Mr. Francis Garden, judicially denominated Lord
Gardenstone, was distinguished as a man of some talent and much
eccentricity. Born in 1721, the second son of a Banffshire gentleman, he
chose the profession of an advocate, and was admitted a member of
Faculty upon the 14th of July, 1744. On the 3rd of July, 1764, he was
raised to the Bench. He is here represented in the latter part of life,
as he usually appeared in proceeding from his house at Morningside (the
one next the Asylum), to attend his duties in the Court. Kay has
endeavoured to represent him as, what he really was, a very timid
horseman, mounted, moreover, on a jaded old hack, which he had selected
for its want of spirit, preceded by his favourite dog Smash, and,
followed by a Highland boy, whose duty it was to take charge of his
Bosinante on arriving at the Parliament House.
In early life, Mr. Garden participated largely in
the laxities of the times. He was one of those ancient heroes of the
bar, who, after a night of hard drinking, without having been to bed,
and without having studied their causes, would plead with great
eloquence npon the mere strength of what they had picked up from the
oratory of the opposite counsel. In 1745, being in arms as a loyal
subject, he was despatched by Sir John Cope, with another gentleman, to
reconnoitre the approach of the Highland army from Dunbar. As the two
volunteers passed the bridge of Musselburgh, they recollected a house in
that neighbourhood where they had often regaled themselves with oysters
and sherry, and the opportunity of repeating the indulgence being too
tempting to be resisted, they thought no more of their military duty
till a straggling Highland recruit entered and took them both prisoners.
John Roy Stuart made a motion to hang them as spies; but their
drunkenness joined so effectually with their protestations in
establishing their innocence, that they were soon after liberated on
parole. In his more mature years, Lord
Gardenstone distinguished himself by a benevolent scheme of a somewhat
unusual kind. Having, in 1762, purchased the estate of Johnstone, in
Kincardineshire, he devoted himself for some years to the task of
improving the condition of those who resided upon it. The village of
Laurencekirk, then consisting of only a few houses, was taken under his
especial patronage. He planned a new line of street, offered leases of
small farms, and of ground for building on extremely advantageous terms,
built a commodious inn for the reception of travellers, founded a
library for the use of the villagers, and established manufactures of
various kinds. By some of his operations he lost largely, but this did
not in the least abate his philanthropy, or for a moment interrupt the
career of his benevolence. The manufacture of a very elegant kind of
snuff-box, the hinges of which are styled "invisible," such as those
made in Cumnock, Ayrshire, is still carried on in the village to a
considerable extent.
His lordship's labours in this good work were
crowned with the success they merited. His village grew rapidly, and
before his death had attained a degree of importance and prosperity that
exceeded his most sanguine expectations. Of the delight which Lord
Gardenstone took in this benevolent project, a singularly pleasing
expression occurs in a letter which he addressed to the inhabitants of
Laurencekirk. "I have tried," he says, "in some measure a variety of the
pleasures which mankind pursue, but never relished anything so much as
the pleasure arising from the progress of my village."
"In his lordship's anxiety to do everything in his
power to invest his favourite village of Laurencekirk with attractions
for strangers, he erected a handsome little building adjoining the inn
as a museum, and filled it with fossils, rare shells, minerals, and
other curiosities. Considering the facility of access, it is not
surprising that these should from time to time disappear; not
unfrequently the unsuspecting proprietor was imposed upon, by having his
curiosities stolen, and sold over again to himself! In this building
there was also kept an album, or commonplace book, in which visitors
were invited to record whatever they thought fit, and, as might be
expected, many of the entries were not of the choicest description. The
apartment was likewise adorned by portraits of a number of the favourite
original inhabitants of the village. The inn itself was kept by a
favourite servant of his lordship's, who rejoiced in the refreshing
patronymic of " Cream," a kind-hearted aud worthy man.
In the year 17S5, his lordship succeeded, by the
death of his elder brother, Alexander Garden of Troup, to the possession
of the family estates, which were considerable. His acquisition of this
additional wealth, was marked by another circumstance, which strikingly
evinces the natural generosity of his disposition. He remitted to the
tenants all the debts due to him as heir to his brother.
On his accession to the family property, his
lordship set out on a lour to the Continent, where he remained three
years, traversing iu this time great part of France, the Netherlands,
Germany, and Italy. The results of his observations during this tour
(which was made in part with the view of gratifying curiosity, but
chiefly with that of improving his health, which was much impaired), he
gave to the world in two volumes, entitled, " Travelling Memorandums
made in a Tour upon the Continent of Europe in the year 1792." A third
volume of this work was published after his death. About the same time
he published "Miscellanies in Prose and Verse," a collection of light
fugitive pieces, partly of his own composition, and partly of others,
the boon companions of his youth. The best of these, however, are
attributed to Lord Gardenstone himself.
Among the eccentricities of Lord Gardenstone, was an attachment to the
generation of pigs. He had reared one of these animals with so much
affectionate care, that it followed him wherever he went like a dog.
"While it was little, he allowed it even to share his bed during the
night. As it grew up, however, which no doubt it would do rapidly under
such patronage, this was found inconvenient; and it was discarded from
the bed, but permitted still to sleep in the apartment, where his
lordship accommodated it with a couch composed of his own clothes, which
he said kept it in a state of comfortable warmth.
His lordship consumed immense quantities of snuff;
requiring such a copious supply, that he carried it in a leathern
waistcoat-pocket made for the purpose, and used to say that if he had a
dozen noses he would give them all snuff. His use of this article was so
liberal, that every fold in his waistcoat was filled with it; and it is
said that from these repositories the villagers, when conversing with
him, frequently helped themselves, without his knowledge, to a pinch.
In his dress his lordship was exceedingly plain, a
circumstance which gave rise to an incident highly characteristic of
him, which occurred at one time when he was returning from London.
Observing some young bucks taking inside tickets
for the coach in which he was about to travel, he took his for the
outside. On arriving at the end of the stage, where the passengers were
to breakfast, his lordship, who had been shown into an inferior room,
while his better-dressed fellow-travellers were conducted to the best,
called the waiter, and desired him to carry his compliments to the young
gentlemen, on whose philanthropy it was his object to make an
experiment, and to request that they would permit him to have the honour
of breakfasting with them. To this message precisely such an answer was
returned as his lordship expected. It was that the gentlemen above
stairs kept no company with outside passengers. Lord Garden stone made
no reply, but desired the waiter to bring him a magnum bonum of claret,
and to send the landlord to share it with him, concluding with an order
to get a post-chaise and four ready for him immediately. These commands,
which very much amazed both mine host and his man, having been in dne
time complied with, his lordship paid his bill and departed, giving
orders previously to his coachman so to manage as to arrive at the stage
where his former fellow-travellers would dine, precisely at the same
time with them, that they might witness the respect which should be paid
to him by the landlord, to whom he was known. All this the young bucks
accordingly saw, and having set on foot some inquiries on the subject,
they soon discovered their mistake. With the view of atoning for their
incivility, they now sent a polite card to Lord Gardenstone, begging his
pardon for what had happened in the morning, which they attributed to
their ignorance of his quality, and requesting it, as a particular
favour, that he would honour them with his company to dinner. To this
polite card his lordship returned a verbal answer, that "he kept no
company with people whose pride would not permit them to use their
fellow travellers with civility."
The
latter years of this amiable man's life were spent in the discharge of
the duties of his office of a judge ; and the very last act of his
public beneficence was the erection of the ornamental building that
encloses St. Bernard's Well, in the neighbourhood of Edinburgh.
His lordship died at Morningside, near Edinburgh,
on the 22nd of July, 1793, in the 72nd year of his age. |