<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<div class="blockquot">
<p><span class="firstword">Old</span> and new type of landed proprietors in Scotland. Highland
Chiefs—Second Marquess of Breadalbane; late Duke of
Argyll. Ayrshire Lairds—T. F. Kennedy of Dunure; ‘Sliddery
Braes’; Smith of Auchengree. Fingask and Charles Martin.
New lairds of wealth.</p>
</div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> most outstanding change in regard to
landed proprietorship during the last half century
has been in Scotland, as elsewhere in
Britain, the successive extinction or displacement
of families that long held their estates,
and ‘proud of pedigree, but poor of purse,’ have
had to make way for rich merchants, bankers,
brewers, iron-masters, and manufacturers. Of
the great landowners the most striking personality
in my time was undoubtedly the
second Marquess of Breadalbane. Tall and
broad, with a head like that of Jupiter Tonans,
having the most commanding presence combined
with the most winning graciousness of
manner, he was the incarnation of what one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
imagined that a great Highland chief should
be. When in 1860 at the head of his Highland
Volunteers, all in kilts of the clan tartan, he
marched to the great review held by Queen
Victoria in Edinburgh, one’s thoughts travelled
back to the days of Prince Charlie, for since
that time there had been no such mustering of
warlike men straight from the Highland glens,
and no such chieftain in command of them.
When in the autumn he established himself at
the Black Mount, and filled his hospitable
house with guests, he would start off for a day’s
deer-stalking, mounted on the box of a large
drag, with the reins and whip in his hands,
his friends seated around him and his gillies
behind. No one of the party was a keener
or more successful sportsman than he. A
liberal and enlightened landlord, he had done
much to improve his vast estates, and was
beloved by his tenantry and people. He never
could understand why the Scottish mountains
should not supply abundance of metallic ores,
and afford a source of wealth to the country.
For years he employed a German expert to
prospect all over his property, and he continued
to work his mines at Tyndrum even at a loss.
Among his acquirements he had gained some
knowledge of mineralogy. Sir Roderick Murchison,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
when visiting him in 1860, after a tour
through the western Highlands, remarked to
him at dinner that one great difference between
the oldest rocks of the north-western and those
of the Central Highlands lay in the presence
of abundant hornblende in the former and its
absence from the latter. ‘Stop a bit, Sir
Roderick,’ interrupted the Marquess, ‘You come
with me to-morrow, and I’ll show you plenty
of hornblende.’ Next day a walk was taken
across a tract of moor near the Black Mount,
Sir Roderick accompanying some ladies, while
the chief marched on in front. At last when
the rock in question was reached, the Marquess
shouted out in triumph, ‘Here’s hornblende
for you.’ And he was right, as Murchison, with
a queer non-plussed look on his face, had to
admit. Nevertheless the geologist’s generalisation,
though not universally applicable, had in
it a certain element of truth.</p>
<div class="sidenote">THE LATE DUKE OF ARGYLL</div>
<p>Another distinguished Highland chief of last
century was the late Duke of Argyll. Gifted
with great acuteness and versatility of intellect,
he directed his thoughts to a wide range of
subjects, and having a remarkable command of
forcible language, he was able to present these
thoughts in such a form as to compel attention
to his reasonings and conclusions. As orator,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
statesman, historian, poet, naturalist, geologist,
agriculturist, chief of a great Highland clan,
and landed proprietor, he was undoubtedly
one of the living forces of his country during
his active career. Moreover, he never
failed to show that, like the long line of his
illustrious ancestors, he was an ardent and
patriotic Scot. In the midst of his conversation
he would every now and then throw
in a Scottish word or phrase, as more tersely
expressive of his meaning than anything he
could find in English. He knew the West
of Scotland better than most of his countrymen,
for not only was he born and bred there,
and passed most of his life in the midst of his
ancestral possessions, but for many years he
kept a yacht on which he peered into every
bay and creek among the Western Isles. He
had considerable artistic power, and was never
happier than when sketching some scene that
delighted him. After a great speech, or during
the intervals in the preparation of one of his
published volumes, he found rest and solace
in working up his sketches, of which he left
a large collection.</p>
<div class="sidenote">INVERARAY CASTLE</div>
<p>Though cast in a smaller bodily mould than
his burly kinsman of Breadalbane, he carried
himself with a singular dignity of bearing. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
finely formed, expressive face and his abundant
golden hair made him a conspicuous figure in
any assembly. But he was perhaps best
seen under his own roof at Inveraray entertaining
the landed gentry of Argyleshire, when
met for the transaction of county business—including
many of the Campbell clan who
counted the Mac Callum More as their chief,
and from some of whom he could claim feudal
service. One of them in particular used to
be prominent from the massive silver chain
which he wore with a key hung at the end
of it. His castle was now a ruin, but, in
accordance with ancient usage, he was bound
to present the key of it when he came to see
his chief. The Duke moved about among the
guests as the grand seigneur, entering into animated
talk, now about land and rent, or improvements
in the county, or some recently opened
tumulus, dredgings in Loch Fyne, the political
situation of the country, or the probability of
getting fossils out of his schists and limestones.
He was keenly desirous to preserve every
relic of antiquity on his property, and had
made a kind of museum in the central hall
of the castle in which he kept the smaller
objects that had been picked up. Among
these he was especially proud of an old knife<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
with what he believed to be Rob Roy’s initials
on it that had been found near the place
where that Highland freebooter lived, when
he placed himself for a time under the shelter
of the Argyll of his day.</p>
<div class="sidenote">KENNEDY OF DUNURE</div>
<p>Perhaps no county in Scotland could furnish
an ampler list of landed proprietors than
Ayrshire, both of the old stock and of the new
comers. The former included both titled possessors
of large estates and smaller lairds who
could trace their genealogy back to a remote
ancestry. One of the best examples of these
landed gentry whom I have known was the
Right Honourable Thomas Francis Kennedy
of Dunure. Educated in Edinburgh under
Pillans and Dugald Stewart, he was associated
from his youth with the brilliant literary
coterie which then flourished in that city, and
delighted to recount his reminiscences of the
men and the clubs of the time. As he was
born near Ayr, and had passed much of his
life in Ayrshire, where he possessed considerable
estates, he retained a lively recollection of
the state of the south-west of Scotland in the
closing years of the eighteenth and the early
part of the nineteenth century. I have heard
him tell of the hardships of the peasantry and
small farmers in his boyhood, how in severe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
winters they were compelled to bleed their
cattle and mix the blood with oatmeal to keep
themselves in life. He used to describe the
cuisine of his early days, and the contrast
between it and modern cookery. One of the
dishes, rather a favourite in Carrick, was roast
Solan goose from Ailsa Craig. But his account
of it was not itself appetising, for he told how
they had to bury the bird for some time in the
garden, and when it came to be cooked, all the
windows in the house had to be kept open, to
let out the ‘ancient and fish-like smell.’ White
and black puddings, now almost entirely
banished, still maintained their place, together
with ‘crappit heads,’ ‘singed sheep’s head,’
and sundry other national dishes which have
long been banished from the tables of polite
society. He used sometimes to revive a few
of these dishes, and I thought them excellent,
but he never, so far as I experienced, tried the
Solan goose again.</p>
<p>He was a gentleman of the antique cast,
courteous and stately in his manners, proud of
his descent and of his ancestral possessions,
and tenacious of his rights, which he was sometimes
thought to insist upon rather more than
he need have done. When I came to know
him about the year 1863 he had retired from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
public life, and devoted himself to the care of
his property. He looked carefully after his
breeds of cattle, and was keenly alive to new
inventions for the improvement of agriculture,
which he was always ready to test on his own
land. Part of one of the smallest coal-fields in
Scotland underlay his estate of Dalquharran,
and he worked the mineral according to the
best known methods.</p>
<p>Yet he had been an active politician in his
time. He was for sixteen years in Parliament,
as member for the Ayr Burghs. In association
with Cockburn, Jeffrey, Horner, Murray,
Graham, and others, he took a leading part
in the preparations for the Scottish Reform
Bill. On retiring from Parliament, he obtained
an official appointment in Ireland, where he
spent some years, until in 1850 he received
a commissionership in the Office of Woods
and Forests. Owing to some dispute in the
staff, he retired from this appointment in 1854,
and thereafter lived entirely at his Ayrshire
home, save that for some twenty years he
continued to come up for the season to
London. The Government of the day would
not grant him a pension, a decision for which
he believed that Gladstone was mainly responsible.
His friend Lord Murray thought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
him so badly used that he settled a pension
of £1200 a year upon him, which he enjoyed
up to the time of his death. Though no
longer actively interfering in politics, he continued
to take the keenest interest in the
events of the time, kept himself in touch with
his old Whig friends in and out of Parliament,
and gave free vent to his disapproval when
he had to criticise their policy.</p>
<p>His wife, a daughter of Sir Samuel Romilly,
was a singularly gentle and gracious old lady.
They had been married twenty years before
a son, their only child, was born to them.
Kennedy used to remark on the curious coincidence
that he himself was also an only
child, born after twenty years of wedlock. The
inhabited Dalquharran Castle is a large modern
mansion, built in a massive but rather
tasteless style, a strange contrast to the older
castle which it replaced, and which now stands
as a picturesque ivy-clad ruin a short distance
off, near the river. The laird remembered
when this ruin still had its roof on, and was
partly habitable.</p>
<p>Another Ayrshire laird had a row of fine
silver firs in the avenue to his romantically-placed
old castle. As several of these trees
had been struck by lightning during a series of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
years, his wife asked me one day if I thought
it possible that the lightning was attracted
by a seam of ironstone in the ground beneath.
She hoped it was not, for if her husband suspected
such a thing, she knew he would have
lawn, avenue, trees, and everything else dug
up in order to get at it. I was able to assure
her that there was no ironstone there, and
that the attraction was in the trees themselves.</p>
<p>In the same county I was acquainted about
forty years ago with a bachelor laird who
possessed a fine estate, on which he lived with
two maiden sisters. He had a large collection
of minerals, and more particularly of gems,
many of which were mounted as rings. When
low-spirited, he would array himself in his
dressing-gown, retire to his library, cover his
fingers with rings, and lay himself out on a
sofa to gaze at and admire them. He dabbled
a little also in water-colours, and it used to
be said of him that ‘he painted a picture
every day, and on Sundays he painted a
church.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">‘SLIDDERY BRAES’</div>
<p>One of the oddest specimens of a laird I
ever personally knew was the owner of a
small estate to the north of Kilmarnock, where
he lived with two unmarried sisters. He had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
nicknames for everybody and everything. His
mansion-house, owing to the steepness of the
approach to it, he always called ‘Sliddery
Braes.’ His sisters, he used to speak of, the
one as the ‘Mutiny at the Nore,’ the other
as the ‘Battle of the Baltic,’ because they were
born in the years when these two events
occurred. He used to take whims, pursue
them with great earnestness for a time, and
then change to something else. Many of
these occupations had a theological cast. At
one time he devoted himself to a serious
study of the Book of Revelations, and in order
to get the better at its meaning, he took to
the Greek original. He found that Dr. Sloan
of Ayr had a more modern lexicon than that
at Sliddery Braes, so he would come down
day after day, and work with this volume in
the doctor’s consulting room. His presence
there, however, becoming troublesome, the
book was sent upstairs to the drawing-room,
and instructions were given to the servant
to take the laird there the next time he came.
On entering that room one day, he found the
doctor’s sister sitting at the window, engaged
in some needle-work. With apologies for his
interruption, he begged her not to allow him
to disturb her, for he would be engrossed in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
his study of the chapter on which he was
then engaged. After some time he turned to
Miss Sloan and said, ‘I’ve been investigating
the account given in Revelation of the White
Horse, and I think I now understand about
it. The animal must have been a large beast,
for standing in the street there, its back would
be up on a level with the window you’re
sitting at.’ And he proceeded to describe in
the most whimsical way the look and qualities
of this wonderful horse. His narrative was
so comical, that the poor lady could hardly
repress her laughter. At last he noticed that
his discourse had not in the least solemnised
her, and he thereupon started up remarking,
‘Ah, Miss Sloan, you may laugh, but it’s no
laughing to some of them; good day.’ So
ended his Greek studies.</p>
<p>His eccentricities at last became so great,
that Dr. Sloan thought it right to send a
letter to the elder sister, pointing out the
desirability of having her brother watched,
and provided with an attendant, for his own
sake as well as for that of others, since the
doctor did not think it was safe to allow him
to go about alone. The lady thoughtlessly
left this letter inside her blotting-book, where
it was soon afterwards found by the laird<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
himself. He immediately sat down and wrote
a long letter to Dr. Sloan, beginning, ‘I am
not mad, most noble Festus,’ and maintaining
that he knew what he was about, and could
manage himself and his affairs without the
help or interference of anybody. The doctor
told me that for a long time afterwards he
himself went about in some fear of his life,
for he never could be sure what revenge
‘Sliddery Braes’ might be prompted to take.</p>
<div class="sidenote">AN ECCENTRIC LAIRD</div>
<p>But the laird had really no homicidal mania.
He grew, however, queerer every year. One
of his last crazes was to hunt up all the graves
of the persecuting lairds of covenanting times.
On one occasion he set out on horseback for
Dunscore, to see where the notorious Grierson
of Lag, ‘damned to everlasting fame,’ was
buried. As he made his way through the
lonely uplands of Dumfriesshire, and was
nearing his destination, he overtook a pedlar
with his pack, and asked him to mount on the
horse behind him. When at last he reached
the graveyard, tying the horse to the gate,
he insisted on his companion accompanying
him to look for the tombstone of the persecutor,
and on finding it, proceeded to read out
and sing a Psalm, in which his companion
was also instructed to join. At the end of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
this performance, the laird turned suddenly
round, looked the pedlar sternly in the face
and exclaimed, ‘Now, sir, d’ye ken whaur ye
are? Ye’re sitting on the grave o’ a man
that’s been in hell mair than a hundred years.
It’s a long time, sir, a long time.’ The poor
pedlar, now convinced that he was in the
hands of a madman, made his escape from
the place, and left the laird to complete his
devotions and execrations.</p>
<p>About the same time that this whim
possessed him, he determined to see the portrait
of a certain member of the Cassilis family
who had likewise distinguished himself for his
zeal against the Covenanters. But the difficulty
was how to get access to the picture,
which formed part of the collection at Culzean
Castle, the seat of the Marquess of Ailsa,
and was hung in a room reserved for private
use. Watching for an opportunity when the
family was from home, he succeeded in prevailing
upon the housekeeper to open this
room for him and let him see the portrait
in question. He used to describe his experience
thus: ‘I stood looking at the picture for
a while; it was really a good-looking face,
not what I thought a persecuting laird would
be like. But at last I saw the truth in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
eyes, for as I watched them, I could see that
they had the true twinkle of damnation.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">ECCENTRIC AYRSHIRE LAIRDS</div>
<p>Another crack-brained laird in the same
county has left inscribed on a stone monument
upon his property a record of his eccentricity.
I came upon it standing by itself near an oak
tree at Todhills in the parish of Dalry. On
the west side of the stone the following
inscription has been cut;</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>‘There is an oak tree a little from this, planted in the
year 1761, it has 20 feet of ground round it for to grow
upon, and all within that ground reserved from all succeeding
proprietors for the space of 500 years from the
above date by me, <span class="smcap">Andrew Smith</span>, who is the ofspring of
many Andrew Smiths who lived in Auchengree for unknown
generations.’</p>
</div>
<p>On the south side the stone bears the subjoined
lines:</p>
<div id="p199">
<p class="p1 b0 center">
My Trustees<br/>
<span class="smcap">Robert Glasgow</span><br/>
Esq of<br/>
Montgreenan<br/>
<span class="smcap">William Cochran</span><br/>
Esq of<br/>
Ladyland</p>
<div class="poetry-container pw25">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0">I stand here to herd this tree</div>
<div class="verse indent0">And if you please to read a wee</div>
<div class="verse indent0">In seventeen hundred and sixty one</div>
<div class="verse indent0">It was planted then at three feet long</div>
<div class="verse indent0">I’ll tell more if you would ken</div>
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
<div class="verse indent0">It was planted at the byre end</div>
<div class="verse indent0">I’ll tell you more you’ll think a wonder</div>
<div class="verse indent0">It’s alloud to stand for years five hundred</div>
<div class="verse indent0">It has twelve yards a cross and round about</div>
<div class="verse indent0">It belongs to no man till that time is out</div>
<div class="verse indent0">But to <span class="smcap">Andrew Smith</span> tho he were dead</div>
<div class="verse indent0">He raised it out of the seed</div>
<div class="verse indent0">So cut it neither Top nor Tail</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Least that the same you do bewail</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Cut it neither Tail nor Top</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Least that some evil you oertak</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class="p0 b1 center">
Erected<br/>
By<br/>
<span class="smcap">Andrew Smith</span><br/>
of Todhills Octr 1817</p>
</div>
<p>When in the year 1867 the British Association
met in Dundee, some of the members were
entertained at Fingask—that charming old
Scottish chateau, with its treasures of family
and Jacobite antiquities. Among the visitors
was Professor Charles Martin of Montpellier,
who so delighted the Misses Murray Thriepland
with his enthusiasm for Scotland and
everything Scottish, that they bade him kneel,
and taking a sword that had belonged to
Prince Charlie, laid it on his shoulder and,
as if the blade still possessed a royal virtue,
dubbed him knight. Some years afterwards
I chanced to meet him on a river steamer
upon the Tiber, bound for Ostia with a party<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
from the University of Rome. He was delighted
to be addressed as ‘Sir Charles Martin,’
and recalled with evident enthusiasm the
charms of Fingask and of the distinguished
ladies who so hospitably entertained him there.</p>
<div class="sidenote">NEW LAIRDS</div>
<p>The new lairds include many excellent and
cultivated men well worthy to take their place
among the older families. Their command of
wealth enables them to improve their estates,
and to beautify their houses in a way which
was impossible for the impoverished owners
whom they have replaced; their taste has
created centres of art and culture, and their
public spirit and philanthropy are to be seen
in the churches, schools, and village-reading
rooms which they have erected, and in the
good roads which they have made where none
existed before. On the other hand, among
their number are some of whom the less said
the better, and who make their way chiefly
in those circles of society wherein ‘a man of
wealth is dubbed a man of worth.’</p>
<p>Many incidents have been put in circulation
regarding the race of coal and iron-masters
who, starting as working miners, have made
large fortunes in the west of Scotland. A
good number of these tales are probably
entirely mythical, others, though founded on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
some original basis of fact, have been so
improved in the course of narration, that they
must be looked upon as mainly fabulous. Yet
the alterations have generally kept to the spirit
of the story, and represent the current estimate
of the character and habits of the individual
round whom the legend has gathered. According
to one of these tales a wealthy iron-master
called on a country squire and was ushered
into the library. He had never seen such a
room before, and was much impressed with
the handsome cases and the array of well-bound
volumes that filled their shelves. The
next time he went to Glasgow he made a point
of calling at a well-known bookseller’s, when
the following conversation is reported to have
taken place.</p>
<p>‘I want you to get me a leebrary.’</p>
<p>‘Very well, Mr. —— I’ll be very pleased to
supply you with books. Can you give me
any list of such books as you would like?’</p>
<p>‘Ye ken mair aboot buiks than I do, so you
can choose them yoursell.’</p>
<p>‘Then you leave the selection entirely to
me. Would you like them bound in Russia
or Morocco?’</p>
<p>‘Russia or Morocco! can ye no get them
bund in Glasco’.’</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span></p>
<div class="sidenote">A WEALTHY IRON-MASTER</div>
<p>One of these men went to see Egypt, and
took with him as a kind of guide and companion,
an artist of some note. When they
came to the Great Pyramid, the magnate stood
looking at it for a time, and in turning away
remarked to his friend, ‘Man, whatna rowth o’
mason-wark not to be fetchin’ in ony rent!’</p>
<p>On the same occasion the iron-master, now
getting tired of sight-seeing, was with some
difficulty persuaded to cross over and see the
Red Sea. He made no observation at the
time, nor on the way back, but after getting
to bed he found vent for his ill humour.
Opening the mosquito curtains, he blurted out
to the artist, who occupied another bed in the
same room, ‘D’ye ca’ yon the Red Sea? It’s
as blue as ony sea I ever saw in my life.
Gude nicht.’</p>
<p>It is told of a Paisley manufacturer that at
the time of one of the meetings of the British
Association at Glasgow, he entertained a large
company of the members, a number of whom
invited him to visit them when he came to
London. He had noticed that his guests had
various initials printed after their names on
the programmes of the association—F.R.S.,
F.C.S., D.C.L., LL.D., etc., and, thinking
that this was customary in good society, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
selected three letters to affix to his own name
on his visiting cards. In due time he made
his appearance in the south; and presented
his cards. Some of his southern acquaintances
ventured to ask what the letters after his
name were intended to signify. ‘O,’ said he,
‘I saw it was the richt thing to hae the letters,
and as I didna very weel ken what a’
you fowk’s letters mean, I thocht I wud put
just L.F.P.; that means, Lately frae Paisley.’</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />