Tweedside is a great home for
sport and people who live there are cradled amidst it. It has been said with
truth that Kelso is one of the most sporting centres in Great Britain. It is
related of Lord Elcho, latterly the Earl of Wemyss, that when he lived at Kelso
he killed a hare in the morning with his own harriers, saw Will Williamson kill
a fox with the Duke of Buccleuch's foxhounds, and after coming from hunting he
went to the junction cast above Kelso Bridge and landed a salmon. From it you
can hunt with hounds six days a week. There is the finest kind of salmon and
trout fishing; within an easy drive you can find a grouse moor, while all around
on its fertile farms is excellent low ground shooting. None of the sport aside
from the salmon fishing may be superlative, but it is so many-sided that those
who have the good fortune to be born within its confines grow up to be natural
sportsmen. So John Clay, inheriting from his forefathers and neighbors the love
of sport, kept more or less at it all his life. Commencing with the gun among
the rabbits on Haddon Rig he probably did the usual amount of shooting which
falls to a young farmer, but this class of sport was evidently early abandoned,
because our recollection, which dates back nearly fifty years, tells us that his
fancy ran to the hound and it matters litde whether it was foxhound, greyhound,
harrier or staghound, he took a deep interest in them all. As far as memory goes
back, till within a few years of his giving up active farming, there was always
a greyhound and a fox terrier about. He never went in professionally for any of
them, but merely kept them as a means to give him sport and pleasure. Many a day
he used to slip greyhounds at the Blackadder meetings when the Herriots and the
Turnbulls, Glendinning, Popplewell, Brown, Allan, Penny and others whose names
are almost forgotten, met in friendly rivalry to test their dogs before the
impartial eye of John Dove, then living at Eccles Newton. Possibly some who
glance over these pages will remember the days of the old Border meeting where
every October on the rich haughs of Redden and over the broad sweeping fields of
Kerchesters a coursing meeting was held. In it he took the keenest interest and
it led on to a grand display of hospitality. The Berwickshire division came up
to meet their Roxburghshire and Northumberland comrades. It was a meeting of the
giants. The Herriots and Glendinning men of stature came from the Merse; Smith
of Melkington, the Borthwicks from Bowmont, men farming many a broad acre on the
English side, were seldom absent. After dinner they met over the whist table. At
the piano Bob Shortreed's sonorous voice could be heard, George Laing, then
living on Wark, would lilt with mellow voice about "My Nannie's Awa," and Jack
Fair, king of good fellows and prince among clowns, would give a character song.
Dreamy days: little did we think then of the long years to come, when the gold
of Autumn would come across our horizon just as at that time it was lighting up
with ruddy glow the path of the Kerchesters tenant.
While he never lost his love for a greyhound and
enjoyed a good course, it was the note of a foxhound that stirred his soul and
made his blood run wild and the passion waxed strong even unto death. As a boy
at Dykegatehead he could remember Hays of Duns Castle, Campbell of Marchmont,
Houston Boswell of Black-adder hunting hounds, but naturally his recollections
were indistinct. It was on coming to Kerchesters that he commenced to follow the
Duke of Buccleuch's pack. Will Williamson was huntsman and Haddon Rig was a
favorite fox haunt. When he went back to Winfield Lord Wemyss was then hunting
Berwickshire. He therefore began his foxhunting days under two of the greatest
sportsmen Scotland has ever seen. He could tell endless anecdotes of these men.
It would be hard to say which of them was the strongest character, but there was
a charm about Williamson which captured his nature and he always talked of him
as the beau-ideal of the foxhunting craft. In old days Lammer-moor was a
favorite hunting ground. It was not fenced in those days and you could gallop
across its heathery uplands without getting into a bird-cage as nowadays. He
often used to tell a story about Williamson. After drawing Spottiswoode either
blank or without sport one Saturday afternoon he trotted along to Wedderlie and
after drawing all around he never touched sign of a fox. This was a grievous
disappointment for it was in the Spring days when the hills are ridable and
specially enjoyable. Across the march on Rawbum down in a little valley was a
cosy little young wood. "Will" kept edging towards it and at last gave the word
to his hounds to draw it. Just as they topped the wall he turned round and said
in his broad Doric, "Mr. Clay, where ignorance is bliss 'tis folly to be wise."
He was quite aware only one man beside himself knew the dividing line betwixt
the "Duke's" and the Berwickshire. A fox broke and ran almost in bee-line to
Amisfield near Haddington. The field of course stopped long before reaching that
point but the huntsman had to push on. The whips, who had also got lost among
the hills, gathered up what hounds they could and went back to the kennels. Long
after dark Williamson reached Byrecleuch with part of his pack and put up there
for the night. Next afternoon he met the Wedderlie tenant returning from Church
at Westruther. He had borrowed an old coat and hat from Smith, shepherd at the
above farm, and had strapped his red coat and hunting cap in front of him. He
did not stop to parley but passed on with the remark, "I'm apt to be a-fore the
session noo, Mr. Clay."
Shortly after his marriage,
hunting was practically abandoned. With an increasing family he felt that it was
not prudent to incur the expense or loss of time. This was a piece of
magnificent self-denial, for he was in the vigor of youth and all around the
mimic warfare went joyously on. But he kept to his resolution and did not
commence regularly hunting again till 1868, a year after entering the
Kerchesters lease. From that time forward he hunted about three days a
fortnight. He had a wonderful knack of combining business and hunting, and it
was surprising how many business excuses he could get to be in the neighborhood
where hounds met.
He was never a finished horseman
like George Grey of Milfield, William Smith of Melkington or George Dove, who
still goes hard with the Duke's, but he had a great eye for country, indomitable
pluck, and as a consequence he was always there or thereabouts. He generally had
a galloping horse that invariably was a good fencer. Probably the last horse he
rode was the only one that failed in this respect, and yet he was so good in
other ways that, with the exception of a dislike to timber, he got as much fun
out of him as anything he ever crossed country upon. He hunted till he was 76
years of age and at three score and ten he went very hard. One of the best runs
he ever participated in was about 1875 with the Duke's. We found at the
Blackknowe running west through Frogden strips to Frogden cover, thence by
Mianhouse, through the Shank, diagonally across the Softlaws to Mellendean, in
fact to the spot where the present gorse cover at Softlaw is located. Turning
southeast the fox made across Windy-walls, Kersquarter to Haddon Rig Whin,
through it as if for Lempitlaw, but turned back at the stank on the march
between Kerchesters and the above place. It looks like yesterday, meeting the
hounds coming back to the cover. Shore got his second horse on the Wooler road.
It may be mentioned that from Mellendean the hunting had been very slow although
there had never been an actual check. This game fox, for we had no reason to
think we had changed, now ran by Haddon Wood, across Haddon and Nottylees Farms,
across Sunilaws, near the station of that name he swung north across Wark farm,
went over the ruins of Wark Castle, and thence up the river side to the Carham
policies. Even after this tremendous dusting at a fast pace, more especially
after leaving Haddon Rig, the fox was able to jump a high rabbit-wire fence into
the garden and there he died. George Grey got the brush but in the run he had
been hard pushed by George Dove and John Clay. On the road home, Shore and a lot
of the riders came in to Kerchesters. They attacked a big piece of potted head
and to the surprise of the assembled hunters Shore took a second draw at the
whiskey bottle, and then went on his way exceedingly pleased with himself.
In riding Lammermoor the tenant
of Wedderlie was exceedingly expert. He had grown up with the wire fences and
other changes and noted them mentally. Here the race is not always to the swift.
Kinch, the N. & B. huntsman, tells a good story in illustration. Hounds had
found a fox about Hallyburton and he gave them a dinking run. John Clay was
riding his chestnut horse, the last hunter he owned and a wonderful goer on the
hills. He had been at the tail of the hounds most of the time. The lead hounds
began to veer away. Suddenly Kinch saw the old warrior, as he called him, riding
like a madman directly away from hounds, his hat almost flat on his head and his
coat tails like sails in a gale. The chase went on. They found the chestnut
horse and his rider about half an hour afterwards standing on the top of an
earth, cheering the baying hounds, and he had been there about ten minutes. In
his sixty years of hunting it is impossible to compute the amount of amusement
and good fellowship he received. He never let his passion for the chase overcome
his business duties and family cares, — these came first but fox catching was a
close second.
Aside from the above sports he
had many pastimes. He loved to play quoits, he was more than an average curler,
and after having left off golf for fifty years he took it up again with the
greatest zest, and his figure became well known at North Berwick and other
Scotch courses.
And when the end drew near and he
could only talk of the days gone by nothing could amuse him more than a crack
about the old hunting days. They kept green in his memory.
Among his papers we find the
following letter characteristic of the writer. It will be of interest to the
older set of foxhunters.
St. Boswells, 30 April, 1860.
Mr. Clay,
Dear Sir: I am favored with yours
and have to thank you for your attention and with reference to the fox killing
your Lambs, I hope your Shepherd Man can fall upon some plan of both protecting
the Lambs and also the fox and her young ones from being destroyed. I am not
aware of anything we could now do,—the season being over—and to go to the moors
where so many Ewes and Lambs are, would only be creating confusion amongst them
and very likely doing more harm than good.
The only way I have been able to
satisfy a Shepherd in the like case was to give him something for the extra
trouble it might put him to, and to your man I would willingly do this, provided
he does his best both for your interest and the hunts.
I may mention I have known a pair
of Trousers to the Man, or a gown to his wife, have a good effect and shall be
glad if any or both of these would do for both parties in this.
We have had a most unfavorable
season for our occupation—indeed we have not yet hunted much above two months
out of the six and even then the weather against us.
I hope to hear better accounts of
the fox's behavior. Will be glad to see you here at St. Boswells Fair to
breakfast in the morning and a glass of toddy —after the day is over. And with
my most respectful regards,
I am, Sir, faithfully yours,
W. Williamson.
John Clay, Esq.