Liddell till now, except
in Doric lays,
Tuned to her murmurs
by her love-sick swains,
Unknown in song, though
not a purer stream
Rolls towards the western
main
Art
of Preserving Health.
The present store-farmers of the south
of Scotland are a much more refined race than their
fathers, and the manners I am now to describe have
either altogether disappeared or are greatly modified.
Without losing the rural simplicity of manners, they
now cultivate arts unknown to the former generation,
not only in the progressive improvement of their possessions
but in all the comforts of life. Their houses
are more commodious, their habits of life regulated
so as better to keep pace with those of the civilised
world, and the best of luxuries, the luxury of knowledge,
has gained much ground among their hills during the
last thirty years. Deep drinking, formerly their
greatest failing, is now fast losing ground; and,
while the frankness of their extensive hospitality
continues the same, it is, generally speaking, refined
in its character and restrained in its excesses.
‘Deil’s in the wife,’
said Dandie Dinmont, shaking off his spouse’s
embrace, but gently and with a look of great affection;
’deil’s in ye, Ailie; d’ye no see
the stranger gentleman?’
Ailie turned to make her apology ’Troth,
I was sae weel pleased to see the gudeman, that but,
gude gracious! what’s the matter wi’ ye
baith?’ for they were now in her little parlour,
and the candle showed the streaks of blood which Dinmont’s
wounded head had plentifully imparted to the clothes
of his companion as well as to his own. ’Ye’ve
been fighting again, Dandie, wi’ some o’
the Bewcastle horse-coupers! Wow, man, a married
man, wi’ a bonny family like yours, should ken
better what a father’s life’s worth in
the warld’; the tears stood in the good woman’s
eyes as she spoke.
‘Whisht! whisht! gudewife,’
said her husband, with a smack that had much more
affection than ceremony in it; ’never mind, never
mind; there’s a gentleman that will tell you
that, just when I had ga’en up to Lourie Lowther’s,
and had bidden the drinking of twa cheerers, and gotten
just in again upon the moss, and was whigging cannily
awa hame, twa landloupers jumpit out of a peat-hag
on me or I was thinking, and got me down, and knevelled
me sair aneuch, or I could gar my whip walk about
their lugs; and troth, gudewife, if this honest gentleman
hadna come up, I would have gotten mair licks than
I like, and lost mair siller than I could weel spare;
so ye maun be thankful to him for it, under God.’
With that he drew from his side-pocket a large greasy
leather pocket-book, and bade the gudewife lock it
up in her kist.
‘God bless the gentleman, and
e’en God bless him wi’ a’ my heart;
but what can we do for him, but to gie him the meat
and quarters we wadna refuse to the poorest body on
earth unless (her eye directed to the pocketbook,
but with a feeling of natural propriety which made
the inference the most delicate possible), unless
there was ony other way ’ Brown saw,
and estimated at its due rate, the mixture of simplicity
and grateful generosity which took the downright way
of expressing itself, yet qualified with so much delicacy;
he was aware his own appearance, plain at best, and
now torn and spattered with blood, made him an object
of pity at least, and perhaps of charity. He hastened
to say his name was Brown, a captain in the regiment
of cavalry, travelling for pleasure, and on foot,
both from motives of independence and economy; and
he begged his kind landlady would look at her husband’s
wounds, the state of which he had refused to permit
him to examine. Mrs. Dinmont was used to her
husband’s broken heads more than to the presence
of a captain of dragoons. She therefore glanced
at a table-cloth not quite clean, and conned over
her proposed supper a minute or two, before, patting
her husband on the shoulder, she bade him sit down
for ’a hard-headed loon, that was aye bringing
himsell and other folk into collie-shangies.’
When Dandie Dinmont, after executing
two or three caprioles, and cutting the Highland fling,
by way of ridicule of his wife’s anxiety, at
last deigned to sit down and commit his round, black,
shaggy bullet of a head to her inspection, Brown thought
he had seen the regimental surgeon look grave upon
a more trifling case. The gudewife, however, showed
some knowledge of chirurgery; she cut away with her
scissors the gory locks whose stiffened and coagulated
clusters interfered with her operations, and clapped
on the wound some lint besmeared with a vulnerary salve,
esteemed sovereign by the whole dale (which afforded
upon fair nights considerable experience of such cases);
she then fixed her plaster with a bandage, and, spite
of her patient’s resistance, pulled over all
a night-cap, to keep everything in its right place.
Some contusions on the brow and shoulders she fomented
with brandy, which the patient did not permit till
the medicine had paid a heavy toll to his mouth.
Mrs. Dinmont then simply, but kindly, offered her
assistance to Brown.
He assured her he had no occasion
for anything but the accommodation of a basin and
towel.
‘And that’s what I should
have thought of sooner,’ she said; ’and
I did think o’t, but I durst na open
the door, for there’s a’ the bairns, poor
things, sae keen to see their father.’
This explained a great drumming and
whining at the door of the little parlour, which had
somewhat surprised Brown, though his kind landlady
had only noticed it by fastening the bolt as soon
as she heard it begin. But on her opening the
door to seek the basin and towel (for she never thought
of showing the guest to a separate room), a whole tide
of white-headed urchins streamed in, some from the
stable, where they had been seeing Dumple, and giving
him a welcome home with part of their four-hours scones;
others from the kitchen, where they had been listening
to old Elspeth’s tales and ballads; and the youngest,
half-naked, out of bed, all roaring to see daddy,
and to inquire what he had brought home for them from
the various fairs he had visited in his peregrinations.
Our knight of the broken head first kissed and hugged
them all round, then distributed whistles, penny-trumpets,
and gingerbread, and, lastly, when the tumult of their
joy and welcome got beyond bearing, exclaimed to his
guest ’This is a’ the gude-wife’s
fault, Captain; she will gie the bairns a’ their
ain way.’
‘Me! Lord help me,’
said Ailie, who at that instant entered with the basin
and ewer, ’how can I help it? I have naething
else to gie them, poor things!’
Dinmont then exerted himself, and,
between coaxing, threats, and shoving, cleared the
room of all the intruders excepting a boy and girl,
the two eldest of the family, who could, as he observed,
behave themselves ‘distinctly.’ For
the same reason, but with less ceremony, all the dogs
were kicked out excepting the venerable patriarchs,
old Pepper and Mustard, whom frequent castigation
and the advance of years had inspired with such a
share of passive hospitality that, after mutual explanation
and remonstrance in the shape of some growling, they
admitted Wasp, who had hitherto judged it safe to
keep beneath his master’s chair, to a share
of a dried-wedder’s skin, which, with the wool
uppermost and unshorn, served all the purposes of
a Bristol hearth-rug.
The active bustle of the mistress
(so she was called in the kitchen, and the gudewife
in the parlour) had already signed the fate of a couple
of fowls, which, for want of time to dress them otherwise,
soon appeared reeking from the gridiron, or brander,
as Mrs. Dinmont denominated it. A huge piece
of cold beef-ham, eggs, butter, cakes, and barley-meal
bannocks in plenty made up the entertainment, which
was to be diluted with home-brewed ale of excellent
quality and a case-bottle of brandy. Few soldiers
would find fault with such cheer after a day’s
hard exercise and a skirmish to boot; accordingly
Brown did great honour to the eatables. While
the gudewife partly aided, partly instructed, a great
stout servant girl, with cheeks as red as her top-knot,
to remove the supper matters and supply sugar and
hot water (which, in the damsel’s anxiety to
gaze upon an actual live captain, she was in some danger
of forgetting), Brown took an opportunity to ask his
host whether he did not repent of having neglected
the gipsy’s hint.
‘Wha kens?’ answered he;
’they’re queer deevils; maybe I might just
have ’scaped ae gang to meet the other.
And yet I ’ll no say that neither; for if that
randy wife was coming to Charlie’s Hope, she
should have a pint bottle o’ brandy and a pound
o’ tobacco to wear her through the winter.
They’re queer deevils; as my auld father used
to say, they’re warst where they’re warst
guided. After a’, there’s baith gude
and ill about the gipsies.’
This, and some other desultory conversation,
served as a ‘shoeing-horn’ to draw on
another cup of ale and another ‘cheerer,’
as Dinmont termed it in his country phrase, of brandy
and water. Brown then resolutely declined all
further conviviality for that evening, pleading his
own weariness and the effects of the skirmish, being
well aware that it would have availed nothing to have
remonstrated with his host on the danger that excess
might have occasioned to his own raw wound and bloody
coxcomb. A very small bed-room, but a very clean
bed, received the traveller, and the sheets made good
the courteous vaunt of the hostess, ’that they
would be as pleasant as he could find ony gate, for
they were washed wi’ the fairy-well water, and
bleached on the bonny white gowans, and bittled by
Nelly and herself, and what could woman, if she was
a queen, do mair for them?’
They indeed rivalled snow in whiteness,
and had, besides, a pleasant fragrance from the manner
in which they had been bleached. Little Wasp,
after licking his master’s hand to ask leave,
couched himself on the coverlet at his feet; and the
traveller’s senses were soon lost in grateful
oblivion.