When he left Kerchesters in 1896
he moved to Edinburgh and bought 8 Magdala Crescent. The house has a beautiful
outlook towards the Pentland Hills;on the southwest is Donaldson's Hospital and
the Hills beyond Murrayfield. The deaf and dumb children were a constant source
of pleasure and amusement, and many an hour the household watched them from the
drawing-room windows. It would be natural to think that a man moving from the
country where he had led a wonderfully active life would be unhappy in town, but
he expressed no regret. In a humorous way he would say the only mistake in the
move was the mixing of the port and he never knew whether he was giving you
1863, 1881 or 1887. Unfortunately the dates had not been sealed on the corks. In
fact in his seventy-second year he found Kerchesters too strenuous for him. The
labor of the farm had changed for the worse. It was a wide-lying place and the
difficulties grew yearly, and as he said himself, his temper did not wax more
mellow with age. And so he left after fifty-seven years of his father's and his
own tenancy. Two men were at the sale in 1839 — himself and Mr. Robert Oliver of
Lochside, who is still living (January, 1906). He still had Plenderleith and
Wedderlie. Plenderleith was vacated in 1898 and he farmed Wedderlie till his
death. His attachment to Wedderlie was pathetic and he went there for the
summers or part of them as long as he was able. He kept up a vigorous town life.
He took to golf and went everywhere. He was a member of Barn-ton and Murrayfield.
He visited Musselburgh and North Berwick. He made trips to Ireland. Nowhere did
he enjoy a day more than at Goswick, where he met his old Berwick friends. He
kept his old hunter at Wedderlie and had many a glorious ride across the hills;
in fact his first serious illness — an attack of pleurisy — was brought on by
his traveling from Gordon Station to Edinburgh after an exciting hunt on a wet
day without changing his clothes. He joined the Waverley Curling Club and was an
ardent player. He took a sitting in St. George's Free Church and was elected to
an eldership shortly afterwards.
As stated in a former chapter, he
took a long trip to the United States in 1897. There he got a fine reception,
the railroads extending courtesies to him at every turn. In fact he had a sort
of triumphal march through the West. He was called back somewhat suddenly by the
illness of his daughter, Mrs. Muirhead. She died a year afterwards and his
sorrow for her lasted to the end.
In June, 1902, he was taken ill
with stone in the kidney. The agony was intense. Finally through the efforts of
his physician, Dr. Gulland, it was alleviated, but it left him stranded and he
practically kept to his bed and the sofa ever afterwards. In the spring of 1903
he made a trip to Pawston in North Northumberland. His enjoyment was intense. He
went back from there never to leave his home again. The grand constitution,
helped by Gulland and Nurse Williamson, whose devotion was untiring, kept the
ship afloat till September 3rd, 1904, and then it sank into the realms of
oblivion.
Aside from his business his
leading characteristic in Edinburgh was his extreme hospitality. Nothing pleased
him better than to have his old friends come and see him. James Hope, East
Barns, and William Kirkwood, Musselburgh, his old school companions, were the
prize visitors. Then came his nephew James Stedman, Middle-town, Fountainhall,
whose knowledge of passing events was simply marvellous. The most regular caller
was his old friend James Swan, of John Swan & Sons, who when he was in town
called every Sunday afternoon at 2x55, almost to the moment. He and his father
had dealt with the Swans for over sixty years, a splendid record for both sides,
and the last verse in the chapter was written by James Swan at the Wedderlie
sale and valuation.
His last instructions were to
take his remains and the mourners out to Sprouston by a special train, and he
lies in the old Churchyard amid scenes which he loved so well.