Ormistoun and the
Cockburns
Of the many branches of the old Border family of Cockburn, that of
Ormistoun finds in the author of these letters its last noted
representative. The barony, which had come into the family in the
fourteenth century through a marriage connection with a Lindsay of
the Byres, another and more famous barony in the neighbourhood, was
sold by John Cockburn in 1747 to the then Earl of Hopetoun, and now
belongs to the Marquis of Linlithgow. This sale must have been a
pathetic blow to many hopes—for Ormistoun was as much to John
Cockburn as any Abbotsford to the hand and heart that had striven
and lived for it. Retiring in 1744 from a post he had long held as a
Lord of the Admiralty, and busied with the building of what is now
Ormistoun Hall, girt with the garden and the trees he had so
lovingly tended, he had to give up the battle within sight of
victory. His closing years were spent under the roof of his only
son, George, of the Navy Office, and there he died in 1758, the year
of the birth of Nelson, at the age of seventy-nine. He inherited his
ruling passion from his father, Adam Cockburn, Lord Justice-Clerk
under Queen Anne, and on the commission that reported severely on
the Glencoe Massacre. In the 'Fifteen he earned much ill-will for
severity in dealing as a judge with the rebels who were tried before
him. John sat in Parliament from 1707 to 1741. Had he been half as
much interested in Walpole's long administration and the ways of his
fellow Scots members amid their novel surroundings as these letters
show he was in manure, and onions, and turnips, and trees, and the
canna-be-fashedness of his tenants, he might have filled now a
notable page in British history.
The Old House of Ormistoun
The approach crosses
the Orme, a tributary of the Tyne, which it joins below the village,
and, rising to the top of the south bank, leads westward alongside
the river dean known as the Glen, which the old house faces. This
position, on a bank overhanging a river hollow, is a characteristic
site for an old East Lothian mansion—witness Seton, Winton, Saltoun,
Yester, Biel, and Whittinghame. This ancient home of the Cockburns
is now a gaunt, featureless, two-story block, in rear of the modern
mansion, and is remarkable only for a low-arched main doorway, at
the left side of which is the grated window of a small chamber that
formed the temporary prison of the martyr George Wishart. Earl
Patrick, father of the Bothwell of sinister aspect and unhappy
memory, had seized the preacher at Haddington, torn him from his
devoted pupil, Knox, and under promise of safety conveyed him by
Ormistoun to Elphinston Tower, standing a grim peel on the ridge to
the north across the Tyne valley. Here waited Cardinal Beaton for
his victim. The Cockburns had been staunch for the English and
reform party. According to tradition, Wishart had often preached
under an old yew-tree which is now the most notable object at
Ormistoun. This tree is mentioned in a document of date 1474, and
still bears witness to its remarkable age. From its gnarled bole
rise great corrugations of the stem, supporting a dense mass of
branches that sweep the ground and form an arbour two hundred and
thirty-eight feet in circumference. John Cockburn casually alludes
to it. By east the Yew Tree, Bell is to thin out many of the fruit
trees now for their thickness hinders their bearing. It now forms
the chief ornament of the flower garden, a bit of ornamentation
which the practical Cockburn deemed superfluous, for in all the
correspondence flowers are never mentioned. Some time after 1816,
when the dowager Lady Hopetoun came to reside at Ormistoun, she
enlarged his modest mansion of 1745, and formed the parterres at the
expense of his beloved garden.
Mr. John Hamilton,
head forester on the estate, has secured for me a manuscript which
throws much light on the garden and its history. It was put together
in 1816 by the gardener, James Smith, at the request of Sir George
Mackenzie of Coul.
Ormiston Hall, in
East Lothian, is situated near the western confines of the county,
and twelve miles east by south from Edinburgh. The only garden here
prior to 1770 was the old one near the mansion-house. It cannot be
ascertained when the garden was made out, but from a date1 over one
of the doors it must have stood one hundred and eighty years. The
first trees for this garden had been selected with great care from
the cider and other fruit districts, and was probably the best sorts
then cultivated in the island. The trees grew to a large size, and
produced very abundant crops, so much so that about 1740 several
attempts were made to make cider. This old garden was originally an
oblong square, laid out in the Dutch style with grass walks, and
divided into squares by holly and yew hedges. Betwixt the above
square and the court of the old mansion is another oblong, about
half the size of the former, which had been occupied as a
bowling-green about a century ago (1716). It still retains the name.
The first repair in the garden was in 1775, when the old wall
running from part of the old mansion towards the old Isle'
(aisle=old church) 'was taken down and rebuilt with hewn stone. In
1789 the noble proprietor removed the decayed hedges, took up the
grass walks, widened the borders, introduced gravel walks, and laid
it out in the modern style. The Belsis garden was laid out and the
walls built in 1770. . . . The ground at the back of this garden (in
which stands an old pigeon-house) was taken in in 1800. . . . The
yew-tree in 1816 measured 12 feet 7 inches in circumference at three
feet from the ground. The late Sir Andrew Louden [Lauder] Dick4 of
Fountain Hall (in the immediate neighbourhood) 'used to measure the
tree for a number of years, and from several observations found, in
1810, that it increased yearly in circumference about three-quarters
of an inch.
Immediately to the
west of the garden, and completely hidden within a grove of giant
trees, the growth of two centuries, stand the ruins of the
pre-Reformation church of Ormistoun, approached, according to old
accounts, through the laird's garden. It must have been in use in
Adam Cockburn's time, and in John's boyhood, for the present edifice
was built in 1696. There John must have been baptized, after a short
journey through the closs and the garden, and, in due course,
catechised by the famous divine, John Cockburn, D.D., who entered
minister of the parish in 1683, closing a romantic career as rector
of Northall, Middlesex. Like his fellow Aber-donian, Bishop Burnet,
Presbytery was always obnoxious to him. John thought of the old
church only as a mark for his planting. ' Don't forget,1 he tells
Bell,' supplying the Large Elms and also Chesnuts and Oaks in the
Old Churchyard' (p. 78). Burial-places used to be secularised
without scruple. Of the old church of Ormistoun we have only a
beautiful arch in what remains of the south wall and the chancel,
both covered with an evergreen pall of ivy. Here too are
associations with Knox. On the north wall of the chancel is a
monumental brass1 to the memory of Alexander Cockburn, a pupil of
Knox, and a lad of great promise, but he was cut off in early life.
His mother was Alison Sandilands of Calder, another family closely
associated with the reformer. The upper part of the tablet has a
Latin elegy extolling the lad's virtues, written by George Buchanan.
Knox had tutored him along with the two sons of Douglas of
Longniddry, another of the reforming East Lothian families. To these
pupils Wishart referred when he parted with Knox, telling him to go
back to his bairns, as one was enough for a sacrifice.
The Correspondence
The Letters represent but a part of John Cockburn's correspondence.
They are contained in a well-bound quarto, carefully transcribed in
a modern hand. A thorough scrutiny of the language shows that the
transcript has been faithfully made; but where and by whom there is
no evidence. Their present appearance is due to the lucky accident
of my having found them carefully preserved by Mr. John Hamilton,
who had rescued the volume from a mass of unconsidered trifles
awaiting the fate of rubbish. He most generously placed the volume
at my disposal, after a cursory reading had shown me its novel
interest and importance. To him the Society is deeply indebted. The
reader will see that there are many gaps in the correspondence,
which Cockburn seems to have worked at in season and out of season,
both at home and on a journey. To Bell he commends his example: 'If
you'l write as you see I do as I can get five minutes, you 'd be
less liable to forget,' a frequent failing of the gardener's. His
industry as a correspondent is portentous. No.
VIII. runs to ten pages of print, four hundred words to the
page. No wonder these worthies were able to listen to long sermons.
Communication was easily kept up with Haddington, where the
postmaster handed over the Ormistoun letters when any one went in on
market-days. At Tottenham or Hampstead, where the writer lived, a
penny post and a foot post twice daily to London—once called upon to
wait till a letter was ready—were established. All the letters but
one are addressed to Charles Bell, gardener. There are letters, one
or more, for every month of the year, July excepted, and for the
years 1727, 1734-5, 1739-44. The correspondence must have been
continuous, except for the writer's occasional visits, so that the
leakage has been great. A few letters are undated, and these have
been dealt with in the notes. Cockburn also carried on at the same
time a much more extensive correspondence with his trusted adviser,
Alexander Wight, so often mentioned here. Brown of Markle, near
Haddington, first editor of the Farmer's Magazine, published (vol.
v., 1804) the two articles on John Cockburn, which up till now
supplied all the information available regarding the work of this
man as an agricultural pioneer. He gives only two letters, out of
many, to Wight (August 1725 and December 1726), and these and the
articles should be read by every one interested, as they supplement
the correspondence now published, a correspondence which throws a
flood of light on the little-known subject of the rise of modern
agriculture in what has ever since been the premier district of
Scotland, as well as on the social development of the villager, the
gardener, and the country gentleman.
A Model Scottish Landlord
The Ormistoun of two
centuries ago presented the usual landscape of the time. The upper
lands were heath-clad moor, perpetually grazed by half-starved
cattle; the hollows by the river-side undrained marsh, from which,
in dry seasons, some poor hay was secured as the only winter fodder
available. Ten crofters near the village held patches of arable
infield in run-dale or long narrow strips, on which crops of bere,
oats, or pease were raised in succession till a year in the natural
dress of weeds gave repose. These crofters were the kindly
rentallers of the barony, tenants at will. Bell's father was one of
them. What Cockburn thought of their farming comes out in this to
Bell about his father's land, 'His Husbandry goes no further than to
gett bad grain one year and worse the next' (p. 17). On the south
side of the Tyne were four farms, and on two of these Adam Cockburn
made the novel experiment (1698 and 1713) of granting long leases,
and this at a time when farmers were too poor and too suspicious to
take such a risk. It was a period, too, of political ferment and
widespread poverty. This pioneer lease-holding farmer was Robert
Wight, of a family long settled on the lands. An ancestor married
(1559) a daughter of John Cockburn, the reformer. Alexander Wight,
mentioned above, was Robert's son; and succeeding to the leases on
his father's death (1734), he became, more than ever, an ardent and
intelligent improver under guidance of the laird. We hear much of
him in the Letters, both as correspondent and fellow-improver. These
leases virtually made the holders perpetual feuars,1 and as the
total value of the estate was not great, John Cockburn and his
father certainly belied the 'grippy' and shortsighted character
usually attributed to men of their class and time. See, for a
conspicuous case of his fairness, p. 76. Defoe, writing in the Union
days, justly ascribed the miserable plight of the Scottish peasant
to the mediaeval system of land tenure which prevailed. John
Cockburn, in a letter to Wight (1725), puts his views as a landlord
in terms greatly to his credit. 'I hate tyranny in every shape, and
shall always have greater pleasure in seeing my tenants making
something under me which they can call their own than in getting a
little more myself by squeezing a hundred poor families till their
necessities make them my slaves. I hope my actions have convinced
you of all this, and that I have hitherto studied your advantage
equal at least to the making the estate better to those who shall
come after me, and I am sure much more than any advance of the rent
to myself. The wise benevolence of this model landlord comes out in
a letter of 1726. 'My tenants are all interested in the future of
the place as well as in the present, for your children will profit
by your work. No father can have more satisfaction in the prosperity
of his children than I in the welfare of those on my estate." In
answer to Wight's of July 16, 1725, he tells him that his turnips
should have been hoed by leaving ten inches between every
two—evidence of drill-sowing at this early date. Wight showed (1736)
in Edinburgh a turnip thirty-four pounds in weight. 'You tell me you
have enclosed a garden, a thing which only a laird then attempted.
There follow useful hints not only for the farmer but for his
good-wife. ' A garden will supply all sorts of roots and herbs. A
neck of mutton in the broth with these and some slices of bread—all
well boiled on a slow fire till very tender—forms a good cheap dish.
A pound or two of beef will make it better. Instead of bread you may
put in barley and half a handful of meal to thicken it.'
Before 1727, when the
Bell Letters begin, the Wight correspondence in the Farmer's
Magazine shows that Alexander had enclosed a garden, sowed rye-grass
and clover, and grasses with wheat, feeding cattle and sheep on the
grass. Cockburn writes to him—18th August 1725—from Tottenham, Your
turnips ought to have been hoed ere this' (in drills, therefore, and
not broadcast), and proceeds to give directions as to the hoeing,
the laying out of the garden. Again, in December 1726, ' the profit
from the one fourth acre potatoes upon the bad land opposite the
church is so great, that I hope you will go on with them, especially
as you find good crops of corn [barley] after them.' These dates for
enclosing sown grasses, clover, drilled turnips and potatoes are in
advance of what are usually given. Robertson, in his Rural
Recollections, which dated from 1765, sets down the introduction of
red clover from seed and of rye-grass to Thomas, sixth Earl of
Haddington (d. 1735), and this on a very limited scale.
Equally novel was the
work of Cockburn and Wight in enclosing by hedges of earth and
quicksets planted atop, frequently discussed in the Letters. An
excellent treatise on Ways and Means for Inclosing, ascribed to
Macintosh of Borlum, was published by Freebairn in 1729; but the
author had no means of giving effect to his instructions. With
Cockburn these hedges were made to combine the useful and the
ornamental, for he set them thick with white and black thorn,
brambles, roses and honeysuckles, elder and privet, producing a most
pleasing effect. Following, too, the example he had seen in Herts,
he planted at distances in the hedgerows hard-wood trees. Of these
the ash was the mainstay, as the most generally useful on the farm
The larch, the poplar, and the lime he never mentions.
Letter XXVI. shows
what he regarded as the comparative value of forest trees (p. 77).
He seems to have found the greatest difficulty in getting oaks and
firs. Some fir seedlings he wishes Bell could secure: ' If you can
gett such a thing for love or money gett it and soon.' He alludes
more than once to a clump of' old firs behind the house, evidently
Scots firs of the days before planting round mansions was thought
of. Note, as showing the scarcity of timber, that he inquires what
was done with a plank he sent from London.
But John Cockburn was
not content with infusing enthusiasm on his own estate. He founded
the Ormistoun Society or Agricultural Club, which met in the village
inn for discussion and mutual help. Brown gives the minute of the
first meeting, 19th July 1736s (under John Cockburn's presidency),
and the sixteen original members. The last minute is dated 4th May
1747. It had at one time one hundred and twenty-two
members—landlords, tenant-farmers, and traders. From the list of
members a few names may be noted, such as James Burnet, younger, of
Monboddo, not yet the eccentric Lord of Session, and Maxwell of
Arkland in Galloway, another pioneer improver. Four others—Robert
Anderson, younger, of Whiteburgh, Colonel Gardner of Bankton, the
Duke of Perth, and the Laird of Macleod—form an interesting
historical group. To this chance association of the first two of
them Prince Charlie owed his victory at Prestonpans (see General
Cadell's Sir John Cope). Among the original members is John's
brother, Patrick Cockburn, advocate. On the parish register of
Ormistoun his marriage to Alison Rutherford of Fairnielea is entered
on 12th March 1731. She is known as the authoress of the popular
later version of the 'Flowers of the Forest,' quite in the
sentimental manner of her century, and for an interesting
association with Burns and Scott. On the club, too, were Alison's
father, Robert of Fairnielea, and her brother, Dr. Rutherford. In
her Letters and Autobiography (T. Craig-Brown), she says, 'We
lived four years with his' (Patrick's) 'venerable father,' that is,
till 1735, when Adam Cockburn died. She nursed him in his Edinburgh
house, and speaks of him as 'a man of fourscore,' which would make
his birth soon after 1650. Cockburn-Hood (Hoitse of Cockburn)
found him 'retoured heir to his brother John in 1671.' Our author,
who was the second son, says elsewhere: 'lam now' (Jan. 1740) ' in
my 61 year,' so that he was born in 1679. He is stated in the
House of Cockburn to have been baptized 1698 and married 1700.
The parish register at Ormistoun is unfortunately blank, 1649-1706.
Personalia
Cockburn came of a good Whig stock, modified by
Anglican influence. Macky, the Hanoverian agent, drew up for the
Princess Sophia (1723) a report on the Scots public men of the day,
in which Adam Cockburn figures as keen for William and Presbytery,
'bigot to a fault, hardly in common charity with any out of the
verge of Presbytery, otherwise very fine in person and manners,
just, of good sense, sanguine complexion.' Singular that two such
strong partisans and political opponents as Adam Cockburn and
Fletcher of Saltoun were near neighbours and contemporaries. Both
too had their most pleasing and enduring tastes for the rural
amenities eagerly cultivated, in the one case by a son, our John
Cockburn, in the other by a nephew, Lord Milton.
The portrait in the
Farmer's Magazine, vol. v., of John Cockburn is from an original
which was long in the family of Haldane of Gleneagles.1 The Letters
amply show that he inherited the most pleasing of the qualities
Macky ascribes to his father. As a landlord he proved himself
eminently just and considerate. At a time when precarious tenure and
harassing feudal services kept the 'pure Commounis' in a degraded
position, he was kindly and generous to a fault. We find that their
services in the making of roads, which he might have claimed, he
merely 'expected.** He grudges to hurt David Wight's feelings, and
so advises Bell to avoid being seen again planting trees in his
hedges. * Make the hole and slip in the horse chesnut at once, for
if David sees yow open new ground he'l think himself undone.' He is
even patient when some rogues among them set fire to whins (p. 63)
and pull up saplings, only threatening, in a Wight letter, to make
use of his barony court in the way of punishing them. His
thoughtfulness is unceasing. To Wight he says, ' To those born and
bred on my own estate I always think I have a particular relation
and a tie upon me to encourage, more than strangers.'' Bell's
brother, John, is a gardener in London (p. 51) and first of a long
succession of Scots abroad in that line, and has had 'brother Adam1
with him as a not very hopeful learner. Bell had himself been at
Tottenham as a learner (p. 28). Brodie had learned joinering there,
and then transferred his skill to Ormistoun. Alexander Wight was
urged (1726) to come south and get insight into the malting business
he was about to enter upon. 'I believe I can get you recommendations
to several places in the north, about Stockton, in Yorkshire; you
will find some very bad husbandry.' If he come to London, he 'shall
be welcome to lodging.'
The reader will not
fail to form an intimate picture of the writer from two aspects of
the correspondence—the way in which he keeps Bell and his servants
up to the mark and his severe handling of the unprogressive,
prejudiced, and limited attitude of the people for whose benefit he
was giving his right hand. Beautiful too is his self-criticism—his
ironical deference to the judgment of others along with confidence
in his own, his consciousness of elaborating his instructions to
weariness, and the self-restraint in the confession, 'I dare say no
more for fear of getting into a passion' (p. 95); or this bit of
homely frankness: ' I hate wrangling, and when I cant make a shoe do
I choose in the easiest way to let it go down in the heel'—a
surprising confession from a Lord of the Admiralty in the days of
Pope and Addison. True ' gentility' breathes in this to Wight, 'My
wife returns thanks to yours for the receipt for making starch; and,
as we are farmers here, she says there is no receipt which she, as a
sister farmer's wife, can return but she shall be glad to send.' But
the most abiding feature of the picture is the strenuous
concentration of the man. These letters are a revelation of, in its
own way, as interesting a personality as that more famous official
of the Navy Office, Samuel Pepys. Bell is to give him a journal of
what he does every day. He irks to know what his neighbour laird,
Hepburn, thinks of his improvements. Every five minutes he has to
spare he gives to Ormis-toun. Almost pathetic is this: 'Last evening
we had the finest soft shower could be and this a fine sunshine
morning. It actually has made a great change upon the colours of the
fields already, and it now gives me great pain only to be able to
see the fields and the changes every day will make from my windows'
(p. 52). Concentration could hardly go further than this bit of
unconscious humour: 'Arch. Pringle, who has lost his wife, talks
much of his Onion Seed, so I send you a little of it, to give it a
fair trial' (p. 50). Archie was another 'brither Scot' doing well on
gardening in the south. Delicious, too, is the dry remark: 'This has
been a clear, frosty day'—closing some plain speaking about '
unthinking stupidity.
The frankness of his
reference to 'my Wife,' and of his criticism of 'my Brothers' shows
how unsophisticated the Scots laird was, and how homely even in the
ceremonious eighteenth century. See also p. 38, ' If Patk: asks you,
etc.
The footing on which
his brothers stood, it is difficult to understand. Charles lived at,
especially is much about, Ormis-toun Hall, and, though John is said
to have assumed the care of affairs in 1714, he writes, in 1735, the
year of his father's death, as if the brothers were not seeing eye
to eye with him : ' Borrow a cart from any of the Tenants for the
Spars or any other uses without asking my Brors for the least thing
or taking any notice when you are to borrow one. None of the Tenants
will refuse you one. The year before this he is quite deferential on
the subject. 'What I write is only my opinion to you, but doe you
follow the orders you receive from my Brother, whether agreeable to
what I write or not' (p. 3). The confidence he reposed in Bell is
shown in this (p. 20): 'I need not tell you this letter is to
yourself and the other to be communicated to my Brothers as usual.'
The freedom of his criticism must have made Bell regard him as ' gey
ill to do wiV Now it is, 'you shd gett better Ink,' for the very
address was scarce legible. Again he gives a home thrust like this:
'Don't glance this Letter and then throw it by, as if saying you
have read it was enough. Read and consider it over and over, for I
can't have time to repeat the same things every Post'; ' What can I
think of any other orders when what I have repeated a hundred times
is not minded'; ' I can't have time to write ten times before I can
know all the circumstances which a line or two more to your first
letter wd have made me understand at once.' Bell is not spared even
the shame of exposure, for in a joint letter to him and Dods we
have, 'If he' (Bell) 'observes as overly as he writes, he had as
good stay within doors.' He is so full of enthusiasm that he can
account for remissness in answering letters on two grounds only,
little is done, and the less said about it the better, or ' as I
write seldom you think you need neither be in haste in going on nor
in writing, but drone on trifling away the season properest of all
the year for business.'' He forgets that the gardener, after his
day's manual labour, and with but a modest share of clerkly skill,
might find composition unkindly under such conditions as Burns has
sketched:—
'the spewing reek,
That filled, wi' hoast-provoking smeek,
The auld, clay biggin',
An' heard the restless rottons squeak
About the riggin'.'
Behind all this
arbitrariness, however, there must have been a real regard for Bell.
He is at great pains in planning ways and means for improving Bell's
position and prospects by market-gardening. The remarkable No.
VIII. letter is almost entirely devoted to
this. In a dark passage (p. 28), after such excellent advice as
this—'Never grudge laying out a penny when you see a probability of
2d. returning—he thus hints,' When I see you next I shall possibly
propose to you what may make you incline to reside there and do my
business and push your own on strongly at the same time.' As he had
been discussing how to cultivate a market in Edinburgh, the 'there'
may refer to some scheme for doing business in the capital in which
Bell and the village might share, 'for my chief view in the many
advices I give to people at Orm. is to advance their own thriving.''
Language and Style
If the truest art is
always that which comes nearest to self-revelation, then these
letters come under the category, all the more that they are the
artless outpouring of mind and heart full to overflowing with the
subject. We have got far beyond what Cockburn has to say of seeds,
tree-propagating and planting, fruits and vegetables, poultry and
pigeons. His wise remarks on nascent economics have an increasing
interest to us, for the rural exodus, the village decadence, and the
growth of home industries are living questions still. But behind all
these are the man himself and the presentation through him of a
notable phase in national development. He wrote at the time of that
change in speech and writing which followed the Union, and nowhere
can we get better material for its study. The language wants polish
and knows no tricks of rhetoric, but there is no mistaking the
meaning, provided we trust to the ear and not to the eye, for the
punctuation seems to us defective. In this, as in so much else, we
moderns are treated like children, thanks to the progress of
book-making. There is no space to speak of the spelling, though it
finely illustrates archaic survivals, inconsistencies, and all those
features of the time which only accurate reprints show. But I must
draw attention to a point now rarely presented to the reading
public, the presence of what Scottish writers of the century dreaded
under the reproach of Scotticisms. While Cockburn as an educated
man— and he certainly writes like one, though true to the situation
he makes no show of learning—would conform to English as he heard it
and used it officially, there is no doubt he could scarcely avoid
the homely ruts in writing to Bell. Thus while we have such usual
forms of the period as dont, your's, their's, our's, it's growth,
people's living, Brodies friends, you'l, he'l,' we have also
specially Scots ones in c wch, w*, ace*, agt (against), Bror, comon,
ane, ye (the) papers.' More interesting are forms which are due to
Scots pronunciation—'ditchen (ditching), farthen (farthing), non
(none), through (thorough), and hight—both with strong guttural,
watter, jobb, halfs (halves), espicially, rasberry, then (than),
collyflowers, unsensible, closs, allers (alders), for fear of their
middling with trees, leed (mill-lade), least (lest), Norraway,
moneth (Ger.monaty Such spellings, too, as 'moue, saue' show that
the letters u and v were still treated as virtually the same.
Peculiarly realistic is the Scottish emphatically pronounced
negation,' No sure' for surely not, and 'Sure, sure, he is most
obstinate.' But a spelling of exceptional interest is 'fain' in the
sentence (p. 100)—'Let them (the cattle) stay there no longer than
it is so, till 1st March, and then carry them to back Lee (lea)
altogether, and fain that south of the Garden.' The word ' fain '
here is obscure. But ' when,' used here in the sense of ' after,' a
common idiom, is in dialect pronounced ' finn,' so that the meaning
is, punctuated to please the modern—'and, when that is done, remove
them to south of the garden.' Initial wh is regularly any in
Aberdeenshire; in the Lowlands only 'when' is so treated. This is no
more barbarous than the Englishman's w'ich, wot, wye, wen; and much
better than his attenuated 'oo, 'oose, 'oom.
It is easy to pick up
or drop a pronunciation, but an idiom abides. In this regard
Cockburn's Scotticisms are most characteristic. His actual Scots
words are comparatively few. They are : frush = easily broken, bye
times = odd times, knowe = knoll, overly = remiss, fend = get along,
fale = turf, sods. But one characteristically Scottish form is
entirely absent. A seventeenth-century speaker would say ' choakit'
where Cock-burn has ' choaked.' If the suffix -ed forms a syllable
it appears, but otherwise we have 'd, a printer's convention in
verse, now happily disappearing. In the Letters, however, we have '
straittened' as well as 'body'd.' Under use of words note : 'you
have done (finished) about the house; you must be sensible (aware)
there is a great deal to do ; not one scrape (bit of writing) from
Lowther.' The same is true of phrases, e.g. 'against May comes three
years; between and to-morrow night; put work by (out of) hand ; up
the way (road); few breed by (in comparison with) what might have
done.' The adjective used as adverb was as common in Middle, and
even in Elizabethan, English as it still is in German and Scots,
e.g.c ne'er saw them right managed, cheaper made.' Examples too
occur of a use off shall,' now regarded as specially Scottish, but
quite common in English of an older day. A marked feature of
Northern English, which includes Lowland Scots, was an apparent
looseness in the use of plurals. Many examples are here: ' severals
otherx particulars; when you are in doubts; you was complained of to
them as you know you was to me; money and time is lost.' The most
interesting of all these idioms, however, is the omission of the
relative in the nominative case, e.g. ' Alex. Cockburne's son and
the man came with him; in a ship sailed yesterday,' and many others.
Now in the oldest Scots, as in the Laws of the Four Burghs, the
unemphatic relative 'that' regularly appears as 'at, and as
regularly is heard in the speech of to-day. The slight stress on the
word led to its being omitted. The ear of Burns must have noticed
nothing amiss with this:—
'Or like the snow' [that] ' falls in
the river,
A moment white—then melts for ever.'
During the eighteenth
century this became a familiar trick to give an archaic effect, as
in the ballads, and no point so well supports, as this, Chambers's
theory of the late and largely artificial presentation of this much
debated literature. The unique value of the Letters in this regard
consists in their showing, without suspicion of pose and without the
intervention of the printer, how an educated Scotsman of the period
wrote and spoke.
The Letters leave no
doubt of the fact that Cockburn wrote and spoke English, and that
plain farmers like Wight, and even Bell the gardener and Dods the
ploughman, understood it. And yet we are told that the speech of
Scotsmen, like Cockburn, who sat in the English Parliament after the
Union was a source of wonder and amusement to the Southron members;
but after the example set before us this must be coloured with the
hues of romance. Of course the oddities of accent and intonation
must be taken into account as a factor in the amusement, but surely
the indubitable provincialisms among the English members themselves
would be as marked as any Doric. Though wordy enough, Cockburn is
fond of elliptical compression and of what the grammarian calls the
gerundial style. Two phrases from the same letter offer typical
illustrations of the gerund subject: 'Their not doing this cleverly
will lose him much of the advantage of what he has learned ... to
push it heartily in every part is wanting to bring it to bear.' Here
is a striking case of compression: 'You have now had a trial of
[what] ' the Garden produces can best be disposed of.' If we compare
Cockburn's language with that of Defoe in the letters he wrote about
the same period to Harley from Scotland, it will be found to be
quite as clear, natural, and idiomatic.
Cockburn's Work and Place
These Letters suggest
much that might be said about Cockburn,s contemporaries who were
busy at work on lines such as he, and with very little effect beyond
endangering their own fortunes, as befell him; much too, in
themselves, they tell about modes of living and of making a living
that what we call modern progress has removed far into the forgotten
past. They illustrate, with a fulness unknown before, the picture of
rural life which is presented in such publications of the Society as
the Court-Book of the Barony of Urie, the Masterton Papers, and
Baron ClerWs Memoirs.
The Farmers Magazine
gives 1726 as the date of the laying out of the village, but in the
light of the Letters this is too early. i If I can get a draught
from Mr. Gordon, youl have much occasion for being at the Town of
Orm:' so Cockburn writes to Bell from Hampstead, June 1735 (No.
VIII.). This letter is the longest, as it
is one of the most important. John's father died this year, and one
can see onwards from this point a fever of development setting in,
embracing dyke-making, market-gardening, bridge and road making,
coal-mining, and, above all, improvements in the town. There is a
hint also of friction between the new laird and his brothers. It is
hard to say where Gordon came from, but he is a stranger in the
village shortly before 1735. He was employed as a draughtsman. His
name is on the Club List, but not as one of the original sixteen.
But in August 1739, we have him about to be settled at Ormistoun,
for his house is being roofed then ' before winter"*; and again (p.
67, February 1741), its position is indicated. In 1742 (p. 80) Mr.
Yool seems to be in charge, and Gordon is not again mentioned. But
building operations are then under discussion, leading to the
uprooting of cherished hedges and trees. We cannot, therefore, put
the first mention of the laying out of the village earlier than
1735, though the phrase in a letter of December 1734—' I hope the
Town is upon Improving'—seems to mark the inception of the plan in
CockburrTs mind (see also September 1735). In No.
XXVII. we have CockbunTs own advanced views on the subject,
and this in October 1742. The idea on which Cockburn worked for the
conversion of Ormistoun from the usual crofter-clachan of the period
into a well-built market town was part of his long-cherished scheme
for creating here a busy industrial centre. He did not, however,
himself build (p. 33), but in every way encouraged his feuars to do
so on their own ground, generously helping them with timber and
stones (see p. 80). '
The neighbourhood was
already an attraction. Defoe was in Scotland for some years before
and after the Union. In the first edition of his Tour (1725)
Ormistoun is simply the seat of the Lord Justice-Clerk. The second
edition (1732) has 'Ormistoun, a perfect English plantation,
curiously hedged and ditched, a fine old seat of the Cockburn
family.'' This is taken exactly, word for word, from Macky's Journey
through Scotland (1723). Defoe's third edition (1742) speaks of the
' thriving little toon and handsome estate, so well planted and
improved. I do not remember to have seen a more beautiful spot. A
pretty good Seat here; but when I saw it, it was very much out of
Repair,' a remark which explains the building of the new house about
this time. As Defoe died in 1731 this is not to be taken as his own
observation, but the Tour was kept up to date through the century in
successive editions. These extracts, however, are all contemporary
with the Letters, which they illustrate. The stranger enters the
village now with pleased surprise at its well-built main street, the
fine old manse garden, the stretch of green sward in the centre with
its quaint worn cross, and the ring of noble trees in which the
whole is set. How it looked near the close of the century (1792) is
shown in the Statistical Account: (Country enclosed with hedges of
white thorn, mixed with sweet-briar and honeysuckle and hedge-row
trees. Flax-dressing never succeeded.'
As representing John
Cockburn's industries there were surviving, in 1792, two
distilleries and a starch-work. His gardening, for which the valley
is admirably adapted, was represented, when the New Statistical
Account appeared (1841), by two vegetable gardens, which sent from
two to three hundred Scots pints of strawberries in the season to
Edinburgh. This fruit he never mentions. In our own day fruit
culture and market gardening have enormously developed here since
the railway came near the village. Cockburn was sage enough to see
that the producer without a customer was nought, but he lived long
before the age of Industrialism. His mill is now a dwelling-house
and the lade dry. The bleachfield survived longest. Though we have
been led to understand that, in the June days, 'lint was in the
bell' all over old-time Scotland, Cockburn never mentions it. In a
Wight letter he observes, 'I cannot say that I know anything of flax
by experience.' It must have been grown by Wight, however, for he
goes on to say, ' I have always heard that the seed ought to
be changed frequently. I therefore advise your getting seed from
Holland, though your own may be excellent.' This was in 1726, but we
are not to infer that there was any bleachfield till much later. We
first hear of it in 1733. Neither flax-growing nor flax-dressing is
mentioned in the Letters ; but the matter was taken up by the Club
(1736-41), which petitioned the Board of Trustees to appoint a
proper person from Holland for the industry. Accordingly, on the
later list of Club members, we have Mr. Keysar, lint-dresser from
Flanders. Along with him is 'John Christie, linen-draper in
Ormistoun,' named in No. VIL as corresponding with Cockburn. This is
early in 1735 (see note, p. 21). Lord Milton's bleachfield at
Saltoun is dated 1750 in the old Statistical Account, and
generally regarded as the first in Scotland. But the Club minutes
show that Ormistoun had an earlier start.
With Wight's malt-making there is an interesting
link that brings it almost to our own day. Robert Moffat, the
African missionary, was the son of a revenue official stationed for
a time in the village. His monument most fitly adorns the main
street. If a prophet were ever honoured at- home, John Cockburn, the
maker of Ormistoun, would surely be also remembered here. A son of
Isabella (Mrs. Begg), the sister of the poet Burns, was for a time
the schoolmaster, as my friend, the Rev. Mr. Proudfoot of Haddington,
has informed me. His mother, then a widow, lived with him, and also
taught in the village. Gilbert Burns lies in Bolton churchyard,
further down the Tyne.
While Cockburn must have seemed a trifle too
opinionative in Bell's eyes, his opinions were uncommonly sound. Nor
is he unduly arbitrary. Resenting Alexander Wight's failure in
answering repeated inquiries put to him, he says: 'I only mention
upon such occasions what I think may be of service, but I never
insisted upon my thoughts being followed. I design them well, but I
leave every man to judge for himself in his own affairs without
censuring of them for not thinking in their own concerns as I do. If
my advices are not liked the trouble that is lost is mine, and I
shall always be glad they do better, without taking ill their not
being of my opinion. As an employer he was painfully alive to the
weak points in the undeveloped industrialism of his country. To Bell
he writes (p. 48): 'You know I have frequently complained of
triflers and all being Idle, and that you take excuses not at all
sufficient for their making little advance.' To similar purpose
another letter says (p. 77): 'Attend you the Men close and make them
work or discharge them. It is picking my pocket to make me pay Men
that can't or won't work.' Evidently a century of the Catechism as
the mainstay of education had not taught the peasant labourer to do
justly. The real reason for such idling, however, was not lack of
intelligence, for the people were shrewd enough. 6 Our people,' he
justly observes, 6 proceed as half asleep without any lively spirit
in contriving or executing, and I really believe much of this
proceeds from our low diet both in eating and drinking. Our common
food gives little strength to either body or mind, and our malt
drink is the most stupifying stuff ever was contrived.' As a
well-drilled official he would hustle the jog-trot peasant, who
seems to have acted upon the Spanish maxim, ' Never do to-day what
you can put off till to-morrow.' ' Delays,' he says,« are the
delight of people in Scotland . . . being punctual is a great sin in
our country . . . doing things by halfs.' He shrewdly sees that all
these defects are great hindrances to business. The country was
sadly in need of a substantial increase in the circulation of money,
then both scarce and debased. One home industry—gardening—was
practicable, but had to be created. The business views of his age,
however, stood in the way. 'If you propose to follow your father's
narrow, vastly mistaken notion of raiseing ten cabbages and not
disposing of them tho' in danger of rotting, unless he gets the
price of 30 for them, you 'l be in the right, provided nobody will
raise cabbages but yourself, but this wont hold long, for the dearer
you keep your price the more others will be encouraged to take up
the business, which is the constant consequence of those foolish,
narrow, low notions.' Here we have, in a nutshell, the soundest and
most enduring business creed.
He must have been a
considerable employer of labour. Directly, by his example and his
favourable leases, he stimulated the farmers, and by his building
and public works he made village life more comfortable. He secured
for the community a trained joiner and trained gardeners. In his own
dealings he is upright. His grazing must have been a novelty and his
advertisements quite modern. These he insists on keeping to, not
always realised now, 'making no particular promises about taking
care of one man's Horse or the like, for I will have no
distinctions, every poor man's horse to have the same fare with the
greatest,' a rebuke for Blundering as last year about Ld Oxford's
stirks,' evidently a case of favouritism. Indirectly he runs counter
to modern social propriety when he encourages Ramsay to set up 'a
good publick House.' The type of the time he sketches sarcastically
(p. 18): ' Our comon dirty Hog stays where nothing is to be gott but
nasty Barm which we call Tuppenny and by accident ane Oat or pease
Cake.' The success of the scheme was not great. In 1743 we find him
reporting the complaint of a member of the club about the malt drink
supplied by the Poosie Nancy of Ormiston. 'I suppose,' he says, 'she
wd be glad of more custom, and yet she won't keep drink which wd
bring her customers.' Evidently he thought the drink traffic ought
to be encouraged, but, it must be remembered, with the view of
stimulating the market for barley ' in so fine a Barley Country.'
So far we have seen
this remarkable man mainly as most of his contemporaries regarded
such as he—a lucky placeman indulging in the luxury of an expensive
and impracticable hobby. In justice to those contemporaries it must
be remembered that he enjoyed opportunities denied to most of them
in the matter of a safe income, the training in affairs on a large
scale, the experience of a capital, relatively as great a school of
enlightenment as now, and the general progress of a country that was
a century ahead of Scotland. But his enthusiasm embraced wider
interests than the care of his estate. He saw that the only
stimulant to dispel the prevailing sloth, or rather apathy, lay in
the creation of incentives to effort in local industries, new
markets, and the healthy play of supply and demand. In his own
fashion this correspondence reveals in him a phenomenal anticipation
of Adam Smith. His views are far in advance of his day. No writer of
the century gives so luminous and incisive a criticism of the
Scottish peasant farmer before modern progress overtook him.
Unfortunately he is in such deadly earnest that he can see nothing
of the farmer's merits. In farming practice Cockburn had little to
learn from us moderns, though our implements, our fencing, and our
deep draining were beyond him. In forestry and gardening he is
ingeniously suggestive. He has such unusual trees as silver and
spruce firs, sweet chesnuts, oriental planes, evergreen oaks, and
maples. He gets seed from France, Turkey, and Scandinavia. He says
nothing of flowers, or of a greenhouse, but he has wall, standard,
and espalier fruit trees; bell shades and hot beds; and uses mats to
protect from wind and frost. He has the usual fruits, including even
mulberries and quinces, but he has no strawberries. On points in
which Scotland was long notably far behind he is stimulating to a
degree, such as the entertainment for travellers in inns, the
absence of fruits and vegetables, the low diet of the people and its
want of variety, their underfed animals, their neglect of manure,
and their mean and unsightly houses.
My obligations to Mr.
John Hamilton I have already acknowledged; but I must add here that
I have derived much help from his professional skill and local
knowledge. The gardener, Mr. Bannerman, who takes an intelligent
pride in his interesting surroundings, drew out a plan of the estate
and garden, which has been of the greatest service to me in
following the topography of the correspondence. For useful
information about the Cockburn family I have to thank Mr. Robert
Cockburn, 17 Great King Street, Edinburgh, descended from the
Langton branch, and Mr. Harry A. Cockburn, of Lower Grosvenor Place,
London, a grandson of the well-known Lord Cockburn of the delightful
Memoirs and Circuit Journeys, and tracing descent from the Ormistoun
branch. He contributes a new fact to John Cockburn's family history,
to wit, that ' his second wife was Arabella Rowe, daughter of a
gentleman in Oxfordshire. Her two sisters were respectively
Viscountess Hillsboro' and Charlotte, wife of George, Lord
Forrester, so that George Cockburn (John^s only son) in marrying
Baroness (in her own right) Forrester married his first cousin.'
Arabella Rowe's father, Anthony Rowe, is described as of Muswell
Hill, now within the grounds of the Alexandra Palace; which gives
plausibility to Mr. Cockburn's shrewd conjecture that John Cockburn
got to know the family while he resided at Tottenham, in the
neighbourhood. His first wife was Beatrice Carmichael, daughter of
the first Earl of Hyndford, by whom he had no children.
In the annotations I
have endeavoured to deal with the great variety of topics raised,
and their relationship to the social progress of the age. The
difficulties of interpretation at this distance of time, involved in
the character and occasion of the correspondence, may have led to
errors both of omission and of commission. The Letters of course
take no notice of the wider interests of the day except the
phenomenal winter of 1739-40. But there are curious references to
seed shops like Switser's in Westminster Hall and that of the
dilatory Lowther; to the enterprising market gardeners and the
higlers or costermongers; to the wheat-fields of Herefordshire and
the well-planted lanes of Herts; to the clannish interests in the
comings and goings of canny Scots; to the primitive arrangement of a
foot-post that waited till a letter was ready; and of Craig, the
waterman, letting Cockburn know when the 'Glasgow Packett' found the
river open for the adventurous voyage to Leith; and to a commercial
intercourse that could boast of Bills of Lading and Bills of
Exchange.
A melancholy interest
attaches to the following extract from The House of Cockburn : c On
the 10th Dec. 1747 was signed the disposition "by George Cockburn of
Ormiston, whereby for the sum of o£ 15612,000 sterling he
sells to John, Earl of Hopetoun, heritably and irredeemably, All and
Whole the parts of the barony of Ormiston on the north side of the
Tyne, comprehending the town of Ormiston, with right of weekly
market, as granted to the late John Cockburn, his grand-uncle"
(1649), "and an infeftment upon the whole barony—granted by John
Cockburn, father of said George, to the late Charles, Earl of
Hopetoun, for £10,000, of date 14th May 1739." By a second
disposition, dated 8th September 1749, "the said George Cockburn
sold to the said Earl All and Whole " the remaining portions of the
barony, with the manor-place of Ormiston, for £10,200. George
Cockburn, made a Comptroller of the Navy in 1750, was survived by
two daughters, who both died childless. This document shows that,
while John Cockburnv was at the height of his improving zeal, the
estate was carrying a debt of ten thousand pounds.
I am under deep
obligation to Dr. Underhill, Coates Crescent, Edinburgh, for his
courtesy in enabling me to read the letters of Cockburn to Alex.
Wight, of whom Mrs. Underhill is a descendant. Though my work had
been by this time virtually finished, they have been of very great
service in confirming or modifying conjectures, and especially in
establishing such essential points as Cockburn's birth, his visits
to Scotland, when, by the way, he lived, not at the Hall, but in the
village with Wight, and family differences, which bring out the fact
that the 'Mrs. Cockburn' here was the wife of his brother Charles,
and that both of them did much to thwart his schemes. J. C.