This is a striking etching of a somewhat eccentric
yet active man of business—one of the few specimens of the old school
who survived the close of last century. The smart gait—the quick
eye—aquiline nose—compressed lips—the silver spectacles, carelessly
thrown upwards—the cocked hat firmly crowning the old black wig—and the
robust appearance of the whole figure, at once bespeak the strong nerve
and decisive character of the original.
Almost every sexagenarian in Edinburgh must recollect
Mr. James Marshall, Writer to the Signet. He was a native of Strathaven,
in Lanarkshire, and made his debut upon the stage of life in the
year 1731. From his having become a writer to the signet at a period
when that society was more select than it is at present, we may fairly
presume that his parents were respectable, and possessed of at least
some portion of the good things of this world.
Mr. Marshall was both an arduous and acute man of
business; but he possessed one accomplishment that might have
been dispensed with, for he was one of the most profound swearers of his
day; so much so, that few could possibly compete with him. Every
sentence he uttered had its characteristic oath ; and, if there was any
degree of wit at all in the numerous jokes which his exuberance of
animal spirits suggested, it certainly lay in the peculiar magniloquent
manner in which he displayed his "flowers of eloquence." As true
chroniclers, however, we must not omit recording a circumstance which,
notwithstanding this most reprehensible habit, does considerable credit
to the heart of the heathen lawyer. One day the poor washerwoman
whom he employed appeared at his office in Milne's Square, with her head
attired in a mourning coif, and her countenance unusually rueful.
"What—what is the matter, Janet?" said the writer, in his usual quick
manner. Janet replied, in faltering accents, that she had lost her
gudeman. "Lost your man!" said Marshall; at the same time throwing
up his spectacles, as if to understand the matter more thoroughly, "How
the d------did that happen?" Janet then stated the melancholy occurrence
by which she had been bereaved. It seems that at that time extensive
buildings were going on about the head of Leith Walk; and, from the
nature of the ground, the foundations of many of them were exceedingly
deep. Janet's husband had fallen, in the dark, into one of the
excavations—which had been either imperfectly railed in, or left
unguarded—and, from the injuries sustained, he died almost immediately.
Marshall patiently listened to the tale, rendered doubly long by the
agitated feelings of the narrator; and, as the last syllable faltered on
her tongue, out burst the usual exclamation, but with more than wonted
emphasis—"The b------s, I'll make them pay for your gudeman!"
No sooner said than done: away he hurried to the
scene of the accident—inspected the state of the excavation—and, having
satisfied himself as to all the circumstances of the case, and the
liability of the contractors, he instantly wrote to them, demanding two
hundred pounds as an indemnity to the bereaved widow. No attention
having been paid to his letter, he immediately raised an action before
the Supreme Court, concluding for heavy damages; and, from the active
and determined manner in which he went about it, soon convinced his
opponents that he was in earnest. The defenders became alarmed at the
consequences, and were induced to wait upon Mr. Marshall with the view
of compounding the matter, by paying the original demand of two hundred
pounds. "Na, na, ye b------s! " was the lawyer's reply; "that sum would
have been taken had ye come forward at first, like gentlemen, and
settled wi' the puir body; but now (adding another oath) three times the
sum'll no stop the proceedings." Finding Marshall inexorable, another,
and yet another hundred was offered—not even five hundred would satisfy
the lawyer. Ultimately the parties were glad to accede to his own terms;
and it is said he obtained, in this way, upwards of seven hundred
pounds as a solatium for the "lost gudeman"—all of which he handed
over to his client, who was thus probably made more comfortable by the
death of her husband than she had ever been during his life.
In the winter season, Mr. Marshall resided in Milne's
Square, but in summer he retired to Greenside House (his own property),
situated in the Lover's Lane, near Leith Walk, where he kept a capital
saddle horse; but for what purpose it was impossible to divine, no man
ever having seen him on horseback (indeed, it was generally supposed he
could not ride), and he would allow no one else, not even the
stable-boy, to mount the animal. From this it may be inferred that the
horse was in high favour with its master. Well fed, and well attended
to, the only danger likely to have occurred from this luxurious mode of
life arose from the want of exercise. To obviate this, the discipline
adopted was truly worthy of the eccentric lawyer. Almost daily he had
the horse brought out to the field behind the house, where, letting him
loose, he would whip him off at full gallop ; and then, to increase the
animal's speed and insure exercise enough, his dog (for he always kept a
favourite dog) was usually despatched in pursuit. Thus would Marshall
enjoy, with manifest pride and satisfaction, for nearly an hour at a
time, the gambols of the two animals.
Having no near relatives to whom he cared bequeathing
his property, Mr. Marshall had selected, as the favoured individual, one
of the judges of the Court of Session; but an incident occurred about
two years prior to his death, which entirely changed his views on the
subject. In politics he had been, if anything, an adherent of Henry
Dundas, afterwards Lord Viscount Melville, and felt very deeply the
injustice of the charges latterly preferred against that distinguished
nobleman. While the impeachment against him was going on in London, Mr.
Marshall, although then in his seventy-fourth year, daily repaired to
the Parliament House, where the news of the day were generally
discussed. The all-engrossing topic was of course "the impeachment;" and
the innocence or guilt of Melville decided upon according to the
political bias of the disputants. Having one day paid his accnstomed
visit, old Marshall was astonished to find the sentiments of his
intended heir decidedly adverse to the fallen minister. This appeared
the more intolerable to Marshall, knowing, as he did, that this
individual entirely owed his elevation to the very person whom he now
villified. *O the ungrateful scoundrel! " exclaimed the old man; and
working himself up into a towering passion, he strode up and down the
floor of the court-house, cursing with more than usual vehemence—then
grumbling through his teeth as he left the court—"He shall never finger
a farthing of my money "—he hurried directly home, ere his accumulated
wrath should be expended, and committed the " will " to the flames.
Mr. Marshall died at Greenside House on the 23rd May,
1807, in the seventy-sixth year of his age. He married a Miss Janet
Spens, who died in 1788.