IN an old tenement in
Church Street, betwixt Mr John Richardson’s dwelling-house and the
Grammar School, up two storeys of an old-fashioned, round-about stair,
very dark in the under part of it, there lived, fifty or sixty years
ago, an old woman of the name of Lizzie Richardson. It wag a common
custom long ago for farmers sending their families to the Haddington
Schools to take a house for them, and place them under the
superintendence of a trustworthy person, who took the management of the
house, and looked after them. Lizzie Richardson was servant in this
capacity to the very old respectable family of Shirreffs of Mungoswells.
When the Shirreffs were done schooling, and old age came on Lizzie, she
took up her domicile in the above house, and began the trade of
“clagham” maker to help her slender income, in opposition to Nannie
Cairncross, an old-established seller of the same article in Jack’s Land
opposite. Lizzie, being a superior kind of woman in her station of life,
soon became a general favourite with the numerous scholars ; and, as she
made good stuff, her manufacture of “clagham” became famous. Attracted
by her kindly manners, her humble dwelling became a favourite resort of
the lads and lassies, many of whom, now old ladies and gentlemen, will
still recollect old “Clagham Lizzie,” and the happy hours spent in her
house; but, alas! the recollection of many who have died in the course
of fifty years throws a gloom over old reminiscences.
Lizzie was a firm
believer in ghosts, warlocks, witches, fairies, kelpies, brownies, and
all such evil-disposed persons and spirits, and told many a fearsome
story about them to the delight, and often, at times, to the fear and
dread of her youthful company. On Hallowe’en night her house was filled
with young folks, who entered heartily into all the ceremonies of the
festival, in “dooking” for apples, burning nuts, “the luggies three,”
eating apples at the glass, &c. On such a night Lizzie was particularly
eloquent with her old stories. One story she used to tell, and which she
firmly believed, of a witch wife, who lived at Dingleton, near Drem, who
had the power of transforming herself into a hare, which one day some
collie dogs set on and broke its leg. The hare ran into a house below
the door, and some of her neighbours going into the house, found her
lying with a broken leg. On fairies’ freaks she was particularly great,
for she had been told by old folks who had seen them running along bean
and grass fields, dressed in green, little bonnie creatures ; and she
firmly believed that “unchristened bairns” had been stolen away out of
their cradles, and “fairy bairns” left in their place by fairies,
especially on Hallowe’en night, when they were all abroad on their
baneful errands, and holding grand cantrips. The west side of Traprain
Law, she affirmed, was a special meeting-place of the fairies. When the
country folks saw a light on the west side, near Green Loaning row of
houses, there was sure to be a fairy tournament.
The light sparkled like a
bright star, which the folk alleged was the reflection of a bright
diamond they had, but when the place was approached by inquisitive
folks, the light instantly vanished. Lizzie’s legend of the fairies of
Traprain Law, derived from old tradition, and firmly believed in in
olden times, is quite in accordance with traditions scattered over the
whole of Scotland, and specially mentioned in Hugh Miller's Legends of
the North of Scotland, and Miss’ Gordon’s Cruise among the Hebrides, and
everywhere in Sir Walter Scott’s Scotch novels. Lizzie also believed
that evil fairies hurled elf shot, or flint arrow-heads, against cattle,
who thereupon pined and died; and was strong in blaming witches for
preventing butter coming on churning days.
A great story of Lizzie’s
was about the laird of Coul’s ghost, which appeared and conversed on
four different occasions with the Rev. Mr Ogilvie, minister of Innerwick,
in the year 1722—viz., at Innerwick, Oldhamstocks, Elmscleuch, and Old
Cambus Muir, near the Pease. The ghost conversed with Mr Ogilvie on
different subjects, relative to both his temporal and spiritual matters.
It rode a grey horse all the way from Dumfries to meet Mr Ogilvie, which
horse was Andrew Johnston, one of his tenants on the estate of Coul, who
died forty-eight hours before him, and was transformed into a horse. On
this wonderful story of Maxwell, the Laird of Coul’s ghost, a pamphlet
of twenty-four pages was in circulation by hawkers seventy or eighty
years ago, but is now very scarce. The writer, however, is in possession
of a copy of this literary curiosity.
Traditions, which she had
received when young from old people, and cherished in a retentive
memory, carried Lizzie back to a very remote period. Among other
traditions, she used to tell that she had known an old man in her youth
who had seen the spear and glove with which Livingstone of Saltcoats had
killed a famous wild boar that infested the neighbourhood of Gullane,
&c., and for which all the land from Gullane on to North Berwick Law was
bestowed on him. She had also heard from her great-grandfather the
account of the battle of Flodden in 1513, so disastrous to the Scotch
nation. Adam Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, led the gentlemen and youth of
East Lothian to the fatal field. There was scarcely a family of any note
in the county that did not mourn the loss of some relative in the bloody
conflict. She had been told of some of the descendants of one Ronny Hood
of the Hule, one of the few who came home. A single couplet is preserved
about him :—
"For a' that fell at
Flodden Field,
Ronny Hood o’ the Hule oam, hame.”
The Hule is a small
hamlet on the farm of Prora, in the parish of Athelstaneford, which
still exists in name.
Lizzie had seen the two
soldiers of “Grant's Fencibles” shot for mutiny at the Yellow Mires, on
Gullane Links, in 1795. She used, with great abhorrence, to describe the
scene, which the whole public feeling joined in denouncing as an extreme
sanguinary example of military discipline. Lizzie was a specimen of a
class of old women now almost extinct. With a wonderful memory, she
delighted many a youngster with her old stories. She died somewhere
about 1825, at the age of four score and upwards.
The shop in the front of
the old tenement was long known as the apothecary shop of Dr Thomson, a
medical practitioner in Haddington, who lived in the adjoining house,
now occupied by Mr Richardson. The shop was afterwards tenanted by David
Peffers, commonly called David Peppers, a decent old Haddington carter
and Acredale farmer.
Graham's boarders used to
act plays in the back part of the old hou&e, where “Douglas" and
“Revenge” were more than once performed, to the real delight of the
audience. W. Wells and Robert Boyd, late schoolmaster of Oldhamstocks,
assistants to Mr Graham, along with Willie Hill, Dr Thomson's
apprentice, were stage managers and prompters; Betty Firth, daughter of
Willie Firth, the old tyler of the Mason Lodge, officiated as
curtain-drawer.
Nannie Cairncross, Lizzie
Richardson's opponent in the clagham trade, lived on the ground flat of
Jack’s Land, exactly opposite. Nannie was a .well-known woman in her
day, and proprietrix of the house she lived in. She had been married to
one Davie Johnston, a coal carter, in her younger days. He was a
feckless bodie by all accounts, and Nannie wore the “breeks.” He never
kept a decent horse, and when rallied on this score, he used to say that
when a horse came to be over forty or fifty shillings, it was “ower dear
for him." A dispute once took place betwixt Nannie and a neighbouring
owner, about a piece of a wall, and had to be settled in the Dean of
Guild Court. Nannie pled her own case. One of her facts being disputed,
she said, “Do not tell me so, for I was barrowman myself when the wall
was built by my faither.” Nannie was a great favourite with Graham's
scholars and boarders, while Lizzie was principally patronised by
Hardie’s. At the yearly dinners, kept up for many years by Mr Graham’s
old Scholars and boarders, in the Bell Inn, Nannie appeared after
dinner, dressed in her best cap and gown, with a white apron filled with
clagham, which she distributed among her "auld callants,” as a
remembrance of “Lang Syne.” Nannie was treated with a glass of the best,
and drank all the company’s good health, not forgetting the worthy old
rector. She left with a deal of coin in her lap. Such reminiscences of
old Lizzie Richardson and Nannie Cairncross will soon be out of
recollection by the now sadly-thinned ranks of Graham’s and Hardie’s old
scholars.
Many old Haddington folk
will still recollect a woman of the name of Christian Wilson, or, as she
was called, “Wandering Kirstie.” A native of the Nungate, and come of
respectable folks, she was married when young to a lad of the name of
Henderson, also Nungate bom, who was a soldier, and died with his
regiment in a foreign land. His death affected Kirstie’s intellect, and
unsettled her to such a degree that she wandered for twelve years at
least from the east end of the Nungate Bridge to the Custom Stone,
morning, noon, and night, backwards and forwards, always looking for her
husband coming home. Her whole askings and waitings were about her man!
“Oh, he is long in coming! hae ye no seen him yet? He promised to come
hame, and buy Monkrig and a carriage for me, and make me a grand leddy.”
Some kind ladies in Haddington sympathised with her in her sad state,
and tried several times to get her to settle down by diverting her
attention to sewing, spinning, and other domestic matters; but all to no
purpose. Poor Kirstie never smiled on their efforts ; her whole mind was
wrapt up in the remembrance of her man, and her whole wail was, “Oh, if
I could only see my dear man!” In her dress she was always very clean
and neat, with a white cap and old-fashioned short-gown. Kirstie was
quite harmless, and respectful to every person, and was equally
respected by old and young, who sympathised with her sad story. She died
of cholera, which was so fatal in Haddington and Nungate in 1831.
Kirstie’s case was one of extreme devotedness to the memory of her
husband, worthy to be immortalised by the pen of poets like Cowper or
Campbell, both of whom have in similar cases (imaginative perhaps)
described with great power the sad condition of weak and mind-suffering
humanity. |