THE idea was curiously slow to
formulate, and the people of Ayr were loth to believe that the
frail and familiar structure which for centuries has spanned
their river, was in precarious condition, and imminent danger of
collapse; but slower still, and more tardy of acceptance was the
inevitable corollary, that in virtue of its poetic and historic
associations, its archaeological interest, the Brig was worthy
of preservation. When, however, after often seeming futile
effort, and much opposition, largely because of the glamour of a
generous local bequest, these ideas began to prevail; and, when
at length they materialised, and emerging from the Burghal,
gathered sufficient force and momentum to become national in
scope and range, few, if indeed any of the efforts after a
monument in honour of Robert Burns, evoked an enthusiasm and
response so sincere and universal, as that which had for its
purpose the preservation of the Auld Brig of Ayr.
The appeal on its behalf
touched deep chords in many hearts, in many lands ; for the Ayr
Brig is the visible expression of much of the Poet's
personality, and, with the Brig o' Doon and the "Auld Clay
Biggin'," must ever remain one of the triple altars in that
imperishable shrine of his worship, which, having Alloway and
Ayr for its Mecca, draws towards it the feet and hearts of
countless thousands from beyond even the seven seas.
The Brig is also an historic
structure of note, and knew much of the bitter feuds and
strenuous life of Ayrshire. Generation after generation of
famous Scots of all ranks and degrees have made use of it;
English invaders have crossed its narrow back, and foreigners of
many nationalities,—for Ayr in its earlier days was the seaport
of the West—these all, with the honest burghers themselves and
their kinsfolk, have climbed its steep approach and worn smooth
its cobble-stones, as they spun the record of their separate
lives. Venerable in itself, and deserving of reverence for its
own sake, the Brig stands the last remaining of the silent
monuments of the past, still serving the town in the useful
purpose of its building; for which cause alone it is worthy of
much regard, and this, even if it had never been richly dowered
by the genius of Robert Burns, or hallowed by his personal
association—its supremest as its most enduring glory.
Across the Brig Burns
oftentimes passed, upon it he mused, from its lofty altitude,
high arched above the highest tides, his eyes followed downward
to the sea the then, save by it, unbridged river; and, westward
from the harbour mouth across the frith to the distant peaks of
Arran, with its long low-lying island hills. If, in a beneficent
universe, hills are ever called into being for beautiful ends
alone, then surely these were hills reared to form a bar of
purple, against those marvellous sunsets which transform the sky
into a fiery furnace held in luminous bondage behind deep
clouds; the sea into a pavement of crimson and gold, iridal with
opalescent colours wherein shadows hide, themselves fugitive and
elusive as the glistering heart of an ocean shell, wet and
radiant in its virginal beauty. These colours, in their limpid
and silent beauty, reached shoreward from the sea, and, carried
onward by river wavelets to the Brig's feet, overspread its
surface and lit up its brown stones with a reflected glory.
Eastward, into the cool land
of the morning, with its flush of rose, its tones of pearl and
grey, the upward river, a silver mirror, passed from sight round
the wooded bends of Craigie.
Thus and truly, the divers
colours of East and West have laid hold upon the Brig, and the
sun has fused their tones into its masonry. The strong
south-west winds have bitten hard into it, and brought up also
against it the surge of the sea to break and be spent in leaping
spray upon its fabric; wearing it with the wind, to rich surface
texture, each separate and time-wrought stone to round and
softened edge. This all was open to men's eyes, and clear as
day; but hidden within the piers, unseen and silently in the
darkness, the receding tides with wanton lips long sucked the
lifeblood and almost the very vitals from its massive pillars.
The river, too, quick-rising and sudden of flood, has lifted its
waves against the Brig's life, and beaten viciously into it with
ice and plunging tree trunk ; but hardest and most unnatural of
all, man's ingratitude turned oftentimes lightly from it
"As friend remember'd not."
and once and again, with
simulated or real forgetfulness, perchance by poverty of gear or
of mind, the Brig has been left to stand or fall, as might
betide.
Slezer's view, dated 1693, and
the earliest pictorial record existing, shows the river on the
Ayr side seaward of the Brig, with houses and small back lands
to the water's edge, and, nearer the sea, infrequent and
decaying walls of harbour masonry; while at the river's mouth
and along the northern bank are undulating links and sand-dunes
of wide extent, of which Burns' lines depictive of the earliest
Ayr are literally as poetically true :
"Low, in a sandy valley spread,
An ancient BOROUGH rear'd her head;"
Eastwards of the Brig, but
close to it, were in Burns' day many of the fair gardens, for
which Ayr early had a name ; those on the southmost bank
stretching in orchard and sward, in blossom and flower, from the
clear waters' brink upward to the line of old houses bordering
High Street and the Mill Vennel, the last named reminiscent of
Abbey precincts and appurtenances. In the midst of the gardens
the Auld Kirk of the Covenant, the successor of those of other
faiths and days, then held restrictive spiritual oversight upon
the town; its shadeless burial-ground, not so many years before
made unlovely by the parsimonious destruction of its trees, cut
down to form centring for the rebuilding of the Brig's fallen
northmost arch. And there, too, in earlier days still, centuries
ago from now, had been built in faith, and in the free beauty
and meaning of the Gothic vernacular, the neighbouring
Monasteries of the Black and Grey Friars; both in aftertime
anger and bitterness of spirit, to be razed to the very ground;
none the less their gardens and burying-places, as their
churches, remain the progenitors of those of to-day, so surely
does the past mould the present, and inexorably guide its trend.
These thing's, the Brig saw and knew, as those others it has
outlived. But all that is of the past, and belongs to far-away
years; and now, it is difficult enough to realise the river of
even Burns' time in the quay-bordered and railway-ridden banks,
or the town, in the electric-power tramway-saddled streets of
our creating. The High Street that in his day Robert Burns knew,
with its projecting gables and outside stairs, lissomed with
easy grace and not too rigid boundaries downward from the
Fauldbacks, till midway at the Wallace Tower there debouched
upon it the Mill and Foul Vennels; then passing in close
succession the Meal Market, the Kirk Port, the then lately
formed New Market Street dividing the one-time stance of the
ancient Tolbooth, the strident and virago-tongued Fish Market at
the Auld Brig end, it bore to the left, and its sinuous length
drew on to the Sandgate and later Tolbooth, with its "Dungeon
Clock" and memorable nineteen steps. At the junction of these
two streets, stood the old Mercat Cross of Charles the Second's
time, in the waning glory of once beautiful masonry; but its
tall slender stone shaft was even then surmounted by its carven
capital with thistle and rose, harp and fleur de lis,
superimposed upon which and crowning all, was the copper unicorn
with its staff and banneret.
These all Burns knew; but the
earlier Mercat Cross, the two Tolbooths, the Castle, the Church
of St John, the Monasteries, the four Ports, the Town Wells and
the Brig, now alone remaining, held the history of the town. The
picturesque many storied and gabled houses, still rose in their
place, along, and behind the streets; but, save for the
uncertain river fords at the vennel and close ends, the Auld
Brig alone joined the keenly jealous friendships and rivalries,
of the Old and New Towns. The beautiful Adams Bridge came in
Burns' own day; he saw its building, and, by prophetic instinct—
some say from more prosaic data—foretold its doom; but how
perilously near that doom came in later years to the Auld Brig
itself, through the agency of the well-intentioned Templeton
bequest, few, if indeed any, will ever fully know. The Brig
came, it is said, by bequest, and by a bequest some strove
frankly and strenuously, that it should go. In a High Street
shop, not far removed from the Brig end, Robert Templeton
carried on a watch-maker's and jeweller's business. Shortly
before his death in February 1879, he made a holograph will
devising, subject only to certain life interests, his whole
estate, in value about £10,000, "to the Provost and Town Council
in trust in order that their successors in office may use the
whole thereof in rebuilding the Old Bridge of Ayr when such a
thing may be required." Ayr, of late decades, has been offered
few bequests, and its strong and insistent desire to secure the
money, and with it build an entirely new bridge, is conceivable
upon utilitarian grounds alone. Admitting the undoubted weight
of Lord Low's opinion, that the money could only be used for
rebuilding in the generally understood meaning of the word, that
opinion did not, I feel sure, express or interpret the intention
of the testator; for Robert Templeton was a man with the soul of
an antiquary, and none such would make provision for deliberate
and vandal destruction; least of all, by an ambiguous holograph
will. The testator often showed me old silver plate and coins,
which, in his business, he long treasured and sold with regret;
moreover, the delight and care with which he handled them, was
that of a man who revered and loved old things. The bequest so
generously conceived was fated, if not to be brought stillborn
into the world, at least to be well-nigh strangled by the
midwifery of law; and in its portentous existence, the money
bequeathed, not, I am convinced, for the destruction, but for
the preservation of the Brig, became for a time the Brig's own
direst peril and most imminent danger, and this, not even
excepting its own often precarious structural exigencies.
Throughout the centuries, the
Brig has time and again been in deep straits, at grave hazard,
and in serious disrepair.
"Wi' crazy eild I'm sair
forfairn,"
is Burns' pregnant descriptive
line; and the Burgh records contain abundant testimony to its
frequent damage and repair, even if such were not more surely
evidenced by the fabric itself. Much money and effort, have time
and again been expended upon it without seeming avail, perhaps,
because of the quick-rising and sudden spates, of ice, of tides,
or because of harbour dredging and consequent increasing river
scour incidental to the work of our own day; but, whatever the
cause of its frequent exigencies, it has been left to the
Scottish people of this generation to tender that outburst of
fervour, which, setting aside all controversy over the bequest,
because recognising the final danger and imperative need, became
and, hearing the call of Kinship which makes a people
instinctively one, a call which Burns of all men could supremely
voice, they joined hand and heart and laid their ample tribute
for the preservation of his Brig upon the Brig itself, the
Poet's noblest material shrine.
The reputed founding of the
Brig of Ayr* by the beneficence of two maiden sisters, one of
whom, Isobel Lowe, saw her lover perish before her eyes, in the
dark waters of the often sudden and turbulent river, is a
beautiful birth-song ; but legend and romance must to-day
inevitably yield place to prosaic fact, and, whatever the motive
and origin, the earliest authentic reference to the Brig,
whether it be the Brig we know, or an earlier, is in the charter
granted by Alexander II. in 1236, to
the Royal Burgh of Ayr; wherein, besides provision made for the
Town and harbour, is also ad susten-tationem pontis. The
Brig is again referred to in the Burgh Charters (1440), and in
those of the Black Friars (1488).
In the accounts of the Lord
High Treasurer of Scotland, under date 17th November 1491, is
this interesting reference connecting
James IV. with the Brig and Town :
"Item, the
XVII Nouembris, to the
massonis of the bryg off Ayre Xs";
from which some have inferred
that the existing Brig was then being built, just as others have
assumed an earlier date of erection, and that the Brig was then
undergoing serious repair. There is not, however, in the
foregoing item any conclusive, and barely inferential, evidence
on either side, and in the Brig itself there is little
architectural detail remaining upon which to establish, although
in general appearance the Brig would seem to indicate a date of
erection, somewhat approximate to that of the King's visit; and
there is this, further, that much of its masonry, shows close
resemblance to that of those portions of Crosraguel Abbey
erected between 1480—1490, and of later date. On this 1491
pilgrimage to Whithorn, where he was on the 11th November, the
young King twice passed through Ayr. On the outward journey he
was ferried a-cross the river, the entry in the accounts being:
"Item, to Sane Johnis Kirk, for
the ferying
of horss and men ower at the water: Vs";
and it was upon the return
journey that he gifted silver to the Brig masons; just as on the
22nd of the same month he gave a similar gift (Xs) to the "Massonis
of Paysla," who were then working at the Abbey. Because of this
gift alone, none, however, would contend that the Abbey was only
then being built, for all know that its foundation dates from
the 12th century, and, except that other evidence regarding the
building of the Ayr Brig is forthcoming, the reference to it in
the accounts of the Lord High Treasurer, is too incidental to
found upon absolutely.
For a period of ninety-eight
years, there is seemingly no local reference to the Brig ; but
in 1583 the Town Council ordained that
"na middingis nor foulzie be
laid upon
ye hie calsig passand to ye brig,"
an item to its credit, for in
the 16th century towns greater than Ayr were not too
fastidiously sanitary, and the deep holes and mud-pools of the
uneven streets in wet weather, became in dry, but infectious
dust-pits ; while the freedom with which, at all hours, the
contents of utensils were emptied from windows, and the
prevalence of "middings" at all doors, combined to produce
odours not always agreeable to sensitive olfactory organs, and
which were themselves moreover fruitful causes of pestilence and
plague. In the same year "Johnne Masoun Masoun" was made burgess
"for his labor and panissusteinit" . . . "in ye doun taking of
ye new work abone ye brig port."
In 1585 the "Brig port,
Carrick port, Kyle port, Sey port" were repaired against
infectious persons with " Hinging yettis and leifis." This was
the period of the "pest" or plague, which then and for many
years devastated the country, but especially the towns; and the
timely action of the magistrates would seem to have kept from
Ayr the grim visitant. In the next year is a long entry anent
"ye repairing and mending of ye brig port qlk is now ruinous and
almaist paistlie like to decay vnless ye same be schortlie
repairit." Accordingly, "David Frew and Johnne Masoun, Masounis,"
undertook "To big up the Brig qr ye same is presentlie fallen &
to mend and repair the pilleris," receiving in return one year's
"impost " on all goods specified "in zair gift," which were
brought into the town by way of the Brig.
In 1588 the Brig must again
have been in serious disrepair, for on the 1 oth of July James
VI., after having ordained a
commission to report, made gift of certain imposts to the town.
The Commission "having sene and considerit the estait of the
harbyr sey-port and brig," and after conference with the "maist
auncient and best experiencit burgessisandcraftismen induellaris
theirof," reported that the "said harbyr hevin and brig" and
other works "ispresentlie ruynous and safar decayit and fallen
doun that gif the samin be not remedit and helpit in tyme it
sail altogidder decay." The King therefore granted that certain
goods, passing into the town by the harbour or Brig, be taxed
for the due upkeep thereof.
In 1592 the Town decreed that,
in gratitude for certain favours and kindness done to the Town
by the Regent Morton, "his Graceis armes to be vpoun ye brig
vnder ye Kingis graceis armes wh ye townis."
In 1595 "ye bowis of ye brig
yt ar ap-perend ruynous to be reparit wt all diligence becaus ye
seasonn of ye yeir now provokis ye samen" (14th April).
In 1597 the drastic order went
forth that "na kynd of cards slaidis or carries be sufferit to
haif passage alangis ye brig" under penalty of the destruction
of the same, " w* fyve punds of valaw " as additional
punishment.
King James
VII. (1687), because the Burgh had difficulty in meeting
its needs for the proper repair of the Brig, Church, Streets,
and Harbour, granted right to levy impost on all ale or beer,
and all malt brewed ; also upon Spanish and French wines
imported and sold in the Burgh.
To summarise, repeated entries
in the Minutes of the Town Council afford an almost continuous
record of alternate damages and repair, of which, the more
noteworthy may be briefly instanced.
On the 5th of June 1732, when
apparently hurriedly convened in Council, the Provost reported
"That the North arch of the bridge fell yesternight." In none of
the Minutes immediately previous is mention made of the
instability of the arch; it therefore presumably fell suddenly,
from, I am inclined to think, the collapse of the northward land
abutment. A long and interesting record is given in the Council
Minutes, of the contract for rebuilding the Arch, made with
"Alexander Gray Masson in Stewarton and Thomas Anderson Masson
in Ayr," the contract price being One Thousand and Nine hundred
merks Scots, "the Town to furnish all materialls." The timber
for the "Cume" or centring of the arch was made of trees cut
from the "Kirkyeard," and the "firr timber" of the "culm" was
not sold by roup, but retained for the "Jests and laying out of
the Lofts in the new Steeple." The Brig, however, was still
insecure, other piers showed indications of weakness, and soon
afterwards the Council ordained that at low water when the river
was fordable, the bar should be put up at the Porch, and no
carriages allowed to cross the Brig.
In 1756 there is an entry that
the pillars of the Brig are to be repaired. In 1754, that the
Brig is to be repaired. In 1779 is a report on the causewaying,
and in 1781 the Brig is again in need of repair. In 1782 the
Town Council had the Brig fully examined, and the three old
arches were reported as being insecure. Two years later a
proposal was made to widen and repair the Brig, but this
proposal was, in the following year, set aside in favour of a
new Bridge joining the Sandgate, by way of the Water Vennel,
with the Main Street of Newton, on the line of the old ford ;
and this Bridge the Town was in 1785 empowered by Act of
Parliament to build, the Auld Brig being retained for foot
traffic only.
The period from then
intervening, has mainly been a record of patching and repair.
Since so recently as from 1867—8 onward, the piers, always the
weakest portion of the structure, have been protected, first by
piling, then by encasing their foundation with concrete fenders,
and lastly, in one pier, by slight underpinning. In April
1902, upon a report by the
Burgh Surveyor, the Council minuted their resolve, that the
piers be "instantly repaired." Mr Kennedy, the contractor for
the concurrent harbour works, in 'a report to the Council almost
immediately following that of the Surveyor, was even more
frankly outspoken. In June
1903, Mr John Eaglesham, C.E.,
submitted a very exhaustive report, closing with the ominous
warning that "this work must not be too long delayed." In
September of the same year, the Surveyor reported subsidence of
the hornising above the Southmost Arch through the open joints
of which a foot-rule might be dropped into the river.
As the Town Council even then
seemed reluctant to take any action, I ventured in October to
bring the matter before the representatives of the First
Electoral Ward; thereafter, by the courtesy of the Ayr press,
before the Ayr public; and, as a record of the inception and
progress of the preservation movement, may some day be
desirable, a brief reference to it from the Town Council
minutes, and other correspondence, may not in the meantime be
without interest. The campanile of St Mark's having then only
recently fallen, I ventured, in my letter to the local press,
after detailing recent Brig operations, to suggest a parallel.
"In both structures subsidence of foundations, rents, cracks,
and decay were reported and considered; and one day the
campanile collapsed—irretrievably. Here, happily, the parallel
ends. Our Old Bridge has historic and poetic associations
belonging not to Ayr only, or to Scotland, but to a large
portion of the English-speaking world; and it would be a matter
of deep sorrow if so ancient and valuable a monument of national
life should, from any cause or reason whatever, be allowed to
perish."
As it is not easy for those
who live in intimate communion with an historic raonument
always to realise its value, I wrote an article on it in one of
the December magazines, and, in the hope of further influencing
the Town from without, I wrote also to several of the Editors of
the London press, and to friends who might influence them,
notably Mr Thackeray Turner, Honorary Secretary of the Society
for the Protection of Ancient Buildings. His Society cordially
and at once took the matter up with me, and, communicating with
the Town Council, their letter was published in the November
report of the Council proceedings. The wider publicity thus
given, was the keynote of all after efforts to preserve the
Brig, it having been at once manifest that any influence, to be
actively operative, must be other than local.
The Town Council was at this
time undoubtedly wishful to do what it thought was right, but it
was also and unfortunately for itself on the horns of a dilemma,
and divided between two opinions. The validity of the will
creating the bequest having been already contested by the
Heirs-at-Law, the Council was very naturally anxiously cautious
as to its procedure ; for, if by its action the money should be
lost to the Town, its members feared the displeasure of the
ratepayers, and, on the other hand, the resentment of the wider
public, if the Brig fell; the latter an instinctive premonition
curiously accurate, for, it was by the contributions of the
outside public, that the Brig was ultimately preserved to the
town. To remove, if possible, the initial difficulty incidental
to the bequest, I saw the agents for the Heirs-at-Law, and
suggested a compromise, a course to which they were then
agreeable; but the Legatees appeared disinclined to entertain
the proposal, and it was not at the time carried further.
Meanwhile, to make their position clear, they raised a judicial
action in the Court of Session, against the Heirs-at-Law and the
Judicial Factor, and, pending a decision, called in Mr Hall
Blyth, C.E., to carefully examine and report upon the Brig. On
the 25th February 19 04, M r Blyth telegraphed that in his
opinion the Brig was unsafe, and should be closed. This was
forthwith done, the three southmost arches strongly centred, the
parapets barricaded, and the Brig again opened to traffic.
During these operations, I was most courteously allowed to take
a very exhaustive series of photographs of the Brig. In June,
Lord Low decided that the money had vested in the Town Council,
and—to slightly anticipate—the last beneficiary having died on
the 15th December, the capital sum was paid over.
In November, during heavy and
continuous river floods, several of the centring supports were
washed out to sea, and it became desirable to at once write to
the Town Council, pointing out the serious danger to the Brig,
if repairs were longer delayed. I also wrote to Mr Thackeray
Turner, stating that the river bed had been scoured away by the
floods, from beneath a large portion of the south pier fender;
but, while we were arranging a series of letters to the London
and Provincial press, the Town Council showed indications of
movement, and we decided in consequence to postpone any public
action, in order that we might not in any way traverse its
policy or efforts.
In February 1905, the Town
Council definitely decided upon rebuilding the Brig, in terms of
Lord Low's interpretation of the bequest, and Mr John Young the
Burgh Surveyor, Mr Eaglesham, and myself were asked to consider
and report accordingly; but, as Lord Low's interpretation of
rebuilding might readily involve the destruction of the Brig,
the task was not without difficulty. After careful examination
of the Brig itself, and exhaustive consideration, no practicable
engineering scheme being apparently forthcoming, whereby the
older and more essential portions of the fabric could be
retained, I, having reason to understand that Sir William Arrol
was sympathetically inclined toward preservation, suggested that
we ask leave to consult him as a bridge-building contractor of
wide experience ; for, after all, whatever engineering scheme
might ultimately be accepted, it would, from the very nature of
the work, rest with the contractor to meet the varying needs and
difficulties, of each separate day and hour. Unfortunately,
however, Sir William's opinion was that the Brig should be
removed, as it was not worth preserving; and, although I pointed
out, that this would involve the destruction of a fabric which
we wished to conserve, he was unable to accept or apprehend its
cogency. Having failed with Sir William, I then suggested to my
colleagues that, as we seemed unable to arrive at any
satisfactory conclusion, and as my suggestion to utilise the
heavy piers and work from within, was in their opinion
impracticable, we ask leave to consult an eminent engineering
specialist in stone-bridge-building, and submit our difficulties
to him. It was now the evening of our last meeting, and final
effort. We telephoned to the interim Town Clerk, who, coming at
once, agreed to submit our request to his Council, but only upon
one definite and specific condition, namely, that, to end the
matter once and for all, we would agree to accept the
engineering decision, so to be given, as final. From this, I
dissented; pointing out that the issue involved was too grave to
hazard upon the decision of a possibly unsympathetic consultant,
and, that we must at any cost, evolve a scheme to save the Brig,
not to destroy. After much disputation, we separated near
midnight, but my point had been gained; for, had the engineering
decision to be given been accepted in anticipation as final,
then there would not have been an Auld Brig today. In reality,
it was the crisis of the struggle, and upon so frail a thread
the existence of the Brig indisputably hung. Mr Hall Blyth,was
the consultant appointed by the Town Council; we laid our views
before him, and in his report thereon to the Town Council, he
reluctantly set aside as impossible, all idea of preserving the
fabric, and submitted instead a highly coloured drawing of the
"rebuilt" Brig to be, showing a vividly blue river and sky. He
declared the Brig to be "twisted from end to end and from side
to side," a literal fact; but, he also established as a premise,
that the identity of the Brig must be preserved, and that
identity he proposed to conserve by careful rebuilding,
forgetting that the rent and shattered stones which he intended
to take down and re-use, could only be preserved and
strengthened in situ, and that any attempt to otherwise
handle them, must of necessity be fatal,—a fact amply evidenced,
when the actual work was undertaken.
At the Town Council meeting
called to consider the reports, the Burgh Surveyor and Mr
Eaglesham concurred with Mr Hall Blyth. I ventured to dissent,
and obtained leave to record my dissent. I further submitted a
statement, that to take down and rebuild the Brig was not to
preserve its identity; that, as an asset, the Brig was of
priceless value to Ayr; and that the impossible in engineering
had not yet been reached. Admitting the utilitarian argument, I
appealed for a higher, maintaining that each individual member
of the Town Council was the Trustee of a great national
monument; and, that until they had exhausted every effort for
preservation, the ultimate and final responsibility for
destruction must rest upon them. I begged that they would make
one last effort, and not say to any engineer, "Is it worth
preserving?" but, "Will you undertake the work, and give us a
reasonable prospect of success?"
All the reports were submitted
to Sir William Arrol, who endorsed Mr Hall Blyth's view, and the
Town Council, definitely deciding upon rebuilding, invited my
co-operation. Realising the nature of the work intended, I asked
for certain assurances, which being refused, I also refused to
take any responsibility for work of which I could not approve;
moreover, had I done so, my hands would have been tied. The Town
Council having embarked upon rebuilding, before any
reconsideration of the matter could reasonably be asked, it was
essential that an authoritative plan of preservation should be
forthcoming. I therefore again communicated with the Society for
Protection of Ancient Buildings, who generously consulted Mr
John Carruthers, an eminent London engineer, and, from the notes
which I sent from Ayr, an outline scheme showing that
preservation was not impossible, was duly submitted to the Town
Council in June 1905, by Mr Thackeray Turner. Although the
preservation scheme so submitted was, by the Council, relegated
to "lie on the table," its purpose had none the less been
served, for Mr Turner's letter having appeared in the press
report of the Council's proceedings, it reawakened public
interest; and Mr Oswald, the Convener of the County, being then
fortunately in London, there saw the letter, and, having called
upon Mr Turner, joined in the effort to preserve the Brig. He at
once wrote to Provost Allan, asking that nothing be done to
destroy the Brig till every effort for preservation had been
exhausted; and to me, generously offering to help in any
possible way. Through Mr Oswald followed the memorable
intervention of Lord Rosebery, whose letter at once gave a
prominence to the whole endeavour, such as it had not before
enjoyed.
The Town Council now declared
its willingness to consider any reasonable schemes for
preservation, and the whole question was thus once again opened
up, with the result that Mr Carruthers, on behalf of the London
Society, visited the Brig and reported ; Mr Francis Fox also,
because of his regard for old structures ; Mr John Strain,
because of local interest; Mr Alexander Simpson and Mr W. S.
Wilson, the latter of whom ultimately carried out the work,
besides many others. Meantime, certain of the Federated Burns
Clubs were bestirring themselves, and indicating possible
financial aid; the annual meeting of the Burns Federation was at
hand, and its President, ex-Provost M'Kay of Kilmarnock, kindly
invited me to attend, and plead the cause of the Brig. At the
meeting a Committee was appointed, and, in due course, a
memorial was addressed to the Town Council. It was now gradually
becoming evident that if, as a last resource, it should be
necessary to appeal to the general public for the requisite
funds, the response was likely to be generous; but the feeling
was also apparent and frankly expressed, that if public
subscriptions became inevitable, then the greater portion of the
required sum should be raised within the Royal Burgh itself, as
it was the town of Ayr that, in a financial sense, would almost
wholly benefit by the preservation of the Brig. Unfortunately,
however, the contributions from the town of Ayr, proved, in
amount, to be almost negligible; and it was from the many
generous sympathisers, at home and abroad, that the money
required eventually came.
Although schemes for
preservation had now been formulated, the Town Council's plans
for rebuilding were still in progress and well advanced ; and
the question of the Brig versus the bequest was not yet
by any means settled. Something, however, had been gained, and
the agitation had not been altogether barren; for the Town
Council, because of the increasing interest manifested outwith
the town in favour of preservation, became apparently more
anxious to consider the desirability of preserving the Brig, as
well as the bequest, and once again decided to submit the matter
to Sir William Arrol; this time, for any observations he might
see fit to make, upon the several preservative schemes now
proposed.
Sir William's opinion was not
made public, but it was in general circulation that the schemes
submitted were not by him considered practicable ; and, as the
Town Council was reticent, it was arranged that specific
questions be asked at the October Electoral Ward meetings, which
questions elucidated, as was anticipated, that Sir William's
objection was the old one—not that the schemes were
impracticable, but, that the Brig was not worth preserving.
Mr Turner accordingly wrote a
strong letter to The Times, and in the same month the
Town Council intimated to Mr Oswald, Mr Turner, the Burns
Federation, and myself that, in order to afford promoters of
preservation an opportunity of providing the funds already
indefinitely indicated, it would delay the commencement of
rebuilding operations, for a period of four months. An informal
Committee of those named was at once formed, ex-Provost M'Kay of
Kilmarnock representing, from its head-quarters, the Federation;
and as it was necessary before appealing for public funds to
make clear the position of the 10,000 held under the bequest, we
asked a meeting with Provost Allan before formally communicating
with the Town Council. As the outcome of several meetings, Mr
Oswald and I had a final interview with the Provost and, with
his concurrence, on the 11th November on behalf of the
Committee, I addressed a memorandum to the Town Clerk, outlining
a scheme of compromise with the Heirs-at-Law, as a necessary
preliminary to any public appeal for funds. This memorandum,
after very considerable delay and some opposition, was submitted
to Mr Clyde, K.C., the Solicitor-General, and to Mr Wm. Hunter,
K.C., now Lord Hunter, and an Ayr man.
Meantime, in order to bring
the Ayr Burns Club into line with the Federation, it was agreed
to ask the Club to nominate a member to serve on the Voluntary
Committee, and Mr Walter Neilson was accordingly appointed.
Although Counsel's opinion was
not communicated to the Committee, it was generally understood
to be not unfavourable to compromise, but the Town Clerk
precluded any hope of compromise by formally intimating to me
his instructions that, while his Council would be pleased to
meet the members of the Voluntary Committee, it declined at the
meeting, to allow any reference to, or discussion of the opinion
of Counsel, an opinion which it had itself in Council agreed, at
our request to ask.
After some hesitation to
accept this veto, the Committee ultimately decided to meet with
the Town Council; having first, however, drafted heads of
proposals whereby to counter the change of front, in the hope
that these proposals might also form the basis of a possible
agreement with the Town Council. These provided that the Town
Council having ruled out any reference to or use of the bequest,
then, in the event of the Committee successfully appealing to
the public for £10,000, that the Brig be handed over to
the Committee for preservative operations. Further, that as a
temporary bridge would be necessary for the convenience of the
public, it should be provided by the Town Council. The Town
Council and the Committee accordingly met, and the foregoing
proposals having been submitted to the Town Council, and, with
one or two additional clauses, having been agreed to, they were
adjusted by the Town Clerk and myself on the following day,
signed by Mr Oswald for the Committee, and confirmed by the Town
Council at its next statutory meeting. Why the Town Council
finally granted that which it had previously so steadfastly
refused, is a matter for interesting conjecture; but whatever
the motive, the way was at last clear for the effort of the
Committee, to raise the £10,000; an effort which, from its
commencement many declared to be absolutely hopeless. These,
however, were the fearful and unbelieving, who did not realise
the strength, nor understand the living and enduring power of
the mighty dead; nor were their eyes yet opened to the truth
that a prophet is not without honour save in his own country,
and in his own house.
The whole interest now
revolved round the possibility of raising the required sum; and,
through the kindness of a friend, widely experienced in the
methods of appealing to and procuring money from a responsive
and generous public, it was made possible for me to prepare a
list of those from whom help might be expected, together with
the approximate sums likely to be received.
It was accordingly decided
that an effort be made to raise one half of the £10,000
privately; then to call a great public meeting, state that one
half of the money was in hand, and ask the general public for
the remaining £5000. The Voluntary Committee was now largely
increased, and the list of possible private subscribers
allocated; Mr Oswald readily undertaking the larger share, and
working strenuously. At the next meeting he intimated two
contributions of £5 00 each, one from Sir James Coats, the other
from the Marquess of Bute; and it is safe to say that, but for
Mr Oswald's unremitting and enthusiastic efforts to raise the
money, it might not have been forthcoming. So successful was he,
that by the time of the public meeting addressed by Lord
Rosebery at Ayr on the 26th September 1906, Mr Oswald was able
to intimate that a sum of over £4,800 had been raised; and
although he did not say so, it was raised mainly by himself.
Lord Rosebery's speech is
historic in Burns Annals. As his letter to Mr Oswald had first
raised the Brig controversy to its true altitude, so his great
speech at Ayr thrilled the Burns world. Its devotees had not
looked to their High Priest in vain, and Lord Rosebery voiced
for them their better aspirations and desires. It was the first
of a trilogy; the second followed at Edinburgh; the third at
Glasgow, the occasion being the inauguration of the Lord
Provost's Fund, a fund mainly due to the initiation of Dr
William Wallace, then Editor of the Glasgow Herald. The
Daily Record and Mail, the Glasgow Evening News,
the Ayr newspapers and many others, opened their columns for
subscriptions. The Town Council of Ayr
declined to subscribe; several,
however, of its members did so as private individuals, but the
Provost, and others, absented themselves from Lord Rosebery's
meeting, although it was an important public meeting, called for
the furtherance of the Town's interest, and the conservation of
its good name. None the less Scottish and St Andrews Societies,
abroad and at home, readily helped, the name of Robert Burns was
magical, and early in the following year the Executive Committee
was able to intimate to the Town Council, that the required
10,000 had been raised, and that it was prepared to proceed with
the work, in terms of the agreement.
In May 1907 work
was commenced upon the Brig, Mr Wilson being in charge of the
engineering work; and, as I knew the Brig well, I was asked to
associate myself with Mr Wilson and undertake the Archaeological
work, leaving all questions affecting stability entirely in his
hands. Acceptance, of course, involved retiral from the
vice-chairmanship of the Executive Committee, as also from the
Committee itself. Mr Wilson entered upon the enterprise with a
very wide experience of underpinning, and he understood to the
full the delicate and arduous
nature of the preservative work before him. As it
turned out, the Brig was even more insecure than had at first
been supposed, and the marvel is that the old structure held
together so long. Its tenacity and dourness have indeed been
great, and the Brig now enjoys its well-earned reward.
Fortunately, this structural
work was not let out to contract, but experienced men were
employed under Mr Mitchell, an excellent engineer foreman; and
as from time to time the peculiar nature of the work to be done
developed, so it was treated.
Beneath the Brig is a bed of
brown boulder clay, from a few inches, to i o feet in thickness,
with a southward dip across the river. Below this boulder clay
is a thick bed of light fireclay, and, near the surface, gravel.
The south abutment, and its complementary pier, are founded upon
the boulder clay, the north abutment upon fireclay almost
solidified into rock, thickly interspersed with fossils, and
divided by several thin coal seams, from which good coal was
often taken, for use at the Brig. The increased river scour,
consequent upon harbour dredging lower down the river, had
undermined, if not the piers themselves, then at least in places
their fenders, to the extent of in one portion 6 feet inward.
The greatest water-flow is beneath the south arch, where the bed
of the river, at the beginning of operations, was from 4 to 8
feet below the level of the oak cradle foundations of the piers.
These oak cradles were formed of roughly hewn timbers, in part
squarely dressed, half checked at the cross angles, scarfed at
the longitudinal junctions, and pinned together by a number of
1-inch oak pins, securely driven home. The timbers varied from 4
to 5 inches, to 8 to 10 inches square. The heaviest followed the
outline of the piers and cutwaters, and were held together by
lighter cross-pieces, these again, beneath the junction of the
piers and cutwaters, being stiffened by angle struts. This oak
cradle framing had been set upon the boulder clay, which again
had been cut into, or the cradle wedged up from it, with oak
wedges to a level surface, and upon the timbers large irregular
flat stones laid. The spaces between these stones, as also
between the cradling timbers, had been filled in with loose
stones; and whin boulders, of varying sizes; and, as the piers
rose, the hearts inside the heavy dressed stone facing would
seem to have been similarly filled in, and the interstices
packed with lime run in hot. Where this lime was free from damp
and decay, it was found to be as hard as the stone itself. Part
of the difficulty of preservation, lay in the fact that the
joints of the stone facing not having been kept tightly pointed,
water had found its way in, and that in time, aggravated by the
suction of the falling tides, had rotted or torn away the lime
from the heart of the piers. The cavities thus left behind the
facing stones, extended into the piers from i to 6 feet, and
upward to high-water mark; moreover, these cavities became in
time solidly packed with a fine deposit of river mud. So hollow
were the piers in places immediately above high-water mark that,
while refacing one of the cutwaters, I could on either side of a
removed stone freely insert a footrule 3 feet in one direction,
and in the other, to the extent of my arm from the elbow, with
in addition the full length of the 3-feet rod. Each of the three
piers had been often re-faced, but none had sunk very
materially, although the northmost pier had moved at one end
nearly 10 inches laterally at its base, while the cutwater of
another had sunk several inches at its outer extremity, but in
its lower courses only. The arches, however, had suffered sorely
by rain soaking in between the roadway cobbles, and this
soaking, had gradually wasted or washed out the lime from
between the stones forming the arches, especially towards the
crown, and these stones closing together in consequence, had in
two of the arches torn them, with their spandrels, away from the
cutwaters, as much as 5 inches at the top, decreasing downwards
towards the springing. The outer ring of voussoirs, was
consequently in some places badly fractured because of unequal
pressure, and the soffits of many of the stones throughout the
arches were splintered seriously. The spandrel walls near the
top, and the parapets immediately above, seem to have been
renewed frequently, and I am inclined to believe that some of
the stones of the existing parapet, were those taken from the
fallen north arch, which, with part of the northmost land
abutment, collapsed, as already stated, in 1735. In the Minutes
of the Town Council, there do not appear to be any references to
the removal of the arched gateway of the Brig, shown in Slezer's
view of 1693; but, from the appearance of the north-west
abutment wall, and from the facts disclosed during the
excavations at the gateway site, I am strongly inclined to the
opinion, that it was, in at least large part, carried away by
the fall of the northmost arch and its immediate landward
abutment.
The Brig proper consists of
four beautifully shaped segmental arches, each from 52 to 53
feet span, three massive piers of 15 feet in thickness, with
triangular cutwaters and heavy land abutments. It rises 27 feet
above high-water mark, and the tide fall is 9 feet. The width of
the Brig footway averages 12 feet between the parapets, and the
steeply sloping roadways, that at the south end between houses,
gives the Brig and approaches an approximate length of over 500
feet; but the Brig proper between the abutments is 255 feet
long. About the Brig there is nothing mechanical, either in the
setting-out of the work, or in the building; and it has all that
indescribable charm of humanness which is the distinctive
feature of all old work. For instance, no two arches or
cutwaters are exactly similar, and the northmost arch, the last
built, is 2 feet less in height than the others. None of the
arches spring too accurately from the piers, and there is that
delightful honesty of procedure manifested throughout the work,
showing so frankly that where a pier and its lower arch stones
had been built 4 inches over much to one side, and the variation
discovered, the builders accepted the fact, and laid the next
arch course 4inches back and into the true line. The very
spur-stones of the pier bases vary, and one of them has on its
upper surface a large incised heart. Let those sympathetically
conversant with the unaffected working of the human mind in old
buildings, conjecture its why!
This, then, is the Brig we set
out to handle, the goal being to so preserve it, with all its
curves and twists and settlements, that when the work should be
completed few might know it had been touched at all; and
moreover, we desired that each separate movement of the fabric
might be preserved, and clearly shown on its face.
And now a word about the
distorted, and much criticised south arch. The resolution of the
public meeting instructed "that all work falling to be done
shall have for its object the preservation of the existing
fabric, as far as possible, in its entirety, and shall interfere
as little as possible with its outward appearance, construction,
or form." The south arch, therefore, was retained, because the
Engineer was able to make it as secure and strong in its
existing shape, as it would have been had it been taken down and
rebuilt. Further, had it been taken down, it is safe to say that
not 10 per cent, of its stones could possibly have been re-used.
Mr Wilson early recognised the
possibilities of the heavy piers and cutwaters, and at once
proceeded to utilise them; but before pitting through their
middle, he required first to ensure the stability of the arches,
and to that end the outer joints of the spandrel wall-stones had
to be securely and deeply pointed with pure cement, to resist
the great after pressure of forced grouting from within. In so
pointing, I added to the cement a little fine gravel, keeping
the cement well back from the face of each weather-beaten stone,
and bedding small pieces of old slate in the more open joints,
closely following in this —as in all else—the original work.
Moreover, in pointing, each separate stone or slate bedding-in
was separately pointed all round, in order that the
weather-beaten surface texture of the Brig might, as far as
possible, be preserved. The outer casing of the Brig having now
been made secure against the pressure of the cement grout to be
pumped into the fabric from within, Mr Wilson proceeded with the
treatment of the Brig, arch by arch and pier by pier
successively, beginning at the south end. He first cut trenches
3 feet wide across the roadway, immediately above the south
abutment and its complementary pier; these trenches were cut
through the sand filling-in of the arch haunches and piers,
strongly bratticed as they were sunk, carried downward to the
solid masonry of the piers, and filled with concrete.
Thereafter, the sand between
the old outer spandrel walls was removed, the interstices
between the rough upper faces of the arch stones carefully
cleaned out and filled in with cement, and a 9-inch concrete
covering laid over all. Following this work a longitudinal
central spandrel wall 2 feet 6 inches in thickness was built of
concrete on, and along the centre line of each arch. The inner
joints of the outer spandrel walls having been also picked out,
were grouted with pure cement under air-pressure of from 20 to
30 lbs. per square inch. At a much later period in the
operations, concrete jack-arches were carried from the side to
the centre spandrel walls, thus forming a continuous concrete
under-roadway, upon which was spread a specially prepared
impervious coating of rock-building composition, to within I
inch of the outer edge of the parapet walls; and, upon this
coating, a layer of sand, in which the roadway granite setts
were laid.
The Brig was now ready for the
more dangerous work of underpinning. Frombetween the 3-feet
transverse concrete walls already sunk above the piers, and
carried down to their solid stonework, the sand hearting was
removed, and the old external walls grouted under pressure;
thereafter, an 8 by 4 feet shaft was sunk through the stone
heart of each pier, and downward through the clay, 9 feet below
the oak cradles. A 12-inch concrete floor was laid, a powerful
electric motor centrifugal pump brought into operation, and the
mining beneath the piers to their outward faces commenced. As
these mines, each roughly about 3 feet wide, were foot by foot
driven, they were strongly timbered, and cement grout forced
upward through the temporary boarded roof into the old
foundations, which sometimes fell out like a ruckle of old
stones into the mine; in the more dilapidated piers, sometimes
from as much as 2 to 3 feet above the oak cradling, which
cradling it was unfortunately found necessary to largely cut
away. The underpinning of blue brick in cement was then built
upon a concrete foundation, and in the brickwork several 2-inch
iron pipes were laid for dealing more easily with seeping water,
but also because through these pipes cement grout could
afterwards be forced into the interior of the brick
underpinning. As the temporary timber roofs were reached they
were removed, and against the smooth face of the cement grout
previously forced in, the brick underpinning was wedged up, and
grouted solid, under high pressure. This procedure was
afterwards successively and successfully carried out in each of
the twenty mines or underpinning sections of each pier, and the
corresponding twelve sections of the abutments. It reflects the
greatest credit upon the Engineer, his foreman and workers, that
there was no subsidence of the structure, not even a single
crack in the outer superstructure ; nay, more, not one of the
original cracks in the external stonework opened by a fraction,
save at one point in the east cutwater of the north pier, where
it was infinitesimal; and it is to be remembered that in this
pier there was one large old rent 5 inches wide, and also, that
into a cavity of the pier one could work one's whole arm, up to
the elbow. As an instance of one of the many difficulties
incidental to the carrying out of the work, from one mine in the
south pier the sinkers were driven out for nearly three
continuous weeks by the inrush of water, which at full tide was
very great ; and even at low water the mine was nearly always
full. In several of the mines, looking from within, one could at
low water see between the Brig cradle and the boulder clay the
blue sky of heaven, so much of the river bed had been washed
away from the pier foundations, and it was literally inch by
inch that way was made by damming out the water till the
underpinning had been completed. Often, day after day, at low
water, when the river and weather permitted, and as one of many
expedients, 2-inch boards overlapping, or as sheaths, were
driven into the river bed outside the piers, and the space
between packed with clay, or grouted with cement; sometimes
cement in bags was packed round, and usually, as one hole was
stopped, another developed. Patience, resource, and deliberation
in the end prevailed, but there was none the less many an
anxious hour for those in charge, and too much credit cannot be
given to Mr Wilson, and all who worked under him.
In May 1909, the engineering
operations were sufficiently advanced to permit a serious
beginning with the archaeological work. The masonry of each of
the three piers, from the splayed stone base upward to nearly
the corbel springer of the arches, had been at various times
refaced with stone or brickwork. It was mainly patchwork, and
the regular courses of the original work had been wholly
ignored. Moreover, many of the later facing stones had not been
properly bonded into the masonry of the piers. The west nose of
the south cutwater had, in its lower courses, sunk about 5
inches, and the space between the oversailing upper courses
which had remained in position, filled in with stone patching
and Roman cement. Upon removing the fractured stones, a deposit
of fine river mud was seen to penetrate for a distance of 2 or 3
feet inward, in one pier as much as 6 feet, and this mud deposit
with the rotted lime had effectually checked the flow of cement
grout, driven under pressure, from within the piers.
Structurally, therefore, it was necessary to clear away all such
mud, rotted lime, and fractured facing-stones wherever found;
and as the latter were almost wholly new, and practically only
patchwork, they were archaeologically valueless. After
rebuilding with brick and cement, outward from the solid portion
of the piers to the new stone facings, which were built on the
original lines, and using therein any old stones found, the
whole was grouted with cement under high pressure; and in order
to follow and ascertain the rise and movement of the cement
within the piers, open joints were left between certain of the
facing-stones, and closed as the cement rose. When the cement
had sufficiently consolidated, fresh grout at full pressure was
forced in, to make up any space lost by consolidation, also to
wedge hard against all upper work, and solidly fill in all open
spaces. After the piers, the abutments were similarly treated.
The fractured portions of the
outer ring of voussoirs were then cut out, from never less than
9 inches to the extent of fracture, and new stones of identical
size were inserted and clamped to the old by lead dowels run
into the intersections; a V channel
was also cut along the top of the stones, through which channel
liquid cement was pumped in, thus solidly binding all new and
old work together. The spandrel walls, where loosened from their
backing, were treated in a somewhat similar fashion. When,
within comparatively recent years, the roadway level was
altered, and straightened from the old curvatures caused by the
movement of the arches, the original side gutter channeling was
then also broken off, or torn out from beneath the parapet
thus materially decreasing its stability. The joints were badly
worn, and so seriously decayed, that at the Ay r end the east
parapet overhung outward nearly 9 inches. The footings and walls
therefore, required rebuilding, so the old side guttering and
gargoyles were renewed, and the parapets carefully taken down in
short lengths and rebuilt against standardised rods, to their
old lateral curvature. A 2-inch joggle channel was cut in the
beds and joints of each old stone, and grouted with cement, and
all possible old stones were re-used. Where old stones were very
much worn away, the joints were bedded in with hard red tiles
pointed with cement, so that the old work might be readily
distinguishable from the new; but the pointing was done
differently from that of the outside walls, because weatherworn
joints were here forbidden, and the wall surfaces had to be kept
as even as possible. For this reason all cement joints were made
V-shaped, the apex being of course outward. Unfortunately, from
an archaeological standpoint, cobble-stones were prohibited in
the roadway, but small rough granite setts, with wide joints,
were used, in order to repeat as far as possible the texture and
scale of the parapet walls; upon which were placed five
wrought-iron lamp standards, made in the same fashion as the one
old lamp, also replaced in position. The excavations at the
north end of the Brig, disclosed an early roadway of
cobblestones and roughly-built guttering, from 12 to 18 inches
lower than the present roadway, and with a more steeply inclined
slope. The lower walls of the old triangular toll- or
guard-house, were also exposed; and it may be noted that this
chamber, with its deep foundation walls all the way up, was
built against, and not with, the earlier abutment wall of the
Brig. The east foundation of the arched gateway was followed
downward for over i o feet, without reaching its bottom, but the
corresponding west foundation had altogether disappeared. All
these remaining portions of old work have been carefully
preserved, exactly as found; and, for their better protection,
enclosed by an iron railing. In the Brig parapets have been
retained the square holes in the wall stones and copes, wherein
rested the later toll-beams or barriers. As little as possible
of the original work of the Brig has been touched, and any new
work, or insertions essential for its maintenance, have followed
as closely as modern work may, the lines of the old. Several
masons' marks were found, and of each a careful impression was
taken, and the results afterwards tabulated. It was difficult at
first to break the masons, working on the Brig, from these
characteristics of modern work, impersonally hewn stones, and
mechanically plumb and level building. The old curves and twists
of the Brig soon, however, made their power felt, and the
workmen gradually found that there was more beauty in the old
slightly cambered and full line, than in the one absolutely
straight, from start to finish. Taken all round, they were an
excellent lot of men; and when once they realised that
preservative operations cannot be pushed or worked out as is a
contract job, they settled down to the order of things wherein
craftsmen, and not merely operatives, are required; very many
taking a deep interest in the proceedings.
Now that the work is
completely finished, the retrospect is not unsatisfactory,
although there is little doubt, that, in the town of Ayr, the
preservation of the Brig does not commend itself to many. In
origin and essence it is based largly upon sentiment, upon
historic reverence, and archaeological regard.
It did not, and does not,
appeal to utilitarian instincts; and whatever of material value
it may hold, belongs of necessity to other generations, when men
shall more clearly see, and understand also, its intrinsic
worth.
But for one or two staunch
friends of the Brig in the Town Council, the work, at least in
its initial stages, would probably never have been carried
through; and in Mr J. B. Ferguson of Balgarth, then a
Councillor, the Brig found a warm and fitting friend, for his
interests are largely centred in Alloway, and his home for long
Doonholm, where William Burness worked as gardener; and, on near
land was built the "AuldClay Biggin'," wherein the poet was
born. Then, was not the first man who ever offered me local help
and encouragement in the earliest days of
the endeavour, when help was sorely needed, also of an old
Ayrshire family, the representative and lineal descendant of one
whom Scotsmen must ever revere ; the Patriot who held for
Scotland her freedom, who first gave to her consciousness of
national life, who won the Battle of Stirling Bridge, and burnt
the Barns of Ayr? Mr H. R. Wallace of Busby, stood strongly for
the Brig, from the very first day; and at the very outset of the
enterprise, long before subscriptions were even thought of, he,
possibly foreseeing the ultimate necessity, generously offered a
contribution of £25 should it be required.
Living on the Brig practically
at all hours, and in all weathers, wondering over and dreaming
of it often, the thought ever uppermost in my mind was, What did
the shade of Robert Burns think of it all? I recalled his
marvellous insight into the human mind, his terrible perceptive
power shredding act from motive, his trenchant words, his humour
and generous thoughts; and, I wondered what he would say to the
workers on the Brig, to his fellow-townsmen, to the Brig
Committee and to its Chair man, so unsparing of himself; but
most of all to the Knight of Dalmeny? I could imagine the two
men meeting on the crown of the Brig causeway, gripping hands,
and looking deep into each other's eyes. What would they see,
and what say! They are both men—and one something over. |
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