Arms and men I sing: douce Jeemsy Todd, rushing from his loom, armed
with a bed-post; Lisbeth Whamond, an avenging whirlwind: Neil
Haggart, pausing in his thank-offerings to smite and slay; the
impious foe scudding up the bleeding Brae-head with Nemesis at their
flashing heels; the minister holding it a nice question whether the
carnage was not justified. Then came the two hours' sermons of the
following Sabbath, when Mr. Dishart, revolving like a teetotum in
the pulpit, damned every bandaged person present, individually and
collectively; and Lang Tammas in the precentor's box with a plaster
on his cheek, included any one the minister might have by chance
omitted, and the congregation, with most of their eyes bunged up,
burst into psalms of praise.
Twice a year the Auld Lichts went demented. The occasion was the
fast-day at Tilliedrum; when its inhabitants, instead of crowding
reverently to the kirk, swooped profanely down in their scores and
tens of scores on our God-fearing town, intent on making a day of
it. Then did the weavers rise as one man, and go forth to show the
ribald crew the errors of their way. All denominations were
represented, but Auld Lichts led. An Auld Licht would have taken no
man's blood without the conviction that he would be the better
morally for the bleeding; and if Tammas Lunan's case gave an impetus
to the blows, it can only have been because it opened wider Auld
Licht eyes to Tilliedrum's desperate condition. Mr. Dishart's
predecessor more than once remarked that at the Creation the devil
put forward a claim for Thrums, but said he would take his chance of
Tilliedrum; and the statement was generally understood to be made on
the authority of the original Hebrew.
The mustard-seed of a feud between the two parishes shot into a tall
tree in a single night, when Davit Lunan's father went to a tattie
roup at Tilliedrum and thoughtlessly died there. Twenty-four hours
afterward a small party of staid Auld Lichts, carrying long white
poles, stepped out of various wynds and closes and picked their
solemn way to the house of mourning. Nanny Low, the widow, received
them dejectedly, as one oppressed by the knowledge that her man's
death at such an inopportune place did not fulfil the promise of his
youth; and her guests admitted bluntly that they were disappointed
in Tammas. Snecky Hobart's father's unusually long and impressive
prayer was an official intimation that the deceased, in the opinion
of the session, sorely needed everything of the kind he could get;
and then the silent driblet of Auld Lichts in black stalked off in
the direction of Tilliedrum. Women left their spinning-wheels and
pirns to follow them with their eyes along the Tenements, and the
minister was known to be holding an extra service at the manse. When
the little procession reached the boundary-line between the two
parishes, they sat down on a dyke and waited.
By-and-bye half a dozen men drew near from the opposite direction,
bearing on poles the remains of Tammas Lunan in a closed coffin. The
coffin was brought to within thirty yards of those who awaited it,
and then roughly lowered to the ground. Its bearers rested morosely
on their poles. In conveying Lunan's remains to the borders of his
own parish they were only conforming to custom; but Thrums and
Tilliedrum differed as to where the boundary-line was drawn, and not
a foot would either advance into the other's territory.
For half a day the coffin lay unclaimed, and the two parties sat
scowling at each other. Neither dared move. Gloaming had stolen into
the valley when Dite Deuchars, of Tilliedrum, rose to his feet and
deliberately spat upon the coffin. A stone whizzed through the air;
and then the ugly spectacle was presented, in the gray night, of a
dozen mutes fighting with their poles over a coffin. There was blood
on the shoulders that bore Tammas' remains to Thrums.
After that meeting Tilliedrum lived for the fast-day. Never,
perhaps, was there a community more given up to sin, and Thrums felt
"called" to its chastisement. The insult to Lunan's coffin, however,
dispirited their weavers for a time, and not until the suicide of
Pitlums did they put much fervor into their prayers. It made new men
of them. Tilliedrum's sins had found it out. Pitlums was a farmer in
the parish of Thrums, but he had been born at Tilliedrum; and Thrums
thanked Providence for that, when it saw him suspended between two
hams from his kitchen rafters. The custom was to cart suicides to
the quarry at the Galla pond and bury them near the cairn that had
supported the gallows; but on this occasion not a farmer in the
parish would lend a cart, and for a week the corpse lay on the
sanded floor as it had been cut down--an object of awestruck
interest to boys who knew no better than to peep through the
darkened window. Tilliedrum bit its lips at home. The Auld Licht
minister, it was said, had been approached on the subject; but,
after serious consideration, did not see his way to offering up a
prayer. Finally old Hobart and two others tied a rope round the
body, and dragged it from the farm to the cairn, a distance of four
miles. Instead of this incident's humbling Tilliedrum into attending
church, the next fast-day saw its streets deserted. As for the
Thrums Auld Lichts, only heavy wobs prevented their walking erect
like men who had done their duty. If no prayer was volunteered for
Pitlums before his burial, there was a great deal of psalm-singing
after it.
By early morn on their fast-day the Tilliedrummers were straggling
into Thrums, and the weavers, already at their looms, read the
clattering of feet and carts aright. To convince themselves, all
they had to do was to raise their eyes; but the first triumph would
have been to Tilliedrum if they had done that. The invaders--the men
in Aberdeen blue serge coats, velvet knee-breeches, and broad blue
bonnets, and the wincey gowns of the women set off with hooded
cloaks of red or tartan--tapped at the windows and shouted
insultingly as they passed; but, with pursed lips, Thrums bent
fiercely over its wobs, and not an Auld Licht showed outside his
door. The day wore on to noon, and still ribaldry was master of the
wynds. But there was a change inside the houses. The minister had
pulled down his blinds; moody men had left their looms for stools by
the fire; there were rumors of a conflict in Andra Gowrie's close,
from which Kitty McQueen had emerged with her short gown in rags;
and Lang Tammas was going from door to door. The austere precentor
admonished fiery youth to beware of giving way to passion; and it
was a proud day for the Auld Lichts to find their leading elder so
conversant with apt Scripture texts. They bowed their heads
reverently while he thundered forth that those who lived by the
sword would perish by the sword; and when he had finished they took
him ben to inspect their bludgeons. I have a vivid recollection of
going the round of the Auld Licht and other houses to see the sticks
and the wrists in coils of wire.
A stranger in the Tenements in the afternoon would have noted more
than one draggled youth in holiday attire, sitting on a doorstep
with a wet cloth to his nose; and, passing down the commonty, he
would have had to step over prostrate lumps of humanity from which
all shape had departed. Gavin Ogilvy limped heavily after his
encounter with Thrummy Tosh--a struggle that was looked forward to
eagerly as a bi-yearly event; Christy Davie's development of muscle
had not prevented her going down before the terrible onslaught of
Joe the miller, and Lang Tammas' plasters told a tale. It was in the
square that the two parties, leading their maimed and blind, formed
in force; Tilliedrum thirsting for its opponents' blood, and Thrums
humbly accepting the responsibility of punching the fast-day
breakers into the ways of rectitude. In the small, ill-kept square
the invaders, to the number of about a hundred, were wedged together
at its upper end, while the Thrums people formed in a thick line at
the foot. For its inhabitants the way to Tilliedrum lay through this
threatening mass of armed weavers. No words were bandied between the
two forces; the centre of the square was left open, and nearly every
eye was fixed on the town-house clock. It directed operations and
gave the signal to charge. The moment six o'clock struck, the upper
mass broke its bonds and flung itself on the living barricade. There
was a clatter of heads and sticks, a yelling and a groaning, and
then the invaders, bursting through the opposing ranks, fled for
Tilliedrum. Down the Tanage brae and up the Brae-head they skurried,
half a hundred avenging spirits in pursuit. On the Tilliedrum fast-day
I have tasted blood myself. In the godless place there is no Auld Licht
kirk, but there are two Auld Lichts in it now who walk to Thrums to
church every Sabbath, blow or rain as it lists. They are making their
influence felt in Tilliedrum.
The Auld Lichts also did valorous deeds at the Battle of Cabbylatch.
The farm land so named lies a mile or more to the south of Thrums.
You have to go over the rim of the cut to reach it. It is low-lying
and uninteresting to the eye, except for some giant stones scattered
cold and naked through the fields. No human hands reared these
bowlders, but they might be looked upon as tombstones to the heroes
who fell (to rise hurriedly) on the plain of Cabbylatch.
The fight of Cabbylatch belongs to the days of what are now but
dimly remembered as the Meal Mobs. Then there was a wild cry all
over the country for bread (not the fine loaves that we know, but
something very much coarser), and hungry men and women, prematurely
shrunken, began to forget the taste of meal. Potatoes were their
chief sustenance, and, when the crop failed, starvation gripped
them. At that time the farmers, having control of the meal, had the
small towns at their mercy, and they increased its cost. The price
of the meal went up and up, until the famishing people swarmed up
the sides of the carts in which it was conveyed to the towns, and,
tearing open the sacks, devoured it in handfuls. In Thrums they had
a stern sense of justice, and for a time, after taking possession of
the meal, they carried it to the square and sold it at what they
considered a reasonable price. The money was handed over to the
farmers. The honesty of this is worth thinking about, but it seems
to have only incensed the farmers the more; and when they saw that
to send their meal to the town was not to get high prices for it,
they laid their heads together and then gave notice that the people
who wanted meal and were able to pay for it must come to the farms.
In Thrums no one who cared to live on porridge and bannocks had
money to satisfy the farmers; but, on the other hand, none of them
grudged going for it, and go they did. They went in numbers from
farm to farm, like bands of hungry rats, and throttled the
opposition they not infrequently encountered. The raging farmers at
last met in council, and, noting that they were lusty men and brave,
resolved to march in armed force upon the erring people and burn
their town. Now we come to the Battle of Cabbylatch.
The farmers were not less than eighty strong, and chiefly consisted
of cavalry. Armed with pitchforks and cumbrous scythes where they
were not able to lay their hands on the more orthodox weapons of
war, they presented a determined appearance; the few foot-soldiers
who had no cart-horses at their disposal bearing in their arms
bundles of firewood. One memorable morning they set out to avenge
their losses; and by and by a halt was called, when each man bowed
his head to listen. In Thrums, pipe and drum were calling the
inhabitants to arms. Scouts rushed in with the news that the farmers
were advancing rapidly upon the town, and soon the streets were
clattering with feet. At that time Thrums had its piper and drummer
(the bellman of a later and more degenerate age); and on this
occasion they marched together through the narrow wynds, firing the
blood of haggard men and summoning them to the square. According to
my informant's father, the gathering of these angry and startled
weavers, when he thrust his blue bonnet on his head and rushed out
to join them, was an impressive and solemn spectacle. That bloodshed
was meant there can be no doubt; for starving men do not see the
ludicrous side of things. The difference between the farmers and the
town had resolved itself into an ugly and sullen hate, and the
wealthier townsmen who would have come between the people and the
bread were fiercely pushed aside. There was no nominal leader, but
every man in the ranks meant to fight for himself and his
belongings; and they are said to have sallied out to meet the foe in
no disorder. The women they would fain have left behind them; but
these had their own injuries to redress, and they followed in their
husbands' wake carrying bags of stones. The men, who were of various
denominations, were armed with sticks, blunderbusses, anything they
could snatch up at a moment's notice; and some of them were not
unacquainted with fighting. Dire silence prevailed among the men,
but the women shouted as they ran, and the curious army moved
forward to the drone and squall of drum and pipe. The enemy was
sighted on the level land of Cabbylatch, and here, while the
intending combatants glared at each other, a well-known local
magnate galloped his horse between them and ordered them in the name
of the king to return to their homes. But for the farmers that meant
further depredation at the people's hands, and the townsmen would
not go back to their gloomy homes to sit down and wait for sunshine.
Soon stones (the first, it is said, cast by a woman) darkened the
air. The farmers got the word to charge, but their horses, with the
best intentions, did not know the way. There was a stampeding in
different directions, a blind rushing of one frightened steed
against another; and then the townspeople, breaking any ranks they
had hitherto managed to keep, rushed vindictively forward. The
struggle at Cabbylatch itself was not of long duration; for their
own horses proved the farmers' worst enemies, except in the cases
where these sagacious animals took matters into their own ordering
and bolted judiciously for their stables. The day was to Thrums.
Individual deeds of prowess were done that day. Of these not the
least fondly remembered by her descendants were those of the gallant
matron who pursued the most obnoxious farmer in the district even to
his very porch with heavy stones and opprobrious epithets. Once when
he thought he had left her far behind did he alight to draw breath
and take a pinch of snuff, and she was upon him like a flail. With a
terror stricken cry he leaped once more upon his horse and fled, but
not without leaving his snuff-box in the hands of the derisive
enemy. Meggy has long gone to the kirk-yard, but the snuff-mull is
still preserved.
Some ugly cuts were given and received, and heads as well as ribs
were broken; but the townsmen's triumph was short-lived. The
ringleaders were whipped through the streets of Perth, as a warning
to persons thinking of taking the law into their own hands; and all
the lasting consolation they got was that, some time afterward, the
chief witness against them, the parish minister, met with a
mysterious death. They said it was evidently the hand of God; but
some people looked suspiciously at them when they said it.