GREGOR and his
friend quickly
turned out of
the smithy, and
went on their
way without
waiting to hear
Duncan Ban's
offered story.
The latter
chuckled—" Yon
was a bad blow
on the nose to
the greusaich
with the unction
of grace and the
face of his
father. But it
was too bad to
hit him so hard.
Gregor should
not have tempted
me by bringing
up the bad
father's name in
such a provoking
way, just as if
I ought to own
friendship with
the man that
stole my hose,
and was the
worst thief in
the Highlands."
"Perhaps,"
suggested the
wright, "Gregor
did not know the
story about the
man's father."
"Pooh-pooh, he
knew it fine.
His own father
was a witness in
the
sheep-stealing
case, and Gregor
must have heard
him tell the
story many a
time. Gregor is
of good stock,
and he is not a
bad fellow
himself, for all
the buzzing of
this veto bee
that has got
into his bonnet.
But what is the
world coming to
when the son of
one crochaire *
and the grandson
of another sets
himself up as a
teacher of
Israel."
"He
is a converted
man, and has the
unction of
grace,"
suggested Diarmad.
Duncan Ban—"Conversion and
unction of grace
here or there, I
would much
rather trust a
man with three
honest
forefathers at
his back than
the best washed
convert of the
Baptists—biggest
sin-washers
going—that ever
stepped out of
the mill dam, if
I knew that his
forefathers were
accustomed to
get into branks
and prisons."
"The Wright—"There's the
first bell. It
is almost time
to be moving. We
are a weak band,
only eight
communicants and
a few adherents.
Well,
worse-signed
calls have been
held good ; but,
for sure, it
will be a poor
thing against
the veto of a
hundred and
twenty
communicants."
Rascal.
Duncan
Ban—"They'll not
have so many as
that. They have
failed, as we
also have
failed, to
persuade the old
women, aye and
many of the
younger ones, to
come before the
Presbytery. The
foolish
creatures think
it something
awful to stand
up in kirk to
say 'yea or
nay,' before the
cleir in meeting
assembled."
Diarmad—"Almost
all the old
women, and the
full half of the
young ones, are,
in their hearts,
on our side.
although the
elders,she-saints,
and
prayer-meetings
folk have
brow-beaten them
out of their
courage and
senses. If the
reckoning were
to be taken like
the
Government-numbering
of the people by
papers left to
be filled in at
every house, the
voting would be
very different
from what will
take place at
the church
to-day. Aye, and
secret voting,
or what they
call the ballot,
would give us a
good majority."
Duncan Ban—"It
is just
astonishing and
lamentable to
think how the
will of the
Gaelic people,
both men and
women, is
bending like a
willow wand to
the bidding of
Dunedin intermeddlers,
and their
fiery-cross
emissaries."
Diarmad—"But
the Non-Intrusionists
both here and
everywhere have
only too much
courage—of a
sort."
Duncan
Ban—"True for
you—of a
sort—but it is
of the wrong
sort whatever.
It is not the
courage of the
man who would
stand up alone
for the right
against all the
world. It is not
the fealty of
kith and kin
that taught
people to fight
shoulder to
shoulder because
blood is thicker
than water' It
is just the
stupid courage
of the Miller
Beag's twenty
sheep which all
got drowned by
jumping off the
plank bridge
into the boiling
linn after their
leader, the
blind old tup."
Calum—"And the
worst of it is
that the
authorities are
equally blind."
"Aye," said the
farmer from the
Braes, "the
authorities are
just as
provoking as
Iain Ruadh was
at the fair,
when he tried
all round to get
a man to fight
with him, and at
last knocked
down the
constable
because he wore
a japanned hat!"
Diarmad—"Indeed
it is God's
truth that, by
the faults of
both sides,
things have come
to such a pass
as to bind the
committed men to
break up the
Church for their
own credit, and
in a manner for
the honour of
the Scotch name,
unless even yet
the Government
will extinguish
the whole
quarrel by
abolishing Bolingbroke's
unfair Act."
The Wright—"Much as I hate
their work, and
fear its
consequences, I
should myself
feel it as a
disgrace to my
country if the
Non-Intrusionist
ministers should
now compress
like a bag of
tow."
Duncan
Ban—"Mille mollachd !1 that
is the black
truth. A sore
disgrace it
would be to all
Alba if these
rampageous Bulls
of Bashan were
now to go on
their knees in
the glaur for
the sake of
keeping their
manses and their
stipends. But
the poke-pudding
Saxons will not
find them to be
so fusionless as
their ministers.
No, indeed, if
they are foolish
enough to demand
a slice of the
moon they have
the courage to
jump into the
linn for its
shadow at the
risk of limb and
life."
Calum—"Yet
they will ruin
the Kirk all the
same, and the
Saxons and their
bishops will be
main glad of
that. Are not
our mad
ministers asking
for the same
Kirk-power for
which the Cuigse
asked and fought
long ago?"
Diarmad—"Our
civil liberties
are now safe
enough, unless
we begin to
betray them
ourselves. And
there are no
intruded bishops
to be got rid
of; but it may
be said, upon
the whole, that
the Non-Intrusionists
stand in the
brogues of the
most intolerant
section of the
Covenanters."
Duncan Ban—"And
brogues of untanned skin
they were,
whatever. Why
don't they, like
the Cuigse, take
sword and shield
to defend the
Kirk, instead of
making haste to
ruin her
altogether by
running away?"
Calum—"We have
got to better
times. War and
bloodshed are
over in our
land, thank
God."
Duncan
Ban—"And again I
tell you, Calum,
that your
thanksgiving is
great
foolishness. You
think there will
be "A thousand
curses. "
Clay—mud. no more
wars. That I
don't believe,
because without
wars now and
then to clear
them off the
vermin of Adam's
race, boasting
all the time
perhaps of
unction of
grace, would eat
up the better
people. Man,
wars without
bloodshed are
the worst wars
of all. Lawyers'
pens create more
misery and
mischief than
drawn swords in
brave hands
fighting for a
good cause. This
Kirk quarrel is
itself a sorry,
bloodless war,
full of malice,
venom, and
uncharitableness,
in which the mad
ministers,
amidst the
yelping of curs,
are about to
save themselves
from the black
disgrace the
authorities are
forcing on them
by ruining the
Kirk of their
fathers."
Diarmad—"And
the Kirk is our
last and
greatest
national
institution;
the only one
left through
which we can
still raise the
voice of an
unconquered
people."
Duncan Ban—"To
my thinking,
although some of
my forefathers
fought on the
other side, the
Cuigse did far
better than
running away.
They betook
themselves to
sword and
shield, and
fought
stubbornly for
the Kirk and the
rights of Alba
as they
understood
them."
The
Wright—"However
that may be, it
is now full time
for us to go to
the gathering."
When soberly
pacing the short
distance between
the smithy and
the church, the
stout farmer
from the Braes
astonished his
companions by
declaring it to
be his firm
intention to
protest for
remead in law if
the Presbytery
proceeded under
the Veto Act,
which the Civil
Courts had
declared
illegal. He had
got the formula
of protest
correctly
committed to
memory from a
newspaper, and
as he was more
stubborn than
clear-headed, it
needed all the
influence and
eloquence of the
others to
dissuade him
from his
purpose. He gave
in, however,
when it was
shown to him
that, from the
circumstances of
the time, it
would avail
nothing to make
such a protest,
since the object
of the vetoers
was simply to
hang up the case
till the meeting
of Assembly in
May, when it was
expected the
disruptive
forces would be
let loose.
The bell that
day was rung in
a most mournful
manner by
old Hugh the
Bellman, who
wished much to
sign the call,
but was under
irresistible
pressure to go
with the
majority.
The
church was well
filled, although
many of the
female
communicants did
not put in
appearance. The
people occupied
their usual
seats. Fixed
resolution was
legibly written
on their faces,
but a shade of
sorrow prevailed
over all, which
on not a few
countenances
deepened into
gloomy darkness.
Before the
business of the
call was
proceeded with,
the Moderator
went into the
pulpit and
preached a short
sermon. The
members of
Presbytery, both
ministers and
elders, found
ample
accommodation,
and the
convenience of a
table for the
clerk, in the
square pew of
the Session. The
sermon, of
course, referred
to the business
of the day, but,
considering that
the Moderator
was a Non-Intrusionist,
he succeeded
very well in
divesting his
remarks of party
spirit. He was a
good-looking,
pale-complexioned
young man, with
a voice that
sounded like a
silver bell.
This clear
sounding voice
was then and
afterwards a
great misfortune
to him, since it
was held to be
destitute of the
unction of
Grace. In very
truth, the young
man was more
gifted with
intellect,
culture, and
business talents
than with
revival
enthusiasm and
fanatical
intolerance.
After sermon,
the Moderator
descended from
the pulpit, took
his seat at the
head of the
Session table,
and the Court
was formally
constituted.
Then the call
and relative
documents were
laid on the
table, and the
parishioners
were invited to
come forward and
sign. So far
nothing was said
about the Veto
Act—which was
the thing
uppermost in
everybody's
mind. The
objectors
observed with
alarm that,
owing to the
unaccountable
absence of two
ministers of
their party, the
Presbytery was
equally divided
—just as many
Moderates as
Non-Intrusionists.
No doubt the
Moderator had a
casting vote in
case of
equality, but in
such a situation
of difficulty
and legal
responsibility
how could much
reliance be
placed in a man
whose voice
lacked the
unction of
Grace?
As soon as
parishioners
were invited to
come forward to
sign the call,
the little band
of twelve
advanced from
the nearest pew,
where they had
been sitting
together, and
signed one after
another in deep
silence. Then
came the turn of
the objectors.
But there was a
short pause, and
it was evident
to all that the
Moderator
hesitated to
assume undivided
responsibility
for defying the
declared law of
the land, by
using his
casting vote to
give his side
the majority for
proceeding under
the Veto Act.
After some
conversation,
the Moderator
seemed very
willing to
accept a
compromise
suggested by the
leader of the
other side,
which would
enable the
opponents of the
presentee who
were
communicants to
come forward and
get their names
recorded as
objectors who at
a future stage
would produce
their objections
in writing. This
plan was on the
point of being
adopted
unanimously
when, just in
the nick of
time, one of the
absent
ministers—a man
of solid build
and with a long
nose—entered the
church, and at
once the faces
of the objectors
relaxed and
broadened with
smiles. The
newcomer would
have no
compromise, no
evasion. Nothing
short of a
substantive
motion to
proceed
according to the
Veto Act would
suit his martyr
zeal. That
motion he
instantly made,
and carried by a
majority of one.
Then the
objectors,
elders,
she-saints,
effective
partisanship
young men, and
the host of the
over-persuaded
and morally
coerced people,
black-balled the
presentee of the
Crown very
thoroughly.
So the parish
was kept, vacant
until the
meeting of the
Disruption
Assembly, and as
it chanced, by
what then came
to pass, for a
long time
afterwards ; and
thus the sure
desolation of
the glen church
was
satisfactorily
secured
beforehand.
On the 18th of
May, while the
name of the
Moderator with
the Graceless
voice was found
in the list of
country
ministers who
sacrificed cosy
manses and
comfortable
stipends to
their sincere,
however
mistaken,
principles of
ecclesiastical
supremacy, the
name of the "substantive
motion" man was
conspicuous by
its absence. A
few weeks later
his sudden
revolution on
his own solid
axis was
thankfully
recognised by
his being
translated to
one of the best
livings in the
gift of the
Crown; and for
the remainder of
his days so far
was he from
objecting to
Patronage that
he managed
indirectly to
exercise a good
deal of it
himself. |