In the last chapter I have
set down some recollections of a boy's summer holidays—spent for the most
part near Aberdeen—in the fifties and sixties. Enjoyable as these were I
think they were hardly considered complete without a few added days spent at
the ideal country manse of a ministerial uncle who, for sixty years, went in
and out among his people as guide, philosopher and friend. He was the very
soul of hospitality and ever received us with open arms. His pony-pheeton,
fishing tackle, books, and well stocked garden were freely at our service,
while a crack with his highly original factotum "Weelum," whose sayings were
proverbial throughout the district, was itself a diversion of no mean order.
About the middle of the
latter decade these began to take wider sweep and the impressions received
increasingly gripped the imagination. It was as far back as 1863 that a
first trip across the border was made. It was to the house of an elderly and
prosperous Liverpool merchant who was prone to sententious remarks,
combining shrewd wisdom with a reverent spirit. Two of these survive still
for what they are worth. One was to the effect that many things had
necessarily to be "considered from a commercial point of view," and the
other was that few things were more objectionable than mere "pious
platitudes from the pulpit." Possibly it was to show us something far
removed from this that he drove us on Sunday to the chapels of the Rev. Hugh
Stowell Brown and Mr. Birrell, father of the late Irish Secretary, the two
leading nonconformist lights of the city. I rather think the former was not
at home, but the latter has often been recalled as an ideal of calm and
thoughtful moral earnestness. Rightly or wrongly I remarked on the large
proportion of the congregation who wore spectacles! Though young enough at
the time, I was allowed fullest latitude to roam about the streets and docks
at my own sweet will, an experience which proved of astonishing interest. A
chamber concert in St. George's Hall, and a visit to a large manufacturing
establishment were among the other good things provided by way of
entertainment.
Though such a journey was
well calculated to broaden one's horizon, it was completely eclipsed, two
years later, when father took myself and a brother on a first visit to
London. Educationally nothing could have been more timeously planned. The
metropolis seemed further off then than it does to-day, if judged by the
number of hours taken to complete the journey. A carefully written journal
of this expedition is before me from which I cull a few particulars which
have a certain interest after so many years. We travelled by the Glasgow and
South-western Railway, whose terminus then was in Bridge Street, starting at
3-3° p.m. and not reaching Euston till 5-5° p. m. on the following morning.
Humorous
scenes along the route are touched off with keen enjoyment-a porter being
shaved on Lochwinnoch platform with a railway bill for winding sheet, a
fantastic trio of sporting toffs in excited conversation at Kilmarnock, &c.
The Covenanting region of Ayrshire arouses interest at almost every stopping
place.
At Carlisle a disconcerting
incident with its happy outcome is given at length. It appears that owing to
some accident on the preceding day a wretched borrowed carriage was being
attached to the south-going train into which we had to change. So
disreputable, indeed, did it look that an honest railway porter would not
ask us to enter it, but found better accommodation in a superior class. By
and by, however, a martinet of a stationmaster came along to examine tickets
and, while he blandly expressed regret at the uncomfortable makeshift he had
to offer, insisted that we must make the best of it. Just as he was hustling
us into the unsightly compartment, he was suddenly arrested in his purpose
by the guard of the train whom we had not observed, but who recognised
father as his minister and friend. A few words from him sufficed to
reinstate us in comfort with many bows and apologies from the great man.
A graphic account follows of
the "Limited Mail" overtaking us like a whirlwind at midnight as we stood in
a siding at Warrington, and of the uncomfortable drowsiness in the small
hours of morning when one wakens up to find that it is only his foot which
has been truly asleep while reassuring himself as to the identity of his
travelling companions. Hugh Miller, whose "First Impressions of England" had
evidently been studied, is repeatedly quoted with due appreciation. In
London itself the dinginess of the brick buildings and the shabby appearance
of the omnibuses is contrasted with those in Glasgow. The first overpowering
impression of St. Paul's from Ludgate Hill is worthily commented on, and
even yet I frequently find myself repairing to the same spot in an endeavour
to recover the same experience. The steady hum and nimble movement of the
street traffic, the amplitude and beauty of the parks, the yellow and gold
of the equipages on their way to a levee at Marlborough House, "such as I
have seen in books of Whittington and his Cat, but which I did not believe
existed except in fancy," are all duly dwelt upon. The Polytechnic where
"Pepper's Ghost" was in the ascendant with five different exhibitions for a
shill- ing! the Egyptian Hall where Arthur Sketchly reigned supreme, and the
Zoo with all its living wonders seem to have been enjoyed to the full, yet
the Crystal Palace, seen in exceptional weather and during a great
Whitsuntide musical festival, evidently carried off the palm in youthful
estimation. Westminster Abbey is characterised as "illustrated history." At
the Tower, inscriptions, gateways, cannons and beefeaters are all described,
together with the jumbled conversation of a tipsy man who talked volubly to
the armoured Knights! South Kensington is declared to be more interesting
than most museums because it contains " less of antiquities and fossils and
more of modern painting, specimens of foods and manufactures and models of
recent inventions, public buildings and shipping."
Through the kindness of Mr.
Murray Dunlop, M.P. for Greenock, and draftsman of the Model Trust Deed, we
were fortunate in obtaining admission to the Strangers' Gallery in the House
of Commons at a full dress debate. There had been serious riots in Belfast,
and an enquiry into the conduct of its magistrates was being demanded by a
Major O'Reilly, while a strenuous defence was offered by Sir Hugh Cairns,
the city member; by Sir George Grey, the Home Secretary; and by Sir Robert
Peel, the Irish Secretary. Mr. Whalley, the voluble Protestant member for
Peterborough, vigorously insisted that the enquiry should be made wide
enough to include the conduct of the popish clergy amid derisive cries of
"Oh! Whalley, Whalley!" Lord Palmerston and Mr. Gladstone were both in their
places, but took no part in the debate. Finally a division was called for,
when supported the motion and 132 voted with the Government. Sir Frederick
Smith then followed with a rambling speech on Harbours and Piers with the
ill-concealed intention of talking out Mr. Berkeley's annual motion in
favour of the Ballot which was the Tory bogey of the day, it being seriously
contended that its introduction would tend to sap British manhood and to
endanger the British Constitution! Last of all the interesting fact is noted
of having twice seen Lord Brougham as he was entering and leaving the House
of Lords.
In following years holidays
assumed a more varied complexion, now to the Ayrshire coast and now within
reach of the Trossachs, while a single day spent in Killiecrankie in the
blaze of its autumnal glory proved a fresh revelation of the beauty of God's
earth and an incentive to more diligent study of it. By and by a further
departure was made which was to give bent to many a subsequent tramp.
Opportunity then presented itself for a short walking tour in North Wales,
which naturally led to further note-taking, to be inflicted later on some
unoffending juvenile literary society. Beginning at Chester with its quaint
"rows" and venerable cathedral, the journey is continued by rail as far as
Bangor, passing over the scene of the then recent appalling railway accident
at Abergele. The first sight of Menai Straits and the great bridges is duly
referred to, and at still greater length a conversation with the aged John
Roberts, stationmaster at Treborth, who had been associated with Father
Mathew in his temperance campaign and who had also, curiously enough, had a
remarkable interview with Louis Napoleon, discussing international rivalries
and peace problems from Waterloo downwards. Alas! that in the immediate
future the unstable Emperor was to allow himself to be involved in a
sanguinary European War which cost him his throne! Llanberis and Snowdon,
Bettws-y-Coed, Conway and Carnarvon, and The Great Orme's Head perambulated
in a terrific storm, made a great impression and pled for fuller
acquaintance with such insistence that as many as three brief runs were made
to the Principality within the next few years.
An odd conceit which has
added not a little to the retrospective value of some of these rambles may
perhaps be referred to; so frequently was it indulged in as almost to
constitute a family failing. A wet afternoon or a wearisome walk would be
enlivened by throwing together in rhyme some humorous account of special
incidents by the way. These jeux (Cesprit assumed great variety of form.
Some-times members of the party would contribute a line in turn, the idea
being that each should endeavour to throw the onus of continuing the
narrative upon the one who was to follow. The result, as might be expected,
was an incongruous medley retaining, however, recognisable traces of many an
amusing episode. At other times more elaborate attempts would be made to
preserve in permanent form the atmosphere of a more lengthy excursion in the
rhythm of Macaulay, Longfellow, or Sir Walter Scott, not unfrequently
evolving a creditable mosaic of mutual memories to be referred to with
renewed zest, as occasion offered, in the days to come.