It was just the other
morning That I met Mrs. Mack,
“Good-dav,” qnoth I; “Good-day,” quoth she,
And thus began her crack.
“I was telling you the last time I saw you that I was thinking to
remove; but I have given up the idea entirely; for although I trailed
about for several days, looking for a house, I could not see a place the
least like the thing. Oh, woman, if you saw the miserable holes of
“rooms and kitchens” that they were seeking seven pounds for—just
perfect cages, with generally nothing to look out to but a dirty back
court! They must have awful consciences that can seek such ransoms for
such places; but they are not so much to be wondered at as those that
give it to them. For my part, I will sit still where I am; and although
I had a great deal of trouble, and came little speed, I do not in the
least regret looking for a house, for I am sure I got more diversion on
my tour than ever I did in the playhouse all my days; and I have been in
it as often as the most of people. I declare, woman, it is worth
anybody’s while, whether they are wanting a house or not, just to take a
tour through among the houses to let, for the knowledge it gives one of
the ‘manners and customs.' Our minister speaks of the ‘manners and
customs of the Jews,’ the Ancients, and the Orientals; but I am sure the
customs of the Glasgow wives beat all the Jews or Orientals that ever
were, or ever will be,
“I set out shortly after ten o’clock, and the first house that I called
at was one presently occupied by one Meiklewham, a moulder. You see, I
happened to have a slight acquaintance with Mrs. Meiklewham before she
was Mrs. Meikle-wham, and a dandy lass she was. Nay, she was the perfect
brag of the front street : never went out but she was dressed in the
extreme fashion, her waist drawn like a wasp’s; and she wore a bustle
that, without a word of a lie, might have done for a cradle pillow; and
she was a wonderfully taken out lass, to all kinds of balls, soirees,
and all that kind of nonsense; and I’ll warrant, when the moulder got
her, he thought he had a great prize;—but I wish him luck of his
bargain. When I went up the stair, of course I knocked at the door, and
was bidden come in. When I opened the door, there was Mrs. Meiklewham,
and a pretty like dear she was! She was sitting right before the fire on
what had once been a beautiful stuff-bottomed chair—but it had got
disgraceful usage—and she was just as black as a sweep. You see, she had
a cap on her head that, I am sure, would clear her at the bar any day,
if she happened to be summoned by the Glasgow Water Company. She was
busy making ready what I took to be about half a pound of ham, and I
could not say how many eggs. It seems this was all for her own cheek,
for there was a very nice child—although you could not have told the
colour of its skin—sitting on the floor playing itself with the bowl
that his father—decent man!— had got his porridge out of;—not that I
would take notice of what I saw in anybody’s house, only a person cannot
shut their eyes. Mrs. Meiklewham’s house would never do for me; not that
it was a bad house—far from that—but I am sure it would take the bulk of
an ordinary rent to clean it; so I bade her good day.
“ I could not help thinking, as I came down the stair, what a useless
wife the dandy lass had turned out. Now, you see, they miscall
mill-lasses, servant-lasses, warehouse-lasses, and dressmakers; but you
see she was neither a mill-lass, a servant-lass, a warehouse-lass, nor a
dressmaker, but just a decent man*s daughter that was kept at home doing
nothing.
“Mrs. Meiklewham told me of an aunt of hers that was thinking to
remove-—a Mrs. Macintyre—so, out of perfect curiosity, I thought I would
take a peep at Mrs. Macintyre’s house. Mrs. Macintyre is a woman that
has no family;— I am sure she is well off, if she thought it—and yet I
do not know. Our John sometimes says, when the children are requiring
various things involving the disbursement of cash, there is a difficulty
with them; and there is a difficulty wanting them; and there are very
few perfectly happy that are not troubled with any of them. Be that as
it may, Mrs. Macintyre has no family. She is a Highland woman, and keeps
four lodgers;—they are awful folk those Highland folk for keeping
lodgers and swine—anything that brings in the “ bawbees!” Mrs.
Macintyre’s house was very clean; so she and I fell on a conversation. I
said she would have a great deal of work: she said she had a ‘creat teal
of work."
“I said, You will need to take in a woman sometimes.
“‘Oh no/ said she, ‘I take in no woman, and no woman takes me in.*
“But it came out how the lady gets her work done. It seems that there
are young lasses living above, and young lasses living below: and it
seems they are wonderfully anxious to come about Mrs. Macintyre, for the
sake of an introduction to her lodgers; and it seems they are
wonderfully willing to do a turn, and she is wonderfully willing to let
them. This is the way the lady gets her work done; but I did not miss to
tell her that I thought very little of her indeed, for bringing a number
of light-headed huzzies about her lodgers; but she just laughed at me,
and said, ‘It was fery nat’ral for the lasses to be whaur the lads was.
And for my part/ said she, ‘I excuse them; for when I was like them
I had my notions like them: and indeed I have my notions yet; for if I
was a wanter the day before to-morrow, I would do all that was in my
power to get another husband —for a husband is a great comfort; there is
no use in denying it.*
“It was perfectly ‘scunnersome’ to hear the old chattering Highland
idiot. No wonder though men are conceited when they hear the like of
yon. The most of them that I know are conceited enough without hearing
the like of yon. I do not know but I might have taken Mrs. Macintyre’s
house, but she told me, in confidence, that she had no intention of
removing: she only gave it up to see if she could get the landlord to
take a pound off the rent. She admitted it was a comfortable, cheap
house; but, said she, ‘If I can get it a pound cheaper, it will be all
that the better.’ Mrs. Macintyre very kindly directed me to what she
thought was a very good house, that an acquaintance of hers was
leaving—a Miss Skinner. Mrs. Mac. said if I would just use her name Miss
Skinner would tell me all that was good or bad about the house; and it
was just as she said; for whenever I had presented Mrs. Macintyre’s
compliments I was taken in and let see through every nook and comer.
“Miss Skinner was a little like myself in some respects. She seemed, by
her remarks, to have rather a turn for observation; so she and I
discussed all the merits and demerits of the house at very considerable
length: but I will trouble you with but one branch of our conversation.
I happened to remark that there was nothing to be seen from the
window—that is, that there was no view.
“Miss Skinner made answer—‘Well, the house may have a thousand faults,
but certainly the view from the window is not one of them. It is true,’
said she, ‘there is no great extent of prospect, and you neither see
hills nor trees, nor sheep nor cows; but it is a very interesting window
for all that. Come here,’ said she, leading me direct to the window, and
turning up the corner of the blind; t there,’ said she,
‘If you look out right before you, you see right into all the houses on
the opposite side. Many a curious sight I have seen from this same
corner when I should have been sleeping And indeed I have sat at that
window till I was shivering with cold, watching a new married couple
that came there about a twelvemonth ago. Oh, but they were a treat! She
was so fond, and he was so fond. They were not like living folk at all:
they were just like folk in a novel. I used to wonder how long such
billing and cooing would last; but however long it lasted, it was no
doubt very good in passing. There was one thing that I noticed
particularly about the young wife. As regularly as the clock struck
twelve she came to the room press, and opened the door and went in. The
press door, you see, folded back on the window; so I could not see what
she did in the press, but I could observe that she always came out
licking her lips and wiping her mouth. I was thinking there was a moral
to be learned from such a sight—a grand moral: that is, always when you
are taking your “twal-hour’s,” be sure and draw down the blind.’
“‘There was another natural curiosity in the very next window, in the
shape of a young gentleman who was in the full enjoyment of single
blessedness, and likely to remain so, I would say, if his lady friends
had seen his silly vanity as it has been exhibited to me. I am sure that
creature was a conceit. It took him at least an hour every morning to
perform his toilet, as they call it. Such a decking, and stroking, and
brushing, and staring there was! They speak of the vanity of young
women; yon beat all the exhibitions of feminine silliness that ever I
saw. The finishing touch of the personal decoration was this. You see,
the creature’s nose had rather a tendency to the pug, with which
circumstance its owner seemed very much dissatisfied. Well, when he had
got his hat on, his gloves on and buttoned, and hif
Coat folded back in an easy way, to show off his waistcoat, he would
stand back at a respectable distance from the looking-glass, and catch
hold of his nose and pull it out to what he thought its proper length;
and there he would grin and squint at himself in all directions,
calculating, no doubt, what would have been his irresistible attractions
if his nose had just been a little bit longer!
"‘But,’ quoth Miss Skinner, with a very philosophic air, ‘that body and
his short nose is a very fair specimen of mankind in general. He would
have liked a longer nose. It was no doubt very silly; but I do believe
the great majority of men and women have some favourite notion just as
silly— some fond desire that their hearts cling to, that has no more
chance of being gratified than my conceited friend’s pug nose had of
being converted into a perfect Grecian. Whatever fault the house may
have,’ quoth Miss Skinner, ‘there is nothing wrong with the view from
the window.*
“This window would, no doubt, have been a great temptation, had I been
in Miss Skinner’s circumstances, with little to do but to watch my
neighbours; but the thought at once struck me that, fighting as I am
among a swarm of children, I was far more likely to afford diversion to
my neighbours than to get diversion watching them; so I did not take the
house.
“Many a house I was in, and many a sight I saw; but the more I saw of
other people’s houses the more I thought of my own; so I am determined
to sit still for another twelvemonth, although I should sit to some
disadvantage. But if I am spared till the next removal time comes round,
I will have another tour among the houses to let, just for the knowledge
it gives one of the ‘ manners and customs.’” |