IT was in July or August
then in 1803 we crossed the Spey in the big boat at Inverdruie in a
perfect fever of happiness. Every mountain, every hill, every bank,
fence, path, tree, cottage was known to me, every face we met revealed a
friend, and our acquaintance was by no means limited, for the "wide
plain of the fir trees," which lies in the bosom of the Grampians, cut
off by the rapid Spey from every neighbour, has its beautiful variety of
mountain scenery, its heights, its dells, and glens, its lakes and
plains and haughs, and it had then its miles and miles of dark pine
forest through which were little clearings by the side of rapid burnies,
and here and there a sawmill. We were expected, so from the boathouse to
the Doune it was one long gathering, all our people flocking to meet us
and to shout the "welcome home"; the only time that I remember so great
an assemblage to meet us on our arrival, the custom becoming obsolete,
warm and hearty as it was. William and I knew every one, remembered
everything. Our dear Betty waited for us at the house anxiously; she had
married the grieve, John Campbell, and was now a great lady in her high
cap and shawl, and she had a baby to show us, a little daughter, the
only child she ever had, called after me, to whom I was bringing a real
silver coral with more than the usual complement of bells. Betty had
been left in charge of the house, and beautifully clean she delivered
it. We thought the floors so white, the polish so bright, the beds so
snowy, all so light, so airy, our nursery so enchanting with Its row of
little plain deal stool s—creepies— and our own dear low table, round
which we could ourselves place them. We were certainly easily pleased
with anything Highland, for a less luxurious abode than the charmingly
situated Doune at that date could hardly have been the residence of a
lady and gentleman.
It took its name from a
long low hill in the form of a boat with its keel upwards, at the end of
which it had been rather ill-advisedly built, and which had been
fortified in the ruder days when the dwelling of our ancestors had been
upon the top of it. I never saw the vestige of a ruin there, but the
moat is perfect, and two or three steep terraces along the side. When
improving times permitted our ancestors to descend from their Doune, a
formal Scotch house was built at the foot of it, with a wide door in the
centre, over which were emblazoned the arms in a shield, and as many
narrow windows were stuck in rows over the wall as were required to
light the rooms within. A kitchen built of black turf was patched on to
one end; it had an open chimney and bare rafters overhead. A green duck-
pond and such offices as were at the period necessary were popped down
anywhere in front and all round, wherever and whenever they were wanted.
There were a barn, a smithy, and a carpenter's shop and poultry-houses,
all in full view from the principal rooms, as was the duck-pond. A
perfect network of sluggish streams, backwater from the Spey, crept
round a little knot of wooded islands close at hand, and a garden lay at
the foot of the hill. My uncle Rothie had not latterly lived here; he
had married a very delicate woman, a daughter of Mr Grant of Elchies,
commonly known as a Lord of Session by his legal title of Lord Elchies.
She had persuaded him that the situation of this old family mansion was
unhealthy, which, considering all the wood and water on this side of the
Spey, and the swamp of the boyack on the other, was probably a correct
opinion. He had therefore built at Inverdruie, to please her, a modern
mansion very like a crab with four extended claws, for there was a dumpy
centre to live in, with four low wings, one at each corner, for offices;
and this was set down on a bare heath, with a small walled garden behind
and a pump standing all alone a little way off in front. Here with them
my father had spent his boyhood, always, however, preferring the Doune,
which had been, when deserted, let to various half-uncles and second
cousins, retired half-pay captains and lieutenants, who all, after their
wandering youth, returned to farm out their old age in the Highlands. A
few years before his death my grandfather, the Doctor, had taken
possession of it, and anticipating a much longer tenure, undertook many
improvements. To the end of the old house opposite the black kitchen he
stuck an outrigger of an overwhelming size, containing a cellar to which
the descent was by stone steps outside, a large dining-room on the
ground-floor, and a couple of good bedrooms above reached by a
turning-stair; as an additional object from the windows he erected a
high stable, where as long as it stood my brother William spent his
leisure, and he increased the old garden, laid it out anew, and stocked
it from Hertfordshire. The entrance to this paradise of our childhood
was by a white gate between two cherry trees—such cherry trees —large
white heart, still standing there to prove my taste, and by no means
dwarfish, even beside the fine row of lime trees that extended on either
side. The old house had a few low rooms on the ground-floor with many
dark closets; the principal apartment was on the first floor, and
reached by a wide and easy stair; the family bedroom was on the one
hand, a large hail on the other for the reception of guests, and the
state bedroom through it. Up in the attics, beneath the steep grey roof,
were little rooms again. This was the Highland home to which my mother
had been brought a bride.
I imagine that the
furniture had been very much suited to the style of the house; there was
some plate, some fine old china and glass, and a few valuables of little
use but as curiosities. The state bed and bedroom were curtained with
rich green silk damask heavily fringed, and the japanned toilet-table—in
which was my drawer of shells—with a mirror to match, and numberless
boxes, trays, and baskets of japanned ware belonged to this chamber; the
other rooms were, I fancy, rather bare. There was, however, never any
lack of living furniture. My mother found established there my
great-uncle Sandy with his English wife, her sister, and all their
carpet work, two of the five sons, an old Donald—a faithful servant of
my grandfather's, who had been pensioned for his merits—an old Christy,
who had gone from Strathspey to wait on my father and my aunt Lissy, and
their bonne good Mrs Sophy Williams. She had her pension and her attic,
and so had Mr Dallas, one of the line of tutors, when he chose to come
to it. Then there were college friends, bachelor cousins, and it was the
fashion of the country for any of the nearer neighbours, when they came
in their full dress to pay their occasional morning visits, to expect to
be pressed to remain the day, often the night, as the distances are
considerable in that thinly-peopled district. My father and mother never
wanted for company, and the house was as full of servants as an Indian
or an Irish one, strange, ignorant creatures, running about in each
other's way, wondering at the fine English maids who could make so
little of them. Amongst the rest was a piper, who, for fear of spoiling
the delicacy of the touch of his fingers, declined any work unconnected
with whisky, which with plenty of oat-bread and cheese was given to
all-corners all day long.
Most of the farms were
occupied by relations, Colonel William Grant was at the Croft, Captain
Lewis at Inverdruie. These were my father's great-uncles. Lieutenant
Cameron, a cousin, came to Kinapol from Kinrara as soon as a former
tenant left it. Up in Badenoch and down in Strathspey there were endless
humble connections most attentive in observing the visiting customs of
the country. Relations at a greater distance were not wanting,—Cummings
in Morayshire, Mackenzies in Ross-shire, Grants in Urquhart, etc. Of
great neighbours there were few. Highland properties are so extensive
that there can be neither walks nor rides in general to the homes of
equals. Each proprietor holds, or held, perhaps I should say, his own
little court in his own domains. When he paid a brother laird a visit it
was in a stately manner befitting the rareness of the event, and the
number of miles he had to travel. Our great house then was Castle Grant,
the residence of our Chief. It was about twenty miles off down Speyside.
My father and mother were much there when they first married, my aunts
Mary and Lissy delighting in the gaiety of a scene so new to them.
Generally about fifty people sat down to dinner there in the great hall
in the shooting season, of all ranks. There was not exactly a "below the
salt" division so marked at the table, but the company at the lower end
was of a very different description from those at the top, and treated
accordingly with whisky punch instead of wine. Neither was there a
distinct" yellow drawing-room" party, though a large portion of the
guests seldom obtruded themselves on the more refined section of the
company unless on a dancing evening, when all again united in the
cleared hail. Sir James Grant was hospitable in the feudal style; his
house was open to all; to each and all he bade a hearty welcome, and he
was glad to see his table filled, and scrupulous to pay fit attention to
every individual present; but in spite of much cordiality of manner it
was all somewhat in the king style, the Chief condescending to the Clan,
above the best of whom he considered himself extremely. It was a rough
royalty too, plenty, but rude plenty, a footman in the gorgeous green
and scarlet livery behind every chair, but they were mere gillies, lads
quite untutored, Sons of small tenants brought in for the occasion, the
autumn gathering, and fitted into the suit that they best filled. Lady
Grant was quiet and ladylike, Miss Grant a favourite, the rest of the
family of less account. This was my mother's account to roe years
afterwards, when all connection between us and the head of our house had
unhappily ceased.
A permanent member of our
family at this time I must not forget, for I bore her great affection.
She was indeed very kind to us, and very careful of us the few years she
remained in the household. She was a natural daughter of my
grandfather's, born long after his wife's death, and had been brought up
by his sister the Lady Logie. When this great-aunt of mine died, "Miss
Jenny" removed as matter of course to the family asylum, as I may call
my father's house. She was entrusted with the store-room keys, and was
employed as a general superintendent of the family business till she
married, which event, luckily for her, poor thing, was not very long
delayed. A Forres beau, a Mr Arthur Cooper, learned in the law, became
her husband, and so relieved my mother of one of her burdens. It was
indeed a strange mixture of ranks and positions and interests, of which
my mother was the head. I do not imagine that it was always harmony
among them. My parents were both too young, too inexperienced, to be
very patient with such a heterogeneous assemblage. It might do very well
in the bright summer weather when an out-door life in the pure air
occupied all the day and produced a glow of spirits for all the night,
but there were wintry weeks in this gay sphere of theirs, clouds and
storms and chills, when annoyances gloomed into grievances, and worry
brought on ill-humour. In those days, unluckily, education had not
extended to the temper. My mother's family cares were principally
confined to such as she could reach with her needle, in the use of which
she was very dexterous. As for the rest, after the dinner was ordered
and the windows opened, matters were left very much to the direction of
the chances.
My father was a much more
active person, very despotic when called on to decide, yet much beloved.
An eye everywhere, nursery, kitchen, farm, garden, tenantry, but not a
steady eye, no prevention in it, fitful glances seeing sometimes too
much, and very summary in the punishment of detected offences. He was
occupied principally at this time with his mason and carpenter, as he
was making great changes in and about the Doune. These changes, indeed,
employed him most of his life, for he so frequently altered in the
present year what had been executed the year before, that neither he nor
his allies, Donald Maclean and the Colleys, were ever out of work. The
changes effected up to this period, the autumn of 1803, when we reached
our beloved Highland home from Scarborough and Houghton, were of some
importance. My grandfather's outrigger had been heightened and
lengthened, and carried back beyond the old house, the windows in it had
all been changed and enlarged, and ornamented with cut granite; in fact,
a handsome modern wing appeared in place of an ill-contrived ugly
appendage. It was intended at no very distant time to have matched it
with another, and to have connected the two by a handsome portico, all
in front of the old house, which would have been entirely concealed, and
being single, was to have had all its windows turned to the back,
looking on a neat square of offices, some of which were now in progress.
My grandfather's new dining- room was thus made into a pleasant
drawing-room, his turning-stair was replaced by an easier one in a hall
which divided the drawing-room from a new dining- room, and in which was
the door of entrance to this modern part of the house. Above were the
spare bedrooms and dressing-rooms, and over them two large attics,
barrack-rooms, one for the maids, the other for visiting maidens, young
ladies who in this primitive age were quite in the habit of being thus
huddled up in company. In the old part of the house my father's study,
the ancient reception hall, had been cut short by a window to give him a
dressing-room, and the black kitchen outside had vanished, much to the
satisfaction of my mother and Mrs Lynch, who declared no decent dinner
could by possibility be cooked in it. it was indeed a rude apology for a
set of kitchen offices. A mouse one day fell into the soup from the
rafters, a sample of a hundred such accidents.
To make room for the new
range of servants' rooms, part of the end of the hill had to be cut
away, spoiling entirely the boat shape of our Doune. The soil thus
removed was thrown into the nearest channel of the backwater, it being
my father's intention to fill these up by degrees; an improvement to
which William and I were decidedly opposed, for on the broom island, the
largest of the group amidst this maze of waters, our very merriest hours
were spent. A couple of wide, well-worn planks formed the bridge by
which we crossed to our Elysian field; two large alder trees grew close
to the opposite end of this charming bridge, making the shallow water
underneath look as dark and dangerous as "Annan Water" did to Annie's
lover; an additional delight to us. Between the two large alders hung in
gipsy fashion the large cauldron used for the washing; a rude open shed,
just sufficient to protect the officiating damsels from the weather;
tubs, cogues, lippies, a watering-pot and a beetle—a bit of wood,
bottle-shaped, with which the clothes were thumped, Indian and French
fashion—lay all about among the yellow broom under the alders and hazels
on this happy island, the scene of as much mirth and as much fun as ever
lightened heavy labour, for be it remembered the high stable was in very
close neighbourhood! William and I were never-failing parts of the merry
group, for our time was pretty much at our own disposal, Jane joining us
only occasionally. We two elder ones were of an age to say our lessons
every day to my mother, and we always faithfully learned our twelve
words— that is, I did—out of a red-marble-covered book filled with
columns of words in large, black print; but my mother was not often able
to hear us; sometimes she was ill, and sometimes she was busy, and
sometimes she was from home, and sometimes she had company at home, and
our lessons had oftentirne to be got pretty perfect before we were
called upon to say them. But we had plenty of story books to read on
rainy days, and we had pleasure in reading to ourselves, for even Jane
at three years old could read her "Cobwebs to catch Flies." I was fond,
too, of dressing my doll by the side of Mrs Lynch, and of learning to
write from Mackenzie. On fine days we were always out, either by
ourselves or with a son of the old gardener, George Ross, to attend us.
There was also a Highland nursery maid and Mrs Acres, the baby's nurse,
superintending. Amongst them they did not take very good care of us, for
William was found one sunny morning very near the Spey, sailing away in
a washing tub, paddling along the backwater with a crooked stick in his
hand for an oar, and his pocket-handkerchief knotted on to another he
had stuck between his knees for a flag. A summer- set into the rapid
river, had he reached it, would have made an end of him, but for my
voice of rapturous delight from the bank where I stood clapping my hands
at his progress, which directed some one to our doings, and thus saved
the young laird from his perilous situation.
So passed our summer
days; we grew strong and healthy, and we were very happy, revelling
among the blackberries on the Doune till we were tattooed, frocks and
all, like American Indians; in the garden, stung into objects by the
mosquitoes in the fruit bushes; in our dear broom island, or farther off
sometimes in the forest, gathering cranberries and lying half asleep
upon the fragrant heather, listening to tales of the fairy guardians of
all the beautiful scenery around us. I was a tall, pale, slight, fair
child to look at, but I seldom ailed anything. William, fat and rosy and
sturdy, was the picture of a robust boy. Jane was the beauty, small and
well formed, with a healthy colour and her Ironside eyes. She was the
flower of the little flock, for Mary was a mere large, white baby, very
inanimate, nor anyway engaging to any one but my mother, who always made
the youngest her favourite.
In winter we returned to
Lincoln's Inn Fields, and then began our sorrows. Two short walks in the
Square every day, sauntering behind a new nurse, Mrs Millar, who had
come to wean the baby; an illness of my mother's, whose room being just
beneath our nursery, prevented all the noisy plays we loved; and next, a
governess, a young timid girl, a Miss Gardiner, quite new to her
business, who was always in a fright lest neither we nor herself were
doing right, and whom we soon tyrannised over properly; for my father
and mother and my aunts went to Bath to meet Mr and Mrs Leitch, and we
were left with this poor Miss Gardiner, who from the beginning had
always lived up in the schoolroom with us, and never entered the
drawing-room unless invited. How well I remember the morning after her
arrival. She had charge of William, Jane, and me. We were all brought in
by Mrs Millar and seated together upon a low sofa without a back which
had been made for us. Our schoolroom was the large front nursery,
curtained anew and carpeted. There were besides the sofa, four chairs,
two tables, one in the middle of the room, one against the wall; a high
fender, of course, two hanging bookcases, six framed maps, one on
Mercator's projection, which we never could understand; a crib in which
William slept—I slept in my mother's dressing-room, Jane in the
nursery—and between the two windows a large office desk, opening on each
side, with two high stools belonging to it. To increase the enjoyment of
this prospect, into my hands was put the large edition of Lindley
Murray's grammar, William was presented with "Geography by a Lady for
the use of her own Children," not one word of which he was capable of
reading, and Jane—who had fine easy times of it in our eyes, though I
question whether at three years of age she thought so—had a
spelling-book given to her. Such was the commencement to us of the year
1804. We were soon as thoroughly miserable as from this method of
instruction our anxious parents could expect. The lessons were hard
enough and numerous enough, considering the mere infants who had to
learn them, but for my part, though I would rather not have had them,
they were very little in my way, although the notes of the whole music
gamut were included, with the names of all the keys and the various
times, etc., all at a blow, as it were. It was never any trouble to me
to have to get whole pages off by rote; I was not asked to take the
further trouble of thinking about them. No explanations were either
asked or given, so that the brain was by no means over-excited, and the
writing and cyphering and pianoforte lesson which followed the drier
studies of the morning pleased me exceedingly. Hook's easy lessons were
soon heard in great style, played by ear after the first painful
reading, without any one but the performer being the wiser. But what we
wanted was our fun, flying from crib to crib on awakening in the
morning, dancing in our night-clothes, all about the room, making horses
of the overturned chairs, and acting plays dressed up in old trumpery.
We had only sedate amusements now. How delighted I was to escape
sometimes to my aunts, from one of whom, aunt Mary, I heard stories, now
real, now fabulous, always containing some moral, however, which I had
wit enough to apply silently, as occasion offered. By my aunt Lissy I
was diverted and instructed through the contents of the big box full of
every sort of object likely to interest a child.
Poor Miss Gardiner! She
was neither reasoning nor reasonable, too young for her situation,
without sufficient mind, or heart, or experience for it, a mere
school-girl, which at that time meant a zero; her system of restraint
became intolerable, when from the absence of the heads of the family we
had no relief from it. Still a certain awe of a person placed in
authority over us had prevented our annoying her otherwise than by our
petulance, till one day that she desired us to remain very quiet while
she wrote a letter, rather a serious business with her; it was to my
mother to give an account of our health and behaviour. She took a small
packet of very small pens from a box near her, and a sheet of very shiny
paper, and after some moments of reflection she began. I observed her
accurately. "What do you call those pretty little pens?" said I. "Crow
quills, my dear," said she, for she was very kind in her manner to us.
"William," said I in a low aside, "I don't think we need mind her any
more, nor learn any more lessons, for she can't really teach us. She is
a fool, I shan't mind her any more." "Very well," said William, "nor I,
nor I shan't learn my lessons." He never yet had learned one, for a more
thorough dunce in his childish days than this very clever brother of
mine never performed the part of booby in a village school, but it was
very disagreeable to him to have to try to sit quiet behind a book for
half an hour two or three times a day, poor child! He was but five years
old, and he was of course satisfied with any suggestion that would
release him.
Some weeks before, my
mother had received a note in my father's absence, which appeared
greatly to irritate her. The contents I did not know, but on my father's
return she imparted them to him with some lively comments to the
disparagement of the writer. "I always knew she was a fool," cried she,
for she spoke strongly when excited; "but I did not expect such an
extreme proof of her folly." "My dear," said my father, in his quietest
and calmest manner," what did you expect from a woman who writes on
satin paper with a crow quill!" In my corner with my doll and pictures I
saw and heard a great deal that passed. Miss Gardiner fell her proud
height on the day she wrote her letter, and she never regained a shadow
of authority over us, for I led all, even good little Jane. Like Sir
Robert Peel, Louis XIV., and other dictators, je fus l'état moi,
and respect for our poor governess had vanished. The next time the crow
quills and satin paper occupied her, William and I, provided with the
necessary strings got ready beforehand, tied her by her dress and her
feet to the legs of the chair and table, so that as she rose from her
engrossing composition the crash that ensued was astounding, the fright
and even pain not small. She was extremely agitated, almost angry, but
so gentle in her expostulations that, like Irish servants, we were
encouraged to continue a system of annoyance that must have made her
very uncomfortable. We behaved very ill, there is no doubt of it, and
she had not any way of putting a stop to our impertinence. When Mrs
Millar found out these proceedings and remonstrated, I told her it was
of little consequence how we acted, as I knew my papa would send her
away when he came home; which he did. She was not supposed to be equal
to the situation, and her father came to take her home. The state of
anarchy the schoolroom exhibited was perhaps as much against her as the
finely penned account of it but I have since thought that her beauty and
my uncle Edward's undisguised admiration of it had as much to do with
her departure as the crow quills. We heard a few years afterwards that
she had married happily, and had a fine set of children of her own who
would be all the better managed for the apprenticeship she had served
with us.
Uncle Edward was now
studying at Woolwich, expecting to proceed to India as a cadet.
Fortunately old Charles Grant was able to change his appointment and
give him a writership, so he came to us to prepare his equipment. Being
quite a boy, full of spirits and not the least studious, he romped with
his little nephew and nieces to our hearts' content, particularly after
the departure of the governess, when William and I resumed our spellings
with my mother, and Jane roamed "fancy free." Lindley Murray and
Geography by a Lady retired from our world, but a Mr Thompson who was
teaching uncle Edward mathematics was engaged to continue our lessons in
writing and cyphering. I had a turn for drawing, too, as was found by
the alterations I made one rainy day in my young uncle's designs. He had
been studying fortifications; his plans were said to be very neatly
executed, but they were not finished to please me. I therefore extended
the patches of colour laid on here and there, round the whole works,
filled up vacant spaces, etc., and I wonder now when I know all the
mischief I did how my good-natured uncle could ever have forgiven me,
for he had been much flattered on his skill as a draughtsman. He blamed
himself for having left his plans within my reach, and for having given
me leave to amuse myself with his paint-box. He got into a great scrape
himself this spring. He slept in my mother's dressing-room, I being
removed to Miss Gardiner's room. The shower-bath stood there, although
my mother had given up the use of it, and it was supposed to be empty.
We were all in this room at play with our uncle, and I suppose teasing
him, for he suddenly caught up Jane, the most riotous of the set, and
popped her into the shower-bath, threatening a ducking, and touching, to
prove his sincerity, the string; down came the whole bucketful of water
on the poor child's head! Both the man and the baby were frightened near
to death. He actually waited till the deluge was over before his
presence of mind returned, and then the piteous object he rescued,
stunned almost and dripping! At last she spoke. "Oh my soos, my red soos!"
it was a new pair put on that morning. I suppose no words ever gave more
relief to an anxious listener. The hubbub brought my mother, who, in the
impartial manner customary in nursery dealings at that time, scolded us
all heartily. We three departed in tears to have "that naughty little
girl" dried, leaving uncle Edward looking very sheepish.
My three maiden aunts
were with us at this time, and uncle Ralph came for a short visit, then
Mr and Mrs Leitch, all to take leave of poor uncle Edward, whom we
observed begin to look very grave. He went often out in the carriage
with my father, sometimes they remained away a long time, once, all day;
and trunks came, and parcels to fill them, and Mrs Lynch was marking
stockings, changing buttons, and sewing on strings for ever. She made
also a long, large chintz housewife full of pockets, with a thread-case,
and a curiously nicked leaf of scarlet flannel filled with needles; it
was her modest offering to Mr Edward, who truly promised to keep it for
her sake, for he showed it to me more than twenty years afterwards at
his house at Camballa in Bombay.
At length came a sad day;
all the eyes in the house were red; on meeting, every one talked with
assumed cheerfulness on indifferent subjects, to which no one seemed
really to attend. A sort of nervousness spread from old to young; we
children felt afraid of what was coming, and as the hours wore away the
gloom spread. We were all in the dining-room when Mackenzie opened the
door; uncle Edward rose and kissed each child; Mary was his darling, he
doted on her with a love that never left him. "When shall I see you
again, little woman?" said he as he sat her down out of his arms;—
little any one there thought then where the next meeting would be, and
when—his heart was too full for another word; he folded my mother
silently to his breast and followed my father out, while she fell back
in a passion of tears very rare in a woman of her calm, reserved nature.
I watched through the blind and saw them turn the corner of Sir Griffin
Wilson's garden wall next door to us, my father leaning on my uncle's
arm, and my uncle with his hat slouched over his brows and his head held
down. It was my first idea of grief; I had never lost anybody I had
loved, and it was long ere even my gay spirits recovered from the first
scene of distress I had noticed.
One of my employments at
this time was to hold the skeins of cotton thread which my mother wound
off neatly on two square pieces of card placed one over the other, so as
to form eight corners between which the thread was secured. This cotton
thread was a great invention, a wonderful improvement on the flax thread
in previous use, which it was difficult to get of sufficient fineness
for some works, and hardly possible to find evenly spun. When one thinks
of the machine-spinning of these days, the cotton and flax threads like
the fibres of spider's webs which we produce in tons weight now, we may
indeed wonder at the difficulties in needlework overcome by our mothers.
Evenings at Home,
Sandford and Merton, and a short Roman history in which very little
mention was made of Tullia, were added to our library. In imitation of
aunt Mary I began to take upon myself to tell fairy tales to "the little
ones," sometimes relating, sometimes embellishing, sometimes inventing,
choosing historical heroes to place in situations of my own imagining,
turning all occurrences into romance. We acted too occasionally, or
played at ladies and gentlemen, copying the style of my mother's various
visitors, supporting these characters for days together at our
play-hours. We began to feel great interest in Shakespeare's plays,
several of which we were taken to see, my father talking them over with
us afterwards. I remember thinking they were all extemporised by the
players as they proceeded in their parts, as we did ourselves in our own
dramas, and wondering whether we should ever, any of us, attain to the
dignified declamation of John Kemble.
This spring of 1804 aunt
Mary had a long, serious illness; she was so weakened by it that country
air was recommended, so she and aunt Fanny took lodgings at Richmond,
and I was sent with them. We lived in the house of a widow who had a
parrot which talked to me just as much as I wished, and a maid who was
pleased to have my company on all her errands. I recollect perfectly,
delighting in the view of the river with so many pretty boats on it and
gardens down to its edge.
Mrs Bonner, our landlady,
allowed me also to help her to make my aunts' puddings, the family
preserves, pickles, etc., an honour I was extremely proud of. She lent
me an old tea-caddy to put my work in; the sugar-bowl and canister had
been broken, so the empty compartments exactly suited the patches I was
engaged on, and made me as perfectly happy as if it had been the
handsomest in the land. I was so improved by this visit to Richmond,
that as my aunts determined on remaining there during the summer, my
father resolved to leave his two youngest children near them under the
care of Nurse Millar, in whom they had full confidence. Lodgings were
taken for them not far from Mrs Bonner, where they were to sleep and be
sent whenever my aunts were tired of them in the day. William and I were
to accompany our parents to the Doune.
I can't remember where
aunt Lissy was all this time. I often recollect her with us, and then I
miss her for long whiles. Though my father's house was nominally her
home she was perfectly independent, being now of age, and inheriting all
that would have been her mother's property by the will of her
grandfather Raper. She had Twyford House, near Thorley Hall, in
Hertfordshire, and a considerable sum of money from the savings during
her minority. I have always heard her income called about £800 a year.
She was not pretty, short, thick-set, plain features, with an agreeable
expression and clear skin, and quiet manners. She was possessed of a
good understanding, her temper was charming, yet she and my mother never
got on well together. She had odd, quaint old-maidish ways adopted from
old Raper relations, with whom she lived very much. She had also
continued an acquaintance with school friends, the results of which
appeared again. She certainly did not go with us this year to the
Highlands.
We set off some time in
July, my father and mother, William and I, Mrs Lynch and Mackenzie, in a
new carriage—a sociable—with a cane body, a roof on four supports hung
round with leather curtains, which we were continually letting down or
tying up according to the weather, which we never managed to arrange in
time for either wet or dry, and which, in spite of hooks and buttons let
in the rain when the showers were heavy. A superior description of
horses replaced the Smiler and Blackbird of former years, and the four
bloods which formed the present team—two bays and two greys,
cross-cornered—were driven by the smart coachman, William Millar, from
the box. These horses for beauty were each a picture; they had cost
proportionate sums, and they did their work, as the coachman said, "like
jewels," never giving in nor shirking when once started—but to make the
start was the difficulty. Mr Coxe, named after his last master, and the
most sedate of the set, merely indulged in a few plunges; but Highfiier,
the other bay, regularly lay down, and it took all the hostlers and half
the post-boys at every inn, with plentiful applications of William
Millar's long whip, to bring him to his feet again. He was cured of this
trick afterwards by having lighted straw put under him. The two greys
were merely awkward. Such a crowd as used to gather round us! To add to
the tumult, my mother, the most nervous woman in the world, kept
screaming at the top of her voice all the time, standing up in the
carriage and entreating all the collected mob to have pity on her and
open the door. This scene continued during the journey, till we got
quite accustomed to what had at first frightened William and me. We were
pleased with the queer new carriage, glad to see our landlady
acquaintance, the boats at Boroughbridge, and other recollected objects;
but we were not happy. We missed our little sisters, we talked over and
over again when we were put to bed at night of all the tears shed on
both sides at parting, particularly by poor Jane, who was a most
affectionate little creature. William was long before he became
reconciled to the want of his favourite companion, and I regretted
equally dear Mary, my live doll. It was not till we reached the Doune
that we at all got over this painful separation. We were a less time
than usual upon the road, as we did not go to Houghton, and were but a
short time in Edinburgh.
On this journey I first
remember old Neil Gow being sent for to play to us at the inn at
Inver—not Dunkeld—that little village we passed through, and went on to
the ferry at Inver, which we crossed the following morning in a large
boat. It was a beautiful ferry, the stream full and deep and dark, the
banks overhung by fine timber trees, a glimpse of a newly- planted
conical hill up the stream, only thick wooding the other way. I don't
know whether this did not make more impression upon me than Neil Gow's
delightful violin, though it had so over-excited me the night before
that my father had had to take me a little walk by the river-side in the
moonlight before I was rational enough to be left to sleep. We were odd
children, "full of nonsense," my mother said. Left to her, a good scold
and a slap would have apparently quieted her little daughter, though a
sleepless night would have left her but a poor object for the morrow. My
father understood my temperament better. As for William, he took all in
an easy Ironside way, remarking nothing but the peat reek, which neither
he nor I had noticed before.
We passed a very happy
season at the Doune. We did no lessons; we had a Jock Mackenzie to play
with us in the stead of George Ross, who had been made a groom of We
rode on the old grey pony; we paid quantities of visits to our friends
all through Rothiemurchus, and we often had a brace of muir-fowl for our
dinner, each carving our bird. A dancing-master taught us every variety
of wonderful Highland step— that is, he taught me, for William never
could learn anything, though he liked hopping about to the fiddle— and
we did "Merrily dance the quaker's wife" together, quite to the
satisfaction of the servants who all took lessons too, in common with
the rest of the population, the Highlanders considering this art an
essential in the education of all classes, and never losing an
opportunity of acquiring a few more flings and shuffles. The
dancing-master had, however, other most distinguished pupils, the
present Duke of Manchester and his elder sister, Lady Jane Montague, who
were then living in our close neighbourhood with their grandmother, the
Duchess of Gordon.
This beautiful and very
cultivated woman had never, I fancy, lived happily with her duke. His
habits and her temper not suiting, they had found it a wise plan to
separate, and she had for the last few years spent her summers at a
little farm on the Badenoch property, a couple of miles higher up the
Spey than our Doune, and on the opposite side of the water. She
inhabited the real old farmhouse of Kinrara, the same our good cousin
Cameron had lived in, and where I have heard my mother say that the
Duchess was happier and more agreeable, and the society she gathered
round her far pleasanter, than it ever was afterwards in the new cottage
villa she built about a mile nearer to us. It was a sort of backwoods
life, charming to young people amid such scenery, a dramatic
emancipation from the forms of society that for a little while every
season was delightful, particularly as there was no real roughing in it.
In the "but" and the "ben," constituting the small farm cabin it was,
she and her daughter Lady Georgina dwelt. By the help of white calico, a
little whitewash, a little paint, and plenty of flowers they made their
apartment quite pretty. What had been kitchen at one end of the house
was elevated by various contrivances into a sitting-room; a barn was
fitted up into a barrack for ladies, a stable for gentlemen; a kitchen
was easily formed out of some of the out-offices, and in it, without his
battery, without his stove, without his thousand-and-one assistants, and
resources, her French cook sent up dinners still talked of by the few
remaining partakers. The entrées were all prepared in one black pot—a
large potato chaudron, which he had ingeniously divided within into four
compartments by means of two pieces of tin-sheet crossed, the only
inconvenience of this clever plan being that the company had to put up
with all white sauces one day and all brown the next. Her favourite
footman, Long James, a very handsome, impudent person, but an excellent
servant for that sort of wild life, able to put his hand to any work,
played the violin remarkably well, and as every tenth Highlander at
least plays on the same instrument tolerably, there was no difficulty in
getting up a highly satisfactory band on any evening that the guests
were disposed for dancing. Half the London world of fashion, all the
clever people that could be hunted out from all parts, all the north
country, all the neighbourhood from far and near without regard to
wealth or station, and all the kith and kin of both Gordons and Maxwells,
flocked to this encampment in the wilderness during the fine autumns to
enjoy the free life, the pure air, and the wit and fun the Duchess
brought with her to the mountains.
Lady Georgina Gordon, the
youngest of the fair sisters of that, the last generation of the noble
name, and the only one then unmarried, was much liked; kind hearted she
has all through her life shown herself to be; then, in her early youth,
she was quiet and pleasing as well as lively. Unchangeable in amiability
of manner, she was variable In her looks; one day almost beautiful, the
next, almost plain; so my mother described her when she spoke of those
merry doings in the old cottage at Kinrara in days quite beyond my
memory. Lady Georgina had been some years married to the Duke of
Bedford, and the Duchess of Gordon was living in her new house in this
summer of 1804 when I first recollect them as neighbours. Our two
dwellings were little more than a mile apart, but as I have said, the
river was between us, a river not always in the mood for assisting
intercourse. There were fords which allowed of carriage and pony
communication at several points, but only when the water was low. At
flood times passengers had to go down the stream to Inverdruie, or up
the stream to near Loch Inch to the big boats, when they carried their
vehicles with them; those who walked could always find a little boat
near every residence, and our ferries were in constant requisition, for
no day passed without a meeting between the Doune and Kinrara, When the
Duchess had miscalculated her supplies, or more guests arrived than she
could possibly accommodate, the overplus as matter of course came over
to us. Morning, noon, and night there was a coming and going. All our
spare rooms were often filled even to the many beds in the barrack, and
at Kinrara shakes-down in the dining-room and the sofas in the
drawing-room were constantly resorted to for gentlemen who were too late
for a corner in the "wooden room," a building erected a short way from
the house in the midst of the birch thicket upon the banks.
Many changes had happened
in our house since my baby recollections. Old Donald was dead, old
Christy was pensioned and settled with some relations in Duthil; Miss
Jenny was married, my uncle Sandy's five sons were all sent about the
world, and my father's first cousins, Logic and Glenmoriston, who used
to be a good deal with us as bachelors, were both married Pnd fixed in
their beautiful homes. There were still the Captain and Mrs Grant at
Inverdruie, and the Colonel at the Croft, and Mr Cameron at Kinapol, and
there were at a little distance, up in Badenoch, old Invereshie and his
wife, and young Belleville and his bride. Cluny beyond in Laggan; down
the Spey, Castle Grant, Ballindalloch, Arndilly and Altyre; Moy, Burgie,
etc., in Morayshire; parties from which houses were frequently with
us—all except our Chief. I do not remember my father and mother going
much from home this season, or indeed at all, except to Kinrara; they
had not time, for so many English travellers were in the habit of making
hotels of the houses of the Highland proprietors, there was a sort of
running stream of them during the latter part of summer. Mrs Thrale and
her daughters, and Mr and Mrs Murray Aust, my mother afterwards
continued an acquaintance with. In general, these chance guests were
hardly agreeable enough to be remembered.
William and I joined in
all the fun of this gay summer. We were often over at Kinrara, the
Duchess having perpetual dances, either in the drawing-room or the
servants' hall, and my father returning these entertainments in the same
style. A few candles lighted up bare walls at short warning, fiddles and
whisky punch were always at hand, and the gentles and simples reeled
away in company until the ladies thought the scene becoming more
boisterous than they liked remaining in—nothing more, however—a
Highlander never forgets his place, never loses his native inborn
politeness, never presumes upon favour. We children sometimes displayed
our accomplishments on these occasions in a prominent manner, to the
delight, at any rate of our dancing-master. Lady Jane was really clever
in the Gillie Callum and the Shean Trews, I little behind her in the
single and double fling, the shuffle and heel-and-toe step. The boys
were more blundering, and had to bear the good-natured laugh of many a
hard-working lass and lad who, after the toil of the day, footed it
neatly and lightly in the ball-room till near midnight. Lord Huntly was
the life of all these meetings; he was young, gay, handsome, fond of his
mother, and often with her, and so general a favourite, that all the
people seemed to wake up when he came amongst them.
There had been some
coolness between my father and Castle Grant about election matters; the
Chief and Chieftain differed in politics, and had in some way been
opposed to each other, a difference that very foolishly had been allowed
to influence their social relations. Many and many a family jar was
caused in those times by the absurd violence of party feeling. |