! A dreamy haze still lingers on the distant
mountains, as if the last faint vestiges of dawn were yet unmelted on
their shaggy slopes. As the clouds in snowy masses float in silence
through the blue pro* found of heaven, their shadows travel over land
and sea— vast patches of gloom which come and go like sin and sorrow
over the world’s fair surface. But wherefore talk of sin and sorrow on
this bright autumnal day, when loveliness and joy seem all-pervading and
supreme? There is gladness in the breeze winch comes from the dancing
waves to cool our cheek, and play in our u lifted hair ”—gladness in the
wilding birds, which sail with glancing pinions around our prow, or swim
in snowy clusters like specks of foam upon the rippled waters. And
surely it is a joyous sight to mark the multitudinous ships in motion or
at rest upon their a native dement.” Now a huge steamer comes rushing
past, with her freight of happy faces, and her lengthened trail of smoke
curling duskily along her foamy track; now it is a stately bark with
bellying sails, slow moving on her seaward way; and anon it is some tiny
yacht or gentle skiff, tacking as if in dalliance against the breeze.
But our steamer, while we gaze upon the “shows and forms” of the
bustling channel, is rapidly cleaving her onward course. Port-Glasgow,
with its ancient Castle, is passed; and, rounding the low-wooded point
of Garvel, we bear right down upon Greenock, the cynosure of its own
sunny bay.
In a fine bold curve, the
bay upon which we now enter, stretches away from Garvel Point on the
east to a promontory which juts out into the water opposite the
well-known anchoring - ground called the Tail-of-the-Bank. Between the
margin of the bay and a picturesque range of hills, which runs in a
parallel direction to it, there is a lengthened strip of level ground,
varying in breadth from about a quarter to half-a-mile. Upon this space,
and almost entirely covering it, is the town of Greenock. In various
places also the lines of building encroach upon the rising ground,
creeping upwards in streets and detached edifices to a considerable
height. As we skirt the bay, there are everywhere abundant symptoms of a
bustling and industrious population. Large spaces on the shore are
enclosed as timber ponds, the dark slab railings of which certainly do
not enhance the beauty of the locality; while the smoke from public
works, of which there are many in this quarter, gives the surrounding
houses a grim and unattractive appearance. As we proceed the town
gradually becomes more dense; shipbuilding yards are seen at intervals,
while the quay wall is interrupted by the entrances of spacious harbours
and docks, which are bristling with the naked spars of ships at rest.
Steamers are coming and going incessantly, and small craft of every size
and build are ever passing to and fro* Arriving in front of the spacious
Custom House, an oblong structure in the Grecian style of architecture
with a handsome portico, our steamer comes to a pause, and, amidst the
roar of the funnel, and the shouts of the porters on the quay, we step
on terra firma, and at once, in company with a few genial friends, make
our way into the bowels of the town.
With regard to the
origin, or derivation of the name of Greenock, considerable diversity of
opinion prevails among local etymologists. It is generally admitted to
be a Celtic compound, but the exact meaning of the component parts is
the rock upon which the various authorities have hitherto split.
According to popular belief, the name is derived from a green-oak tree
which once reared its leafy honours on the spot; but this is far too
simple an elucidation of the mystery to be received by any one having a
spark of the genuine Olbuckian spirit. Grian, a Gaelic word signifying
the sun, and cnoc, a term, the signification of which is a hill, are,
according to some, the roots of the name, which would therefore mean the
hill of the sun, or the sunny hill. Others hold that grian-aig, a sunny
bay, is the proper derivation; while certain parties do not scruple to
affirm that the radical phrase is the British graen ag, a gravelly or
sandy place. Amongst such conflicting readings, it is really difficult
for a plain English scholar like ourselves to arrive at anything like
the truth. There is some consolation in thinking that the matter is not
one of vital consequence. It is amusing, however, to observe how
pertinaciously'fche majority of these local word splitters lug in the
sun, as if everybody did not know that the said luminary veils himself
oftener in showers at Greenock than anywhere else in “the west countrie.”
Why do you call such a one “nosie?” queried a stranger at an Irishman.
“Oh, bedad!” was the reply, “bekase he has got no nose at all.” It
cannot surely be on the same principle that the etymological sages of
Greenock adhere so inflexibly to the solar adjective.
Greenock, in a certain
sense, has little or no history. In another sense she has a very noble
story indeed. Of barons bold and chivalrous retainers she has but little
to tell; in raids and battles, and deeds of blood and rapine, her
chronicles are wondrous scanty. All the more to her credit, say we,
although of such stuff ordinary history is in a great measure composed.
The annals of her victories are not inscribed with the red ink of war.
Her battles have ever been the battles of industry and commerce; her
noblest names have achieved distinction in far other fields than those
of the bullet and the sword. In the successive advances of civilization
she has kept a forward pace, and she can point to names among those of
her children of which the world may well be proud. To take a rapid
retrospective glance, however, we may mention that the earliest recorded
name in connection with this place, is that of “ Hugh de Grenok,” which
occurs on the infamous “Ragman’s Roll,” by which* to their lasting
disgrace, so many of the Scottish barons, in 1296, consented to
sacrifice the independence of their country. The next notice we have of
Greenock is in the reign of Robert the Third, when, according to old
Crawfurd, the prince of family historians, the barony was divided
between the co-heiresses of Malcolm Galbraith, one of whom married Shaw
of Sauchie, and the other Crawford of Kilbimie. From their division at
this time until 1669 the lands formed two distinct baronies, which were
known respectively as Easter and Wester Greenock—the former being held
by the family of Crawford, and the latter by that of Shaw. On either
barony was a stately castle or mansion. One of these, that of Easter
Greenock, is now among the things that were —not one stone standing upon
another to indicate its site, which lies about a mile to the eastward of
the town. The other, or whatever vestiges of it may still be in
existence, is incorporated with the mansion-house, a handsome structure
which now occupies an elevated and commanding situation on the heights
adjacent to the town. At the date we have alluded to, John Shaw
purchased the estate of Easter Greenock from the Crawford of that day,
and thus, after the lapse of centuries, again united the baronies. Since
that period they have remained in the possession of his descendants, Sir
Michael Shaw Stewart being the present representative of the family. The
germ of the town of Greenock appears to have been a small duster or row
of houses along the shore, which formed a kind of appendage to the
adjoining castle. In process of time, under the fostering patronage of
the Shaw family, it gradually increased in size and importance, although
even to a comparatively recent date it seems to have been a village of
“no particular mark or likelihood.” So late as the beginning of the
seventeenth century it consisted of a single row of thatched cottages,
principally inhabited by fishermen and small traders. In these days the
exclusive privileges of Dumbarton, Renfrew, and Glasgow, exercised a
withering influence on the commercial efforts of the less important
communities along the river, and Greenock, in its early attempts at
commerce, had to struggle against the invidious opposition of its more
favoured burghal neighbours. Ultimately, in 1635, it was erected by
Royal Charter into a free burgh of barony, after which it seems to have
advanced steadily in wealth and enterprise. The herring fishing was
still the principal item in its trade, and towards the end of the
seventeenth century the inhabitants possessed no fewer than 900 boats,
each of which was furnished with twenty-four nets, and carried a crew of
four men. Some idea of the produce of the Greenock herring fisheries at
this period may be formed from the fact that, in 1674, after the home
market had been supplied, 20,000 barrels were exported to Rochelle,
besides large quantities which were despatched to other French ports and
to various places in the Baltic. A considerable coasting trade was also
done by vessels belonging to Greenock, and at times a run was even made
to1 the Continent or to the shores of Ireland.
About the beginning of
the- last century Greenock had become a town of considerable importance.
According to the contemporary history of Crawfurd, it .was then the
principal town upon the coast, the houses being well built, the harbour
large and commodious, while the inhabitants* were possessed of numerous
vessels engaged in the coasting and foreign trades. The population was
at this period about 2,000. In 1700 the people of Greenock petitioned
the Scottish Parliament for a grant to enable them to construct a
harbour; but, being refused, they entered into an arrangement with Sir
John Shaw, the liberal-minded lord of the manor, who advanced the
necessary funds on the security of a voluntary assessment of Is. 4d. on
every sack of malt brewed into ale within the limits of the burgh. In
1707 this important work was commenced, and in three years thereafter it
was satisfactorily completed, at a cost of nearly £5,600. The
construction of the harbour was productive of the happiest consequences.
Trade immediately increased, and the population of the burgh became
considerably augmented. The burden of debt incurred was entirely
liquidated in 1740, while a surplus of £1,500 remained in the hands of
the corporation. Since that period, the prosperity of the town has
advanced with astonishing rapidity. Additional quays and harbours have
been formed from time to time, according to the requirements of an
ever-extending commerce; and although circumstances have occasionally
threatened to interrupt the welfare of the town, it has still risen
superior to its difficulties, and continued to progress in its
industrial resources, its population, and its wealth. The most important
branches of manufacturing industry prosecuted in Greenock are
shipbuilding, iron-founding, sugar-refining, rope-spinning, sail-making,
and cooperage. In shipbuilding especially, the town has long occupied a
prominent position, some of the establishments being of great extent,
and producing vessels of the largest size and the most beautiful
proportions. A volume, however, would be required to do anything like
justice to the history and statistics of this flourishing town. For our
purpose, the above rapid and imperfect outline must, in the meantime,
suffice.
After resting for a brief
space in the James Watt Tavern, the house in which the great improver of
the steam-engine was born, we proceed in an easterly direction to visit
the suburb of Cartsdyke. Passing the spacious Victoria Harbour, we soon
find ourselves in this most ancient and picturesque part of the town.
Cartsdyke was originally a distinct little community, possessing a
harbour of its own, and being governed by its own local authorities.
Crawfurd, writing in 1710, says, “Cartsdyke is built of one street, with
a convenient harbour capable of containing ships of considerable burden.
It was erected into a burgh of barony, with the privilege of holding a
weekly market and several fairs, in favour of Thomas Crawford of
Cartsburn, from a Charter from King Charles II., dated the 16th of July,
anno 1669.” In the advancement of Greenock, Cartsdyke has been annexed
to its more lusty neighbour, and now forms one of its integral parts. It
consists principally of one main street, running parallel to the shore,
with a number of narrow lanes or closses branching off in lateral
directions. Many of the houses are time-worn and rickety, presenting,
with their peaked gables and crawsteps, a curious auld world aspect.
There is a dreary downcast expression, indeed, in the entire appearance
of the locality, all filthy and smoke-begrimed as it is, which forcibly
suggests the idea that it has seen better days. This is more especially
the case in the immediate vicinity of the ancient harbour, which, in a
woful state of decay, is still in existence. Here many of the edifices
are absolutely ruinous and deserted, the roofs falling in and the
windows being shattered and paneless. The old pier itself is
weather-worn and crumbling, while the only tenants of the harbour at the
time of our visit, are a group of Dutch-looking hulks of no great size,
and evidently far past a sea-worthy condition. The glory has in truth
departed from the harbour of Cartsdyke. Yet it has seen brave sights in
its day. It was from this spot that a considerable number of the vessels
engaged in the ill-fated Darien Expedition took their departure in 1699,
amidst the blessings of their countrymen, and with the brightest hopes
of success. Alas, alas! how different was the result from the
anticipations of its too sanguine projectors! Ay, many a sad departure,
and many a blithe return, has been witnessed by this old and
time-battered quay. It was here, and in the adjacent domiciles, that
poor Jean Adams, the humble poetess of Cartsdyke, saw those
manifestations of genuine affection which she has embodied in her
inimitable lyric, “There’s nae Luck about the House.”
“Is this a time to think
o' wark
When Colin's at the door?
Rax me my cloak—In to the quay
And see him come ashore.”
Many such meetings must
the poetess have seen here, and deliciously indeed has she given
utterance to the sentiments of the overjoyed wife on the return of her
ain gudeman. Burns says truly, 44 This is one of the most beautiful
songs in the Scots or any other language.” This is high praise from the
prince of singers. And he further observes:—
“And will I see his face
again?
And will I hear him speak?’
as well as the two
preceding lines, are unequalled almost by anything I ever heard or
read.” Jean Adams, the authoress of this exquisite effusion, was a
native of Cartsdyke, having been born there about the year 1710. Her
father was a shipmaster in the village. Of her early days almost nothing
is known. That she received a fair education, according to the standard
of the period, is evident from the circumstance that she was afterwards
able to earn a subsistence by the teaching of reading, writing, and
needlework, in the village of her nativity. In 1734 she published a
small volume of poetry by subscription, but the result in a pecuniary
sense does not seem to have been very encouraging. In the school she is
said to have treated the children placed under her charge with the
greatest tenderness and care. Unfortunately for herself, however, she
seems to have been of a highly excitable temperament, winch led her into
certain harmless eccentricities, which tended to her disadvantage as a
teacher. Ultimately this blasted her prospects, and she became reduced
to a condition of extreme indigence. About the year 1760 she seems,
indeed, to have fallen into a state of absolute beggary. Mrs. Fullarton,
who was formerly a pupil of the unfortunate poetess, was afterwards in
the habit of relating that, on one oceasion, she came to her house
asking alms; and that although she at first refused, through a lingering
feeling of pride, to accept some articles of dress which were kindly
offered to her, she afterwards returned and was glad to receive them.
Dependent on the cold hand of charity for her livelihood, she wandered
from door to door, sometimes repaying her benefactors for their “ gowpen
of meal” with a screed of her rhyming ware. The end of this unhappy
daughter of song was in accordance with her miserable life. It is
briefly recorded in the following extracts from the minutes of the
Glasgow Poorshouse:—
“Glasgow Town’s Hospital,
2d April, 1765.
“Admit Jean Adams, a poor
woman, a stranger in distress; for some time she has been wandering
about; she came from Greenock; recommended by Bailies Gray and Miller.”
"Glasgow Town’s Hospital,
9th April, 1765.
“Jean Adams, the stranger
admitted on Tuesday, the 2d current, died on the following day, and was
buried at the house expense.”
Thus miserably terminated
the earthly career of poor Jean Adams. On such a melancholy theme we
might easily wax sentimental, but the naked truth, as it is thus briefly
stated in the chronicles of poverty, is more impressive than aught that
we could say. Peace to the ashes of the friendless pauper, in whatever
nameless grave they may be lying! Sorrow and suffering were her
companions in life; but her one sweet strain has been a comfort and a
joy to many a heart, and her memory must ever be cherished by those who
can appreciate the genuine utterances of simple pathos and feeling.
We are aware that the
authorship of “There’s nae Luck about the House” has been ascribed to
William Julius Miokle, the learned translator of the Lusiad of Camoens.
The only reason assigned for the supposition that Mickle was the writer,
is the fact, that a copy of the song, with emendations in his
handwriting was found among his papers after <leath. On the other hand,
Cromek, who investigated the subject thoroughly, adduced the evidence of
Mrs. Fullarton and that of other pupils of Jean Adams in support of her
claim. From their statements it appears that they had frequently heard
her recite the song, and that she uniformly spoke of it as her own
composition. This we are the more inclined to believe from the internal
evidence of the song itself. To our mind it appears that only from the
heart of a woman could it by possibility have sprung. There are certain
strains, such as “Auld Robin Gray,” “The Flowers of the Forest,” and
others that might be mentioned, which could only have issued from “the
weeping blood of woman’s heart.” They are pervaded so completely with
the delicacy and tenderness of the feminine nature, that there cannot be
the slightest doubt in any discriminating mind with regard to the sex of
their writers. In the peculiar characteristics alluded to, the song in
question is particularly rich. It is surcharged with the woman. That the
cold classical scholar, Mickle, whose every efiusion is of purest
English, “all compact,” should have burst for once into the most genial
Doric, and poured forth such an inimitable gush of womanly affection and
minute domestic detail, we shall believe when men “ gather grapes of
thorns and figs of thistles,” but certainly not a moment sooner. Either
Jean Adams or one of her sex, we are firmly persuaded, must have
produced the song. We have never either heard or seen it ascribed to any
other woman; and as the evidence of Mrs. Fullarton and her schoolmates
is sufficiently satisfactory to our mind, we shall continue to give the
honour of its authorship to whom we conceive the honour is due, and that
assuredly is to the humble poetess of Cartsdyke.
There are other names
deserving of notice besides that of Jean Adams, however, associated with
the now dingy suburb of Cartsdyke. The grandfather of James Watt, as we
find duly recorded on his tombstone, was “Professor of the Mathematicks”
in the village, which in his day must have been somewhat diminutive in
its proportions. As we can learn nothing of a college having ever
existed in the locality, we suspect the honest man, whose title is thus
pompously recorded, must, in plain language, have been the dominie of
the place. Who can say how much of his illustrious grandson’s mechanical
genius may have descended to him from the good old teacher! It was in
Cartsdyke that James Macrae, afterwards Governor of Madras, was born,
about the beginning of the last century. This individual, who left his
native village a poor friendless boy, gradually elevated himself by his
industry, perseverance, and enterprise, to the dignity we have
mentioned, while he realised at the same time a princely fortune. On
retiring from his public position, he took up his residence in Glasgow,
and it was to his munificence that our city is indebted for the
equestrian statue of King William, at the Cross. The story of his life,
to which we can only thus briefly allude, is indeed a striking
illustration of the saying, that “truth is stranger than fiction.”
On the night of Saturday,
the 21st of November, 1835, Cartsdyke was the scene of an awful
catastrophe, by which about forty individuals lost their lives, and an
immense destruction of property took place. Among the hills above the
village, the waters of Cartsbum, a small rivulet which flows into the
bay at this place, are reserved for the supply of the town. On the
melancholy occasion alluded to, the dam gave way, in consequence of some
defect in its construction, and the water, amounting in all to about
three millions of cubic feet, was precipitated on the devoted village.
The occurrence was all the more appalling that it happened at a late
hour, when the inhabitants for the most part had retired to rest. Many
were drowned in the raging torrent. Some were saved in an almost
miraculous manner. In one case an individual volunteered to brave the
perils of the flood, when at its height, for the purpose of saving two
children. On making his way into the apartment where they were, he found
them both lying sound asleep, while the bed upon which they lay was
floating on the water that almost filled the room. Numerous other
incidents of an interesting nature occurred on the night in question,
which is still remembered with the most lively horror in the locality.
Traces of the devastation occasioned by the destructive deluge are still
pointed out to the inquiring visitor.
There is, it must be
admitted, but little temptation to linger at Cartsdyke. After a cursory
inspection of the vicinity of the old quay, which, in its connection
with Jean Adams, may well be regarded as hallowed ground, we proceed, in
a south-westerly direction, to the venerable and somewhat picturesque
mansion of Crawfurdsburn, which is situated on a gentle slope of the
adjacent hills. Crossing the line of the railway, and threading our way
among edifices of recent erection, principally occupied by operatives
engaged in the neighbouring public works, we soon arrive at the entrance
of the beautiful grounds, and, without let or hindrance, at once make
our way into their shadowy precincts. The environs of Greenock are
somewhat deficient in sylvan accessories. Whatever charms may be
possessed by the landscape in this neighbourhood—and few localities can
boast such a rich variety of scenery—it is, in truth, sadly in want of
stately and time-honoured trees. Young plantations, we are happy to
observe, adorn the hills and girdle the mansions in every direction; but
time is required for the production of the “leafy senators,” and as yet
the woodfe of Greenock are comparatively in their infancy. Crawfurdsburn
is an exception to the rule. Here there is a choice congregation of fine
old sylvan giants. Nowhere, unless in the policies of some hoary
ancestral mansion, do we meet with such impressive bosky attendants as
now fling their shadows over our path. We have heard, with somewhat of
scepticism, of “the divinity that doth hedge about a king,” but there is
certainly a majesty in a grand old tree, which almost compels us to the
doffing of our hat. That umbrageous plane, for instance, with its sturdy
trunk and its lofty masses of green, is a sight to inspire awe. Things
of a day, we pass beneath its outspread arms. From the sun and the rain
it shelters us, as it has sheltered the generations of the past, and
when the home which knows us now shall know us no more for ever, there
it will stand in its “pride of place,” unfolding its leaves in the smile
of spring, and bidding defiance with its naked boughs to the blasts of
many a winter.
"In the days of old, when
(he spring with gold
Had brightened its branches gray;
Through the grass at its feet crept the maiden sweet,
To gather the flowers of May;
She is gone, she is dead, in the church-yard laid.
Bat the old tree still remains."
We are the most
treacherous of quoters, but the lines, all incorrect as they may be,
come bubbling from our memory as we gaze upon the hoary forestling, and
dream of the sights it may have seen. But there are many trees around
the house of Crawfurdsburn, which would have delighted the soul of an
Evelyn or a Gilpin. To us they are a joy unspeakable ; for be it known,
that with all our reverence for these sages of the rugged stem and the
whispering bough, we hold ourselves to be as devoted worshippers of the
sylvan deities as they for their lives could have been. We . have indeed
a perfect adoration of trees. Their various features are familiar to us
as those of our intimate friends; and their voices—for every tree has an
utterance of its own—are to our ears even as “household words.” You
doubt the assertion, gentle reader 1 then come with us into the bosom of
the wood at midnight’s mirkest hour, and let but the winds do their
musical duty, and we shall convince thee of our lore. We shall read for
thy edification every tone and cadence (and haply even reveal their
hidden meanings) from the soft whispering rustle of the saugh, as it
dips in the gurgling stream, to the deep dreary moan of the Scottish
fir, as it stands apart in gloom, upon the cloud-cleaving summit of the
hill.
The antique mansion of
Crawfurdsburn is still in an excellent state of preservation, although
it has now braved the storms of nearly three centuries. It is a fine
specimen of the old baronial residence, and from various points of view
would furnish abundant material for pictorial study. The edifice is
situated on the summit of a gentle activity, round the base of which
meanders the small streamlet of Cartsburn, which gives its name to the
locality. It consists of two principal sections, of venerable aspect,
which are connected by intervening walls of considerable height and
strength, enclosing a courtyard of somewhat limited extent. The entrance
to this is by a handsome doorway in one of the walls alluded to, which
is surmounted by the armorial bearings of the family of Crawford, carved
in stone, and coloured. The carving is as perfect and well defined as if
it had just passed from the hands of the craftsman by whom it was
executed. Our knowledge of heraldry, we are sorry to say, is not
sufficiently extensive to enable us to describe in appropriate terms the
symbols which it embodies. To borrow from old Crawfurd, however, and he
is an authority on such matters, the arms of the family consist of—44
Gules; a Fess, ermine; betwixt a crescent in chief, and two swords
saltyre-ways, hilted and pomelled; or, in Base: for crest, a sword with
a balance, with this motto, 'Quod tibi hoc alteri.’ ”We spend some time
right pleasantly inspecting the various features of this picturesque old
dwelling, and musing upon the scenes of joy and sorrow which it may have
witnessed in the past. Of its history we know but little, and that
little is almost solely derived from the pages of Crawfurd: "A short
distance to the south of Crawfurdsdyke,” says the good old historian of
the shire, "stands the house of Cartsburn, well planted, the principal
messuage of that barony, and the seat of Thomas Crawford of Cartsburn,
which lands were anciently a part of the Barony of Kilbirnie, and became
the patrimony of a younger brother of that ancient family (in the reign
of Queen Mary), whose posterity ended in the person of David Crawford of
Cartsburn, in the reign of King CharlesI.” Malcolm Crawford of Newton,
the nearest heir, then succeeded to the barony, and the historian
proceeds to trace the subsequent genealogical links in the family chain,
with a degree of minuteness which may be sufficiently interesting to the
antiquary, but which in the repetition would become tiresome, we are
afraid, to the general reader. We may mention, however, that George
Crawfurd, author of the History of Renfrewshire, was himself a scion of
the Cartsburn family, and that he first saw the light within these time-honoured
walls. According to tradition, Jean Adams, the sweet singer of Cartsdyke,
was a frequent visitor at Cartsburn House, and it is also said that the
Ayrshire ploughman spent at least one night beneath its hospitable roof.
Such associations are worthy of remembrance, and lend an additional
charm to the locality.
Making our descent into
the channel of the burn, which is here shaded in many places by the
foliage of overhanging trees, and threading its mazes to the vicinity of
“Kennedy’s Mill,” a lonely and a song-hallowed spot, we turn to the
west, and after a brief walk along the hill-side, soon find ourselves in
the Wellington Park of Greenock. This spacious and most beautiful
enclosure, the gift of Sir Michael Shaw Stewart to the inhabitants, is
situated on a gentle but commanding slope immediately adjacent to the
outskirts of the town. In extent, we should say, judging by the eye, it
it about ten or a dozen acres. The authorities have shown their
appreciation of the liberal donation so handsomely bestowed upon the
community, by a lavish expenditure on the improvement of the grounds. A
fine gravel walk has been formed round their entire extent, bordered
externally with a belt of planting, while the wide expanse of the
internal area has been levelled and covered with a smooth layer of turf.
Seats for the accommodation of walkers have been erected at intervals
along the pathway, while a handsome bowling-green has been constructed
at the lower extremity of the park. Everything requisite, indeed, has
been done to beautify the spot, and to adapt it to the purposes for
which it was designed, as a place of popular recreation and leisurely G
resort. From the more elevated portion of the esplanade, a series of
most delightful prospects are obtained. At the spectator’s feet, as it
were, lies the town in its canopy of smoke, with all its quays and
harbours, its spires and stately edifices. Beyond, a bright expanse of
the Frith stretches away to the distant hills of Dumbarton, Cardross,
and Cowal; while the placid waters are fretted with ships and steamers,
ever coming and going upon their various missions of usefulness.
After lingering for some
time within the green precincts of the Wellington Park, we return to the
bustle of the crowded streets. The “West. End” is yet unvisited, and we
must now crave the company of our readers in a brief stroll of
inspection through the better parts of the town. The portions we have
hitherto traversed may well be called the worst, although, as we have
seen, they are not altogether devoid of interest.
Our own Briggate,
all-odorous and repulsively tenanted as it is, will at any time bear
favourable comparison with many of the nasty thoroughfares which the
stranger in Greenock is called upon to navigate. There, for instance, is
the “Minchcollop-dose,” which our cicerone insists upon showing us, as
the scene of Highland Mary’s death. It looks the very home of typhus and
other nameless pestilences. No wonder the poor girl, all fresh and
blooming from the green braes of Campbelton as she was, should have
fallen a sacrifice to her brief residence here. Many have been the
deaths of the young and the beautiful which have taken place in such
vile localities under similar circumstances. The poor Highlanders of our
own land, and the Celts of the sister isle, have too often been driven
from the homes of their fathers, and compelled by their undeserved
necessities to burrow in such unwholesome dens, amidst disease and
death. Many a poor nameless Highland Mary has thus been pushed into an
untimely grave, and thus has many a stalwart chiel been laid prostrate
in the very pride of his manhood. for the children of the mountain and
the glen, who are driven unwillingly to an abidance in the vennel and
the dose, ’mongst “sights and sounds unholy.” That such things have
been, is assuredly both a sin and shame to many a proud family.
Having accomplished the
somewhat irksome task of threading the mazes of the more ancient and
unattractive parts of the town, we pass the handsome terminus of the
railway, and passing the theatre, which was erected by one of the Kemble
family, ascend to the venerable mansion of the Shaw Stewarts. This
spacious structure is situated on an elevated terrace quite adjacent to
the town, and on the very spot where, in former times, stood the Castle
of Wester Greenock. The site is one of the finest imaginable, commanding
an extensive view of the town, with a splendid prospect of the Frith and
the mountains beyond. There it stands with an appearance of offended
dignity, while the common race of edifices are treading dose upon its
privacy. And a stately edifice it is, albeit a little weather-worn and
disjaskit. It is evidently a product of various periods. The more
ancient portions, with their peaked gables and craw-steps, their angular
projections and their narrow windows, approximate even to the
picturesque; while the more modem additions, part of which are said to
have been designed by the celebrated James Watt, are erected with
greater attention to comfort and convenience. Over one of the entrances
is the date 1637. In former times the hospitality of the Shaw family
was, from generation to generation, dispensed within these hoary walls.
It was here the loyal Sir John assembled his tenantry, and marched to
the assistance of the second Charles, who was then engaged in a fierce
struggle with Cromwell for the crown. At the bloody fight of Worcester,
on September 3, 1651, the Greenock lads did yeomen’s service in the
royal cause, although at length, with the whole army, they were
compelled to flee. His authorities of Greenock, with a praiseworthy
appreciation of the princely liberality displayed by the donor of the
grounds, hare ex* pended considerable soma in their improvement and
decora* tion. Everything about them is arranged with the greatest taste,
while it is evident, from the aspect of neatness which pervades every
nook and comer, that the greatest attention is paid to such operations
as are necessary for the preservation of the amenities. Several fine
prospects of the town, we may also mention, and of the neighbouring
Frith, are obtained from various parts of the park, which altogether
must be regarded as a privilege of no ordinary value by the denizens of
the town. Few communities of equal size, indeed, are so fortunate in
regard to places of recreation as Greenock is at the present time. For
this, as we have already stated, she is primarily indebted to the
generosity and public spirit of the Baronet of Ardgowan.
After mating a brief
inspection of the Park, we descend the brae, and at once proceed along
the main thoroughfare of the town, in a westerly direction. Passing the
Middle area, a handsome edifice, with an elegant spire, occupying one
side of a spacious square, the aspect of the locality gradually
improves. The West End in Greenock, as elsewhere, asserts a decided
superiority. The streets are more cleanly and agreeable in
appearance—the buildings being generally of a superior description;
while there is a marked ''condition of the atmosphere, dyke is begrimed,
and the heart of the town” is so at the "West End,”
About 100 men from
Greenock and Cartsdyke joined the Duke of Argyle in 1716, when he
resisted the friends of the Stuart family in their attempts to overthrow
the reigning dynasty. At the same time a large body of the townspeople
were under arms, keeping watch on the movements of the cateran Bob Roy,
who threatened to make a descent from the Cardross shore, for the
purpose of plundering the district. It appears, indeed, that the bold
outlaw alluded to was in the habit, both before and after this period,
of crossing the Frith with his gillies, and helping himself to whatever
suited his fancy in the shape of gudes and gear. It is satisfactory to
learn, however, that the reiving scoundrel occasionally met with a warm
reception from the townsfolk, and was glad to make his escape toom-handed.
The old mansion of Greenock continued to be the residence of the family
of Shaw, and latterly of their lineal descendants, the Shaw Stewarts,
until 1754, when the family removed to Ardgowan, which still continues
their favourite seat.
Adjacent to the mansion,
and on the same elevated level, but a little to the westward, is
Wellpark, a spacious and beautiful area for exercise and recreation,
which has also been handsomely gifted to the townspeople by Sir Michael
Shaw Stewart. This noble esplanade anciently formed part of the policies
attached to the baronial residence immediately adjoining. Around the
sides it is adorned in several places by rows of fine old trees, while a
profusion of shrubbery has recently been planted over the grounds. In
extent the park may be, guessing in a rough way, about from six to eight
acres. It is covered with the most luxuriant green sward, and is
intersected in every direction with fine gravel walks, having seats at
convenient distances for the accommodation of promenaders. In one corner
there is a quaint-looking old well, having the armorial bearings of the
Shaw family carved upon its sides, with the letters “ H. H. S.M
curiously blent together, and the date of 1629. The authorities of
Greenock, with a praiseworthy appreciation of the princely liberality
displayed by the donor of the grounds, have expended considerable sums
in their improvement and decoration. Everything about them is arranged
with the greatest taste, while it is evident, from the aspect of
neatness which pervades every nook and corner, that the greatest
attention is paid to such operations as are necessary for the
preservation of the amenities. Several fine prospects of the town, we
may also mention, and of the neighbouring Frith, are obtained from
various parts of the park, which altogether must be regarded as a
privilege of no ordinary value by the denizens of the town. Few
communities of equal size, indeed, are so fortunate in regard to places
of recreation as Greenock is at the present time. For this, as we have
already stated, she is primarily indebted to the generosity and public
spirit of the Baronet of Ardgowan.
After mating a brief
inspection of the Park, we descend the brae, and at once proceed along
the main thoroughfare of the town, in a westerly direction. Passing the
Middle Kirk, a handsome edifice, with an elegant spire, occupying one
side of a spacious square, the aspect of the locality gradually
improves. The West End in Greenock, as elsewhere, asserts a decided
superiority. The streets are more cleanly and agreeable in
appearance—the buildings being generally of a superior description;
while there is a marked improvement in the sanitary condition of the
atmosphere. The smoke with which Cartsdyke is begrimed, and the dubious
odours by which “the heart of the town” is so grievously haunted, are
unknown at the “West End,” which, with its snug cottages along the shore
and its regular lines of architecture creeping up the adjacent braes, is
really a very pleasant place of abode. Some of the more recent streets,
indeed, present most beautiful vistas of the Gourock shore, and of the
broad Frith, with its magnificent boundaries of mountain and glen. It is
unfortunate for Greenock that strangers who make their approach to it by
the railway, or who merely pass through its streets from the terminus to
the quay, are apt to be prejudiced to its disadvantage by the
unprepossessing appearance of its eastern and central portions. Yet to
those who linger in its precincts as we have done, and who visit its
fairer quarters, Greenock presents many aspects of loveliness. It also
possesses many attractions in the shape of creature comforts and
intellectual appliances, which are unknown at the more fashionable
summer resorts of our saut-water citizens.
Turning aside to the
right of the thoroughfare along which we have been pursuing our westerly
way, a walk of a hundred yards or so brings us to the gateway of the
West Churchyard. The key is deposited in an adjacent house, and we
readily obtain admission to “the field of graves,” which is of
considerable extent, and thickly studded with headstones, monuments, and
other records of departed mortality. The old church (the original place
of worship of the people of Greenock, when Greenock formed but one
parish) is situated at the eastern extremity of the enclosure. It is a
plain edifice, apparently about a century and a-half old, irregular in
outline, and surmounted by a small belfry. Of late it has been deserted,
by preacher and congregation, for a more spacious and fashionably
constructed house of prayer. Already it begins to wear a desolate and
ruinous appearance. The windows are shivered and paneless, permitting
free ingress to the winds and the rain. We hear the sparrows chattering
among the empty pews as we pass; and on peeping into the interior, which
we do for a minute or two, everything wears a dank and gousty look,
which contrasts painfully with the spectacle which the place presented
when we were last under the roof of the venerable building. At that time
it was filled with an attentive congregation, the music of psalms
resounded within its walls, and the voice of the minister was heard
giving utterance to the glad tidings. We were then a little boy, and our
attention was attracted by a mimic ship suspended from the roof, which
we were told, in a solemn whisper from one we loved, was to remind the
worshipping throng that their prayers were requested for those u who had
gone down to the sea in ships.” Many a heart was doubtless there which
needed not the remembrancer; but to our mind the circumstance was
peculiarly affecting, and we have never forgotten the lesson which it
conveyed. How different is the scene which now meets our gaze! how
different the sounds which now fall upon our ear! The walls are damp and
weather-stained, the thick dust lies heavy on pulpit and pew, and the
murmur of the winds, as they play unchecked in the crevices, seems to
mourn over a glory which has departed. We think of those who were then
by our side, but who have now entered upon their rest; and our heart,
like "a muffled drum,” beats thick as we recross the threshold, and
enter the sunshine which brightens the auld kirkyard.
The West Church
burying-ground is enclosed by a high stone wall, which gives it a
half-secluded aspect, although it is nearly surrounded by houses and
workshops of various kinds. The area, unless where covered with
monumental erections, is mantled with rank verdure, and around the
margin it is adorned in various places with recently planted shrubbery
and trees. It is deficient, however, in those rugged old specimens of
ash and elm which seem so appropriate to the home of the dead, and which
lend so grateful a shade to those who, like ourselves, delight to
meditate among the tombs. For people of such doleful taste there is
abundant food for reflection in the space before us. The dead of all
ages and conditions are here. These parallel stones mark the place of
sepulture where the father and grandfather of James Watt are laid, with
their wives and many of their kindred. The more ancient of the two
informs us, that the grandsire of the great engineer was “professor of
the mathematicks in Cartsdyke.” The other, as the legend imports, was
placed here by James Watt himself, to the memory of his parents, and
that of a beloved brother. A little distance to the westward of this
hallowed spot we are once more brought to a pause beside an honoured
grave. It is that of John Wilson, author of “ The Clyde,” a descriptive
poem of genuine excellence, and one to which we are indebted for many an
apt quotation. Good old John! thou hast often been our companion in
spirit by wood and wild; we have crooned thy lines full oft amongst the
very scenes which thy genius best loved to depict; we have sat for long,
long hours of summer with thee on the banks of that stream which thy
song has rendered sacred, and we have cherished thy memory for its dear
sake. Instinctively our hat rises from off our head, as reverently we
stoop to scan thy honoured epitaph. We read as follows from the flat
stone which roofs thy narrow home:—
“Here are deposited the
remains of Mr. John Wilson, Master of the Grammar School in Greenock,
who died on the second day of Jane, 1789, in the 69th year of his age.
His life was an example of the superiority of knowledge over wealth; for
though comparatively in an obscure station, he enjoyed the friendship of
many eminent and enlightened characters, whose esteem and converse were
to him more than an equivalent for the want of fortune. His colloquial
and literary talents, in which unaffected simplicity was united with
exquisite humour, and profound learning with elegant poetical genius,
rendered him worthy of their society. As an instructor of youth he was
equally skilful and kind; in his intercourse with the world he was
upright and friendly; in his domestic relations most tender and
affectionate.”
In the same grave are
deposited the remains of his wife, Agnes Brown, who survived him about
ten years.
Such is the posthumous
tribute, and a high one certainly it is which has been paid to the
memory of the poet by the people among whom for so many years he dwelt.
One would naturally imagine, on reading such a splendid encomium upon
his character and genius that the good folks of Greenock must have been
particularly proud of the natural abilities and the educational
acquirements of their gifted teacher. The very reverse, however, seems
to have been the case. At the time Wilson, who was a native of Lanark,
finished his principal poem, “The Clyde,” he was a teacher in
Ruther-glen, and his appointment to the Grammar School of Greenock in
1767, was conferred upon him on the express condition that he renounced
entirely "the profane and unprofitable art of poem-making.” To this
bitter humiliation the necessities of the poor poet compelled him to
submit, and from that time forth he seems to have cut altogether the
acquaintance of the Castalian ladies. The iron entered into his soul
indeed, and we find him at a late period of his life still fretting
under its pangs. In a letter to his son, written in 1779, he says,—“I
once thought to live by the breath of fame; but how miserably was I
disappointed, when, instead of having my performance applauded in
crowded theatres, and being caressed by the great—for what will not a
poetaster, in the intoxicating delirium of possession, dream!—I was
condemned to bawl myself to hoarseness among wayward brats, to cultivate
sand, and wash Ethiopians for all the dreary days of an obscure life,
the contempt of shopkeepers and brutish skippers.” This is surely a
sufficiently painful glimpse into the feelings of the dependent and
down-trodden bard. Dr. Leyden, in narrating this circumstance, waxes
exceedingly indignant at the good people of Greenock for thus placing
the bushel of bigotry and intolerance on the sacred light of genius. It
was in very truth a sorry sight. The Greenock authorities, however, were
not one whit less liberal than the great majority of their countrymen at
the period. The “rigidly righteous” were then rampant in the land. Only
a few years previously Home was driven from his church for writing the
beautiful tragedy of “ Douglas;” about the same time, the Glasgow
Magistrates put Mr. Blackburn in jail for merely taking a Sunday walk;
and the records of our kirk-sessions, if examined, would reveal such
doings, over the length and breadth of Scotland, as would keep the
Greenock folk abundantly in countenance, although they might well put us
all to the blush for the intolerance of our sires. Robert Bums was the
first to grapple with the gaunt genius of cant which then prevailed.
With a master hand he unveiled the mysteries of hypocrisy and bigotry,
while he flashed the lightnings of his scorching satire athwart the
fearful hollows of sour-faced sectarian zeal. Thanks unto him, we shall
have no more John Wilson’s gagged with a crust of bread on the
blasphemous pretext of doing God service.
But "soft you now, the
fair Ophelia!.” We are approaching the grave of Highland Mary. Had it
been possible for the bard of Coila to have accompanied us to this
hallowed spot, his big heart would have beaten with fondest
recollection, and his black lustrous eyes would have glittered with the
salt drops of sorrow. A sweet episode in the troubled life of the poet
was his brief intercourse with that simple mountain girl. Shadows have
gathered round the narrative of their connection, since both have left
the scene, but her name remains without a single stain; and if we may
judge of his feelings with regard to her from the songs in which her
memory is embalmed, they were of the purest and most ennobling kind:—
"Wi’ mony a vow and locked
embrace
Our parting was fu’ tender,
And pledging aft to meet again,
We tore ourselves asunder;
But, oh! fell death's
untimely frost
That nipt my flower so early!
Now green's the sod and cauld's the clay
That wrap my Highland Mary.”
In sending the most
affecting song from which we extract the above verse, to Thomson, Burns
says, "The subject of the song is one of the most interesting passages
of my youthful days; and I own that I should be much flattered to see
the verses set to an air which would insure celebrity.” Recent
revelations seem to prove that the poet was not so young when the
passage occurred, but there can be no doubt that it was one which
affected him deeply, and which he long continued to cherish in his heart
of hearts.
The last resting-place of
Highland Mary is situated at the western extremity of the
burying-ground, within a few feet of the wall by which it is bounded.
For many years the spot was all unmarked, save by a diminutive and
somewhat quaint-looking headstone, on which was carved the effigies of a
carpenter’s tools, with the following inscription:—“This burying-place
belongs to Peter M‘Pherson, ship-carpenter in Greenock, and Mary
Campbell, his spouse, and their children, 1760.” It was in the house of
the said Peter M‘Pherson, whose wife was a cousin of the poet’s
sweetheart, that the latter died, she haying been on a visit to her
relatives at the time of the melancholy occurrence. In process of time,
as the fame of Burns strengthened and extended, every scene associated
with his memory became as hallowed ground to his countrymen. The place
of his birth, and the locality where he died and was buried, were
crowded from year to year with admiring pilgrims. The grave of his
Highland lassie was also visited by many for the sake of him whose love
she had reciprocated, and who after her early death had so beautifully
sung her tearful praises. At length it was suggested that a monument
should be erected over the spot where her ashes were laid. The scheme
was submitted to the public, and ultimately a sufficient sum was
subscribed to defray the cost of a neat structure. The workmanship was
entrusted to our townsman, Mr. John Mossman, whose excellent artistic
productions contribute so materially to the adornment of our local “
cities of the dead.” The monument, which was formally inaugurated on the
25th of January, 1842, consists of a tall and elegantly formed slab, on
which are carved a group representing the parting of the lovers,
surmounted by a figure of Grief hanging over a vase, on which is
inscribed the simple name of “Mary.” Beneath the figures are the two
lines,—
“Oh, Mary, dear departed
shade,
Where is thy place of blissful rest?”
At the base is the little
old-fashioned headstone, with its rude carvings, which originally marked
the lair of Peter M‘Pherson, and which, with commendable taste, has been
permitted to remain uninjured. The plot on which it stands is now,
contrary to what it was a few years ago, neatly kept, and is shaded by
some recently planted shrubs. A phenomenon similar to that observed at
the grave of Burns is also visible here. There is actually a beaten
footpath from the entrance of the church-yard to the narrow abode of
poor Mary Campbell. That brown pathway winding among the tombs is more
suggestive than aught that we could say, with regard to the estimation
in which the memory of Bums and his Highland Mary is held by the people
of Scotland.
But time does not linger,
even within the precincts of the auld kirkyard, and as the day is
rapidly wearing to its wane we must depart. Adjacent to the West Church
is the extensive shipbuilding establishment of the Messrs. Scott. Taking
a passing peep into the spacious area, where vessels in every stage of
advancement are in busy preparation for their advent on the deep, we are
shown an interesting relic of the past, in the shape of a gigantic piece
of ordnance (half buried in the earth), which once did service on board
one of the stately war-ships of the great Spanish Armada. The story of
this time-honoured gun is briefly told in an inscription upon a brass
plate, which is attached to one of its sides. It is as follows:—“The
famous Spanish Armada sailed to conquer England in the year 1588, under
the command of the Duke of Medina. The fleet was scattered in a tempest,
and many of the ships were wrecked on the western islands of Scotland.
This gun, saved from the wreck of one of these ships, was brought to
Greenock, and placed on the West Quay, built in the year 1710, where it
remained for one hundred years. Mr. Scott having purchased all the
materials of that quay from the magistrates of Greenock, on the
improvement of the harbour, the gun was by him placed here; not for the
destruction of ships, but as a holdfast to convey them for repairs
safely in and out of dock. Build-ing-yard, Greenock, 1810. Calibre of
gun, 12-pounder; circumference at breach, 3 feet 6 inches; length of
gun, 8 feet 3 inches; circumference at muzzle, 2 feet 8^ inches.”
Notwithstanding the tear and wear which the ancient destroyer must have
undergone, bpth from the tooth of time and from its being used as a “
holdfast,” it still presents a sturdy trunk, and bids fair to keep its
ground for centuries.
Perambulating the
labyrinths of the town in various directions, we visit in succession a
number of the public establishments, many of which are well deserving of
notice. The Mechanics’ Institution is a handsome edifice, fitted up with
all the means and appliances of popular adult education. The tables of
the reading-room are well supplied with newspapers and other
periodicals, while the walls are garnished with a valuable collection of
phrenological casts, apparatus, and objects illustrative of natural
history, &c. An extensive library is attached to the institution, and on
glancing at the catalogue we are pleased to observe that the selection
of books is in every respect admirable. The lecturing-hall is equally
elegant and comfortable—the platform, which is at one end of the
apartment, being adorned with busts of James Watt and Mr. Wallace of
Kelly, while a beautiful model of a full-rigged yacht hangs from the
opposite wall. On the whole, the institution, so far as we could judge
from a cursory inspection, appears to be exceedingly creditable to the
working men of Greenock, and we sincerely trust that a large section of
them take advantage of its privileges. If such is really the case,
however, it is different, we are sorry to say, from our experience in
other quarters. In Union Street, a pleasant, retired thoroughfare in the
west end of the town, is situated a handsome structure, known as the
Watt Memorial. This building was erected at a cost of £3,000, by the
late Mr. Watt of Soho, son of the great improver of the steam-engine,
for the reception of a beautiful statue of his father, which was
executed by Chantrey —the cost having been raised by a public
subscription. The statue is placed in a central compartment on the
ground floor. It is of pure white marble, and is an exact counterpart of
that with which our readers are already familiar in George Square,
Glasgow. On the front of the pedestal is the following inscription, from
the pen of the late Lord Jeffrey:—
“The Inhabitants of
Greenock hare erected this statue of James Watt, not to extend a fame
already identified with the miracles of steam, but to testify the pride
and reverence with which he is remembered in the place of his nativity,
and their deep sense of the great benefits his genius has conferred on
mankind. Born 19th January, 1736. Died at Heathfield, in Staffordshire,
August 25, 1819.’*
On the right of the
pedestal is a shield containing the arms of the town, and on the left
are carved representations of strength and speed. A likeness of the
elephant adorns the back, a figure suggestive of Jeffrey’s fine simile
of the steam-engine, that, like the trunk of the animal referred to, is
equally adapted to lift a pin or to rend an oak. On the walls around are
portraits of John Galt, author of the Annals of the Parish, who resided
many years in Greenock, and who ultimately died ‘and was buried there,
of James Watt, Henry Bell, the pioneer of steam navigation on the Clyde,
and others. There is also a manuscript survey of the Clyde by Watt, and
a letter by his son announcing his intention of erecting the present
edifice., The Watt Memorial is principally devoted, however, to the
reception of the Greenock Public Library. Its walls are accordingly so
extensively lined with tomes of every size and shape, that the sight of
them would have dumfoundered even such a bookworm as Dominie Samson, and
compelled him to an audible utterance of his favourite “Pro-di-gi-ous! ”
A short distance to the
southward of the Watt Memorial is the beautiful new cemetery of
Greenock, and thither, after a brief inspection of the institution
alluded to, we wend our way. The cemetery spreads over a gentle
elevation, which commands a variety of delightful prospects. The grounds
are nearly twenty-two acres in extent, and are intersected in every
direction by upwards of four miles of carriage-way and walk. Large sums
have been expended from time to time by the authorities in the adornment
of this lovely place of burial. Trees and shrubs of the richest and
rarest species are profusely introduced wherever they are calculated to
produce a happy effect, while there is no end of the herbaceous plants
which embellish the parterres and borders. Many of these are in bloom at
the period of our visit; and, while we are threading the mazes of this
city of the silent, it is with difficulty we can realize the idea that
we are treading over the ashes of departed mortality. One is rather
tempted, indeed, to the study of botany by the nodding blooms around,
than to speculations on those who "sleep the sleep that knows no
breaking ” in the dark chambers below. Yet there are promptings to
solemn musing in the flower of the field which to-day is, and to-morrow
is gone for ever. The withered leaf and the falling petal are beautiful
but striking monitors of doom. They also are preachers, and the lesson
they inculcate is that of Israel’s wise king, "All is vanity and
vexation of spirit.”
‘We die even as the
flowers,
And we shall breathe away
Our lives upon the chance wind,
Even as they.”
As we gradually, by many
a winding sweep, ascend the hill, it is evident that there are already
many tenants in the narrow mansions of the cemetery. Headstones and
monumental erections are rising thickly in every direction, each with
its own little legend of sorrow. Some of these mementoes of departed
friendships are very tasteful and elegant, while others are rather
flaunting manifestations of pride than chaste records of bereavement. On
the summit, where it is intended, we understand, to raise a gigantic
monument in memory of Greenock’s greatest son, James Watt, a
considerable space is still permitted to remain in all its native
wildness. The broom and the whin are here seen intermingled with the
crimson of the heath-bell, while the lilac blossoms of the eyebright
blend exquisitely with the deep blue of the bellflowers and the golden
luxuriance of the hawkweeds and the lady’s bedstraw. Some of our
prettiest wild flowers, indeed, are indigenous to this spot, which
altogether presents a not unpleasing contrast to the cultivated flora of
the lower terraces. But let us scan the landscape which is spread before
us in the rich yellow radiance of an autumnal afternoon. At our feet the
town of Greenock stretches aw^y along the shore, “sleeping in its
smoke,” as the poet says, “like a monster in its own thick breath.”
Beautiful is the upward glance of the river, with Dumbarton and Dumbuck
in the distance, and Cardross, with all its darkening woods and
yellowing slopes intervening on the farther shore. Turning by slow
degrees from east to west, we have still the glittering Frith, with its
ships and its steamers in motion or asleep, its birds and its shadows,
and its long arms thrust far into the hollows of the mountain land
beyond. On the shore immediately opposite gleam the snowy lines of
Helensburgh cottages and villas. Roseneath, Kilcreggan, Cove, Kilmun,
and Dunoon, are each but simple features of beauty in the marvellous
scene, which like a fairy picture is now spread out in all its
loveliness before us. *Tis a subject for the pencil, however, rather
than for the pen, and we turn to the south where the Greenock braes
swell rapidly to the horizon. There is ample scope for a long day’s
rambling amidst these “heighs and howes,” and more than one happy day we
have spent among their recesses. A bird’s-eye “glower” is all we can
devote to them at present. Their outlines, however, are familiar to
every one who has passed along the Frith, so that there is the less need
of anything like a minute description. The most remarkable feature is
the course of the Shaws rivulet, by which the town is abundantly
supplied with water, and the machinery of numerous mills is impelled
with unceasing regularity. From our present position we can trace the
channel in all its downward windings, and observe the various industrial
establishments with which it is beaded. This is one of the most
remarkable efforts of engineering which the country can boast. The Shaws
Water, which formerly debouched into the Clyde at Inverkip, is collected
into a vast iteservoir in the bosom of the hills. From thence it is
ingeniously conveyed by an artificial aqueduct, several miles in length,
to the brow of the range before us, from whence it is gradually
precipitated to the level of the town below, performing an immense
amount of labour at every step, and ultimately contributing to the
culinary and lavatory wants of the inhabitants. One of the wheels which
is impelled by the descending stream is of gigantic size, and is
reckoned one of the sights of the locality. This grand undertaking,
which has materially advanced the prosperity and comfort of the
community, was designed and executed in 1827, for an association called
the Shaws Water Company, by Mr. Robert Thom, at a cost of £52,000. It is
indeed a proud monument of mechanical genius and skill.
But, while we sit and
gaze, our shadows are lengthening in the declining sun, and the hour of
the last train is rapidly approaching. Descending from our lofty
position, we retrace our steps into the town, which we reach after a few
minutes’ leisurely walk. A most hospitable reception awaits us in the
domicile of our friend and cicerone. In the enjoyment of his good
things, and in the examination of his books, &c., over which we have
some genial crack, the little space of time which we can now call our
own is soon speftt. When we arrive at the spacious and most commodious
terminus, the train is on the eve of starting, and we have barely time
to shake hands when the final signal is given, and we are careering
homeward with the speed of the wind through a delicious autumnal
gloaming. |