Shenstone’s Verses. — The singular Unhappiness of his
Paradise. — English Cider. — Scotch and English Dwellings contrasted. — The
Nailers of Hales Owen; their Politics a Century ago. — Competition of the
Scotch Nailers; unsuccessful, and why. — Samuel Salt, the Hales Owen Poet. —
Village Church. — Salt Works at Droitwich; their great Antiquity. —
Appearance of the Village. — Problem furnished by the Salt Deposits of
England ; various Theories. — Rock Salt deemed by some a Volcanic Product;
by others the Deposition of an overcharged Sea; by yet others the Produce of
vast Lagoons. — Leland. — The Manufacture of Salt from Sea-water superseded,
even in Scotland, by the Rock Salt of England.
It was now near sunset, and high time that I should be
leaving the Leasowes, to “take mine ease in mine inn.” By the way, one of
the most finished among Shenstone’s lesser pieces is a paraphrase on the
apophthegm of old Sir John. We find Dr. Samuel Johnson, as exhibited in the
chronicle of Boswell, conning it over with meikle glee in an inn at
Chapel-house; and it was certainly no easy matter to write verse that
satisfied the doctor.
“To thee, fair Freedom! I retire,
From flattery, cards, and dice, and din;
Nor art thou found in mansions higher
Than the low cot or humble inn.
“’T is here with boundless power I reign;
And every health which I begin
Converts dull port to bright champagne;
Such freedom crowns it at an inn.
“I fly from pomp, I fly from plate,
I fly from falsehood’s specious grin ;
Freedom I love, and form I hate,
And choose my lodgings at an inn.
“Here, waiter, take my sordid ore,
Which lacqueys else might hope to win;
It buys what courts have not in store, —
It buys me freedom at an inn.
“Whoe’er has travelled life’s dull round,
Where’er his stages may have been,
May sigh to think he still has found
The warmest welcome at an inn.”
Ere, however, quitting the grounds to buy freedom at the
“Plume of Feathers,” I could not avoid indulging in a natural enough
reflection on the unhappiness of poor Shenstone. Never, as we may see from
his letters, was there a man who enjoyed life less. He was not vicious; he
had no overpowering passion to contend with; he could have had his Phillis,
had he chosen to take her; his fortune, nearly three hundred a-year, should
have been quite ample enough, in the reign of George the Second, to enable a
single man to live, and even, with economy, to furnish a considerable
surplus for making gimcracks in the Leasowes; he had many amusements, — he
drew tastefully, had a turn, he tells us, for natural history, wrote elegant
verse and very respectable prose ; the noble and the gifted of the land
honored him with their notice; above all, he lived in a paradise, the
beauties of which no man could better appreciate; and his most serious
employment, like that of our common ancestor in his unfallen state, was “ to
dress and to keep it.” And yet, even before he had involved his affairs, and
the dun came to the door, he was an unhappy man. “ I have lost my road to
happiness,” we find him saying ere he had completed his thirty-fourth year.
Nay, we even find him quite aware of the turning at which he had gone wrong.
“ Instead,” he adds, “ of pursuing the way to the fine lawns and venerable
oaks which distinguish the region of happiness, I am got into the pitiful
parterre-garden of amusement, and view the nobler scenes at a distance. I
think I can see the road, too, that leads the better way, and can show it to
others; but I have got many miles to measure back before I can get into it
myself, and no kind of resolution to take a single step. My chief amusements
at present are the same they have long been, and lie scattered about my
farm. The French have what they call a parque ornee, — I suppose,
approaching about as near to a garden as the park at Hagley. I give my place
the title of a ferme ornee” Still more significant is the frightful
confession embodied in the following passage, written at a still earlier
period: — “ Every little uneasiness is sufficient to introduce a whole train
of melancholy considerations, and to make me utterly dissatisfied with the
life I now lead, and the life which I foresee 1 shall lead. I am angry, and
envious, and dejected, and frantic, and disregard all present things, just
as becomes a madman to do. I am infinitely pleased, though it is a gloomy
joy, with the application of Dr. Swift’s complaint, ‘ that he is forced to
die in a rage, like a poisoned rat in a hole.’ ”Amusement becomes, I am
afraid, not very amusing when rendered the exclusive business of one’s life.
All that seems necessary in order to render fallen Adams thoroughly
miserable, is just to place them in paradises, and, debarring them serious
occupation, to give them full permission to make themselves as happy as they
can. It was more in mercy than in wrath that the first father of the race,
after his nature had become contaminated by the fall, was driven out of
Eden. Well would it have been for poor Shenstone had the angel of stem
necessity driven him also, early in the day, out of his paradise, and sent
him into the work-day world beyond, to eat bread in the sweat of his brow. I
quitted the Leasowes in no degree saddened by the consideration that I had
been a hard-working man all my life, from boyhood till now; and that the
future, in this respect, held out to me no brighter prospect than I had
realized in the past.
When passing through York, I had picked up at a stall a good
old copy of the poems of Philips, — John, not Ambrose; and in railway
carriages and on coach-tops I had revived my acquaintance, broken off for
twenty years, with “Cider, a Poem,” “Blenheim,” and the “Splendid Shilling;”
and now, in due improvement of the lessons of so judicious a master, I
resolved, when taking my ease in the “Plume of Feathers,” that, for one
evening at least, I should drink only cider.
“Fallacious drink! ye honest men, beware,
Nor trust its smoothness; the third circling glass
Suffices virtue.”
The cider of the “Plume” was, however, scarce so potent as
that sung by Philips. I took the third permitted glass, after a dinner
transposed far into the evening by the explorations of the day, without
experiencing a very great deal of the exhilarating feeling described, —
“Or lightened heart,
Dilate with fervent joy, or eager soul,
Keen to pursue the sparkling glass amain.”
Nor was the temptation urgent to make up in quantity what was
wanting in strength: “the third circling glass sufficed virtue.” Here, as at
the inns in which I had baited, both at Durham and York, I was struck by the
contrast which many of the older English dwelling-houses furnish to our
Scotch ones of the same age. In Scotland the walls are of solid stone-work,
thick and massy, with broad-headed, champer-edged rybats, and ponderous
soles and lintels, selvaging the opening; whereas the wood-work of the
interior is almost always slight and fragile, formed of spongy deal or
moth-hollowed fir rafters. After the lapse of little more than a century,
there are few of our Scotch floors on which it is particularly safe to
tread. In the older English dwellings we generally find a reverse condition
of things: the outsides, constructed of slim brick-work, have a toy-like
fragility about them: whereas inside we find strong oaken beams, and
long-enduring floors and stairs of glossy wainscot. We of course at once
recognize the great scarcity of good building-stone in the one country, and
of well-grown forest-wood in the other, as the original and adequate cause
of the peculiarity. Their dwelling-houses seem to have had different
starting points ; those of the one being true lineal descendants of the old
Piet’s house, complete from foundation to summit without wood, — those of
the other, lineal descendants of the old forest-dwellings of the Saxon,
formed ship-like in their unwieldy oaken strength, without stone. Wood to
the one class was a mere subordinate accident, of late introduction, — stone
to the other; and were I sent to seek out the half-way representatives of
each, I would find those of England in its ancient beam-formed houses of the
days of Elizabeth, in which only angular interstices in the walls are
occupied by brick, and those of Scotland in its time-shattered fortalices of
the type of the old castle of Craig-house, in Ross-shire, where floor rises
above floor in solid masonry, or of the type of Borthwick-castle, near
Edinburgh, stone from foundation to ridge.
I spent some time next morning in sauntering among the cross
lanes of Hales Owen, now and then casting vague guesses, from the appearance
of the humbler houses, — for what else lies within reach of the passing
traveller?—regarding the character and condition of the inmates; and now and
then looking in through open windows and doors at the nailers, male and
female, engaged amid their intermittent hammerings and fitful showers of
sparks. As might be anticipated of a profession fixed very much down to the
corner of a country, and so domestic in its nature, nail-making is
hereditary in the families that pursue it. The nailers of Hales Owen in the
present day are the descendants of the nailers who, as Shenstone tells us,
were so intelligent in the cause of Hanover during the outburst of 1745.
“The rebellion,” he says, in writing a friend just two months after the
battle of Prestonpans, “is, as you may guess, the subject of all
conversation. Every individual nailer here takes in a newspaper, and talks
as familiarly of kings and princes as ever Master Shallow did of John of
Gaunt.” Scarcely a century had gone by, and I now found, from snatches of
conversation caught in the passing, that the nailers of Hales Owen were
interested in the five points of the Charter and the success of the League,
and thought much more of what they deemed their own rights, than of the
rights of either monarchs de facto or monarchs de jure. There was a
nail-manufactory established about seventy years ago at Cromarty, in the
north of Scotland, which reared not a few Scotch nailers; but they seamed to
compete on unequal terms with those of England; and after a protracted
struggle of rather more than half a century, the weaker went to the wall,
and the Cromarty nail-works ceased. There is now only a single nail-forge in
the town; and this last of the forges is used for other purposes than the
originally intended one. I found in Hales Owen the true key to the failure
of the Cromarty manufactory, and saw how it had come to be undersold in its
own northern field by the nail-merchants of Birmingham. The Cromarty nailer
wrought alone, or, if a family man, assisted but by his sons; whereas the
Hales Owen nailer had, with the assistance of his sons, that of his wife,
daughters, and maiden sisters to boot; and so he bore down the Scotchman in
the contest, through the aid lent him by his female auxiliaries, in the way
his blue-painted ancestors, backed by not only all the fighting men, but
also all the fighting women of the district, used to bear down the enemy.
In passing a small bookseller’s shop, in which I had marked
on the counter an array of second-hand books, I dropped in to see whether I
might not procure a cheap edition of Shenstone, with Dodsley’s description,
and found a tidy little woman behind the counter, who would fain, if she
could, have suited me to my mind. But she had no copy of Shenstone, nor had
she ever heard of Shenstone. She well knew Samuel Salt, the Hales Owen
tee-total poet, and could sell me a copy of his works; but of the elder poet
of Hales Owen she knew nothing. I bought from her two of Samuel’s
broadsheets, — the one a wrathful satire on the community of Odd-Fellows;
the other, “A Poem on Drunkenness.”
“O, how silly is the drinker!
Swallowing what lie does not need;
In the eyes of every thinker
He must he a fool indeed.
How he hurts his constitution!
All for want of resolution
Not to yield to drink at first!"
Such is the verse known within a mile of the Leasowes, while
that of their poet is forgotten. Alas for fame! Poor Shenstone could scarce
have anticipated that the thin Castalia of tee-totalism was to break upon
his writings, like a mill-dam during a thunder-storm, to cover up all their
elegances from the sight where they should be best known, and present
instead but a turbid expanse of water.
I got access to the parish church, a fine old pile of red
sandstone, which dates, in some of its more ancient portions, beyond the
Norman conquest. One gorgeous marble, sentineled by figures of Benevolence,
Fidelity, and Major Halliday, all very classic and fine, and which cost, as
my guide informed me, a thousand pounds, failed greatly to excite my
interest: I at least found that a simple pedestal in front of it, surmounted
by a plain urn, impressed me more. The pedestal bears a rather lengthy
inscription, in the earlier half of which there is a good deal of verbiage ;
but in the concluding half the writer seems to have said nearly what he
intended to say
“Reader, if genius, taste refined,
A native elegance of mind, —
If virtue, science, manly sense,
If wit that never gave offence,
The clearest head, the tenderest heart,
In thy esteem e’er claimed a part, —
O ! smite thy breast, and drop a tear,
For know, thy Shenstone’s dust lies here.”
The Leasowes engaged me for the remainder of the day; and I
again walked over them a few weeks later in the season, when the leaf hung
yellow on the tree, and the films of gray silky gossamer went sailing along
the opener glades in the clear frosty air. But I have already recorded my
impressions of the place, independently of date, as if all formed at one
visit. I must now take a similar liberty with the chronology of my wendings
in another direction; and, instead of passing direct to the Clent Hills in
my narrative, as I did in my tour, describe, first, a posterior visit paid
to the brine-springs at Droitwich. I shall by and by attempt imparting to
the reader, from some commanding summit of the Clent range, a few general
views regarding the geology of the landscape; and by first bearing me
company on my visit to Droitwich, he will be the better able to keep pace
with me in my after survey.
The prevailing geological system in this part of England is
the New Red Sandstone, Upper and Lower. It stretches for many miles around
the Dudley coal-basin, much in the way that the shires of Stirling and
Dumbarton stretch around the waters of Loch Lomond, or the moors of
Sutherland or the hills of Inverness-shire encircle the waters of Loch Shin
or Loch Ness. In the immediate neighborhood of the basin we find only the
formations of the lower division of the system, and these are of
comparatively little economic value: they contain, however, a calcareous
conglomerate, which represents the magnesian limestone of the northern
counties, and which in a very few localities is pure enough to be wrought
for its lime : they contain, too, several quarries of the kind of soft
building sandstone which I found the old stone-mason engaged in sawing at
Hagley. But while the lower division of the New Red is thus unimportant, its
upper division is, we find, not greatly inferior in economic value to the
Coal Measures themselves. It forms the inexhaustible storehouse of our
household salt, — all that we employ in our fisheries, in our meat-curing
establishments for the army and navy, in our agriculture, in our soda
manufactories, — all that fuses our glass and fertilizes our fields, imparts
the detergent quality to our soap, and gives us salt herrings and salt pork,
and everything else salt that is the better for being so, down to our dinner
celery and our breakfast eggs; it forms, in short, to use a Scoticism, the
great salt-baoket of the empire; and the hand, however frequently thrust
into it, never finds an empty comer. By pursuing southwards, for seven or
eight miles, the road which, passing through Hales Owen, forms the principal
street of the village, we rise from the lower incoherent marls, soft
sandstones, and calcareous conglomerates of the system, to the equally
incoherent marls, and nearly equally soft sandstones, of its upper division;
and, some five or six miles further on, reach the town of Droitwich, long
famous for its salt springs. There were salt-works at Droitwich in the times
of the Romans, and ever since the times of the Romans. In the age of the
Heptarchy, Kenulph, King of Mercia, after cutting off the hands and putting
out the eyes of his brother-king, Egbert of Kent, squared his accounts with
Heaven by giving ten salt-furnaces in Droitwich to the church of Worcester.
Poor Edwy of England, nearly two centuries after, strove, though less
successfully, to purchase the Church’s sanction to his union with his second
cousin, the beautiful Elgiva, by giving it five salt-furnaces more. In all
probability, the salt that seasoned King Alfred’s porridge, when he lived
with the neat-herd, was supplied by the works at Droitwich. And still the
brine comes welling up, copious as ever. I saw one powerful spring boiling
amid the twilight gloom of its deep pot, like a witch’s cauldron in a
cavern, that employs a steam-engine night and day to pump it to the surface,
and furnishes a thousand tons of salt weekly. In 1779, says Nashe, in his
History of Worcestershire, the net salt duties of the empire amounted to
about two hundred and forty thousand pounds, and of that sum not less than
seventy-five thousand pounds were derived from the salt-works at Droitwich.
The town lies low. There had been much rain for several days
previous to that of my visit, — the surrounding fields had the dank
blackened look so unlovely in autumn to the eye of the farmer, and the roads
and streets were dark with mud. Most of the houses wore the dingy tints of a
remote and somewhat neglected antiquity. Droitwich was altogether, as I saw
it, a sombre-looking place, with its gray old church looking down upon it
from a scraggy wood-covered hill; and what struck me as peculiarly
picturesque was, that from this dark centre there should be passing
continually outwards, by road or canal, wagons, carts, track-boats, barges,
all laden with pure white salt, that looked in the piled-up heaps like
wreaths of drifted snow. There could not be two things more unlike than the
great staple of the town, and the town itself. There hung, too, over the
blackened roofs, a white volume of vapor, — the steam of the numerous
salt-pans, driven off in the course of evaporation by the heat, — which also
strikingly contrasted with the general blackness. The place has its two
extensive salt-works, — the old and the new. To the new I was denied access;
but it mattered little, as I got ready admittance to the old. The man who
superintended the pumping engine, though he knew me merely as a curious
traveller somewhat mud-bespattered, stopped the machine for a few seconds,
that I might see undisturbed the brine boiling up from its secret depths;
and I was freely permitted to take the round of the premises, and to examine
the numerous vats in their various stages of evaporation. It is pleasant to
throw one’s self, unknown and unrecommended, on the humanity of one’s
fellows, and to receive kindness simply as a man!
As I saw the vats seething over the furnaces, some of them
more than already half-filled with the precipitated salt, and bearing atop a
stratum of yellowish-colored fluid, the grand problem furnished by the
saline deposits of this formation rose before me in all its difficulty.
Geology propounds many a hard question to its students, — questions quite
hard and difficult enough to keep down their conceit, unless, indeed, very
largely developed; and few of these seem more inexplicable than the problem
furnished by the salt deposits. Here, now, are these briny springs welling
out of this Upper New Red Sandstone of central England, — springs whose
waters were employed in making salt two thousand years ago, and which still
throw up that mineral at the rate of a thousand tons apiece weekly, without
sign of diminution in either their volume or their degree of saturation ! At
Stoke Prior, about three miles to the east of Droitwich, a shaft of four
hundred and sixty-feet has been sunk in the Upper New Red, and four beds of
rock-salt passed through, the united thickness of which amount to
eighty-five feet. Nor does this comprise the entire thickness, as the lower
bed, though penetrated to the depth of thirty feet, has not been perforated.
In the salt-mines of Cheshire, the beds are of still greater thickness, — an
upper bed measuring in depth seventy-eight feet, and an under bed, to which
no bottom has yet been found, a hundred and twenty feet. And in Poland and
Spain there occur salt deposits on a larger scale still. The saliferous
district of Cordova, for instance, has its solid hills of rock-salt, which
nearly equal in height and bulk Arthur’s Seat taken from the level of
Holyrood House. How, I inquired, beside the flat steaming cauldrons, as I
marked the white crystals arranging their facets at the bottom, — how were
these mighty deposits formed in the grand laboratory of Nature? Formed they
must have been, in this part of the world, in an era long posterior to that
of the Coal; and in Spain, where they belong to the cretaceous group, in an
era long posterior to that of the Oolite. They are more immediately
underlaid in England by a sandstone constituting the base of the Upper New
Red, which is largely charged with vegetable remains of a peculiar and
well-marked character; and the equally well-marked flora of the
carboniferous period lies entombed many hundred feet below. All the
rock-salt in the kingdom must have been formed since the more recent
vegetation of the Red Sandstone lived and died, and was entombed amid the
smooth sands of some deep-sea bottom.
But how formed? Several antagonist theories have been
promulgated in attempted resolution of the puzzle. By some the salt has been
regarded as a volcanic product ejected from beneath; by some, as the
precipitate of a deep ocean overcharged with saline matter; by some, as a
deposit of salt-water lakes cut off from the main sea, like the salt lagoons
of the tropics, by surf-raised spits or bars, and then dried up by the heat
of the sun. It seems fatal to the first theory, that the eras of Plutonic
disturbance in this part of the kingdom are of a date anterior to the era of
the Saliferous Sandstone. The Clent Hills belong to the latest period of
trappean eruption traceable in the midland counties; and they were
unquestionably thrown up, says Murchison, shortly after the close of the
Carboniferous era, — many ages ere the Saliferous era began. Besides, what
evidence have we derived from volcanoes, either recent or extinct, that
rock-salt, in deposits so enormously huge, is a volcanic product? Volcanoes
in the neighborhood of the sea — and there are but few very active ones that
have not the sea for their neighbor — deposit not unfrequently a crust of
salt on the rocks and lavas that surround their craters; but we never hear
of their throwing down vast saliferous beds, continuous for great distances,
like those of the New Red Sandstone of England. And further, even were salt
in such huge quantity an unequivocally volcanic production, how account for
its position and arrangement here ? How account for the occurrence of a
volcanic product, spreading away in level beds and layers for nearly two
hundred miles, in one of the least disturbed of the English formations, and
forming no inconsiderable portion of its strata ? As for the second theory,
it seems exceedingly difficult to conceive how, in an open sea, subject, of
course, like all open seas, to such equalizing influences as the ruffling of
the winds and the deeper stirrings of the tides, any one tract of water
should become so largely saturated as to throw down portions of its salt,
when the surrounding tracts, less strongly impregnated, retained theirs. I
have seen a fish-curer’s vat throwing down its salt when surcharged with the
mineral, but never any one stronger patch of the brine doing so ere the
general mixture around it had attained to the necessary degree of
saturation. And the lagoon theory, though apparently more tenable than any
of the others, seems scarce less enveloped in difficulty. The few inches, at
most few feet, of salt which line the bottoms and sides of the lagoons of
the tropics, are but poor representatives of deposits of salt like those of
the Upper Old Red of Cheshire ; and Geology, as has been already indicated,
has its deposits huger still. Were one of the vast craters of the moon—Tycho
or Copernicus — to be filled with sea-water to the brim, and the fires of
twenty JEfnas to be lighted up under it, we could scarce expect as the
result a greater salt-making than that of Cordova or Cracow. A bed of salt a
hundred feet in thickness would demand for its salt-pan a lagoon many
hundred feet in depth; and lagoons many hundred feet in depth, in at least
the present state of things, are never evaporated.
The salt-works at Droitwich were visited, in the reign of
Henry the Eighth, by Leland the antiquary. He “asked a salter,” he tells us,
“how many furnaces they had in all; and the salter numbered them to an
eighteen score, saying, that every one paid yearly to the king six shillings
and eightpence.” “Making salt,” the antiquary adds, “is a notable
destruction of wood, — six thousand loads of the young pole-wood, easily
cloven, being used twelvemonthly; and the lack of wood is now perceivable in
all places near the Wyche, on as far as Worcester.” The Dudley coal-field
seems to have been broached just in time to preserve to the midland
districts their iron and salt trade. The complaint that the old forests were
well-nigh gone was becoming general, when, in 1662, a Dudley miner took out
a patent for smelting his ironstone with coke instead of charcoal; and the
iron trade of England has been the largest of which, there called Grusnoe
Azore, is probably the same that is distinguished in our maps by the name of
the new salt lake, and is five miles long, and two-thirds of a mile wide.
These lakes have the property, in common with others of the same kind, that
during the hottest season of the year, which, in these parts, is from May to
the end of August, the surface of the water becomes covered with a crust of
salt nearly an inch thick, which is collected with shovels into boats, and
piled away. This is managed by private individuals, who rent the privilege
from the government of the Don, on condition of paying a tenth of the
produce. On this occasion I was much interested in being able to prove to my
own satisfaction, that in such lakes it is nothing more than the rapid
evaporation from the heat of the sun, and the consequent supersaturation of
the water with salt, that effects the crystallization of the latter ; for
these lakes are so shallow that the little boats in which the salt is
gathered are generally trailing on the bottom, and leave a long furrow
behind them on it; so that the lake is consequently to be regarded as a wide
pan of enormous superficial extent, in which the brine can easily reach the
degree of concentration required; while, on the other hand, if the summer
prove cold or rainy, the superfluous water must necessarily militate against
the crystallization of the salt, or even prevent it altogether.”
On the increase ever since. And only a few years later, the
salters of Droitwich became equally independent of the nearly exhausted
forests, by lighting up their “ eighteen score furnaces ” with coal. The
railways and canals of the country have since spread the rock-salt of the
New Red Sandstone over the empire; and it is a curious fact, that some of
our old established Scotch saltworks — works so old that they were in
existence for centuries before the Scotch salter had ceased to be. a slave —
are now engaged in crystallizing, not sea-water, as formerly, but rock-salt,
from the midland counties of England. I picked up, about a twelvemonth ago,
on a cart-road in the neighborhood of Prestonpans, a fragment of rock-salt,
and then, a few yards nearer the town, a second fragment; and curious to
know where the mineral could have come from, in a district that has none of
its own, I went direct to one of the more ancient salt-works of the place to
inquire. But the large reservoir of salt water attached to the works for
supplying the boilers, and which communicates by a pipe with the profounder
depths of the sea bey ond, of itself revealed the secret. There, against one
of the corners, lay a red, half-molten pile of the rock-salt of Cheshire;
while the enveloping sea-water — of old the only source of the salt
manufactured in the village — constituted but a mere auxiliary source of
supply, and a solvent, |