EARLY
on the following morning, Mr Stewart and Miss Mary
met to consult together upon the means they should
employ to render Mrs Mason's situation at the
farmer's somewhat comfortable; and after some
deliberation, resolved, that they would postpone all
preparations for that purpose, till they had visited
the place, and seen what the house afforded.
In the course of their conversation, Miss Mary
expressed her surprise, that so good a couple as the
Earl and Countess of Longlands should not have
thought it an incumbent duty to make an ample
provision for one, who had rendered them such
important services.
You are mistaken,' said Mr Stewart, ' they were not
deficient in gratitude; and, to my certain
knowledge, intended to settle on her a very liberal
independency. But my lord was still in the prime of
life, and thought he had many years to live. He
therefore delayed to do, what he imagined might at
any time be accomplished : and after his death, his
lady, who was always indolent, gave herself up to
the indulgence of grief so as utterly to forget
every duty; but of this you will have no hint from
Mrs Mason: for hers is truly a good mind, and one
that sees every thing in the best light. She knows
not what I have endeavoured to do for her, with the
present lord ; and she shall never know it, for it
would only hurt her to be assured of his total want
of liberality and gratitude.'
Mr Stewart was here interrupted by the unexpected
entrance of his eldest daughter and her friend Mrs
Flinders, whose animated looks bespoke the near
prospect of some new scheme of pleasure. After a few
preliminary remarks on the fineness of the season,
etc., etc., Mrs Flinders gradually disclosed the
purpose of her visit, which was no other than to
obtain Mr Stewart's consent to his daughter's
accompanying her to the Edinburgh races. Mr Stewart
was on many accounts averse to the proposal; nor did
Mrs Flinders's assurances of the great advantages to
be derived to a young lady, from being seen in
public, and introduced to all the people of fashion
at the races, produce the least alteration in his
sentiments. But he had not firmness to resist the
torrent of entreaty : and after he had permitted a
reluctant consent to be extorted from him, the
remaining articles were easily adjusted: His
daughter had no difficulty in obtaining from him the
money she thought requisite for the purchase of new
dresses; and her sister, ever willing to promote her
gratification, promised to pack up, and send her,
with other things, some handsome ornaments, that had
been presented to her by a near relation, to whom
she had paid attention in a fit of illness.
Elated with her victory, Bell seemed to tread on
air; and after she got into the carriage, called out
to her sister, that she should write her a full
account of the race week. She bowed graciously to
her father as the carriage drove off; but he
appeared not to notice the salute. Pensive and
dissatisfied, he returned to the house, and found
Mary with Mrs Mason, giving her an account of all
that had just passed. 'Well,' said he, addressing
himself to Mrs Mason, ' you have heard of the new
trouble that has been prepared for me by this giddy
woman, to whom Bell has unfortunately attached
herself? These races ! How unfit a scene for a young
woman in my daughter's station; and under how unfit
a conductor will she there appear ! I wish I had
been more firm ; but 1 could not. O that she were
not too headstrong to take advice, and too
self-sufficient to think that she stands in need of
an adviser. I am troubled about her intimacy with
these Flinders more than I can express.'
'But, sir,' said Mrs Mason, ' have you not a right
to dictate to your daughter what company she ought
to keep? If you really think Mrs Flinders an
improper associate, why do you permit her to go to
her house?'
'Because,' replied Mr Stewart, ' I cannot bear to
see my child unhappy. I have not courage to
encounter sour looks, and all the murmurings of
discontent. This girl, who is when in good humour so
lively and engaging, treats every opposition to her
will as an act of cruel tyranny; and I cannot bear
being treated by the child I doat on as a tyrant.'
'Still, my dear sir,' said Mrs Mason, ' as Miss
Stewart is not deficient in understanding, you
might, I think, by a little firmness, teach her the
propriety of submitting to your will.'
'Alas!' returned Mr Stewart, 'she always thinks
herself in the right; and it is impossible, utterly
impossible, to convince her, in any instance, that
she is otherwise. Her mind got a wrong bias from the
first, and I fear it is now too late to think of
curing it. But I have myself to blame. Had she been
brought up with the rest of my family, under the
watchful eye of their dear mother, she would never
have been thus forward and intractable; yet I know
not how our other children escaped spoiling, for my
wife was all tenderness and indulgence.'
'True,' replied Mrs Mason, ' but her indulgence
would be of a nature tending to foster the best
affections of the heart, not the indulgence of the
passions, which engenders pride and selfishness.'
'Your distinction is a just one,' said Mr Stewart, '
but unhappily her grandmother could not discriminate
; and after the death of my parents, Bell came home
to us. I saw that she was too unmanageable for her
mother's gentle spirit to control, and therefore
urged sending her to a school, where a daughter of a
friend was going; but there, alas ! instead of
getting quit of her bad habits, she lost the good
that counterbalanced them, and acquired such a love
of dress, and so many foolish notions about
gentility, as have utterly destroyed all relish for
domestic happiness. Think of her flying off, as she
has done, the very day that we expect her brothers
home from school! Is it not heartless ?'
'So she will admit, when she is herself a mother,'
replied Mrs Mason. The rest of her speech was lost;
for from the bark of joy which the dogs began to
send forth, Mr Stewart perceived that his sons were
near at hand, and eagerly flew out to meet them.
They were already folded in Mary's arms, and sprang
to their father with all the alacrity of confiding
love. Every care was now forgotten; without doors
and within, above stairs and below, all was holiday
at Go wan Brae. Mrs Mason, to whom the sight of a
happy family afforded one of the highest
gratifications, was no unmoved spectator of the
joyful scene. She readily consented to postpone her
departure till the following day, and prompted, by
her cheerfulness, the amusements of the evening.
In order to gratify the boys, it was proposed that
the whole party should accompany Mrs Mason to
Glenburnie, on an Irish car, a vehicle well adapted
to such excursions, and which was consequently a
great favourite with the younger part of the family.
Just as they finished an early dinner, the car was
brought to the door. Robert, the eldest boy, begged
leave to drive, to which, as the roads were good,
and the horse steady, Mr Stewart made no objection.
They were all seated in a moment; Mrs Mason and Mr
Stewart on one side, and Mary and her two younger
brothers on the other. Robert, vaulting into his
proper station, seized the reins; and, after two
gentle strokes with the whip, prevailed on old Gray
to move forward, which he did very sagaciously, with
less speed than caution, until they reached the
turnpike road, where he mended his pace into a sober
trot, which, in less than two hours, brought them to
the road that turns into the Glen, or valley of
Glenburnie.
They had not proceeded many paces before they were
struck with admiration at the uncommon wildness of
the scene which now opened to their view. The rocks
which seemed to guard the entrance of the Glen were
abrupt and savage, and approached so near each
other, that one could suppose them to have been
riven asunder to give a passage to the clear stream
which flowed between them. As they advanced, the
hills receded on either side, making room for
meadows and corn fields, through which the rapid
burn pursued its way in many a fantastic maze.
If the reader is a traveller he must know, and if he
is a speculator in canals he must regret, that
rivers have in general a trick of running out of the
strait line. But however they may in this resemble
the moral conduct of man, it is but doing justice to
these favourite children cf nature, to observe,
that, in all their wanderings, each stream follows
the strict injunctions of its parent, and never for
a moment loses its original character. That our burn
had a character of its own, no one who saw its
spirited career could possibly have denied. It did
not, like the lazy and luxuriant streams, which
glide through the fertile valleys of the south, turn
and wind in listless apathy, as if it had no other
object than the gratification of ennui or caprice.
Alert, and impetuous, and persevering, it even from
its infancy dashed onward, proud and resolute ; and
no sooner met with a rebuff from the rocks on one
side of the Glen, than it flew indignant to the
other, frequently awaking the sleeping echoes by the
noise of its wild career. Its complexion was
untinged by the fat of the soil; for in truth the
soil had no fat to throw away. But little as it owed
to nature, and still less as it was indebted to
cultivation, it had clothed itself in many shades of
verdure. The hazel, the birch, and the mountain-ash,
were not only scattered in profusion through the
bottom, but in many places reached to the very tops
of the hills. The meadows and corn-fields, indeed,
seemed to have been encroachments made by stealth on
the sylvan reign ; for none had their outlines
marked with the mathematical precision, in which the
modern improver so much delights. Not a straight
line was to be seen in Glenbuinie. The very ploughs
moved in curves; and, though much cannot be said of
the richness of the crops, the ridges certainly
waved with all the grace and pride of beauty.
The road which winded along the foot of the hills,
on the north side of the Glen, owed as little to art
as any country road in the kingdom. It was very
narrow, and much encumbered by loose stones, brought
down from the hills above by the winter torrents.
Mrs Mason and Mary were so enchanted by the change
of scenery, which was incessantly unfolding to their
view, that they made 110 complaint of the slowness
of their progress, nor did they much regret being
obliged to stop a few minutes at a time, where they
found so much to amuse and to delight them. But Mr
Stewart had no patience at meeting with obstructions
which, with a little pains, could have been so
easily obviated; and, as he walked by the side of
the car, expatiated upon the indolence of the people
of the Glen, who, though they had no other road to
the market, could contentedly go on from year to
year, without making an effort to repair it. 'How
little trouble would it cost,' said he, ' to throw
the smaller of these loose stones into the these
holes and ruts, and to remove the larger ones to the
side, where they would form a fence between the road
and the hill! There are enough of idle boys in the
Glen to effect all this, by working at it for one
hour a week during the summer. But then their
fathers must unite in setting them to work; and
there is not one in the Glen who would not sooner
have his horses lamed, and his carts torn to pieces,
than have his son employed in a work that would
benefit his neighbours as much as himself!'
As he was speaking, they passed the door of one of
these small farmers ; and immediately turning a
sharp corner, began to descend a steep, which
appeared so unsafe, that Mr Stewart made his boys
alight, which they could do without inconvenience,
and going to the head of the horse, took its
guidance upon himself.
At the foot of this difficulty, the road again made
a sudden turn, and discovered to them a misfortune
which threatened to put a stop to their proceeding
any further for the present evening. It was no other
than the overturn of a cart of hay, occasioned by
the breaking down of the bridge along which it had
been passing. Happily for the poor horse that drew
this ill-fated load, the harness by which he was
attached to it was of so frail a nature, as to make
little resistance, so that he and his rider escaped
unhurt from the fall, notwithstanding its being one
of considerable depth.
At first, indeed, neither boy nor horse were seen;
but as Mr Stewart advanced to examine, whether by
removing the hay, which partly covered the bridge,
and partly hung suspended on the bushes, the road
might still be passable, he heard a child's voice in
the hollow, exclaiming, ' Come on, ye muckle brute!
ye had as weel come on ! I'll gar ye ! I'll gar ye !
That's it! Ay, ye're a gude beast now.'
As the last words were uttered, a little fellow, of
about ten years of age, was seen issuing from the
hollow, and pulling after him with all his might a
great long-backed clumsy animal of the horse
species, though apparently of a very mulish temper.
'You have met with a sad accident,' said Mr Stewart;
' how did all this happen?*
'You may see hoo it happened, plain eneugh,'
returned the boy; 'the brig brak, and the cart
coup-pet'
'And did you and the horse coup likewise?' said Mr
Stewart.
'Oa ye, we a' couppet thegither, for I was riding on
his back?'
'And where is your father, and all the rest of the
folk?'
'Whar sud they be but in the hayfield? Dinna ye ken
that we're takin' in our hay? John Tamson's and
Jamie Forster's was in a wook syne, but we're ay
ahint the lave.'
All the party were greatly amused by the composure
which the young peasant evinced under his
misfortune, as well as by the shrewdness of his
answers; and having learned from him that the
hayfield was at no great distance, gave him some
halfpence to hasten his speed, and promised to take
care of his horse till he should return with
assistance.
He soon appeared, followed by his father, and two
other men, who came on, stepping at their usual
pace. 'Why, farmer,' said Mr Stewart, 'you have
trusted rather too long to this rotten plank, I
think (pointing to where it had given way); ' if you
remember the last time I passed this road, which was
several months since, I then told you that the
bridge was in danger, and showed you how easily it
might be repaired?'
'It is a' true,' said the farmer, moving his bonnet;
but I thought it would do weel eneugh. I spoke to
Jamie Forster and John Tamson about it; but they
said they would no fash themselves to mend a brig
that was to serve a' the folk in the Glen.'
'But you must now mend it for your own sake,' said
Mr Stewart, ' even though a' the folk in the Glen
should be the better for it.'
'Aye, sir,' said one of the men, ' that's spoken
like yoursel'! gin every body would follow your
example, there would be nothing in the world but
peace and good neighbourhood. Only tell us what we
are to do, and I'll work at your bidding till it be
pitch dark.
'Well,' said Mr Stewart, ' bring down the planks
that I saw lying in the barn-yard, and which, though
you have been obliged to step over them every day
since the stack they propped was taken in, have
never been lifted. You know what I mean.'
'O yes, sir,' said the farmer, grinning, ' we ken
what ye mean weel enough: and indeed I may ken, for
I have fallen thrice ow're them since they lay
there; and often said they sud be set by, but we
couldna be fashed?
While the farmer, with one of the men, went up,
taking the horse with them, for the planks in
question, all that remained set to work, under Mr
Stewart's directions, to remove the hay, and clear
away the rubbish; Mrs Mason and Mary being the only
idle spectators of the scene. In little more than
half an hour, the planks were laid and covered with
sod cut from the bank, and the bridge now only
wanted a little gravel to make it as good as new.
This addition, however, was not essential towards
rendering it passable for the car, which was
conveyed over it in safety ; but Mr Stewart
foreseeing the consequences of its remaining in this
unfinished state, urged the farmer to complete the
job on the present evening, and at the same time
promised to reimburse him for the expense. The only
answer he could obtain was, ' Ay, ay, we'll do it in
time, but I'se warrant it'll do weel eneugh.'
Our party then drove off, and at every turning of
the road, expressed fresh admiration at the
increasing beauty of the scene. Towards the top of
the Glen, the hills seemed to meet, the rocks became
more frequent and more prominent, sometimes standing
naked and exposed, and sometimes peeping over the
tops of the rowan-tree and weeping birch, which grew
in great abundance on all the steepy banks. At
length the village appeared in view. It consisted of
about twenty or thirty thatched cottages, which, but
for their chimneys, and the smoke that issued from
them, might have passed for so many stables or hog
sties, so little had they to distinguish them as the
abodes of man. That one horse, at least, was the
inhabitant of every dwelling, there was no room to
doubt, as every door could not only boast its
dunghill, but had a small cart stuck up on end
directly before it; which cart, though often broken,
and always dirty, seemed ostentatiously displayed as
a proof of wealth.
In the middle of the village stood the kirk, an
humble edifice, which meekly raised its head but a
few degrees above the neighbouring houses. It was,
however, graced by an ornament of peculiar beauty.
Two fine old ash trees, which grew at the east end,
spread their protecting arms over its lowly roof;
and served all the uses of a steeple and a belfry;
for on one of the loftiest of these branches was the
bell suspended, which, on each returning Sabbath,
'Rang the blest summons to the house of God.'
On the other side of the church-yard stood the
Manse, distinguished from the other houses in the
village, by a sash window on each side of the door,
and garret windows above, which showed that two
floors were, or might be, inhabited: for in truth
the house had such a sombre air, that Mrs Mason, in
passing, concluded it to be deserted.
As the houses stood separate from each other at the
distance of many yards, she had time to contemplate
the scene; and was particularly struck with the
numbers of children, which, as the car advanced,
poured forth from every little cot, to look at the
strangers and their uncommon vehicle. On asking for
John MacClarty's, three or four of them started
forward to offer themselves as guides; and running
before the car, turned down a lane towards the
river, on a road so deep with ruts, that, though
they had not twenty yards to go, it was attended
with some danger. Mrs Mason, who was shaken to
pieces by the jolting, was very glad to alight; but
her limbs were in such a tremor, that Mr Stewart's
arm was scarcely sufficient to support her to the
door.
It must be confessed, that the aspect of the
dwelling, where she was to fix her residence, was by
no means inviting. The walls were substantial;
built, like the houses in the village, of stone and
lime; but they were blackened by the mud which the
cart-wheels had spattered from the ruts in winter;
and on one side of the door completely covered from
view by the contents of a great dunghill. On the
other, and directly under the window, was a squashy
pool, formed by the dirty water thrown from the
house, and in it about twenty young ducks were at
this time dabbling.
At the threshold of the door, room had been left for
a paving-stone, but it had never been laid; and
consequently the place became hollow, to the great
advantage of the younger ducklings, who always found
in it a plentiful supply of water, in which they
could swim without danger. Happily Mr Stewart was
provided with boots, so that he could take a firm
step in it, while he lifted Mrs Mason, and set her
down in safety within the threshold. But an
unforeseen danger awaited her, for there the great
whey pot had stood since morning, when the cheese
had been made; and was at the present moment filled
with chickens, who were busily picking at the bits
of curd, which had hardened on the sides, and
cruelly mocked their wishes. Over this Mr Stewart
and Mrs Mason unfortunately stumbled. The pot was
overturned, and chickens cackling with hideous din
flew about in all the directions, some over their
heads, others making their way by the hallan (or
inner door) into the house.
The accident was attended with no further bad
consequences, than a little hurt upon the shins :
and all our party were now assembled in the kitchen
; but though they found the doors of the house open,
they saw no appearance of any inhabitants. At length
Mrs MacClarty came in, all out of breath, followed
by her daughters, two big girls of eleven and
thirteen years of age. She welcomed Mrs Mason and
her friends with great kindness, and made many
apologies for being in no better order to receive
them ; but said that both her gude man and herself
thought that her cousin would have stayed at Gowan
Brae till after the fair, as they were too far off
at Glenburnie to think of going to it: though it
would, to be sure, be only natural for Mrs Mason to
like to see all the grand sights that were to be
seen there; for, to be sure, she would gang many
places before she saw the like. Mrs Mason smiled,
and assured her she would have more pleasure in
looking at the fine view from her door than in all
the sights at the fair.
'Ay, it's a bonny piece of corn to be sure,'
returned Mrs MacClarty, with great simplicity; ' but
then, what with the trees, and rocks, and wimplings
o' the burn, we have nae room to make parks of ony
size.'
'But were your trees, and rocks, and wimplings of
the burn all removed,' said Mr Stewart, ' then your
prospect would be worth the looking at, Mrs
MacClarty : would it not?'
Though Mr Stewart's irony was lost upon the good
woman, it produced a laugh among the young folks,
which she, however, did not resent, but immediately
fell to busying herself in sweeping in the hearth,
and adding turf to the fire, in order to make the
kettle boil for tea.
'I think,' said Miss Mary, i you might make your
daughters save you that trouble ;' looking at the
two girls, who stood all this time leaning against
the wall.
'O poor things,' said their mother, ' they have no'
been used to it; they have eneugh o' time for wark
yet.'
'Depend upon it,' said Mrs Mason, ' young people can
never begin too soon; your eldest daughter there
will soon be as tall as yourself.'
'Indeed she's of a stately growth,' said Mrs
MacClarty, pleased with the observation; ' and Jenny
there is little ahint her ; but what are they but
bairns yet for a' that! In time, I warrant, they'll
do weel eneugh. Meg can milk a cow as weel as I can
do, when she likes.'
'And does she not always like to do all she can?'
said Mrs Mason.
'O, we manna complain,' returned the mother, ' she
does weel eneugh.'
The gawky girl now began to rub the wall up and down
with her dirty fingers; but, happily, the wall was
of too dusky a hue to be easily stained. And here
let us remark the advantages which our cottages in
general possess over those of our southern
neighbours ; theirs being so whitened up, that no
one can have the comfort of laying a dirty hand upon
them, without leaving the impression; an
inconvenience which reduces people in that station,
to the necessity of learning to stand upon their
legs, without the assistance of their hands \
whereas in our country, custom has rendered the
hands in standing at a door, or in going up or down
a stair, no less necessary than the feet, as may be
plainly seen in the finger marks which meet one's
eye in all directions.
Some learned authors have indeed adduced this
propensity, in support of the theory which teaches
that mankind originally walked upon all fours, and
that standing erect is an outrage on the laws of
nature ; while others, willing to trace it to a more
honourable source, contend, that as the propensity
evidently prevails chiefly among those who are
conscious of being able to transmit the colour of
their hands to the objects on which they place them,
it is decidedly an impulse of genius, and, in all
probability, derived from our Pictish ancestors,
whose passion for painting is well known to have
been great and universal.