^Ky m-^-r A J-.-S.^ .. v.. % t \ '■ ,.y C \A '\.^ t *i* V " 4 I* >• V jv :X THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IN MEMORY OF CAROLINE GUSHING DUNIWAY '92 . i ^'v!-- , VJ\ y/LiC /^y. THE ARNISTON MEMOIRS 1571-1838 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/arnistonmemoirstOOomonrich ^^e^yuz^Lj^A yUoO'T.i^UZd . THE ARNISTON MEMOIRS THREE CENTURIES OF A SCOTTISH HOUSE 1571-1838 EDITED FROM THE FAMILY PAPERS BY GEORGE W. T. i^MOND ADVOCATE, AUTHOR OF " THE LORD ADVOCATES OF SCOTLAND" EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS MDCCCLXXXVII (j^K^),x^ (a^^CLoj ^s-'fcS ^ /?7 ^^ PREFACE. Many years ago, in the course of some building operations, the Charter-Room at Arniston was dismantled. Its contents, consisting of charters, rent-rolls, leases, accounts, and valuable family papers, were placed on the floor of an attic where, for a long time, they lay in confusion, uncared for, and in constant danger of destruction. About twenty years ago Dr. William Fraser, who was then beginning those researches which have thrown so much fresh light on the family history of Scot- land, was requested by Mr. Dundas to give his help in examining the Arniston papers. Dr. Fraser arranged the charters, making a copious inventory of them, in which everything of local or family interest was described. He also deciphered the old estate, family, and colliery accounts down to the middle of the seventeenth century. The results of Dr. Frasers labours 290 vi PREFACE. suggested the idea of a family history to Mr. Dundas, who accordingly proceeded to arrange the letters and estate accounts, and compile a narrative from them to be left in the Charter- Room at Arniston in manuscript for the private use of the family. There had been no intention of publication ; but friends who had an opportunity of examining the materials thus collected by Mr. Dundas were of opinion that they were worthy of preservation in a more permanent form ; and I was requested to undertake the task of weaving them into a continuous narrative and editing the volume of family history which is now published under the name of the Arniston Memoirs. As originally planned, the work included a memoir of Henry Dundas (the celebrated Viscount Melville), who was a younger son of the first President Dundas. But it became apparent, as the work proceeded, that a complete account of his career, which, in some of its most interesting and important aspects, was that of a British Minister, could not be given without entering upon a variety of subjects inconsistent with the umtia6 Ca^ tn tHu. XI4// (e/nlujvu. PREFACE. vii scope of the present volume. It has, therefore, been decided to omit the correspondence at Arnis- ton between Henry Dundas and his brother and nephew. This correspondence, which extends over a large part of his public life, together with the voluminous collection of papers at Melville Castle, will form the groundwork of a separate work on the Life of Henrv Dundas. G. W. T. (). May 1887. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. Gospatric, the son of Maldred, The lands of Dundas, The Charter of Dundas, Helias, son of Huctred, His origm unknown. Early owners of Dundas, Carmelite Monastery at Queensferry, Inchgarvie, .... George Dundas, founder of the Amiston family, The laird of Dundas persecuted in 1683, . Sale of Dundas, .... Different branches of the family, . The Arniston and Melville branches. The Dundases of Beechwood, General Sir David Dundas, The Duddingston and Manor branches. The Dundases of Virginia, The Zetland family. PACK xxiii xxiv xxiv XXV XXV XXV xxvi xxvii xxvii xxviii xxix XXX XXX xxxi xxxii xxxiii xxxiv xxxiv CHAPTER I. THE PURCHASE OF ARNISTON. Early history of Arniston, ..... Was part of the Temple lands in Lothian, and passed into the hands of the Hospitallers, Purchased after the Reformation by George Dundas ot Dundas, ...... Dame Katherine Oliphant, .... Early description of Amiston, .... b CONTENTS. CHAPTER II. SIR JAMES DUNDAS, GOVERNOR OF BERWICK. PAGE His birth and education, ..... 5 His marriages, ...... 5 Purchases of land by Sir James Dundas, . . . 6 Amiston Burial-place at Borthwick Church, . . 6 Agricultural improvements, .... 8 The Home Farm at Amiston in l628, ... 10 Servants' wages, . . . . . .11 Death of Sir James Dundas, . . . .12 His will and funeral, . . . . .12 CHAPTER III. THE FIRST LORD ARNISTON. Sir James Dundas, governor of Berwick, succeeded by his son James, ..... Dame Marie Home manages the estate, . Farming Customs, .... Tenancy in Common, .... Church affairs — The National Covenant, . The Covenant signed by Dundas of Amiston, Marriage of James Dundas to Mistress Marion Boyd, A case of Church Discipline, Political State of Scotland in 1648, Death of Dame Marie Home, 14 14 15 15 16 16 17 18 21 CHAPTER IV. THE FIRST LORD ARNISTON— co7^^^w^^^£^. State of the Court of Session at the Restoration, . Sir James Dundas appointed a Judge, The King decides that all Judges must sign a Declaration renouncing the Covenants, Correspondence on the subject, .... 23 24 25 25 CONTENTS. XI Sir James Dalrymple's plan for meeting the difficulty, Dundas is pressed to conform, but refuses, Letter from Lauderdale, .... Dundas resigns his Judgeship, Correspondence with Sir James Dalrymple, Dundas retires into private life. His three marriages, .... Marriage of his daughter to Lord Stair's second son. Death of Sir James Dundas, His funeral, ..... PAGB 26 29 30 32 33 38 38 39 39 40 CHAPTER V. THE SECOND LORD ARNISTON. A blank in the records of Arniston, 41 Robert Dundas, son of Sir James Dundas, appointed a Judge, ..... 41 Improvements at Arniston, 42 The Old House of Arniston, 42 Traquair's Bridge, ..... 43 Esperston and Outerston, .... 43 The Arniston Ash, .... 46 Plantations, ..... 49 Agricultural improvements. 50 The Jacobite Medal, ..... 52 Proceedings against his eldest son, James Dundas, 53 Termination of the prosecution, .... 56 Death of Lord Arniston, ..... 51 CHAPTER VL THE FIRST PRESIDENT DUNDAS. Robert Dundas, second son of the second Lord Arniston, called to the bar, ..... 58 His appearance, ...... 58 His habits, ...... 59 Marries Miss Watson of Muirhouse, ... 59 CONTENTS. Appointed Solicitor-General, Conduct of the Lord Advocate, The Representative Peers, Dundas appointed Lord Advocate, Family Letters, .... Quarrel with the Town-Council of Edinburgh, Elected for Midlothian, Attendance of Scottish Members in Parliament, The Malt-Tax Riots, Dundas dismissed from office. Improvements on the estate of Amiston, . Landscape gardening. PAGE 59 60 61 64 64 65 67 67 68 69 72 76 CHAPTER VIL THE FIRST PRESIDENT DUNDAS— co?itimied. Trial of Carnegie of Finhaven, The opposition to Walpole, The Independent Whigs, . Letters from Dundas to his son. The Representative Peers Election, Meetings of Opposition Peers, Family troubles — Small-pox in 1733 Death of Mrs. Dundas, Dundas marries Miss Gordon of Invergord Death of President Dalrymple, Duncan Forbes appointed President, Dundas accepts an ordinary Judgeship, A visit to the Highlands in 1739 The Goat-Whey Cure, Resignation of Walpole, Marquis of Tweeddale appointed Scottish Death of Duncan Forbes, . Intrigues for the President's Chair Dundas is appointed. Private life of President Dundas, Bills of Fare in 1748, Death of President Dundas, His merits as a Lawyer, Secretary, 78 78 79 80 82 83 85 86 87 89 90 91 92 93 96 96 99 100 103 107 107 109 109 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VIII. THE SECOND PRESIDENT DUNDAS. Robert Diindas, son of the first President Diindas. Birth and Kchication, On the Continent, . CorresjKMidence with his cousin Lord Bargany, Death of Lord Bargany, Marriage of Robert Dundas to Henrietta Baillie, Appointed Solicitor-General, Fears of a Jacobite Rebellion, The Scottish Administration, Sir John Cope, French Officers in Scotland, Bad feeling among the Scottish Officials War against France, Death of Lord Wilmington, The Broad Bottom Administration, Landing of Prince Charles, Beginning of the Rebellion, Letters from Mr. Mitchell, Battle of Prestonpans, Family Lettei-s during the Rebellion, Progress of the Rebellion, Resignation of Lord Tweeddale, And of Solicitor-General Dundas, . Ministerial Crisis of February' 1746, Close of the Rebellion, lACB 111 111 112 112 lia 114 115 117 118 llf) 121 121 12.S 12^^ 124 126 127 128 131 132 134 136 13() 142 143 CHAPTER IX. THE SECOND PRESIDENT DUNDAS— coulinucd. State of old Lord Amiston's health. He threatens to resign office, Dundas requested to stand for Lanarkshire, But declines, .... Correspondence on the subject, Mr. Stuart of Torrance elected, b2 144 144 145 145 146 148 xiv CONTENTS. PAGE State of Politics, . . . . . .150 Dundas returned for Midlothian, . 150 Illness of Mrs. Dundas, 151 Her death. 152 State of the Highlands, 153 Ofthe forfeited estates, . 154 Cluny Macpherson, 155 Hume and the Advocates' Library, 157 The Tragedy of Douglas, . 159 Second Marriage of Mr. Dundas, . 161 Death of Lord President Craigie, . 162 Dundas appointed President, 162 Letters from Lord Hardwicke, 163 The Militia Acts, . 165 Autobiography of President Dundas, 166 CHAPTER X. THE SECOND PRESIDENT DUNDAS— continued. Death of George the Second, . . . . 169 Letters from Lord Hardwicke, . . . . 169 Resignation of the Duke of Newcastle, 171 His account of the Crisis, . . . 172 The state of parties, .... 174 The "Scottish Manager" Question, 177 Death of Lord Milton, .... 179 The Douglas Cause, .... 180 Henry Dundas, ..... 181 Midlothian Politics in 1770, 182 Henry Dundas elected for Midlothian, 184 Correspondence between Henry Dundas and the President 185 The President's children, .... 186 Marriage of Miss Baillie, .... 187 And of her sisters, .... 187 Private Life and Improvements at Arniston, 189 Prices of Food, ..... 191 Servants' Wages, ..... 191 Sport, ...... 192 Farming Customs, .... 193 Death of President Dundas, . . 197 CONTENTS. XV PACK His Funeral, ...... 198 His Character, 199 Legal History 1748 to 1787, 201 Heritable Jurisdictions Act, 201 Abolition of Wardholding, 20s Montgomery Entail Act, . 203 The Scottish Bench, 204 Lord Karnes, 204 Francis Garden, 204 Lord Hailes and Lord Glenlee, 204 Lord Monboddo, . 205 The Douglas Cause, 206 The Duntreath Case, 210 CHAPTER XL LORD CHIEF BARON DUNDAS. Power of the Arniston family, . 212 The Causes which led to it, 212 State of the Franchise, . 21s Henry Dundas, . 214 A Journey to England in 1772, . 215 Robert Dundas, son of President Dundas, calle( 1 to th< Bar, . 215 Appointed Solicitor-General, 216 His Practice, 216 Midlothian Election in 1784, . 217 Marriage of Mr. Dundas, . , 220 Is appointed Lord Advocate, . 221 Social Life in 1787, . 221 Loch Ericht. An adventure in th< i Highlands, 223 Midlothian Election in 1790, . 225 Agitation for Burgh Reform, . 226 The Edinburgh Town-Council, 228 The " Friends of the People," . 229 The King's Birthday in 1792, • 230 Riot in George Square, . 231 Government Information, . 233 Arrest of Thomas Muir, , 235 CONTENTS. Character of Lord Braxfield, Trial of Muir^ . . Trial of Palmer, ..... The Lord Advocate challenged by Mr. Hamilton Rowan, Arrest of Mr. Rowan, .... Question in Parliament as to the legality of the proceed- ings at the State Trials, Convention of the Friends of the People, . Arrest of Delegates, .... Trials of Skirving, Margarot, Gerald, and Watt, . Contest for the Deanship of the Faculty of Advocates, Defeat of Henry Erskine and election of Lord Advocate Dundas, ..... Midlothian Election of 1796, Election Dinners last century. 236 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 244 245 245 246 247 CHAPTER XIL LORD CHIEF BARON DV^DAS— continued. Mutiny at the Nore, ..... 249 Letter from Admiral Duncan, .... 250 Is created Viscount Duncan, .... 252 His death, ....... 252 Mr. Dundas appointed Chief Baron, . . . 253 A sea voyage in 1805, ..... 254 Account of a journey from Arniston to England, . . 257 The Princess of Wales and Lady Hester Stanhope, . 258 The impeachment of Lord Melville, . 259 His acquittal, . . . . . . 260 The Cannings, ...... 264 The Castlereagh-Canning duel, .... 265 Death of President Blair, ..... 267 Death of Lord Melville, ..... 269 Retrospect of his career, ..... 269 The office of Lord President offered to Chief Baron Dundas, 277 But refused, . . . . . . 280 Death of Mr. Perceval, . . . .281 Waterloo in I8I6, ...... 283 Tour on the Continent in 1817, . • . 284 Journey through Holland, . . . . .285 CONTENTS. xvii Visit to Waterloo, . PAGE 287 Review at Douchy, 289 Winter in Italy, 1818, 291 Chief Baron Dundas resigns, . 292 His death, . . . 292 Farming from 1787 to 1819, 294 Chief Baron Dundas's improvements at Arniston, . 29() The Church of Borthwick, . 299 Anecdote of ' Meg Dodds,' 299 CHAPTER XIII. ROBERT DUNDAS OF ARNISTON. Son of the Chief Baron, . . . . .301 His early days, . . . .301 Field sports and game-preserving at the close of last century, ...... 302 The Midlothian Coursing Club, . . . 304 Journey through Greece and Turkey, . . . 307 The Convent at Argis, ..... 309 The Radical War, . . . . . .311 Midlothian politics in 1820, . . . 313 Marriage of Robert Dundas, . . . .314 He is appointed Advocate Depute, . . 314 The Letters of Malachi Malagrowther, . . 315 The Town-Council of Edinburgh and the Representation of the City, ..... 32d Politics of the Councillors, .... 328 Illness of Lord Liverpool, . . . . 329 Formation of the Canning Administration, . 329 Resignation of Lord Melville and other Ministers, . 330 Death of Mr. Canning, and Formation of the Goderich Ministry, ...... 334i Formation of the Wellington Ministry, . . 335 Lord Melville appointed President of the Board of Control, ...... 335 Correspondence on the subject, .... 335 Feeling against Sir George Clerk on account of his having taken office under Mr. Canning, . . . 339 The Conservative party in Midlothian resolve not to oppose him, ...... 342 xvm CONTENTS. Dissensions in the Cabinet, Resignation of Mr. Huskisson, . . Sir William Rae and the office of Lord Chief Baron, The General Elections of 1830 and 1831, Return of Mr. R. A. Dundas for Edinburgh, Election Riot, ..... Passing of the Reform Bill, and preparations for the General Election of 1832, . The Edinburgh Election, .... The Midlothian Election, .... Victory of the Government, and fall of the Scottish Tory Party, ...... PAce 343 34>5 349 350 350 351 352 355 356 356 CHAPTER XIV. ROBERT DUNDAS OF ARNISTON— cow^mMerf. CONCLUSION OF THE MEMOIRS. Mr. Dundas retires to Arniston, Improvements on the Estate, Develops the working of coal. Construction of Railways, . Scottish Agriculture in 1819 to 1839, State of the Tory Party on the passing of the Reform Bill General Election of 1835, .... The Peel Banquet, .... Death of William IV., and General Election of 1837 Mr. Dundas's closing years. Attendance at the General Assembly, . His Death, Mrs. Dundas — The Durhams, Mr. Nisbet-Hamilton, Mr. Pitt Dundas, . The second and third Lords Melville, Conclusion of the Memoirs, 358 359 359 359 360 361 362 363 363 365 366 366 367 367 367 368 ILLUSTRATIONS. FULL PAGE. {Tlie Etchings are by William Hole, A.R.S.A.) George Dundas of Dundas, ..... Frontispiece The Old Dundas Charter, ...... ii Dundas Castle, from a drawing in the Eighteenth Century, vi Katherine Oliphant (w'//e of George Dundas of Dundas), . 2 Sir James Dundas, Governor of Berwick, .... 8 First Lord Amiston, . . . . 14 Second Lord Arniston, 42 First President Dundas, ....... 58 Amiston House — North Front, 72 Second President Dundas, . . . . . . l62 Arniston House — South Front, 200 The Old Library at Arniston, 220 First Lord Melville, 268 Right Hon. W. Dundas, M.P., Lord Clerk Register, . . 280 Chief Baron Dundas, 292 Second Lord Melville, 338 Robert Adam Dundas, afterwards Nisbet-Hamilton,. . 352 Robert Dundas of Arniston, ...... 358 WOODCUTS, ETC. Tapestry at Amiston (see page 2), . Stone Carving, Dundas Crest, . Seal of George Dundas of Dundas, . Plaster-work, Hall, Amiston, . Church of Whitefriars, South Queensferry, Arms of Dundas of that Ilk, Borthwick Church — Amiston Burial-place, PAGE ii vignette in title-page vii viii XXX xxxvi 6 ILLUSTRATIONS. Borthwick Church : ground-plan of ruins, Newbyres Tower, Ancient Oak-tree, . Outerston Village in 1758, Plan of Arniston, 1 690, . Ash-tree, .... Beech Avenue, Larch Trees, . Plan of Arniston — proposed Improvements, 1 726, Plan of the Woods and Enclosures at Arniston in 1753, Old Clock in the Hall at Arniston, China Plate, .... House of second President Dundas, Oak Room, Arniston, House of Lord Advocate Dundas, North Front of Arniston, . Receipt by Sir Henry Raebum, Garden Gate, . Beech Avenue Gate, Rustic Bridge, Plaster-work, Hall, Arniston, Arthur's Seat from Arniston, Tapestry (see page 2), PAGE 7 19 43 44 45 46 48 74 75 77 110 114 196 211 232 248 293 297 298 300 357 369 370 SIGNATURES. George Dundas of Dundas, and his Wife, Dame Katherine Oliphant, ......... 4 Sir James Dundas of Arniston, . . . . . 13 James Dundas, First Lord Arniston, .... 22 Dame Margaret Ross, wife of First Viscount Stair, and mother of Janet Dalrymple (Scott's Bride of Lammer- moor), ......... 40 David Dunbar of Baldoon, ...... 40 ARNISTON MEMOIRS INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER For some years after the coming of William the Conqueror, " Gospatric, the son of Maldred" appears from time to time upon tlie troubled stage of English history. When the Conqueror was Iiolding court at Westminster, at Christmas 1067, Gospatric obtained, by the payment of a large sum of money, a gift of the Earldom of Northumberland, an honour to which he was well entitled to aspire, for royal blood ran in his veins, liis mother being Algitha, the granddaughter of King Ethelred. But neither the possession of a rich earldom, nor the fear of William''s vengeance, appear to have deterred him from taking part in, or at least encouraging, the san- guinary revolts by means of which the men of northern England attempted, for some time after the Conquest, to throw oft* the yoke of the Normans ; and, at length, having been, in 1072, deprived of his Earldom, he was driven into exile, and went to Scotland. On a former occasion, when his doings had compelled him to take refuge at the court of Malcolm, he had been accom- panied by Edgar Atheling and his sister Margaret, and " all the best men of Northumberland.^'' ^ And now Edgar Atheling, with his mother Agatha, and his sisters Margaret and Christina, were, says Mr. Freeman, "once more seeking a shelter at the court of Malcolm after the final ruin of their hopes in England."" Gospatric, therefore, found himself among friends and kinsfolk. Malcolm and the Saxon Margaret, now his Queen, received him graciously, and bestowed upon the ^ Hmdeh History of Northumberland, ip. 173. xxiv ARNISTON MEMOIRS. banished Earl a grant of Dunbar and other valuable possessions in Lothian. "Lothian and the neighbouring lands, which, like Fife, soon became as English as Lothian, became,'' says the historian of the Norman Conquest, " the historical Scot- land.'"' To the north lay a savage region, almost as unknown, and inhabited by a people as untamed, as in the Roman days ; while to the south was the border land, the debatable country, where the King's authority, weak even in the most settled part of his dominions, was practically ignored. In Lotliian, therefore, was to be found whatever there was of stability in the institutions of the Scotland of those times. It need hardly be said that even this favoured portion of Scotland was then for the most part little better than an uncultivated waste, covered with thick forest land or trackless heath, and abounding in game of every description. The chase was the favourite pastime of the people, when their energies were not employed in war ; and thus it came to pass that the names of places were often taken from the kind of game which frequented them. In West Lothian, on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth, were the lands of Dundas, or The Hill of the Fallow Deer. These lands either formed part of the possessions bestowed by Malcolm on Gospatric, or were acquired by his immediate descendants ; for, in the twelfth century, " Waldevus filius Cospatricii " conveys them to one Helias, son of Huctred, by the following charter, which is one of the oldest titles to land in Scotland : — " Waldeuus filius cospatricij omnibus probis hominibus suis et omnibus amicis suis tam futuris quam presentibus : salutem • Sciatis me dedisse et concessisse et hac carta mea confirmasse Helie filio Huctredi, Dundas, pro seruitio dimidij militis, ilium et heredes suos tenendum de me et heredibus meis in feudo et hereditate, in moris, in aquis, in stagnis, in molendinis, in pratis, in pasturis, cum omnibus rectis diuisis et pertinencijs • Concedo itaque et uolo et precipio ut iste predictus Helias istam terram habeat et teneat tam quiete et tam libere et tam INTRODUCTORY CHAPTKR. xxv lionorifice, ut nullus miles de harone tenet liherius et (|uietius et honorificentius in tota terra regis Scotie . His testibus : Johanne filio Orni, Wakleuo filio liaklewin, Roberto de Sancto Michaele, Helia de Iladestandena, Willebiio de Copland, Willebno de Hellebet, Aldano Dapifero, Gerardo niilite, Jolianne de (iragin/' ^ If, as there seems little reason to doubt, the granter of this charter was Waldeve (Waltheof), Earl of Dunbar, the great- grandson of Gospatric, Earl of Northumberland, the date of the deed must be between 11 ()6 and IIHJ^, as Waldeve suc- ceeded his father 2 in 1166, and died in 118J^. There is no evidence to prove who Helias, son of Huctred, was ; but, wliatever his origin may have been, he founded the family of Dundas of that Ilk, as the estate remained in the possession of his descendants until 1875. For a long time little is known regarding the successive owners of Dundas. Of one Hugh de Dundas we read, in Douglases Old Baronage (rf Scotland^ that he was " a man of singular merit and fortitude,'*'' and that " he joined the brave Sir William Wallace in defence of the liberties of Scotland, and embraced every ojjportunity of exerting his courage against the enemies of his country under that brave com- mander.''^ His son George, the next Baron of Dundas, as became one whose father had fought with Wallace, is said to 1 •* Waldevus son of Cospatric, to all his good men and all his friends, present and to come : greeting. Know ye that I have given and granted and by this my charter confirmed to Helias son of Huctred, Dundas, for half a knight's service, to be held by him and his heirs of me and of my heirs in fee and heritage, in moors, in waters, in stanks, in mills, in meadows, in pastures, with all its right marches and pertinents. I grant, therefore, and will and charge that the aforesaid Helias have and hold that land so quietly and so freely and so honourably, as no knight holds of a baron more freely and quietly and honour- ably in all the land of the King of Scotland. Before these witnesses : John son, of Orm, Waldev son of Baldewin, Robert of Saint Michael, Helias of Hade- standen, William of Copland, William of Hellebet, Aldan the Steward, Gerard the knight, John of Gragin." A facsimile of this charter is among the National Manuscripts of Scotland, vol. i. No. xxxiii. The original is in the possession of the family of Dundas of Dundas. - Gospatric of Dunbar, Earl of Lothian, and grandson of Gospatric, Earl of Northumberland. xxvi . ARNISTON MEMOIRS. have been a follower of Robert the Bruce. He built a monastery at South Queensferry for the Carmelite Friars, which is still the burial-place of the family, and perished at the battle of Dupplin in 1332. James de Dundas, son of George, seems to have had a long dispute with the Abbot of Dunfermline about his right to some landing-place, or to some islands in the Forth, which he maintained so obstinately that the Abbot proceeded against him with the highest censures of the Church. But all differ- ences were at last arranged, and Dundas was absolved from a sentence of excommunication in 1342. " By the dreaded power of excommunication the Lord Abbot of Dunfermline kept the mightiest of his lay neighbours in awe. The Lord of Dundas, whose massive stronghold frowns in sight of the Abbey Towers did once provoke a strife to his own bitter shame and humiliation. He laid claim to a certain landing- place at the south side of Queensferry, opposite his own castle, and molested the Abbot's boatmen. Abbot Alexander smote him with excommunication. But James of Dundas was proud and powerful, and obdurately resisted for some time. At length he quailed and bowed. Abbot Alexander and his Council proceeded to the disputed landing, and sat in public state on the rocks which served as the pier. James of Dundas on his knees humbly supplicated the Abbot to remove the excom- munication, which the Abbot graciously did, when Dundas found security never more to repeat his offence.'' The estates were forfeited to the Crown — a common fate in the fifteenth century — in 1449, but were restored to the family in the person of Sir Archibald Dundas, who enjoyed the favour of James ii. and James ni., and was frequently employed as an ambassador to the Court of England. John Dundas, of Dundas, was served heir to his father, Archibald, on the 3d of October 1480. James in., with con- sent of his Queen, Margaret, conferred on him a grant of the lands and barony of Bothkennar, "on account of the faithful services done by him to them, and in special for his INTRODUCTOUY CHAPTEU. xxvii free labour and jissistance given in delivering their Royal Persons furtii of the Ciustle of Edinburgh, in which they were detained contrary to their Royal plejisure, by which their lives were in danger."' He was also about to he created Earl of Forth ; but the nnirder of the King in June 1488 prevented the fulfilment of the Royal promise. Dundtus had faithfully adhered to the cause of James in. ; and his estates were declared forfeited on the accession of James iv. When, however, a wiser policy prevailed in the councils of the young King, they were restored, with the exception of the barony of Bothkennar, instead of which Dundas received a grant of the rocky island of Inchgarvie, lying in the Firth of Forth, opposite the lands of Dundas. This Charter is dated the 14th of May 1491. By it the King gives " to our beloved familiar, our esquire, John Dundas of that ilk, and his heirs, all and whole the Island and Rock of Inchgardy.'" And the said John has power to build thereon "a castle or fortalice,tosuch height, length, and breadth as to the said John and his heirs shall seem most expedient, with iron bars, ramparts, portcullises, crenelles, and machicola- tions, and with all other fortifications and monitions as can be planned and devised for the security of the said castle.'' Of this castle Dundas and his heirs were, at the same time, declared to be the perpetual governors. The castle was built, and still remains in the possession of the family, although the island of Inchgarvie is now desecrated by the piers of an enormous struc- ture ^ which, though it testifies to the progress of science, has done much to destroy the interesting associations of the past. Passing over two generations, we come to George Dundas, who was served heir to his father, James Dundas, on the 11th of March 1554. He was the sixteenth laird of Dundas, and married, first, Margaret, daughter of David Boswell, of Bal- muto, and secondly, Katherine, daughter of Laurence, third Lord Oliphant. The eldest son of the second marriage wa.s James Dundas, in order to provide for whom the lands of Amiston in Midlothian were purchased, and from whom were 1 The Forth Bridge. xxviii ARNISTON MEMOIRS. descended the men of whose lives an account will be given in the following " Memoirs.*" Sir Walter Dundas, the eldest son of George Dundas by his first marriage, had the honour of Knighthood conferred upon him by James vi. at the baptism of his son Prince Henry, " probably,"" it has been said, " for a pair of silk stockings lent by him to the modern Solomon." A fountain still remains at Dundas Castle which Sir Walter is said to have erected out of a sum of money which lie had saved, and was about to use in the purchase of the barony of Barnbougle, when he found that it had fallen into the rapacious hands of the great Earl of Haddington. We find the next owner of Dundas plunging into tlie troubled politics of the reign of Charles i., and deeply engaged on the Parliamentary side during that memorable conflict. He was made a Privy Councillor for life by the Covenanters in 1641, and acted on various Committees of the Estates, includ- ing that which was appointed for the trial of Montrose in 1641. In after years he seems to have been on terms of personal friendship with Cromwell, as several of the Protector's letters are dated from Dundas Castle. He survived the Restoration, and obtained a Charter for his lands, under the Great Seal, from Charles ii. Towards the close of the seventeenth century George, laird of Dundas, suffered from the rigorous laws against non-conformity. The Privy Council had passed an Act by which every heritor, on whose estate any conventicle should be held, was to be fined fifty pounds. It seems that, in the autumn of 1683, James Renwick and "other traitors'" did " meet and convene at Brown- rigge, in the laird of Dundas his land, and kept a numerous field-conventicle, where the said Mr. James took it upon himself to preach, and baptize ten or twelve children.'*'' Accordingly the Privy Council, on the 8th of November, fined the laird of Dundas fifty pounds.^ Next year the same thing took place. 1 Register of the Privy Council, Decreta, 8th Nov. 1683. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. xxix The laird of Dundas was brought before the Council and accused of allowing persons coming from a conventicle to pass through his lanils. Mis defence was that he htul not been at home at the time, and knew nothing about it for some days after. The Council, however, refused to admit this as a defence, and left it to the Lord Advocate to prove that, in point of fact, the people had passed through the lands of Dundtis.^ In commenting on these proceedings, Wodrow observes, " We shall hear just now, that in a j)arallel case this very day, they sustain the same defence in the Earl ofTweeddale, for it was now * Show me the man, and Til show the law."* "'' ^ The history of the various lairds of Dundas during last century need not be detailed ; and at last the time came when it was found necessary that the ancient estate should be sold. This was when the long life of the late Mr James Dundas was drawing to a close. He was born in 1793, — a posthumous child, his father having perished in the wreck of the Winterton Indiaman, — and, on coming of age, erected, at great cost, the modern Dundas Castle, a fine example of Tudor Gothic. He farmed, hunted, drove a four-in-hand from Dundas to Edinburgh, and was popular in the county, of which he was Vice-Lieutenant for many years. But his chief characteristic was a wonderful talent for mechanics, the pursuit of which led him into heavy expenses, beyond what his fortune was able to bear ; for, clever and ingenious as Mr. Dundas was, his mechanical inventions usually ended in severe pecuniary losses. Such an expenditure, continued through the course of a long life, led to hopeless embarrassment, ending in the sale of the property which had been in his family for so many genera- tions. The inexorable necessity which led to the loss of the estate was deeply regretted by all the neighbourhood. The sale of the greater part of Dundas took place in 1875. But the family reserved a portion adjoining the lands of Hope- toun, the island of Inchgarvie, and the Carmelite monastery in ^ Register of the Privy Council, 17th July 1684. - Wodrow, ed. 1830, vol. iv. p. 46. XXX ARNISTON MEMOIRS. Qiieensferry ; and under the vaulted roof of that old building, which has outlived so many changes in church and state since the day when, more than four hundred years ago, it was dedicated to the service of our Lady of Mount Carmel, the remains of the last Laird of Dundas were laid in March 1881. CHURCH OF WHITEFRIARS, SOUTH QUEENSFERRY. The ramifications of a family which, apart from the legen- dary and more remote period of its history, can be traced with certainty from the close of the twelfth century, are neces- sarily too numerous to mention. But it is possible, within the limit of a few pages, to give a brief account of some of the branches which have sprung from the parent stem. The Arniston branch, descended from George, sixteenth laird of Dundas, forms the subject of these Memoirs. Of the Melville branch, which has been rendered memorable chiefly through the greg,t name of Henry Dundas, the first Viscount Melville, nothing need be said at present, except that it sprang from the house of Arniston towards the close of last century. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. xxxi The family of Dmidas of Heecliwood is descended from the family of Duiulas of Dundas, throua/n^ed ^:2S^^{/n^cuiu} z^yiA^yto'z.cyty . / i626.] IMPROVEMENTS. 9 value l)eing due to its coal and lime. Ksperston was improved by the recljunation of waste laud from the moor. The tithes of this farm, formerly reckoned at thirteen bolls victual, " are lyk to be moir wortli because they are day lie fattit by making it inland."" On the home farm, the Mains of Aniiston, the rise in rent was considerable. Before the farm wtis taken into the pro- prietor''s own hands (" befoir it wes labourit in maynsing "") it had paid ten score and eight bolls of victual, four score and ten bolls meal, forty bolls oats, fifty bolls here, and twenty-eight bolls wheat, rent and tithe included. There was no lime upon the farm ; but it was brought by the proprietor from his other farms " with great labour and chairges, quhilk no fermer wes habill to underlie."^ After Sir James''s death the Mains of Arniston was let to tenants, when the rent paid for crop 1630 was ninety-six bolls here, twenty- six bolls wlieat, and one hundred and sixty-two bolls oats; realising at the current prices of the year £2SSS, 5s. Scots. These improvements, however, were not considered per- manent. Lime was the sole meliorating agent ; therefore " gifF the coin [coal] of Cassiltoun fail, the lyming will be difficill,'*'' and the land would relapse into its former state. This and other considerations were urged by Sir James Dundas against his lands being valued for the commutation of teind at their improved rent. His protest also records the disastrous results arising from the abuse of lime, and the little faith entertained at that time in the permanence of agricultural improvements.^ It not unfrequently happened that small farms were feued with the riglit still attached of fail and divot, and of pasturing upon the barony muir and unenclosed land of tlie superior a number of cattle proportioned to the acreage of the feu. It is easy to conceive the extent to which these rights were " the occasioune of dyvers actionis, discordis, and trublis,'" l)etwixt the feuars and tenants of an estate, and the impossibility of improvement during their existence. Within the lands of Arniston there were six feus or pen- dicles^ possessing the right of exercising the above servitudes : * See Reports made to H.M. Commissioners for Plantation of Kirks, 1627, Printed by the Maitland Club, 1855. - Small holdings. 10 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [i6: the Shank, Birkenside, Tailors Pendicle, the Burne, the Park of Halkerston, and Littlejohnsschott, or Castleton. Fortunately they all belonged to the same proprietor, and Sir James Dundas, by giving him eighty-one acres adjoining the Shank, liis largest feu, obtained in return a renunciation of the servi- tudes over the estate, and the absolute possession of the other five feus. The contract of excambion is dated at Dundas, 1598, and is " betwix Sir James Dundas of Arnistoun, Knyt., with consent of Dame Katherine Douglas his spous, and of George Dundas of that Ilk his father, and Dame Katherine Oliphant his spous, on the one part, and John Elphinstone of Schank on the other."" The value of such servitudes to the tenants of small holdings is shown by the fall in the rent of the Shank from five chalders to four, on the loss of the supply of limestone from Arniston, it having no limestone nor " commoditie of moss ""' of its own. Sir James Dundas farmed largely himself. He had in his own occupation the Mains and " Town "" of Arniston, the farms of Newbyres Mains, and Whitehouse, and the hill farms of Howburn, Esperston Hill, and Blakehope, the latter being rented from the Earl of Lothian. The list of the stock at Arniston in 1628, given in the note, may be interesting as showing the character and value of a Midlothian laird's home farm at that time.^ I Scots. s. ^. £ Scots. s. ^. ^ 38 drawing oxen, at 36 ewes, at Howburn, at £2A, . . . 912 40s., 72 12 horses, at;^26, 13s. 40!., 320 2 draught ewes, at 30s., 3 7 cows, with their calves, 120 gimmersand dinmonts, at;^i6, . 112 at 48s., . 288 2 cows, without calves, 46 hogs, at 30s., . 69 at;^i3, 6s. 8d., 26 13 4 42 yeld sheep, at Esper- 6 yeld cows, at ;^I3, ston, at 50s., . 105 6s. 8d., . 80 5 young nolt, one and At Arniston — two year old, at ;^8, . 40 183 threaves wheat, con- 16 "rassin" oxen, at taining 68 bolls 3 ;^i3, 6s. 8d., . 213 6 8 pecks; price, with the 87 ewes, at 40s., at Ar- fodder, ;^8 per boll. 545 10 niston, 174 3 bolls rye, with the 12 draught ewes, at 30s., 18 fodder, at £6, . 18 4 tups, at 50s., 10 852 threaves oats, con- I dinmont, . 2 taining 305 bolls I i628.] SERVANTS' WAGES. 11 About a dozen sen'ants seem to have been employed in the home farm of Arniston. Their wages were calculated in victual. The largest amount })aid to any one man was sixteen bolls of oats, which, at £5 Scots ])er boll, came to =£^80 Scots, or £6y 13s. 4d. sterling, for the year''s work. Some received £4^ Scots, or £ii, 6s. 8d. sterling. "James Jackson, smith and servant,'*"' only got £^5 Scots ; and the herd of Espei-ston was paid the small sum of £6, 5s. Scots. Among the debts enumerated as owing by Sir James Dundas at his death are the wages to his domestic servants as follows : — Mr. James Owsteane,* servand, for his yeiris fie, . . loo merks. To John Lorimer, servand, To James Nisbett, servand, To Mathow Boig, servand, To Thomas Crombie, servand, To Robert Browne, servand. To Isobel Lowthiane, servand, . To Katharene Haig, servand, . To Katharene Hadden, servand. To Janet Drummond, servand, To George , coupar. To Alexander Galloway, servand, To John Hepburn, servand,^ To James Bruce, cuik, .... To William Lowthiane, .... ICO 8o 40 £ Scots 20 „ 20 » 30 ,, 8 „ 8 5 100 merks. £ Scots 24 8 357 £ Scots, s. d. firlot ; price, with the fodder, ;^5 per boll, 1526 5 o threaves peas and beans, containing 40^ bolls I peck, with the fodder, at £fi per boll, 499 threaves here, con- taining 199 bolls I firlot ; price per boll, with the fodder, ;^6, 13s. 4d., . At Newbyres and White house — 329 threaves beir, contain- ing 65 bolls ; with the fodder, £(>, 13s. 4d. per boll, . . .433 From this list it appears that in Scots, or ;^6i2, is. in sterling ^ Tutor to the children. 243 7 6 1028 6 8 jC Scots. *. d. 69 threaves wheat, con- taining 20 bolls ; with thefodder,;^8 per boll, 160 o o 558 threaves oats, contain- ing 171 bolls ; worth, with the fodder, ;^5 per boll, . . . 855 o o 3 threaves i stook rye, containing i boll 3 f. 2 pks., at £(i per boll, with the fodder, . 1 1 5 o 100 threaves peas, contain- ing 3 bolls3f.,at;^5 per boll, . . . 18 15 o The pea-straw of the said 5 score threaves is estimated at 60 o c 15s. rod. Steward and farm -overseer. 6 8 the value of the stock was ;^7344 money. 12 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1628. Sir James Dundas died in 1628. His will, executed at Arniston on the 28th of April 1627, commences with those quaint expressions of religious devotion which are often found in the testamentary writings of Scotsmen in the sixteenth or seventeenth centuries. The opening sentences are as follows : — I, Sir James Dundas of Arnistoun, knycht, considdering with myself the many perrellis and daingeris quhairunto manes lyf is subject, and that thair is nothing more certane than death, and nothing more oncertane than the tyme and hour thairof, and thairfore I, being now of perfyt helth and judgement, have resolvit for ease of mynd, weill of my childrene, and sattling of my warldlie affairis, to sett doun my testament and latter will in manner following ; revoking by thir presentis all utheris testa- mentis maid be me at any tyme befoir the dait of thir presentis. In the first I commit my saull to God quho gave me the same, and I belive assuredlie to be savit of his frie mercie by faith throw the pretious blude of his deir Sone Jesus Chryst, my onlie Lord and Saviour ; and I ordane my bodie to be bureit in my bureall place at Borthuik kirk, thair to rest quhill the day of the generall resurrectioun, at quhat tyme I hoip assuredlie baith my saull and bodie sal be joynit agane to injoy and be partaker of that eternall glorie purchesit throw Jesus Chryst, his onlie death and passioun.^ In the Book of Household Accounts in the charter-room at Arniston, the expenses incurred at the funeral of Sir James Dundas are given in full detail. The accounts of the cloth and silk merchants for materials for the family mournings, and of the tailor by whom they were made up, are minutely ren- dered, each small charge, such as for thread, pins, buttons, etc., being made separately. The dresses both of the gentlemen and ladies, and of the men and women servants, were made by the tailor, who undertook every article of clothing, from the Laird's doublet and "breikis"' to Margaret's gown and stomacher. The apothecary's account for medicines supplied to Sir James during his illness contains some curious items, such as — Two ounces oil of scorpions, and 7 grains of Oriental bezoar, a costly drug, of which the price was ,£2, 6s. 8d. Scots. ^ For a similar document see Tytler's Life of the Admirable Crichton, Appendix, p. 276. 1 628.] FUNERAL OF SIR JAMES DUNDAS. 18 The funeral, after the fashion of the day, was an elaborate affair. Messengers were sent witli invitations to be ])resent to friends in Fife, to Dunghuss, Traquair, Dunchis, and Hancreiff. The body was embalmed, as appears from the following items in the accounts : — For odoriferous powders after the best manner, for the whole trunk of the body, etc., . . . . ^ Scots 13 6 8 For one ounce "centure candell," burnt the time of the evisceration 140 Item, two jars ("piggis") to put the bowels in, . . . o 12 o To Dr. Arnot at time of the bowelling, .... 40 merks. To David Pringle, chirurgeon, for doing same, ... 20 merks. To John Hamilton, apothecary, for his trouble, . 30 merks. The funeral procession was headed by trumpeters, heralds, pursuivants, and pages, carrying banners emblazoned with the family arms. The pall or dool-cloth was carried on a horse, and a horse-litter was provided for the widow and her daugliters, the former wearing a veil, while the young ladies carried black fans. The bell of Borthwick kirk was tolled, and that there was a funeral service in the church is sliown by the scliool- master having led the singing. The steward''s accounts for the dinner which followed were on a similar scale ; and, while tlie guests were feasted in memory of the deceased, the poor were not forgotten, a distribution of money having been made among them on tlie day of the funeral. CHAPTER III. THE FIRST LORD ARNISTON.^ Thp: next laird of Arniston was James, eldest son of Sir James Dundas, the Governor of Berwick, and Marie, daughter of George Home of Wedderburn. At his father's death, in 1628, young James Dundas was only eight years of age. His guardians were Dundas of Dundas, Home of Blackaddar, and Sir Patrick Murray of Elibank ; but the estate of Arniston seems to have been managed during his minority entirely by his mother. Dame Marie was evidently a prudent Iiousewife and a loving mother, who attended carefully to her son's interests. Some of the entries in her account-books may be mentioned, as giving an idea of the early life and surroundings of a boy in his position during the opening years of the seventeenth century. He was instructed by a tutor, who lived at Arniston and received a salary of one hundred merks a year. A pony was kept for him, and a man to look after it. In the accounts for the year 1633, there is a long list of clothes and other articles supplied to him, beginning with a saddle, £4}, 10s. Scots ; a pair of stirrups, 12s. ; stirrup-leathers, 13s. 4d. ; a bit, 6s. 8d. ; a pair of girths, 10s. ; and a pair of spurs, 12s. Among the clothes men- tion is made of a red satin doublet, lined with Spanish taffitie ; while, for winter wear, he had a suit of English cloth. In the year 1635 we find him fitted out with a red gown, with ribbons, buttons, and trimmings to match, and sent to St. Leonard's College, in the University of St. Andrews, where he is designated in the books as " Jacobus Dundas ab Arnistoune." In the following year his mother enters in her books the purchase of a Greek Grammar, Mercator's Geography (with her 1 Senator of the College of Justice, with the title of Lord Arniston. ^^^^^ ^ ■ ^^n n MVIh wffwf'a™ > ' 4 ^^^^^^ES^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^HIwHi I 'i U^hL»^ -/ f^L^^4eXAJ^C?e<^^^^>5^2-/ 1629] FARMING CUSTOMS. 15 son's name printed on tlieni in p^old letters), and "ane case with a ir\i\ss and combes to James." In the meantime the estiite was managed with prudence and thrift by Dame Marie. The crop on the Mains of Arniston had been sowed and reaped, for tiie year 1629, by the young laird's guardians, after whicli tlie farm was let to tenants. As was usual at that time, the farm wius taken by several tenants in connnon. In this instance they were four in nundKT. The rent was the third sheaf, or one-third of the ])r()duce, and the teind, both payable to the landlord in kind. Sometimes, how- ever, instead of taking his rent in kind, the landlord sold his thinl sheaf aiul the teind to the tenants on the ground, taking the price realised as his rent. The straw of crop 1629, on the Mains of Arniston, was given by the landlord to the tenants, who tilled the land for the crop of 1630, and became bound to leave the same on their quitting the farm. In 1631, half of the third sheaf forming the rent of the Mains of Arniston was sold to two of the tenants, on the ground ; while the other half of the rent and the whole of the teind was taken in kind. The prices obtained for the produce of the crop of 1631 were as follows : — Barley, . . ;^5 10 o Scots per boll. Wheat, . . ;^9 o o „ „ Peas, . . ^400,,,, Oats, . . ^400,,,, In 1633 the crop of peas, both for third sheaf and teind, could not be collected, being " frost slane and all spilt.'' It appears from the factors' books that, for many years after this, the rent continued to be the third sheaf, or one- third of the produce taken in kind. The landlord's sheaves were sometimes stacked in the tenant's yard, to be carted home at a convenient time. The teind still continued to be taken by the landlord separately from the third sheaf or rent. The factor's book for 1649 contains an account of various " third " or rent stacks, thrashed during the autumn of tliat year. A factor's post was, in those days, one of toilsome work. During harvest, every field had to be visited, and its crop measured for the settlement of " third " and " teind ; " and after the harvest was over, and all disputes settled, there still 16 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1638. remained the transport of the produce to the landlord's yard and barns. The Arniston family, as strong Presbyterians, took a great interest in Church affairs ; and, during her son's minority, Dame Marie frequently appeared before the Presbytery of Dalkeith, either personally or by a representative, to maintain his rights as a heritor in the parish of Temple. For instance, a visitation of the parish took place on the 22d of October 1635, " when wer present of the heretours the Lady Arnistoune for herselfe and her sonne."" It was stated that " the Lady Arnistoun desyrit that sho might have a seat in the east end of the kirk befoir the seat under the loft,^ and referred the quantitie and space therof to the minister and brethren then present, who designed the same place to her for a seat, pro- vyding it hinder not the entrie to the back seats onder tlie loft, nor thair sight of the minister.'" ^ But the Presbyteries were soon to be occupied with matters more serious than the settlement of disputes as to the pews of heritors in country churches. The mistaken policy of Charles i., in attempting to establish the Episcopal form of church - government in Scotland, was not long in producing its inevi- table results. The whole country united in resisting him. The iirst copies of the National Covenant were signed in the spring of 1638 ; and before the close of the following year the power of the Covenanters had been consolidated. The National Covenant is written in full at the beginning of the third volume of the records of the Presbytery of Dalkeith ; and after the signatures of the ministers come those of the heritors. Lords Lothian, Dalhousie, and Ross sign first, and then follows the name of "James Dundas of Arnistoune.'"* The date of his signature is 12th December 1639. In July 1640, the young laird of Arniston was made an " elder " of the Church in the following circumstances. On the occasion of a Presbyterial " visitation " of the parish of Temple, the minister, the Reverend Robert Couper, stated that he earnestly desired the help of the civil magistrate " in matters of Kirk discipline." The lairds of Arniston and Temple nomi- ' Gallery. - Records of the Presbytery of Dalkeith. i64i.] MAHUIAGE OF DUNDAS. 17 iiatetl their bailies to assist the minister on tlieir belialf. It tlien (KTurred to those present that Dmuhis, alonjr witli the hiird of Temple and 'I'homius Me«i[«^it, laird of Coekpen, should be made elders, in order that they might have the right of sitting in the Kirk-Session with the minister. They were, acrordinglv, then and there appointed elders, and "gave their oath to be faithful." After this " the laird of Arniston "" is fre(|uently named as present at the meetings of Presbytery. In the following year Dundjus wjus married to Mistress Marion Boytl, daughter of Robert, l^ortl IJoyd. The contract wtis signed at Kdinburgh on the 12th of November 1641. On the part of the gentleman, the consenting parties were Sir David Home of Wedderburn ; George Dundiis of that Ilk ; John Home of Blacader ; James Dowglas of Stanyjjeth ; and Dame Mary Home, Lady Arniston, his curators. On the })art of the lady. Dame Christian Hamilton, I^idy Boyd, her mother ; John, I^rd Lyndsay ; Sir Patrick Hamiltoun of Prestoun ; Sir John Sinclair of Stevinsone ; ]Mr. John Sinclair, his son ; and Alex- ander Moresone of Prestongrange, her curators. As jointure there was settled upon the bride the lands of Newbyres, Ksperston, and an annualrent of 500 merks from the lands of Halkerston. On the narrative that the lands of Arniston were entailed upon heirs-male, it was provided that if there should only be daughters of the said marriage, the heir-male succeed- ing to the lands should pay to the said daughters the sums of money following : if but one daughter, 20,000 merks ; if two, to the elder 15,000 merks, and to the younger 10,000 merks ; and if there were more than two, to the eldest 12,000 merks, and to the rest 18,000 merks equally among them, on their attaining the age of fifteen years complete ; and in the mean- time he was bound to entertain, educate, and upbring the said daughters virtuously and honourably, according to their estates, until they should attain the said age. The bride''s marriage portion was 17,000 merks. This marriage took place while Charles i. was in Scotland, on that visit during which he made such immense concessions to the demands of the Covenanters in regard to various points in the constitution of the Scottish Government. The Parlia- ment, which was sitting in Edinburgh in November 1641, encroached on the royal prerogative in a way which no 18 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1646. monarch, least of all a monarch of the Stuart line, would have tolerated, had it not been evident that resistance to the popular demands was impossible. One of the most un- pleasant tasks which was forced upon the King was to confer honours and offices on prominent supporters of the Covenant. The Earl of Argyll received a marquisate ; Johnston of Warriston was knighted ; Hope of Kerse was appointed Justice-General ; and Balmerino became a Lord of Session. The newly married laird of Arniston shared in the good things which were going, as, four days after his marriage, the honour of knighthood was conferred upon him. For some years after this Sir James Dundas appears to have lived quietly at Arniston, engaged in the management of his estate, and deeply interested in parochial business. In 1646 we find him taking a very active part in a case of church " discipline."' The Reverend Robert Couper, parish minister of Temple, was examined before the Presbytery of Dalkeith on a charge of tippling and swearing. Among other witnesses — "The Lard of Arnolstoun, being inquyret quhat he knew anent Mr. Robert Couper, his miscarriage, reported he hard of all the particulars quherof he wes accuset be the Synode, and more- over that on day going in to William Knox's to ask for Mr. Robert to speik with him, they first denying him, att lenth he fund him drinking with Master Pont and William Knox, whom, after he had called furth to speik with, he fund him so distemperet that he was forcet to leive him, for verifeing quherof he desyret to cause summond William Knox, buik- seller, and Thomas Ker, his owne servant.'' After several depositions by other witnesses regarding his playing at cards with the laird of Temple, and uttering " profane small oaths," Mr. Couper, "being poset^ if he wes drinking in Simeon Wilson's house excessively, answered that cominge from the Newbyres,^ quher he had been visiting the old Lady Arnolston, he met with the lard of Temple," who asked him to go in and " tak an drink." As the process against Mr. Couper went on, he objected to ^ Asked. 2 The Tower of Newbyres was this time used as the jointure house of Arniston. 1646.] A CASE OF CHURCH DISCH^LINE. 19 "Sir James Diimlas sitting as one of the judges in the aise — 1st, in reganl he wes cheiff* accuser befor the Synode and Presbytery ; 2d, he had never athnonishet him in private of these faults ; .'3d, that he had alwayes bein his secreit eniinie ; 4th, that he had deterrit be violence his stii)end from this long tyme; 5th, that he had at his owne table in Arnolston drunken to one of Mr. Robert his partK'hiners in thir teniies, 'This to the drunken nnnister and elders of Temj)le/ '' The record of Presbytery goes on — "Mr. Robert being reniovet, the lard of Arnolston declaret vnto the bretherin that ^^^>ft^lsS8ijte^: ^,^:n>t^^J ^'_^^i^ NEWBYKES TOWER. for the matter of his stepend he had offeret such satisfaction as wes thought sufficient be diverse of the bretherin, as also that he had regrated to sindrie of the bretherin Mr. Robert his miscarriage, and in particular to Mr, Patrik Sibbald quhen he wes at Newcastle, quhilk Mr. Patrik declaret to be so. " The lard of Arnolston removet willingly desyret that he might know the mynd of the brethern whither they thought it expedient that he should sit as judge or no in Mr. Robert Couper^s business. The most part of the brethern voycet this way, that they wish he would be pleaset not to sit as judge in that business. Quherwith he not being well pleaset, and 20 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1646. desyring if he were reniovet the extract of the act of his removal, with the reasons of it, the brethern sent furth Mr. Oliver Colt and Mr. Robert Lichtoun^ to deill with him, and to requeist that he would not sit as an judge in that business. Quhilk quhen he refuset, they desyret (he being callet in) that he would give his oath that in his cariage in this particular he wes frie of malice and splen, and had nothing befor his eyes bot the glory of God. "After the quhilk oath given he sat as judge, bot upon this condition, that quhen his servants and tenents, who ar witness against Mr. Robert, shall depon he should remove himself, quherviito he aggriet.'' In the course of the depositions tlie laird of Temple stated that he and Mr. Robert Couper, while playing at cards, drank *' four mutchkins of wine sack at the most,'' but that " Mr. Robert drank not immoderatly."*"* After a lengthy trial the charge of actual drunkenness was found not proven ; but as the accused had been guilty of misdemeanours he was j udged worthy of censure, which he was to receive upon liis knees. But, on being called in for this purpose, he became so outrageous, and so insulted the Court, that they summarily suspended him from his ministerial functions. In October following, Mr. Couper gave in a supplication confessing and regretting his " miscarriage,'' when, after due consideration, and testimony from several of the brethren, *' and especially the lard of Arnolston," that he had behaved Christianly since his suspension, some difference of opinion arose as to whether they could relax him from the sentence of suspension without waiting to refer the matter to the Synod, The Presbytery, with the exception of Mr. Robert Lichtoun and Sir James Dundas of " Arnolston," voted for immediate relaxation, the two gentlemen named dissenting. In the meantime great events had taken place. The Solemn League and Covenant, formed for the preservation of the reformed religion in the Church of Scotland, and the reforma- tion of religion in the Churches of England and Ireland, had been adopted ; and in support of this compact, in addition to ^ Robert Leighton, afterwards Archbishop of Glasgow. 1648] POLITICAL STATE OF SCOTLAND. 21 the National Covenant of 1638, tlic j)eo})le of Scotland were, on the whole, united. Hut the " Enga^r. 21, 1663. My Lord, — Yours of the l6th instant I receaved. You have conjectured aright of thes tuo friends who wer thinking upon oar concernments ; I am fully of your mynd, that ther is nothing to be done till they goe up, and that then the easiest and securest way for us wer that our busines wer moved ther, and we both called (if need wer), thither to doe what wer necessar, onlie a man is a lyon in his owne caus, and will keepe it afoote till ther be some issue. I leave that to your prudent consideratione, bot trewlie I am not in any freedome to leave this place till I know what becomes of my wife, who besyde the hazard of chyld birth is very unweell and in great hazard otherwayes. I know you ar a kynder husband then to think that can be dispensed with, bot my 1663.] SIR JAMES DALRYMPLKS PLAN. 27 opinione wold be that, without any noise of going till some tym after our great ones wer up, I might give a compt of publick affaires, yourself went up; you have not yet seen the King since he came home. And oftymes the (autumn) uses to be als good wether as any in the year. I sould be haartilie glad you wer presented whatever come of me, and I am suir you might be helpful to both, whatever you doe. Let the medium thought uj)on be als little known as possible, least thes who will be against it mor for the example of it then for our interest in it, prevent it. The termes I think safest and cleirest, I have inclosed ; let me hear your resolu- tion, and remember me to your lady and all friends to whom you think fit to mention. Your really aff'ectionat friend and servant, J A. Dalhvmple. In tiiis letter Sir James Dalryniple encloses, written on a slip of paper, the words which he proposed to add to the Declaration, and which he thought, as he expresses it, " safest and cleirest.'^ The Declaration (to be taken by all persons in positions of public trust) was to the effect that it was unlawful for subjects to enter into Leagues and Covenants, and, in particular, that the National Covenant of 1638 and tlie Solemn League and Covenant were " unlawful oaths, and were taken bv, and imposed upon the subjects of this kingdom, against the finidaniental laws and liberties of the same.'" The words which Dalryniple proposed to add were, " I do declare against the actings above written in so far as they were against the law, and against the oaths and obligations aforesaid, as they are construed to import any obligations to act or endeavour against law.^^ In the following letter Sir Alexander Hume conveyed to Dundas the King^s refusal to accept a qualified subscription to the Declaration : — Sir Alexander Hume to Sir James Dundas. Westminster, this Tuesday -^d A'oz'em her 16^. Mv Lord, — Yesternight, late, I received yours of the 26th Octob., with an enclosed for the B. of Dumbl.^ to w*^'' if he hold his promise, you will receive an answer herewith. I had upon my journey much ill wather and bad way, yet, thanks be to God, I got safe hither on Wednesday last the 28th, without any ill ^ Robert Leighton, Bishop of Dunblane (1661-70). 28 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1663. accident, whereof I should have given you notice sooner, but that I deferred untill I might withall let you know the arrival! of our great men, whom I expected every day, yet they came not till yester night about six o'clock. They went immediately to the king, who gave them a very gratious reception, and talked with them both together about an hour or thereby. Upon their with- drawing from the king, I waylaid upon them at my Lord Lauder- dale's loging in the Court, but forebore at that time to say anything to them concerning you, untill I should understand from you upon what terms you left them, whereof your letter that I received afterward did inform me. So this morning early, I went to them both, and found Lauderdale newly comed out of bed, and Rothes afterwards still in bed. I spoke to them both very earnestly concerning your business, and Lauderdale told me of the signed paper you had sent with him, wherein both of them have promised at the very first opportunity to speak jointly with the king, this night if it be possible, but seem both of them to have small confidence of the success, the king having absolutely refused to accept my Lord Crawford's subscription with any manner of qualification, but punctually as the words lye. Upon this answer from them I went and found out the B. of Dumbl.,i and having given him your letter, spoke at great length with him of the thing, and found him as you described him, very much inclined to moderation, and against all rigid courses, but without any hope that the king can be moved to dispense in any sort with the acte made in that behalf. And for his speaking with the king in it, he declines it altogether, having seldom or never as he sayeth taken the freedom to speak with the king in any business, and rarely made any other address to him but to kiss his hands at coming or going. All that he thinks proper for him to doe is to speak with Rothes and Lauderdale, and endeavour all he can either by his advice for moderation in generall, or by recommend- ing your person and my Lord Stair in particular, to dispose them to be earnest with the king for procuring an exemtion to you both from the acte. And to this purpose he sayeth he will make all the haste he can to see them, as soon as he can possibly absent himself for an hour's time from his brother, who is at present lying sick of a fever and flux in great extremity. In his discourse to me he said one thing, which to me seemed very rational], that he thought the qualification you desired to insert (of disown- ing the particulars there mentioned, in so far as they were against ^ Bishop Leighton. 1663.] PRESSP:D to renounce the covenants. 2c) law, and disclaiming all ordinances that may lead to the disturb- ances of the publick peace) is altogether superfluous, seein^r the meaning: of the declaration can be in effect no other, and no acting can thereby be understood to be disowned, but such as were against law, nor any ordinances disclaimed but such as are seditious. Which if you will take into serious consideration, together with what I have formerly urged when we were together, and consult your own judgement maturely in it, I do yet hope that you may overcome your scruples and subscribe the declara- tion simj)ly as it stands, without addition of that postscript, though you may at the subscribing of it, by mouth declare the sense in which you think it is to be understood, which doubtless will be equivalent as if you should put it in writing. Yr. Lop's, most affectinat and humble servant, A. Hume. lAnd Arnistcm wjus not prepared to make the recpiired renunciation, and did not take his seat on the bench after the Ttli of November 1663. On the 18th of November, the renun- ciation wtis signed by all the judges present^ twelve in number, which was reported to the King. His Majesty offered to allow time for subscribing the Declaration, but was determined that subscription should be enforced. Sir Alexander Hume to Sir James Dundas. London, 8/// Decemb. 1663. My Lord, — Having at this instant written another letter to you, by advice of Mr. William Sharpe, lest that should mis- carry-, or be slow of coming to your hands, I send this by the usual way, to let you know that having been this evening, as my custom is every post night, with my Lord Lauderdale, he told me he could now give me an account, but not such as he wished, of the business I came to inquire of, which was, that the king, not- withstanding all that could be sayd to persuade him, would upon no terms yield to accept of that explanation in writing which you desire to subjoyn to the declaration, as you will understand by a letter more at length that my lord hath writte to you himself, which he showed me. This answer I did expect, but I confess I am deceived in one point, for I did believe advantage would have been taken against all that failed at the day a])poiuted, and their places disposed immediately without admitting of their subscrip- tion after that day. But it seems the king is so gratious as to leave place still for such as will yet comply with the law, and to 30 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1663. that end is forthwith to send order to the Lord Chancellor to call for all the absent members of the house, and urge them to declare whether or no they will subscribe simply without any addition or explanation in writing, and such as shall then refuse immediately to declare their places voyd, and returne an account to his majesty. And it is withall a curtesy in my Lord Lauderdale to keep up the king's order for some days, and in the meantime to give my Lord Stair and yourself notice of it, that you may not be surprised at it. Now, I trust this grace of the king's and his lordship's civility will work that effect with you both for which it was intended, and that at last your eyes will be opened to see there can be no difference in reason or conscience, between writing and speaking the same words you desire to subjoine, which is the clear opinion of all I have spoke with about it ; and amongst others of Sir Robert Morry, who was present this night when I spoke with my Lord Lauderdale. And for any explanation of that kind you shall desire to make by tongue, it will not be denyed. But for setting any such thing in writing, and so have the declaration subscribed in different wayes, the king looks upon it as making party against party, and believes it a thing of dangerous consequence, wherein 1 find all men here concur in his judgement. And whatever ground you may have to be scrupulous in the thing, yet I assure you, if you refuse to subscribe the declaration in the same way as the parliament, and councill, and all the Lords of Session, except your- selves, have done, it will be interpret by the king and by all impartiall men, as a factious inclination which is a scandal that worthy patriots and loyall subjects, as you two ar, I trust will avoyd to incurr. And this consideration above all that I formerly said, I hope will prevaile with you not to desert the station wherein God hath placed you, and wherein you may have occasion to doe God and your king and your Cuntrie, and your friends acceptable and usefull service. ^ Earl of Lauderdale to Sir James Dundas. Whitehall, 2,th of Deer. 1663. My Lord, — At my first arrivall, having found the king avers from such a declaration as y"" Lo. wold put in wryting, and know- ing y' absence secured you from being put to it, I delayed urging his maj^'^^ positive resolution untill I could doe it conveniently. And now within these 2 dayes I have his positive order to let you know that he cannot admitt of explanation, becaus that were posi- ^ This letter is unsigned. 1663.] LEITER FROM LAUDERDALE. til lively to state a partie of those who doe subscribe as the hiw requires & of those who subscribe with exphmations. This his Maj*'"= will on no termes admitt because of the example, and I am comanded to prepare an order to the Session to put all their members to a positive answer. But befor I sent it, I thought it my dewty to give you this warning that you might be not surprised. I doe not need I hope to profess my respects to you nor my desire to serve you. From that consideration, I who am elder must entreat you to consider well before you abandon your station ; and this freedom I hope you will take well from. My Lord, y' affectionate friend, Lauderdaill.^ The following letter, which was Sir James's reply to Lord Lauderilale's letter of the 8th December 1663, is coj)ied from the original, now in the possession of Richard Ahnack, Esq. of Melford, Suffolk:— Sir James Dundas to the Earl of Lauderdale. 16/// Dec. 63. Mv Noble Lord, — I received your Lordship's of the 8 dayes date yesterday in the aftemoone, by which I understand that ydur Lordship hath been pleased not only to move the business you writ of once and againe to the king, but also to watch oppor- tunities of doeing it to the best advantage. And as if al this wer to smal a testimonie of your respects for me, yow ar likewise pleased to give me ane express advertisement of the event that I should not be surprised by hearing it in a way which I cannot evite. My Lord, soe verie great favor calleth for a greater acknow- ledgement than I am able to make, and not the lesse that the successe hath not been answerable to your Lordship's desires and endevours ; soe I can verie frely say caveat successibus quisquis ab eventu. And not to misspend your Lordship's time (which all men know to be taken up with far greater things), I doe in a word return your Lordship most heartie thanks for this and all your favors ; and if ever I shall be soe happie as to have an opportunitie to doe you service, I hope I shall not be capable of that unworthi- ness as to be found forgettful therof, who now subscribe myself most sincerely, y' Lordship's most humble and obliged servant, James Dundas. ' Second Earl, and afterwards Duke of Lauderdale, Secretary of State and President of the Council. S2 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1664. On the 19th December 1663 the King wrote to the Privy Council, ordering them to " requyre the Senators of our College of Justice to appoint a short day, on which the absent Senators and other members may either subscribe or refuse, to the end wee may take care for supplying the places of such as shall on that account forsake their station.*" The Lords accordingly, on tlie 5th January 1664, " did assigne ane certaine day for cache of the absent Lords, con- forme to their severall distances to come in and give their positive answer either as to the subscrybing or refusing of the declaration aforsaid ; viz., to the Lord Arneistoune, the eight of January instant, and to the Lords Staire and Bedlay, the nynteinth day therof, and to the Lord Tarbett, the second of February nixt."" In reply to the letter from the Chancellor, assigning the eighth day of January instant for subscribing or refusing the Declaration, Sir James wrote as follows : — Sir James Dundas to the Lord Chancellor. Arnistoun, ']thjaii. 1664. May it please your Lordship, — I did some weekes agoe send a demission of my place in the Session to the Court, which I hope befor this tyme is presented to the king's most sacred Majestic, whereby I am altogether incapacitat to give obedience to the Lords of Session their commands laid upon me as one of their number by their letter of the fift of this instant, signed by your Lordship in their name. This I hope will excuse me for not waiting upon their Lordships on Friday next according to their appointment, and shall entreat their Lordships may believe that, though I shall noe longer be able to serve them as a publick minister, yet I shall never omitt anything shall be in my power as a private man, whereby I may witness the deep sense I have of their Lordship's civilitie and kindnesse to me, while I had the honour to sitt amongst them, which can never be forgotten by — My Lord, y*" lordships most humble servant, James Dundas. On this letter being read, the Court pronounced the follow- ing sentence : — " The Lords having considered the Act of Parliament, with his Majestie's letter, and the above written answer to the Lord's 1664.] RRSKJNATION OF LOUD AUNISTON. 33 owne letter, they declare the said Sir James Duudas his place as ane of the Lords of Session vacant." On tiie 15th .January 1664, Lord Stair wrote from Ayr to the I^rd Chancellor in much the same terms as I^)rd Arniston, and his place was in the same manner declared vacant. I^)rd Iknllay wjus excused on the ground of ill-health, and his declaration of willingness to make the required renuncia- tion. I^)rd Tarbett had already made the renunciation in his j)lace in Parliament. Sill James Daluvmple lu Siii James Dundas. Stair, Febr. 15, 1664. My Lord, — Your last cam bot on of thes dayes to my hand. As to your desyre of my coming east in March to put some poynt to the difference betwixt my Lord Lothian and you, I will not have my hoi*ss to shoe when you have to doe, bot I think a little further, in the year when wether is fairer and the day longer, will be better. It is no small difficulty to draw me to Edinbrugh voyage. 1 much mor inclyne if your convenience so be to wait upon you at Laurike, near my Lord Lea's, who is to be spared in travel als much as you can. We will be freer of diversion ther than at Ed^ A night or two will serve in either case, my kyndnes and confidence made me so free with you in my last as not to conceale the observatione of others ; if thereby you appre- hend that I laid blaime on you, indeed it was far from my thought, bot it is my rejoycing to have a sharer in my lot, whom I honor and love so much, thogh lyke motives moved us both without our premoving either the other. Remember my service to your ladle. — I sal ever continue your faithful friend and servant, J A. Dalrymplk. Sir James Dalrymple to Sir James Dundas. (From London.) My Lord, — I beleive you will thinke it strange to hear of me from this place, it is even strange to myself, who had resolved retirement, bot being called hither by friends, upon finding of the kings kyndnes continowed with me and hopes of his favour to me, I obeyed, thogh I knew no particular (reason) that I did not come be you, bot keept Carleell way, wherbye I was als neir London as is Ed"". I sal at meeting fully satisfie you in that, and that this is the first advertisement, you may be assured I shall not be forget- 34 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1664. ful of you, bot sal doe for you as you wer my brother, I cannot say what I can doe for myself or any other, bot I am suir I shall doe for you whatever I can. I am bot new come hither, and not yet in a rite postur to sie any bodie or doe anythinge, bot when I come to any ishue or expectatione, you sal be acquainted with it from your real friend and humble servant, J a. Dalrymple. Send your letter to Daniel Dalrymple, at Mr. John Hay's chambers, or Master James Ross, at William Ros, Wryter to the Signet his chambers. Sir Alexander Hume to Sir James Dundas. Westminster, 18 A/>r. 1664. My Lord, — I suppose that knowing of my Lord Stair's being here, you may expect to receive some account of his proceedings, which he was proposed himself to have given you by this post, but that he is invited this night to my Lord Lauderdale's countrie house at Highgate, some four miles out of town, from whence they are to returne on Monday next. Before his going out he was with me, and told me he had this morning a large conference with the king, being the first time he saw him, to whom he made an ingenous declaration of the motives that induced him to make scruple of the subscription required of all in publick trust, which he assured his mat*^ did not proceed from any want of loyalty. The particulars he had not time to tell me, only in general he sayd the king was very civile to him, and told him he would be very sory that he should desert his service. So at that time there was no conclusion made, but he is not without hope that the result may be such as he may keep his station, whereof he may be able after full communication with my Lord Lauderdale, to give you a particular account by the next post, that you may also resolve what is fitt for you to do. For seeing you both agree as well in sincere principles of loyalty as in scruples of conscience, it is reasonable to think your affaires may have the like event; wherein my Lord Stair and I will take the best care we can that your absence shall not prejudice you, and my Lord Lauderdale hath also promised his best offices. Perchance it may be necessary that you be at the pains of coming hither, for which at all adven- tures I would have you prepare yourself, though I shall rather wish you may avoyd the journey, unless it be absolutely necessary. I shall add no more at present, but, with my humble service to your lady, remaine ever, your most affectionat cosen and humble servant, A. Hume. 1664.] DALRYMPLK AT COURT. S5 Alth()u<;li liis seat on tlie bench had been dechiretl vacant, Sir James Dalynnple wlien in I^)n(l()n, (hn'infjj his interviews with the Kin^, made the arrangement which is hinted at, rather than exphiined, in the foHowing letters. He wius to subscrilx,* the Dechiration as it stood, and the King was to allow him to salve his conscience by making a private verbal explanation of the sense in which he understood it. Sni James Dalrvmple to Sni James Dundas. VVhvtehall, Apryl 19, 64. My Lord, — Since my last 1 have bein with the king, and have fowned mor favour than I doe deserve, and mor desyr of my continwans in his Majesty's service then I could have expected, hot no jKJssibilitie of obtaining an explanatione in wrytte, to be subjoyned to the declaratione. Something is spoken of in lieu therof, hot no effect as yet, nether may I at a distance mention it to you. It is necessar for yourself and me and others, it be so ; and that nothing be spoken of, either endeavour or expectation, till I sie you, which if anything be done to satisfactione will be shortlie, bot I hope you will be out of dowbt of my dilligence for you. I assur you you have some very kynd friends heir who doe heartilie goe along with y' real friend, Ja. Dalrvmple. Sir James Dalrvmple to Sir James Dundas. London, May 26, 1664. Mv Lord, — I receaved two of yours together at Paris, and once since my returne, prior to both which Sir Alex' Home had. I must still forbear to be particular with you in what is past heir, and thogh you find difficulty to aprehend how it can be that we can sign without explanatione in wrytt, I sal say no more at distance, bot that ther is an equivalence in all respects of adjecting a declaratione or provisione to a wrytt, and getting the sam, under the hand of the wreater of the wrytt, that it is so accepted or so satisfactorie. I shall be full with you at meeting. I desyre you will be at Ed', the ()th of June, for on the 7th or 8th I hope you shall see Y' real and affectionat friend, Ja. Dalrvmple. S6 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1664. Sir Alexander Hume to Sir James Dundas. Westminster, 2^/2me 1664. Just now I received yours of the l6th, and am very sorry you give me so little hope of that which you know I so much wish. I have already said as much upon this subject as I could, and have nothing now to adde, but that I cannot comprehend how you should be more difficult to receive satisfaction in your scruples than your friend (Dalrymple), who hath hitherto been of one mind with you. I doubt not but he hath fully acquainted you with his proceed- ings, and upon what grounds he hath been moved to comply, which I conceive was a conference he had with the king, who, being the party chiefly concerned, had power to declare in what sense he would allow the thing to be done. For God's sake con- sider seriously whether you might not in the same way be sett free, and if so, I could wish that you should of purpose make a journey hither to receive the same satisfaction, in the point that your friend did. In any case I think your journey would be usefull to let his mat'^ know that your scruples do not proceed from any bad cause, but merely conscience. — My Lord, your most affectionat cosen and humble servant, A. Hume. Although thus urged by Hume to follow Sir James Dalrymple^s example, Dundas stood firm to his original position, and refused to sign the Declaration without a written qualification. This resolution was deeply regretted by Hume. Sir Alexander Hume to Sir James Dundas. Westminster, 9 Aug-. 1664. I have received yours of the 30 of July, whereby you have now cleared me more than I wished of your purpose, whereof I have often written, and with so much impatience expected your answer. I must withall confess to you I am farr disappointed of my hope in that matter, for having very justly heretofore from the former difference of your judgement and principles from your friends, collected that more might be expected from you than from him, I cannot comprehend upon what ground it can be that you now fall short of the length he comes, nor will I urge to know it, seeing it may not be without divulging your friend's secret, whereof it is not fitt for me to be inquisitive. But as to that 1664.] DUNDAS'S FINAL RESOLUTION. 87 which you say (that the paper being so much against your sense and his, you think it unreasonable that your signing of it should be publick and the salvo should be latent), give me leave to remind you of what you have often professed, that no considera- tion did hinder you to do it, but merely point of conscience ; and if so, what need there should be to have the salvo publick is more than I can understand. But this or any thing else that I can say I doubt will be to little pur})ose, seeing that worthy person (Dalrymple) can neither with his persuasion nor his example prevail with you ; therefore I shall forbear farther contending with your resolution ; only as a last means, I shall intreat you to peruse two little books which I have sent you by our cosen (Home of) Wed- derburne, and if they do not convince you I shall despair of it. As for the king's inclination, touching the laws enacted by the parliament in order to conformity, I am not able farther to inform you, than I have often said, that I know he is not of a nature to use severity with any man in point of tender conscience ; but how farr he may be disposed to grant any indulgence or dispensa- tion from the obedience of those laws, is more than I know. Your friend (Dalrymple) may possibly know more than I, having, at his being here been intimately concerned with my Lord Lauder- dale, who is best able to inform him. And now that I name that Lord, I must let you know that of late, having occasion to speak with him, he told me he was sorry to hear that you were not likely to comply, and wished me to use all possible means to persuade you to it, promising to keep the door open for you as long as he could. And indeed I see no great haste is made to fill any of the vacant places, nor doe I hear whom they mean to put in them. As for that person whom you wished to be your suc- cessor, there is no expectation for him though all these places were voyde, the resolution being unalterably taken to fill all with lawyers, according to the constant practice of this cuntrie (England), which is undoubtedly more fitt. With hearty wishes of happy success both to your lady in a safe delivery,! and to your daughter 2 in her marriage, I remain ever, &c. &c. A. Hume.s * Birth of his son Charles. - Christian, married to Charles Erskine of Alva. ' This lengthy correspondence, on the positions taken by Sir James Dalrymple and Sir James Dundas in reference to the question of the Declaration, is some- what tedious. But as the letters are of considerable historical value, it has been considered better to print them in full. 38 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1665. Neither the "two little books,"" whatever they may have been, nor the expression of Lord Lauderdale's desire to serve him, had any influence on Dundas, who steadfastly adhered to his resolution, and retired to private life. Sir James Dundas was thrice married. His first wife was Marion, daughter of Robert, Lord Boyd. Of this marriage four children were born : — Robert, known, as a judge of the Court of Session, as the second Lord Arniston ; Mary, wife of Sir J. Home of Blackadder ; Christian, wife of Sir Charles Erskine of Alva; and Katherine, wife of the Hon. Sir J. Dalrymple of Borthwick. His second wife was Janet, daughter of Sir Adam Hepburn of Humbie, and widow of Sir John Cockburn of Ormiston. The children of this marriage were : — James, from whom the Dundases of Beech wood are descended ; Alexander, and Charles. His second spouse died in 1665 ; and in the following year. Sir James married, thirdly, Helen, daughter of Sir James Skene, President of the Court of Session, and widow of Sir Charles Erskine of Alva. The following letter is from Sir James's friend and cousin, Sir Alexander Hume, giving an account of his son Robert, afterwards the second Lord Arniston, then a youth returning from his travels ; also condoling with Sir James on the death of his second wife : — Sir Alexander Hume to Sir James Dundas. Hamton Court, 4 Jtdy 1665. My Lord, — I could not let this bearer 1 goe without a letter, though I have little subject left for one, having at length dis- coursed with him of everything that I could write ; unlesse it be of the good opinion I have of him, which I could not express to himself without offending his modesty, for really it was much joy to me to finde him so well qualifyed, being (if my interest in him do not much deceive me) a discreet and knowing gentleman, without vice or vanity, and I am very confident he will give you cause to think his time and your money imployed in his travells well bestowed, and that his company will in a great measure lessen that affliction which it pleased God of late to lay upon you, by taking from you a deserving lady ; which sad losse I had sooner condoled with you if I had known it, which I did not until 1 ^ Robert Dundas, 1679] FAMILY OF SIR JAMES— DEATH. 39 I saw your sone goe in mourning for her ; on which subject I can say nothin^f as to yourself, but that I know you are so ^ood a Christian as to submitt to the ^ood pleasure of God ; and as to myself I hope you do believe that whatsoever befalls you, I receive it with such a sense as becomes the friendship I owe you as, my Lord, your most affectionat cosen and humble servant, A. Hume. In the early part of the year 1679, Sir James's daughter Katherine was married to James Dalryniple, one of the principal clerks of the Court of Session, and second son of his friend Sir James DtUrymple, afterwards Lord Stair. The contract of marriage is dated the 2d of January 1679. On the part of the bridegroom the consenting parties are his father. Sir James Dalrvm})le, and his mother. Dame Margaret Ross. The bride- groonrs mother, it is perhaps unnecessary to remind the reader, was the " Lady Ash ton " of Sir Walter Scotfs Bride (yf Lammermoor ; and it is curious to notice that one of the witnesses to the contract is " David Dunbar, younger of Baldoon,^ who appears in that celebrated novel as " Bucklaw/' the unlucky husband of Lucy Ashton. Another of the witnesses is Sir George Mackenzie of Rose- haugh, who was, at this time. Lord Advocate, and deeply engaged in the persecutions, from which he earned his name of the "Bloody Mackenzie/"* His presence on this occasion shows that Sir James Dundas had not suffered from his refusal to renounce the Covenants, and was on terms of intimate friendship with the members of the ruling party in Scotland. A period of greater trial was, however, at hand for the people of Scotland ; and the time was now rapidly approach- ing when the passing of the Test Act was to drive Sir James- Dalryniple into exile, and to furnish the pretext on which Argyll was sentenced to death. But Dundas was not destined to witness these events ; for, not long after his daughter's marriage, he died at Arniston, in October 1679, leaving behind him the well-earned reputation of one who, at a time when principles were put to the severest test, had proved himself a resolute and conscientious man. The heraldic painter's account for work done at the funeral of Sir James Dundas has been preserved. It consists 40 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1679. of the customary items of a large coat-of-arms, etc., smaller shields for the decoration of the coffin, trumpets, and hearse. The ornaments of the coffin likewise included a headpiece and wreath to place on its head. The doors of the burial-place (yle, aisle) were blackened, and had emblematic tears painted on them. The cost of this funeral painter- work amounted to ^98 Scots, a considerable sum for those days. Sir James was succeeded in the estate of Arniston by his son Robert, wlio occupied a seat on the bench in days happier than those in which his father lived. S^^&.: ^y-mtfoA^i/.'J-'n^ CHAPTER V. THE SECOND LORD AHNISTON. From the death of Sir James Dimdiis, in UJTO, until the year 1688, there aj)pears to be a blank in the records of the Arniston family. Moreover, there are no letters in the charter- room at Arniston for the period from 1667 till 1717. This want is, to some extent, supplied by a manuscri})t written by Robert Dundas (the great-grandson of the second Lord Arniston), who was Lord Chief Baron of Scotland at the beginning of the present century, and who found time to com- pose an interesting account of various matters connected with the family estate. It appears that Robert Dundas, son of Sir James Dundas and Marion, daughter of Lord Boyd, was living abroad during the years which immediately preceded the Revolution. He returned to Scotland as a supporter of the Prince of Orange, and was chosen one of the members of Parliament for Mid- lothian in 1689, a position which he continued to hold until the passing of the Act of Union. In Scotland the active pursuit of politics had always been thought compatible with the performance of judicial duties ; and Dundas was appointed a judge of the Court of Session on the 1st of November 1689. It was at this time that proprietors in Scotland began to improve their houses and grounds. Trees were being planted, to a considerable extent, round mansions and farm-" tounes,"^ and enclosures were designed as well for ornament as for the protection of stock. Mansions were rebuilt or enlarged, gardens and pleasure-grounds were formed, and public roads were removed to a greater distance from the pleasure-grounds. Scotch lairds who had been residing abroad during the last 42 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1688. years of the Stuart dynasty, returned home with minds im- proved by taste and cultivation, acquired on the Continent, and devoted themselves to the adornment of their houses and to the improvement of their estates.^ The following account of the changes made at Arniston is taken from the manuscript of the Chief Baron : — NARRATIVE OF THE IMPROVEMENTS AT ARNISTON, From the MS. by the Chief Baron Dundas. " The old Manor-house of Arnistoun was situated exactly where the present house stands ; the Oak-room and vaults beneath, being part of the old building. The vault beneath the east end of the Oak-room was the parlour or eating-room of my great-grandfather, Lord Arniston. The Oak-room was then divided into two apartments, one a dining-room used only on great days, and the other the principal bedroom for strangers of distinction visiting the family. The house was enclosed by a stone wall to the north. My great-grandfather. Lord Arniston, died in 1726, and his son before his death, either began to build the new house from a design by old Robert Adam, or at least took down part of the old chateau, witli the view of preparing for it. I was told by my father, who was then about eleven or twelve years of age, that on pull- ing down the high wall, which enclosed the house to the north, they discovered that the sea was to be seen from the windows, and having notified this to the old man, he would not believe the fact till he was carried to the room for the purpose of satisfying his own eyes. " The garden of the old house was immediately contiguous to it, on the south and east fronts of the present house, and in front of the present stables, stable-court, and cow-house ; all beyond or without this was corn or the croft land of Arniston. " The road from Edinburgh to the south was by Carrington, Arniston, Esperston, and thence through the Outerston Moss over the hill into Heriot Water, and by Dewar and Innerleithen ^ Cosmo Innes, Highland Society Transactions, 1861. ^^H^- ^r^i^^ta^' cJ^f^^^z^^^-^^^i^ i688.] THK OLD HOUSE AT ARNISTON. 43 to Traquair. Lortl Traquair,* when Chancellor of Scotland, built, it is said, at his own expense, tlie bridge across the river at the foot of the bank below the meeting of the Temple and Ciirrin«rton waters, which I am now (1811) pulling down.-^ By old people the bridge wtus always called Tra(iuair's Bridge, his Lordship always riding through this road to Edinburgh. The path up the brae is still to be discerned. In some old ANCIENT OAK-TREE WHICH IS SAID TO HAVE MARKED THE BOUNDARY BETWEEN THE ENCLOSURES AND CORN-LAND OF ARNISTON. book, I have seen^ Esperston marked as the first stage from Edinburgh, or the road to the south country. Outerston and Esperston were then large Towm, or hamlets, each con- taining a considerable number of inhabitants, most of whom kept pack-horses, on which they carried the lime burnt in great quantities on these lands, to all the neighbouring country. ^ First Earl of Traquair; creation 1628. - The piers of the bridge are still standing, 1886. ^ Tradition still marks the site of the inn and blacksmith's forge at Esperston — about sixty yards to the south of the present farm-house. 44 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1688. "The public road then passed close by the old house of Arniston, and thence branched off to the eastwards towards Stob- hill and Borthwick. Its direction from Traquair^s Bridge was up the hollow path, through the south lawn, along the green walk from the Grotto, through the present greenhouse and dairy, and thence round the front of the present house into the Edinburgh approach, under the double row of ancient planes and ashes, at the end of which it took its direction to the east along the ridge of the north-east lawn, through Lawrence Law THE HAMLET OF OUTERSTON. Inhabited by persons making their living by farmings -weaving^ lime-burning, and carrying the lime on pack-horses through the surrounding country — Enlarged ft oin Arniston Estate Map, 1758. park, by an old ash-tree still standing, along Birkenside, where a farm-house stood, and thence eastwards near to Harvieston House, slanting diagonally through Harvieston south park, and downwards to Catcune Mill, and thence by the present footpath between Catcune and Haughead, up the water-side, under the row of plane-trees to Borthwick. This, before the formation of the turnpike road in 1753, was the only kirkroad, and my grandfather's and father''s coach always went that way. I remember, when a child, the diagonal road through i688.] OLD ARNISTON. 45 tlie soutli park of Harvieston ; and I have repeatedly ridden to cliurch on my pony that way. I remember, to my great joy, ^tting leave on one occasion to ride (the first time I rode so far) with the old and respectable Karl of KinnoulP and I^)rd Melville, then Mr. Henry Dundas, to Borthwick Kirk, while my father and the rest of the family went in the coach by Skftfli iBip Torcraik. About this period it was shut up as a bridle road by common consent, and restricted to a footpath for the inhabitants of Amiston, Shank, and Harvieston going to church, and as such it is still used. It is necessary to state what trees existed around the old house of Arniston prior to Lord Amiston's return from Holland in 1688.^' ^ Thomas, eighth Earl of Kinnoull. 46 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1688. The MS. then gives, in minute detail, the position, size, and age of a number of the trees on the grounds of Arniston ; but these details would be of no interest to the reader. The narra- tive next goes on to describe " The famous Ash-tree in the Orchard, of which it is right THE ASH-TREE. was I should give some description. A drawing of this tree made by my worthy friend, the present Earl of Morton, about the year 1792, when he did me the honour of passing a few days with me at Arniston. It then measured at its base, close to the ground, thirty feet in circumference. At the height of about six feet it divided into eight, or I think nine, different limbs, each of them large and lofty, and sufficient to have each i688.] THE ARNISTON ASH. 47 attracted notice, if separate, as fine timber. Three or four persons could have stood without inconvenience in the centre where the limbs diverged. One storm of wind, in winter 1793, tlirew down four of tlie limbs, and it wtus then discovered what was long suspected, timt the trunk was rotten and entirely gone, the Iwirk and a plate of the external wood only being sound ; the remainder entirely wasted and hollow. Another stormy day, in winter 1794, completed the destruction, and levelled all the remaining limbs to the ground. The timber of these was in general sound, and, even at the low prices then j)aid, brought at a sale V50. The age of this tree and its early Iiistory are unknown. It stood also in what was originally tlie croft or corn-field of Arniston. It cannot have been less than three hundred years old, not only from its size, and the circumstances of its appearance above detailed, but that my great-grandfather who, previous to the Revolution of 1688, passed his life abroad and returned with King William, had a bench placed in the centre of the trunk, where every day in sunmier he in his old age used to sit and amuse himself in reading, chiefly, as I was told by my father, Italian books, of which he was fond, and the Pastcrr Fido, which was a peculiar favourite. This was betwixt 1690 and 1725, and, as far as my fatlier^s observation carried him, no change but towards decay had occurred for eighty years afterwards. If I trace in ima- gination the springing of this seedling from the earth to some such accidental cause as Cowper has done in the beautiful lines on the ancient and decayed oak, and its date to the year 1450, the reign of the first James, I cannot believe myself much mistaken. " My grandfather, the first Lord President Arniston, was naturally vain of this tree, and of showing it to his guests. When he was named President in 1747, the Magistrates and Council of Edinburgh came out to congratulate him on his appointment, and dined with him. Before dinner he walked them out in the garden to the Ash Tree. Deacon Milroy — I think that was the name — a house carpenter, after admiring and examining it with attention, told his Lordship there were at least . . . feet of timber in it, and that he would give him JB . , , for the tree. ' I would rather,"* replied his Lordship, ' see you hung on its topmost branch.** A small piece of the trunk still 48 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1688. remains (1811) as a memorial of the original. I caused my son Robert, on the 2d April 1809, to plant an oak-tree now growing there, produced from an acorn of the famous Green- dale oak in Welbeck Park, Nottinghamshire, which my BEECH AVENUE. respected friend the Duke of Portland gave me in 1805, and which, with about twenty others, I sowed in the garden and transplanted to this and other situations to be hereafter mentioned. " In 1690 the Earl of Tweeddale, who was a particular friend of Lord Arniston's, and with whom he agreed in politics, was 1 688.] IMPROVEMENTS AT ARNISTON. 4c^ employed in forming the plantiitions at Yester, and in j)lanting the buslies wliich are now such noble trees, when Lord Arniston hap})ened to j)ay him a visit. On returning lionie he gave Lord Arniston thirty beech plants and an elm, which were brought over behind the servant in the portmanteau, and planted along tlie side of the cow-park dyke, where, with the exception of a few now to be cut, they still remain, and are in general fine timber. My father thought they must have been cut over when ])lanted, otherwise they could not have assumed the shapes they generally have done. These trees stand on the west side of the road and dyke fronting the garden. " His Lordship also formed the bowling-green east of the present liouse, and planted the large spruce-fir still standing there, thougli now in a state of decay, and much altered in my remembrance. Another spruce of the same age, though not quite so large, stood opposite, and near to the middle door of the cow-house. I remember it perfectly. It was blown down about 1766. My brother and I had a small garden near to its root, where we amused ourselves when children. A row of hollies were also planted in the line of these two spruce-firs, and two arhoi' vitas at the end of each row next to the house. One of these still stands.^ The other a7'bo?' vitoe was blown up by the roots in 1766. Two large hollies also stood within the wall of the present stable-yard, near the cistern ; these gradually decayed, and died away about 1780. Those in the bowling-green my mother did not like, and prevailed on my father to cut down, one excepted, sometime about 1760 — at least I do not remember them ; and for this the late Lord Kames has celebrated either her good or bad taste in his work entitled Sketches of the H'lstoi'y of Man. The remaining holly stood till 1786, when, one frosty morning, some of the slieep fastened on it, and, before they were observed, had eaten off all the bark from the root upwards as far as they could reach. I had it plastered round, and as well secured as possible, but in vain — it died in the course of the year.*" ^ This tree, one of the largest of its kind in this part of Scotland, was taken down in i860, being quite decayed. 50 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1695. The first marked advance in the improvement of the Low- lands of Scotland may be said to date from the settlement of the country after the Revolution of 1688. A few years later, in 1695, an Act for the division of run-rig lands was passed — a most necessary measure ; and in the same year an Act for the encouragement of the exportation of victual was also passed. Statute labour, for the better repair of the roads, had been introduced a few years previously, in 1669, and in Midlothian, at all events, the traffic was carried on by wheeled carts. In the Arniston accounts the entries for payments to the wheel- wright for cart-wheels are frequent, as are likewise payments for hired cartages of stone, lime, and other materials, but no allusion is ever made to pack-horse loads. The wages of farm servants continued to be paid in grain ; the shepherd, smith, wright, and even " the bedall,"' figuring in the factor's books for so many bolls of oats. The land for the most part was tilled upon the in-field and out-field system, though an improved rotation of cropping was being introduced. On the better descriptions of in-field land the following course was adopted : — 1. Barley or wheat, dunged. 3. Oats. 2. Oats. 4. Pease. The out-field was used as the common pasture for live stock of all sorts. The portion of it under tillage for the time being was enclosed within turf dykes, and dunged by having the sheep folded within the enclosures at night. The rotation on which the out-field was cropped was three or four crops of oats in succession, followed by from four to six years' rest. Among the papers in the Arniston charter-room is the balance-sheet for crop 1699 of the lands of Howburn, a farm — at the foot of the Moorfoot Hills — of about 120 acres of arable land, and about 400 of hill pasture, river banks, and moss. A copy of this balance-sheet is given in the note on the follow- ing page, and is interesting as showing the style of farming and the prices realised on a Midlothian hill farm in 1690. Of the arable land only about 20 acres were in^eld, or in 1699.] IMPROVEMENTS AT AHNLSTON. 51 re<2;iilar cultivation, tlie remainder bein^ broken up in small patclies from time to time.^ Besides the improvements carried out by individual pro- prietors in Midlothian, the county obtained a Turnpike Act in £, Scots, s. d. * Imprimis the rent form- erly paid by the tenant was, .... 260 2 o Item, the parson's teincl was, . . . . 66 2 o Item, the vicarage teind was, . . . . 13 2 o Item, there will be used for 30 pints of tar yearly, at 4s., . . . 600 Item for 16 pounds of butter, . . . 12 o o Item for interest of ;^I333 for stocking the farm, . 80 o o Item for 7 bolls oats, at £\ per boll, 2 bolls pease at;^6 as the herd's boll, . . . . 40 o o Item for 16 bolls of oats, 2 bolls pease, i boll bere, for a double hynd's boll, . . . . 82 o o Total (;{: Scots), ;^559 6 o Imprimis for 2$ stone of wool as the produce of 15 score of sheep, 12 fleeces to the stone, at j^4 per stone, Item, there may be 60 ewes casten every year, which being belter than ordinary croaks, because not very old, for it will not be proper to keep them above three or four years upon the ground, 60 ewes at ;^2, 3s., Item for the milk of nine score ewes, at 6s., Item for five score of lambs, at £i per head, the other four score being allowed in place of the 60 ewes to be sold as above, Item for 20 neats' grass in the moss, at £2, . Item for hay, expenses paid, .... Item for the produce of 20 bolls oats sown, counting the third corn price for the same, gives 40 bolls as product. Item for 4 bolls bere sown, at the four corn, gives 12 bolls product, . £ Scots. 1. 1/. 100 o O t35 o o 54 o o 40 o o 60 o o 160 o o 72 o o Total {£ Scots), ;^72i o o There must be necessarily 2 bolls pease sown yearly, but we can count nothing upon the profit, because of the uncertainty of the crop. It is to be remembered that, by this account, the herd that keeps the twelve- score sheep upon the hill and the lady's ten-score sheep kept upon the farm is paid ; which may compensate for what expense may be for the maintenance of the shearers in time of harvest. There is likewise no allowance here given for the upholding of plough and plough pertinents. 52 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [17 ii. 1714, and made a commencement of the magnificent system of roads by which the capital was brought into communication with every part of the kingdom. In 1711 an incident took place which must have tried Lord Arniston's feelings, as a sound Whig and thorough -going supporter of the House of Hanover. His eldest son, James, was the leading spirit in a curious episode which caused con- siderable excitement in Scotland. In June 1711, the Duchess of Gordon,^ wife of George, first Duke of Gordon, offered to the Faculty of Advocates, for preservation among a collection of coins in the possession of the Faculty, a Jacobite medal. The medal bore on one side Great Britain and Ireland, with a fleet of ships coming to them, and the motto " Reddite ; '' and on the other side the Pretender's head, with the motto "Cujus est." A dispute arose at a meeting of the Faculty as to whether this medal should be received or not. We have no means of knowing accurately what happened ; but there can be little doubt that an acrimonious debate took place. TTie Flying Post, a London paper, published an account of the proceedings, according to which Mr. Robert Bennett, Dean of Faculty, presented the medal, and, in doing so, said, " Her Grace sends, as a present to you, the medal of King James VIII., whom we and the English call the Pretender. I hope thanks are to be returned for it.'' Objections were at once raised to receiving the medal, and it was proposed to return it, on the ground that to receive it would be to " throw dirt upon the face of the Government."^ But James Dundas made a very strong speech in favour of receiving the medal, and thanking the Duchess of Gordon for sending it. He ended his speech by saying, ''But, Dean of Faculty, what needs further speech ? None oppose receiving the medal, and returning thanks to her Grace, but a few pitiful scoundrel, vermin, and mushrooms, not worthy of our notice. Let us, therefore, proceed to name some of our number to return our hearty thanks to the Duchess of Gordon." The vote being taken, it was carried by a majority that the thanks of the Faculty should be given to the Duchess, and that Mr. 1 The first Duchess of Gordon, Lady Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Henry, sixth Duke of Norfolk. 2 7'/ie Flying Post; or. The Postmaster, f^^^ 171 1- 171 1.] THE JACOBITE MEDAL. 53 James Dinulas and a Mr. Horn of Westhall should represent the Fiwulty on the ocnusion. According to 7'hi' Flij'ni^' Pod^ Dundas, in performing this duty, took (K'casion to say, " I hope, and am confident, so do my constituents, that your Grace shall have very soon an opportunity to compliment the Faculty with a second medal, struck upon the Restoration of tlie King and Royal Family, and the finishing Rebellion, Usurping, Tyranny, and Whiggery/' The records of the Faculty are absolutely silent upon the subject ; and there exist no means of knowing whether the statements of The Flying Post are well founded ; but the Dean of Faculty threatened, in the colunms of the Edinburgh Gazette^ to prosecute the editor for publishing false news ; and the Faculty, at a special meeting, rejected the medal, and pa^ssed a resolution declaring their loyalty to the Queen and the Protestant Succession. The matter would soon have been forgotten had not James Dundas and his friends composed, and sent to the printer, a pamphlet in support of their conduct in receiving the medal. This found its way into the hands of the Government ; and orders were given to prosecute Dundas on a charge of sedition. The Government was not satisfied with the conduct of the Lord Advocate, Sir David Dalrymple. He was sunmiarily dismissed from office ; and Sir James Stewart of Goodtrees, who had previously held that high position, was reappointed in his place. It is in the hands of Dalrymple, j ust after his dismissal, that we last hear of the medal which had caused so much trouble. " I have this famous medal,"'* he writes on the 26th of September 1711, "and shall be glad to receive direc- tions to whom I am to give it up.'' ^ There are no letters relating to the affair of the medal in the Arniston collection. The subject was probably an un- pleasant one, which the family avoided as much as possible. There appears to have been great delay in bringing on the trial. In December Lord Hay writes to the Secretary of State the following letter : ^ — Decemb. 26, 1 71 1. My Lord, — I have taken the liberty to delay the returning an answer to your Lordship's letter of the 11^, till I should hear * State Papers, Domestic (Scotland), 171 1, Public Record Office. ^ Ibid. Archiljald Campbell, Earl of Hay, and afterwards Duke of Argyll. 54 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1711. from Scotland of what had passed in that matter. When I inform your Lordship that I have the honour to be President of the Court before which M'" Dundass is to tryed,^ I hope your Lordship will be sensible that her Majestic has commanded me only to observe in generall to your Lp what occurs to me upon that subject. There is an appearance of M'* Dundass having acted against the Goverment in a very extraordinary manner. What the law may determine upon those facts I must leave to the Court. But admitting those facts criminal, as stated in the Indict- ment, I humbly conceive that it is impossible for her Majestie's servants here to give her any particular advice in the farther proceeding in that matter, unless the evidence her Majestie's Advocate has to prove the allegations, be distinctly lay'd before them. And I am of opinion that if the prosecution should happen to fail for want of proof, it might be of bad consequence, & encourage other dissaffected persons in a greater degree than if the Goverment had not taken any notice att all of that matter. I am informed that my Lord Advocate has lately made application for a delay of the tryal upon the account of his indisposition, & in order to get some papers he thinks necesary for the carrying it on. I will not enter into the reasonableness of the delay of a tryal, upon the indisposition of the Advocate, nor whether the })apers he wanted might not have been found sooner. But I think myself obliged in duty to observe that unnecessary delays in tryal Is cast a great damp upon them, & very often the speedy administra- tion of justice has more effect towards deterring persons from crimes than the very punishment it self. These are, my Lord, my humble thoughts of this matter. — I am, my Lord, with all respect, your Lordship's most ob* & most humble servant, Ilay. It was not till March 1712 that James Dun das was brought to the bar of the High Court of Justiciary, at Edinburgh, whien the Lord Advocate produced an order, signed by Lord Dartmouth, directing him to prosecute. The following letter describes the stage which had been reached at that date : 2 — Sir James Stewart (Lord Advocate) to Secretary of State. Ednr., 1 It h March 17 12. May it please y'' Lo^, — I had the honour of a letter from you ^ Lord Ilay had succeeded the Earl of Cromarty, in 17 10, as Lord Justice- General of Scotland. - .State Papers, Domestic (Scotland), 1712, Public Record Office. 1 71 2.] PROCEEDINGS AGAINST JAMES DUNDAS. 55 of the 27^' Decern'' last, wherin you aqiiainted nie that what I had writ concerning the process raised against M"^ Arnistoun for his contending to have a medal of the pretender received by the Faculty of our Advocats, and for his causing print a scandalous pamphlet called the Advocats lAUfaHi), had been laid before the Queen, and that Her Majesty had been pleased upon the reasons I offered to order me to put off the tryal for some tyme, as I had proposed. In obedience to which letter I did put off that tryal fairly enough untill Arnistoun proved so obstinat as to take out a writ against me in the form of our Court requiring me to insist within sixty days, or otherways the process to fall. Wherupon, I being unwilling to give him the advantage of letting the process fall, did, by advice, chuse rather to insist and discuss the relevancy by an Interloqutor of Court, and then to adjourn the probation. And thus we have this day discussed the relevancy, and I herewith send to y"^ LoP both my information against Arnistoun, and Aniistoun's information in defence, with the Interloqutor oi Court past upon the Debate ; and the Court as to the probation is adjourned to the 8'^ day of Aprile next, the longest time allowed by our Act of Parliament. But, my Lord, here is my strait, that my most matereal witnesses as to the pamphlet are George Lockhart of Carnwath, and Sir David Dalrymple, both Members of Parliament, against whom the Court could give no diligence. And thus my probation as to the pamphlet must fail, and even as to the medal it may be uncertain, because the lawyers whom I have cited as witnesses are now almost all gone to the country, it being vacation with us untill the moneth of June. It's true tho I should be necessitat to desert the process at the day appointed, yet the Act of Parliament allows me to recommence it upon forty days farder. But still I am unwilling to give Arnistoun that advantage, lest he and others should abuse it ; and, therfore, I must humbly entreat y*" Lop' for direction in this matter. For if I shall be obliged to insist in my proof at the day, I do truly fear it shall fail me, which would be a matter of too much insulting. And if I forbear at the day, yet the process will fall, which will also be of ill consequence, tho I may recom- mence it. And, therfore, I must farder adventure with all submission to offer my own opinion, which is that if at the day I shall. find that my proofs and witnesses cannot be had for sufficient evidence, I would inclin to let the process rather fall than that the defendant should be dismissed. But for the honour and interest of the Government I would let it fall, with a protest that I may recommence it so soon as I may have my witnesses. 56 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [17 12. specially these two Members of Parliament, that are indeed necessary witnesses. My Lord, I have endeavoured to represent the casse as plainly as the termes of our law allow, and I hope y'^ LoP will perceive my most sincere desire to aquit my selfe in this matter as I ought, and will therfore let me have the orders necessary. It is, indeed, some releif that this bussiness, I hope, which at first made so much noise, is now so far spent that Her Ma*^ Governm* will be the less concerned, whatever be the issue. My Lord, I wrote to y'^ LoP on the first ins* of poor Robert Fleeming's casse, under sentence of death for forgery, but several tymes reprived, and at present to the 2P* of this moneth, that it might be considered, for he must die at the day if there be no remedy. — 1 am, my Lord, your Lop^ most humble and most faith- full servit^ Ja. Stewart. After this the proceedings collapsed ; and this unfortunate episode was terminated by the abandonment of the prosecu- tion. Escaped from the dangers of a State trial, James Dundas married, in the following year, Mary, eldest daughter of Sir Alexander Hope of Kerse, but predeceased his father without issue. The common belief in Midlothian was that, to punish his disloyalty, James Dundas had been confined in a strong room at Arniston until his death ! The reader may recollect the Twelfth Chapter of The Heart of Midlothian, in which Davie Deans states his objections to the advocates whom Saddletrees proposes to retain for the defence of Effie : "'Weel, Arniston.? — there ^s a clever chield for ye ! ' said Bartoline, triumphantly. ' Ay, to bring Popish medals in till their very library, from that schismatic woman in the north, the Duchess of Gordon." '" It is most unlikely however, that any such words would have been used by an Edinburgh citizen, in real life, for the " Arniston "" of the time at which Deans is supposed to speak was Robert, James Dundas's brother, then just about to become a judge. From this time until his death, in 1726, the life of Lord Arniston was uneventful. He had married, early in life, Margaret, daughter of Sir Robert Sinclair of Stevenson ; and of this marriage James Dundas was the eldest son. After his death, the hopes of Lord Arniston were centred in his second 1726.] DEATH OF LORD ARNISTON. 57 son, Robert, who quickly rose to a lii^li position at the bar. As his own health be^an to fail, the old judge had the siitisfaction of seeinose, will be at the Cockpit, you shall hear from me again ; but I have not called at his door these three months, nor yet at my Lord Townshend's, nay, not so much as to wish his Lord^ a good voyage. And yet I am not turned out, but am satisfied that they concluded that I would lay down, upon the changes that have just now been made in Scotland. But I have seen so many changes, and have outlived so many ministry s, that I am resolved not to give them that satisfaction this time, however uneasy and disagreeable the situation I am in may be to myself. ... I am extremely sorry that I cannot have the pleasure of reading your letters, that I received to-day, to the King, but yet I hope that a good use may be made of them. In the meantime I cannot help thinking that you have laid a load upon me in leaving it to me to destroy the letter inclosed or not, as I pleased, for though I can easily give up my own interest and resentment to your ease and satisfaction, yet many of our friends, I am sure, will be heartily vext at it, and blame me for it. The hurry and uneasiness I was in when I wrote to you last made me forget to tell you that the only reason that was ever given to me for your being dismissed, was the part you had acted against Sir R. Walpole's scheme proposed in lieu of the Malt Tax, particularly your writing the proposall or resolution, at the meet- ing of the Scots members, with your own hand, but the easier the > Henly Park. 2 Walpole. 70 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1725. Malt Tax goes on, the more absurd will that scheme appear to have been. . . . — I am ever yours. Adieu. In the meantime Dundas returned to the bar as an ordinary counsel, Duncan Forbes of CuUoden having succeeded him as Lord Advocate. Duke of Roxburghe to Mr. Dundas. Whitehall, ///«^ 10, 1725. ... I am very glad to know you are gone to the bar again, for I find that all your friends that understand that matter wish't you might do so. I had yours of the 1st on Monday last, with y'^ father's dimission inclosed, but have not spoke of it to any body, but the Marquiss of Tweeddale, who seems to doubt that it will be accepted of ; concluding that my L^ Isla can never consent to it upon the account of his friends upon the bench. And I think he reasons well, but still I think I guess' t right in what I said to you in my last. For in all probability Sir R. Walpole will consider himself in the first place ; and as a token thereof, I must tell you what past between him and me yesterday upon the Lord Justice's meeting breaking up. I had disputed with myself a good while whether to mention your name to him or not, but perceiving that he did not seem inclined to speak to me, I at last went up to him, and told him that I had had a letter from you, wherein you very modestly represented that you were the first Advocate for Scotland that had been laid aside since the Revolution, that had been dismiss't the service without any gratification or compensation. But I said not a word of your father's dimission, nor, indeed, had I time if I had intended it, for he immediately told me, with a very cheerful countenance, that he had had a letter from you, and that he thought your proposal most just and reasonable. I said I was glad to find you was grown so old. Who } the father } said he ; No, the son, said I, because he thinks of retiring so soon. Why, reply'd he again, I think what he proposeth is most reasonable, and I will be sure to write by the next post about it. I answered, I am sure I shall never be against it. And I perceived he had a great mind I should have said more, but I made my bow, and so left him to guess whether I was really for it or against it ; which, I believe, with all his penetration, he dos not yet know. And I must own to you that tho' your being upon the bench is most 1725.] THE MALT-TAX RIOTS. 71 desirable, yet to me it is still a question whether you may not be more wanted in Parliament. However, that is over now, and I doubt not but tliat you will be upon the bench before the session riseth. . . . But what I chiefly want to know is whom you think to set up in your shire in ease you are upcm the bench yourself; for, believe me, a mute will be of little use to us, nor do I know of any one that will be proper ; but a lawyer of spirit and parts in my humble opinion wou'd do best. — I am ever yours. Sir Robert Walpole to Mr. Dundas. Ju/te 19, 1725. Sir, — I ask your pardon for not sooner acknowledging ye favour of yours, which ye great hurry of business has been the only reason of, and must plead my excuse. The favour you have asked the King, I think so very reasonable, both in regard to y'^self & y*" father, that you shall have my best assistance to render it effectual. I am sorry there was a necessity for doing any thing that was disagreeable to you, and I shall, with a great deal more pleasure, take any opportunity to render you service, for I am, S"", y^ most humble serv^ R. Walpole. Nothing came of the proposed changes. Lord Arnistoii retained his seat on the bench until his death in the foUowinti^ year, and his son continued to practise at the bar. When the 23d of .June came, the day aj)pointed for the collection of the Malt Tax, there was a serious riot in Glasgow. The Provost and some of the magistrates were arraigned before the High Court of Justiciary, where they were defended by Dundas. They were admitted to bail ; but no further steps were taken against them. In Edinburgh the brewers, for the purpose of harassing the Government, combined to stop brewing until the duty on malt was abolished. Dundas was their chief adviser, and the advice he gave them was to set the law at defiance. The resistance to the Malt Tax continued till the Government took the strong step of advising the King to deprive the Duke of Roxburghe of the seals of office, and, at the same time, to abolish the Scottish Secretaryship. The moment this was done the opposition collapsed. Mr. Dundas succeetled to the family estate on the death 72 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1726. of his father in 1726. He entered at once with characteristic energy upon the schemes of improvement projected during Lord Arniston's life. Though head of the bar, and leader of the Scottish Opposition in Parliament, he still found time for his country improvements at home, and, during the busiest period of his public life, built the modern house of Arniston, and laid out around it the long avenues stretching across what was then little better than open moor. The Society of Improvers in Agriculture were at that time commencing their labours, pioneers in the march now so eagerly followed. They pointed out the necessity for relieving the land from the scourging routine of successive corn crops, and the advantages of a fallow as part of the rotation. They also showed the profit to be derived from draining, enclosing, summer fallowing, and from the culture of rape, turnip, cab- bage, potatoes, and clover, as part of the rotation of the farm. The manufacture of linen and wool still continued to be a large part of the work of a farm household, and shared the Society's attention with out-of-doors husbandry. Lord Stair, one of the most active of the improvers, established a manufacture of fine linen, made from flax raised upon his farm, and dressed at his Lordship's mill. Well-wishers to their country were urged to encourage Scottish manufactures by giving a preference to home-spun stuffs ; and agriculture was to be encouraged by a similar preference being shown for ale and spirits made from Scottish barley. Lord Belhaven, the supposed author of the CountrymarC s Rudiments, describing the condition of East Lothian, says, *' Sown grass is, I know, a very great rarity among husbandmen, neither can they well have it as at present their farms are ordered.*" He recommended the " setting aside a piece of moist ground for pasture, and enclosing it with a dry-stone dyke made of the stones gathered off the land — the advantages would be the saving the wages of a horse herd ; the horses may be left out at night in summer, and more labour will be got from the servants, whose time is now taken up with gathering thistles and other garbage for the horses to feed upon in the stables, and the great trampling and pulling up of your corn will be prevented.'' " As for your labouring oxen," he continues, " they require to be well fed in some moist pasture ; i 1726.] IMPROVEMENTS. 7« thou» Aviemore, 5 5 » Corryburgh, 020 ?5 Dalinagarry, 13 II Wednesday 25th , Inverness, I 2 2 Kepock and Inv ergordon. 10 Simon, Lord Lovat, writes to express his regret that sick- ness had prevented him paying his respects to Lord Arniston since he came into that neighbourhood. He continues, in his customary strain of mock humility : — ... If your Lordship goes south by Inverness, the best road is within a quarter of a mile of this hut ; for I have made a very good coach road from this little house to Inverness, and if your Lordship would do me the honour and singular pleasure to come and lodge one night in this little hut, I can frankly assure your Lordship, that there were never, nor will be, any guests in it more welcome than my Lord and my Lady Arniston. I beg your Lordship may believe that I am with the greatest truth, and the utmost esteem and respect, my good Lord, your Lordship's most obedient, most obliged and most humble servant, Lovat. Beaufort, 26th May 1739. A journey to Inverness was no easy matter in those days. General Wade had by this time completed the greater part of his system of roads throughout the Highlands ; but the main road between Perth and Inverness, which had existed for many years, was still of a very primitive description. Even the roads between Scotland and London were rough and dangerous. I740.1 THE GOAT-WHKY CURE. 9^ and a journey to the nipital wjis a tedious aiul sometimes liazardous uiulcrtakin<;. We find Mr. Duiuhus writing from hondon to Mrs. Dundas, " Yesterday morning we got safe here, and, considering wliat terrible roads we had, it is a wonder there wtts not one fall among us.'" Again, he writes to his wife, who was near her confinement, " I beg of you to \ye very careful jus to travelling, and consider whether it will be siifer for you to go (to Dundas Castle) in a horse-chair, or in the coach. If you take the coach, see it go slow, and that the coachman take care of jolting."' In tiie early part of the eighteenth century, goat whey was in liigh repute as a corrective for the ills induced by a too liberal indulgence in j)unch and claret ; and there were various places in Scotland where families used to go in summer, which were familiarly spoken of as " goat-whey cjuarters.'*' People used to speak colloquially of being at " the goat whev,'' just as now a-days they speak of being at the sea-side. Probably plain food, no claret or punch, and fresh country air were the real cures ; but the iniiversal belief was that the whey was what acted as a restorative. Between 1735 and 1746, Lord Arniston seems to have gone to the hills for this cure as regularly as a German goes to his brunnen. In the Arniston accounts there are entries of expenses in successive years at Struan in Perthshire, Rossdhu, Castle I^eod, I^uss, and other places, which were visited for the whey. Lord Arniston to his Wife. Castle Leod, May 9, 1740. My dearest Life, — I wrote to you yesterday by the foolish express that was sent to plague me. I hope your sister is not the worse of her journey, tho' she took a day less to it than she intended, tempted by the good day ; this seems likewise a good one, so I hope to get some riding. The whey is yet scarce, but enough for me. I cannot say it does quite so well with me as formerly; it gives me pretty smart colicks, but these I expect will leave me when I have used it several days longer. All at Invergordon are well in health; we expect Sir William* * Sir William Gordon of Invergordon, father of Mrs. Dundas and of the Countess of Cromartie. 94 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1741. here this day. Send me a parcel of twist tobacco' here by next post. There is none tolerable to be got here. There is strong thieving in this country by the Glengarry men, and some murders. This country is threatened with a famine, and I am afraid so are you at home. The cattle are likewise dying fast. I have inquired for cows to buy, but as yet can find none, nor do I believe there will be any fit to be driven for near two months ; they have no fodder, neither straw nor hay, in all the country, and no grass coine up. ROSSDHU, //^//t' 3, 1 741. My dearest Life, — I am here just in health as I left you, living quietly in the way you may guess, going on with my whey, which I do not find so strong, in my opinion, as at Castle Leod, riding and walking out, calling over in two days in my ride on Lady Castlehill,^ reading my book, playing at backgammon with Lady Janet Boyle, fishing perches, but have not as yet had a day for chasing the otters, though the weather is tolerably good, but want of rain ; but, I believe, liberty to be idle, and absence from the Session, is not the least agreeable part of the scene. In 1742, Lord Arniston went to Rossdhu to drink the goat whey, Mrs. Dundas remaining at Arniston, where her son Henry- was born on the 28th of April 1742. Lord Arniston to Mrs. Dundas. Rossdhu, April 2^, 1742. My dearest Heart, — I got here last night. I cannot say that I was quite well on the road. I was bad on Friday night at Glas- gow ; the journey did defeat me. This day I am somewhat tired, but have begun the whey. Ap. 28. I did not recover the fatigue of the journey for two or three days, and have not been on horseback since, nor had any other diversion than fishing perches on the Loch. There is not a soul here but he and she, so you may judge the rest, and not one of the neighbours at home. ^ Martha, daughter and heiress of Sir John Lockhart of Castlehill, wife of George Sinclair of Woodhall. 2 Henry Dundas, afterwards first Viscount Melville. 1743] LKITKHS FROM THE HIGHLANDS. 95 Lord Arniston in the followiiiir year went to Shien, near Aniulrie, in Pertlishire, for the <;oat whey, Mrs. Dmuhis remaining at Arniston for her aj)proaching confinement. Lord Arniston to Mrs. Dundas. Shien, /«//<' 15, 1743. My dearest Pleasure, — We ^ot to Stirhng on Monday, and to this place yesternight, in /ajood time, all safe, hut were sadly put to it when we came, for our ba^rgage got not up till one o'clock in the morning. So that we had neither knife, spoon, napkin, nor, worst of all, sheets, so that we had a prospect of sitting in our scabbards all night ; till at last we were relieved. I kept the men all this day to rest the horses, which seemed pretty necessary. This place is rather worse than when we were here before ; garden, house, and everything neglected in their absence ; not so much as a cow here, but we are to have two or three sent over to us to-morrow. Shien,/«w 17, 1743. Lady Moncrieff hath been pleased to send her servant here with garden things to us, which are very welcome, we having nothing of that kind. The weather has been excessively cold, and we are but ill provided with firing. Fishing goes on, and Tom hath taken a little touch of shooting, but Currie and Vogrie's dogs seem good for nothing. SHiEN,y««^ 28, 1743. I have about an hour ago your very acceptable letter, giving me an account of my being a grandfather, and that Henny^ and her daughter- are both in a good way. You will congratulate her in my name in the most affectionate manner. I am heartily glad of her safe delivery, and now that she hath once rode the ford safely, I hope she won't be afraid to try it again in due time. Make also my compliments to my son. I give him joy, and hope for a continuance of all favourable circumstances. SHiEN,y>//j/ 16, 1743. My dearest kind obliging Comfort, — We are here almost drowned, quite prisoners by a great flood ; the water not passable, our horses and also the goats graze on the other side, so that we * Henrietta Baillie, his eldest son's wife. - Elizabeth, afterwards Lady Lockhart Ross of Balnagowan. 96 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1742. got no goat whey this morning, nor can get a horse over, unless we send by the bridge, which, backward and forward, would be a jaunt of six miles to get a horse here, and the half of that to get it back to the road. I think it is almost time for me to be looking homewards, so you may order the chariot to Crieff against this day seven night, that is Saturday the 23d. I suppose they will set out from Arniston on Friday, and may get either to Lin- lithgow or Falkirk that night, and thence to Crieff Saturday. The baggage horses may be either with them or a day later, as you think fit.i In 1742, there was a complete change in the administration of Scottisli affairs. Defeated by a majority of one on the Chippenham election petition, Walpole resigned all his offices, and retired to the House of Lords as Earl of Orford. Lord Wilmington was the new Prime Minister ; and part of the policy of his Government was to revive the office of Secretary of State for Scotland, which was bestowed upon the Marquis of Tweeddale. Marquis of Tweeddale,"^ Secretary of State for Scotland, /o Lord Arniston. My Lord, — When you reflect upon the present situation of affairs here, how difficult it is for me, who have been unexpectedly in a particular manner distinguished by his Majesty, unassisted, without any proper advice, to determine what steps are proper to be taken upon my first entrance into so high and public a station, you will not be surprised at your receiving a letter desiring and intreat- ing your presence in this place. Nor will you be at a loss to judge why I have wrote in the same strain to the President of the Session.'^' Half-an-hour's conversation could explain many things which it is impossible to do by letters. I know, and you will easily perceive, the difficulties surrounding me, yet I desire you may be persuaded that I never would have embarked myself had I not well known upon what footing I stood in the proper place, and that I have the satisfaction to be engaged with those in the Administration with whom I have long lived in friendship and connection, whose '^ The journey from Crieff to Amulrie, a distance of about twelve miles, had to be performed on horseback. - John, fourth Marquis of Tweeddale. ^ Duncan Forbes of Culloden. 1742.] SCOTTISH ADMINISTRATION. 97 principles unci views are the same with yours and mine. As to our particular part, in so far as concerns the future government of Scotland, a great deal depends upon the first steps taken by which the outlines are shaped. I am diffident of my own opinion, dare not venture to proceed till once I know your opinion, both as to persons and measures. Your sentiments have always had, and will always have, the greatest weight with me, and tho', from the present situation of things, every thing that could be wished cannot be at once effectuated, yet 1 dare venture to say more will be than you probably imagine. Let me therefore intreat of you, for the sake of your friends and country, grudge not to undertake this journey. Nothing but want of health, which, I hope, is not the case, can excuse you. Should the President of the Session come up, and you stay behind, I may probably be more embar- rassed. You can't be at a loss to know my meaning, yet, in all events, let me have your sentiments freely, and without reserve, both as to the measures and the proper persons to be employed for the execution, since it is vain for me to have right and good intentions unless I can find persons in whom I can confide, proper to be employed in the service. Those may not be indeed very easy to be found, but I sure the fittest will be recommended, and occur to you. I am afraid you will neither be able to read this, far less to understand it ; it is wrote in a greatt hurry, but 1 could not think of sending you a formal letter without assuring you that I wish to enter into an entire confidance with you, & I can say that there is no person alive has a greater value & honnour for you than myself, and am sure it will be your own fault if opportunities do not daily occur to convince you how much your opinion and advice must have weight with me and others. London, Feb. ye z-i^d^ 174^. In the Cabinet the Duke of Argyll had a place, but he did not long retain it. For many years he had engrossed the whole patronage of Scotland, where Ministers had seldom taken any steps without his advice or consent ; and he now expected that the Secretary of State was to be a new tool in his hands. But Carteret, the most powerful member of the Government, and Pulteney, whose influence was also great, let him know plainly that there was to be a new system of managing Scotland. Incensed at this, and at having failed to obtain a place for Sir John Hinde Cotton, he resigned office, and joined the Opposi- tion. " You would be surprised,*" ^v^ites I^rd Tweeddale on 98 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1742. the 16th of March 1742, "at a noble Duke's resigning all his employments. Whatever may have been his reasons for it, most people, I think, seem to agree it was a rash and . . } step. He now puts himself at the head of Tories, and the present question seems to be whetlier we ought to have a Whig or Tory administration."" The management of Scotland would have been, in any case, a great source of difficulty to the new Government, but the difficulty was much increased by the fact that they were opposed by the Duke of Argyll. It was suspected that the Duke had not only joined the open and constitutional Opposition, but was actually intriguing behind the scenes in favour of the Stuarts. Still it was impossible to make any sweeping changes in Scotland suddenly. The Duke's placemen could not be removed merely because they were his placemen ; and the fabric of power which he had constructed during the ascendancy of Walpole would not fall to the ground merely because an Administration to which he was opposed had handed over to another the patronage which had been taken from him. It was among the English members that the strength of the Government lay ; yet it would have been most impolitic to dissolve Parliament in the hope of unseating the Scottish members who supported the Opposition. "I know,'" Lord Tweeddale says in a letter to Lord Arniston, "it is his Majesty's intention to make as great an alteration in the persons employed in Scotland as the particular circumstances of this will allow of. We are in the beginning of Parliament. This is a Whig administration. A dissolution of the Parliament would ruin the Whig interest, since it is certain a new Parliament would be Tory. So there is no thought of that, which, as your Lord- ship observed, was a material question to be resolved, and must have great influence in determining how far it is proper to go." The Government appear to have been anxious to obtain Lord Arniston's assistance in devising their measures for Scottish administration, and he was repeatedly invited to visit London for the purpose of helping Lord Tweeddale ; but his health prevented him. In 1745, he passed the autumn in the north of England, suffering much from his old enemy the Illegible. 1747-1 DEATH OF PRESIDENT FORBES. 99 gout ; and in the following year he was bent on retiring from public life, and retained his seat upon tlie bench only in deference to the wishes of his son, Jlobert, who had been appointed Solicitor-General in 1742, although he was then only in his thirtieth year. Forbes of CullcKJen, President of the Court of Session, died on the 10th of December 1747. The appointment of a suc- cessor gave rise to considerable discussion, and " made more noise ""^ in London than usually was the case with the disposal of a Scottish office. It was felt that the appointment would show " what set of men in Scotland were to be supported,"" whether Jacobites in disguise, or staunch tulherents of the House of Hanover, and whether every consideration was to l)ecome secondary to the maintenance of the influence of the Duke of Argyll. The Independent Whigs believed that neither the King''s authority nor their own property would be secure were the Presidents chair filled by one of his adherents. On the other hand, the Duke naturally was bent upon retaining his power as long as he could, and was quite alive to the importance of placing a faithful adherent at the head of the administration of justice in Scotland. There were four candidates for the vacant chair, William Grant of Preston - grange, who was Lord Advocate at the time of the President's death ; Erskine of Tinwald, who was supported by the Duke of ArgylFs influence ; Craigie of Glendoick, who had been Lord Advocate during the Rebellion, but had lately resigned office ; and Lord Arniston. Even before the President's death. Lord Arniston had l>egun to take steps for the purpose of securing the ])lace. Lord Arniston to the Lord Chancellor.^ Dec. 1747. Mv Lord, — I presume your Lordship hath heard before this time that the President of the Court of Session is in a very bad way, and in all human appearance cannot live many days. Though my own state of health makes it highly improbable that I can enjoy any office long, yet in point of honour I cannot tamely submit without remonstrance to see another put over me to that * Lord Hardwicke. 100 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1747 Chair. I am older Lawyer than any of those who can be thought of; I was older in the Crown's service than any of them. I ran through both the Law offices at a time when, I believe, that service was as difficult as ever it was before or since ; and when no Lawyers of any character at the Bar showed great zeal to set their faces to support the service of this Government. All I gained was envy and detraction, and instead of profit, a very great loss to myself and family, and a considerable sum never repaid by the Government, tho' laid out on the publick service. I was vain enough to think my pretensions were full as strong as Mr. Forbes', at the time he was put over me, but court power and favour are not to be got the better of. I do not pretend to compete with any man in point of personal abilities, but I hope it is not want of zeal for his Majesty's family and service that can make me deserve to have any new mark of indignity put upon me, and in these views I beg leave to submit the matter to your Lordships' consideration, and to hope that at least his Majesty may have the case plainly stated, which I do not know if I can expect from the great Duke of our country. — I remain, with the highest respect, etc. Lord Chancellor to Lord Arniston. Powis House, Dec. i^th, 1747. My Lord, — I will make no apology for not sooner acknow- ledging the honour of your Lordship's letter, besides assuring you that it by no means proceeded from want of respect, and that I thought, whilst I gave no attention to your request, it was better to suspend my answer till the event, which was not then certain, though very probable, should happen. Since I have been placed in my present station, I have made it a rule not to take upon me to recommend particular persons upon any vacancies amongst the Scotch judges, unless of such Barons of the Exchequer, as, by established usage, have been supplied with Englishmen. If, indeed, an affair of that nature becomes a consideration of the King's servants, I always think it my duty to give my opinion in such manner as appears to me to be most for his Majesty's service. I have, with great fidelity and exactness, laid the state of your case, as your Lordship have represented it, before his Majesty in his closet, with such other facts relative thereto, as have fallen within my knowledge and observation, and submitted it to his consideration. ... I am extremely sorry for the loss of my old acquaintance, your late President, and heartily wish his Chair 1747] INTRIGUES FOR THK PRKSIDKNT'S CHAIR. 101 may be filled with a worthy successor, and am very sure that nobody would fill it with ^eater ability and sufficiency than your- self. — I am, with great respect, my Lord, your Lordship's most obedient & most humble servant, Hardwicke. (Probably) Sir Charles Gilmour ^ to Lord Arniston. Dff. 17, 1747. Mv Lord, — I received yesterday the hon*" of your Lops, of the 10th. I am informed the Chancellor got your letter, but what steps he has taken I know not, but a person told me this day, who dined where his son was yesterday, the conversation was about filling the President's chair; the young gentleman spoke very handsomely of you, and said he had often heard his father declare your great worth and abilities, and the assistance he had from you of late, without which he could not have carried through the laws that have passed.^ . . . The filling the President's place makes more noise here than I had expected, and some people don't hesitate to say it will be a declaration what set of men in Scotland are to be supported, when they compare the behaviour of men in perilous times formerly. — I am ever yours. l^rd Arniston also wrote to the Duke of Argyll, soliciting his interest, and begging him not to forget that it was in con- sequence of the " persuasive motives your Grace gave me *" that he had left the bar ten years before.^ But the Duke of ArgylPs influence was entirely given to his friend, Charles Erskine of Tinwald. Mr. Andrew Mitchell, a warm friend of Lord Aniiston'*s, warned him that he had to contend against heavy odds. " The President's death has given great and real concern to me,"" he writes, " and I fear it will not be alleviated by the nomination of a successor.*" For nine months no appointment was made. In his diary, published among the March mont Papers, Hugh, third Earl of Marchmont, narrates the course of the negotiations which took place before the vacancy was filled up, and the various expedients which were from time to time suggested by the rival interests. The choice of the Government lay between 1 Sir Charles Gilmour of Craigmillar, M.P. for the county of Midlothian, and a Commissioner of the Board of Trade. - An allusion to the Act abolishing Heritable Jurisdictions in Scotland. * Supra, p. 90. 102 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. (1747. Erskine and Dundas, and the friends of both did all in their power to damage the reputation of their opponent. It was believed that Lord Arniston would resign his seat on the bench, if he was not made Lord President. Marchmont, according to his own account, went to the Duke of Newcastle, and told him very plainly what he thought. Dec. 3. I went to the Duke of Newcastle's and told him 1 was afraid of being officious, but thought it my duty to inform him of what I thought might affect the King's interest in Scotland. He said he should be glad of receiving any lights from me . . . I then said this conjunction was the more critical from the President's illness, and perhaps death. Ay, says he, who do you think the most proper man ? I said . . . First, the man most unfit was T ;^ he was a known Jacobite in 1715, and I have no faith in Scots Jacobites' conversions, and next he was a very dangerous man ; and they might as well take the crown of Scot- land off the King's head, and put it on the Duke of Argyle's, whose subject I could never be. I said, besides that, Lord Arniston would probably quit the bench ; and I did not see how they could supply his place. He asked about him. I said he was very well, was the ablest man, one whom the whole kingdom pointed out for it ; and as he had a great property, might quit on what would be thought an affront to him ; and if he got it, as he was the most zealous friend to the King on the bench, so, I would be answerable he would belong to the ministers. . . . But as in this case (the appointment of Lord Advocate Craigie to the President's chair). Lord Arniston would probably quit, I did not see how they could supply his place ; and that this would be the most fatal blow to the King's interest in Scotland. Dec. 24. After dinner. Lord Chesterfield took me into his library, and told me, . . . they had had a meeting about the Presidentship of the Session, in which Mr. Pelham was for ,'^ as the Duke of Argyle's man, which he owned, saying the Duke had assisted them, and was to be preferred to the squadron who were linked to Lord Granville, Sir John Gordon, and the Prince. But he added, he thought Arniston and his son were to be gained if possible, and therefore he would propose giving Grant now L** Advocate the gown, and making young Dundas^ Advocate. The ^ Lord Tinwald. - Tinwald. ' Lord Arniston's son, afterwards second President Dundas. I74S.] DUNDAS APPOINTKD LOHI) PKKSIDENT. lOii Duke of Newcastle mentioned and Arniston, but seemed to incline to Lord P'.lchies,^ saying he thought they should name one who could make it apparent that the English Ministry had named him. . . . Then the Chancellor (Hardwicke) weighed what had been said in his Chancery scales of equity, and seemed to be of opinion they should name Aniiston. But nothing was decided in this meeting. Finally a compromise was effected, the English ministers, backed by the Independent Whigs, appointed Lord Arniston to be President ; whilst the Duke of Argyll was conciliated by the appointment of his friend Erskine of Tinwald to the office of Lord Justice-Clerk, the vacancy being created by the retire- ment of another of bis adherents, Fletcher, Lord Milton, who received the Signet for life, and the reversion of a place for hi« son. Duke of Newcastle to Lord Arniston. Newcastle House, A/ay 12, 1748. Sir, — I had the favour of your letter upon the subject of the place of President of the Session, which had then been long vacant. I did not trouble you with an answer till I would acquaint you with his Majesty's intentions relative to it. The knowledge I always had of your firm attachment to his Majesty's government, and of your distinguished ability in the law, made me wish to see you placed at the head of it, and I was extremely glad to promote the success of a scheme, which I hope will be equally to the satis- faction of those who are concerned in it, and have very just pre- tensions to his Majesty's favour. ... If I have any merit with you upon this occasion, I must recommend to you in the strongest manner to promote the most perfect harmony and good corre- spondence between all his Majesty's servants in your part of the kingdom, which is so necessary for the true interest of it. — I am, etc., HoLLEs Newcastle. Mr. Pelham to Lord Arniston. Afay 12, 1748. Sm, — You will hear from the Duke of Newcastle this night that the King has agreed to make you Lord President of the Sessions in the room of my old friend, Mr. Forbes. I can assure ^ Patrick Grant of Elchies. He had been on the bench since 1732. 104 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1748. you. Sir, I have not been inattentive to the letter you honoured me with of December last, but as it is a maxim with me never wilfully to misguide any man, I chose not to return an answer to it till I could speak clearly, and show to you by facts, as well as words, the true regard his Majesty and his servants have for your ability in your profession, and for your zeal and attachment to the King's person and Government. I have always wished to see those distinguished who are true friends to both, but personal altercations and party divisions have too often prevented the execution of the best intentions for that end. I am sure you will not dislike my plain way of speaking and writing. I do not always suppose a man to be exactly what his friends partially represent him, much less do I give credit to the misrepresentation of an enemy ; it is the uniform conduct of every man's publick behaviour that is the proper test of his principles and inclinations. With this view I am sure you would think no man deserves to have a friend who would give those up on slight insinuations, who have constantly acted faithfully to him, and, in his judgement, honestly to the publick. I therefore found in my own mind great difficul- ties how to determine my wishes upon the late event of the vacancy of the Chair in your Court, but as far as I was able to suggest anything that might unite the contending parties, and which ought to please both, I have not been wanting to lay before the King and his servants. The expedient has taken effect, and his Majesty, by the advice of all his ministers, has most readily agreed to it. You will therefore now give me leave in my turn to give some advice to you, as, I can assure you, I took very kindly by what you said in your letter to me. You will soon be at the head of the Court of Justice in Scotland. Your known abilities and private integrity will enable you to make a great figure there. Don't let politicks create you enemies, whom justice would make your friends. Unite cordially with those whom the King thinks proper to employ in the great stations of your country. You cannot want support here ; don't let them want yours there. A great deal is to be done to bring the factious and disaffected in Scotland to a proper sense of their duty, which cannot be effectually brought about but by a thorough union amongst those who are true friends to the Government. If there are any persons encouraged who are publicly or secretly enemies to it, let us unite in rooting them out. Let the aim of honest men be to detect those that are not truly so, and wish that the number may be few, rather than artfully to whisper that there are as many, and detect none. These are my 1748] LKITERS FROM MINISTKRS. 105 principles, and by these I desire to be tried. It is absurd for any man in a publick life to forget his old friends, but it is equally weak not to admit into his confidence those who are well inten- tioned to the Government he serves, and cordially disposed to reconcile former differences. I should not have taken up so much of your time in sending, perhaps, these useless lines, had I not thought your letter required it ; and as I have faithfully kept yours a secret, I doubt not I may equally depend on your not showing this to any one. I have chosen to begin my correspondence with you in this frank and open manner, that you may see what I wish, and if you approve what I say, you may cultivate a further inter- course between us, which I shall be always glad to improve, upon the system and terms I have here represented. I most heartily wish you joy of the great mark of favour the King intends to show you, and am, with great respect, etc., H. Pelham. Duke of Argyll to Lord Arniston. My Lord, — I should not have been so rude as to delay for so long a time the answering your Lordship's letter, if it had been possible for me to have said any thing with precision. Such a vacancy as that was did naturally open a field for a variety of schemes. They were then very crude, and little more than hints that came from several of the King's servants, and which I was by no means at liberty to mention. It was only a very few days ago that anything was settled, and now I have the pleasure to wish you joy of matters being accommodated to your satisfaction. Your Lordship will now have the office which, you know, I many years ago thought you equal to, and which I wish you may live long to enjoy, being with great respect, my Lord, etc., etc., etc., LOND., May 13, 1748. ARGYLL. Andrew Mitchell* to Robert Dundas, younger. London, May 14, 1748. Dear Sm, — I heartily give you joy of Lord Amiston's success. I confess such a President is worth any purchase, but some people turn every thing to their own advantage. Lord Tinwald ^ is to be Justice-Clerk, and the Justice ^ to have the Signet for life, with * Afterwards Sir Andrew Mitchell. * Charles Erskine of Tinwald, third son of Sir Charles Erskine of Alva, by Christian, daughter of Sir James Dundas of Arniston. ' Andrew Fletcher of Milton, son of Henry Fletcher of Saltoun. 106 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1748. a reversionary grant of Sir James Dairy mple's place for his son ; sure the Government we live under is full of gratitude ! Mr. Pelham told me yesterday that he had wrote fully and freely to Lord Arniston. ... I took the liberty to thank him in the name of the Whigs of Scotland for Lord A.'s promotion. . . . — I am affectly. yours, A. M. Lord Chancellor Hardwicke to Lord Arniston. Powis House, Afay 24, 1748. My Lord, — The great hurry I have been in by the close of the Session, and of the Term, which ended but yesterday, has hitherto prevented me from congratulating your Lordship on the signal mark of his Majesty's favour, which you have lately received by your advancement to the President's chair. Though my con- gratulations wait on your Lordship thus late, I beg leave to assure you they are as sincere as any you have received. Your Lordship has this satisfaction that you have had the concurrence of all his Majesty's servants in your promotion; and will, I am confident, look upon it as a proof that extraordinary merit in your profession, and strict impartiality in the administration of justice, attended with real affection and attachment to his Majesty and his Govern- ment (qualities in your Lordship, to which nobody can do more justice than I do) are allowed their due weight. As it will be difficult to add to that reputation which your Lordship has already so justly acquired, I need only wish you a long continuance of health and strength to sustain this laborious and important station, wherein I am sure it will be perfectly agreeable to all the well affected in Scotland to see you placed. As your Lordship had so meritorious a part in the model, newly established for the admini- stration of justice in the room of the Heritable Jurisdictions, I need not press you to exert your endeavours to support and improve it. New schemes, however wise and well founded, have generally some difficulties attending the first execution of them, which require much judgement and a propitious disposition towards the measure, to remove. I much rely on your Lordship for both these, and that you will be particularly attentive to perfect this good work for the general benefit of the whole country. May I presume farther to recommend to your Lordship, what I doubt not your own inclination and right way of thinking will lead you to, I mean, to live in good correspondence with your now Lord •Justice-Clerk.i My acquaintance with him arose in the same Erskine of Tinwald. 1748] DINNERS AND SUPPERS IN 1748. 107 manner witli that which I have the honour of with your Lordship, hy having experienced you both in the same offices ; and it will give me great pleasure to see my two friends co-operating together, and maintaining that harmony which, I am sure, will be of great utility to the dignity of the Court. — I am, etc., etc., etc., Hardwicke. Having thus obtained the object of his ambition, Lord Arniston passetl the remainder of bis life in trancjuillity. In Edinburgh his house was in the aristocratic quarter known as Bishop^s I^nd, a large tenement on the north side of the High Street, not far from where the North Bridge now joins that thoroughfare. But most of bis time was spent at Aniiston, where he was frequently visited by the members of bis family and numerous friends. One of bis sons, Robert, the offspring of his marriage to Miss Watson of Muirhouse, bad already held the office of Solicitor- General, and was now Dean of the Faculty of Advocates. Henry, the future Viscount Melville, the son of his second marriage to Anne, daughter of Sir William Gordon of Invergordon, was, in 1748, a child of six. From the Household Books kept at Arniston, we can gather some idea of the style of living at that time, and the following extracts may perhaps be thought interesting : — BILLS OF FARE FOR A WEEK IN 1748. Siniday, December 4, 1748. Dinner. Cockyleeky. Boiled beef and greens. Roast goose. 2 bottles claret. 2 white wine. 2 strong ale. Supper. Mutton steak stewed with turnips. Drawn eggs. Rice and milk. My Lord's broth. 1 bottle claret. 1 white wine. 1 strong ale. Mondm/, December 5. Dinner. Pea soup. Boiled turkey. Roast beef. Apple pie. 3 bottles claret. 2 white wine. 2 strong ale. Supper. Mutton steak. Drawn eggs and gravy. Potatoes. My Lord's broth. 2 bottles claret. 1 white wine. 1 strong ale. 108 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1748. Tuesday, December 6. Dinner. Sheep's-head broth. Shoulder of mutton. Roast goose. Smothered rabbits. 2 bottles claret. 2 white wine. 1 strong ale. Supper. Boiled hens, with oyster sauce. Cold goose. Cockel hags. My Lord's broth. 1 bottle white wine. 1 bottle strong ale. Wednesday, December 7. Dinner. Cockyleeky. Mince pie. Roast mutton. 1 bottle claret. 1 white wine. 1 strong ale. Supper. Scotch collops. Roast hens. Drawn eggs. Potatoes. My Lord's broth. Thursday, December 8. Dinner. Soup. Beef a. la mode. Calf's head. 2 roast muirfowl. Roast pig. Mince pie. Apples, with can els. Supper. Mutton steaks. Rice and milk. Drawn eggs. My Lord's broth. Friday, December 9. ' Dinner. Hare soup. Roast beef. Fricasseed Rabbits. Boiled chickens. Tongue. Boiled pudding. 2 roast ducks. Tarts. S roast muirfowls, with canels. Jellies. Jugged hare. Fritters. 12 bottles claret. 4 white wine. 4 strong ale. Supper. 2 boiled hens, with oyster sauce. Jellies. Lemon puffs. Mince pies. 3 bottles claret. 2 white wine. 1 strong ale. Saturday, December 10. Dinner. — Scotch collops. Supper. Fricasseed hen. Drawn eggs. Milk and rice. Broth. 1 bottle claret. 1 white wine. 1 strong ale. In the years 1740 to 1749 the consumption of wine averaged ^140 per annum ; of spirits, <^10. The wine was principally 1753] DEATH OF LORD PRESIDENT DUNDAS. lOf) claret, with a little French white wine or Lisbon. Claret cost ^2 per hogshead ; Lisbon and white French wine, £16 per ho^hciid. From the (juantity of sugar entered in the house books as "given out for punch,**"* and the lemons in the house- keeper''s books, rum punch wjus evidently a daily beverage. Lord Arniston was President of the Court of Session until his death, which took place, on the 26th of August 1753, at the Mansion House of Abbeyhill, which stood close to what is now the line of the North British Railway, at the point where it is joined by the branch railway from Granton and Leith, to make way for which the old Mansion House was pulled down in 1872. The first President Dundas died at the comparatively early jige of sixty-seven. He had never been a robust man ; and for nearly fifteen years before his death his letters contain frequent complaints of bad health. A hard worker and a hard liver, he had burned the candle at both ends ; and, to some extent, the dissipated habits of his youth, never wliolly abandoned, may have impaired his constitution. He faithfully fulfilled the duties of his office, and maintained a correspondence with Lord Hardwicke and Mr. Pelham ; but it cannot be said that, as President of the Court, he was the equal either of his predecessor, Forbes of CuUoden, or of his own son, the Second President Dundas. When he gained the President's chair his want of physical vigour rendered it impossible, in the opinion of his contemporaries, that he should do himself j ustice. " He was named,**" was the verdict of the Scots Magazine at the time of his death, " to be President of the Court of Session in his old age, when he was unable to exert the force of his genius in discharging the functions of it. Had he been raised to the office at an earlier period of his life, it can admit of no doubt that he would have equalled, if not surpassed, any who had presided in that Court ; as no lawyer was ever more conspicuous on account of his singular merit and ability, or better qualified l)y his science in law, to perform the duties of the office."" Of his singular merits as a lawyer no better proof can be given than the testimony of Sir Hew Dalrymple. "I knew,""* he said, " the great lawyers of the last age — Mackenzie, Lockhart, and my own father, Stair ; Dundas excels them all.""' 110 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1753. His career, both as a politician and a lawyer, had been a great success, and had laid the foundation of that extraordinary power over Scotland wliich was enjoyed by his family during the remainder of the century. OLD CLOCK IN THE HALL AT ARNISTON. CHAPTER VIII. THE SECOND PKESIDENT DUNDAS. Robert Dfxdas, son of the first Lord President Dundas, was born on the 18th of July 1713, and was, from an early period, destined for the profession of the law. " When he was at school and at college, he was,^ we are told by the Scotft Magazine^ "a very good scholar, owing to his quick appre- hension and natural genius ; but afterwards he was never known to read through a book, except, perhaps (and that but seldom), to look at parts out of curiosity, if he happened to know the author.'*'* He studied at first under the care of a private tutor, and was also for some time at school and at the University of Edinburgh. In 1733 he was sent to Holland, as his father and elder brother had been before him, to pursue his studies at the University of Utrecht. He remained abroad, at Utrecht and in France, till 1737, when he returned home. The following extracts are taken from letters at Arniston relating to that period : — From his Father. Edinr., Nov. 13, 1733. Son, — I have one from you by Saturday's post last. I don't wonder if letters miscarry when all are opened. I don't value what they open of mine. I have no occasion to write anything that I care who sees ; and if I had I would not be fool enough to put any such thing in their way. . . . You begin a little smartly as to your draughts, and you could not do it at a worse time for me. Demands are so high in all quarters for other people's use more than my own. ... As I have oft cautioned you to beware of gaming, I am not much afraid of your falling into it. But now I give you a new caution, not to enter too much into the taste of throwing too much money away on books ; when that turns a 112 ARNISTON xMEMOIRS. [1734. disease, *tis as bad as pictures. When I have more leisure I will write a little more fully on this subject, what I think you ought to do : I '11 expect when you are settled to hear a fuller account of your economy, way of living, college, and these things. — Fare- Wellj Ro. DUNDAS. From his Cousin, Lord Bargany. MONTPELIER, March 23, 1734. D. RoBiE, — I must own my fault in having so long neglected writing to you. No doubt Mr. Stevenson has writ to you our proposed jaunt, on which I am confident you will not baulk us. It is for us then to make the tour of Flanders during your summer vacance. I am so full of the thoughts of it, that every day seems to me a year, betwixt this and that time. You '11 let us know by your next, your sentiments upon the affair. I have writ to Mr. Stevenson that we '11 meet him at breakfast in your chamber on the first day of July. I imagine you '11 weary very much of Holland on account of the people's being of so villanous a temper. I assure you I begin to dislike France every day the more, because I see the whole aim of the people is self-interest. No such thing almost as sincere friendship even betwixt brothers. A man who will make you all the protestations and compliments, would, at the same time, see you hang'd for a sixpence. I now begin to believe that the proverb is true which says that the most agreeable part in going abroad is the returning home. . . . — Yours, Bargany. Monsieur Robert Dundas, Gentilhome Ecossais Chez Monsieur Vion a Utrecht. At this time the death of Augustus, king of Poland, had led to hostilities between the King of France and the Emperor Charles, each of whom supported a rival claimant to the vacant throne ; and young Dundas proposed visiting the armies, then campaigning on the Rhine, in company with his cousin. Lord Bargany. His father writes in reply : — EDiNR.,/«n^S, 1734. Son, — I should easily excuse young people's curiosity in a thing of that kind if I looked upon it as a thing practicable^ but if you consider upon it I believe you '11 find it quite impossible. I have talked to some of our officers here, who are all of opinion 1734] LETTERS FROM ABROAD. 118 that you will find it so. It 's quite another thing for a private gentleman to go into an army of our own where he may have numerous friends among the officers, who will accommodate him with lodging in their tents, and with the use of horses to ride about and see what is to be seen, without which it's impossible to be in the army, and to go into an absolute stranger's army where you could not know one soul, nor not one of them take any notice of you. If you were to go such a road, you would not only be obliged to have equipages, servants, and horses of your own, which would amount to an expense, absolutely improper, either for my Lord (Bargany) or me. Besides this, which seems unanswerable, you don't seem to consider the present situation of the armies. The German army is at a vast distance, the French lying inter- jected betwixt them and you, so it would be both very difficult and very dangerous to attempt to get at the German army. When you consider these things I am persuaded you will see what you propose to be impracticable. I am afraid you are not in danger of losing an opportunity of seeing an army of our own before you come home, or of seeing another in a more convenient situation than you can see the Germans at present, and there is one other thing, I believe at present, it would not be well taken, if any of you went to any of the armies without express permission from the king. Ro. Dundas. The proposed visit to the armies was, of course, given up — the two cousins making a tour of Flanders instead. From Lord Barganv. S?A,/uneg, 1734. D. RoBiE, — I am greatly pleased with this wild romantic place, situated in a little valley, surrounded with hills covered with wood. I believe if I had anything of a poetical genius that this place would inspire me to write an ode on the beauties of the works of nature, which certainly human art can never equal. We have scarce any company here as yet, but in a few days there will be abundance. I would propose to you to come here and pass a week or ten days in the beginning of July. It 's but three short days journey from you. . . . — Always yours, Bargany. Lord Bargany returned home soon after, and died in the following year, to the intense sorrow of his cousin, who, iu H 114 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1737. one of his letters, declares that he is " heart broken '' at the neAvs. Plate forming part of a Wedding Service made for Mr. and Mrs. Dundas, with the Anns of Dundas of Amiston and Baillie ofLamingtofi in the centre, and figures of Hymen's altar ^ CupicTs bow, and other emblems on the margin. In 1738 Dundas returned home, and passed advocate. He almost immediately obtained a considerable practice at the bar ; but for the first five years of his professional life his fees only averaged ^280 a year. In October 1741 he married Henrietta, daughter of Sir James Carmichael of Bonnington, and Dame Margaret Baillie, his wife, heiress of the estates of Bonnington, Lamington, and Penston. Lord Arniston settled upon his son an allowance of .£^300 a year, from the lands of Newbyres, and upon Miss Baillie, as jointure, 1000 merks per annum out of the I74I ] MARKIAGE OF MR. DUNDAS. 115 lands of Arniston and Newbyres. Miss Haillie settled a jointure of MHK) nierks uj)on her husband, out of the lands of Livniin^ton. Among the papers at Arniston is a long Kpithalaniiuni fonij)osed in honour of this wedding. The unknown ])oet writes : — " Henrietta, Gracious, Affable, Modest, justly Kind, Whose face displays the Beauties of her noble Mind, Indulgent, smiling now in a comely wedding dress. May Heaven her Life with every Bounty still Bless." He adds, " Let me know if this may be printed and published;'' but the hint was not taken, as the lucubra- tion, a most inferior production, exists only in the original manuscript. In the following year, 1742, only five years after he was called to the bar, Dundas was appointed Solicitor-General in the AVilmington Ministry, which came into power on the fall of Walpole. Andrew Mitchell to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitkhall, 12M Attgttst 1742. My dear Sir, — It is with the most sincere pleasure that I wish you joy of the honour His Majesty has been pleased to do you, in appointing you His Solicitor General for Scotland. This mark of the Royal favour can not fail of being accept- able, as it hath been obtained in an honourable way, and with- out your asking or soliciting for it, and I cannot help consider- ing it as an earnest of what His Majesty will afterwards do for you. But what gives me most immediate joy is the satisfaction I shall have of being connected with you in business as we have long been in friendship : and as the ties are now double, I hope they will mutually support and fortify each other. As you now are, there is hardly any thing left for me to wish you, only as I have been alarmed with the accounts of y' health, I hope you will, for y' country and y' friends'sake, care to preserve it, and avert the danger which y*" ambition may prompt you to, of engaging in too much business. 116 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1742. I beg leave to offer my compliments to your Lady_, and to my Lord Arnistoun, and hope you shall ever find me, — My dear Sir, yours most affectionately, And^^ Mitchell.^ President Forbes to Solicitor-General Dundas. Dear Sir, — The last post brought me yours of the 25th of August, and with it a great deal of pleasure, as it expresses the very best sentiments that a young man entering upon office can entertain. Insolence is so incident to Office that it is become proverbial, and a young man, of all others, ought to be the most on his guard against it. But then it has been ever observed, that it most commonly possesses low men, raised by some accident or jerk of fortune to employments above their merits, if not their hopes ; it seldom lays hold of men whose abilities and rank in the world makes them equal to the office to which they are invited, and gives them reason to consider it as no elevation, tho' it be a preferment. I approve nevertheless mightily of the Resolutions you express. No man can be more securely guarded against an evil, which obscures, or rather, if I may be allowed the expression, which deforms every other good quality in the person whom it seizes. The apprehensions which made you deliberate on accept- ing the office, made, you may remember, no impression on me. I am glad you have dismissed them, and I entertain no doubt that the step you have taken will be to y'" own satisfaction, and to the satisfaction of y'^ country. Nevertheless to make y^ mind easy I accept the first invitation you give me, and do promise you with the freedom of a friend to acquaint you with my sentiments on y'' conduct, whenever you think fit to ask after them, or, which I hope and believe will seldom be the case, when you do, or aim at, anything that may be blameable. You put, my dear Robin, too great a value on my friendship which may flow from selfishness, as it is the creature of y'^ own making. The good opinion which you raised of y^self in me begot it, and I hope it may serve, as long as you and I shall. 1 am glad to hear that my brother Robin ^ has found great benefit from this summer's recess. I hope he has (during the fine weather which we have hitherto had) been improving it by exercise, and I would add, if it did not sound oddly from me, by abstinence. * Mr. Mitchell was at this time Under-Secretary of State for Scotland. 2 Lord Arniston, afterwards first President Dundas. 1742.] APPOINTED SOLICITOK-GENERAL. 117 It is of great consequence that his health be properly established against our meeting in November. Pray give him this advice, with my compliments. — I am, my dear Robin, very truly, your most obedient and most humble servant, Dun. Forbes. CUI.LODEN, 4/// ^^/>/''. 1742. The Lord Advocate Jit this time was Robert Craigie of (ilentloick, who had already been more than thirty years at the bar. Solicitor-General Dundius, on the other hand, was only twenty-nine years of age ; but such was his natural force of mind that, in his official correspondence with the mend)ers of the Government in London, he never failed to hold his own, and he even sometimes spoke of his more experienced chief in a tone of kindly patronage. "I hope,"' he writes on one occa- sion, " a little more practice, not in the law but among men, will make him more cautious.''^ Soon after his appointment as Solicitor-General, the first anniversary of his wedding-day arrived, when he received the following letter :-r— From Mrs. Dundas (Henrietta Baillie). I have just now received your two letters, but my inclinations lead me in the first place to congratulate you upon the return of this day, as I find I have so large a share in the satisfaction it brings, and that 's a happiness I hope shall ever increase, as long it pleases God to spare us together. I have signed the paper according to your direction, and think myself perfectly safe in following your advice, either with respect to business or anything else. . . . — Adieu my dearest. I am ever most affec^^ yours, H. Baillie. Lawers, 18/// Oct. (1742). During the years 1743 and 1744 there was constant and ever increasing uneasiness in Scottish official circles. The fears of a new Jacobite attempt, which had never wholly ceased since the rising of 1715, were now increased by the dangers of a French war. The prevailing feeling with regard to the risk of a second rebellion was, indeed, one of incredulity, arising from an unwillingness to believe that the Highland clans would * LeUer to Mitchell, 23d Sept. 1742. Addl. mss. British Museum, 6860. 118 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1744. again venture to take arms, and from an ignorant contempt of their powers. The real source of uneasiness was a lurking- dread that the French might, in the event of war breaking out, attempt a landing on the shores of Scotland, where, among the followers of the Stuart dynasty, they might safely reckon upon a cordial welcome. The Government of Scotland was, at this juncture, practi- cally in the hands of a small group of men. The Marquis of Tweeddale was Secretary of State for Scotland. He had been appointed to this important office on the formation of the Wilmington Ministry in 1742 ; and his powers were ample, as ample, in Scotland, as those of the English Secretaries of State were in England. The patronage of all offices had, contrary to the wishes of the great Duke of Argyll, been bestowed upon him. The right of recommending to tlie Crown the persons who were to fill all legal stations, even the highest, was nomi- nally vested in him ; and all business connected with the admin- istration of Scottish affairs was conducted in his office at Whitehall. The Under Secretary of State for Scotland was Mr., after- wards Sir Andrew, Mitchell. Mr. Mitchell, who, for some time after this, was tlie constant correspondent of Dundas, was the son of the Reverend William Mitchell, minister of the High Church at Edinburgh. Originally destined for the bar, he is said to have abandoned that profession and taken to foreign travel, in order to drown the sorrow which he felt at the loss of his wife, whom he had early married. This course of life fitted him for the sphere in which he afterwards gained distinction ; for, at the conclusion of his term of duty under Lord Tweeddale, he entered the diplomatic service, and was appointed Ambassador to Brussels. From Brussels he went to the Prussian Court ; and at Berlin, having gained the character of a wit, he became a favourite with Frederick the Great. Several anecdotes have been told of his readiness in reply. On one occasion, during the Seven Years' War, the British Government failed to send a fleet, as they had pro- mised, to operate in the Baltic against Russia and Sweden. Day after day Mitchell could only make excuses ; until at length he found, one morning, that he was not invited, as usual, to tlie royal dinner table. "It is dinner-time, Mr. 1744] THE SCOrriSH OFFICIALS. 119 Mitchell,'' said the officers of the household. " Ah, gentlenien,'" he replied, " no fleet, no dinner ! '" When Frederick heard this, he is said to have renewed his inviUition. After the disastrous operations which led to the court-martial on Admiral Byng, tlie king siiid to Mitchell, "This is a bad business/" " We hope, sir, with GotPs help, to do better,'' he replied. "With God's assistance ?" said the king, " I did not know you had such an ally." " We rely much on him," replied the ambtissiulor, " though he costs us less than our otlier allies !" These and many other well-known stories were told about him, and, though now forgotten, the Under Secre- tary for Scotland was a man of no little mark in his own day. Lord Tweeddale and Mr. Mitchell were responsible for the Scottish Department in Whitehall. In Scotland the chief advisers of the Ministry were the Lord President, Forbes of Culloden, whose vast influence, great talents, and indefatigable energy had for many years been placed ungrudgingly at the service of his country ; the Lord Justice-Clerk, Andrew Fletcher, Lord Milton, an intimate friend of the Duke of Argyll, and himself rivalling that statesman in his knowledge of Scotland and Scotsmen ; Robert Craigie of Glendoick, a sound-headed and sensible man, whose career of industrious toil had raised him to the position of Lord Advocate ; and lastly, Robert Dundas, the Solicitor-General, younger than his colleagues, but already displaying the administrative capacity for which his family was so distinguished. The ability and resources of this group of officials were about to be tried by the sudden and painful events of a civil war. In F'ebruary 1744 Sir John Cope was sent down to Scotland as Commander-in-Chief. Dundas was then in Edinburgh, and in constant correspondence with Whitehall (the Lord Advocate being absent in London) ; and the following letter throws some light on what was thought about Sir John Cope by men who knew him : — Mr. Mitchell to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 4 F^/>. 1744. Sir, — General Cope set out yesterday for Scotland. He was appointed Commander-in-Chief without much consultation. His 120 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1744. Majesty inclined to have conferred that command on Sir Robert Rich, but he declined it on account of his health, etc. Lord Mark Ker, and others, were very solicitous to have it. I am well assured that the D. of Argyll was not pleased with Sir J. Cope's being appointed, but notwithstanding of that, I make no doubt but he will be well received by the Lord and Lady J. C.^ This gentleman 2 has been what the world call lucky in his profession. He has rose fast to considerable rank and preferment, without much service, and his success has been attended with the usual concomitants, envy and slander. But he certainly has both parts and address, to acquire the friendship of the great, and to make it useful to himself. As I have wrote you with great freedom, you will, I know, remember that what I have said is in confidence to you only, and I need not tell you how necessary it is that there be a perfect good understanding between you and the Commander-in- Chief. You will find him easy, well bred, and affable, and I fancy it will be an easy matter to gain his confidence. Some early civilities will make him yours, he being an absolute stranger in the country. — Yours, &c., And^- Mitchell. The fears of a French invasion increased among the mem- bers of the Government in London. It was the belief of Lord Tweeddale that "some desperate enterprise is resolved upon against this kingdom. "''' In Scotland all seemed quiet ; but Lord Tweeddale, on hearing this from Mr. Dundas, answered that he was not satisfied. " I am very glad to hear," he writes, " that there is not the least stir, as yet, in your parts, particularly in the Highlands ; though I own I cannot help even suspecting so dead a calm at this time ; and, therefore, I hope it will not make His Majesty's servants less upon their guard." Again Lord Tweeddale writes, upon the 25th of February 1744 : — Lord Tweeddale to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 25 Feb. 1744. Sir, — I am glad to hear there has yet appeared no disturbances in Scotland ; yet as I wrote to you in my last, I even suspect that dead calm. We know for certain that there are many French officers, Irish, and others, come over here, and are lurking about 1 The Lord Justice-Clerk and Mrs. Fletcher, of Milton. '^ Sir John Cope. 1744] FRENCH OFFICERS. 121 this town. I btlicve upon enquiry the same will be found so in Scotland. 1 have myself intelligence of two, whom I know to be there ; the one Donald Stewart, brother of the same Stewart whom we were in search for last year, and who wa,s formerly Quarter-Master in the Greys. The father of these Stewarts was once a farmer in the Knock of Kincardine, j)arish of Abernethy in Strathspey. The other is Alexander Bailey, called Capt. Bailey, but only a Lieutenant, as I am informed, in Clare's regiment in the French service. Both these officers are lately come from France, and are now supposed to be in the north of Scotland. I have, there- fore, received His Majesty's commands to signify to you that it is his pleasure that warrants be issued for apprehending not only these two persons, but also all other officers at present in the service of France, who you happen to hear are in Scotland, since they can come here with no good design at this juncture. Supposing no invasion had been intended, their view, at least, must be enlist- ment for the service of that Crown. You will communicate this to Sir John Cope, and concert the manner of doing it with such of His Majesty's servants as you shall judge proper. Care must be taken, if any such persons should be seized, to secure all the letters and papers they may have about them, and those, if containing anything material, to be transmitted to me here, and the persons of such officers detained till further orders. — I am, etc., TWEEDDALE. The letters which passed between Dundas and the Scottisli Department disclose the fact, an unfortunate one for the public service, that he and the Lord Justice-Clerk were not on good terms. Lord Milton, as an intimate friend of the Duke of Argyll, may, very naturally, have been averse to admit to complete political confidence the son of that old leader of the Independent Whigs, who had, years before, opposed his patron with so much determination. He was inclined, Dundas com- plained to Lord Tweeddale, to consult Sir John Cope too much ; and the Secretary of State had some difficulty in keeping the peace. " As to what you hint at,'' he writes, " in yours of the 28th, it is no more than I expected would happen. You know very well the Justice-Clerk is very a,ssiduous in making his court to all strangers, and ])articularly to military men ; but I think that should occasion no division at this juncture among you." 122 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1744. Mr. Mitchell io Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 6th March 1744. Sir, — My Lord ^ had notice, by a letter from General Cope, that it was suspected the Marquis of Tullibardine was in Scotland. As his Lordship is not certain that this has been communicated to you as it was to the Justice Clerk, he desires me to tell you that, in case the General has failed in this particular, that it is his opinion you should show no mark of resentment on this occasion. The present state of the public affairs requires that such trifles should be overlooked, and that at least a seeming harmony should be pre- served amongst His Majesty's servants. His Lordship is sensible that in your station some things may happen that will be dis- agreeable to you ; but he depends upon your temper and prudence, and your zeal for His Majesty's service, that nothing of that kind will in the least influence your conduct at this juncture. I shall write to you by post this night. — I am, &c., Andr. Mitchell. In subsequent letters the Marquis of Tweeddale and Mr. Mitchell continue to impress on the Solicitor General the necessity of preserving, " in appearance at least, a good corre- spondence between the Justice Clerk and you.""* Sir John Cope received express orders to consult both the Solicitor and his father, Lord Arniston, on the state of affairs ; and " it is hoped," says Mr. Mitchell, " that Lord Arniston will not be shy in meeting and talking with them."' The position of public affairs was becoming more and more critical. " We are now," Mr. Mitchell writes on the 24th of March, " on the eve of a French war, and some of those who, these several years, have been bellowing for a war with France, now talk of nothing but the power of France, and the dangerous consequences of a war, a notable instance of how impossible it is to please a giddy and misinformed multitude." In April Dundas began to feel the strain of continuous official work, and proposed leaving Edinburgh for a time. War had been formally declared at the end of March, and events in Scotland were more narrowly watched than ever. " I have,"''' Lord Tweeddale writes on the 14th of April, "just now ^ Lord Tweeddale. 1744] THE WAR WITH FRANCE. 12.S seen a letter from you to Mr. Mitchell, wherein you signify your inclination of going to the country for some days. 1 cannot object to it, though I am sensible occurrences may happen in whicli I may wish to liave your opinion as (|uick as the post will allow it ; and, therefore, I desire you will take care that your letters be regularly transmitted." Mrs. Dundas /o the Solicitor-General. I received yours with all the affection and gratitude imaginable, and it cannot but gratify my ambition to be secure of having the esteem and regard of a person whose judgement in nothing can ever be called in question, if it is not his partiality towards me. Your absence would have been more insupportable to me had 1 been in any other place than where I am.^ Their manners here are, indeed, different from the generality of the world, and few are so well qualified to be friends ; for they have all the accom- plishments that are fit to constitute true friendship. I please my- self with the thoughts of your agreeing perfectly with the country, and that your health is daily more confirmed. You are often made mention of here, and they beg, in a particular manner, to be remembered to you. My mama designs to write to you soon, and, in the meantime, begs you '11 accept of her best wishes. — Believe me ever, my dear, most affectionately yours, Hen. Baillie. HoPT. House, May 21. Meantime the war with France was in full progress ; and the Arniston letters contain the accounts which reached Scot- land of the varying phases of the contest, the successes of the English men-of-war and privateers, and the progress of the campaign on the Continent, mingled with directions for the arrest of suspected persons, instructions to watch the sea-ports closely, accounts of the debates in Parliament, warrants for the appointment of justices of the peace, with, now and then, stray items of court gossip, — while over all, coming nearer and nearer, hovers the shadow of the exiled family, the presage of impend- ing civil war. In July 1744 Lord Wilmington, died, and Henry Pelham became prime minister. Carteret, whose motto, according to ' ^ Mrs. Dundas was visiting at Hopetoun House. 124 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1744. Horace Walpole, was " give any man the crown on his side, and he can defy everything,'^ was the royal favourite ; and he and Mr. Pelham were estranged by mutual jealousy. The result was that, at the end of autumn, the country was plunged into a ministerial crisis. Carteret, now become, by the death of his mother, Earl Granville, had driven Mr. Pelham and his brother, the Duke of Newcastle, to inform the king that he must choose between their resignations and that of Lord Granville. Lord Granville resigned. Mr. Mitchell io Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 24//^ A^ov. 1744. Sir, — My Lord, who has not time to write, desires me to acquaint you that this morning the Earl of Granville resigned the seals, which His Majesty immediately gave to the Earl of HaiTington. Next week there will be a new Commission for the Admiralty, but who will come in place of the Earl of Winchelsea, and what other changes will be made in that board, are not yet known, and perhaps not yet settled. How this will end I know not, but till the whole scheme is visible, those who wish well to a certain interest will, I hope, be very cautious of what they say or do. — I am, etc., And^. Mitchell. The administration which was now being formed was that which is known as the Broad Bottom Administration of 1744. " Great are the expectations of many,"" writes Mitchell, " and great will be their disappointment. Ld. G — lie, I am told, had very numerous levees there three days past;"' and in another letter, on the 1st of December, " Nothing is yet done in the changes so much talked of, and indeed everybody, in their con- versations, turn in and put out with so much freedom according to their affections and prejudices, that I can affirm nothing certain in these affairs.""' In a postscript to another letter he says, " I have heard that lately when a certain great man ^ brought a bundle of papers to be signed by ,2 that he said, ' Lay them down ; I suppose these are warrants for your friends to come in and mine to go out,"* etc. It is the general observa- tion of those that attend the levee, that he speaks with 1 Probably Mr. Pelham. - The King.* 1745] BROAD BOTTOM ADMINISTRATION. 125 great affettation and temper to the late secretary, but hardly deigns to look at tlie reformers.'' Mr. Mitchell to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 22 Dec. 1744. Dear Sir, — Inclosed I send you a list of such as have kissed hands this morning.^ I believe the whole was not settled till late last night. What other changes will be made I cannot inform you, and with regard to your friend here ,2 some say the office will be suppressed, others that he will soon have a successor, and others that he will at least remain till the end of the session. Be this as it will, I hope you will continue to do the duty of your office, and you may be assured that so soon as anything is determined con- cerning your friends that you shall have timeous notice, that you may take the steps you shall judge most proper for your honour and satisfaction. . . . The bringing in of some of the Tories has given jealousy and discontent to many ; and though I believe there will be no opposition immediately, yet a foundation is laid, from the discontent of the Whigs, and the disappointment of the Tories, which will one time or other break out with violence, for I believe the heads of the Tories will soon lose their influence with their party. — I am, &c.. And'*- Mitchell. Mr. Mitchell remained at his post, so did Lord Advocate Craigie, and the Solicitor-General ; and accordingly there was no change in the Scottish Department. Mr. Mitchell to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 17 Jan. 1745. Dear Sir, — 1 had the pleasure of yours of the second, and I return you thanks for thinking of me during the Saturnalia, which you celebrated in the country. Happy should I have been to have shared in your mirth ; but indeed this is no compliment, for I should be happy to be anywhere rather than here, so tiresome and so hateful is this evanescent state of being, in which I have not even the comfortable prospect of a sudden and honourable death. I will, however, follow the example of my betters, and stand by my ^ Mr. Pelham's ministry of 1744 included Lord Hardwicke as Lord Chancellor, the Duke of Newcastle and Lord Harrington as Secretaries of State for England, the Marquis of Tweeddale as Secretary for Scotland, and Lord Chesterfield as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. - Lord Tweeddale. 126 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1745. standard till I am honourably dismissed^ or meet with my fate. I have heard it rumom'ed that the office of has been offered to the D. of Ar — 11, which he refused. Whether he had the option of naming a successor I do not know ; but I am told he affects that both should be believed. Whatever be in this, I fancy we cannot subsist long, and I most sincerely wish that we may rather cease to be, than not be as we ought. — Dear Sir, I am most sincerely, yours affect'^* A. M. Throughout the winter and spring of 1745 there were vague rumours of a Jacobite invasion. " There are,'' Lord Tweeddale writes to the Solicitor-General on the 2d of April, "several letters in town, mentioning a ridiculous story of a young man, who calls himself the Pretender's son, being in Scotland. By the description I have had of him, he appears to be the same person who was here about two years ago, and was actually taken up at the time of the invasion, and upon examination he appeared to be crazy ; however, such stories and persons are not to be altogether neglected, and, therefore, you will enquire about him as prudently as you can." This story was, indeed, an idle tale. The young Pretender was still on the Continent. But towards the end of July other rumours reached Edinburgh and London, which were equally laughed at, but of which it would have been well for the Marquis of Tweeddale and Mr. Mitchell to have taken serious notice. Prince Charles landed among the Western Islands on the 2d of August, or a few days before — the exact date is uncertain — and on the 2d of August Mr. Mitchell writes to Dundas : " I thought it needless to trouble you with any account of the intelligence about the young Chevalier, first, because I knew the Advocate would acquaint you with it, and then because I could hardly think seriously of that matter, the whole appeared to me so absurd that I was surprised to find the Lords of the Regency had ordered a proclamation ; but they know best." For many days the possibility of a serious attempt at invasion was denied. Mr. Mitchell to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 17 Atigji-st 1745. Dear Sir, — As you will be acquainted with the contents of the later expresses to Scotland, I shall say nothing of that matter, 1745] BKGINNINO OF THK REBELLION. 127 only I think the paragraph of tin* Ijmdou Gazette fully strong for all the intelligence they yet have about this affair. It is surprising that this affair has made so much noise here, and occasioned a falling of the stocks. I wish I had money to purchase, notwith- standing the imminent danger. -1 am, &c.. And**- Mitchell. Mk. M|T( IIKI.L la Sndon until three days later. Dundjus had left Edinburgh some time l)efore, along with the Lord Advocate, and hatl, since the occupation of the city by the Pretender, been at Haddington, Dunbar, and Berwick. He ju'conipanied Sir John Cope on his march from Dunbar to Prestonpans, and was bv his side during the movements of the day before the battle. I^te on the evening of the 20th, he and Craigie left tlie royal army prejiaring to bivouac for the night, with the rebels about a mile to the west, and rode off to spend the night at Huntington, the country seat of Mr. Thomas Hay, the Keeper of the Signet. Early next morning they heard the sound of guns, and soon learned that the force under Sir John Coj)e iiad been totally routed by the Highlanders. They then made the best of their way southwards to Berwick, stopping for a short time at Hatldington, where Dundas assisted the I^rd Advocate to write a hurried note to Lord Tweeddale with the news of Cope''s defeat. This note reached Whitehall at midnight on the 24tli of Septend)er. Mr. Mitchell to Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 24 i>//. 1745, ^ past midnight. Dear Sir, — It was with unexpressible concern that I read this morning the accounts of the battle near Preston. God only knows what may be the consequences of it to our country. I shrink at the very thought of these scenes of blood and misery that must necessarily follow. I hope the Castle of Edinburgh will still be preserved. My Lord has wrote to the Advocate about it, who will shew you his letter. I hope the connexions you have in Edinburgh will enable you to do service on this occasion. Let no expense be spared, for it is of the utmost consequence to the nation. Pray be very particular about what has happened. I never 1.32 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1745. before knew what it was to be so miserably anxious. A veiy minute detail of the facts and numbers is necessary, not for curiosity only, but for a justification of those you wish well to. . . . My heart bleeds for my friends who, besides these present hard- ships, must suffer the reputation of treachery, till the shameful surrender of Edinburgh be cleared up. I beg leave to offer my compliments to Lord Arniston. Pray let me know in your next where he is, and how he does. — I am ever most affectionately yours, And'' Mitchell. The following letter, which bears no date, was evidently written during the occupation of Edinburgh by the rebel army, and shows the alarm and uncertainty which existed among the relatives of those who remained true to the reign- ing family : — Lady Arniston^ to her Stepson, Solicitor-General Dundas. (No date.) Mv DEAR RoBY, — I sciid tliis by express, both for security and haste, with one for your father which you '11 be so good as to forward by the post, for I am afraid if the servant goes on all the way, he will not be back in time for to answer the end of sending nim, which is to consult and get your advice what is proper for me to do. Since last Monday at eight o'clock we got two expresses from Edinburgh telling us that the town was to be destroyed by firing from the castle, unless a free communication was left for provisions to go up to them. The respite was only till twelve the next day, which occasioned a general consternation, sick people in bed, children with their nurses, men and women, all running out of town with carts full of goods, and of these we hear the Highlanders took a share. However, next day we were told the town had got a reprieve for six days till the return of an express from London, and by a proclamation, which you will see if the town is reduced, reprisals are to be made on all the abettors of the Government, which is a very general description. And as it is positively given out our houses are to be burnt, wherever protections have been given they are to be recalled. In short, we are to be ruined. If I could believe all this I would surely leave this place. But since the forfeitures of estates are to be given to defray the loss of what their friends may suffer, I can 1 Anne Gordon, second wife of the first President Dundas. 1745] FAMILY LETTERS. 13S hardly think they will destroy our houses or anything that may answer that pur|K>se. However, I would be very glad to know if my husband and you would have me remove books and papers to any of our neighbours, where they could be safer than here — or if I shall run the hazard of their not carrying things to that extremity, and which is to depend upon the answer from London. I have no reason to expect ill from them personally, unless they change, for last night there was a protection sent out to me, dated yesterday. Since all this disturbance I was afraid to send it back for fear of exasperating them, but am resolved not to claim the benefit of it till I hear from you. I don't think it right to take a protection allegiance. — Farewell, (iod protect you and deliver us from these distresses. When M*" Dundas writes to me I beg you would forward it by express, in case it can be here time enough to serve for a direction for me. Wednesday. — I would have wrote before, but knew not where to direct for either of you till last night. to Solicitor-General Dundas. Arniston, Oct. I, 1745. Dear Robie, — I came from your house ^ yesterday, where I left my Lady Carmichael a little frighted, but M" Baillie well and quite composed, really not more concern on her spirits than any rational man has, when his country is the scene of war, nor do I believe she will be easily cast down now that you are free from danger. . . . M"^ Baillie delivered me your message, and I spoke to J. Fleming- to put the hounds all out to the tenants, for I thought they would be better there than in the kennel; and you may believe we will have very small joy in iumting when you are absent. I sincerely wish you well, and that God may bless you and preserve you. — Yours, Adieu. No harm was done to Arniston by the rebels ; and the Solicitor-Generars wife seems to liave remained safely at Ormiston Hall, his country residence at that time. "Mrs. Baillie,*" writes an anonymous correspondent, " is surprisingly easy and composed amidst the flying parties which have gone round about your house.'** 1 During his father's lifetime Mr. Dundas lived frequently at Ormiston Hall, about twelve miles from Edinburgh. * The factor. 134 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1745. Andrew Mitchell Io Solicitor-General Dundas. Whitehall, 28/// Septr. 1745. As my Lord Advocate will forthwith set out for London, my Lord Marquis leaves it entirely to you to determine whether you will remain in the north, or come here ; but I cannot help on this occasion offering you my opinion, that you should continue for some time either at Berwick or Newcastle, in order to carry on the correspondence with Scotland, which at this time may be of the greatest service to the public, and I shall advise you from time to time of what is passing here. Oct. yi. 1745. The Marquis of Tweedale requests Mr. D. to remain at Berwick or its neighbourhood, for the purpose of forwarding intelligence to Gov*. After this Dundas remained at Berwick till November. One Robert Mackintosh sends him a short journal, which may be given as a specimen of the shape in which information was frequently conveyed to the Government. Journal. 7th Nov. — From Berwick to Dunbar. 4 miles to East Dunbar, met a man passing off the way. Called on him, and he ran into a village, 'twixt the road and the sea, and was informed by another man that talked w ith him that he appeared to him to be a spy. Heard from a clergyman at Dunbar that advice had come from the Fife side to Admiral Byng of 3000 troops, mostly Irish, were embarked at Ostend, bound for the harbours of Montrose or Stonhyve. 8th Nov., Edin'^. — Arrived here and found all peaceable. But that last night Ro. Clark, vintner, and some others in liquor, walking the streets, insulted the City Guard, upon which a scuffle ensued, and Clark's leg was broke. It 's given out here, from different hands, that last night 3000 Highlanders, viz.. Erasers, &c., from the north, passed above Stirling to join the rebels (this fact is doubtful), and it 's said that the '500 men that were reported as having deserted, are gone upon a secret expedition. A letter from a merchant in Lanark to his correspondent here mentions 1745] PROCJKKSS OF 'IHK HHHKLLION. 1S5 that the Highlanders are passing there in numbers of ten to fifteen in company, and enriching the country with arms of the best kind, which they sell for what's next to nothing. It's reported from good hands, that the Highland army, as they marched from Kdin^, Dalkeith, &c., did not exceed 7000 in all, and that they had thirteen piece of canon. That, upon search made, more of the silver plate, &c., in Col. Gardner's house were found in the house of one M'*Laehlan in the Writer's Court. Despatch (anonymous) to Mr. Dundas. Edinr., Sat., A'ffvr. g//i. . . . All accounts, from very different places in the countr}', bear that the Highlanders are deserting in great numbers; some- times 30 or 40 go off together. Several letters have been inter- cepted from Lewis Gordon, brother to the Duke, directed to the Duke of Perth, John Murray, &c. These letters are now in the castle. I read two of the originals, the one directed to the said Duke, the other to the said Murray. They are dated Huntly Castle, October 28th, and bear that he finds the people in general extremely averse to take up arms in support of the Prince, and that force is absolutely necessary . This he says is entirely owing to the vile Presbyterian Ministers, who instil into the people's minds false and foolish notions, and speak disrespectfully of the Prince and his abettors, but adds that he hopes to prevent their future influence, as he has sent a written order to those of them who are under his jurisdiction, requiring them not to preach in their present strain, otherways they shall be forthwith punished as the law directs. He speaks of his having formed a design to take the President prisoner, but was disuaded from the attempt by General Gordon, an old man who married Sir Thomas Mon- crief s daughter, as a thing impracticable, in regard that 200 of the Erasers, having attacked the President's house,i were repulsed with considerable loss. He begs that General Gordon's name may not be mentioned, as he does not choose to appear publicly. The letter concludes with promises that he, Lewis Gordon, will do all in his power to support the glorious cause, and an account of the Lady Aberdeen's safe delivery of a son, who is now named Charles. . . . This comes from the gentleman who parted with you yesterday at Berwick, before you got out of bed." » Culloden. 136 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1745. About the 12tli of November Dundas returned to Edin- burgh. The royal forces under General Handasyd were now approaching the city. On tlie 13th the General writes from Haddington : " Here I am, but much fatigued. Not being certain that the rebels were at Carlisle till Monday night at ten, it was twelve next day before I could leave Berwick. A worse march I never liad. Pray make my quartering in the town easy for seven hundred horse, and fifteen hundred foot. I assure you we are so many. Almost dead with cold. Adieu.'^ Mr. Mitchell, though still in a state of great anxiety, finds time to say : " Pray desire any of your friends wlio have been in Edinburgh during the Highland Government, to write a detail of what passed, their reception, manner of living, and convers- ing, the P."*s intrigues, hon jnots, and trifling incidents." Very little trustworthy information regarding the move- ments of the rebel army reached either London or Edinburgh until it was known that, on the 4th of December, the young- Pretender had entered Derby. The news reached London on the 6th, Black Friday, as it was called, and all was panic. " It is difficult to conceive,'"* Mitchell writes to Dundas, " how few behaved like men.""* But on that very day the Highlanders were in full retreat to the north, and the invasion of England was at an end. The year closed with brighter prospects than had lately seemed possible ; but all danger was not over. " I am glad,"' Mr. Mitchell writes on the 31st of December, " that the city Edinburgh has had even a short reprieve from the fury of the rebels, for till the King's army has entered Scotland, I will not call it a deliverance.'' In the meantime the Marquis of Tweeddale had made uj) liis mind to resign the office of Secretary of State for Scotland. The jealousy between Lord Granville, the King's favourite, and Mr. Pelham, had not been diminished by the dangers of the Rebellion ; in fact, they seem to have regarded the country's extremity as their opportunity for bringing matters to a crisis. Lord Tweeddale, as a member of the Granville faction, had for some time found his position becoming more and more un- comfortable, and he resolved to retire. In his letter to Dundas of the 31st December, Mr. Mitchell says : " My Lord Marquis has allowed me to communicate to you only that he intends to 1746] LORD TWEEDDALE'S RESIGNATION. 137 resign the seals on next Saturday. This I know you will not mention ; and I am sure the news will neither surprise nor dis- })lease you. For my own part, and after -what I liave seen and suffered, the wonder is how he has had the j)atience to kee]) them so lonord Arniston was much amioyed, and wrote his son a long and angry letter, in which he declared that "provocations from the L. J. C} I never would have minded one figg ... as I now know that neither his impudence nor his J)atron^s high power could have been able to turn out one man, I mean either the Advocate or you. I must own, vour so obstinate resolution, notwithstanding, has given and does give me very great vexation. . . . Vou have by this step established for ever the power of the very man that I believe you and I abominate.^'' Lord Advocate Craigie to Mn. Dundas, late Solicitor-General. London, \tth Jany. 1746. Dear Robin, — I have yours of the 9th with the unpleasant account of your having resigned your office. It is too late for me to complain or to insinuate that the reasons of your conduct are insufficient. At the same time I cannot help wishing that in a matter so delicate you had waited until you could have had your father's opinion. I shall only add that I congratulate you on the quiet and ease you '11 now enjoy. You '11 have vacation till June, and I hope the disturbers of our quiet are got so far north as to leave you and your concerns free of any apprehensions of danger. I am still in the storm, and so is my little family, and God only knows how I shall ride it out, and when it will be over with me. President Forbes to Mr. Dundas, late Solicitor-General. CuLLODEN, 26th Jan. 1746. My dear Robin, — I have yours of the l6th, which gives me no small uneasiness. I can, without much auguring, see that your situation was difficult. But at a season such as this, a man must bear and rub them, those difficulties, as well as they can. I know- how painful it is to bear the insolence of office ; and I know you too well, to think that you would choose to submit to it, in a season of calm and tranquility. But there is somewhat in our present situation that makes me wish you had tugged a little longer at the oar, because the step you have taken may give your enemies an opportunity, not only to misrepresent you, but to lay * Lord Justice-Clerk (Fletcher of Milton). 142 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1746. your act to the account of your friends. Arniston (for whose recovery I heartily rejoice) certainly advised right ; and I sin- cerely wish for many reasons you had drudged on, till I might have had the good fortune to see you. There is, however, now no help for it, and I am convinced you will forgive me, for telling you my sentiments freely. . . . — I am, my dear Robin, affection- ately yours, Duncan Forbes. Lord Advocate Craigie to Dundas. London, Feb. lUh, 1746. Dear Sir, — ... I don't know if you have advice of the revolu- tion in our Administration that happened yesterday, and is still going on to the surprise of most people. The Duke of Newcastle and Lord Harrington resigned the seals, upon what occasion I believe is not publicly known ; and in the afternoon his Majesty sent for E. Granville, and gave him the seals. This morning Mr. Pelham resigned as Chancellor of the Exchequer, L. Gower as Privy seal, D. of Bedford as First Commissioner of the Admiralty, E. Pembroke as Groom of the Stole. The Chancellor resigns on Thursday, as to-morrow is the first day of the term. How many more resign is uncertain, or who are to be successors. E. Bath succeeds Mr. Pelham. They say D. of Argyll resigns ; but whether he does or not, he has for once lost his power. — Yours, Rob. Craigie. This letter alludes to an event which took place at the beginning of February 1746, and which is described by Lord Mahon as " a short but singular ministerial revolution."" "The Royal favour had been," says Lord Mahon, "for some time engrossed by Lord Granville (Carteret) ; the Pelham brothers found themselves treated with coldness and reserve, and appre- hended that in carrying the supplies this winter they would only be paving the way for their own dismissal at the end of the session. To them the unquelled rebellion appeared, not as a motive of forbear- ance, but only as a favourable opportunity for pushing their preten- sions. They determined, therefore, to bring the question to an issue, and to concentrate their demands on one point — an office for Pitt — to whom they were bound by their promises, and still more by their fears. The king, however, steadily refused his assent to this arrangement. ... A resignation was now resolved upon by nearly 1746.] MINISTERIAL CRISIS. liii all the ministers. In this aff'air the Pelhams prudently shrunk from the front ranks ; the van therefore was led by Harrington, he bein^ the first, on the lOth Feb., to frWc up the seals, and thus drawing on himself the Kind's especial and lasting resentment. He was followed on the same day by the Duke of Newcastle, on the next by Mr. Pelham. . . . His Majesty immediately sent the two seals of Secretaries of State to Lord CJranville (who was indis- posed) that he and Lord Bath might form an administration as they pleased. . . . After various offers and repeated refusals, this ministry of forty hours was dissolved, and Ix)rd Bath announced its failure to the King. . . . His Majesty had no other choice than to reinstate his former servants, and admit whatever terms they now required. It was agreed to dismiss from place the re- maining adherents of Bath and Granville, amongst others, the Marquis of Tweeddale, whose office as Secretary for Scotland was again abolished." Craigie resigned before the end of February, and was suc- ceeded, as Lord Advocate, by William Grant of Prestongrange. Dundas was succeeded, as Solicitor-General, by Patrick Hal- dane and Alexander Home, who held the office jointly. No new Secretary of State for Scotland was appointed in place of Lord Tweeddale. And thus, long before April came, with the final defeat of the Pretender at Culloden, a sweeping change had been made among the persons on whom had fallen the burden of maintaining the royal cause during the early days of the Rebellion. CHAPTER IX. THE SECOND PRESIDENT DUNDAS — continued. After the close of the Kebellion, Dundas attended assiduously to his practice at the bar, to which, as he no longer held office, he was able to devote his full attention. Old Lord Arniston's health had been failing for some time. He suffered much from gout ; but his intellect was still robust. The long letters which he wrote to his son, and particularly those in which he remonstrated with him for resigning the office of Solicitor-General, are full of acute reasoning, though couched in somewhat violent language. During the Rebellion he was compelled, by an attack of gout, to leave Scotland for some time, and journeyed about, staying, among other places, at Stockton, Darlington, and Mor- peth. When he returned home he was, evidently, suffering from low spirits, and his wife ^ found him very difficult to deal with. In one letter to her stepson, Mrs. Dundas describes how im- possible she found it to induce the old gentleman to look into the state of his family affairs. When she pressed him on the subject he " shows the greatest signs of grief and perplexity, and wishes he were dead.^"* At last he resolved to retire from the bench ; ^ a resolution which nearly ended the brilliant career of his son, and which might, by destroying the influence of his family, have materially changed the course of Scottish political history. For Dundas declared that if his father left the bench he would leave the bar, and retire into private life. The following letter explains how he was induced to remain in office : — 1 Anne Gordon, Lord Arniston's second wife. '^ Supra, p. 99. I750.] THE REPRESENTATION OF LANARKSHIRE. 145 Mrs. Dun das (u livr Stepson.^ Dear Roby, — When I came home last night, as I found your father in a disposition to hear me, I entered on the subject you spoke to me of. I repeated all the arguments I could recollect against resigning, and concluded with assuring (him) that if he did throw off one gown, you would throw off the other ; that the trifling gains you acquired were no inducement to you to slave in the manner you now do, but the hopes you had of being able, some time, to raise yourself into a station where you might be more useful in the world ; that if he resigned all that was at an end. You was sure of being run down. He was impatient to let me finish what I had more to say, and, stretching out his hand, — " You need say no more. If my Roby thinks it would hurt him that I should resign, I will never do it. Let me bear affronts, contempt, &c. I never will be a hindrance to the views of a son I so much esteem as well as love." I thought it would be a pleasure to you to know this ; and that makes me give you this early disturbance. — I am ever yours. Thursday Morning. P.S. — If you will send us Lord Lovat's trial, I should take great care of it and thank you, for your father grudges to buy one of them. We have already seen how the death of Lord President Forbes, in December 1747, put an end to all Lord Arniston's ideas of leaving the bench, and how he not only secured for himself the vacant chair, but had the satisfaction of seeing Lord Justice-Clerk Fletcher — " that puppy,'' as he used to call him — thrust aside in the course of the intrigues which led to his own elevation.^ In 1750 Dundas was urged to offer himself for the vacancy in the representation of Lanarkshire, caused by the death of Sir J. Hamilton. His wife. Miss Baillie, was a Lanarkshire heiress, and it was thought that he would be a strong candidate in the Whig interest. He declined, however, as will be seen from the following letters, from unwillingness to enter Parlia- ment at that particular time, and also from a feeling of doubt as to whether he would receive the support of the Govern- ment : — ^ No date ; probably in April or May 1747. * Supra, p. 103. K 146 ARNISTON MExMOIRS. [1750. Mr. Dundas io the Hon. Charles Hope Weir.i March 25, 1750. Dear Charles, — As the death of Sir James Hamilton is now beyond doubt, and as I am persuaded that you and I agree entirely in our sentiments of the politicks of that county, a letter from me on that subject needs no apology. My great and indeed only view is that we should if possible send a proper representa- tive in his place to Parliament. It is some time since I disengaged myself from what I will be allowed to call these low schemes of politicks, which, to my grief, I have too much seen prevail in this country. But the great and fundamental scheme of Whig and Torie I will never divest myself of, since at all times I shall use my utmost endeavours to countenance the one and discourage the other. I therefore make no doubt you will concur with me in following it out. I had a message from one gentleman assuring your humble servant that if I had any view to Parliament he would endeavour to make the matter easy. But you know I have long preferred quietness to politicks, which makes me have no inclination that way. However, I gave for answer that I wished no hasty resolution to be taken until there was a general meeting of the county, when we might all consider of a proper person. Hon. Charles Hope Weir to Lord Hopetoun.^ London, March 20, 1750. Within these few days we have lost our member for Clydesdale by the death of Sir James Hamilton. M'^ Pelham sent for me yesterday morning to ask me about the situation of that county, and who might be a proper man to propose there. I told him (as it appeared to me) that if the person would think of it himself, the most proper man would be our friend Robin Dundas, and who I believe would be acceptable to all the friends of the Government in that shire ; (and I really think in the present situation of the shire the friends of the Government, I mean the 1 Hon. Charles Hope Weir, third son of the first Earl of Hopetoun by Lady Henrietta Johnstone, daughter of the first Marquis of Annandale. On the death of his uncle, the second Marquis of Annandale, Mr. Hope succeeded to the estate of Craigiehall, in West Lothian. He married the daughter and heiress of Sir W. Weir of Blackwood, in Lanarkshire. He was M. P. for West Lothian. * John, second Earl of Hopetoun. I750.] DUNDAS DFXLINKS TO STAND. 147 Whig interest, should and may make the member). Next to him I proposed John Lockhart of Castlehill. But I was still doubtful how far either of these gentlemen would be persuaded to come into Parliament, but that I was persuaded they would agree with me in supporting any man that should be proposed for the county upon a Whig interest, rather than let anybody come in on a contrary one. He said any friend to the Government would be acceptable to him, particularly a man of M*" Dundas's character, and wished we might all unite in support of the Whig interest, which surely is the natural one in the county. I promised to inform myself as soon as possible how matters stood, as if either our friend Robin or John Lockhart will think of it, to go down immediately and lend any poor help I could towards this scheme. I would have wrote to M*^ Dundas himself, but as I don't know whether he may be in the east or west country, and that possibly you may before now know his opinion with relation to this affair, I thought it best to write to you, and beg you will let me know how matters stand. If necessary (I mean if you don't already know his sentiments) send him this letter. I don't offer advice nor opinion, but will heartily assist in the scheme if he has any such. Mr. Dundas to the Hon. Charles Hope Weir. March 26, 1750. A few hours ago I had a letter from Lord Hopeton inclosing one which he had yesterday received from you concerning the election. ... I wish the election may go to our minds. For my own part, if I were convinced that my going into Parliament could be of real service to the Whig interest, I should think it my duty to yield up my own private ease and tranquillity to serve a cause which I have ever warmly espoused. But I do not look upon myself as a man of so great consequence. I cannot at pre- sent vary my resolution of continuing in the private and retired sphere which I have acted in for some time past. You indeed mention in your letter that M'^ Pelham would not be displeased with one of my character. As a friend to the Government I will not disown my being flattered by this expression, as it is my earnest desire that my attachment to the Government should be known and believed by every person in his Majesty's service. Since my name, therefore, has been brought upon the carpet, I trust that you, as my friend, will do me the justice of representing 148 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1750. me as willing and desirous at all times of promoting his Majesty's interest, without regard to any mean or selfish views. Mr. Dundas to the Hon. Charles Hope Weir. Ormiston Hall, Ap. 10, 1750. D*^ Cha., — I was favoured last post with your letter of the 3**. There was no occasion for any protestations either of your friend- ship or your sincerity in the sentiments you there express. I entertain not the least doubt of either. But friends daily differ in opinion^ which is our case at present, as after the maturist deliberation I cannot see any sufficient reason to alter my sentiments of not offering my service to our county of Clydesdale. I never have indeed said that I am resolved at no time to go into Parliament, but at this time I am certainly resolved. The Government interest was given to Patrick Stuart of Torrance, who was returned in the Whig interest in opposition to Hamilton of Aikenhead, who was put forward by the Hamiltons. Both Dundas and Mr. Hope Weir voted for Mr. Stuart. Those were the days of small constituencies ; and at the election the numbers were : — Stuart 17. Hamilton 12. Mr. Mitchell expresses in his letters the regret which he had felt on hearing that Dundas had declined to stand for Lanarkshire. Three years, however, passed before he made u]) his mind that the proper time had come for him to enter Parliament ; and, when he did so, it was for his own coimty of Midlothian that he wished to stand. Mr. R. B. Ramsay to Mr. Dundas. By the misfortune of my horse's coming down with me in coming here from Kinghorn the 28*^ ult., I got a strain, which deprived me of the honour of waiting on you in paying the last duty to my Lord President's funeral, as I intended, whether I had been invited or not.^ You know so well that it is unnecessary to inform you how it 1 The Lord President had died on the 26th of August. Supj-a, p. 109. 1753] STANDS FOR MIDLOTHIAN. 149 came about tliat I was elected to serve the county of Edinburgh in Parliament upon Sir Ch. Oilmour's death. As it was a thing, when projwsed, that I had not entertained a thought of, so had I rested on my own opinion, witiiout regard to those who intended me such an honour, I should have declined it. The most grateful return I could make those gentlemen who had importuned me, was to accept of their offer, and as the election happened in the middle of a Parliament, should I tire of this jK)st of honour, which it was more than equal chance I should, I had only the half of a Parliament to attend. This was a lucky incident for me. I have not altered my sentiments, but am fully satisfied with the half Parliament, and you, I think, are the first person I should tell it to. It was my sincere wish that you should have come in for the county at last general election. Whether from an aversion to the thing, or from a point of delicacy with regard to your friend (Sir C. Gilmour), I can't say, but you took an effectual method to prevent any solicitation on that score. I would fain hope you have now thought more favourably of this scheme, and will stand for the county next election. To remove all scruple with regard to me, I tell you again I am determined to the contrary. I will without compliment say farther, that tho' I were inclined to make another attempt, and were sure of success, yet I would cheerfully give it up, could I prevail upon M'^ Dundas to take it up. You have the sincere good wishes of all happiness to you and yours of your most obedient humble servant, RoB^ Balfour Ramsay. ^ Balbirny, \^th Sept. 1753. Dundas thought his time had now come, and was only waiting till the next dissolution of Parliament. He had little fear of opposition. Sir Alexander Dick writes from Preston- field, on the 13th of October: "The letter you gave me for I^)rd Milton ^ I delivered him next day at Salton, and he expressed himself, as I took him, very hearty in your interest at next election, and said he knew of no sort of opposition you could possibly have, by which means I think our harmony is complete in this county.*" * Mr. Ramsay of Whitehill and Balbirny, M.P. for Midlothian. * Andrew Fletcher, who resigned the office of Lord Justice-Clerk in 1748, see supra^ p. 103. He retained, however, his seat on the l^ench, as an ordinary Lord of Session. 150 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1754. The tliree years which had elapsed since Dundas declined the Lanarkshire invitation, had been uneventful. In England they were years of quiet, wlien nothing singular occurred in politics, except, perhaps, the appearance on the scene of Lord Bute as an aspirant for the lionours of the State. In Scot- land the policy of Mr. Pelham and Lord Hardwicke, and the feeling, now universal, that the Stuart cause was desperate, were slowly but surely bringing even the most lawless portions of the Highlands into order and the appearance, at all events, of loyalty. But the sudden death of Mr. Pelham, in March 1754, and the ministerial clianges which followed, when his brother, the Duke of Newcastle, became Prime Minister, led to a dissolution of Parliament. The Midlothian election took place on the 25th of April 1754, and Dundas was returned unopposed in the Whig interest. He had chosen exactly the right moment to enter Parlia- ment. In July one of the judges, Patrick Grant of Elchies, died, and the Lord Advocate, William Grant of Prestongrange, succeeded him on the bench. The Duke of Newcastle, instead of appointing either of the Solicitors-General, Mr. Haldane and Mr. Home, to Grant's office, which would have been in accordance with the ordinary rule, gave the place to Dundas, who was accordingly appointed Lord Advocate on the 16th of August 1754. He was re-elected for Midlothian, having resigned his seat on taking office, on the 20th of December. Lord Tweeddale to Lord Advocate Dundas. Yester, Attg. 7, 1754. I had great pleasure in hearing you were the person pitched on for the office of Lord Advocate, as I think it will be for the service of his Majesty and Government. The placing you in such a rank shows a just regard to your own merit, as well as a remem- brance of your father's great services. I think you judge perfectly right for many reasons in making a trip to the Highlands. What- ever is in my power towards contributing to your executing this office with satisfaction to yourself, shall not be wanting in one who has always been with great truth and regard, — Yrs., etc. etc., Tweeddale. P.S. — The Marchioness offers her compliments to you, as we both join in the same to Mrs. Baillie. 1755 ] ILLNESS OF MRS. DUNDAS. 151 Earl of Marchmont^ Io thv Lord Advocate. Kbdbraes, Aug. 20, 1754. I received the favour of your letter by last post. I congratu- late you most sincerely on the mark you have received of his Majesty's regard for you, and the justice done by it to your merit. As I have always entertained the highest esteem for you, and the greatest desire to obtain your friendship, you cannot doul>t my heart's exulting at every honour done to you, nor that upon every occasion I shall be glad to express my sentiments for you. I know your zeal for our happy establishment, and you will want no jissistance but your own good sense to direct you in your con- duct with the Ministers. Lady Marchmont presents her compli- ments and congratulations to Mrs. Baillie, to whom I desire to offer my respects. Be persuaded that I am with the greatest truth and esteem, — Etc. etc. etc., Marchmont. Mrs. Dundas was not spared to see the remainder of her liusband^s career, as soon after his promotion to be I^rd Advocate she sunk into bad health. In the spring of 1755 she was very ill, and he was sunuiioned from London to see her. Mr. John Lockhart to the Lord Advocate. The good accounts I received by last post from Mr. Smith, of our valued friend Mrs. Baillie, gave a most sensible satisfaction to my wife and me, as some accounts we had got of her illness, a little before that, had given us inexpressible uneasiness. At the same time it was extremely agreeable to me when I reflected on the exquisite happiness you would have on your arrival at home, by finding her so much better than you could have reason to expect, from the accounts that were sent to you ; and I assure your Lordship that I enjoyed a very considerable share of the ])leasure that you would feel on that occasion. I most earnestly pray God for her speedy recovery, which is the greatest blessing that can happen in this life to you and your family ; and I am certain it is most sincerely wished for by every person who hath the happiness of her acquaintance. The present scarcity of such characters in life make them of great value and importance. . . . I shall long, with great anxiety and impatience, to hear that Mrs. Baillie continues in a fair way of recovery, that you have suffered * The fourth Earl of Marchmont. 152 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1755. nothing by your quick journey from London, and that Lady Carmichael and the rest of your family are in good health. All your friends here are well. They offer their most humble com- pliments to Lady Carmichael, Mrs. Baillie, and to you, and join in their most sincere wishes for long health and happiness to you and to all your family ; and I am, with great respect and esteem, my dear Lord, your Lordship's most affectionate cousin and most humble faithful servant, Jh^ Lockhart. Camnethan, Apr. 7M, 1755. In spite of all good wishes, and though from time to time there were hopes of her recovery, Mrs. Dundas grew worse. On the 10th of May Mr. Baird of Newby writes : " I most sincerely condole with you in your present distress, but hope all is not lost that is in danger. She has our constant prayers for her recovery.'" He then mentions some matters of business. But the answer is a hurried note, in the handwriting, apparently, of a clerk or secretary : " Lord Advocate desires me to acquaint you that he is in such distress about Mrs. Baillie, who is exceedingly low to-day, that he could not write you himself, nor can he at present think of any business.'^ Three days afterwards she died, on the 13th of May 1755 ; and her husband was left to mourn the loss of one whom he describes as " one of the most sensible, amiable, and affectionate women that ever made a man happy." In the following month, Charles Yorke,i in thanking Dundas for congratulations on his own approaching marriage, alludes to the death of Mrs. Dundas : " I thank your Lordship heartily for your kind and friendly congratulations. I will not say too much in answer to them, lest the contrast be too strong between the happiness which I have gained and that which you have lost. I feel greatly for your Lordship, upon the occasion ; because though your mind is firm, and your reason well prepared, yet the best minds and the best under- standings are always the most open to tender and generous affections. I beg you to continue a share of your friendship to me/' ^ Hon. Charles Yorke, second son of Lord Chancellor Hardwicke, and him- self Lord Chancellor in 1770. He died on the 20th of January 1770, three days after his appointment, when about to be created Lord Morden. 1755] STATE OF THK HIGHLANDS. I5:i When Dmulius became I^)r(l Advocate tlie country wa» in a very different state from that in which it hml been when he hvst held office, and there was no h)n«i[er any dreml of a Jacobite rebellion. Nevertheless the Hitrhlands were a source of con- siderable anxiety, and his attention, as first law-officer of the (Vown, was constantly directed to the measures which were considered necessary for ivcepintr the clansmen in order. A few extracts may be given from letters which show the state of things in the north at tliis time : — GovERNoii OK Fort Augustus to the Loud Advocate. ?'ORT Augustus, 13 Dec. 1754. Mv Lord, — I was much concerned at not seeing your Ix)rd- ship before I left Edinburgh, to have received your Lordship's commands for the Highlands, and returned my grateful thanks for the many civilities received at Arniston House. ... At present the country is pretty quiet, and no manner of theft among these wild Tartars ; and, with very little pains, I am confident that in a short time there will not be an outlaw left in this neigh- bourhood. Glengarry has behaved, among his clan, since his father's death, with the utmost arrogance, insolence, and pride. . . . He has declared that no peat out of his estate should come to this fort. As this garrison is to be supplied with coal next year, I have given out that I am heartily sorry that Glengarrj', by his folly, will be the ruin of so many people, whose only subsist- ence and support are by the peat. The bait has taken, and the whole country complain loudly against him. His whole behaviour has greatly alienated the affections of his once dearly beloved followers. I shall take all opportunities of improving this happy spirit of rebellion against so great a chieftain, which may in time be productive of some public good." From TiiK Same. Fort Augustus, 20 March 1755. Mv Lord, — Although I had the honour of writing to your Lordship last post, I cannot omit acquainting your Lordship of a famous hunting match on Loch Laggan side by the Badenoch gentry, about a month ago, where many appeared in arms. Among them was M*Donel of Keppoch, M'Donel of Aberarder, Mac- pherson's son. of Strathmashie, and M*Donel of Tullacrombie, who 154 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1755. I hear has his Grace of Gordon's protection to carry arms. There were many more, but these were all I could get the names of. They killed ten deer, and sent two as a present to Lady Cluny.^ The people of Badenoch are in great spirits on the prospect of a war, and say it will soon be an intestine one. I have people out, in several parts of the country, to find out if any strangers are come over, and what is doing among them. The two men who escaped being taken for perjury, about Lovat's second son, are now in Badenoch. I have sent one to try and fix them. I much doubt of success. P.S. — Excuse the liberty I take in suggesting to your Lord- ship that, in case of a war, some notice should be taken of the many able Chelsea pensioners fit for service that live in this country, many of them Papists, and all disaffected. On the 13th of August 1755, General Watson writes from Fort Augustus a long letter, in which he gives an account of a journey which he had just made through part of the High- lands. " Since I was last in Edinburgh,'"* he says, " I have made the round of all the west coast of Argyllshire, and from Fort William came here. In this journey I had the pleasure of seeing a great change in all respects to the better, a founda- tion of both wealth and industry in many places ; and .the people sensible of their present happy situation. ... I came through Appin and Ardshiels. The King's tenants ^ upon this last estate appear already visibly more happy than their neigh- bours, and the poor wretches everywhere cried out for schools and a kirk. Your Lordship will be amazed when I tell you the miserable Indians of this very country (who are in the parish of the island of Lismore) have not had access to any sort of worship for three years past. What a shame and dis- grace ! And yet they are called British subjects and Pro- testants. It gave me great pleasure to hear several instances amongst the common people, who, when they were like to be oppressed in the old way, actually refused, and threatened going to complain at Edinburgh, which threatening had the desired effect, and youTl easily believe I don't neglect the ^ The wife of Macpherson of Cluny, whose husband was at this time an outlaw on account of the Rebelhon of 1745' 2 The forfeited estates were vested in the Crown, and their revenues devoted to improving the condition of the people. I755J CLUNY MACPHKRSON. 155 doctrine of always encoiini^iii*!: the coninion peo])le to mutiny against every ancient and usual })iece of former oj)j)ression.'" Tlie stronf. 6, 1759. I am extremely obliged to your Lordship for the kind and affectionate manner in which you take notice of the melancholy breach Providence has been pleased to make in my family. The loss is indeed never enough to be lamented, particularly by the poor Solicitor, who has been inconsolable. Nor can I blame him, for there never was woman formed with greater sweetness of temper or more amiable qualities. However, I hope his Christian philosophy and the necessary avocations of his business will in time work a cure. As to myself I had an ugly illness, partly occasioned by the effects of this heavy stroke, and partly by the ^ Lord Hardwicke's son Charles, at that time Solicitor-General. He married Catherine, daughter and heiress of the Rev. Dr. W. Freeman of Hammels, Herts. 162 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1760. excessive heats of the season, but thank God I have had no relapse, and am now perfectly well. I hope your Lordship and all your family continue so, which I do most sincerely wish, and am, with great truth and esteem, etc. etc. etc., Hardwicke. Lord President Craigie died on the 10th of March 1760. Lord Advocate Dundas immediately proceeded to London to press upon Ministers his claim to the vacant chair. A negotia- tion had been set on foot for giving the Presidents chair to the Justice-Clerk, Erskine of Tinwald.^ But Mr. Dundas's claim seems to have been at once admitted, for on the 18th of March he was able to acquaint Lord Prestongrange with "the material alteration in my situation of life,""* his Majesty having been pleased to declare his intention of appointing him succes- sor to Mr. Craigie. Mr. Dundas was also successful in obtain- ing promotion for his friends Miller^ and Montgomery^ to the vacancies caused by his own elevation, the former becoming Lord Advocate, and the latter one of the joint Solicitors- General. Montgomery quaintly expressed his gratitude : — " Gratitude I have always considered as a cardinal virtue ; and if I am possessed of any good quality and know myself, I must be forgiven to say that I think I possess it in as strong a degree as any man living. I have a letter from London by this post, that so much fills my mind in that way that I cannot resist the impulse of writing your Lordship in this manner. The application will be easy."" Lord Prestongrange to Lord President Dundas. Prestongrange, March 25, 1760. My dear Lord, — Your letter of the 1.5th I received here late on Saturday night. It contains a confirmation of the news your spouse had wrote to me the post before, and in my return to hers I have in effect answered this of yours, giving you my sincerest congratulations and best wishes on your new preferment. I am, however, obliged to you for informing me somewhat more fully of circumstances which I pretty well understand, tho' for historical * Letter, Mr. Montgomery to the Lord Advocate. 2 Thomas Miller of Glenlee, afterwards Lord President. ^ James Montgomery of Stanhope, afterwards Chief Baron. 1760] DUNDAS APPOINTED PRESIDENT. U)S satisfaction there may yet be evlaiiclssnnents wanting, which in (hie time I may receive from you, when it shall })lease (iod that we meet. In the meantime it was agreeable to me to hear that regard and goodwill towards me are still declared by those from whom I expected that dispositi(m. I say this is soothing whether there shall ever be occasion for its producing any benefit to me or not. As for yourself, distrust not your own abilities farther than to quicken your attention and diligence in discharging the duties of your new station. God has blest you with a ready apprehension and a good memory, which are valuable qualities for that office. Your eldest and youngest daughters are both well, and yesterday we heard at Edinburgh from Amiston that all the children were well there. It will be agreeable to us to hear from you when leisure permits. All here join in their compliments to you and your company, whom we constantly remember, and I am ever, my dear Ix)rd, very affectionately yours, W. G.-^ Lord Hardwicke to Lord President Dundas. GrOSVENOR SQUARE,/i/«rd President received from his friend I^)rtl Hopetoun a letter in whicli was enclosed a piece of paper, on which were tiiese words : " t'opy of a paragra})h of a letter from the D. of N. to 1^1. H., Oct. 10, 1765. I wish for my own private information that I could know my old friend the President's thoughts, and your Lo}).'s, into whose hands the affairs of Scotland should be put. My present thoughts are, and I believe of all my friends here, that in some shape or other my Ld. President must have the correspondence and the conduct of them.'"' In his letter to the President, enclosing this j)aragraph from the Duke, Lord Hopetoun said that he understood it " as a way of asking whether you would undertake what is proposed, to avoid making any more propositions that may be declined.'" He advised the President to write to the Duke, and at the same time declined to give his own opinion on what he de- scribed as " too delicate a point to give advice upon."" The rough draft of the President's letter to the Duke of Newcastle is among the Arniston papers, so full of erasures and marginal additions as to be almost illegible. It seems to have been corrected and recorrected with the greatest care. In the end it was a decided expression of opinion that it would be im- proper for him to assume the functions of a Scottish Minister. " I confess,"" he says, " that I have long entertained an opinion that the management of the public affairs in Scot- land is improper for any Judge, if not entirely incompetent with his character. We are, or ought to be, sequestered, in a great degree, from the world for six months,^ and deprived of a free interchange and communication with our friends.'' He was requested to go to London and consult Ministers, but declined ; and with the following letters the correspondence on the subject ended : — * During the sittings of the Court of Session. M 178 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1765. Lord George Beauclerk ^ to the Lord President. Upper Brook Street, 18 Oct. 1765. My Lord, — We arrived here on Sunday last. I can't say it was so pleasant a journey as I expected, as I was obliged to leave two of my horses sick at Newark, and the other four at Stilton, but got here the remainder of the road post. . . . This morning I went to pay my respects to the Marquis of Rockingham, who had a private levee. ... I took the liberty to say it would be necessary to have somebody in Scotland to correspond with. He agreed in that point very readily, and said he had some knowledge of your Lordship. I assure you I was very happy in having an opportunity of acquainting his Lordship that I had a particular knowledge and regard for your Lordship. He then asked me if your business could permit you to come up now, as he would be very glad to have some conversation with you, which would answer much better than by letter, in which to be sure he was right, but at the same time I said I was afraid it was not possible now, as the Sessions were to meet the 12th of next month. I told his Lordship there would be an intermission of the Court at Xmas for three weeks or a month, and was not certain whether that might not suit you, etc. etc. etc., G. Beauclerk. The Lord President to Lord George Beauclerk. Arniston, Nov. 9, 1765. My Lord, — My having been from home, and indeed the desire of coolly considering some part of the contents of your Lordship's letter is the cause of my not sooner acknowledging your goodness and friendship expressed in it. But I little expected that 1 was to answer it with a heart full of real grief and anguish by the accounts we received of the death of his Royal Highness the Duke.^ Your Lordship knows better than any other person now living my sentiments in publick affairs, and also the regard and esteem as a private man I bore for that valuable personage. Nobody can, better than your Lordship, form an idea of my private concern and of my publick fears. The first must be combated in my own mind, but I wish to God the last may be disappointed, and that I may find myself wrong in my present notions. So great a publick loss scarce leaves any place for mourning the losses of private ^ General Lord George Beauclerk, sixth son of the first Duke of St. Albans. - The Duke of Cumberland. 1766.] DKATH OF LORD MILTON. 179 families, but I assure you that (as on every otiier tiling relating to your I^rclship and Lady Heauclerk) I take part in the death of so near a relation. 1 cannot refrain from returning your Lordship most sincere and unfeigned thanks for the friendshij) you have shown me in the conversation you mention with a noble Lord. It was extremely right to say that coming to London at this time was impossible, but it is equally impracticable at Xmas for only three short weeks' vacation, when I must employ a good deal of the time in preparing the causes to be determined in the two following months. But, indeed, another objection occurs. My going to London at that unusual season would make a great noise, and make me considered either as a Scots Minister, or as a person seeking it and disappointed The impropriety of the last is apparent. As to the first, I am nowise proper for it, nor would my character permit me to act or correspond on many affairs very material for his Majesty's servants in England to direct. I need only mention elections, etc. At the same time I will freely unbosom myself to your Lordship, who knows my real regard for the constitutional principles, and for many of the particular persons who now act under his Majesty. 1 am not so self-denied as not to believe I might be of some use in this country in pointing out whom they might trust and whom they ought not, and perhaps in some matters I could serve them by the private interest and connections I have formed. Your Lordship well knows that nobody can maintain a proper interest without being able at times to recommend, and you also know how abundantly the smallest connection of certain people ^ in this country have been rewarded. — I am, etc., R. Dundas. In December 1766 Lord Milton died, in his seventy-fifth year, having survived his old patron, the Duke of Argyll, but maintaining to the end his interest in the intrigues and political changes of the time. He had retained his seat on the bench after resigning the Justice-Clerk''s chair in 1748 ;- and there was, therefore, now a vacancy among the judges. The member of the bar chosen to take his place was James Burnett of Monboddo, afterwards well known as the learned but eccentric Lord Monboddo, whose theory that the human race was originally "gifted with tails'" was the subject of so many jokes ^ Adherents of the Argyll interest. - Supra, p. 103. 180 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1766. in the Parliament House. Burnett was one of the counsel for Mr. Douglas in the famous Douglas cause, which had now, for five years, been agitating all classes in Scotland to an extraordinary extent. The following letter which President Dundas received, on the subject of the proposed appointment, shows how bitter were the passions excited by this great law- suit : — Duke of Queensberry to the Lord President. My Lord, — As I had reason to believe that your Lordship approves of Mr. Burnett's coming on the bench when the expected vacancy shall happen, and finding no difficulty here when I first proposed him, I thought it would be giving your Lordship un- necessary trouble to desire you to express your sentiments in a letter. But a very extraordinary occurrence has lately happened which makes it very desireable. The Duchess of Hamilton has taken it into her head within these few days to exclaim against Mr. Burnett's being to be made a judge, because he was a zealous Advocate against her cause (as she calls it). That is a strange reason to give, and if admitted as an objection, would imply a very injurious reflection. She has, however, seriously and warmly applied by letter and otherwise to the Ministers of State to endeavour to prevent Mr. Burnett's appointment by the most unjustifiable means. My conduct has shown that I have a very different way of thinking, never doubt- ing that justice will be strictly attended to by men of probity on the bench, howsoever they may have been engaged as counsel. . . . The Ministry in general look upon her Grace's objection in its true light, as being very absurd and founded in malice, except one man among them, who has been influenced by her. For my part, I have declared to them all that if it were possible that her Grace's opinion should prevail against mine, I would no longer hold the office I have ; but at the same time I have appealed to your Lordship's opinion. . . . — I am, etc., Queensberry. Both the late and present Chancellor treat the objection as it deserves. I have not informed Mr. Burnett of this malicious attack upon him, which I hope will be soon put an end to, and therefore I have not wrote to him at present. Burnett was appointed ; and it is said that a habit (one of his well-known peculiarities) of preferring to sit among the 1767] THE DOUGLAS CAUSE. 181 clerks at the table, rather than ainoii^ the other judges, began from the tlay on whicir he hml to deliver his opinion on the Douglas cause, when he declared that, having been a counsel in the case, he felt a delicacy in giving his judgment from the bench! I^)rd Cockburn, however, says that "some offence had made him resolve never to sit on the siime bench with President Dundas ; and he kept this vow so steadily that he always sat at the clerks' table even after Dinuhus was gone/'' It wiis on the 7th of July 1767 that the Court met to give judgment. The cpiestion, it is |)erhaps necessiiry to explain, was whether Archibald Steuart was or was not the son of Sir John Steuart of GrandtuUy and Lady Jane Douglas, sister of the Duke of Douglas. If he succeeded in establishing that he was, lue was entitled to claim the esbites of the last Duke of Douglas, who had died in 1761. The guardians of the Duke of Hamilton, then a minor, opposed him, maintaining that he was the son of poor parents, a Frenchman and his wife, from whom Lady Jane and her husband had fraudulently obtained him. The date of his birth was said to be July 1748. Both Sir John Steuart and Lady Jane were now dead. The case, simple as the actual issue was, presented formid- able difficulties from the complicated nature of the evidence. The judges were equally divided ; and Lord President Dundas gave his casting vote against the claimant. Public feeling was entirely in favour of the other view of the case; and the President's vote was most unpopular in Edin- burgh. The result was that when, in February 1769, the House of Lords reversed the decision of the Court of Session, the city was in an uproar of joy. The President's house was attacked on the evening of tlie 2d of March. The windows were destroyed ; an attempt was made to break in the door ; and the family were much alarmed. On the following morning he was insulted on his way to Court ; and the mob threatened to pull him out of his chair. But the j)resence of a few troops of dragoons soon put an end to the disturbances.^ In the meantime, the President's brother, Henry Dundas, was rising high in the profession of the law. He had been appointed Solicitor-General in 1766, at the early age of twenty- * Lord Justice-Clerk Miller to Lord Rochford, 3d March 1769, State Paj^ers, Scotland. There are no letters on this subject in the Amiston Collection. 182 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1766. four, and when he had only been three years at the bar ; and it was already seen that his career would equal, if not surpass, that of any member of his family. The great Lord Mansfield, who met him in London, writes to the President : " Your brother will certainly go as far as his career can carry him ; and his short visit has been of use to him. There is great difference between being personally known, and by name only, let it sound ever so high."' He had not yet entered Parlia- ment, but was resolved to represent Midlothian, as his brotlier had done before him. The Arniston influence was not at this time absolutely supreme in the county, and occasionally diffi- culties arose, as the following letters show : — Mr. John Dalrvmple to Lord President Dundas. My Lord, — A thing with which my father. Sir WilHam, sur- prised me lately makes me trouble your Lordship with these lines. He says your Lordship complained to him that I do not use to salute you when I pass you on the street, nor to pay you proper respects in the Court. This is supposing me so perfect a fool, that I cannot let it stick without assuring your Lordship that anything of that kind is altogether accidental and undesigned on my part. I would the less have indulged such childishness, that Davy Dalrymple^ last winter repeated to me a conversation which passed betwixt you. Lord Coalston, and Auchinleck on my account, in which I thought myself obliged to you. I did at that time think of expressing my sense of it. But visits in that way look so like flattery and design, and particularly in one so little apt to stoop as I am, that I did not do it, the more so that I thought you could not fail to see that I must have a just sense of it. A good many years ago I offered to your Lordship to declare to all that I held this county from you, and to restore it to your family at the end of seven years. When this was rejected, I took up with other friends, yet even then the first public visit I paid was to you, when I had the honour to repeat the same offer. If this showed a disinclination to connect with your Lordship, I know not what that word means. Your Lordship will permit me to mention to you that though I know a way by which above twenty votes can be created in this ^ Either Lord Hailes or Lord Westhall. I770.] HKNUY DUNDAS. 183 county in an hour, and know a man who would be very glad of such a secret, yet I have kept it to myself, so little idt*a have I of doing things from wantoness that arc disagreeable to you. I have the honour to be, with very great respect, my Lord, your very obedient humble servant, John Dalrvmim.e.* Kdinburgh, Afotuiayt \%thjan. 1766. Henry Dundas to his limllivr The Loho President. Edinburgh, 27M Sept. 1770. My dear Lord, — I was obliged to come to town last night, for some days, upon some business which I have not got finished before, and did not chuse longer to delay. Soon after coming John Davidson called uj)on me, as a common friend betwixt Sir Alexander Gilmour- and me, with a message from Sir Alexander, to this pur|)ose, that he was not at liberty to explain the ground of it, but that it was not impossible there might be a re-election in this county before long; that having heard from different quarters that I was making great impressions upon the county of Midlothian, he wished to know from the first authority upon what footing he might consider himself in that respect. My answer immediately was that I could not speak with absolute precision upon the subject of a re-election speedily to happen without having other things understood betwixt us with regard to future contingencies, and desired M*^ Davidson and him to call upon me this forenoon, which they just now did. The general purport of the conversation was this : that I wished to be in Parliament next general election, and had no desire for it sooner, that every consideration led me to cast my eyes upon the county of Midlothian, that I had a most sincere affection for him, and a very great aversion to divide old con- nexions in the county ; on the contrmy, as well for my own sake personally as for the sake of others in my family, who might hereafter have the same views as I have, I wished if possible to keep it whole and entire. In short, that if we could both be in Parliament, so much the better, but if that could not be the case, I hoped he would not attempt to divide the county. He readily agreed that I asked no more than he thought reasonable. He then added that I might be convinced from what he now said that he had no desire to set up a separate interest in this county, * Afterwards Sir John Dalrymple, father of the eighth and ninth Earls of Stair. - M.P. for Midlothian. 184 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1770. and therefore hoped that the particular passion I might have to represent this county would not induce me to insist upon that preference, if the consequence thereof should be a total exclusion of him from Parliament, while at the same time events might occur whereby we might be enabled to sit in Parliament together. My answer was that if two seats should cast up I still must insist upon his yielding up this county and betake himself to the other, except it could be supposed that an event should happen of any set of electors being determined not to accept of him but willing to accept of me. In that case I fairly owned that my desire not to divide the county, old connexions and my regard for him, who did not appear desirous to set up any independent interest, would incline me to leave the representation of the county with him rather than that he should be put in a situation (I mean out of Parlia- ment) which I knew, as his affairs were circumstanced, would be highly inconvenient for him. Our conversation to the above purport ended with me telling him that what I said was what occurred to myself upon this subject, and that, although from any conversation I ever had with you upon the subject, I had no reason to think that you had inclination towards him anyways more unfavourable than I had, yet it was highly necessary that the matter should be understood in your presence and under your approbation, after which our final resolutions, if cordial, should never go farther. I have sent this by express to let you know this interview, which, tho' unexpected, I am glad it has happened. I suppose the unexpected early meetings of Parliament has brought it sooner on. Sir Alexander, M^ Davidson, and the Edmonstone people, I mean Wauchope and his wife, dine at Melville to-morrow, as it is the only day I will be there for a fortnight, and I wished this matter fully adjusted. I have sent this so soon, in the hopes you will be able to-morrow to dine at Melville, where we may, in presence of M'^ Davidson, have some minutes conversations with Sir Alexander before dinner. — Yours sincerely, Henry Dundas. Ultimately Henry Dundas succeeded in securing his election, and was returned as member for the county at the general election of 1774. At the age of thirty-three, on the 24th of jVIay 1775, he wa.*i appointed Lord Advocate in the Govern- ment of Lord North. 1775] HENRY DUNDAS. \Hr> LoHi) Mansfield to tlw Lohu President. Bloomsbury, yi May 1775. My dear Lord, — As your brother has much more than answered the expectations I gave, that notwithstanding it came at so early a period of his life, he would do credit to his first promotion, and honour to those who espoused him, I cannot help congratulating your Lordship upon the fortuitous concourse of circumstances which has opened the way to his second advance- ment, and wish you joy of it, and of the certain success which can't fail to attend him in the career he has still to run. I have recommended his successor, which I would not have done, tho' he has a call of connexion upon me, if I had not believed him qualified to fill the office with some reputation. I feel myself pledged for the figure he shall make. I can think of no way so effectual to assert his endeavours, as to beg your friendship, countenance, and protection to him. If you find he has merit, lend a kind hand to lift it up and show it to the world. I flatter myself you cannot have a stronger motive than that of doing a very sensible pleasure to your most aff. ob. humble servant, Mansfield. A voluminous correspondence passed between Henry Dundas and the President from this time until 1783. Besides the re- marks upon the progress of political events during these stirring years, the correspondence frequently turned upon the change which was about to alter the future course of Henry Dundas*'s life. Though still holding only the subordinate office of Lord Advocate, his ability for business, and his skill in debate, had placed him in the front rank of the supporters of Government. Of his position in Parliament he was fully aware, and the charm of its combined power and independence was among the reasons which delayed his acceptance of offices which were pressed upon him. Moreover, he was devotedly attached to the Scottish bar, proud of his position as its leader, and most unwilling to ([uit it entirely. Son of one President, and brother of another, he saw before him the succession to the Presidents Chair, to which he could look forward at the close of his parliamentary career. And even after his resolution to resign the office of Lord Advocate had been taken, he expresses in a letter to his brother, in Octol>er 1782, his desire to retain 186 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1761. the post of Dean of the Faculty of Advocates, as a badge to indicate that his connection with the Scottish bar was not to be totally dissolved. While his brother was thus displaying his ability to main- tain the credit of the family, the President's children were growing up, and going out into the world. By his first mar- riage, to Miss Baillie of Lamington, he had four daughters, and by his second marriage, to Miss Jean Grant, Lord Preston- grange's daughter, he had four sons and two daughters. His eldest son, Robert, was only a lad of seventeen when his uncle Henry became Lord Advocate ; but, as we shall afterwards see, he was himself destined to fill that responsible office, and to end his days upon the bench. The first of the President's daugliters to marry was Miss Elizabeth Baillie or Dundas, and the choice which she made was not at all in accordance with lier fatlier's wislies. Lord Lvttelton to President Dundas. TuNBRiDGE Wells, ^?^^^. 15, 1761. My Lord^ — I have been so fortunate as to meet with Miss Bailey at this place^ and as I find she is to pass the year in Eng- land, I cannot help begging to have the honour of her company at my house in Worcestershire in the month of October, when my daughter, and I believe my sister, will be there to attend her. It would give me the greatest pleasure to show her, by my best attentions at Hagley, the grateful sense I have of the many favours I received from your Lordship in Scotland. I see with all the joy of a most sincere friend that time, and your care and cultivation, have brought to perfection all that her amiable infancy promised when I was at Arniston. To have an opportunity of conversing with her will be a great advantage to my daughter. I may venture to say that the goodness of my girl's heart and the innocence of her manners make her a safe companion, and in Miss Bailey she will see what my fondest wishes would have her to be. You will therefore lay me under a great obligation, if you will permit Miss Bailey and Mrs. Whitney to pass some time with us. I hope you will excuse me if I add that Miss Bailey is in every respect so amiable that I will not venture my son's being at Hagley at the same time, if a passion he might perhaps entertain for a young lady of such uncommon merit would certainly meet with your disapprobation. i76i.] MARUIAGK OF MISS BAILLIK. 1H7 I beg my most respectful compliments to Mrs. Dundas, and have the honour t<» be, with the sincerest respect and attach- ment, — My Lord, your Lordship's most obliged and most obedient servant, Lvitklton. Please to direct to me at my house in Curzon Street, near Berkeley Square, London. The writer of the foregoing letter was Sir George Lyttelton, who had been created I Ami Lyttelton in 1757. His daughter of whom he speaks was Lucy, who married in 1767 the Viscount Valentia, subsetjuently created Karl of Mountnorris. Lord Lyttelton died in 1773. "Miss Baillie^^ was President Dundas's eldest daughter Elizabeth, who on the death of her brother William succeeded to her mother's estates of I^niington and Penston. At the time I^ird Lyttelton''s letter was written, the young heiress hmi been sent for a year to England under charge of Mrs. Whitney for the completion of her education. A little later Miss Baillie met Captain John Lockhart, and with the connivance of Mrs. Whitney engaged herself to Captain Lockhart without her father'^s knowledge or approval of the match. The President was excessively angry at the conduct of his daughter and of Mrs. Whitney ; but he seems later to have forgiven her want of respect, and to have been on affectionate terms with her husband. Captain Lockhart ultimately succeeded to his family honours, and became Admiral Sir John Lockhart Ross, having assumed the latter name on succeeding his uncle. General Ross of Balnagowan.^ Another of the President's daughters, Anne, was married to George Buchan of Kelloe, in April 1773 ; and in June of the same year, a thirtl, Margaret Dundas, was married to * The immediate descendants of Sir John Lockhart Ross and Miss Dundas or Baillie were :— 1st. Sir Charles. He married first Matilda Theresa, daughter of Count Lockhart of Carnwath, by whom he had a daughter Matilda, who married in 1812 Captain, afterwards Admiral, Sir Thomas Cochrane. Their son, Alexander Baillie Cochrane, succeeded to his mother's estates, and in 1880 was created Baron Lamington. Before marriage she had inherited the estate of Old Liston, and had assumed the name of Wishart. Sir Charles married secondly Lady Mary, daughter of second Duke of Leinster, by whom he had a son. Sir Charles, who inherited Balnagowan. 2d. Captain James Ross. He married Catherine Farquharson, heiress of Invercauld, by whom he had a son, James Ross Farquharson of Invercauld. 188 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1773. General John Scott of Balcomie. Miss Peggy, as she was called, did not fly in her father^s face as her sister Elizabetli liad done, as appears from tlie letters written at the time the marriage was being arranged. The correspondence commences by Miss Peggy, in terms savouring strongly of the complete letter- writer, informing her father of General Scott's offer of marriage. "The love and afFection,"" slie begins, " you liave always had towards all your children merits the return of filial duty from inclination as well as principal "''' (mc). General Scott connnences by expressing his happiness at receiving the lady's consent, and " the flattering circumstance of Iier being confident that it will receive your Lordship's entire approbation." However, "as he is anxious to avoid any unneces- sary delay," he plunges at once iii medias res, and enters into liis views on marriage settlements. He thinks a jointure of .^1000 a year suitable, half to be forfeited in the event of re- marriage. But "as the jewels he has already foolishly bought " are too valuable to come under the head of paraphernalia he will, at his death, bequeath to his widow £9.000 in their stead. As to children, the General considers it to be highly improper that they should be made in any shape independent of their parents, and lie reminds the President that his Lordship some years ago found the bad effects of an heiress being independent of her father. In a subsequent letter to his bride, the General most liandsomely insists that lier fortune shall be divided be- tween her two unmarried sisters, as an addition to theirs. The President replied to General Scott assuring him that "his sentiments as to independency of children coincided strongly with liis own. He had seen it to be a source of vexa- tion and disappointment to parents {this you will say I once felt), and of ruin and destruction to the children themselves." ^ General Scott ccmcludes the correspondence by insisting, through Henry Dundas, upon providing the trousseau for his bride. For, lie says, " it is ridiculous that anybody should clothe another man's wife." " In short," continues Henry Dundas, " he means to be superb in everything, and let him be indulged." ^ The children of this marriage were three daughters — i. Henrietta, m. the fourth Duke of Portland. 2. Lucy, m. the ninth Earl of Moray. 3. Margaret, m. the Rt. Hon. George Canning. 1778.] PHIVATK LIFE. 18J) These letters were written in Miircli. " I suspeetr «iy« Henry Dunchus, " tlie Scotch whim of not niarryin*^ in May will put of! the affair till June."' And so it was. In the marriiige-contract, sij^ned at Arniston on the J)th of June 177*5, General Scott renounces the "tocher'' intended for Miss Dundas, and requests that it may be applietl to increasinjj; the portions of lier sisters Henrietta and Anne. Henrietta Dundjus accepted the hand of Caj)tain Adam Duncan,^ R.N., in 1777, and, by doing so, dismissed another suitor, whose letters (which, even at this distance of time, it wouUl be cruel to publish) show tliat he suffered the most bitter distippointment. I^Astly, Miss Grizzel Dundas was married, in Se])tend)er 1778, to Adam Colt of Auldliame. The family, thus gradually diminishing in nund)er, lived in Edinburgh during winter, and at Arniston in sunnner. The President's Edinburgh house was considered in those days as almost out of town. It was built by himself on a site which lately was known as Adam Square, a block of buildings, as those who know Edinburgh may recollect, which stood at the corner of the South Bridge, close to the University Build- ings. Adam Square was pulled down in 1871 ; and the President's old house had then been occupied for some time as a shop and warehouse. The drawing-room was a handsome room with a panelled ceiling ; and the chimney-piece belong- ing to it is now in the dining-room at Arniston. The President made considerable additions to the estate of Arniston. In 1753 he purchased the Barony of Shank, for dP3000, from the descendants of Sir George Mackenzie of Rosehaugh (the " Bloody Mackenzie "") ; and other purchases of lands were made between that time and 1777. Various changes, too, were made in the grounds. A new garden was formed, with a pond, which was stocked with trout from Duddingston Loch. Hotliouses were built, and other modern luxuries introduced. The improvements made upon the mansion-house and pleasure grounds at Arniston by the second President Dundas are described by Chief Baron Dundas in the ms. narrative from which quotations have already been made : — * Afterwards created Viscount Duncan, on gaining the battle of Camperdown. 190 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1780. " The first President Dundas died in 1753, leaving the house unfinished. As already related he pulled down the old chateau, with the exception of the oak room and the vaults beneath, round three sides of wliich the modern house is built. His son, the second President, built the addition to the west of the old house, consisting of the present dining-room and drawing- room, and the rooms above. He also completed the different offices which had been left unfinished at his father's death. Some time about 1764^ he removed the kitchen garden from east of the stables to its present site, and at the same time took down the cascade whicli his father had built in the Fountainhead Park. His plantations in the immediate neigli- bourliood of the house were — " 1st. The wood called Thomson's Braes, which now contains very thriving timber. It was planted in the year 1755 ; it has been regularly thinned from time to time by him and me. I cut down three years ago (1805) an ash wliich stood too near to the large chestnut in the liaugli under tlie rock, whicli sold for two guineas. " 2d. About the year 1756 my father planted up the small park called at that time the Rawmuir, west of the Hunter's Park, which now forms part of the high wood, and the lower division of which is thriving timber. At the upper end, next the Castleton march, an old earthen mound and ditch still remaining, there was a long belt of Scots fir planted by my grandfather which ran from the top of the Diamond eastward as far as the Witches Knowe. I remember these trees when I was a boy ; my father cut them all down about the year 1768. "3d. In 1760, by William Cranston's^ information, my father planted the Diamond, part of which now forms the South Lawn, and is included by me in it (1812). I was at the expense in 1813-14 of digging, fallowing, and trenching all this field, and of grubbing up all the useless and bad trees, and sowing it off with grass seeds. In winter 1810, when the old road to Carrington was stopped, I extended the shrubbery round to the gardener's house, and planted the clump imme- diately to the east of the house. ^ In 1763 there is in the factor's book an entry of a payment for lime for build- ing the new garden wall. ^ Forester at Arniston. 1780.] PRIVATE LIFK. 1})1 "4th. In 1T7(), when my mother formed the walk down to the Sliank, my father planted uj) the wet bank innnediately under the l)ea(hnanlees ; also the small haugh under the Hut above the Red nn-k opposite to Carrington. The oaks there are in a thriving state. All, or a greater part of the larches were cut down in 1809-10, and used in Outerston^ farm-house. *' 5th. The belt from the Auchenshadow Beech Knowe ettst- wards to the turnpike road at Pirnhall, or I^umsden's Gate,- was originally formed by my father in 1775, at the same time that he planted the belt at the Baker''s Avenue."" This attention to the beauty of woods and parks was now spreading among the great landowners of Scotland. The formality and stiffness with which they laid out their grounds was in keeping with that punctilious attention to small matters of etiquette which characterised their social intercourse, with the artificial nature of a great deal of their daily life, the powder, the patches, and the enormous head-pieces. But such defects were soon removed by the exuberance of nature ; and the progress of time has rapidly changed the straight, formal avenues, and prim rows of trees, into scenes of natural beauty. From the household books of the President's family, some idea may be gathered of the style of living, and cost of food, in Scotland from the middle of last century until about the year 1780. Hens cost sixpence, and chickens threepence each. Grouse and partridges sold for sixpence a bird. Ducks cost a shilling, and turkeys about three shillings. Eggs averaged about threepence a dozen. Mutton was the kind of butcher meat of which most was consumed; while rabbits, plovers, snipe, and woodcock were frequent articles of diet. The price of beef was from threepence to threepence halfpenny the pound. Nuts, oranges, pomegranates, and grapes were procured from Covent Garden, the grapes costing one shilling a pound. The wages paid to servants are duly recorded. There wa.s a man cook, at i?8 a year, and an under-cook who received £S. The butler had £^0 a year, and Mrs. Dundas's maid £S, 10s. There is little about sporting matters among the private * This larch timber lasted until 1875, when the house had to be almost entirely renewed, owing to decay, - The Lodge of this old gate was taken down in 1875. 192 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1782. letters of this period ; but occasionally hounds and " hunting,'" by which probably coursing is meant, are spoken of. Game preserving was not strict at that time ; and it is amusing to find the Lord President receiving, at the end of August 1782, a note with what would now be considered a very cool request : "The officers of the Royal Dragoons quartered at Dalkeith present their compliments to the Lord President; ask per- mission to shoot on his Lordsliip\s grounds in that neighbour- hood."*^ Lord Arniston appears to have been a little staggered at the prospect of giving the officers of a cavalry regiment carte blanche to do what they pleased among his fields. His answer is an admirable specimen of combined courtesy and caution. He gives them leave, however. " The President/' he says, " was favoured with a card from the officers of the Royal Dragoons at Dalkeith. Could have wished to have known particularly the gentlemen who ask permission to shoot, etc. etc. The President has a very great regard for Colonel Goldsworthy, and some others of the reg*. of his personal acquaint- ance, and is very desirous of obliging them, or any other officers of that regiment. Shall, therefore, make them welcome to hunt for partridges on his grounds of Stobhill and Kirkhill, which are those adjacent to them — persuaded himself that these liberties will not be abused. Indeed, he must fairly explain himself that he understands this liberty is to be confined to the gentlemen themselves shooting for their amusement, and that they will not permit any other person whatever to hunt. The fields in question are reckoned among the very best for hounds in this country ; and as the Pres'^ good friend. Sir Arch. Hope (indeed his own son), often sport there (if the Pres. himself seldom or never courses a hare) ; and therefore is confident if the officers will, in no shape, destroy any hares, he knows they are welcome to the share the sport of hounds hunting."^ The improvement of the country in agriculture, interrupted for a few years by the Rebellion of 1745, was carried on with renewed vigour during the latter half of the eighteenth century. The factor''s books at Arniston during that period show a continuous expenditure upon building, planting, and ^ If the President's composition seems faulty, it must be recollected that only a rough draft of his letter has been preserved. 1760.] FARMING CUSTOMS. 193 enclosing. A marked improvement on the farm buildings is observable, conseciuent upon the increased growth of green crops and roots for winter feeding, and of the greater attention paid to the condition of the live stock upon a farm. In Mid- lothian, where building materials were abundant, and easy of access, the walls of a farm steading were solidly built with stone and lime, though the roof still continued to be covered with " divots."" These farm -steadings were, of course, very different from the buildings which are now seen in a lowland farm in Scotland. The farm buildiiigs on Arniston seem usually to have consisted of a small handet, or cluster of cottages stand- ing at a short distance from each other ; whose inhabibuits, in addition to their ordinary work of farming and home spinning, carried on the trade of lime-burners, and carriers of lime throughout the neighbouring country. The increasing wealth of the country also began to be shown by the greater number of tenants with capital sufficient to stock a good-sized farm, before whom the joint tenants, holding a farm in common, began to disappear. The consoli- dation of small holdings into large farms was also going on rapidly — in Midlothian at all events. Among other changes the tithe or teind, as a separate payment by the tenant, was being given up, and was included in the rent, as was also the case with a variety of old servitudes. Payments to country tradesmen, such as joiners, blacksmiths, and others, were, how- ever, still made to a considerable extent in kind, as also were farm servants'* wages. Home spinning being still part of the business of the farm, the cottars were obliged to sow a stipulated quantity of flax seed in their gardens for the supply of the family. The farm implements continued to be rough and strong, such as could be made and repaired at home — the ploughs large and heavy, and drawn by four horses — the plough harness of plaited hemp, as shown by the frequent entry in the factor's books of " hemp for the ploughmen.*" In tillage, the land was still laid off in high crooked ridges, with intervening spaces of unploughed land. The turnips, which were grown by enterprising farmers, were sown broadcast, though the use of drills was recommended as possessing the advantages of a bare fallow. 194 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1760. It was also becoming genenilly known tliat sown rye grass and clover coukl feed three times as much stock as the growth of natural grasses. The drainage of wet spots of land was being extensively carried on. The drains were cut in the wet spots to the heads of the springs, and were filled with small stones, brusliwood, or straw to within a foot of the surface. The main drains were conduits formed witli large stones. In England, where the practice of draining wet pieces of land was more general than in Scotland, the drains were made 32 inches deep, 20 inches wide at top, and 4 inches wide at bottom. When filled with small stones the cost wjis about 7d. per rod. It was found tliat by an outlay of £S or £4f per acre on draining and manuring, the rent of land might be raised from 10s. to 20s. per acre. The following were the terms of an Arniston lease in 1760 ; and similar terms were probably usual at that time in Scot- land. The farm was that of Newbyres, and tlie principal conditions of the lease were as follows : — Duration, nineteen years. Rent, <£98 and six hens. Tenant to keep and maintain two hounds for the use of the landlord. Thirled to Newbyres Mill ; tenant to assist in keeping the mill dam and lade in repair, also to allow the tenant of the mill to cut whins on Newbyres for the use of the kilns. To carr)', from Leith or elsewhere, timber for cradling the coal- pits, for the stairs in them, or for the lodges ; also to bring to Stobhill the furniture of any coalier that may be engaged for the coal work. Tenant to have the exclusive privilege of brewing and retailing ale within the barony of Newbyres. Among the Arniston collections is a paper showing the rotation of crops proposed by the Second Lord President for his home farm, of which a copy is given as illustrative of the agriculture of the day. 1769. ROTATION OF CROPS. 195 00 M I vO P-. O (^ O o o t-H O "T3 I'' a. a s "O lA lA (/) £ 6 s 5 ,--— .-^-v 1 5 a 1 £f2 1 s u s .c s > ax: 13 .« 4 u V > U a r:-Q. u J3 1 ^1 I' b 2(2 a ^ u £i2 (^ z ■— V— ' •< '"" ' ' " ""^ s ij !-• JZ Q. s ^ ^ ^, 4= d >^ ^j z i 3^ V > U 1 § = £ V z ^-~v~' ^— v/-^-^ ^ - — " — ^ y~^ s fill 1 1 1 hi i 0; S 1 ,— -■^— ^ ,~^^ -0 ii.-^fe i I 2; ^ V g Si J3^ S u fan ^ -o 2i 3 (/5 A_ PQ ? . (/5 en 55 m c/i "m id .«j « rt rt «! a c! rt 1 f^ ,^| ct: tS •o ui >n -n . si 5 II (c« 5 3 s c2 6 ^ 5 t^ ^^^ ■5 2 s rt 3 nJ 2 H oH 1 ^ z Cd A 1 rt iff ^ <^ 1^1 5 ^ £ vg^ d ci f^ rf 10 vd t>. 03 r^ pn t^ tx r^ c< t^ r>. r^ t;> t^ t^ c^ t^ tv t^ t^ rN t% 196 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1787. HOUSE OF PRESIDENT DUNDAS IN ADAM SQUARE. 1787.] DEATH OF PRESIDENT DUNDAS. 197 In the full possession of all his faculties, and in the enjoy- ment of fair health, with the exce])ti()n of a weakness in his eyesi^lit whit-h prevented him readin*"; with etise, the I^)rd President lived, sometimes in P^dinhurgh, and sometimes at Arniston, until 1787. On the 13th of December of that year, he died in his house in Adam Scjuare, in the seventy-fifth year of his age. " His last illness,"''' says I^rd Woodhouselee, " which, though of short continuance, was violent in its nature, he bore with the greatest magnanimity/' On hearing of the death of the head of the Court, Henry Pirskine, then Dean of Faculty, wrote to Robert Dundas, the late Presidents eldest son, who had now l)een Solicitor-Cieneral for three years : — Mr. Erskine to Solicitor-General Dundas. Edinburgh, 14 Dec. 1787. My dear Sir, — I condole with you from the bottom of my heart on the unfortunate event which has deprived you of a worthy and affectionate parent, and the country of a most able, upright, and active Chief Judge. I need scarcely inform you that the Faculty of Advocates, who feel in a peculiar manner the weight of this misfortune, have resolved, on their part, to do everything on this melancholy occasion that can show the high respect they entertain for his Lordship's memory, and the regret they feel for his death. They have desired me to express these their sentiments to yourself in person, and to know from you, what particular mode of showing their feelings on the approaching funeral will be most agreeable to the family, and best suited to the manner in which that ceremony is proposed to be conducted. I would not immediately press on your present distress, but will have the pleasure of waiting on you the moment I learn that it will be agreeable. I beg you to be assured that my feelings as an individual keep pace with my conduct in my official capacity, as at the head of the Faculty, because in addition to my full sense of the merits of the deceased, I recollect with grateful satisfaction the many marks I have received of his Lordship's regard and affection towards myself in circumstances not less honourable to him than flattering to me. — I am, with real regard, my dear Sir, your most ob. faithful servant, Henry Erskine. 198 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1787. The President was honoured by a public funeral. Fifty years before the Bar of Scotland had met to consider whether they should attend the funeral of a judge, and it was resolved not to do so lest the profession should be brought, by estab- lishing such a precedent, " under the dishonourable necessity of paying extraordinary outward compliments in future times where equal merit may not call for the same inward respect." But on the death of Lord President Dundas, such was the veneration felt for this great judge that an exception was made to the established rule, and the Bar attended, with the Dean of Faculty at their head. The Scots Magazhie thus describes tlie scene : — " On Dec. 18th his Lordship"'s remains were interred at the family burial-place of Borthwick. At ten ©""clock before noon, the funeral procession began from the Parliament Close in the following order : — Town-Officers, two and two ; their halberts covered with crape. Mace-bearer and Sword-bearer of the city ; the mace and sword covered with crape. Lord Provost, Magistrates and Council in their robes ; three and three. Mace-bearer of the University ; his mace covered with crape. Principal and Professors of the University in their gowns ; three and three. Four Mace-bearers of the Lords of Session ; two and two, their maces covered with crape. Lords of Session in their robes ; two and two. Principal Clerks of Session, and Clerk of Teind Court in their gowns ; two and two. Bar-keeper to the Dean and Faculty of Advocates in his gown ; his baton covered with crape. Dean and Faculty of Advocates in their gowns ; three and three. Macer to the Court of Exchequer ; his mace covered with crape. Barons of Exchequer, in their gowns and bands ; the Chief Baron supported by the Lord Advocate and Baron Norton, followed by the principal Officers and the Attornies belonging to the Court, in their gowns ; three and three. Officer of his Majesty's Signet, in his gown ; his mace covered with crape. 1787.J HIS FUNERAL. 199 Depute- Keeper, Commissioners, and Clerks to the Signet, in their gowns ; three and three. Preses of the Agents, and his brethren ; three and three. First Clerks of Advocates ; three and three. " The procession proceedetl down the Fishniarket Close, up the Horse Wynd, and along by the front of the College, to the Lord President's house in Adam S(|uare, where it went round the Square till the corpse wius brought out. Immediately after this the mutes, etc., proceeded forward to Nicolson Street, where the hearse waited. At this time the Principal and Pro- fessors of the University reversed their manner of walking, the junior Professors going first, and the Principal of the College la.st. The Lord Provost, Magistrates, and Council observed tiie same etiquette, so that the Lord Provost came to walk immediately before the corpse, preceded by the sword and mace bearers. The rest of the procession was conducted in the same order in which it set out, by which means the Lords of Session fell to take place innnediately after the corpse. The friends of the deceased, etc., walked after the Advocates^ first Clerks. In this order the whole procession moved on to Nicolson Street, where the corpse was put into the hearse, and conveyed to tlie place of interment, attended by the relations and friends of the family in mourning coaches, and by several of the nobility. Lords of Session, etc., in their own carriages. The gi-eat bell tolled during the procession, which was escorted by the military from the castle and the city-guard ; and while the body was conveying from Adam Square to Nicolson Street, the band of music belonging to the military played the ' Dead March in Saul.'"'' Lord President Dundas had risen to eminence by a com- bination of family influence and personal talent. He was never a laborious student, or an eloquent speaker. " While he continued at the bar,'''' says a contemporary, " he did not allow business to interrupt his pleasures. Though he could have got as much employment in his profession as any of his contem- poraries, yet he refused to be engaged in a great many causes, and confined himself to those of the greatest importance, which completely answered his views of acquiring such a character and reputation in business, as entitled him to be preferred to 200 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1787. the first offices in the law department. As his speaking cost him little trouble, and he endeavoured to avoid the writing of papers, which required more application and pains than he inclined to bestow, he easily accomplished his intention with- out submitting to much drudgery. When he did undertake to write, he executed well in point of good sense and argument, though he might be liable to criticism in what regarded the composition or style of his papers, to which he never paid any attention."' His father, the first President Dundas, bore the impress of the seventeenth century, thougli he had no share in its trans- actions. He would have held his own among tlie statesmen of the last days of the Stuarts. He had that peculiar suppleness of intellect, and those strong resentments, which were developed in the politicians of a time of great constitutional struggles, when adherence to a party meant a great deal more than the acquisition of power or personal distinction. The public character of the second President was moulded by the times in which he lived. He lived at a period of transition, when, as the student of history will observe, the old traditions of unblushing intrigue and unscrupulous rivalries were passing away, and giving place to the new methods of modern political life.' The second President was probably the greatest judge who ever presided in the Court of Session ; certainly as the head of the Supreme Court he was regarded by his compeers as with- out a rival. He cleared the rolls of court of a vast accumula- tion of arrears. He paid the most minute attention to the duties of his office. " For many years,"" it has been said, " after he was promoted to be President, I have heard it observed by those who attended the House, that he seldom or never was mistaken in any fact or circumstance relating to any cause.'' His regard for the honour of the Bench was such that he gained for it fresh dignity in the eyes of the nation. To the Bar he was courtesy itself, hearing counsel to the end, and teaching his colleagues to control the impatience which able and experienced men feel in listening to the argument of a raw or dull-witted pleader. The office which he held was always one of great dignity and influence ; but during the eighteenth century the President 1787.] CHARACTER OF THE PRESIDENT. 201 of the Court of Session m*cu|)ied a position of peculiar power. Thou<2:h the Act of Union had removed the Parliament to I^)iulon, Edinburgh wius still a capibU. Scottish society clus- tered in the closes and lofty tenements of the picturescjue street wliich runs from tiie Castle to Holyrood ; and in Edinburgh, and among that society, the Bar and the liench exercised an extraordinary influence. The President was, therefore, a great persontige in those days ; to be courted by suitors, who had inherited the belief that private interviews with tiie judge were likely to be useful in a lawsuit ; and the object of consttint attention from all kinds of office-seekers, from the j)eer who wanted a place about the Court in London down to the aspirant for the poorest clerkship in the Outer House. For at that time the Lord President was not only a judge, but also one of the regular advisers of Government in matters both of policy and patronage. It appeared so natural, to statesmen in London, that the head of the Scottish Courts should take an active part in politics tliat the Duke of Newcastle, as we have seen, wished President Dundas to be the recognised " Scottish Manager "" under the Rockingham Ministry of 1765. Dundas declined this position, from a due appreciation of the proper character of a judicial office; but, in private, like other Presi- dents of the eighteenth century, he continued his correspond- ence with the leading statesmen of his day, and had a voice in those important questions of policy which arose, from time to time, with regard to the affairs of Scotland. In this difficult position, combining the functions of the politician and the judge, Dundas succeeded in securing the confidence and admira- tion of the country. The first President Dundas occupied the chair of the Court of Session from 1748 to 1753. The second President Dundas occupied it from 1760 to 1787. Thus the father and son, except for six years, presided continuously over the Supreme Court of Scotland for the long term of nearly forty years. The legal history of this period commences with the passing of the Act by which the Heritable Jurisdictions were abolished. These jurisdictions, which enabled their possessors to administer whatever they chose to regard as law and justice in complete independence of the King's judges, were spread like a network over the whole country ; and the British Government, convincetl 202 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1748- by the events of 1745 that the question of Scotland must be settled once for all, resolved to abolish them without delay. The measure for effecting this reform was drawn by Lord Chancellor Hard wick e, with the assistance of the judges of the Court of Session. It abolished all the heritable jurisdictions of justiciary, and restored the criminal jurisdiction of the country to the King's Courts. The sheriffships, which hatl been handed down from father to son, for generations, in many families, were taken away ; and tlie right of appointment was once more vested in the Crown. Although compensation was to be given to the possessors of heritable jurisdictions, a strenuous resistance was made to the bill. No money could, in the opinion of many a Scottish nobleman and laird, be a sufficient compensation for the loss of dignity which was implied in the loss of the cherished " power of pit and gallows."" It was denounced as a violation of the rights of property, as a breach of the Treaty of Union, as a dangerous interference witli the proper relations which ought to exist between landlord and tenant, and as only the prelude to a system under which no man could be sure that his possessions were safe. One argument, used in the House of Commons, reads almost like a prophecy. Some future minister, it was said, may declare that it is necessary for the public good to compel every man in the kingdom to part with his property in land for a reasonable price. Nevertheless, the bill ultimately passed both Houses of Parliament ; and this important measure of law reform, which has conferred inestimable blessings upon Scotland, found a place in the statute-book. The sum paid as compensation to the owners of heritable jurisdictions was considerable, although far less than they had demanded. The total sum claimed was more than half a million. The sum actually paid, in April 1748, was about ^^150,000. This was the commencement of the present system of Sheriff Courts. A member of the bar was appointed as Sheriff to each county of Scotland ; and it need hardly be said that the filling up of so many offices at one time was a source of great delight in the Parliament House, and of equally great trouble to the dispensers of so much patronage. 1787] LEGAL HISTORY. 208 The session duriuf^ which the heribible jurisdictions were abolislu'd put an end also to the system of huid tenure known as wardhohiing, under which huids were hehl on condition of military service rendered to the feudal suj)erior. This fniiil blow at the clan system met with little opposition, and, coupled with the Acts for disarmin'i; the Highlanders, put it out of the power of the chieft^iins to force their unwilling vassals into anotiier rebellion. These were great and salutary changes in the law. But the period from 1748 to 1787 was singularly destitute of legislation for Scotland. Indeed the only other statute which need be mentioned is the Montgomery Entail Act of 1770. Since the original Entail Act of 1685, the custom of putting lantls under the fetters of a strict entail had gradually taken deep root. In 1764 the Faculty of Advocates, impressed by the evils of the law of entail, had condemned the system by a large majority;^ and in 1770, Lord Advocate Montgomery succeeded in carrying through Parliament a bill " to encourage the improvement of lands, tenements, and hereditaments, in Scotland, held under settlements of strict entail.'^ By the Montgomery Act the heir of entail obtained power to grant leases, under certain conditions, for thirty-one years, or for fourteen years and an existing lifetime, or for two existing lifetimes. He was also enabled to grant leases for the erection of houses or villages for any number of years up to ninety-nine, and was encouraged to improve his estate, by means of enclosing, planting, draining, and building farm-houses, by a provision that he should have a claim against the succeed- ing heirs of entail for three-fourths of any money laid out in this way. The benefits which followed the Montgomery Act were not so great as had been expected ; but it paved the way for that abolition of the law of entail which has since almost completely taken place. The fact that Parliament was not employed in the develop- ment of the law of Scotland at this time threw a great respon- sibility on the Court of Session ; and it is to the decisions of the judges over whom the two Dundases presided that the ^ Minutes of Faculty, 4th August 1764. 204 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1748- student of legal history, during this period, must chiefly devote himself. A very superficial account of the men who occupied tlie Scottish bench, during a great portion of the eighteenth century, is sufficient to prove that they were distinguished, in many cases, not only by a profound acquaintance with the science of jurisprudence, but also by great literary attainments. One of the most loveable of these old judges is Lord Kames, whose career may be studied in the fascinating pages of Lord Woodhouselee. His youthful imagination was fired by the spectacle of Lord President Dalrymple at his daughter's tea- table, enjoying the pleasures of domestic happiness towards the close of a long and busy life ; and he determined to join the bar. He combined, throughout his own life, a deep knowledge of the law with an unceasing devotion to philosophy, literature, and classic learning. "As a judge,"' says Lord Woodhouselee, "his opinions and decrees were dictated by an acute under- standing, an ardent feeling of justice, and a perfect acquaint- ance with the jurisprudence of his country, which, notwith- standing the variety of pursuits in which his comprehensive mind had alternately found exercise, had always been his principal study, and the favourite object of his researches. . . . The state of the bench, during the greater part of the time in which he occupied a seat in the Court of Session, was favour- able to the exertion of superior abilities. It was no ordinary mental energy that could distinguish itself in the daily com- parison with such men as Pringle of Alemore, Ferguson of Pitfour, Sir Thomas Miller of Glenlee, Lockhart of Covington, Macqueen of Braxfield, and the younger President Dundas."' Another of the Judges of this period was Francis Garden of Gardenstoune, whose acquirements in the languages of Rome and Greece were equalled by a fluency in that of France, which astonished the spectators, when, in the great Douglas cause, he opposed Wedderburn before the Parliament of Paris. Sir David Dalrymple of Hailes was on the bench from 1766 to 1792, and found time not only to discharge his official duties, but to enrich the literature of his country with the results of much laborious study in the field of historical inquiry. Sir Thomas Miller of Glenlee had, according to Baron Hume, "a fondness for the Greek and Latin classics, which. 1787.] THE COURT OF SESSION. 205 even in the busiest periods of his life, he found oj)j)ortunitie8 to indulge/' He wtus Lord Justice-Clerk for nearly twenty- two years, from 1766 to 1788, when he succeeded Dundtis as President of the Court ; and throughout that long })eriod he wjis regarded jis one of the ablest lawyers on the bench. Of lA)vd Monbtxldo it is hardly necessary to say anything. His " Attic Banquets,"" when " the master of the feast crowned his wine, like Anacreon, with a garland of roses,"" his (}uaint theories regarding the origin of man, his eccentric habits, and his constant flow of humour, are household words anumg Scottish lawyers at the ])resent day. These judges, and others among their colleagues, were pro- found lawyers, and, at the same time, men of very high attainments in general literature. They all flourished while the two Dundases were at the heatl of the Court. The Court of Session during this period consisted of the Lord President and fourteen ordinary judges. Of the fourteen ordinary judges, one sat each week in the great hall of the Parliament House, which was then known as the "Outer House,"" and heard causes argued before him, while the rest of the judges were sitting, as one Court, in the "Inner House."" The Court rose at midday, as a rule ; and in the afternoons, two of the judges sat, by turns, to hear witnesses in those cases in which evidence of disputed facts was required. " This Court,"" says Lord Bankton, "is justly admired for its contrivance, in order to despatch of business, and at the same time, with great solemnity and deliberation.""* If there was great solemnity, there was also great deliberation ; for many years sometimes passed before the litigant reached the point at which his case came to be argued before the whole Court, " in p-esentia Domuwnimy " Ye must stand primed,"" says Alan Fairford"s father, " for a hearing in presentia Dorninorum, upon Tuesday next."" " I, sir ? "" I replied in astonishment, " I have not opened my mouth in the Outer House yet."" " Never mind the Outer House, man,"" said my father, " we will have you into the Sanctuary at once — ever shoes, ever boots."" " But, sir, I should really spoil any cause thrust upon me so hastily."" " Ye cannot spoil it, Alan,"" said my father, rubbing his hands with much complacency, "that is the very cream of the whole business, man — it is just, as I said before, a subject upon which 206 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1761. all the tyrones have been trying their whittles for fifteen years ; and as there have been about ten or a dozen agents concerned, and each took his own way, the case is come to that pass, that Stair or Arniston could not mend it ; and I do not think even you, Alan, can do it much harm — ye may get credit by it, but ye can lose none/' The greatest Scottish law-suit of the eighteenth century was the case of Hamilton v. Douglas, best known as the Douglas Cause, to which allusion has already been made.^ Lady Jane Douglas, sister to Archibald, Duke of Douglas, was, on the 4th of August 1746, privately married to Colonel Steuart, afterwards Sir John Steuart of GrandtuUy. She was then in her forty-ninth year. Soon after the marriage. Lady Jane and her husband, accompanied by her confidential attendant, Miss Helen Hewit, and two maids, went abroad. They lived at the Hague, Utrecht, and Aix-la-Chapelle till May 1748. At Aix- la-Chapelle the fact of the marriage was disclosed to some of Lady Jane's friends ; and about the same time it was rumoured that Lady Jane was soon to be confined. On the 21st of May they left Aix-la-Chapelle for Rheims. Here the two maids were left, and Lady Jane, then supposed to be within a week of her delivery, her husband, and Helen Hewit, started for Paris, which they reached on the 4th of July. Here, it was said. Lady Jane gave birth to male twins, in the house of a Madame Le Brun. In the end of the year 1749, Sir John and Lady Jane returned to England with the two boys, one of whom died, while the other lived to be the defender in the famous Douglas Cause. In July 1761 the Duke of Douglas died, and three com- petitors appeared as claimants of his estate. The Duke of Hamilton, as heir-male of the family of Douglas, claimed the whole landed estate, except what the Duke of Douglas had himself purchased. The Earl of Selkirk claimed the estates of Angus and Dudhope, as heir of provision under certain deeds of settlement executed by James, Marquis of Douglas, father of the late Duke. Archibald Steuart or Douglas, the survivor of the twins said to have been born in Paris, claimed the whole landed estate, as heir general and of ^ Supra, p. 181. 1767.] THE DOUGLAS CAUSE. 207 line, ei)si()ns on tlieiu, were able to secure, very frecjuently, a voice in deciding who should be the county member. The small lunnber of electors made it easy, jis a rule, to mana»i^e the elections. It is probable that, about the time of the second I^)rd Presidents death, there were not more than 2()()0 county votes in Scotland, if indeed there were so many. In Midlothian there were not a lunuhed electors. In Cromarty there were only six. All over the country the constituencies were small select bodies, consisting of the freeholders, who alone had the rird President, and the nephew of Henry Dundas, everything was in his favour. When on a visit to London he pleased his granduncle, Mr. Thomas Dundas, son of the second Lord Aniiston, and Sheriff of Galloway, who had supposed that young Dundas would be wholly engrossed witli the amusements of the town, by writing him a letter in which he described the great figure which his uncle Henry was making in the House of Commons. The old gentleman, in return, gave him some very good advice. Mr. Thomas Dundas to his Grand Nephew Robert Dundas, Younger of Arniston. Keith, April lo, 1781. My dear Robie, — What you write me concerning the Advo- cate,^ is most agreeable, for you know, no man can wish him better than I do, and indeed his parts are surprising and his o])en- ness and courage most delightful ; he is plagueing Charles Fox and ^ Henry Dundas. 216 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1784. the faction, but, what you are not aware of, he will plague you more after this. You will very probably succeed him and represent Mid-Lothian, and the higher the pyramid he raises, the more strength it will take to support it. It will rob you of many nights' rest, and cost you immensity of labour not to degenerate from the fame of your predecessor. In London, at present, your nights may be devoted as you please, perhaps to Mammon, but the day to serve God and your country. Your language must be purified, a most difficult task, for it generally sticks, like original sin. Your knowledge, by ardent study and the conversation of mankind, must be improved, and graces of speaking learned from the best masters, your orators in Parliament, and then, like the Advocate, you will be esteemed and courted by high and low. . . . — I am always, etc. etc. etc., Tho^- Dundas. He had not long to wait ; for in Januax'y 1784, soon after Mr. Pittas government took the place of the Coalition, he received a letter from Lord Sidney, who was then Under- Secretary of State, informing him that he was appointed Solicitor-General. He was only twenty-five years of age. Tliis was rapid promotion ; but it seemed natural. His father had been Solicitor- General at twenty-nine, and his uncle Henry at twenty-four. Lord Cockburn attributes the success of young Dundas entirely to family influence, and forms a very low estimate of his capacity.^ He certainly had not the talent of his kinsmen, who had held office before him ; and, without family interest, he might not have risen as he did. But tliough his abilities were moderate, it must be remembered that Lord Cockburn bore no goodwill to his cousin Robert Dundas. Cockburn*'s separation from the political party among whom he had been brought up, at a time when party spirit ran high, could not fail to carry with it a tinge of bitterness towards former friends. And it was no secret tliat it was towards Robert Dundas that this feeling was chiefly directed. His statement that Dundas, when at the bar with all the advantages of his position, all the favour of agents, and all the partiality of courts, never commanded any independent private practice, is by no means correct. In the first year of his prac- ^ Memorials of His Time, p. 156. 1784] MIDLOTHIAN ELFXTION. 217 tk-e, iiu"liuHn; a ballad of his own composition on the Midlothian Addrefttt^ the la.st verse of which (alluding to Mr. Solicitor- GeneraFs very interesting appearance at his honourable uncle''8 late election) was as follows : — Young Robert again, with his modest fine fire, Will draw praise from all present, and tears from his sire. Huzza then, brave boys ! send it off by express. And let Melville present the Midlothian Address." 1 The young Solicitor-General had, in the meantime, fallen in love with his cousin Miss Elizabeth Dundas. In a boyish letter written to her soon after he came to the Bar he laments the fact that neither he nor slie was tall. " Heaven,'*'' he savs, " seems to have been rather niggard in its bounties to you and I, whilst it has been no less lavish on some of the younger branches of the family. Not only has it cruelly curtailed our statures among the sons and daughters of man, but it has mortified us by giving to William and Ann in the same pro- ])ortions that it hath taken from us.'*'' This recalls Lord Cockburn's description of him as "a little, alert, handsome, gentleman -like man, with a countenance and air beaming with sprightliness and gaiety, and dignified by considerable fire ; altogether inexpressibly pleasing,'*"' and also the complaint which Mr. Ferguson of Pitfour, the member for Aberdeenshire, is said to have made, during a division in the House of Com- mons, when Dundas came to be Lord Advocate, — " The Lord Advocate should always be a tall man. We Scotch members always vote with him, and we need, therefore, to be able to see him. I can see Pitt and Addington, but I can''t see this new Lord Advocate.'' The William alluded to was his younger brother, a very handsome man, who retained his good looks to an advanced age. Ann was his cousin Elizabeth's sister, who also deserved * The allusion is to an address in favour of the Ministry which had recently been adopted at a county meeting in Midlothian. 220 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1787. the praise for personal appearance bestowed upon lier. She married, in February 1786, Mr. Henry Drunnnond, banker, of Charing Cross, and was tlie mother of Henry Drummond, M.P. of Albury. On the back of young Dundas^s letter to his cousin there is a brief note — written long years after — " The oldest letter the Chief Baron ever wrote me, when I lived at Millhead in 1782 or 3.'' His addresses had been favourably received ; and Henry Dundas, too, liad formed a very high opinion of liis nephew, for he had already requested his brother, the President, to show him all his letters. " When,'' he says, " I write you confidential letters, show them all to your son Robert ; for I have that good opinion of his understanding and perfect dis- cretion, I have no thoughts of ever being upon reserve witli him in anything.'' But it was not until three years after liis appointment as Solicitor-General that matters were finally arranged. Then, nothing having occurred to interfere with the affair, the elder members of the family were consulted on the subject in the spring of 1787, when the lady's father wrote to the Lord President, expressing his approval, and making arrangements for a suitable provision for the young couple. Henrv Dundas to his Brother, the Second President Dundas. WiMBLEi>ON, Saturday, \lth March 1787. Mv dear Lord, — The Solicitor and Elizabeth having explained themselves to each other, I do not think anything you or I have to do in the business need take much time, or give us any trouble. He mentioned to me in a conversation he desired with me yester- day an intention of desiring James Newbigging to come up, and to bring up papers with him, in order to show me particularly how his situation and prospects stood. There is not the smallest necessity for any such step. He has shown me enough to make me understand that he has large landed property under large in- cumbrances. But they are not such as in any respect to create any idea of anxiety. On the contrary, it is clear to me that, with your attention, joined to his own industry, and a rational economy, he has within his powers the certainty of establishing his family on a most respectable footing. And he shall act very much indeed contrary to my opinion if, for the sake of having a little larger 1787.] MAHRIA(JK OF MR. DUNDAS. 221 inconu* u few years sooner, he shall ever part witli one ridj^e of his landed property. The size of the house and policy of Arniston ought to have a corresjjonding estate, and they ought to be knit together by "an indissoluble entail. For we must not always take it for granted that the ])roprietors of Arniston are to be men of business and of virtue ; and it would be hard if one proHigate fool should have it in his power to dissolve what has been the col- lection of ages. These being my general sentiments with regard to the Solicitor's situation and prosj)ects, in which I truly believe I am not less interested than you, a marriage-contract between your son and my daughter must be a very simple business. ... 1 suspect I have put your eyes to the trial to read this letter, and shall, therefore, relieve you with only further say- ing that if our two young friends do not make each other happy, I shall despair of ever seeing it again. — Yours faithfully, Henry Dundas. The marriage took place in the following month, .V})ril 1787, and proved a very liappy one in all respects. In September 1789, Hay Campbell, who had been Lord Advocate since the fall of the Coalition Ministry, was ap- pointed Lord President on the death of Sir Thomas Miller of Glenlee ; and Robert Dundas became Lord Advocate in his thirty-second year. No better picture of the social life of this time has ever been drawn than that given by Lord Cockburn in a pa.ssage in his Memorials, which, though well known, will bear repetition. His father, then Convener of Midlothian, had gone to a meeting of road trustees, and taken some of his family with him. " It \\"c\& a bright, beautiful August day,'" says I^)rd Cockburn ; " we returned to the inn of Middleton, on our way home, about seven in the evening ; and there we saw another scene. People sometimes say that there is no probability in Scotfs making the party in Waverley retire from the Castle to the Howf ; but these people were not with me at the imi at Middleton, about forty years ago. The Duke of Buccleuch was living at Dalkeith ; Henry Dundas at Melville ; Kol)ert Dundits, the I>ord Advocate, at Arniston; Hepburn of Clerk- ington at Middleton ; and several of the rest of the aristcKTacy of Midlothian within a few miles ; all with their families, and luxurious houses; yet had they, to the number of twelve or 222 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1789. sixteen, congregated in this wretched ale-house for a day of freedom and jollity. We found them, roaring and singing and laughing, in a low-roofed room scarcely large enough to hold them, with wooden chairs and a sanded floor. When their own lacqueys, who were carrying on high life in the kitchen, did not choose to attend, the masters were served by two women. There was plenty of wine, particularly claret, in rapid circula- tion on the table ; but my eye was chiefly attracted by a huge bowl of hot whisky punch, the steam of which was almost dropping from the roof, while the odour was enougli to per- fume the whole parish. We were called in, and made to partake, and were very kindly used, particularly by my uncle Harry Dundas. How they did joke and laugh ! with songs, and toasts, and disputations, and no want of practical fun. I don't remember anything they said, and probably did not understand it. But the noise^ and the heat, and the uproarious mirth — I think I hear and feel them yet. My father was in the chair ; and he having gone out for a little, one of us boys was voted into his place, and the boy's health was drank, with all the honours, as ' the young Convener. Hurra ! hurra ! may he be a better man than his father ! hurra ! hurra ! ' I need not mention that they were all in a state of elevation ; though there was nothing like absolute intoxication, so far as I could judge.'' At this time, and for some years after. Lord Advocate Dundas used to spend a part of the summer on the shores of Loch Ericht, while Mrs. Dundas lived with her father at Dunira, his estate near Comrie in Perthshire. Loch Ericht is a romantic Highland lake, lying on the northern confines of Perthshire, among the wilds of Badenoch, and surrounded on all sides by a bare and desolate region. On its western side is Ben Alder, a magnificent mountain, among whose gloomy recesses Macpherson of Cluny had found a safe hiding-place, in which he defied the Government forces, who were searching for him, for nine years after Culloden. About five miles to the south of Loch Ericht, and separated from it by rough moorlands, is Loch Rannoch, at the western end of which (that nearest Loch Ericht) is Rannoch Barracks, a place which was built as quarters for the soldiers who occupied that district after the rebellion of 1745. 1789] LOCH KRICHT. 22S The following letter describes an iidventiire which some of the Dmuhts party htul among these hills in August 1789. It appears that the I^)nl AdvcK-nteV younger brother, Francis Dundas,' along with Mr. Henry Dundjts's son Ho!)ert, resolved to walk from Killin, at the west end of Loch Tay, to I^oeh Ericht ; and any one who lias traversed the tnickless waste known as the Moor of Rannoch, over a part of whieh their route lay, is aware that it was a long and difiicult walk. Loiii) Advocate to Mrs. Dundas. Loch Ericht side, Thursday^ ^^th Aug. 1789. You made me very happy, my dearest Elizabeth, by receiving your letter from Francis, who arrived here about six o'clock this morning. What you are doing, how you are, and all the little minutite going on at Dunira, are to me the most pleasing intelli- gence of any you can possibly communicate. 'I'o return, my sweet wife, the same pleasure which I believe my letters give to her, she may now look for a full narrative of the proceedings at Loch Ericht, and I must warn her they are a little extra- ordinary. I had just got to bed last night about eleven, when a knock at the window from the outside made me jump up, surprised not a little, as everybody in the house were quiet. Guess my amaze- ment when I heard Robert's voice, who immediately after entered ; and guess my still greater astonishment when he told me the Governor and he had walked that day from Killin, uj)- wards of forty miles, through inaccessible hills ; and that he left Francis in the moor about three miles off, unable to proceed a step further. This intelligence made the whole family tuni out, the ladies excepted. By this time it was half-past eleven, pitch dark, blowing and raining a tempest. A couple of Highlanders and a pony were immediately dispatched in quest of Francis, whose situation, I can assure you, alarmed me more than I can express. Your brother was immediately taken care of in every way ; and as soon as he got to bed, with some warm chops and Madeira to comfort him, he fell asleep as sound as a top. The account he gave me of Francis was, that he had forced him on with directions to send people for him ; but was totally unable to drag a leg after him, and was sitting on a stone at the loch side. ^ Second son of the second President Dundas. 224 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1789. That they had got to Rannoch Barracks early in the afternoon, and expecting the boat to meet them, at the end of the Loch ^ (twelve miles from hence), they had agreed to walk the five miles of moor betwixt the two lakes, which after their dinner they thought themselves able for. For these three days it has blown a perfect hurricane from the west, which rendered it absolutely impossible to row the boat down to meet them ; and I accordingly yesterday morning dispatched a courier to Rannoch with a note to Francis, telling them why the boat could not meet them. But unfortunately the fellow missed them by the way. About two miles from hence there is the only shealing on the loch ; which Robert, in stumbling through the moor, fell in with, and sent the Highlander back to Francis with whisky and some oat cakes, whilst he himself proceeded on here with a boy he got at the shealing. I sat up till one o'clock, when one of the High- landers returned with intelligence that the Colonel was asleep in the shealing, and that his neighbour and the pony were waiting there till he should awake. I then went to bed, so far satisfied ; and at six this morning his honour arrived, such a figure as you never saw. He had slept on the moor, with the rain pelting on him, till the Highlander came from the shealing, and assisted him to it, when, after eating some cheese, and drinking half a bottle of whisky, he had slept on the man's bed till daybreak. Their baggage and servants were left some miles behind on the moor, where they were forced to stand all night, there being no road, and the night so dark that they could not pick their way. Unfortunately part of this letter has been torn off, and accordingly the story ends abruptly ; but neither of the travellers suffered. Francis Dundas, who was at that time Colonel of the Scots Brigade (afterwards the 94th Regiment), lived to be a General in the army ; and Robert Dundas suc- ceeded his father, in 1811, as the second Viscount Melville. Nothing can better illustrate the complete change which had taken place in the Highlands, since the rebellion, than the fact that the district in which Mr. Dundas was now living in perfect safety had been, when his father was Lord Advocate, not fifty years before, one of the most dangerous and disaffected parts of the country. Every mile of the heather over which his brother and cousin stumbled on that August evening in ^ Loch Ericht. I790.] A MIDLOTHIAN ELECTION IN 17f)0. 225 1789 wits, in Au«i:ust 1749 and for several years after, ^runrdeil by outposts of armed chuisiueu, wlio allowed no one to approach tlie fastnesses of Hen Alder. A clmnge too has taken place since 17S9. The IIi<^hland Railway runs within a few miles of Ivoch Ericht ; and tliou«;h the Moor of Uannoch is its desolate as ever, llannoch Barracks is now a comfortable shooting lod^e. At the {General election of 17JK), Mr. Henry Dundas was^ ivturned as member for Edinburgh, having ji;iven up his seat for Mitllothian in order to make way for his nephew, who was elected for the county on the 2(jth of June. The Edinlmr^'h Aihrrt'hscr thus describes what took place : — "On Saturday there wtus a very full meetin<;- of the free- holders of the county of Edinburgh in the Parliament House, the Right Hon. Henry Dundas, Treasurer of the Navy, in the chair. Mr. Dundas addressed the meeting in a nervous speech, returning his warmest acknowledgments for the honour they had so often and for so long a period conferred upon him, having been no less than seven times unanimously elected their representative. Mr. Dundas then quitted the chair, which I^rd Hailes^ was called to fill. The election proceeded, when the Right Hon. Robert Dundas of Amiston, I^ord Advocate, was unanimously chosen. "The Lord Advocate expressed his gratitude for the honour done him in choosing him to fill the high station which his ancestors had filled for two centuries in the Scottish and liritish parliaments. The Parliament House was crowded. A numl)er of ladies were in the galleries, among whom were the Duchess of Gordon and daughter. The gentlemen afterwards dined in the new Assembly Room.'' - The Lord Advocate entered Parliament as a devoted follower of Mr. Pitt, but without any great confidence in his own abilities. He modestly and eagerly accepted the advice which Mr. Pitt, though young in years, was so well qualified to give to a new member. " I am going down,'' he writes to his wife on the 23d of March 1791, " at half-past four, to attend the ' Sir David Dalrymple of Hailes. He had been on the liench of the Court of Session since 1 766. - The Assembly Rooms in George Street, Edinburgh, which were oiK'ned about the year 1 785. P 226 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1790. Committee on the Corn Bill, which I suppose will last all this evening. I wrote you in very bad spirits and in worse humour witli myself for having risen on Friday last to give my opinion about that business. It seems, however, that I was mistaken, -as Pitt was much pleased, and said what I had stated was in point of matter and manner more to the purpose than anything he had heard on the subject. In short, he thinks I shall do him good ; and in proof of it, I was admitted, by his own desire, to the previous meeting at his house yesterday, of 8 or 10 of his friends, to consider what was to be stated in answer to the expected attack on the bill for appropriating the imclaimed dividends. He says he never wants me to make a set speech, but wishes me to make myself previously master of the business to come on, and not to rise and speak on it, unless I feel inclined, and anything occurs which I think myself able to answer. If I do ultimately turn out of use to him in any way, I shall be abundantly satisfied. "" For some years after this Lord Advocate Dundas occupied a peculiarly trying position, during which things were done in Scotland Avhich all parties are now united in condemning. Two movements were in progress which he was bound, as a faithful adherent of Mr. Pitt, in the unfortunate position which that illustrious statesman was led to adopt during the last ten years of the century, to oppose both as a politician and as first law officer of the Crown in Scotland. These movements were the agitation for Burgh Reform, and the agitation for Par- liamentary Reform. The grievances which were complained of in the Scottish burghs were such as can hardly be realised in our own day. It is only necessary to mention a few of them. In the first place, the town-councils were self-elected ; and, accordingly, year after year the same persons managed or mismanaged the affairs of the burghs, the burgesses having no power of dis- carding from their service even the most unworthy or incom- petent of the councillors. To such an extent was this absurd system carried that there were instances of men continuing to act as town-councillors for periods of from twenty to fifty years without interruption. Sometimes one family would secure tlie power of managing a burgh, and hand it down from I790.] THE SCOTTISH BURGHS. 227 father to son. At other times the inaiia^ement fell into the hands of a council, many of whose members were non-resident and totally ignorant of the burgh business. These self-elected councilloi-s refused, in many cases, to allow the burgesses access to the books of coimcil, and insisted on spending the public money without any supervision or con- trol by the tax-payers. There were many instances in which the public property had been alienated without the consent, or even against the wishes, of the inhabitants. At Inverness, for example, this wjus a great grievance. " The revenues of this burgh, dilapidated away within the last century by the different leading niiigis- trates, in favours of themselves and their tidherents, for trifling feu-duties not exceeding £20 per annum, now yield above i^OOO sterling. The revenue of the town is at present ^ £5(K) sterling a y^ar or thereby ; a great part of which is expended in entertainments and pensions to the friends and adherents of the leader."*'^ At Dundee the same thing had taken place. " Had the town retained the property of their lands, the revenue would have been very great. But these, except an inconsiderable part (which have been feued on very disadvan- tageous terms), were distributed among the friends of tlie men who formerly composed the town-councils, many of them with- out the shadow of a remuneration, and others for such avowed causes as bore no proportion to the value of the property given away.'*''^ Taxes, too, were imposed without the authority of Parlia- ment. In Glasgow potatoes were taxed on the ground, it was said, that they had partly superseded the use of meal, on which a tax had been established by usage ! * It followed, as a matter of course, that jobbery of every kind was rampant. Building contracts were given, not to the lowest offerer, or to the best contractor, but to those who were relations or friends of the town -councillors ; and work was often ordered, not because the town needed it, but simply in - A Memoir concerning the Origin and Progress of the Reform proposed in t/ie Internal Government of the Royal Burghs of Scotland. By Archibald Fletcher, Esq., Advocate. Part iii. p. 56. 3 Ibid. * Ibid. p. 115. 228 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1790. order to enrich those whom the irresponsible town-council wislied to favour. Lastly, tliis system of self-election, with its natural accom- paniments of jobbery and peculation, was guarded by what was known as the Beautiful Order, a farce devised for the purpose of securing that, on those occasions when the election of a new councillor could not be avoided, any new member of corporation sliould stand by all tliat was done within the secret conclave of the council chamber. The new councillor was elected on the express condition that he would solemnly promise always to abide by the vote of a majority of his brother councillors.^ In 1783 a conference of burgh delegates was held, by which an agitation for reform was originated ; and four years later, after an immense quantity of evidence had been collected, an attempt was made to induce the Government to deal with the question. Mr. Henry Dundas was approached upon the sub- ject. " But Mr. Dundas,"' says Fletcher, " in perfect consist- ency with the manly openness of his character, told us at once that he would not support, but oppose the object of the Burgh Reform.'" It would, indeed, have been difficult for Mr. Dundas to have assisted a movement, one of the first results of which would have been to irritate, and probably estrange the town- council of Edinburgh, which returned him, or any member of his family whom he chose to nominate, to the House of Commons. Lord Cockburn describes the Edinburgh council chamber, which seems to have been well suited for its occu- pants, as "a low-roofed room, very dark and very dirty.'" " Within this Pandemonium," he says, " sat the town-council, omnipotent, corrupt, impenetrable. Nothing was beyond its grasp ; no variety of opinion disturbed its unanimity, for the pleasure of Dundas was the sole rule for every one of them. Reporters, the fruit of free discussion, did not exist ; and though they had existed, would not have dared to disclose the proceedings. Silent, powerful, submissive, mysterious, and irresponsible, they might have been sitting in Venice." With such an institution at his doors, it was not likely that Mr. Dundas would take a leading part in promoting a reform of the corporations of which it was merely a specimen. ^ Fletcher on Burgh Reform, Part iii. p. 32. 1792.] THE ''FRIP:NDS OF THK PKOPLE." 21^9 Mr. Henry Krskiiie, however, and the Whijj^s in SeoUand, were active in ti^itatin<>; for some measure of burgh reform ; and thev were supported by Mr. Sheridan and the ()})])osition in the House of Connnons. They continued their efforts for sometime; and in 1792 tlie Government yiehied to a cerbiin extent. I^)rd Adv(K*ate Dundas !)rou«>;ht in a bill to regulate the mode of accounting for the common good and revenues of the royal burghs of Scotland. Hut the system of self-election, from which the reformers declared all their grievances sprung "as rivulets from a fountiiin,'* was left untouched; and the bill, after the second remling had been passed, was abandoned. But the (piestion of burgh reform was forgotten for a time, in the midst of the fierce passions which were aroused by the larger and more exciting topics to which the attention of the country, now brought face to face with a demand for a change in the system of parliamentary representation, was for some years to be directed. In Scotland the horrors of the French Revolution had rent society in twain. Mr. Burke's Refkctiows on the French Revolution, which appeared in 1790, but faintly echoed the fear of change, the burning indignation against those who ventured even to hint at reform, and the intense distrust of the masses which was felt by many at this time. The publi- cation, in the following year, of the Vindic'uv Gallkic only added fuel to the flame ; and events soon took place, in which Lord Advocate Dundas was a leading actor, of a most painful and harrowing description. It was to the proceedings of the " Society of Friends of the People'*^ that the attention of Government was chiefly directed. This association was formed in England din*ing the spring of 1792. At first it consisted of about one hundred members, most of whom were persons of some position in the country. One of the original members was Thomas Erskine, afterwards Lord Chancellor Erskine. Sir James Mackintosh acted as secretary. Lord Lauderdale, Lord John Russell, Mr. Grey, afterwards Earl Grey, Mr. Fox, Mr. Sheridan, and Mr. Whit- bread, were also members.^ Their object was strictly constitu- tional, and was defined as " obtaining a Parliamentary Reform."" * The first general meeting of the Friends of the People was held in the Freemasons' Tavern, London, on the 26th of April 1792. 230 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1792. But a society whose leaders have in view a legitimate end, which they purpose to attain by legitimate means, cannot always control the action of all its adherents. The whole history of reform shows that, as a rule, side by side with legal and constitutional agitation, there is found an illegal movement, conducted by men wlio rely upon acts of violence or intimidation. In tlie seventeenth century the memor- able resistance to the Scottish administration of Cliarles the Second and James the Second was stained by the murder of Sharpe and other outrages. At the commencement of the present century the Cato Street conspirators purposed, by wholesale assassination, to advance the cause for which the Whig members were contending witliin the Houses of Parlia- ment. And, in like manner, tliere was, in 1792, a dangerous spirit of violence, if not of actual disloyalty, among many of the working classes. In the meantime, however, nothing worse took place than ordinary rioting in Edinburgli, Dundee, and some other places in Scotland. The King's birthday was the 4th of June. During the day all was quiet in Edinburgh ; and for some time in the evening nothing of importance happened. Bonfires were lighted, and fireworks displayed by the street boys, as usual. But, in the course of the evening, some dragoon officers, who chanced to be walking along the High Street, attracted the attention of the mob. Stones were thrown at tliem, and they ran for shelter to tlie Riding School, where some of their men were stationed. The dragoons turned out and patrolled the streets, where the mob attacked them with stones and squibs. The 53d Regiment, which was then quartered in the Castle, marched into the city; and the crowd, turning its attention from the soldiery, was allowed, unmolested, to burn the sentry boxes which stood at the Tron Church ; after which it dispersed. No attacks were made on private houses that night. As may be supposed, the Arniston family, one of whose members was Home Secretary,^ and another Lord Advocate, was peculiarly obnoxious to the mob ; and the following news- paper account, which is probably accurate in most of its ^ Henry Dundas had become Home Secretary in 1 791. I792.J KIOT IN GEORGE SQUARE. J.H (lebiils, describes an atbick which was nuule upon them on the foUowin^ iiiglit : — "On Tues(lay, June 5th, it was exi)ecte(l that the riots in this city were at an end, and the dragoons who had been brought to town on Monday were on Tuesday forenoon sent away to tlieir respective (juarters. In the evening, Iiowever, a number of people assembled in (xeorge Square, and proceeded to break the windows of the houses of Mrs. Dundas, Dowtiger of Arniston, and the lAyrd Advocate. The Sheriff earnestly intreated the mob to retire, but in vain. He then sent for the 53d regiment from the Castle. When they ciune they were insulted with stones. The Sheriff informed the mob that if they did not disperse, the soldiers would fire upon them. They tlien apparently dispersed, and the soldiers were ordered away, except an officer and twenty men, who were left to guard the houses that had been attacked. About an hour after- wards, the mob again assembled, when the Sheriff and tlie small party of soldiers endeavoured in vain to disperse them. The mob continued to insult them, and to break the windows of a house in tlie square. The Sheriff, after ineffectual efforts to disperse them, gave orders to a few of the soldiers to fire, but the mob finding none of their number wounded became more bold and abusive. The Sheriff* then gave orders to fire a second time, when six or seven persons were wounded, two of them very dangerously. "At a meeting of the authorities, held next day, it was observed that many false reports had been j)ropagated to inflame the minds of the people, particularly one that Mr. Secretary Dundas was bringing a bill into Parliament to raise the price of meal."' On the following evening, the 6th of June, the mob again assembled, and attacked the Lord Provost**s house, which was in St. Andrew Square. All the windows were broken ; but the riot lasted only a short time. Two signal guns were fired from the Castle, on which the soldiers turned out, and the rioters at once dispersed. Alarmed by the excited state of public feeling, some of the landed proprietors in Scotland appointed delegates to hold a 232 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1792. <*oiiferenee in Edinburgh " to consider the present state of tlie election laws for the return of members to Parliament/' The meeting was held in the Assembly Rooms on the 2d of July. Sir James Montgomery of Stanhope was in the chair. " A motion in favour of a reform in these laws was moved by Sir Thomas Dundas, and seconded by Lord Advocate Dundas, and agreed to HOUSE OF LORD ADVOCATE DUNDAS, ATTACKED ON 5TH JUNE 1 792. unanimously.'"' ^ A committee was appointed to consider the subject ; but in the end the movement led to no practical result. The plan of operations which the Friends of the People intended to follow, was to organise, all over the country, a number of affiliated societies for reform (one in every parish, if possible), which were to send delegates to a general conven- ^ Edinburgh AdveHiser, 3d July 1792. 1792] UNEASINESS OF GOVERNMENT. 258 tion. The first ineetiii«r of the Scottish branch of the S', . . £4.S Youn^, Trotter, & Co., putting up the tables, . . . . 22 For the use of the Assembly Rooms, 10 17 Alexr. Williamson, furnishing glasses, 3 Given to the waiters, ... 30 Gratuity to Mrs. Bayll, ... 22 .£lOf) L5 H Doz. Bs. Wines. 1 1 4 Claret, 5/6, () 1 Port, 2/10, 3 4 Sherry, 3/, 3 3 Madeira, 5/3, 1 Rum, 3/8, 6 Brandy, 4/(), 1 Claret for the clerks, X37 10 () 10 2 3 83 1.9 (> 26J dozens. Bill for the clerks, . £12 6 For the musicians, . . 10 10 Election fee, . .£550 Doorkeepers, . . 3 18 () 9 3 i< 70 1() 31 19 (> £293 11 1 These election dinners very often became mere debauches. Lord Advocate Dundas, himself a very temperate man, wished to check the orgies in which many of his suj)})orters delighted ; and on one occasion he arranged, with the gentlemen by whom he was supported at the head of the table, that the party should break up at an early hour. But it was no use. On rising to leave the room, they were greeted with shouts from the croupiers' end of the table of " Na, na, Mr. Dundas, we Ve no a' slockened vet ! '' Mr. William Dundas, for many years ^248 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1799. member for Edinburgh, used to relate that at one of his election dinners a voice from beneath the table was heard liiccuping, " I dinna like thae Dundases ; they dinna pay weel/' *' Brute,"' replied the member, " drunk with my claret, and yet abusing my family.' NORTH FRONT OF ARNISTON, AS ORTGINALLY DESIGNED. The front door at Arniston, as designed by Adam, its architect, was approached by a wide flight of steps, ending with a broad landing, and with a massive stone balustrade. Adam, who had drawn his inspiration from Italian sources, had overlooked one material fact, the difference between an Italian and a Scotch climate. His outside flights of stairs, though very hand- some, were unsuited to Scotland, and in many instances, Arniston included, have of late years been replaced by covered porches — less handsome, but better suited to a Scotch winter. CHAPTER XII. IX)RD CHIEF BARON DUNDAS — continued. In the summer of 1797 tlie memora])le mutiny in the British fleet took phice, when Admiral Duncan, by liis firmness combined with moderation, kej)t tlie crews of the " Venerable '' and "Adamant"* true to their colours. These events were watched by the Arniston family with j)eculiar interest, from the fact that the Admiral had married Henrietta, second daughter of the Second President Dundas ; and the following letters relate to the decisive victory, which, in the following autumn, he gained over the Dutcli at Camperdown : — Lord Advocate Dundas to Mrs. Dundas.^ Mv DEAREST Bess, — I have this moment your letters of Smiday and Monday. Be you mistaken or not is to me immaterial, for whilst you write me as you have done, and wind yourself about my heart so closely as you are doing, my happiness is beyond the reach of any circumstance to alter. Three successive days have I been fighting these Scots members, and at last have beaten the brutes among them to silence. This day I am going to ride out, and stay all night with your father, and return to-morrow to finish my last cause in the House of Lords, as I hope. And as I possibly will not have time to write you to-morrow, I write you these few lines with the chance of their reaching you on Sunday. But chiefly that a sea officer was here within this hour searching for your father, and if Lamb, who came in with a face of amazement and folly mixed, when he presumes to commence a conversation w^ith me, states that the Dutch fleet are all taken.^ Now, this may ^ Undated. 2 This sentence is printed exactly as it is expressed in the original ; but it is evident that something is wanting. 250 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1797. be true, tho* unlikely. But if true, the news will come by the post as soon as you receive this. If not, burn this note. Probably Duncan may have fallen in with, and taken, a ship or two. And, if so, I rejoice in his success and the joy it will give Mrs. Duncan. Mr. Gardner and I will arrange about the trees this evening. Such of your bills as I can pay shall be paid. I will leave nothing in my pocket of my fees here, but what is necessary to bring me down to Arniston. If the Scots bill passes Monday I will write you certainly my motions. I confide entirely in your prudence, my dearest, and believe me, — Yours most truly, R. D. Admikal Duncan to the Lord Advocate. Mv DEAR Advocate, — As I am sure no friend will rejoice more at any good fortune that attends me than you will, I write you these two lines to say I hope the action I have had with the Dutch, who fought with their usual gallantry, is not exceeded by any this war. We have suffered much. The returns I have had, and have not had, half exceed I9I killed, and b(i5 wounded ; from only two Dutch ships, 250 killed, and 300 wounded. We were obliged, from being so near the land, to be rather rash in our attack, by which we suffered more. Had we been ten leagues at sea none would have escaped. Many, I am sure, had surrendered, that got off in the night, being so near shore. We were much galled by their frigates, where we could not act. In short, I feel perfectly satisfied. All was done that could be done. None have any fault to find. I have now in my possession three admirals Dutch, an admiral De Winter, Vice-ad. Renter, Reer-adm. Meame. The admiral is on board with me, and a most agreeable man he is. He speaks English well, and seems much pleased with his treat- ment. I have assured him, and with justice, nothing could exceed his gallantry. He says nothing hurts him, but that he is the first Dutch admiral ever surrendered. So much more credit to me. He tells the troops that were embarked in the summer were 2.),000 Dutch, destined for Ireland, but after August that ex- pedition was given up. The government in Holland, much against his opinion, insisted on his going to sea, to show they had done so, and was just going to return, when I saw him. I am sure I have every reason to be thankful to God Almighty for his kindness to me on this occasion, and all others. I believe the pilot and myself were the only two unhurt on the quarter-deck, and De Winter, who is as tall and big as I am, was the only one 1797 ] VISCOUNT DUNCAN. 251 on his quarter-deck left alive. After all my fatif^Uf, I am in perfect health, and my usual spirit. — Believe me, most faithfully yours, Adam Duncan.' • Venerable,' getting up to Sheemess, Sunday, October thf 1$///, 1797, Lady Mary Duncan* io Henry Dundas. Hami'ton Court Green, Oa. 18///, 1797. Sir, — Tho' I have not the honour of being personally known to you, I can't resist giving you joy of the signal victory. Report says my nephew is only made a Viscount. Myself is nothing. But the whole nation thinks the least you can do is to give him an English earldom. From the multiplicity of your business, you may have slipt w hat I am going to lay before your eyes. Please to recollect what a chicken-hearted way all the nation was in, low spirited by the war, murmuring at taxes (tho' necessary), grum- bling and dissatisfied in every county. Now comes my hero, the first that attempted to quash the rebellious seamen, locks up the Texel for nineteen weeks, when he could no longer remain. They came out. He flies after the Dutch ; completely beats them, though they resisted like brave men. I know the little etiquette of not raising gentlemen, but by degrees, a very proper distinction for those thirteen gentle lords you made last week. But what has that to do with a con- queror.'' What a different situation all your ministers are in at the opening of the Parliament. The nation joyful. Not a black democrate dare open his mouth. Even our cowardly allies will be ashamed to have deserted us. All success, under God, owing to my nephew. Lord St. Vincent is a brave man ; he merited it ; was made an earl. I leave to you the comparison. All my ancestors only rose by their brave actions, both by land and sea. Makes me think it is the only great way of rising. Am sure, were this properly represented to our good king, who esteems a brave religious man like himself, would be of my opinion. Therefore, I hope to hear soon of his being made Earl of Lundie, Viscount Texel, and Baron Duncan. The first and last titles he owes to his ancient family, the ' Admiral Duncan was the younger son of Alexander Duncan of Lundie. " Lady Mary Tufton, daughter of the seventh Earl of Thanet. She married Sir William Duncan, M.D., younger brother of Alexander Duncan of Lundie, father of Admiral Duncan. 252 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1804. Viscount for his successor to remember the great maii^ who locked up the Dutch, and bravely defeated them. Don't doubt you are proud, as I am, of being related to Admiral Duncan. — I have the honour to be, your most ob. humble servant, Mary Duncan. In recognition of his great services, the Admiral was created Viscount Duncan of Camperdown, and Baron Duncan of Lundie, to which estate he had succeeded by his bro therms death. He lived for nearly seven years after the victory at Camperdown ; and the following letter conveying the news of his death to ]Mr. Dundas, who in the meantime had become Lord Chief Baron, may be inserted here : — Mr. J. Anderson to Chief-Baron Dundas. CORNHILL, Aug. 4, 1804. ... I am very sorry for the melancholy occasion which is the immediate motive of my writing to you at present. This morning early 1 was awoke by an express from Lord Duncan's butler announcing the melancholy intelligence of his master having died suddenly this morning at one o'clock, in the inn at this place. I lost no time in coming here, and it will, I am sure, afford you con- solation to know that he died in the most tranquil manner, and with suffering as little pain as possible. He had arrived here about six in the evening, and after eating a moderate dinner, and taking his pint of wine as usual, he went to bed about ten in good spirits, after expressing to his servant the satisfaction he felt at the prospect of dining with his family to-day. He slept for more than an hour, and then awakening with a sensation of pain in his stomach, he rang for his servant, who having given him a few drops of laudanum, left him for a little, but was soon after alarmed with another ringing of the bell. On his return he declared to his servant he was gone, and that he only regretted dying without seeing his family. The servant sent immediately an express for the surgeon at Coldstream, but before he could arrive his Lordship had expired, and both the servant and the landlady assure me that it was in the easiest manner possible. Your friend Mr. Buchan ^ of Kelloe, who is now here, has written to Lord Melville and to your brothers. An express was sent early ^ George Buchan of Kelloe, in Berwickshire, married Anne, fourth daughter of the second President Dundas by his first wife, Henrietta Baillie of Lamington. i8oi.] MU. DUNDAS APPOINTED CHIEF BAUON. 253 this morning to Mr. Duncan, which would probably reach him alK)ut ten, and I sincerely hope that Lady Duncan may be enabled to sustain herself with fortitude under this severe trial. In March 1801 Mr. Pitfs Administration, whicli hat! now histed for seventeen years, aune to an end in c(mse(|uence of the kinjij^s refusiil to sanction a policy of Catholic Emancipa- tion, and the Addin^on Ministry was formed, after a crisis durin«j; which his Majesty sufteretl from a return of his mental illness, and Wiis at one time in great danger of his life. Mr. Henry Dundas, of course, retired with Mr. Pitt, but, though out of office he was still in power, and able to give a helping hand to his son-in-law the Loril Advoaite. Mr. James Montgomery of Stanhope was at this time Lord Chief Baron of the Scottish Court of Exchequer; and in A})ril Mr. Dunchus writes to him : — " Retiring myself from office, it is natural for me to wish to see the near branches of my family completely settled, and the Advocate naturally forms an essential object of my consideration in that point of view. If the king luul lately died, as there was too much reason for two days to expect, I should not have felt comfortable if Mr. Erskine, or any other person connected with a new Government, had been in the predicament of looking forward to be your successor. I wish now to put that point out of risk.'' Joined to the wish to be of service to a near relation there existed likewise a feeling of distrust of the new Ministry of a kind which it is difficult now to realise, and a dread of seeing the great offices of State placed in the hands of their adherents.^ Lord Chief Baron Montgomery was desirous of retiring, and (as subsequent events showed with too good reason) Lord Advocate Dundas thought his own health unequal to the work which his promotion to the Bench would have entailed uj)on him, and was anxious for the comparative retirement of the Court of Exchequer. Under these circumstances, arrangements for the retirement of Chief Baron Montgomery were easily brought al)out. He resigned, and the Lord Advocate succeeded him. Mr. James Montgomery became Solicitor-General ; and, in the following July his fatlier, the late Chief Baron, was further rewarded for his services by being created a baronet. • See Mr. Canning's letter to the Chief Baron, sttpra^ p. 264. 254 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1804 Some of the new Chief Baron's friends thought that he should have aimed at being Lord President, as his father and grandfather had been before him. Mr. Blair of Avonton, then Solicitor-General, wrote regretting " that you should accept a situation which will fix you for life in an office of much less importance than the one which, you know, I had allotted to you from a firm conviction that there is not a man in our profession who is, in all respects, so well qualified to exercise the duties of it.'" But Mr. Dundas's health had been failing for some time, and he had every reason to welcome a means of escape from tlie constant worry and annoyance of public life. Having been advised on account of his health to pass tlie winter out of England, Chief Baron Dundas in 1804 and 1805 spent six months in cruising with the fleet at sea, and in visits to Lisbon and Madeira. In his journey from Mamhead, where lie had been residing, he was accompanied by Mrs. Dundas and their niece Eliza Drunmiond ^ as far as Plymouth, where he embarked on board the " Illustrious," 74, Captain Sir Charles Hamilton. On the 22d of November the " Illustrious " weighed and stood out to sea followed by the " Glory,'" 98, and the sloop " Rosario.'' Sir Charles was ordered to put his passenger on board the " Naiad,'"* 36, cruising oft' Brest, which was to carry him to Madeira. In standing in towards Brest, the '"Defiance," 74, Captain Durham^ passed the " Illustrious " within hail. A heavy gale from the north-east, however, prevented the "Illustrious"" joining the "Naiad" oft* Brest, and after battling against it for three days Sir Charles agreed at the Chief Baron's request to bear away for Ferrol, oft* which they arrived on the 4th of December. Admiral Cochrane's fleet was lying off Ferrol, and the Admiral agreed to send the Chief Baron to Madeira in " I'Egyptienne," ('aptain Fleming,^ who was to sail next day on a cruise. On the first few days of the cruise, a variety of strange sails were sighted and chased by " I'Egyptienne," but all of them on being over- hauled proved to be merchantmen under neutral flags. On ^ Afterwards married to John Portal, Esq. of Laverstoke, Hants. '^ Subsequently Admiral Sir Philip Durham. ^ Subsequently Admiral The Hon. Charles Elphinstone Fleming. 1805.] A SEA VOYAGE. 255 the 13tli of DetTinhcT, the wiiul beiiifi; favounible for Lisbon, C aptnin Fleininjr, much to the Chief IJaroir.s delight, agreed to run in for a few days. Their patience wa«, however, severely tried hy the dehiys caused by the formalities attencb'nj^ the admission of the shi]) to pratitjue, by which nearly a week hml to be ptussed at tlie anchorage of Paco d'^Arcos, and it was not until the i22d of l)ecend)er that the Chief Baron and Captain Flemintj^ hmded at Lisbon. The frigate remained at Lisbon until the Slst of December. The Chief Baron jwissed the time in visiting the objects of in- terest in the city and its neigld)()urh()0{l. At daylight on New YearV Day 1805, " TEgyptiemie "''' weighed and dropped down the Tagus, accom])anied by a fleet of merchantnien, and again put to sea. After about a week's nm, the anchor was dr()p|)ed, on a lovely evening, in Funchal Bay, and on the next morning, the 7th of January, tlie Chief Baron left the " Kgyptienne'' and landed at Funchal under a salute of thirteen guns. His cousin Sir James Suttie and Lady Suttie were passing the winter at Madeira, and near them a small house standing in a beautiful garden was taken for the Chief Baron. It connnanded an exten- sive view of the town, the sea, the Desertas, and the mountains behind Funchal. The Chief Baron remained at Madeira from the 7tli of January to tlie 12th of Marcli 1805, and during that time suffered much from an attack of fever. He was fortunate in finding himself near liis cousins the Sutties, from whom he received the kindest attention. Not having derived the exj)ected benefit from his residence at Madeira, he became impatient to return home, and looked anxiously for (>aptain Fleming\s return from his cruise. At hist he was made happy by the arrival of Captain Fleming and his frigate on the 9th of March. Next day his journal records : " A sijuadron of large ships seen off the south end of the Desertas, and being suspected to be French, the Indiamen and frigates formed in line across the bay, a beautiful sight, the day being fine and calm. At noon, a breeze springing up, the distiint ships ap})roached, and by signals were ascertained to be English. At night, the AchniraFs ship burned blue lights as signals to tlie other shi})s, which from our windows had a fine effect."" ^•^ March 11. — The bay filled with the s(|uadron and India- men, a beautiful morning, and a splendid sight. The s(|uadron 256 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1805. consisted of tlie 'Northumberland,' 74, flagship of Admiral Cochrane, ' Atlas,' 74, ' St. George,' 98, ' Spartiate,' 74, ' Eagle,' 74, ' Veteran,' 64, and was bound to the West Indies in pursuit of the Rochefort squadron. There were also five Indiamen under convoy of the ' Mediator,' 44. After breakfast. Captain Fleming, Sir James Suttie, and I went on board the ' Northum- berland.' The Admiral ordered the 'Egyptienne' to follow him to the Canaries, and thence to go to England. In the evening the fleet sailed for the Canaries. '''March \% — Went down to the Loo to embark, but mid- day before we got off. Blowing hard, the ' Egyptienne ' had dragged her anchors, and knocked away the bowsprit of the 'Ruckers,' Indiaman, and was in danger of drifting on the Brazen Head. She filled in time and got clear, then tacking back, took us on board, after having had a most dangerous trip of it in the boat. Made sail, and at dusk were off the south end of the Desertas. " March 13. — Calm. Standing in all day towards Funchal. " March 14. — Standing in towards the Cruz with a fine view of Funchal and of the island. Sent a boat on shore for Sir James, Mr. Pringle, and the servants. They dined on board, and agreed that I should go on with Captain Fleming to the Canaries, and then return ; by whicli time he and Lady Suttie would go with us to England. Got the stock on board, and, after parting with our friends, stood out to sea. '"'March 16. — A hurricane of wind, and a tremendous sea; it broke in at the quarter gallery window, and floated the cabin. "March 17. — In the channel between the islands ; all around still cloudy and stormy. About noon, the clouds clearing away a little, the top of the Peak made its appearance. It was long ere I observed it, never looking high enough in the air for this stupendous summit, which far exceeded anything my imagination had figured. It had the appearance of a snowy island up in the heavens, unconnected with either land or ocean. Stood in all day, and by evening were within six miles of the land." After a few days at the Canaries, " I'Egyptienne " made sail for Madeira. After a week passed in Funchal Bay, on the 7th of April Sir James and Lady Suttie came on board, and 1805] A SEA VOYAGE. 257 after a farewell to the hospibihle friends who hml accompanied them on Inwird, the frigate stocnl out to sea. A couple of days later the Chief Baron and the Sutties had the sight of a man- of-war cleared for tu-tion. On the 9th of A})ril three sails were seen by the light of the moon hearing down uj)on them. On l)oard the " Egyptienne "^ the men were at (piarters, the guns loaded, and the lights uncovered, the most impressive sight, the Chief Baron remarks, he hml ever witnessetl. 'I'he strange sail, however, pmved to be English letters of manpie. After a run of alwut six days from Funchal, the "Egyptienne""* ancliored in Delgmlo Bay, about (hisk on the 18th of April. During a two days" visit to the Azores the party landed and rode and drove over the beautiful island. The Chief Baron also consented to declare a young cou})le man and wife ticcord- ing to the law of Scotland on board the frigate. They had been betrothed four years, but had never had a chance of l)eing married by a clergyman, and were too happy at a termination being put to the delay. The " Egyptienne "" left Delgado Bay on the 21st of April, and after a ptissage of fourteen days, on one of which the frigate ran 251 miles in twenty-four hours, cast anchor off* Weymouth. On the 3d of May the voyage came to an end, and after bidding farewell to the officers, the Chief Baron, Sir James and Lady Suttie landed in the barge, the crew manning the yards, and giving them three cheers as they left. Next day, after a six months" absence, the Chief Baron rejoined his family at Mamhead Cottage. Among the Arniston papers there are numerous journals and memoranda connected with the trips taken by the Chief Baron and his family. The following account of a journey from Arniston to England is from the pen of the late Mr. William Pitt Dundas :— "Subsequent to my father"s return from Madeira and taking up his residence in Scotland, the chief incidents which I remember are the almost annual journeys which he took between Arniston and some English watering-place, generally Bath. Their usual fashion was on this wise. He started in an huge yellow coach after the fashion of the day, drawn by 258 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1806. four very good horses, with a fifth by way of outrigger, with another servant. I well remember one of these journeys in which I accompanied him, along with your father and Ann, of wliich one incident was that as the present Gala Water Road was in process of construction, we left the carriage at Bank- house, and walked down to inspect the works, followed by Caro the poodle and Moidy the terrier. The latter not liking the aspect of aflfairs, as soon as he reached the workmen, turned his face towards Amiston, and never stopped till he reached it. Sir Walter Scotfs Waverley had just appeared, and my father was reading it. I quite recollect that he stopped, and giving a great sliout, exclaimed, ' This is Walter Scott ! "* the passage whicli had so attracted him being the arrival of the English- man at the Baron of Bradwardine's, and his surprising the maids in ' the boukit washing,' and their exclamation of ' Hech, sir."* Farther on, in the same journey, my father paid a visit at Welbeck, where, for the first time, I saw the celebrated Greendale Oak, from the acorns of which so many descendants are now flourishing in the Arniston woods. Another visit we paid, not to Lord Lyttelton, but to the grounds of Hagley, for which my father had a great admiration. Lord L. was from home, but we saw everything ; and it was from a bridge in the park that he took the idea of Horace's Bridge and the Inscription. The two were not identical, but the idea was supplied at Hagley. "About 1806-7, being at Mamhead (previous to what I have described above), I recollect a visit my father received from the Princess of Wales. The only lady that I remember accompanying her was Lady Hester Stanhope. I was five or six years old, and extremely disgusted at being brought in from my outdoor play, and dressed in my best clothes for the occasion, and I believe I behaved very ill, but the moment Lady Hester heard my name she took me on her knee, and for the visit we were great friends. She was in mourning for Mr. Pitt." The Princess of Wales to Chief Baron Dundas. The Princess of Wales has, since she had the pleasure of seeing the Chief Baron at her house, been informed that all the worthy and true Pittites intend to have every Wednesday, in commemora- i8o6.] IMPKACHMKNT OF LORD MKLVILLE. 259 tion of tlu'ir iinniortal friend, a social diniur. The Princess thinks that perhaps she might intrude iiymn the Chief Haron in asking him and his friends to come on that day to Blackheath ; tho' the Princess is proud to name herself a I'ittite and sorry for not being a Scotchwoman, for main/ reasons (which the Chief I^aron may easily guess), she would never forgive herself to deprive any of these true disciples from enjoying the recollection of their departed friend. As the Princess does not dare to preside at such a meet- ing, she can only offer her best wishes to the whole society, and that the Pittites may reign for ever and ever, and that their toast may be drunk with success to a certain Illustrious Personage. A gitiueajbr ever. A crown for never. The Princess will be very happy to receive the Chief Baron and Mrs. Dundas, if she is arrived, on Sunday the 19th to dinner. She will try to summon some more of the Scotch friends of the Chief Baron to meet him on that day. The Princess flatters her- self that the Chief Baron can never doubt of the high regard with which she remains for ever, C. P. Blackheath, April ii, 1807. My narrative has here anticipated two important events, the death of Mr. Pitt and the impeachment of Lord Melville. In 1802 Mr. Henry Dundas liad been raised to tlie peerage as Viscount Melville and Baron Dunira ; and, on the formation of Mr. Pittas second Administration in 1804 he had been aj)pointed First Lord of the Admiralty. Lord Melville was workinoj hard at the Admiralty when his official career was suddenly brought to a close. Tiie Tenth Report of a Commission which had been appointed to inquire into certain frauds and abuses, which were said to exist in the management of the affairs of the Navy, was published in February 1805. It contained grave charges against Lord Melville, and afforded the Opposition an opportunity of accus- ing him of having l)een guilty of malversation in the office of Treasurer of the Navy, which be had held for some time sub- sequent to the year 1782. Nor were I^rd Melville's opponents to be found only in the ranks of the Opposition. He liad con- tributed materially to the downfall of the Addington Ministry ; and Lord Sidmouth — by whicli title Mr. Addington wjis now 2(i0 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1806. known — was thirsting for revenge. Mr. Pitt stood firmly by Lord Melville. But he was unable to command a majority against Mr. Whitbread, who moved a series of resolutions in which Lord Melville was accused of a gross violation of the law and a high breach of duty. The division took place on the 8th of April, when 216 voted on each side. The speaker gave his casting vote in favour of Mr. Whitbread's motion. Lord Melville at once resigned office. His name was removed from the list of Privy Councillors. But enough had not been done to satisfy the Opposition. After several debates in Parlia- ment, during which various modes of procedure were discussed, it was resolved that Lord Melville should be impeached, before the House of Lords, of high crimes and misdemeanours. The trial did not take place until April 1806 ; and before that time Mr. Pitt was dead. His constitution, long enfeebled by gout, had given way under the enormous burden of his public responsibilities ; and there can be little doubt that the mortification which he felt at the charges against Lord Melville had helped to injure him. "I have ever thought,'" says Lord Fitzharris, " that an aiding cause in Pitt's death, certainly one that tended to shorten his existence, was the result of the pro- ceedings against his old friend and colleague Lord Melville.'"' He died on the 23d of January 1806. The trial of Lord Melville began on the 29th of April, and ended on the 12th of June, when he was acquitted on all the articles of impeachment. This is not the time to narrate, or examine in detail, the charges against Lord Melville ; but the almost universal opinion of his contemporaries, even of those who bore him no goodwill, was that he was personally innocent of anything in the shape of peculation. In the Amiston collection are a number of letters congratu- lating the Chief Baron upon Lord Melville's acquittal. There can be no doubt that apart from the importance of the acquittal as the defeat of a party attack upon Mr. Pitt's government, the failure of the impeachment gave general pleasure in Scot- land, where Lord Melville was popular, not only on personal grounds, but from the way in which his paramount influence had been exercised on behalf of his countrymen. A political opponent. Lord Minto, has remarked there was scarcely a family in Scotland which had not been under obligations to i8o6.] LOUD MELVILLF/S ACQUIT! AL. 2()1 liini. " Oh, Pitt r writes Mr. Dalljis from Dawlish, " had you lived, how you wouhl have enjoyed this triumph ! J^ut all is for the best. It can no longer be wiid that Pitt's influence, and the power of his Ministry, deprived public justice of its victim.**' Chief Baron Dundas to his Wife. Edinburgh, xdjutu 1806. Mv DEAR Elizabeth, — It would do your heart ^ood to have witnessed what I have done yesterday and to-day, the universal joy of all persons here on your father's acquittal. I really could hardly get along the streets, heing stopped by every person I met. Whether they will illuminate or not is uncertain, as the magis- trates have recommended to the inhabitants not to do so, and I think, for the reason stated, most rightly. But I suspect the people will not acquiesce in the prohibition. I shall not close this till to-morrow morning. To-day I dined at home for the first time this fortnight. Yesterday I dined at Fortune's with twenty- one gentlemen, and you will see in the Edinburgh papers an advertisement for Friday night, which I believe will be more generally attended than any meeting of the kind ever was. Our varlets are at present hanging Mr, Whitbread in effigy in Mr. Blair's back court, with a half dozen companions, and a bonfire blazing, to their inexpressible delight. At the High School to- day, the play was given for the afternoon on this account, to the universal joy of the youth of the city. At Leith the seamen are em- ployed as our boys are, with the addition, I understand, of a porter cask, in which the effigy of the porter brewer is to be consumed. Edinburgh, id June 1806. An engagement Jiaving gone off by accident, I dined to-day at home with the varlets and Anne,^ Mrs. Hamilton 2 being gone to Luffness, whence she returns to-morrow. I have therefore the evening of a day as cold as Christmas to myself, and employ it in writing to you. I went to-day to the last meeting of the committee and stewards at Fortune's ; 490 names stood then on the list, and I fear more may be expected this evening and to-morrow forenoon. By every exertion 550 can be accommodated, but it will require sitting close. 1 should be vexed if any dissatisfaction arose from people * His eldest daughter, wife of Mr. John Borthwick of Crookston. 2 His sister, wife of Colonel Hamilton of Pencaitland. 262 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1806. being obliged to go away for want of room. To-day has produced a great number of the most respectable gentlemen from the country, who come on purpose — Wemyss, Oswald, Stirling of Keir, Houston, etc., and numbers of the like sort. It will be a proud day for your father. Such a meeting as never on any occasion existed before, assembling on purpose to celebrate his acquittal. We are to have fireworks in the evening at half-past ten in St. Andrew Square, and I suspect that many will again illuminate. The provost has ordered all the bells to ring in the evening, bells not being within the letter of " His Majesh/s Solicitor-General for Scot- land in absence of the Lord Advocate's " ^ Proclamation. The Writers to the Signet addressed on Tuesday, after a battle, in which, after every exertion of the new Ministers, the division was 122 to 38, and, of course, all holding offices during pleasure were not present. The Earl of Hopetoun to Chief Baron Dundas. HOPETOUN House, i^hjuiie, Saturday, 1806. My dear Lord, — Yesterday the Justice-Clerk showed me your very agreeable information of Wednesday, and delivered your kind message of your intention to pay us a visit here soon — which I am obliged to request your Lordship to delay till the end of your ensuing term, as next week is our sacrament week here, and the week following we have promised my brother John to go to Rankeillor. By this time I trust Lord Melville has been most fully and honourably acquitted, to the joy of his friends, which all honest men are, and to the shame and confusion of his perse- cutors, and that we shall again have ground of rejoicing in his perfect health and comfort restored. — My dear Lord, yours faith- fully, etc., Johnstone Hopetoun. The Comte de Vaudreuil to Chief Baron Dundas. MoN CHER Milord, — Je n'ai jamais doute de I'heureuse issue qu'aurait I'affaire de Lord Melville ; — la voila terminee, avec une si grande majorite en sa faveur que le jugement pent ^tre regarde ^ "His Majesty's Solicitor-General for Scotland, in absence of the Lord Advocate." The allusion is to the spiteful conduct of Mr. John Clerk, the Solicitor- General, who took upon himself, " in the absence of the Lord Advocate " Erskine, to write to the provost and magistrates of the city, warning them of the conse- quences which might arise in the event of a riot on the occasion of the illumina- tion, with which it was proposed to celebrate the acquittal. The magistrates allowed themselves to be bullied, and recommended the citizens to abstain from the illumination. Mr. Clerk's letter to the magistrates is printed at length in the Court of Session Garland^ Edinburgh, 187 1. i8o6.] LOUD MELVILLE'S ACQUIITAL. 2C.S coinme im triomplu* coniplet. Je mVmpresse i\v vous fii fuire men bieii siDci^re coniplinient et ii Madame Duiidas en iiion iioin et en celui de Madame Vaudreuil. J'esp^re, mon cher milord, que vous 6tes bien sur de tout notre int6rC*t pour ce qui vous touche de pr^s ou de loin. Les marques d'nmitie que nous avons eprouvees de votre part, et de celle de Madame Duiidas, vous out acquis A jamais des droits A notre reconnaissance, et A notre tendre attache- ment. Agreez que je vous en renouvelle I'liommage et celui de ia haute consideration avec laquelle j'ai I'honneur d'etre, — Votre tres-humble et tres-obeissant serviteur, Lk C'- de Vaudreuil.' L€ i^/uin 1806, No. 23 Brvanston Street, London. Mr. George Abercromby to Chief Baron Dundas. My dear Lord, — Most sincerely do I participate with you in the joyful intelligence of Lord Melville's acquittal, an event not only important to himself and to his friends, but to every man who is capable of feeling for the character and reputation of his country. The feelings of the country will not and ought not to be suppressed on such an occasion. Our enemies have been abun- dantly triumphant for these fifteen months. Let them now feel that their victory is turned into a defeat, and that it is now less a reproach to have been convicted with Lord Melville than with Mr. Fox. On receiving the account last night I formed the resolution of riding into Edinburgh this forenoon to see the fun, but on receiving your letter, and one from Boyle, I will delay it until the day fixed for the public fete. If you are to be at Amiston on Sunday I will join you there. — Yours most sincerely, George Abercromby.^ General John Scott of Balcomie married Margaret, daughter of the second President Dundas,by whom he had three daughters.^ The eldest, married to Ix)rd Titchfield,* inherited General Scott'* * The Comte de Vaudreuil, along with the Due de Grammont and others, accompanied the Bourbons into exile at the Revolution. During his residence in Scotland the Comte de Vaudreuil was much at Amiston. ' George Abercromby, afterwards the second Lord Abercromby, eldest son of Sir Ralph Abercromby, and Mary, daughter of John Menzies, Esq. of Fern- tower. He married the youngest daughter of Lord Melville. * Supra, p. 188, note. •* Lord Tiichfield, subsequently fourth Duke of Portland, born 1768, died 1854. 264 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1806. large fortune, the two younger sisters, Lady Moray and Mrs. Canning, receiving each ^100,000 as their portion. In the <:ase of Mr. Canning, his wife'*s fortune was of invaluable service in meeting the expenses of a political career. Lord Titchfield and the Chief Baron were Mrs. Canning's marriage trustees, and between the years 1801 and 1810 a variety of letters upon Mr. and Mrs. Canning''s private affairs are in the collection at Amiston. At that time Mr. Canning seems to have been upon terms of intimacy with his wife's relations, which con- tinued down to the unhappy schism of 1828. Among the letters at Arniston is one from Mr. Canning to the Chief Baron, wliich, althougli primarily upon his private affairs, at the same time shows the feeling of insecurity pre- vailing, in their circle, as to the course which miglit be followed by the new Ministry : — Mr. Canning to Chief Baron Dundas. Somerset House, Feb. 26, 1806. My dear Lord, — You may depend upon it that no use will be made of the powers which you have signed, but such as is strictly conformable to the purposes of the trust for which you are respon- sible. Very probably they may not be used at all. The alarms (which had reached us some time before it became public) of an intention on the part of the new Government ^ to appropriate a part of the Sinking Fund to the supplies of the year, induced us to wish to have it in our power to escape from the ruin which such a measure would bring upon all funded property, but that for the present at least is past by. Many thanks, my dear Lord, for your kind expressions, which be assured I feel as I ought to do. It is indeed a comfort and consolation to me (and the only one which such a loss admits 2) to reflect that I have at least endeavoured, on all occasions, to discharge faithfully the duty which I owed him both as a public and as a private friend. That the loss is, in both views, irreparable, no man can feel more painfully than I do. Yet even amidst my own keen regrets I cannot help turning aside now and then to compassionate what must be, under all the complicated mis- fortunes to which this last and heaviest has been added, the sufferings of poor Lord Melville. 1 All the Talents. - Mr. Canning's allusion is to the death of Mr. Pitt. i8o9.] THE CASTLKKKAGH-CANNING DUEL. 265 .loan (Mrs. Canning) lift town last week. I quit my quarters here on Friday, and shall then ^o to ^ for a (hiy or two, but nuist return a^ain to attend the House of Commons. Our best wishes ever attend you and yours, and I am ever, my dear Lord, most sincerely and faithfully yours, CJko. Cannino. In Septenil)er 1809 the Portland - Ministry came to an end ; and on the 22d of Septenil)er, Mr. Canninf; and Lord Castle- reapjh, having resieatedly pressed upon him. The correspondence upon the suhjcH-'t is lenj^thy, hut enough of it is here given to exphiin the l)earing8 of the case. (Second) Viscount Melville * to the Chief Baron. VVlMBLKDON, 1st July 181I. Dear Chief Baron, — You will be surprised at receiving from me, so soon after your peremptory refusal of the President's Chair, a repetition of that suggestion under circumstances which perhaps may incline you to depart from your resolution. I will state to you as concisely as possible, but without reserve, what has occurred, and the present situation of affairs with regard to that question. It is for your own private information, unless you choose to show it to the Justice-Clerk,'- but I shall communicate to Mr. Perceval your reply to this letter, unless it goes into other matters separate from your own concern in the business. In the course of last week the Prince Regent saw the Lord Chancellor and stated to him his own anxious wish that you should go to the President's chair, unless you preferred the Justiciary, and that Mr. Adam ^ should succeed you as Chief Baron. Next day Mr. Adam came to me and stated that the Prince Regent had made a similar communication to him, and had desired him to wait upon me, and to intimate the desire of his Royal Highness that I should see him on the subject next day. I mentioned imme- diately to Mr. Adam that independently of any other consideration in this matter, it happened that the proposal of your going to the President's chair had very recently been under your consideration, and that for the reasons which I stated to him (as I had also pre- viously explained to Mr. Perceval) you had positively refused. When I waited upon the Prince Regent next day, he began * Robert Dundas, second Viscount Melville, son of Henry, first Viscount, and Elizabeth Rannie. Born 1771 ; President of the Board of Control, 1807, with a seat in the Cabinet ; Secretary of State for Ireland, 1809 ; Privy Seal for Scotland, i8ii. He subsequently held various offices, including that of First Lord of the Admiralty, until 1830, when he retired into private life. Died 1851. '■* The Right Hon. Charles Hope, afterwards Lord President. ' The Right Hon. William Adam of Blairadam. Born 1751. He became a member of the House of Commons in 1774, and held office under Lord North, in defence of whose policy he fought a duel with Mr. Fox in 1780. He was afterwards Attorney-General to the Prince of Wales. In 18 16 he was appointed Chief Commissioner of the Jury Court in Scotland, and, having prospered under every ministry during fifty years, died in 1819. His wife was the Hon. Eleanor, daughter of the tenth Lord Elphinstone. 278 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [i8ii. by adverting to all that had occurred for some years in regard to my father. He also reminded me of what had passed between us on a former day on the subject of the Privy Seal, and of Lady Melville,^ on which latter point he certainly had gone much beyond anything I had in contemplation, especially in the mode of doing it, which I could not conscientiously, as one of his servants, approve, viz., a message from himself to the two Houses of Parlia- ment. He also adverted to my father's intimacy with the late President Blair and their mutual friendship, and his own earnest desire to confer an adequate mark of his own and of public esteem for Mr. Blair's character by providing adequately for his family. He then mentioned my father's and my intimacy with Adam, and the zealous and able professional assistance which the latter had afforded on the impeachment, and how gratifying on that point of view any mark of favour conferred upon Adam would probably be at the present moment. His Royal Highness next explained the nature of his own con- nection with Adam, and the obligations he felt himself under to him, both on his own and the Duke of York's account, and the unjust obloquy to which Adam had been exposed in the clamour against the Duke (of York), and he expressed his strong and anxious wish that Adam should be appointed to the Chief Baron's chair in Scotland, by your accepting the other situation. He con- cluded by stating his belief that if the arrangement took place it would enable Adam, from his good sense and principles, to put down or at least keep in order a parcel of shallow-pated reviewing Reformers at Edinburgh, who were meddling in matters which they did not understand, but who were doing much mischief. I stated to his Royal Highness what had passed lately with you on the subject of your removal to the Court of Session, and my apprehension that the same reasons would still operate to pre- vent your agreeing to it now. But he desired positively that it should be again put to you, and that his strong and anxious wish should be conveyed to you ; a duty which I have accordingly dis- charged by repeating to you, in farther proof of his earnestness on the subject, the grounds on which he placed it. I need scarcely add that the whole was conveyed in the most gracious manner to myself, and with every expression that could be gratifying, and I will only mention farther that the Chancellor gave the same report of the Prince's earnestness and anxiety on the subject. ^ Lady Jane Hope, widow of the first Lord Melville, subsequently married to Mr. T. Wallace, created Baron Wallace. i8ii.] THE PRESIDENTS CHAIR. 279 I need scarcely add, that we (the Ministry) are strongly impressed with the conviction that the most beneficial as well as satisfactory appointment to the President's chair will be by your acceptance of it — Yours sincerely, Melville. The al)ove letter was followed on the 13th of July by a formal offer of the Presidents chair, through Mr. Ryder, Home Secret^iry, by connnand of the Prince Regent, which was de- clined, on the score of ill health. Hut as an inunediatc decision wfts not pressed for, the matter wits allowed to stand over for maturer consideration. Besides the grounds of advantage to the public from the Presidents chair being filled by a man of the Chief Baroifs long experience and knowletlge of public business. Lord Melville urged upon him the advantages arising from the appointment both to his party and political adherents in Scotland, and to his own family. On the 1st of August he wrote : — " I have nothing more to say on the subject of your removal to the Court of Session, except that independently of any private or personal considerations, I am much mistaken if you are not throwing away a public card in Scotland which will not be re- covered during your life or mine." Again he wrote : — Wimbledon, Au^. ii, i8ii. You are very much mistaken if you suppose that I have had in contemplation only the public reasons to which I formerly alluded, and I rather think that I adverted expressly and distinctly also to considerations of a private or personal nature. Your otim eldest sou tvill be the greatest sufferer by your refusal ^ and to an extent which YOU will never be able to replace to him, and I promise you that even you will admit that proposition before you quit Boroughbridge (where Lord Melville and the Chief Baron were to meet). It is quite reasonable that under any circumstances neither you nor your family should be the sufferers, and nobody ever dreamt of such a proposition, but directly the reverse. But, however, quern, Deus vult perdere, etc. etc. I shall at least have done my duty both to the public and to yourself, and shall not be responsible for the consequences. On the 14th of August the Prince Regent wrote to Lord Melville again, expressing his " most anxious wishes for the 280 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1811. accomplishment of the arrangement which has been proposed to the Lord Chief Baron of Scotland; an arrangement so important to the judicature of Scotland, about which my anxiety is such that I have thought it right to write you with my own hand/' If the matter had been left in Lord Melville's calm and judicious hands, the Chief Baron would apparently have con- sented "to obey the commands and gratify the wish of his Prince/' But unfortunately his brother William^ seems to have taken it in hand, and not satisfied with the intimation of the intentions of ministers, as expressed in Lord Melville's letter of the 11th of August, wrote to Mr. Perceval to know " if he had -any objection to the proposition being submitted for the con- sideration of H.R.H. to give the Chief Baron a seat in the House of Lords," an injudicious step which produced a lengthy refusal from Mr. Perceval. There is no doubt that as Lord Melville was a Cabinet Minister, and in direct communication with the Prince Regent himself, his letter of the 11th of August should have been con- sidered a sufficient intimation of what Ministers intended to •do, in the event of the Chief Baron's meeting the wishes of the Prince Regent. But William Dundas's letter, by seeking to tie them down by an express stipulation, was in reality placing the Prime Minister in a position in which no one holding the post could submit to be placed. It is curious how an able man like William Dundas, after a long parliamentary and official life, could have been guilty of so great an indiscretion. How- -ever, his letter and Mr, Perceval's reply drew forth a per- emptory refusal from the Chief Baron to listen to anything farther, and the negotiations for meeting the Prince Regent's wishes came to an end. One of the arguments which Lord Melville used, when try- ing to induce the Chief Baron to become Lord President, was that the family influence would be rendered more complete if he put himself at the head of the administration of the law in ^ Right Hon. William Dundas, third son of the second President Dundas, by his second wife. Miss Jean Grant. Bom 1762. A Commissioner of the Board of Control, 1797 ; Secretary at War, from 1804 to 1806 ; a Lord of the Admiralty 1812 to 1814; appointed Lord Clerk Register of Scotland in 1821. Died 1845. His wife was Mary, daughter of the Hon. James Stuart Wortley Mackenzie (second son of John, third Earl of Bute), and sister of James, first Lord Wharncliffe. aq/atT-^ i8i2.] DEATH OF MR. PERCEVAL. 281 Scotland. Alt]i()u«i:li Midlothian was no longer represented by a nienil)er of the Arniston family, there was still a Tory uuijority. Sir (ieorge Clerk of Penicuik, who had succeeded llol)ert Dundas of Melville, when the latter became a peer on the death of his father, gives tlie following estimate of the jH)litical state of the county, in a letter to the Chief Baron, dated the 26th of March isis :— For Sir (Jcorge Clerk (7 on/), . . 51 For Sir John Dairy mple (fyfiig)y . «^8 Absentees, ..... 20 Doubtful, 17 12() Lord Melville held the office of IVesident of the Board of Control in Mr. PercevaPs Government, and was the confidential adviser of Ministers in regard to the affairs of Scotland, as his father had been before him. The assassination of Mr. Perceval, in May 1812, led to a ministerial crisis, after which Lord Liverpool became Prime Minister ; and in the new administra- tion Lord Melville was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty, the centre of Scottish patronage being at once transferred from the Board of Control to the Admiralty. In writing to her son Henry,^ Mrs. Dundas thus alludes to IMr. PercevaPs death : — " Your father and I have been thrown into the greatest affliction by this unexampled and atrocious murder of Mr. Perceval. It is dreadful for the poor man'*8 family, and dreadful for the country, and they will find it a most difficult, if not an impossible task to fill his situation with as able, and above all, with as good a man. It certainly seems as a punishment for our sins that it pleases heaven to deprive us at such a moment of his services. Next to his own imme- diate family, I know none more to be pitied for his loss than Lord Melville, as he had always the greatest regard for him. Your father is dreadfully shocked by Mr. Perce vaPs death. ""^ The following letter from the Due de Gramont to Mrs. Dundas was written at the close of November 1813, a few weeks after the decisive battle of Leipzig and the surrender of Dresden with its garrison of 40,000 French troops. Tlie power * A boy at the Naval College, Portsmouth. 282 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. > [1813. of Buonaparte seemed to be crumbling to pieces, and the dawn of happier times to be rising upon the long oppressed French royalists : — The Due de Gramont to Mrs. Dundas. Hartwell House, d. 29 Novembre 1813. Le Due de Gramont a I'honneur de presenter ses respects a Madame Dundas et les remereiements du roi pour la boite de grouses qu'elle lui a envoiee ; elle a ete re9ue hier; on en a servi deux sur la table du roi qui les a trouve exeellentes, et meilleures qu'il n'en avait encore mangees. Le roi desire que Madame Dundas fasse parvenir au Lord Chief Baron ses remereiements de son aimable attention. Le Due de Gramont remercie Madame Dundas de la part qu'elle veut bien prendre aux esperanees que cette eontinuite de bonnes nouvelles pent nous permettre ; nous n'avons cependant nous y trop livrer, II faut cependant esperer que le ciel cessera de nous persecuter, et que la bonne cause finira par triompher. Le Due de Gramont a I'honneur de renouveler a Madame Dundas I'assurance de ses sentiments respectueux. Due DE Harcourt to Chief Baron Dundas. Due de Harcourt presents his respects to the Lord Chief Baron, and returns his most sincere acknowledgments for the polite note he has been favoured with. Nothing can be of a more favourable omen for the cause of the Bourbons than to see it sup- ported and hailed by the first magistrate of a country, to which the French princes are so much indebted for its noble and kind hospitality. Wednesday Evenings 6 April 18 14. Due de Harcourt begs to be respectfully remembered to Mrs. Dundas. The correspondence closes with a few lines from the Chief Baron, dated Bath, April 11th, to the Due de Gramont for transmission to the King of France, hoping that his Majesty may long continue to reign over a brave and loyal people, and that the prosperity of his Majesty's future life may in some degree compensate for the unmerited and severe calamities sus- tained, through so many years of adversity, with a magnanimity worthy of his illustrious name. i8i6.] WATERLOO IN 1816. 28.S On leaving Scotland the Conite (rArtois sent to the Chief Haroii Ills portrait, to he added to the pictures at Arniston, in rei'olleition of the attentions he had received while living at Holynxxl, and also a hackgannnon Ik)x, prolmbly as a souvenir of various games with the Chief Haron. The termination of the war against France, in 1815, once more openetl up the continent of Kuro|)e to travellers ; and it was with feelings of curiosity and pride that Englishmen and Scotsmen visited the scenes of the memorable struggle against Napoleon. Mr. Robert Haldane^ to tlie Chief Barun. DUNKELD, I4/A Sept. 1816. Mv Lord, — I lately went to visit the field of Waterloo, and in the true spirit of a pilgrim, wished to carry away with me some relics from that interesting spot. The things which are sold by the inhabitants as memorials of the battle cannot be depended upon as genuine. I therefore resolved to purchase nothing which might have been fabricated for the purpose of imposing upon credulous travellers, but cut for myself staves from the garden of Hugomont, and from the edge of the wood of Bossy, at Quatre Bras, where so many of our gallant countrymen fell. 1 was loath to lay profane hands upon so interesting and venerable an object as Lord Wellington's tree, which had been splintered by shot on the day of action, and since sadly mutilated by the knives of merciless travellers. But, observing some scraggy branches near the top almost broken off, I made Lacorte's son climb up and bring them to me. I wrapped up all the sticks, sewed carefully in a cloth, and they formed a parcel so singular in appearance, as to excite much astonishment wherever I went, particularly amongst the custom- house officers, who do not know what to make of theui. Little as this package was thought of by others, I put much more value upon it than all my luggage besides, and was always much more afraid of losing it than my portmanteau. I left the staves in Edin"^ to get them dressed and made straight, and gave the charge of them to Dr. Grant, with proper injunctions to secure their identity. He writes me that they are now ready, and I have re- quested him to carry the handsomest-looking one to your Lord- ship's house in George Square, and you will gratify me highly by * Professor of Mathematics in the University of St. Andrews, and subsequently Principal of St. Mary's College there. Mwlerator of the General Assembly in 1827. 284 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1817. accepting of it. Had I not been under the necessity of coming directly north to look after some little affairs here, it was my intention to have done myself the honour of waiting upon your Lordship at Arniston, to have given you some account of my excursion, and to have delivered this Waterloo trophy into your own hands. I am not sure that I have fixed upon that sort of present which your Lordship may value most highly, or deem the most appropriate that could have been thought of. But of this I am certain, that I could not offer any memorial of the battle of Waterloo to one in the kingdom who felt more unmingled joy than you did at the glorious issue of that tremendous conflict, or who was more truly proud of the matchless feats which our heroes, and especially our Scottish heroes, there achieved. From the numerous and accurate descriptions which have been published, every person may form a very good idea of the ground on which the battle was fought, but it is impossible to describe the feelings which a person experiences when for the first time (having advanced a little way in front of the farm of Mont St. Jean, to the edge of the ridge), the whole field of battle bursts upon his view, and he feels himself standing on the ground where lately the fate of the world was decided. . . . Yours truly, Rob. Haldane. In the summer of 1817 the ill health of the Chief Baron was a cause of grave anxiety to his family. And with the hope of regaining some measure of strength, he was induced to make a tour upon the Continent, and try the eflPects of a better climate than that of home. He was accompanied by two intimate friends. Sir William Rae ^ and Dr. Haldane of St. Andrews, by his brother General Francis Dundas, and by his eldest son Robert, then a youth of twenty years of age. The lighthouse yacht was placed at his disposal to take him across to Holland, and on Friday, the 25th of July, the party embarked on board the cutter in Leith Roads, where she lay in readiness to receive them. Sail was at once made, and the vessel ran down the Firth before a fair wind, and soon got out to sea. During the voyage, when adverse winds prevailed, against which little progress could be made, their presence was taken advantage of for visiting places of interest along the coast ; instead of beating all day against a head wind. In that ^ Appointed Lord Advocate in 18 19. i8i7.1 JOURNEY IN HOLLAND. fiS5 way Holy Island, l)anil)<)r()ugli, Scarborough, and other places were visited, and it was not until Thursday the Slst, that the cutter came to anchor off the harbour of Helvoetsluys. After a night's rest, tlie |Mirty started next day in two coaches for the Brille, where for tlie first time they saw a Dutch town in perfection, with canals, streets, and trees inter- spersed. The same aftern(M)n they embarked on board a schmjt for Rotterdam, and wind and tide being with them, hiul a pleasant run of three hours up the noble river to llotterdam. From Rotterdam the tour of the chief Dutch towns was made, always travelling, and with much pletisure, by canal. Why Holland had been selected for the Chief Baron''s first tour abroad, the journal does not say. Probably the old educational connection between Scotland and tlie Dutch universities had to do with it.^ His father and his grandfather had been educated in Holland, and he had been brought up in a house where the library shelves were stored with Dutch editions of the classics which they had collected ; and ajmrt from the other sights of Holland which would strike any stranger, he regarded the University towns with peculiar in- terest. For instance, on arriving at Leyden, he goes straight to the chief bookseller^s shop, where he sees many editions of the classics for sale, and on his walk through the town, student life appears through the notice in Latin on the walls of the houses, Ciibiada locanda. It was vacation-time at the Uni- versity, but Dr. Haldane purchased a copy of the Prospectus of Lectures about to be delivered, with the days and hours, all in Latin. They visited the Museum, College Hall, and Library, where the librarian wondered at the Chief Baron's repeating part of the Proemium of Justinian's Institutes, and said he must he an adept in civil law. At Haarlem, besides the great organ, the Chief Baron's affections were divided between the copy of Coster's Speculntn Christianw Salvationist printed in 1440, and a collection of tulip and Hyacinth roots, "all very high priced," which he bought for the garden at Amiston. In Amsterdam, the hotels in 1817 bore the same character for high charges they still maintain, the bill at the Doelen * On this subject, see Dr. Carlylis Autobiography ^ Chapter IV. 286 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1817. being pronounced " enormous and extravagant.'' Besides the ordinary sights of the town, the Chief Baron's country gentle- man"'s instinct led him to visit the prison, a thing which few travellers at that day would have done ; and he seems to have been much struck with its bad management. The party left Amsterdam by canal as usual, the boat coming under the windows of the hotel to take them and their luggage on board. " We dined," says tlie journal, " at Slosten- dam, a nice country inn on the side of the canal, and thence passed through a succession of gardens, villas, and trees ; most enchanting ; the families were all in their summer pavilions on the bank of the canal, drinking their coffee, and we bowed to each other as we passed. Let not the Dutch taste be ignorantly vilified and despised, as it is by fools among us at home. In such a country it is undoubtedly not only the best, but the only possible style of ornamental gardening. Also let no one think of travelling in Holland in summer or in fine weather in any other way than by water, the beauties of the country can be seen in no other way." After sailing or tracking through shrub- beries and pleasure grounds, on a beautiful evening the party reached Utrecht after dusk. The gates were shut, but a trifle opened them, and they tracked along the canal to the landing- place, close to the hotel where beds had been secured for them. At Utrecht, the pleasant tracking along canals, through shrubberies and pleasure grounds, came to an end, and tlie journey to Rotterdam, through Gouda, was performed by road. At Rotterdam, General Dundas and Sir William Rae quitted the party, and embarked at the Brille on their return to Scotland, while the others, in a barouche with three horses, started with the intention of making their way to Berlin. But at Gorcum the Chief Baron became so unwell that the journey to Berlin had to be given up. The party, now reduced to the Chief Baron, his son, and Dr. Haldane, travelled leisurely, halting at Antwerp, Ghent, and other places of interest, and arriving at Brussels at the end of August. They found Brussels so full of strangers, that they had some difficulty in finding apartments — crowds of English, and visitors from all parts of Europe. On the morning after his arrival, the Chief Baron notes that he met Cambaceres, Sieyes, i8i7.] VISIT TO WATERLOO. 887 and David walking together, the first l)eing the most alnmiin- able-Iooking ruffian lie had ever set eyes on. After a short halt at Brussels, the party went on to Waterloo, to which a long visit was paid. At this distance of time a flying visit on a fine summer day is usually all that is devoted by the traveller to his excursion to Waterloo. But a visit to the field, coming so soon after the great battle itself* by ])eople who were deeply sensible of the relief the overtlirow of Buonaparte had given to their country, and who felt the blessing of the cessation of the struggle for existence in which it had been so long engaged, together with sorrow for the death of friends, yet fresh, nuule a visit to the field of Waterl(H> a subject of the deejjest interest. It will not be surprising, therefore, that the Chief Baron spent the afternoon of the day of his arrival at Waterloo, the whole of the next day, and half of the following day, in tracing the course of the struggle, upon the ground, and that tlie record of the impressions made upon him occupies a large space in his journal. The two nights of their stay near the battle-field were spent at the little inn, the Roi d'Espagne, at Gemappes, whose land- lord was a farmer, and the inn the farm-house and offices. At the time of the battle the Koi d'Espagne underwent rapid changes of occupants. On the 16th of June the Duke of Wellington slept in it, on the 17th, Jerome Buonaparte, and on the 18th, at ten at night, arrived the veteran Blucher, and took up his quarters in it. He supped and then smoketl his pipe until two in the morn- ing, when he went to bed. He rose late, not until after ten next morning, and immediately marched with the Prussian army. After the visit to Waterloo the travellers continued their journey to Spa, which, like Brussels, was full of English visitors, all enjoying the opening up of the Continent, from which war hatl so long excluded them. After a fortnight at Spa spent among the many friends he met there, the Chief Baron, his son, and Dr. Haldane, travelled on to Frankfort, and thence to Mayence, descending the Rhine in a boat, a voyage to which a word or two may l>e given. T^ie Journal says : — " Mayence^ Sept. 28. — Hired a boat with two boatmen to carry us down the Rhine to Cologne for five louis-dW. 288 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1817. " Sept. 29. — Weather fine. Sailed in our canoe from below the bridge, and had a delightful day gliding down the stream of this noble river. Below Bingen we passed one of the falls of the Rhine ; the current is strong and rapid, and from the rocky bottom of its bed causes a strong and tumultuous stream like a mill-race. We passed this, and several smaller falls lower down with great rapidity, but no danger, our boatmen always keeping near the shore, and out of the surge of the river. We landed at Caub, thirty miles from Mayence, six hours sail, and slept there. Several Rhine vessels going upstream passed us to-day ; one towed by thirteen horses arrived this evening and moored under our windows. " Sept. 30. — Cold wind and heavy rain which lasted all the way to Coblentz. Below St. Goar we passed through a strong- fall of water, eddy and whirlpool, dangerous to boats such as we were in, if not well managed. It seemed to me to resemble the fall of the Thames at London Bridge near low water. ^ " Coblentz^ Oct. 1. — Rain falling so heavily that it was eleven o'clock before we could embark, when it cleared a little, and we proceeded on our voyage. At Andernach there was a toll of one franc to pay. The toll-keeper's office was shut, and he was gone to his dinner. We went to his house a few doors off with the franc, but he refused to take it, and kept us wait- ing until he opened his office two hours later. The rain con- tinued to fall, but that did not prevent our enjoying the scenery from Andernach down to Lintz, where we landed for the night. The host of the inn, a German, had been seized during the war by the French as a conscript, and sent to serve in their army in Spain. At the peace he was discharged, and had returned to his native village. He and his wife were civil people, but the fare at their house was bad ; a piece of stinking chevreuil, a starved chicken, and two snipe, formed our dinner, but the bread was excellent, and the red Aar wine good of its kind. " October ^d. — Left Lintz in the canoe this morning. The wind was strong from the north, and dead against us ; we 1 The bed of the Rhine has been greatly unproved since 1 81 7, by the removal of the dangerous rocks which caused the falls. Of course the reference is to Old London Bridge. i8i7.] REVIEW AT DOUCHY. 28() sufferetl much from cold. I^uuled at Colojijiie after a six lioiirs'' siiil, where our coachman had arrived on the preceding evening?, ami had secured rooms for us at the ('our Imperiale/' On his way from Colo^rne to ( ahiis the Chief Haron halte.l a few (hiys at Valenciennes, round which the British army of occuj)ation was quartered, and had the good fortune to come in for a grand review of the troops. He says : — *' Or/. 15. — Set out at nine for the review. Al)out eleven reached Douchy, where we saw the army drawn up on the heiglit hetween that village and Houchain. At half-past eleven the Duke appeared on the field, and after he hml ridden up and down the line, the manceuvres hegan. We drove to the knoll ahove Douchy, from which we had, on a fine day, a full view of the most im|)ressive sight I have ever witnessed. Ahout tlijrty thousiuul men were on the field, all in the highest order, and mostly the troops which had fought at Waterloo ; the sight was one which it is impossihle either to describe or to forget. " The Duchess of Richmond presented me to the Duchess of Wellington, and I had an invitation from the Duke to dine with him that day at Cambray, which, from the lateness of the hour at which I returned to Valenciennes, it was out of my power to accept.*" From Valenciennes the party made their way to Calais, where Dr. Haldane (piitted them to return to Scotland. The Chief Baron had obtained leave of absence to winter in Italy, and it had l)een arranged that Mrs. Dundas and his two daughters should meet him at Calais on the way there. He had written iier full directions about what was wanted for the journey, some of which sound amusing now. She is told to bring as little baggage as possible with her. If she can do without the Imperial, or half of it, they would be enabled in the South to keep the carriiige open, which would be a great pleiisure to them all. Clothing of all kinds, exce})t linen, wtus to l)e bought abroad iis needed. She was told to bring two or three large tea-cups with her, for in Itiily " they have no cups larger than a thimble ; the ca.se of knives and forks is also most reciuisite."*' Armed with these instructions, Mrs. Dundas and her 290 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1817. daughters made their way to Dover, embarked in the packet on one day at noon, and after knocking about all niglit off Calais, got into the harbour on the following morning. She had brouglit with her the family coach, a ponderous vehicle ; in addition to which a caleche was bought at Calais, and with these conveyances the family began the journey to Rome. The journey from Calais to Paris occupied four days, on the last of which, from Breteuil to Paris, they were in the carriage from half-past seven in the morning to seven at night, with only a few minutes^ halt at a cook's shop at Lesarches, where for iive francs they had as much as they could eat. After a week spent in Paris, in sight-seeing, theatre-going, and visiting friends, the journey was recommenced on the 31st of October, when, owing to a breakdown of the caliche, Essonne was the limit of the first day's journey. Turin was reached on the 14th of November, a fortnight's journey from Paris, devoid of incident beyond the squabbles with postilions and the differences with postmasters as to numbers of horses to be taken, matters of course in pre-railway days. Up the steep road over the Mont Cenis, the modern road in some places being only in course of formation, the family coach was dragged by a team of eight horses, a novel sight to travellers whose longest journeys had been from Scotland to Devonshire. Southwards from Turin, the route followed was by Bologna and the shores of the Adriatic to Loretto, encountering the furious blasts of wind and rain frequently met with towards the close of autumn in Italy. Swollen by the rain the torrents which had to be forded were coming down like broad and impetuous riveis. Two visits were paid to the Santa .Casa at Loretto, lately robbed by the French' of its ancient treasures, even down to the candlesticks required for the church service. From Loretto the journey was continued to Tolentino and across the Apennines to Rome; and at the mountain inns they met with very indiff*erent accommodation. " On one evening," the Journal narrates, " we reached Valcimara, a most miserable place, but where we had to halt for tlie night. We got some weak soup and hard mutton for dinner — the wine was execrable, and they had no spirits of any sort, no milk, nor sugar, only some indifferent coffee. There was no firewood beyond roots of vines, and some sticks plucked from a dead fence near the i8i8.] WINTER IN ITALY. «9l inn door. The filth of the house wtis extreme, no glass in the window, and this on a tohi frosty nifjjht, with the nioun- buns facing us covered with snow, and in my room neither fire nor fireplace. We retired to tiie aiM)minal)le heds longing for next day." At tliat late time of year, the hust days of November, the higher })arts of the roiul were covered with ice and beaten snow, slippery and gla-ssy, and very unpleasant for travelling upon. The plain at the sunnnit of the mountains was deep in snow, in some parts so deep that the postilions had to leave the road and drive over the open ground ; in others nearly as high iis the windows of the carriage. But at hust the mountain was crossed, and in three days more the jmrty reached Rome, the time occu])ied on the journey from Paris to Rome, short halts included, having been a few days over a montii. Naples was intended to he the halting-place for the first half of the winter, so after a week^s rest in Rome, the ])artv were tigain upon the road. Tiiey slept at Terracina, where were also their friends Colonel Herries and Captain Gordon. The two latter, instead of sleeping at Terracina, set off about seven in the evening to travel all night to Naples. Soon after leaving Terracina, and half way between two picquet guards^ posted only half a mile apart, Herries and Gordon were attacked by five robbers, who fired at the carriage, and danger- ously wounded the postilion, strip])ing the gentlemen of their money and watches. Next morning the Chief Baron and his family left Terra- cina, and on coming up to the place where Colonel Herries had been robbed, found the wounded postilion still there. A little later a soldier brought a letter from the Colonel mention- ing the affair, and saying he had got on to Fondi. On arriving there, the Chief Baron found him, and supplied him with money for continuing his journey. And here the extracts from the Journal may cease. They have been made with the object of showing how a Scottish family made its way across the Continent seventy years ago. liut the object of the journey, the restoration of the Chief Baron's health, was unsuccessful. He spent the winter at Naples and Rome, returning homewards in the following summer through Switzerland, a suffering invalid. 592 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1819. Early in the summer of 1819, and not long before his death, the Chief Baron resigned his office. Lord Sidmouth, who was then Home Secretary, in acknowledging the resigna- tion, expressed liis regret that the state of Mr. Dundas's liealth obliged him to deprive the public of his services. After this he grew rapidly worse, until, on the 17th of June 1819, lie died quietly at Arniston. Besides his eldest son, Robert, who succeeded liini in the family estate, he had four children — Anne, married to Mr. John Borthwick of Crookston ; Henry, Vice- Admiral in the Navy ; William Pitt, Deputy Clerk Register of Scotland ; and Joanna, wife of Mr. George Dempster of Skibo. The personal appearance of Cliief Baron Dundas has been already described.^ His portrait, painted by Raeburn in 1795, bears out the description. His statue, from the chisel of Chantrey, stands in the north-east comer of the Parliament House, almost under the shadow of that of his famous uncle Henry. But in the statue there is an expression of pain, or, at all events, of weariness, which his features did not wear z^^- 1819] FARMING FROM 1787 TO ISIf). «95 containing the threshing nmdiinet) now coming into general use in the south of Scotland. I'he ohl huil(lin<^s of rou^h stone, thatch covered, and phtstered with day or mortar, were rephiced by regular nuuson-work, with tile or slate roofing, the improve- ments on the internal fittings being on a corres|K)nding scale. Chief Haron Dundas lived to see the completion of one great improvement u|)on his estate — the enclosure of the arable land. In the Charter-room at Arniston there is a beautifully executed map of the |)art of Midlothian lying between Dalkeith and Heriot, drawn by General Hoy, and presented by him to President Dundjis sometime alM)ut the year 1755, on which all the enclosures then existing are accurately laid down. At that time Roslin stood u|K)n the eil^^e of the enclosed land, and although, owing to the close succession of mansion-houses u[K)n the North Esk from Roslin down to Dalkeith, and with Dalhousie and Newbattle on the South Ksk, only a short distance from them, parks and home farms covered that district with enclosures, yet a large extent of ground is shown as unenclosed even so low down the country as Loanhead and Lugton. Arniston witii its enclosures stood like an oasis in the midst of the high country desert of bare unenclosed land. Systematic land drainage cannot be said to have existed, in Scotland at least, until the time of Smith of Deanston ; but along with the work of enclosing and building, a con- siderable amount of drainage work was done in Midlothian towards the close of last century, j)rincipally in marshy places where outlets could be got for the springs. From the Arniston estate lx)oks the drains would seem to have been from two to three feet deep, half filled with small stones, covered with a layer of straw, the cost for cutting being 3d. to 4d. per rood of six yards. The main drains were built conduits of stone, carefully formed, and in many instances running as clearly now as when first built. But it was still thought more profitable to plant )X)or wet land than to improve it for agriculture. In a plan of Arniston made in 1791, the damp land is described as " )x>or wet land which ought to be planted,^ any lantl being thought good enough for trees. Of course these outlays u}K)n enclosing, building, planting, and draining were not made without a heavy outlay. But 296 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1819. prices of produce were high, rents rose, and landowners and farmers both prospered. The narrative wliicli Chief Baron Dundas wrote of the improvements made by himself and liis predecessors, and from which quotations Iiave frequently been made in the earlier pages of this volume, is prefaced with the following remarks : — " Having collected, when a boy, from my father's con- versation, and to the accuracy of whose memory I can (as Arnot does in his Crimhial Laiv) bear tlie fullest testimony, a variety of particulars relative to the age of tlie different woods, plantations, and trees at Arniston, I have felt it right and proper to commit tliese to paper, and to leave tliis book in the Charter Room there, not only for the information of our posterity, but that they may, I liope, be encouraged by tlie example of their ancestors, to continue to protect those to which they have succeeded, and to extend them as regularly and progressively as we have done : assuring tliem most solemnly that, after tliirty years' experience, no pleasure is to be compared with that wliich a man enjoys in contem- plating the woods he has planted, and sees yearly advancing in their progress, especially if to that is joined a taste for, and cultivation of, literary pursuits, and a conscientious endeavour to discharge the duties of life honestly and virtuously. I have subjoined to this narrative an exact account since the year 1800 of all tlie timber I have cut and disposed of, with the sums of money I have actually received, that my descendants may see that their own interest is deeply concerned in continu- ing that attention to their woods, which I earnestly recommend. They will reap the benefit of those acorns I am now committing to the ground, and receive the value of those seedlings which are now planting out from my nurseries, as I am now enabled to defray all the expenses of these and other more extensive embellishments and improvements by the sale of trees planted by my great-grandfather, who above a century ago commenced those plantations, which his son and his grandson so wisely cherished and extended.'' At the close of last century, when the Chief Baron was carrying out his improvements, the old Parliament House i8,9.] [MPUOVKMENTS AT ARNISTON. 297 at E(iinl)urgh was bein^ rebuilt. No care was taken to pre- serve the characteristic carviiippt with which its masonry hml GARDEN GATE BUILT OF STONES FROM THE OLD PARLIAMENT HOUSE {except the Mask on the top). been enriched. These were treated as mere rubbish. J^ut the Chief Baron, in order to preserve a part at least of that old buildintr witli which his family hml l)een so long connected, 298 AHNISTON MEMOIRS. [1819. brought many cartloads of the old stones to Arniston, where they were used for ornamental doorways and bridges about the pleasure grounds. In particular, the Royal Arms were built into the new pediment by whicli the tame and unbroken out- line of the soutli front of Arniston house was being relieved. The Cliief Baron"'s love of old associations also led to the erection of tlie pillars of wliicli a woodcut is given below. " The pillars of that gate,*" lie writes in his ]\IS., " witli the two BEECH AVENUE GATE, WITH PILLARS TAKEN FROM NICOLSON i^TREET. lions on the top of them, stood in front of Mr. Mitchelson^s, afterwards Dr. Bennet's, house, in Nicolson Street, and were purchased by me for twenty guineas. They were erected when I was a boy at the High School about 1766 or 1767, and it was one of the first houses in that street.'' He had to pass tlie pillars on his way to school, and as Edinburgh grew, the house to which they belonged was pulled down, and so he bought his old friends and put them up at Arniston. i8i9.] THE CHURCH OF BORTHWICK. 899 The old church of Horthwick, which, tus we have already seen, liad fallen into a niitious state when the vestry was bought by Sir James Duiulas in IGOG,^ was destroyed by fire about tiie year 1780. The church which was erected, after the fire, to re})lace the old building, was a hideous Imm-like structure, relieved outside by a pitiful little belfry. Inside, this second church was as Imre as a l)arn, a gallery at each end, the pulpit in the centre of the south wall, and facing it a platform on which wius phu'ed a large |)ew with chairs and a fireplace for the Arniston family. A monument to the second President Dundas stora, p. 6. - '* Dined at Fushie Bridge. Ah ! good Mrs. Wilson, you know not you are likely to lose a good customer!" wrote Scott in 1827, to which Ix)ckhari adds : " Mrs. Wilson, landlady of the Inn at Fushie — an old dame of some humour, with whom Sir Walter always had a friendly colloquy in passing. I l)elieve the charm was, that she had passed her childhood among the Gipsies of the border. But her fiery Radicalism latterly was another source of high merriment." — Lockhart's Lt/e 0/ Scoff, vol. vii. p. 86. ^ "The Chief Baron, my early, kind, and constant friend, who t«x)k me up when I was a young fellow of little mark or likelihood." — Lockhart's /J/c of Scott, vol. iv. p. 336. 300 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1819. yet that tlie latter had grievously oftended her. ' He had pit up," she said, ' in the kirk the Lord's Prayer and the Ten Com- mandments, and when a remonstrance was sent to him against such idolatry, he just answered that if tliey didna let him alane, he would e'en pit up a Belief into the bargain.' " ^ Life of Barham, vol. i. p. 130. BRIDGE MADE OF STONES SAVED FROM THE OLD PARLIAMENT HOUSE. CHAPTKH XIII. KOIJKRT DUNDAS OF AUNISTON. KoHKKT DrxDAs, eldest son of the Chief Baron Dunchts, wiis l)orn on the 19th of June 1797, at his father's house, No. 57 George Square, Edinburgh. He wiis e(hicated at the High School of Edinburgh, and at Dr. Bond's at Hanwell, as were also his brothers Henry and William, a favourite school at that time for Scotch l)oys. During short holidays, when the length of the journey did not permit of Robert going liome, he and his brothers used to visit their relations ; Lord Melville at Wimbledon, William Dundas in Grosvenor Street, and old Sir David Dundas at Chelsea Hospital. I^dy Dundas was very kind to the boys ; and a portrait of her husband the General, now at Aniiston, was given by her to the Chief Baron in exchange for a water-colour of the bovs. After leaving Hanwell Robert Dundas completed his studies by a course of lectures at Edinburgh University. PVom his earliest days he was passionately fond of field sj)orts, although at the beginning of the present century there was but little sport to be had in the lowlands of Scotland. For nearly four hundred years an Act of Parliament had been nomi- nally in force which forbade the slaughter of partridges, nmir- fowl, and some other birds from Lent till August. But the close-time thus ordained seems to have been but little observetl. In the Arniston house-lM)oks there are entries of payments for j)artridges in March, and for nniirfowl in July. The first President Dundas, writing from his Highland cjuarters in June 1743, says, "Fishing goes on, and Tom hath taken a little touch of shooting, but Currie's and Vogrie^s dogs seem good for nothing."*^ The first mention in the papers at Arniston of ])liea.sant.s 302 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1797. there is in 1757, when tlie following entries occur in tlie account book of the Second President Dinidas : — Feb. (), 1757. l(y Pheasants, . .£740 10 Pheasant hens, . 4 10 1758. 18 Pheasants, . . 7 I6 1759. Pheasants, . . 6 16' 6 In the liouse-books are frequent entries of barley given out for the " pheasant fowls."" But want of shelter and absence of protection from vermin rendered unsuccessful this first attempt at naturalising pheasants in the Arniston woods. Towards the close of the eighteenth century greater atten- tion was turned to the systematic preservation of game. Notices were published in the newspapers by many of the landed pro- prietors, among others by Lord Advocate Dundas of Arniston, warning poachers that they would be prosecuted according to law, and hoping that no gentleman would hunt or shoot upon their lands without leave. An association of Midlothian Heritors was formed about the same time for tlie prosecution of persons trespassing in pursuit of game. The winter of 1794-5 was very severe, occasioning great destruction of the breeding stock of game, at that time small at the best. At a meeting of the Heritors of Midlothian held within the old Justiciary Court-room on 11th July 1795, it was resolved that a Jubilee should be given to the game during the ensuing season. The meeting also resolved to enforce the law for the observance of close-time, and that all persons trans- gressing the law in that particular should be prosecuted, with- out distinction. In the advertisement announcing the Jubilee, nmirfowl and partridges are specified but not pheasants. The summers of 1795 and 1796 did not suffice for repairing the damage done to the game by the severe winter of 1794, for on August 3d, 1796, the Midlothian Heritors were again obliged to resolve, " that as from all appearance a good deal of corn would remain uncut on the first of September, and that the partridges were very scarce in most parts of the county, having not yet recovered the inclemency of winter 1794, the lieritors postpone the commencement of the time for killing partridges to the 1st of October, instead of the 14tli of September."' In the following year, 1797, pheasants were turned out in 1797] (JAMF^PKKSKHVING. SOS Dalkeith Park,' aiul proper measures having I)eeii taken for their preservation, they soon spreml over the a(r)oinin<»; eountrv. The Jissistanee of the nei«i;hhoiirs was asked by an intimation — "That a few phejisiuits have hitely l)een turned out in Dalkeith Park with an intention to encourage their hreedinji; in this part of the eountrv, and as some of them have already been seen at a distanee from the park, it is earnestly hoped that the roughs of Stamford and Dover. After filling various sulx)rdinate offices he was apjwinted Master of the Mint, and Vice-President of the Board of Trade, and a Privy Councillor in 1845. Sir George died in 1867. * Mr. Alexander Maconochie, afterwards the second Lord Meadowbank. 314 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1822. or seven years hence ; adding that if ever the train of events and the wishes of his friends should lead him to stand for the county, he would come forward fairly and openly and tell Sir George he meant to dispute the field with him, but until that time should arrive he would have nothing to do with the matter. In reply. Lord Melville writes : — ** Admiralty, 20 March 1819. " I do not recollect to have received any similar commmiication with more pleasure than your letter of March 1 5 ; the good sense and proper feeling which pervade every line of it were very gratifying to me^ and it is scarcely necessary for me to add, that I entirely concur in your views of the subject to which it relates. "It would have been quite unnecessary to announce to Sir George Clerk that when he was elected for Midlothian there was no pledge either expressed or implied that those who supported him were bound to him for the rest of his life. Whenever a dissolu- tion of Parliament shall take place, you will be at full liberty to come forward if you choose it, and if it shall be in other respects convenient or agreeable to you, and I have no doubt you will find the county as well disposed to yourself, as they have been for a century past to others of your family who have gone before you." On the 9th of April 1822 Robert Dundas married Lilias, daughter of Colonel Durham Calderwood of Polton, a descen- dant of the famous Sir Thomas Hope, Lord Advocate in the reign of Charles the First, and also of Sir James Stewart of Goodtrees, Lord Advocate to King William and Queen Anne. Mrs. Dundas notes in her diary, " April 9th, went to dinner at Polton. After dinner, Robert and Miss Durham were married, and went to Arniston."" Two years later, in 1824, he obtained his first promotion at the Bar, being appointed Advocate-Depute in room of his friend John Hope, who became Solicitor-General. The second Lord Melville, who held the office of first Lord of the Admiralty in Lord Liverpool's Administration, was at this time the Scottish Manager. " The rise,'' says Lord Cock- burn, " of Robert Dundas, Lord Melville's son, was an impor- tant event for his party ; for, without his father's force, or power of debate, or commanding station, he had fully as much good sense, excellent business habits, great moderation, and as i826.] MALACHI MALAGROWTHKH. 315 much candour »us, I sup{K)se, a party leader can ))ractise/' The first symptoms that his influence wius waning were seen in 1826, when the Government, alarmed by tlie commercial crisis of the previous year, resolved to bring in a bill to prevent the issue of bank-notes for a smaller amount than £5. In Scotland, where a greasy £1 note was received witli greater confidence than a brand-new sovereign or a crisp Bank of England " fiver,"^ this proposid wiis most un])o})ular. Mr. Downie of Appin, mend)er for the Stirling burghs, gave a significant answer when Mr. Canning asked him if the one-pound notes were not very dirty. " Very,"^ he said, "and if you meddle with them, you'll foul your fingers."*" Lord Melville supported the obnoxious measure, and was roundly abused for doing so. But the measure might have become law had not Sir Walter Scott, one evening in February, suddenly thought of taking up the cudgels against the Govern- ment. " I am horribly tempted,^ he writes in his diary, " to interfere in this business of altering the system of banks in Scotland."' Next morning, the 18th of February, he set to work ; and on the following day the first letter of Malachi Malagrowther was finished. A second and a third followed. As is well known, these famous letters created an enormous sensation. They appeared in the Edinburgh Weekly Journal in February and March, and were often quoted during the discussions which afterwards took place in Parliament. The proposed measure was, so far as Scotland was concerned, aban- doned ; and the fact that the Scottish banks retained the privilege of issuing £\ notes was universally said to be the work of Sir Walter Scott. The Government was seriously annoyed. " The Ministers,'" Lockhart wrote to Sir Walter, " are sore beyond imagination at present ; and some of them, I hear, have felt this new whip on the raw to some purpose." No one was angrier than I^rd Melville. "Sir Robert Dundas," Scott writes in his diary, " to-day put into my hands a letter of between twenty and forty pages, in angry and bitter reprobation of Malachi, full of general averments, and very untenable arguments, all written at me by name, but of which I am to have no copy, and which is to be circulated to other special friends, to whom it may be necessary to ' give the sign to hate." I got it at two o'clock. 316 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1826. and returned it with an answer four hours afterwards, in which I have studied not to be tempted into either sarcastic or harsh expressions/"* Among the papers at Arniston are Lord Melville's letter written at Sir Walter Scott, and Sir Walter's reply through Sir Robert Dundas : — Lord Melville to Sir Robert Dundas. Private. Admiralty, 6 March 1826. My dear Sir, — I received in due course your letter of the 10th ulto., with its enclosure, and I have since seen various appH- cations from other clerks in the Law Departments in Scotland for increase of salary. I hope the salaries of the Judges will be in- creased, and at any rate I shall use my best endeavours for that purpose, because I think it of great importance to the respecta- bility of the Bench in Scotland, as well as in England, that the salaries of the Judges should be to such an amount as will induce well-employed competent lawyers to accept the situation. Since the salaries of the Judges in Scotland were fixed on their present footing, the emoluments of the Bar, as I am informed, and indeed know to be true, have increased out of all proportion. With regard to the Clerks of Session and sundry other and inferior clerks, and even judges (the commissaries for instance), there does not appear to me to be the slightest ground for any such increase, and if my opinion is asked, I shall give it accordingly. There is no lack of candidates for those situations, and of the first abilities, or at least fully adequate to the duties they have to perform. In your same letter of the 10th ulto. you advert to the question of the Paper Currency in Scotland, and you state, as others have since done, that the introducing a metallic circulation into that country in lieu of their small notes would be injurious to its interests. I cannot pretend to any great depth of knowledge on that subject, but it is not new to me as far as regards Scotland, and I have no difficulty in saying that my opinion has long been at variance with that doctrine. It has appeared to me for several years that the extent and facility of banking credit in that country and the speculations of all kinds, agricultural, commercial, and manufacturing, to which it has given rise, are hollow and unsafe. It is true, as you state, and for reasons which you assign, that the banks in Scotland as a body, are more solid and more worthy of confidence than is generally the case in England ; but if they had i826.] LORD MELVILLE'S LETTER. 'M7 not hitherto been, and were not still, in an implied league to support each other, I do not believe that they could with justice have been so much extolled for their solidity. I know a few anecdotes on that subject which would sound ominously if pub- lished to the world, and I am confident that for their own sakes they had better not provoke too much probing of the system. On the other hand, there can be no question that as far as regards the granting of cash credits, anything which would suddenly derange that system would not only be injurious to Scotland now, but would affect her permanently if it is (as they assert) necessarily interwoven with the power of issuing notes under £5. I say nothing so much of the banking system as relates to the dis- counting of bills or to deposits, as these branches are common to all bankers in this kingdom as well as elsewhere, except that the allowing of interest on deposits is not peculiar to Scotland, but is common in England, independently of any circulation of small notes. Sundry delegates from the Scotch banks have recently come to London, and if they can make out that the abolition of small notes will necessarily and unavoidably have the effect of putting down altogether the system of cash credits, I think they will establish a case which will call for a different course to be adopted in Scotland from what is contemplated for England. I am by no means satisfied from anything I have yet heard, that such a consequence would follow, even at Glasgow and other manufacturing districts where small notes (or sovereigns) are required for the payment of their workmen, and still less do I believe that it would follow in the eastern parts of Scotland, where the notes of £5 and £5, 5s. would to a considerable extent supply the place of small notes. I have heard and believe that a much greater proportion of the Royal Bank circulation (which is considerable in Glasgow) is in small notes, than of Sir William Forbes' House, which is chiefly at Edinburgh and the neighbour- ing counties. But whatever may be the real state of the case in that respect, you will observe that I have herein adverted to Scotch concerns only ; though there is another part of the subject equally deserving of consideration, viz., how England may be affected. And here I cannot help reminding you of the profound and total silence of every resolution and petition on this point ; the people of North Britain who have lately come forward have either overlooked it altogether, or have thought, as a matter of course, that England was bound to submit to every inconvenience and loss which Scotland might think fit to impose upon her. I presume it will 318 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1826. not be denied that a pressure on the money market, or any com- mercial difficulty, is likely to affect both comitries at once, and not one exclusive of the other. If that is the case, and supposing England to have a considerable gold circulation, and Scotland none, it is quite clear that whenever such pressure arises, Scotland must depend, and be a dead weight upon England, for whatever gold coin she may require over and above what she ought to have, and what she would have if her small notes were extinguished. This inconvenience is unimportant in ordinary times, but at pinching periods it might be most serious, and it would affect the money market much beyond the difference between the ordinary metallic circulation of England and of Scotland. If the banking delegates from the north can point out any mode by which England can be protected from such an invasion on her circulation, they will undoubtedly remove one of the objections to a continu- ance of small notes in Scotland. I have perused within these few days two letters in the newspapers from a certain Mr. Malachi Malagrowther, and I should not now have mentioned them if I had not heard with sincere regret that they are from the pen, of Sir Walter Scott. I know the people of Scotland as well as he does, and I also know full well how they ought to be dealt with ; and I am much mis- taken if the period is far distant (if it has not already arrived) when every person in that country, whose good opinion he would most wish to cultivate, will not join with me in condemning, on public grounds (I will not condescend to advert to private feelings), the style and tone of those letters. I do not quarrel with his opinions on the Scotch banking system and paper currency ; many of his observations and arguments on those matters are very much to the purpose, and deserving of great consideration, and if they are not altogether new or original, it would be very unreasonable to find fault with him merely on that account. But I do quarrel with him, first for the inflammatory tendency of his letters, secondly for the gross misrepresentations which are to be found in every paragraph, and almost in every line of them, except where he discusses exclusively the professed subjects of the letters ; and thirdly for his insulting taunts and unfounded attacks on the present Government. Before adverting to these points separately, it may be worth while to inquire what foundation there is for the allegation, not only in these letters, but in almost all the resolutions and petitions which I have seen, where we are told with an air of triumphant superiority, that the permission to issue small notes has existed in i826.] LORD MELVILLE'S LETTER. 819 Scotland above a century, meaning thereby to apprise the unin- fonned lieges (as I understand the matter) that En^huid has not had the same happy lot. Now, it so happens that with the exception of twenty years, viz., from 1777 to 1797, the law in that respect has been common to both countries from the earliest periods to the present time ; and yet (to show the extraordinary extent of misconception on that ])oint) no less a person than Mr. Kirknian Finlay informs us in a set of resolutiims adopted by the Merchant Company at Glasgow that " the permission to English banks as to the issue of notes under £5 is of very recent origin, wherejis in Scotland it existed before the Union," etc. I trust that the Government whose proceedinpfs are animadverted upon by Messrs. Malagrowther, Finlay, and others, are not so ignorant of the laws and history of their country on these matters as their said assailants. But to return to Mr. Malachi's letters, I am persuaded you will agree with me that I am fully justified (on the first point) in stating that they are of an inflammatory tendency, and it is difficult to conceive that such was not the meaning and intention of the writer. The questions as to paper currency, or the advantages or otherwise, of a metallic circulation, do not belong exclusively to Scotland, or to England, or to France, or to any other country, and therefore the attempts to persuade uninformed persons on the north side of the Tweed that these questions are part and parcel of the ancient and fundamental laws of Scotland, and that the meddling with them by the Imperial Parliament, or with anything that could possibly affect "cash credits," would be a violation of the articles of the Union, is so preposterous, that it is impossible to receive these remarks as arguments addressed to reason and common sense : they are directed to the passions of the ignorant and the illiterate. I little thought, if Sir Walter Scott is really the author of these letters, that he would ever have been found to be dabbling in such an impure stream. The honest claymore to which he appeals had but one edge : popular inflammation is a two-edged weapon, and is seldom resorted to by those who really wish well to their country. On my second head of charge, the plentiful crop of misrepre- sentation which may be gathered in these letters, I really know not where to begin with instances, and still less where to end with them, unless I were to copy and animadvert upon every separate paragraph of the letters. Almost all that is stated as to the changes in the jurisprudence, and in the revenue system of Scot- land, and in the motives of those who originated or acquiesced in 320 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1826. those charges, is, to my certain knowledge, absolutely untrue. Even in minor instances, and which he professes only to quote as proofs of a contemptuous animus towards Scotland in recent years, he is equally at variance with the fact. For instance (to begin from my own shop), he tells us that "till of late, there was always an Admiral on the Scotch Station." I never heard of an Admiral on that Station till after the renewal of the war in 1 803, and Mr. Malachi's memory, if he is as old as Sir Walter and I, must have told him so. The assertion I believe to be wholly unfounded, and / am the only person who ever left an Admiral there during peace, and I only withdrew him when the Revenue Cruisers were taken from under our orders. Again, we are told '* that till of late years there was always a Commander-in-Chief, with a Lieutenant-General and two Major-Generals under him." I believe this assertion to have as much foundation as the other, as far as relates to periods of peace ; and I observe in a Scotch Almanac of 1783, when the war was scarcely ended, and before the Definitive Treaty was signed, that the Scotch staff then consisted of two Generals, viz., Mackay and Skene. The next instance, as to the Scottish Yeomanry (for he alludes to them exclusively) having been deprived of their allowances, is, I be- lieve, equally untrue, with the additional demerit of being very mischievous. I understand, on the contrary, that the Yeomanry Allowances have lately been increased. Mr. Malachi says truly that these instances are perhaps trifling, but he adds that they display the anirmis towards Scotland. I am not conscious of being prone to ascribe improper motives to any person, especially to one for whom I have felt an affectionate regard ; but really if Mr. Malachi had only the animus of misrepresentation, it would be difficult for him to stumble on a more unfortunate collection of assertions than are to be found in those letters, always ex- cepting where he is discussing only his proper questions of banks and currency. Perhaps it might only be intended as a correct representation of the Malagrowther character, in like manner as a very honest gentleman may without offence, or any impu- tation on his morality, go to a masquerade in the character of a highwayman. If that is the case, I shall regret having mis- conceived Mr. Malachi' s meaning and intention; but I must, in that event, be permitted to remark that in these letters the part is greatly over-acted. These last observations apply equally to my third head of charge, viz., his unfounded attacks on the present Government. He assumes, or rather asserts broadly, that the intention to i826.] LORD MELVILLE'S LETTER. 321 abolish small notes in Scotland was entertained by the Government on the sole ground of establishing a system of uniformity with England, and not with any view to the advantage of Scotland ; and also that the resolution having been adopted to make it simultaneous with England, or at the end of six months, such resolution had subsequently been abandoned, and the period extended to six years, therein manifesting a " temporising and unmanly vacillation." Possessing, as you will readily believe, full knowledge as to everything that has been done, or intended to be done, by the Government on those several points, I deny flatly and unequivocally that there is the slightest foundation for any of the above assertions or insinuations ; they are wholly and absolutely untrue. Our first impression was to leave Scotland untouched, and to comprehend in the measure only England and Ireland. On further discussion at a subsequent period, and after the receipt of information of which some amongst us had not before been in possession, it was judged advisable to include Scotland — not for the sake of uniformity, which no one ever dreamt of as a reason for such a change, but because it was thought for the permanent interest of that country, though it was deemed to be inexpedient that it should take effect there as soon as in England, or at an earlier period than six or seven years. Such are the real facts, and I need not point out to you how totally at variance they are with the assertions of the Malagrowther. Our decision may have been wise or the reverse ; but here again a course was adopted the more effectually to guard against the risk or the evil effects of its having been erroneous. I wrote myself repeatedly to request that some well-informed gentlemen from the different banks might come to London in order to afford the fullest information on the subject, because it might very well happen that in legislating on a measure of that description various details which might be applicable to one part of the kingdom might be inapplicable and injurious to the others, and in the meantime everj'thing relating to the Scotch question (and indeed the Irish also) was suspended. These gentlemen are now come to I^ndon, and I presume that in a few days, or at least an early period, proper opportunities will be afforded to them of explaining at full length everything they may think fit to urge upon the question. I have now performed a task painful from deeply rooted feel- ings of regard and attachment to the individual whose assertions I have been compelled to notice, but his name having been osten- tatiously put forth on the occasion, it has been impossible for me to avoid dealing with these assertions as they really deserve. I X 322 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1826. must request that you will communicate this letter in extenso to Sir Walter Scott, and you are at liberty to do the same if you chuse to any others of my private friends, only taking care that no copies of it are taken. — I remain, my dear Sir, yours sincerely, (Signed) Melville. Sir Robt. Dun das, Bart. Sir Walter Scott to Sir Robert Dundas. My dear Sir Robert, — I return you Lord Melville's letter, and as it is chiefly intended for my perusal, I am under the neces- sity of adding a few observations. My Lord Melville is fully entitled to undervalue my arguments and contravene the facts which I have aired. Very possibly the former may not be worth minding, and the latter in some degree incorrect, though I believe the general statement will be found substantial. But I think it hard to be called a highwayman for taking the field on this occasion when God knows I had no personal booty to hope for. I think Lord Melville might have at least allowed the credit of Don Quixote, who took the field as an imaginary righter of wrongs. Twice in my life I have volunteered in public affairs. Once about twenty years ago when, with zeal if with little talent, when I did so on behalf of an honoured friend and patron. By doing so I gave great offence to persons then high in office, some of whom thought it worth while to follow up the debit with some- thing like persecution, insisting that I should be sent to Coventry by every friend I had connected with that side in politics. I have never regretted that I did this, though the result was painful. In the present case the concern, which as an individual I am bound to take in the welfare of my country, has appeared to me to dictate another interference at which, to say truth, I did expect from the beginning some of my great friends would be displeased. I cannot complain of the consequences in either of the cases, since I incur d the risque of them voluntarily. But I think the motive leading me to a line of conduct which is at least completely disinterested, ought to have been considered. I am perfectly aware that the pamphlet was warmly written, but its subject was warmly felt, and I would not term a blister inflammatory merely because it awakened the patient. So much for intention and manner of expression. I have not the vanity to think Lord Melville wished me to enter into argu- i826.] SIR WALTER SCOTTS REPLY. 328 ment on the subject. Were 1 to do so with a view to his Lord- ship's private information, I coidd say very much connected with matters in which he is deeply interested to show why the course I have taken is beneficial to Scotland and to his Lordship as the guardian of her subjects. But the mode in which his Lordship has intimated his sentiments renders this impossible. I might, I think, complain that so long a letter is sent for the purjK)se of being shown to his I^)rdshi])'s private and confidential friends, and is not to be copied — although I am so deeply impli- cated — or even a copy of it permitted to remain with me, the person at, though not to whom the whole is written. Most of these individuals must in our little and limited circle be my friends also, and it seems hard that where such sharp language is used I am to be deprived of the usual privilege of putting myself on my own defence, and that before such a special jury. The circumstances respecting the Naval Station and Military force are not written by me on my own authority, for I know nothing of the matter, but were inserted on the information of a personal friend, no less of mine than of Lord Melville, and they really are not founded on anything of much importance, and the general statement is not I think untested. The clubbery of our great Officers of State is certainly accurate. The facts alluded to by Lord Melville respecting something like insecurity of the banks I certainly never heard. But who was more distressed during the changeful events of the last war than the Bank of England } And so must every great commercial body during such extraordinary circumstances — it is not for such but for the ordinary state of commerce that laws are made. When danger comes according to circumstances Marshal Law is proclaimed. The Habeas Corpus is suspended, and the issuing of specie from the bank is dispensed with. But these, like the appointment of a Dictator in Rome, on the dictates of stem necessity. Legislators do not make laws for them. I must with whatever pain to myself understand the circula- tion of such a paper without any copy being permitted as a general annunciation to Lord Melville's friends that Malachi is under the ban of his party. I am not surprised that Lord Melville parts lightly with a friendship which, however sincere, cannot be of any consequence to him. He cannot prevent me from continuing the siime good wishes to him which no man has more sincerely enter- tained, and which no endurance of his resentment can alter. Other times may come before we are either of us elsewhere, and he will find Walter Scott just where he was, without any feeling of animosity, but with the same recollection of former kindness. S24 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1826. I own my intention regarded the present question much less than to try if it were possible to raise Scotland a little to the scale of consideration from which she has greatly sunk. I think that John Hume mentions that Hepburn of Keith, a private gentleman of pleasant manners and high accomplishments, was regretted by the Whigs as having induced him to sacrifice himself to a vain idea of the independence of Scotland. With less to sacrifice and much fewer to regret me, I have made the sacrifice probably as vainly. But I am strongly impressed with the necessity of the case, and I know that not a man will speak out, but one who like myself is at, above and below consequences. Scotland is fast passing under other management and into other hands than Lord Melville's father would have permitted. In points of abstract discussion, quickness of reform, etc. , the Whigs are assuming an absolute and undisputed authority. Now here was a question in which the people might be taken absolutely out of their demagogues, and instead of that our numbers strengthen the hands of these men with ministerial authority to cram the opinions of these speculative economists down the throat of an unwilling people, as they have crammed a dozen of useless experiments already. I could say more of this and to the same purpose, but I need not make both Whigs and mistaken Tories alike my enemies. And yet, if I could do good by doing so, I would not care much for any personal con- sequences. Concerning the first part of Lord Melville's letter you are, I am sure, aware that individually I rather discouraged the applica- tion of the Clerks of Session for an augmentation, and signed the memorial in deference to the opinion of my brethren who, enter- taining such a sense of their pretensions, I did not think I had any title to withdraw myself from their body. I certainly con- sider that we were and are harshly treated in the case of our brother Ferriar. As to the argument that good men will be got to fill our offices at less than our emoluments, I will engage that if every public office were exposed to auction on the Dutch principle that every man should underbid instead of overbidding each other, and preferring the lowest bidder, they would be all reduced to a very moderate standard. Old Fleming offered to be a King for .£500 a year. How far this would lead to the improve- ment of the country is de quo quoeritur, the improvement would be a radical one. I have written a great deal more than I intended, and still I could write much more fully in the controversy, but I am con- scious that I am a rash cudgel-player, and incapable of expressing 1826] THE RECONCILIATION. 325 regret. When I have no feeling except of sorrow, I think it is better to stop as I am. When I say that I regret Lord Melville's alienation, I hope his Lordship will understand it is that of the friend and early companion, not of the Minister. In the latter capacity I have always found Lord Melville more kind and attentive to my personal concerns than I had any title to expect, and I think his Lordship will do me the justice to say I have seldom troubled him with personal requests. If I have been frequently an intrusive solicitor for others it has been for persons reconnnended either by talents, by distress, or by merits towards Government. I wish you may be able to read this, but by candle-light I cannot write so distinctly as usual. I request you will transmit to Lord Melville. I have read it once over and keep no copy. But I should think it fair, with his Lordship's permission, that it should be shown to these friends to whom he wishes you to show his own letter. If I am wrong, I have a title that men should know that I have erred from honourable and patriotic motives. The event will show whether I have erred or not. If I have, there is not much harm done ; and if I have not, I am sure I do not know whether I ought to be glad or sorry for it. — Adieu, dear Sir Robert, I am always affectionately yours, /- .. „ f o n Walter Scott. Castle Street, 9 March 1826. The Malagrowther letters treated of a subject on which Scott was ignorant ; and he remarks in his diary, while writing the second letter, " Had some valuable conununications from Colin Mackenzie which will supply my plentiful lack of facts.'' The Ministers were, not unnaturally, " sore beyond imagina- tion '^ at such an attack ; and Lord Melville's letter was their reply, one result being " a (juarrel in all the forms '' between Sir Walter's old friend and himself. It was not, however, per- mitted to last long. A message from I^)rd Melville was sent to Scott, through Sir Robert Dundas, expressing the assurance that however strong Lord Melville's dissent from Malachi'^s views on the currency might be, it would not be allowed to interrupt his affectionate regard for the author ; and this message was accepted by Sir Walter in the spirit in which it was sent. At one period of the struggle Sir Walter had had to encounter the keen wit and practised irony of Mr. Croker, who replied to the Letters of Mahichi Malagrowther in the 326 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1826. Cow'ie?' newspaper under the assumed name of " Edward Brad- wardine Waverley/' Mr. Croker's tone was highly provoking, and although, as his biographer candidly admits, the victory rested with the author of Waverley^ nevertheless some of his observations were sharp, and extremely well calculated to irri- tate his antagonist. Perhaps his best point was made in answer to Sir Walter^s allusion to the edges of the Scottish claymores. " I shall not,'' he wrote, " stop to inquire whether the edge of' a claymore is a good argument in a question of legal improvement or civil administration, nor will I insist on the obvious retort that if claymores had edges at Prestonpans, bayonets had points at CuUoden."" Often during his long literary career was the pen of Mr. Croker dipped in gall, but, although he considered that Sir Walter had " attacked with great violence and injustice the administration of Lord Melville, and, indeed, of our party in general,'' he had too much genuine regard for him to be as implacable as usual. Sir Walter, though quite prepared for a set-to, — " As to my friend Croker, an adventurer like myself, I would throw my hat into the ring for love, and give him a bellyful," he wrote to Sir Robert Dundas — as soon as he saw that he had gained his point, was also very ready to make up the peace. " I thought it best," he writes to Mr. Croker, " not to endanger the loss of an old friend for a bad jest, and sit quietly down with your odd hits, and the discredit which it gives me here for not repaying them, or trying to do so." In 1826 signs of the coming storm, which was about to subvert the old political state of Scotland, began to appear. The family at Arniston were startled by hearing of a plot on the part of a section of the Edinburgh Town Council to throw off their old allegiance, and to elect the Lord Provost ^ as their member, in place of William Dundas, who had represented the city since 1812.^ At the first intimation of such a piece of ^ Coi'respondence and Diaries of the Right Hon. John Wilson Croker, vol. i. P- 314. 2 The Lord Provost was Mr. "William Trotter, upholsterer in Edinburgh. ^ The hospitalities of the Arniston family to the Town Council had continued (from the days of the first President) down till shortly before this episode. Mrs. Dundas, wife of the Chief Baron, notes in her Diary, ' Sep. 2nd, Arniston. — The Magistrates and Council of Edinburgh dined here ; Gow played during dinner in the Hall.' i826.] THE TOWN-COUNCIL. S«7 treacliery, Rol)ert Duiidas seems to have pounced uj)on the un- hicky Provost, and to have broii opposition, and I have no doubt of Mr. Peel's power in the Commons. I have not sat behind the Treasury Bench^ since the late changes. Henry Scott^ you may trust ; he is with M"* Peel. In Adam Hay,^ John Campbell,* and Duncan Davidson,^ you have sworn allies. They have proved it on the Leith Police Bill Committee, and will prove it against Dalrymple and the Police Commissions to-day. Do not despair. Were you here, you would view public affairs under a very different aspect to what you do in Edinburgh. — Y"* sincerely, R. A. Dundas. * Mr. R. A. Dundas was memljer for Ipswich. - Henry Francis Scotl, M.P. for Roxburghshire, afterwards Lord Polwarth. ' Adam, afterwards Sir Adam Hay, M.P. for Selkirk, etc. ■* John Campbell, M.P. for Dumbartonshire. * Duncan Davidson of TuUoch, M. P. for Cromarty and Nairn. 334 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1827. David Anderson of Moredun to Robert Dundas. MOREDUN, gth/tdy 1827. My dear Sir, — My brother Adam ^ has communicated to me the conversation you had with him two days ago respecting the state of the county politics, when you mentioned to him that in the event of an immediate dissohition of Parhament it was not im- possible but that some member of your family might come forward as a candidate for the representation of the county. I am happy to take the earliest opportunity of expressing the respect that both my brother and I entertain for your family, and of assuring yourself that if you have any thought of standing for the county you may depend upon our most zealous and hearty support. With the members of Lord Melville's family I have but a very slight acquaintance, but entertaining as we do a hereditary respect for Lord Melville, and admiring most sincerely the high-minded feelings which have influenced his conduct during the late changes in administration, I have no hesitation in saying that were Parlia- ment to be dissolved at present, we would give our cordial support to any son of his that might offer himself to the county. To our present member ^ I entertain every feeling of regard and good-will, but he has attached himself to an administration which I can by no means approve of, and which, as it is supported by the most violent of the Whig party, I cannot but regard with feelings of great suspicion. — Y^" most faithfully, D. Anderson. Mr. Canning died on the 8th of August, and was succeeded as Premier by Lord Goderich. But his term of office was short. Before his death Mr. Canning had resolved to appoint a finance committee to inquire into the state of the revenue. Lord Goderich revived this project, and, on the advice of Mr. Huskisson, proposed to nominate Lord Althorp as chairman. Mr. Herries, who was Chancellor of the Exchequer, took offence because he had been passed over, and sent in his resignation. It was not accepted. But he and Mr. Huskisson were now on such bad terms that the Prime Minister found it impossible ^ Adam Anderson, afterwards a judge with the title of Lord Anderson. - Sir George Clerk of Penicuik, i828.] THE WELLINGTON ADMINISTRATION. SS5 to reconcile them ; anil the result was that the Administration came to an end. The King sent for the Duke of Wellington, who, in Janu- ary 1828, succeeded in forming a Cabinet. I^)rd Lyndhurst was lAH'd diancellor; Mr. Goulburn, Chancellor of the Kxche(|uer ; Mr. Peel, Home Secretary ; Lord Dudley, Foreign Secretary ; Lord Palmerston, Secretary at War ; and Mr. Grant, President of tlie Board of Trade. Mr. Husicisson was a})p()inted, against tlie wishes of many among the DukeV supporters. Colonial Secretary. During I^ord Liverpool's long term of office I^ord Melville had been in the Cabinet as First Lord of the Admiralty ; but he now consented, to the disap- pointment of his friends in Scotland, who wished him to insist on having (me of the highest offices in the Government, to become President of the Board of Control. Lady Melville to her Nephew Robert Dundas. Green Street, /a«. 21st, 1828. Evening. Mv DEAR Robert, — I would have written by this day's post, but was so hurried by house visiting, and visits to particular friends, that I had no time, and I now prepare a letter as the same impedi- ments will recur to-morrow. I am anxious to make my confidential communications to yow, but you must understand that they are to be confined to yourself. The statement you see in to-night's Standard is, I believe, correct ; the appointments are as stated there, so far as I understand, and after the manner in which Lord Melville's immediate friends treated his resignation, and the allegations they made at that time in regard to the Duke of Wellington, I cannot but confess that I do sincerely regret the turn the appointments have taken, as they regard the Duke. The fact, I believe, is true that in spite of the complete secrecy which the Duke had insisted on as to his arrangements, by some neglect or worse, the projected list got into the Morning Chronicle the very morning that Lord Melville was to arrive, and before his opinion could be taken. When he arrived he found the Duke and Mr. Peel were in great indignation . and Mr. Peel declared his perfect readiness to accommodate to any other arrangement for himself if Lord Melville had any objec- tion to return to the Board of Control, and would take the Home Office. Lord Melville, of course, said that which office he was to 336 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1828. fill was immaterial to him, so long as it was not incompatible witli his circumstances and situation, as he had no other view than to make himself useful in the most efficient manner in which he was able. The Duke said he had given it to be understood that he considered it due to Lord Melville to leave him entirely at liberty to choose his office ; but that for many reasons difficulties presented themselves. He had found it advisable to propose to Mr. Huskis- son and to Lord Dudley to continue in office, though he had pledged himself to no one for any particular office till Lord Melville should arrive to make his own determination, but that the expira- tion of the charter ^ being likely before long to require a special consideration, he did feel it was by no means unimportant how that office was filled now, and therefore he stated his wish, without intending to fetter Lord Melville thereby. Of course Lord Melville felt that it was very unfit to be bargaining for a thousand a year or a little piece of precedence, and therefore acceded at once, but knowing as I do, the way in which it has been alledged that he had been the " dupe of the Duke of Wellington's ambition and Lord Eldon's pique," the Duke having at last taken the Premier's place, those who have made the accusation will think it substanti- ated, particularly as reports of Lord Melville's being intended for it had arisen (probably) from the intention manifested to wait his arrival for the final arrangements. I cannot deny that I am very much afraid that the public impression will be that the Duke has not redeemed his pledge, and I exceedingly wish that Mr. Peel had been appointed to the Premiership ; but there seems to have been difficulties that could not be reconciled any other way, and there is a great feeling that the Duke's decision of character is at least something to rest upon for a ground of hope that something like a distinct line of policy will be adhered to. If therefore any abuse of the Duke or discontent at Lord Melville's not being as Lord Abercromby advised " as near the top as possible " is mani- fested among our friends, I beg you will take the high tone, and maintain that the confidence which has been manifested by the Duke and Peel makes it wholly immaterial whereabout he stands in the play-bill. I am very sorry any Canningites are retained, and my confidence is much shaken thereby as to stability, believ- ing them all to be no better than they should be, but it seems to be thought that it is a necessary policy, and we must swallow the pill without making wry faces. After the manner in which all Lord Melville's friends have acted by him, the conduct of Sir George The East India Company's Charter. i828.] LORD MELVILLE'S POSITION. 337 Clerk and the Solicitor,' and the language I have heard from your uncle William, and know I^)rd Abercromby to have held, I cannot help having great anxiety for Lord Melville's vindication proving full and complete ; though, in my own mind, I feel the undoubted honour of his proceedings admits of no question, and am entirely aware that all those who were politicidly acquainted with him here did him ample justice, the dirty conduct of the gentlemen ^ whom he had been instrumental in bringing into office, in and from the north (of whom the Advocate seems the only one who has acted with honour), has certainly made a strong and unfavourable im- pression upon me. If, however, their interests fail, he is not now to be charged with having broken them. The policy he pursued has so far found its level that the king has been compelled to resort again to the assistance of the statesmen with whom he had divided, and if, by having themselves depreciated the measure, they have entailed weakness and insecurity, they have only to thank the paltry love of present profit that induced them to ask what they ought to do, instead of confiding in the judgment of the man who had the conduct of those interests for twenty years creditably. As your interests may now be deemed decidedly to coincide with his, I have no doubt now about opening my mind to you. If now the measures pursued are to be changed as before and confidence denied, because much is to be objected to, the reasons of which the conductors of the business only can sift and decide upon, they must e'en go to the dogs. It is the King who has desired the Duke to take the Premiership, and, had he persevered in refusing it, he must have resisted the positive command. What is yet to be done with the army is not known. I think that a fearful point in the question, for though I think no man did ever unite so much political with such powerful military talent, the powers of man must be limited. Sir George Clerk called on me yesterday, and (as I thought) looked so blank, that I could not help feeling as if I let him see I thought so, tho' I did my best not to do so. I hear Lord Whamcliffe, Lady Canning, etc., etc., are furious at Huskisson for coming in with us. — Y'rs aff^ly, A. M. Lady Melville*'s letter explaining Lord Melville'*s reasons * Solicitor-General Hope. - The persons alluded to are Sir \V. Rae, Lord Advocate, John Hope, Solicitor-General, Sir George Clerk, and William (afterwards Lord William) Keith Douglas. Y 338 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1828. for accepting the India Board was by no means unnecessary. Among many of his friends in Scotland, who looked upon him as the leader of the Tory party there, a strong feeling existed in favour of seeing him re-occupy at least as prominent a post in the Ministry as he had done under Lord Liverpool. Robert Adam Dundas in particular expressed his views strongly upon the impolicy of Lord Melville^s accepting the India Board. He himself was anxious to give his services to the Government, and to work under Lord Melville in any " creditable '' appoint- ment. Robert Dundas wrote to Lord Melville (January 29, 1828) urging that an appointment should be given to Robert Adam. In the same letter he expresses his own views as to himself. The return of the Duke of Wellington and Mr. Peel had made him dismiss his late gloomy ideas of the ruin he supposed to be impending over the Tory party. " Now,'''' he says, " considering the present political state of the Scots bar I trust I am not too presumptuous in allowing these prospects again to revive.^ Under these circumstances I wish to make you aware that were I Solicitor-General my first step would be to obtain a seat in Parliament for the sake of doing all that my powers would permit of helping tlie Ministry. I should do tliis whether the Lord Advocate was in Parliament or not, and that, at any sacrifice of professional emolument, for the sake of devoting my whole time and labour exclusively to public busi- ness. The county of Edinburgh would naturally be the seat to which I should look, and I trust you will not think I am interfering with Henry's - interests in holding this opinion."" Lord Melville at once answered — London, Fed. 2, 1828. My dear Robert, — If your letter had arrived o?ie day sooner, Robert Adam would have been an un-salaried Commissioner at the India Board. We must have two Commissioners who are not Privy Councillors, and as Lord Graham, one of those who is to receive a salary, is a Privy Councillor, I settled with Mr. Peel to let his own brother's name be inserted, being at a loss for any other person. I thought of Robert Adam, but did not choose to ^ Alluding to the probable early promotion of Lord Advocate Sir William Rae to the bench, with Hope for Lord Advocate and himself for Solicitor-General. - Henry, Lord Melville's eldest son, subsequently third Lord Melville. He sat for Rochester in the last Parliament of George iv. '/I>^ ^A. ^. 2 n^ i828.] FKELING AGAINST SIR GEORGE CLERK. S89 take upon myself to apiM)int him without his knowledge or consent, though I should have held your suggestion to be sufficient. I uni verj' sorry it was not done, as he would have been of more use to me than any of the others. With regard to your own coming in for Midlothian, Henry, of course, will never stand in your way, as he never dreamt of it, unless you did not choose to come forwanl. I only doubt the prudence of it, as far as your j)rofessional views are concerned, and it is not more than a week since I objected to having John Hope brought into Parliament, because it is most inconvenient to the public service, especially with the great increase of criminal busi- ness, that both the Lord Advocate and the Solicitor -General should be absent from Scotland for several months in spring. Lord Melville'*s appointment at the India Board la.sted but a short time. On the resignation of the post of I^)rd High Admiral by the Duke of Clarence, the Duke of Wellington replaced I^)rd Melville at his old quarters at the Admiralty,, where his knowledge of the business of naval administration wa» very much wanted. The vacancy at the India Board was filled up by the appointment of Lord Ellenborough. This began his^ connection with Indian afiairs, which ultimately led to his appointment as Governor-General, and in the end to his celebrated recall by the East India Company. Although by the return of the Duke of Wellington to power, accompanied by most of the members of the former Liverpool Administration, the Tory party seemed to be firmly re-instated in office, the feeling against such of the Tories as had ratted by continuing in office under Mr. Canning was very keen. Among those who had in that way offended his party was Sir George Clerk. The Dundas influence in Midlothian hat! been given to him, and to Lord Melville he owed his first place in the Administration. For a man under such obligations to have deserted his party in their time of need was felt to l)e an unpardonable offence; and although the oflence was con- doned by his re-appointment to office on the Duke of Welling- ton's return to power, the local members of the party in the county were by no means inclined to be so forgiving, and a desire was expressed by many of the leading freeholders of showing their disapproval of his political course by refusing to return him on his vacating his seat on his new appointment in 540 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1828. the Wellington Ministry. The correspondence on the subject at Arniston is lengthy, but enough is now given to show how matters stood. On the 1st of February, Robert Dundas wrote to Lord Melville, putting two questions : " 1st, Should I stand for the county ? 2d, If not, should Henry try ? As to the 1st there exists more than one strong objection against my doing it — "1. The chance of defeat by the junction of the James Gibson party with those who might not wish to turn against Sir George after nineteen years'* services. " 2. The difficulty of holding the county without residing at Arniston, which under existing circumstances is quite out of the question. " 3. The expense attending such a seat in contested votes, etc. "4. The probability of Parliament, especially for such a seat, interfering so much with my profession as to form a bar against any future promotion therein. "5. The fact of having another seat ready either now or whenever it may be more convenient for me to take it. If this were not the case, I should have run the risk rather than totally give up all prospect of being in Parliament. " 2d. As to the next question : Ought Henry to try ? The 1st objection here also occurs, and I must candidly and openly state that I fear it exists with greater force in his case than in mine, as from constant residence I have had the opportunity of making more personal friendships and connections among the electors than what Henry can have done. In this I ma2/ be wrong, but I fear I am right. None of the other objections apply, and I therefore think Henry ought to try it for the following reason^' : — "1. If he or I cannot turn out Sir George nozv, we never can. " 2. I fear from all accounts that his present seat will not be again secured, except at an expense which he cannot bear, and far beyond what the county will cost him. " These two reasons seem to me sufficient to induce Henry to try." i828.] MIDLOTHIAN POLITICS. S41 The concluding sentence of Robert Dundas'^s letter to Lord Melville is worthy of sj)ecial notice, as illustrating the complete and thorough -going nature of tlie revolution soon to be effected, by the Reform Rill, in the management of the Scottish con- stituencies : — "The conclusion therefore is,^ he says, "that he should now try the county, leaving to me, at such time i\» will best suit me, the less respectable, secure, and easy seat for the town which my uncle William m readi/ to ffive mc whenever I please."^ Lord Melville to Robert Dundas. Green Street, 4/ A Feb. 1828. Mv dear Robert, — I have received to-day your letter of the 1st inst., and have only to say that as far as I am concenied, I have not the least objection to your starting for Midlothian on the present vacancy. I presume the writ will be moved to-day. I should object to Henry (his son) coming forward, because it would look like a personal, and therefore an unworthy, attack on my part against Sir George (Clerk), after I had acquiesced in his continuing in office under the new administration ; but the case is totally different with regard to you, whose natural position it is to repre- sent the county, and who have much better claims to it than Sir George. I do not wish to urge, or even to recommend you to do it, because I have no personal feeling against him, and also with reference to your private concerns ; but if you decide on coming forward, you have a right to my concurrence and cordial support, which most assuredly you shall have. He has no claim on me, and I only acquiesced in his remaining in office now, because he offered to resign in April last if I wished it, or would advise him to do so, and because I did not choose to do anything that might appear like pique or vindictiveness. His continuing to represent Midlothian is quite another affair, if you choose to oppose him, but for your own sake you ought to be tolerably sure of success before you embark in such a contest. He expressed a wish to come to the India Board with me, which I declined, as it would have had the appearance of his being my nominee, and I requested the Duke of Wellington to put him anywhere else if he was to con- tinue in office under the new Government. — Ever yours affect'', Melville. 342 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1828. On the same day Lady Melville wrote as follows : — Green Street, Feb. ^th, 1828. I am clearly of opinion you ought to start. I certainly do not understand why, if Sir George Clerk could not remain at the Ordnance, he was to have another office ; but I understand he has been trying to get himself in as Under Secretary in Husky's department, and there he would not have had to vacate his seat. They say there is a general amnesty for Rats. I am so disgusted with all this year's business, that I was never in worse humour with Politics. I believe the old system of things must fail, for the punficaiions of the last half-century have made Riches the only available Talent — the last that ought to prevail if the good of the community in general is to be considered. Thus dirt must always be the basis of power, till some renewal of temp- tation to those who can use. their talents with honour can be held to those who have them, that will not make honour the losing game. — Yours very sincerely, A. Melville. Robert Adam Dundas was equally explicit in expressing his feelings, that after Sir George Clerk's tergiversation, his return for Midlothian should be opposed. He says : — Arniston, Feb. $th, 1828. My dear Robert, — With regard to Lord Melville's objection,^ I wish you to be aware that as long as Henry and I are in Parlia- ment, the County may be assured that when your professional duties call you from London, its business will not be neglected by either of us. It is absurd for a moment to suppose that the free- holders expect you to abandon your profession. Your presence in London will not be required as much as you may naturally sup- pose. I beg you also to understand that as long as Mary and I can find a comer for you, you will make our house and no other your abode in London. My decided opinion is, that you should not allow Sir G. C. to be returned for the county. — Ever yours in haste, R. A. Dundas. Ultimately, the prudent counsel of the Duke of Buccleuch, Lord Hopetoun, and, in particular, of Sir John Hope, pre- vailed, that no opposition at that time should be offered to ' Alluding to Lord Melville's dislike to both the Lord Advocate and Solicitor- General being in Parliament at the same time. i828.] DISSENSIONS IN THE CABINET. 848 Sir George CIerk''8 return. It was felt that once, to use Lady Melville^s exj)rcssi()n, an anniesty had been granted to the llats, it would be ungracious to oj)|)ose his return on a vacancy caused by his having been appointed to an office under the Government, of which liis opponents were keen supporters. There wjus also the risk of the Wliig party taking the oppor- tunity of the schism in the Tory camp to carry their man. Sir George was, however, informed that abstention fnmi opposing his return on that occasion implied no obligation of future support, and that in all probability Robert Dundas would become his opponent at the next election, whenever it might happen.^ The successive Administrations of I^)rd Liverpool, Mr. Canning, and Lord Goderich had each contained the elements of discord ; and the Wellington Government suffered from the same misfortune. There was hardly a (juestion on which the Ministers agreed. The important subjects of the Corn Laws, Foreign Policy, and Parliamentary Reform were all so many bones of contention, any one of which might at any time lead to a collapse of the Government. "The Cabinet,''"' Ix)rd Palmerston notes in his journal of the 22tl of May 1828, " has gone on for some time past as it had done before, differing upon almost every question of any importance that has been brought under consideration : — meeting to debate and dispute, and separating without deciding.^** It was on a question of Parliamentary Reform that the final quarrel took place. It had been conclusively })roved that the constituency of East Retford was hopelessly corrupt ; and a bill was introduced by Mr. Tennyson, the member for Blechingley, for the transference of the franchise from East Retford to Birmingham. On the day on which the bill was to be considered in the House of Com- mons the Cabinet met. The Ministers were at variance, and separated without deciding what should be done, altliough the mode of proceeding which appears to have been tliought most advisable was that suggested by Lord Melville, namely, that each should be free to vote as he pleased. In the House that afternoon there was a division. Mr. Peel voted in favour of a proposal to transfer the representation of East Retford to the ^ Mr. Peel was of the same opinion, and felt that it was an awkward moment to choose for opposing and ousting Sir George. 344 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1828. adjoining hundred. Mr. Huskisson and Lord Palmerston voted in favour of transferring it to Birmingham. Mr. Peel was in a majority of eighteen. Here the matter ought to have ended ; but the division led to the resignation of Mr. Huskisson, who was followed out of office by Lord Palmerston, Lord Dudley, Mr. Lamb, afterwards Lord Melbourne, and other Canningites.^ The following letter was written to Mr. Dundas by Sir William Rae, while it was as yet uncertain how the Ministerial crisis, caused by the division on the East Retford question, would end : — Sir William Rae, Lord Advocate, to Robert Dundas. London, May 23, 1828. My dear Dundas, — You will have heard there is a bit of a rumpus in the Gov*. I believe the truth to be this : in the Ret- ford question, though the mode of proceeding had been adjusted in the Cabinet, Huskisson and Palmerston did not support Peel, and divided against him. Huskisson walked home with Planta,^ who said that Huskisson should resign, and accordingly he wrote a letter to the Duke of Wellington, dated at two in the morning, resigning. The Duke went forthwith to the King, who approved of its being accepted. The Duke accordingly wrote to H. express- ing general regret at losing him, and wishing him well. This brought an answer bearing that H. had only meant to place his resignation in the Duke's hands. A reply from the Duke con- tradicted that view of the matter, and bore that he would keep no man in the Government who chose to express a desire to leave it. A rejoinder followed, of a description as if meant for publica- tion, and there the matter rested yesterday, and there it will rest, unless H. asks to be retained. In doing this he will lose character. In keeping him otherwise the Government would suffer, which, you and I will agree in thinking, would be worse. It seems strange that a man of the age of Huskisson should not have chosen to sleep upon a matter of such grave importance. If he had waited till morning, and spoke to the Duke, all would have been well, as they have all along been on very good terms. Lord Palmerston, it seems, said something to the Duke about ^ The Canningites were Mr. Huskisson, Lord Dudley, Lord Palmerston, the Duke of Portland, Lord Eliot, Lord George Bentinck, Mr. Charles Grant, Mr. Lamb, Mr. Evelyn Denison, and Mr. Frankland Lewis. 2 Joseph Planta, M.P. for Hastings. i828.] RESIGNATION OF MR. HUSKISSON. 345 resigning, which his Grace hardly deigned to notice ; he afler- wards observed he was not going to take a cannon to kill a butter- fly. All this, mind, is for your private ear. — Yours ever most truly, W^. Rae. What Sir William llae alluded to in the last paragraph of his letter wiis, probably, the interview which took place between I^)rtl Palmerston and the Duke of Wellington on the after- noon of Tuesday the 20th. ^ I^rd Palmerston had represented to the Duke that Mr. Huskisson had merely offered to resign if the Duke wished it ; but the Duke maintained that he had actually resigned, and that it was impossible to recpteat him to remain in office. I^)rd Palmerston then said that if Mr. Huskisson went out he must do so too. " I remarked,"*^ says Lord Palmerston, " that while I said this he raised his eyes, which had been fixed on the ground as we were walking up and down, and looked sharp and earnestly at me to see whether this was meant as a sort of menace, or a party measure.^ There can be no doubt that the Duke had been anxious for some time to get rid of Mr. Huskisson ; and on the 25th he was able to inform him that his successor at the Colonial Office had been chosen. Sir William Rae to Robert Dundas. London, May 26, 1828. My dear Dundas, — Huskisson is out. The Duke sent for Lord Dudley on Saturday morning, and said there must be an end of the then state of matters, and that if he did not hear from H. before two o'clock, he would go to the King. Dudley soon after returned, and requested that the Duke would say something to smooth the way. But the Duke said no ; that whatever was to be passed was to be in writing, and that whatever had passed verbally must go for nothing, but that he would wait till two. The hour came, and no letter, so off went the Duke to the King. It is believed that a countryman of our own will be the successor in the colonial office, but I am not at liberty to say more. We shall not suffer by this change ; we lose a man of talent, but a united Treasury Bench is of more importance in the House of Commons. — Yours faithfully, W**. Rae. ^ BvXviex's Life 0/ Lord Palnurston^ vol. i. p. 261. S4>6 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1828. Henry Dundas to Robert Dundas. Brook Street, Maj' 28, 1828. Dear Robert^ — I have no doubt you will have received the news of the secession of Husky with the same satisfaction that I felt on first hearing of it. Sir George Murray is to be his successor. This is the only appointment I believe that is decided. Charles Grant, I understand, has also resigned. Sir Henry Hardinge and Sir George Clerk have both been named as suc- cessors to Lord Palmerston. I think the latter quite impossible, and should not think he could wish to move so soon. One resig- nation seems much regretted, that of the Doodley.^ It was not expected he would have thought it necessary to take this step, in consequence of Husky's secession, and I think, for a man of his rank and station to identify himself with such a man as Husky is much beneath him. Besides, if my information is correct, he ex- pressed himself as thinking Husky to have acted a very wrong part, and as he seems to have given great satisfaction in his office, his resignation is rather to be regretted, particularly as it gives a sort of rallying point for the Canning party, which, had he re- mained, would otherwise have sunk into nothing ; for as to Husky or Grant, no one cares one damn about them. The general opinion in the city when these resignations were first mentioned, w^as that it would have the effect of establishing the Government on a stronger footing. The Duke has got the entire confidence of everybody, and has acted very firmly and discreetly in this business. Husky wanted to retract his offer of resignation, or, at least, to explain it away as only intimating his readiness to resign, if it was thought necessary, and not as a positive tender of his resignation. This was a regular quibble, and the Duke very properly sent the second letter, as he had done the first, to the King, who, it is said, showed no dissatisfaction at the retirement of Husky, but rather the reverse. William Lamb ^ has also resigned, for no other reason, it would seem, but having come into office with that party, he chose to retire with it, not having, as I can learn, any objection to remain with the Duke. And if the vote on the East Retford Bill had anything to do with these changes, he had no reason at all to retire, having voted in the majority, and against Husky. I am sorry he ^ Lord Dudley. 2 William Lamb, afterwards Viscount Melbourne. i828.] RESIGNATION OF MR. HUSKISSON. 347 has resigned ; altho' a Whi^, he is a very good one, a decided anti- refonner, and has, 1 believe, given great satisfaction in Ireland. Tjiken all in all, he is a good man, and very sound in his opinions. The day after the division on the East Retford Bill, Paddy Holmes^ met the Duke, and told him he had done his best to procure a good attendance of members, but that he was not pre- pared for some circumstances attending the division ; and as that night a division was again expected, he wished to know whether he should advise gentlemen to vote with Mr. Secretary Huskisson or Mr. Secretary' Peel. The Duke laughed and said, " By (Jod, you 're quite right, this won't do, it must be put a stop to." I only hope now we shall go on better in our House : things have not gone on at all well. It has been nothing less than the adoption of every measure of opposition, and weak concession on every point. Peel has disappointed the hopes of many people ; he has not nerve enough, and wishes to have the idea of always acting what he calls a - . . . part ; that, in fact, he gives way on everything, and, of course, the support he meets with is proportionally weakened. I only hope he will now take a decided line ; any embarrassment he may have felt with the Canningites is now removed, and if he does not show fight when necessary, the party must fail. He wants political courage. What says that crocodile Hope to all this ? Does he mean to follow Husky in his retirement ? Or is resignation only a virtue he preaches, not practises ? I expect to sail for Corfu very shortly. I am now going to celebrate the birth of Mr. Pitt at the City of London Tavern, Lord Skelmersdale in the chair. — Ever yours, H. D. Robert Adam Dundas to Robert Dundas. Mivart's Hotel, Brook Street, /ufre 3, 1828. My dear Robert, — You will see in the newspapers an account of last night's debate, in which the united efforts of the Whigs and Canningites to throw discredit on the Duke of Wellington were completely defeated. Huskisson's defence was lame and un- satisfactory to the House. Brougham could not defend it. The division of last night has established the Government, and the ^ William Holmes, Esq., M.P. He filled the office of Clerk to the Ord- nance, and acted for many years as Whip to the Tory party in the House of Commons, where his Irish wit and good humour made him a universal favourite. - Word wanting, owing to the letter being torn. S4g ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1830. second division, to which I particularly refer you, clearly shows the unpopularity of Huskisson's conduct, even in the House of Commons. After the first division the Whigs gave up all for lost, and left the House, with the exception of twenty-five, who retained their seats on the right hand of the chair, the side on which they divided. The other side of the House was brimfull of the friends of the Government to the number of 220, who to a man maintained their places behind Peel. The effect of this was more striking than anything I ever witnessed in the House of Commons, or anywhere else. Such decided and determined support I never saw given to any man, and the effect of the empty benches on the side on which the opposition divided was no less singular in its way. Peel's friends kept their places till he left the House, and followed him out. The support which the Government received last night was beyond my most sanguine expectations, considering the influence Canning used in forming the Parliament. Now that the mis- creants have been dragged through the mire by Huskisson, and left in the slough of despond, in which situation I trust they may long remain, we may again enjoy the happiness of seeing firmly established a united Tory Government, which, in my humble opinion, never was more required, considering the situation of public affairs at home and abroad, and considering the utter con- tempt in which foreign powers hold every individual of the Canning faction. The Duke of Wellington, in spite of all the abuse lavished on him, has shown no want of energy in the late proceedings of the Government. — Yours sincerely, R. A. Dundas. In February 1830 Sir S. Shepherd, on account of ill health, resigned the office of Chief Baron of Scotland. The event had been long anticipated, and it was considered in Scotland that on account of his position, long services, and fitness for the post, the vacant appointment should have been bestowed upon Sir William Rae. However, the policy of conciliating the Whigs which was then being pursued by the Duke of Welling- ton and Mr. Peel, induced them to pass over their own Lord Advocate in order to appoint Mr. James Abercromby Chief Baron, a man of whom it was felt by the Scottish Tories that his sole claim to the appointment lay in his being a Whig. Besides the respect felt for Sir William Rae on account of 1830.] SIR WILLIAM RAE. 849 his lonpf public services, he was personally p()]>iilar. All this rendered stronger the irritation felt against the (joverninent on account of the way in which they had beliaved ; and it is said that afterwards the Duke himself re^i^retted the step, and acknowled»]jed that he hml behaved badly to Sir William Rae. At Arniston tliere are a variety of letters from John Hope, the Solicitor-General, to Robert Dundas, who was then in London, on the subject, expressive of the feeling in Scotland upon the treatment of Sir William Rae. " The treatment of the Advo- cate,"** he writes on the 10th of February, " is scandalous. I think it the very harshest and most imfeeling thing any Government ever did. I remember in history (that is, from 1689) nothing in political life more cruel, more infamous. . . . The cry against Lord Melville is louder and more general than any ever raised in my time as to any public and personal matter. I must fairly add that 9-lOths of people believe, and ever will, either that Lord M. desired to drive Rae to resign, or that Lord M. has as little to say as in July 1827. ... I am too disgusted with the treatment of Rae to write more about it.'' On the following day he writes again : " Jeffrey said to me to-day that they all view this as a decided degradation to the Scotch bar, and are far from thanking II Imperatore for it. . . . WJuit can they do for Rae? The subject is to me full of tlisgust. There is not palliation or excuse." Had Sir William Rae been appointed Chief Baron, John Hope would have succeeded Rae as Lord Advocate, and Robert Dundas expected to succeed Hope. But even if these arrangements had been carried out their duration would have been very brief, for the Scottish political regime was then tottering to its fall, and six months later the Tory Government had come to an end, and the old state of things with it. The Catholic Emancipation Act had been unpopular among the Duke of Wellington's supporters in Scotland. " The Duke of Wellington," says the New Scots Magazine in February 1829, " before whom the fortunes and the genius of Napoleon were bowed down, has quailed beneath the gasconading rant of some Irish mountebanks and bog-trotters.*' From the day on which he rose in the House of Commons to declare his sudden conversion to Catholic Emancipation, Mr. Peel had been 350 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1831. openly accused of the basest political apostasy by many of those who had been his warmest admirers. In the House of Commons, as well as in the country, the authority of the Government was seriously shaken ; and their followers looked forward in many cases with grave apprehensions to the chances of a general election. In spite, however, of these untoward circumstances, William Dundas was again returned, at the election of 1830, for the city of Edinburgh, the seat he had occupied so long. Henry Dundas, Lord Melville's son, was returned for Winchelsea, and Robert Adam Dundas for Ipswich. This Parliament was dissolved on the 23d of April 1831, in the midst of the wildest political excitement which the country has probably ever known. The second reading of the English Reform Bill had been carried ; but Ministers had been defeated in committee on General Gascoyne''s motion that the number of members for England and Wales ought not to be diminished. Mr. William Dundas did not present himself for re-election ; and the Tory candidate for Edin- burgh was Mr. Robert Adam Dundas, son of Mr. Philip Dundas, fourth son of the second President.^ Born in 1804, he was called to the Scottish bar in 1826, and married, two years later. Lady Mary, daughter of the seventh Earl of Elgin. From 1826 till the dissolution of 1831 he had been member for Ipswich. But he was now nominated for Edinburgh, which had been so long represented by some member of his family. The Whig candidate was Mr. Jeffrey, then Lord Advocate, who had consented to stand somewhat unwillingly, as he was well aware that, however strong the popular feeling in his favour might be, it was very improbable that the town-council would elect him. His opinion proved correct. The town-council still stood firm to their old colours, and, on the last occasion of exercising their ancient privilege of returning a member to Parliament, elected a Dundas. As their privilege was certain to be extinguished, to stand by their old political faith, and by the family with whom they had for so many years been politically connected, was perhaps the most 1 Mr. Philip Dundas represented Gatton in Parliament from January 1803 till April 1805, when he was appointed Governor of Prince of Wales Island. He died, when on board ship on his way to India, in April 1807. i83T.] AN ELECTION RIOT. 351 (li<«;iiific(i mode of exercising it for the last time. There was, however, a division, ami the numbers were 17 for Dauilas, ^4f for Jeffrey, and 2 for the Lord Provost, who had also been nominated. Outside the Council Chambers, in the lioyal Exchange, an immense crowd hml collected, j)re|)ared to give a rough recep- tion, not so much to the new mend)er, against whom they had ])robably but little ill-will, as to the Provost, whose conduct in ignoring the wishes of the citizens was bitterly resented. The moment the Chief Magistrate appeared, the rioting began. " The Lord Advocate,'^ said a paper of the day, " being a little man, and having to struggle only with the blessings of the people, got easily out of the throng. The Provost, who is, ea' officio^ a big man, did not escape so easily. We said last week, that an Edinburgh mob was no joke, and the Ix)rd Provost''s nose on Tuesday bore woful testimony to the truth of our assertion. What could tempt any man in his sober senses, the moment after he had braved the whole population of the town, to appear on foot in the midst of a numerous and exasperated band of them, we do not pretend to divine.'' It was with the utmost difficulty that the Provost was rescued ; and at one time his life was actually in danger. He was caught up and held over the parapet of the North Bridge ; but fortunately he had the presence of mind to seize one of his assailants and declare that he would not go down alone. LTltimately he reached his home in safety, but only under the protection of a guard of soldiers. The city was for some hours in the hands of the mob, the useless civic guard having been easily oveq^owered. In the course of the night an attack was made on the Dundases' town house. No. 69 Queen Street. The family were at Arniston, and did not hear of what had taken place till next morning, when the terrified servants reported that the windows had been broken by stones, and that they had been compelled to take refuge in the back parts of the house. It chanced that in the drawing-room there was a handsome mirror belonging to Lord Abercromby, which Mr. Dundas, before leaving for Aniiston, liad carefully covered up. Ix)rd Abercromby had, early in the century, sat for Edinburgh as a Tor\', but had afterwards joined the AVTiig party, to which 352 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1832. most of his family belonged ; and, on hearing of the damage done to the house, Mrs. Dundas laughingly said that it would have served their old friend right if his mirror had been left to the tender mercies of the Radical mob. The result of the general election in Scotland was a majority of three in favour of the Ministry ; while in England the supporters of the Reform Bill secured so many seats that, when Parliament met, the second reading was carried by a majority of 136. After a year of turmoil the English Reform Bill passed on the 4th of June. As it was now certain that the Bill for Scot- land must speedily become law, when a general election would at once take place, a serious question arose as to what seats should be contested in the Conservative interest. Midlothian and the city of Edinburgh were the seats in which most interest was felt at Arniston. As to whether Midlothian should be contested there was no doubt. There the issue was very un- certain. With occasional intervals the Dundases had pos- sessed the seat for about one hundred and ten years, and it could not be relinquished without a struggle. The Arniston influence was given to Sir George Clerk, who, like his opponent. Sir John Dalrymple, was already in the field. It was otherwise with regard to Edinburgh. There the Whigs, or rather the Radicals, were enormously strong ; and it was felt to be almost a hopeless attempt. But the Dundases were naturally averse to giving up a seat which they had held for nearly forty years, and the following letters will suffice to describe the views which were entertained by Mr. Robert Adam Dundas and other practical politicians upon the subject : — Mr. R. a. Dundas to Mr. Dundas. London, /ww^ 13, 1832. Dear Robert, — I had intended to have written to you yester- day with reference to the future representation of the city of Edinburgh, and it is necessary that you should lose no time in consulting our friends who meet at Blackwood's and so ably sup- port the Conservative cause. It is for them to determine what is to be done. For my own part I see so little chance of success, or even of 1832.] REPRESENTATION OF EDINBURCJH. H5H obtaining a reasonable minority in a constituency of at least 120(), that it may be a question whether we are ])repare(l or not to ha/.anl a contest. I am, however, willing to place myself in the hands of the party either to stand a contest on cerlain amdUiomiy or at once to withdraw in favour of a more popular candidate. I cannot undertake a contest if the electicm is to be conducted in the man- ner in which elections generally are conducted. Were 1 to agree to this, I should inevitably he ruined. If however the party in Edinburgh are willing to conduct the contest, and professional men be ready to lend their gratuitous services so that I shall be liable only for my own personal expenses, then I am willing to place myself at the disposal of the party whether the struggle be successful or not. I have consulted Sir John Forbes on the sub- ject, and suggested to him whether it were likely that the Radicals would let him come in with the Lord Advocate. If such an arrangement could be made, which I believe would be made more easily with another party than myself who am so objectionable to the Jacobins, and more especially to those in Edin', as having been elected by the Town Council, I believe it would be for the interest of the Conservative cause that I should withdraw and seek my fortune elsewhere. Sir John Forbes desires me to say that he is most unwilling to be a candidate, and that he must have time to make up his mind if he should be selected. He authorises me also to say that he will undertake no contest except on an understand- ing that it is to be the contest of the party and not for his own personal gratification. I beg that you will assure the gentlemen of the Committee at Mr Blackwood's that in coming to a decision on this question they will best consult my wishes in determining on what will be most advisable for the interest of the Conservative cause without reference to any views of ambition I may have in continuing to represent the city of Edinburgh. Let this, how- ever, be distinctly understood, that neither Sir John Forbes nor I can acquiesce in any arrangement which will involve us in an engagement to be liable for more than our personal expenses. Pray lay this letter before the gentlemen of the Committee, and let me have their answer as soon as they have decided. — Y" very sincerely, R. A. Dundas. % P.S. — Sir J. D.* swears till he is black in the face that there were no flags at the Radical meeting such as I described. ' Sir John Dalrymple. It was reported that flags of a disloyal character had been displayed at a reform meeting in the previous month. % 854 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1832. Mr. Robert Adam Dundas to Mr. Dundas. Private. London, //m^ 15, 1832. Dear Robert, — I have received your letter this morning, and Sir John Forbes will explain in person his views and mine with re- spect to the representation of the city of Edinburgh. My opinion most decidedly is that if Aytoun split the Whig party, one Tory candidate will have a better chance than two, as I suppose no one dreams of the possibility of two Tory members for the city of Edinburgh. And if you can get in one you will be very fortunate. I must have it distinctly understood that I am to have no agent retained for me, nor will I hold myself responsible for the acts of any agent whatever. The contest must be conducted by the party. It is only at the solicitation of the party and in consequence of the complexion of the votes after they are registered that I shall allow myself to be an instrument in the hands of the Committee to carry their views into effect without rendering myself personally responsible for their actions. There is no agent in Edinburgh whom I would trust with the unbounded use of my purse, and I believe that Sir John Forbes and I are of the same opinion on this point. I write this in confi- dence, in order that you may be prepared with my views as to the manner in which a contest is to be conducted in Edinburgh. Sir John Forbes will see you soon after his arrival in Edin"^, and will tell you more. In the meantime, till something is settled by the party, and I am informed of their plans, I shall remain here. In haste.— Y»^s ever, R. A. D. Mr. Robert Adam Dundas to Mr. Dundas. Private. Charles Street, yif/«^ 22, 1832. Dear Robert, — I received your letter this morning, and in answer beg to assure you that no man will be found in London to enter into a contest for Edinburgh on the expensive system which is likely to be created by the men of business in that place. I send you some suggestions which, if adhered to, will make people of Conservative principles come forward without compromising their character or ruining their fortunes. The suggestions which I enclose for the use of our friends in the north are founded on my own experience and on the principles on which all elections have lately been conducted in England and will be conducted under the 1832.] REPHESKNTATION OF EDINBUIKJH. S55 Reform Bill. On such principles contests for London unci West- minster and the county of Dorset have cost the candidate nothing!!! Whereas on Mr. Fisher's principles of paid agents, drinking-houses, &c., I would not undertake a contest in Ediir if I had £:iO,00{) given me to conduct it. Most heartily do I congratulate myself that I am out of the scrape. I expect an answer from Ipswich to-morrow. My last election there stood me less than eight hundred ])ounds. My first in £,5000, thanks to the attorneys ! and the freemen were better pleased with the last election than the first. If I am again invited, it will be still less, as there are no out-voters. You should stir up the press against the system pursued in Berwickshire by Marjoribanks. Are the independent householders to be crammed into voting by dint of beef and pudding .'' And who canvasses on this plan ? Why, those persons who railed against the expense and corruption of former elections. //// this point liard, it will do good. The suggestions to which I alluded, and which are in a separate enclosure, are not to be made generally public, but you may safely show them to your confidential friends who are likely to take a share in the management of elections under the Reform Bill. — Very sincerely y"^, R. A. Dundas. P.S. — The Duke of B. is in communication with Irvine, but he will not place himself in the hands of the writers to be pigeoned. Ultimately Mr. Forbes Blair was selected as the Conser- vative candidate, in opposition to Jeffrey and the Right Honourable James Abercromby, and the canvass of the city went on during the remainder of the summer. Mr. Aytoun, a Radical candidate, was also in the field, but he withdrew in favour of Mr. Jeffrey and Mr. Abercromby. The county was also thoroughly canvassed during the summer ; and there are some memoranda on the subject among the Amiston papers in the handwriting of Mr. Dundas which show that he did good work for his party at this exciting crisis. The election for the City took place on the 18th and 19th of December, when, as was expected, Mr. Jeffrey and Mr. Aber- cromby were returned. The numbers were — Jeffrey, 4035 Abercromby, .... 3850 Blair, 1519 356 ARNISTON MEMOIRS. [1832. On the same day as the result of the Edinburgh election was declared, Sir George Clerk and Sir Jolin Dalrymple were nominated for Mid-Lothian. The voting took place on the 21st and 22d. There were three polling places, Edinburgh, Mid- calder, and Dalkeith. At Edinburgh the numbers were very close. At Midcalder there was a large majority for the Whig candidate. But in the Dalkeith district, where the Arniston influence was strong, and where Mr. Dundas had canvassed so liard for his party. Sir George Clerk had a good majority. When the poll closed tlie numbers were — Sir John Dalrymple, . . . 60 1 Sir George Clerk, . . . 5.36 Sir John Dalrymple, the new member for Mid-Lothian, well deserved his success as the reward of a life-long struggle against what liad liitherto been hopeless odds. He was the active and unwearied leader of the Whig party in Mid-Lothian, and never missed a chance of forwarding their interests. Apart from political reasons, no one at Arniston grudged liim the victory he had won. His second wife. Lady Adamina Duncan, was a niece of Chief Baron Dundas. Through all the trying years of political strife, both Sir John and his wife retained unaltered their friendship for their Tory relatives; and there are some letters in the collection at Arniston from Sir John to Mr. Dundas upon county matters, in which they had a common interest.^ When the iirst general election under the new system came to an end, the Scottish counties had returned twenty-one Whigs and nine Tories, and the burghs had returned twenty- two Whigs and one Tory. The single Tory burgh member was Colonel Baillie, wlio was elected by a majority of seven for the Inverness Burghs. There was thus a majority of forty- three votes to ten in favour of Lord Grey's Administration. The highest hopes of the Whigs and the worst fears of the Tories had been realised ; and witli this election the long con- tinued supremacy of the Tory party in Scotland came to an end. Few could have supposed, on the formation of the Duke of Wellington's Administration, that within the short space of ^ In 1840 Sir John succeeded, as eighth Earl, to the Earldom of Stair. He died in 1853. i832.] RESULT OF THE ELECTIONS. S57 two years the whole of that elalKjrate structure of political }K)wer, wliich had been erected and maintained with such dis- tinti^uishetl ability by the leaders of the rulinf^ party, and above all, bv the members of the house of iVrniston, was to be sliattered to pieces. But nothing less had taken place. The old system had completely disa})peare(i, and its place had been taken by a new system, the results of which, tlien unforeseen, politicians are perha))s now only beginning to realise. PLASTER WORK, HALL ARNISTON. CHAPTER XIV. ROBERT DUNDAS OF ARNISTON — continued. Conclusion of the Memoirs. On the passing of the Reform Bill and the complete defeat of the Scottish Tory party, which implied the annihilation of the political influence which his family had for so many years enjoyed in Scotland, Mr. Dundas at once recognised that any hope he might have entertained of political advancement through the Scottish bar was at an end. He decided upon retiring to Amiston and settling there with the view of transferring his energies from political life to the management and improvement of the estate. This was no sudden change in his plans of life. So long before as February 1828, when the Duke of Wellington had returned to power, and the prospects of the party had brightened again, he opened his mind to Lord Melville upon the subject of his future career. His friend John Hope ^ had been advising him never to allow the thought of Parliament at any future period to enter his mind, that he ought to stick fast to the Courts, and if appointed Solicitor General to quit that office for the Bench as soon as he was able. In reply he said he never could agree to that doctrine. The object of his ambition was to represent Mid-Lothian in the House of Commons, and professional promotion was only the step whereby to attain it. Had he chosen a profession for pecuniary emolument, it would not have been at the bar, but in India that he would have sought a fortune. He could scarcely say, he concluded, with what difficulty he would resign the object of his ambition for the line pointed out by Hope. * Afterwards Lord Justice- Clerk Hope. 1832.] CONSTRUCTION OF RAILROADS. 359 Hut now the turn which puhlic affairs had taken relieved Mr. Duiuhus from the necessity of choosing l)etweeii the ciireer which he had phuuied for himself and that which Mr. Hope reconnnended ; and henceforth his life was that of a country gentleman. Fortunately, at this time, an opportunity |)resented itself not merely of developin = ^>»i.'^ii^^tr: ARTHL K S SKAI J KOM ARNISTON. 2a INDEX, Abbeyhill, where Lord Arnistondied in 1753, aged 67, 109. Abbotsiord, 299. Aljercromby, George (Lord Aber- cromby), on Lord Melville's acquit- tal, 263. Lord, writes to R. Dundas, Feb. 1827, 331; at one time M.P. for Edinburgh, 351. Rt. Hon. Jas., isapix)inted Chief Baron, 348; elected for Edinburgh 1832, 355- Sir Ralph, 263 note. Adam, Sir Fred., 307, R., architect of Arniston, 248. Rt. Hon. Wm., of Blairadam, 277 note. Adam Square, where President Dundas lived, pulleddown in 1871, 189; house of second President Dundas in, 196. * Adamant,' the, 249. Addington, 219 ; ministry of, formed, 253 ; downfall of his ministry — cre- ated Lord Sidmouth, 259. Advocati Loyalty^ a pamphlet so called, 55. Airdrie, 312. Aix-la-Chapelle, 206. Aldan, xxv. Alemore, Lord, votes in the Douglas Cause, 20Q iwte. Algitha, xxiii. Alison, Archibald, author of History of Europe^ 310. Almack, Richard, of Melford, SuflFolk, 31- Alva, 38. Althorp, Lord, proposed as chairman of finance committee, 1827, 314 ; resigns, 361 ; Chancellor of the Ex- chequer — created Lord Spencer, 362. Amulrie, 95. Andernach, 288. Anderson, Adam (Lord), 334 note. Adam, 328. David, of Moredun, writes to* Robert Dundas, July 1827, 334. J., on the death of Admiral Duncan, 252. Angus and Dudho|>e, estate of, 206. Annexation Act, 161. Anstruther, Lord, 90. Antwerp, 286. Apennines, 290. Appin, 154. Ardshiels, 154. Argis, Monastery of, 309. Argyll, Earl of, made a Marquis, 18 ; leads the Presbyterians in 1638, 21 ; sentenced to death, 39. Duke of, his influence, 89 ; in the Cabinet, resigns, 97; susf>ected of Jacobitism, 98 ; writes to Lord Arniston, May 1748, 105. Arniston, early history of, I ; tajiestry at, 2 ; name of, substituted for that of Ballintrodo, 4 ; Mains of, rent, 9 ; limestone, lO ; stock, 10 ; pro- duce of, in crops, 15 ; entailed on heirs-male, 17; improvements at, old Manor-house of, oak -room of, 42 ; map of its woods and roads, 45 ; ash-tree of, descril^ed and sketched, 46 ; beech avenue of, 48 ; bowling green at — trees at, 49; plantations of — wilderness of, 73 ; plan of, 75 ; Gardener's Park of, 76 ; the Grotto, 76; plan of, in 1753, showing improvements of first Presi- dent, 77 ; accident to Dundas at, 91 ; style of living at, a week's bill of fare in 1748, 107; consumption of wine and spirits at, 1740-49, 108 ; old clock in hall of, no; additions made to, 189; expenses at, until 1780, 191 ; farm buildings on, 193 ; Mains, rotation of crops on, 1769- 1778, 195 ; oak-room of, 21 1 ; north front of, 248 ; drains of, 295 ; garden gate of, built of stones from old Parliament House, 297 ; beech avenue, gate of, 298 ; bridge at, made of stones from old Parliament House, 300; colliery, 359. Lord. See Dundas. Lady (Anne Gordon),' writes to Sol. -General Dundas, 1745, 132. Arnolstoun, 18. S72 INDEX. Arnot, author of a work on Criminal Law, 296. Dr. , his fee for embalming body of Sir James Dundas, 13. Articles of Faith signed by Sir James Dundas, 5. Artois, Comte d', 283. Athens, 308. Auchinleck, Lord, 182 ; votes in the Douglas Cause, 209 note. Augustus, King of Poland, death of, 112. Aviemore, 92. Aytoun, the Radical, 354. Badenoch, 222; gentry of, 153; dis- affection in, 155. Bailey, Alex. (Capt. Bailey), sus- pected, 121. Baillie, Elizabeth, daughter of second President, 186. Henrietta (Mrs. Dundas), 95 Twte ; letter from, dated Lawers, Oct. 1742, 117; her death, 152. Dame Margaret (Lady Car- michael), mother-in-law of second President Dundas, 114. Baird of Newbyth, 152. Baker's Avenue, 191. Ballintrodo, seat of Templars, i ; barony of, broken up, 2 ; name changed to Arniston, 4. Balmerino, becomes a Lord of Session, 18. Banffshire, Conservatives lose, in 1837, 364. Bargany, Lord, 65 note; ward and nephew of Dundas, 81 ; letter of, to Robert Dundas (second President), 87 ; writes to his cousin, Dundas, in 1734, 112; letter from, to his cousin Dundas, dated Spa, June 1734— dies, 113. Barjarg, votes in the Douglas Cause, 209 note. Barhain^ Life of, 299. ' Bambougle, barony of, xxviii. Bath, visited by Chief Baron, 257. Earl of, succeeds Pelham, 142. Bathurst, Lord (1735), at the Duke of Queensberry's, 84. Lord (1827), retires, 330. Bayll, John, innkeeper, Edinburgh, 247. Beauclerk, Lord George, writes to Lord President Dundas, Oct. 1765, 178. Beautiful Order, 228. Bedford, Duke of, 1 72 ; presents a petition to the House of Lords, 84 ; resigns, Feb. 1746, 142. Bedlay, Lord, 32, 33. I Beechwood, 38. Beer, tax on, to be substituted for Malt Tax, 68. Belhaven, Lord, supposed to be the author of Countryman^ s Rudiments, describes condition of East Lothian, 72. Ben Alder, 222. Bennet, Robert, Dean of Faculty, 52. Dr., 296. Bentinck, Lord George, 344 «^/^. Berlin, 286. Bexley, Lord, in the Canning Ministry, 1827, 330. Bills of Fare for a week at Arniston in 1748, 107. Bingen, 288. Birkenside, 10, 44 ; rotation of crops on, 1769-1778, 195. Birmingham, 343. Bishop's Land, where Lord Arniston resided in Edinburgh, 107. Blair, 92. Forbes, 355. Jas. Hunter, member for the city, 218. Robert, of Avontoun, Solicitor- General, 239, 254 ; death of, in May 181 1, 267. Blakehope, 10. ' Bloodie Mackenzie,' 39, Blucher, 287. Blythswood, 363. Bogend, rotation of crops on, 1769- 1778, 195. Boig, Matthew, servand, ii. Bolton, Duke of, at the Duke of Queensberry's, 84. Bonar, John, 328. Bonnington, 114. Bonnymuir, 312. Boroughbridge, 279. Borthwick, John, of Crookston, 261 note ; married Anne Dundas, 292. Michael, of Glengelt, 2. Sir William, builds Borthwick Castle, 7. kirk, family burial-place in, 6 ; complaint by minister of, 6 ; vestry of, sold to Sir James Dundas, 7. parish church of, burned down, 8. parish, valuation of, 8. where second President is in- terred, 1787, 198. old church of, 299. Castle, 369. Bossy, 283. Boswell, David, of Balmuto, xxvii., 2. James, 218; his verses on Dundas, 219. Bothkennar, xxvi. INDEX. S7S Bovino, 309. Boyd, Mistress Marion, marries James Dundas, 1 7 ; her issue, 38. Rol)ert, Lord, 17, 38. Brax field, Lord. See Macqueen. Breteuil, 290. BrtWe of Lamnurmoor^ characters therein, 39. Broad Bottom Administration of 1744, 124. Broun, James, 329. Browne, Robert, servand, li. Bruce, General, of Kennet, xxxiv. James, cuik, 11. Lady Mary, 367 ticte, Brussels, 286. Bryans colliery, 359. Buccleuch, Duke of, 303 uoU^ 221, 342 ; fees Dundas, 217. Buchan, George, of Kelloe, 252 ; marries Anne Dundas, 1773, 187. Bukharest, 309. Bulwer's Life of Lord Palmerston, 345 *fo^^' Buonaparte, Jerome, 287. Burgh Reform, 226. Burke, Edmund, on the French Revolution, 1790, 229. Burnett, Jas. (Lord Monboddo), suc- ceeds Lord Milton, 1766, 179; is counsel for Mr. Douglas, 180 ; ' Attic Banquets,' 205 ; at Paris, 207 ; on the Douglas Cause, 209. Bute, Lord, advancement of, 169 ; ascendency of, 171. Butler, Hon. Simon, 239. Burne, 10. Buxton, 215. Byng, Admiral, court-martial on, 1 19. Caithness, Conservative victory for, 1827, 364. Calais, 289. Calderwood, Lilias Durham, of Polton, Caledonian Mercury on Henry Dun- das's re-election, 1783, 217. Caledonian Chronicle, 233. Callendar, Captain Burn, 364. Cambaceres, 286. Cambray, 289. Camnethan, 152. Campbell, Lord, his Lives of the Chancellors, 209. John, M. P. for Dumbartonshire, 333. Hay, appointed Lord President, 1789, 221. Camperdown, 249. Canary Islands, 256. Canning writes to Chief Baron Dundas, Feb. 1806, 364; on the one-pound notes, 315 ; rwjuested to form a Ministry, 1827, 329 ; death of, Aug. 8. 1827, 334. Canning, Lady, 337. Carl)erry, 369. Carleel, 33. Carlisle, Lord, adheres to Canning, Carlyle, Dr. (Jupiter Carlyle), his de- 330- rlyle, scription of the first President Dun- das, 58; on the Tragedy o{ Douglas ^ 159; ' Jupiter,' 369. Carmelite Friars, xxvi. Carmichael, Sir James, of Bonnington, father-in-law of second President Dundas, 114. Lady, 152. See Baillie. Carnegie of Finhaven — murder of the Earl of Strathmore, 78. Carrington, 3, 42, 91. Water of, 43. Carteret, Lord, 82 ; at Lord Cobham's, 83 ; opposes the Duke of Argyll on management of Scotland, 97 ; a royal favourite — his motto, 124 ; resigns Nov. 1744, 124 ; jealousy between, and Pelham, 136. Cassiltoun, 5. Castle Leod, 73 ; a resort of Lord Arniston's, 93. Castlereagh, Lord, 265. Castleton, 304, 3, 10. Burn, 76. Catcune, 44. Catholic Emancipation, 253. Emancipation Act, 349. Cato Street conspirators, 230. Chantrey, his statue of Chief Baron Dundas, 292. Chapman, 237. Charles, Emperor, 112. I., xxviii. ; mistaken policy of, 16 ; in Scotland, 17. II., xxviii., 230 ; custom regard- ing verdict then established, 78. Prince (Pretender), lands among Western Islands, Aug. 1745, 126 ; enters Derby, 136. Chatsworth, 76. Chesterfield, Lord, 102 ; opposes Wal- pole. Lord -Steward of the House- hold, dismissed, 79 ; his dismissal, 82 ; at Lord Cobham's meeting, 83. Chevalier, his arrival in 1745, 126. Chichester, Earl of, xxxii. Chipperham election petition, 96. Church, Established, advantages of, discussed by Sir Robert Peel, 363. of Scotland supported by Ar- niston family, 364. 374. INDEX. Clackmannanshire represented by James Erskine of Grange, 83. Clarence, Duke of, resigns office of Lord High Admiral, 339. Clarendon, 21. Clark, John, 328. Clerk, Sir George, of Penicuik, 337 note ; represents Midlothian, 281 ; M.P. for Midlothian, 313 ; defeated by Sir John Dalrymple 1832, 356 ; returned for Midlothian 1835, 362 ; defeated by Sir W. Gibson-Craig 1837, 364. Clerkington, 304 note. Coalition, 214, 216 ; unpopularity of, 274. Coalston, Lord, 182 ; votes in Douglas Cause, 209 note. Cobham, Viscount, 83, 84. Coblentz, 288. * Cobler of Messina,' 243. Cochrane, Admiral, 256. Cockburn, Baron, xxxi. Lord, 88 ; on Henry Dundas, 214; bears no good- will to Robert Dundas, his cousin, 216 ; his Me77torials^ 221 ; describes Edin- burgh Council Chamber, 228 ; on Chantrey's statue of Chief Baron Dundas, 292 ; on second Viscount Melville, 314. Archibald, Sheriff of Midlothian, 88 7iote. of Cockpen, 88. Sir John, of Ormiston, 38. Sir William, 88. Cockpen, 17. Cockpit, 69. College of Justice, 32. Collieries of the Lothians, 359. Cologne, 287, 289. Colonsay, Lord, 368 note. Colquhar, 304. Colt, Adam, of Auldhame, 189. Oliver, 20. Commissioners appointed to examine Borthwick Kirk, 7 ; sit at Dalkeith as Executive, 21 ; cease to act, 23.. Comrie, 222. Constantinople, 308. Cope, vSir John, sent to Scotland as Commander-in-Chief in 1744, 119; is consulted, 121 ; consults Lord Arniston, 122 ; starts for the North too late, 127; marches to Inverness, 128 ; is defeated at Prestonpans — his defeat, 131. Corfu, 347. Cornwallis, Lord, 174. Corryburgh, 92. Cotton, Sir John Hinde, fails to ob tain a place, 97. Couper, Rev. Robert, minister of Temple, 16 ; charged with tippling, \% et seq. Coursing in Scotland, 305 et seq. Coiirant on the election of 1837, 364. Court of Session from 1748 to 1787, 203 ; constitution of, 205. Craig, Sir W. Gibson, defeated by Sir George Clerk, 1835, 362 ; re- turned for Midlothian, 1837, 364. Craigie of Glendoick, a candidate for the President's chair, 99 ; Lord Advocate, 102, 117, 119; writes to Dundas, Jan. 1746, 138, 141 ; Lord President, dies, March 1760, 162. Craigmillar, 369. Cranston, William, 190. Crawford, Lord, 24, 28. Crebillon, 158. Crichton Castle, 369. Crieff, 96. Croker replies to Malagrowther, 325. Cromarty, Earl of, 23. Countess of, 93. Crombie, Thomas, servand, 11. Cromwell, triumph of, 21. Crops, rotation of, 1769-1778, 195. Cruz, 256. Cumberland, Duke of, 172. Cummings, as a judge, 90. Cunningham, David, 328. Currie, 95. Dalhousie, 91, 295, 359. Lord, signs Covenant, 16. Dalinagarry, 92. Dalkeith, 295. Presbytery of, 6, 16 ; questions Sir James Dundas regarding Solemn League, 21. Small-pox at, 85. — ■■ — Park, pheasants on, 303. Dallas of Dawlish, 261. Dalmeny, Lord, 364. Dalnacardoch, 92. Dalrymple, Daniel. 34. Sir David, of Hailes, youngest son of first Lord Stair, 55 ; Lord Advocate (1709-14), displeases the Government, and is dismissed, 53, 60 ; retires, becomes Audilor of Exchequer, 64. Sir David (Lord Hailes), 157 ; on the bench, 1766- 1792, 204; attends Douglas Cause in Paris, 207 ; votes in Douglas Cause, 209 710 te, 225 note. Sir Hew, President, death of, in INDEX. S75 1737, 89; his opinion of first Presi- dent Dundas, 109 ; old age, 204. Dalrymple, James, Clerk of Court of Session, 39. Sir James, of Stair, elevated to the bench, 23 ; letter of, to Sir James Dundas, dated Sept. 12, 1663, 25 ; letter of, to Sir James Dundas, of same date — letter of date Sept. 21, 26 ; letter from, t<^ Sir James Dundas, Feb. 15, 1664, 33 : his seal on l>ench declared vacant, 32 ; letters of, to Sir James Dundas of dates April 19 and May 26, 1664, 35 ; consenting party to son's marriage with Kather- me Dundas, 39 ; driven intoexile, 39. Hon. Sir J., of Borthwick, 38. John, writes to Dundas, 1766, 182. Sir John, 305 ; opjx)nent of Sir G. Clerk's, 352 ; elected for Mid- lothian, 1832, 356. Colonel, 233. Dalwhinnie, 92. Dalzell, George, Ix>rd, sick of the small-pox, 85. Darlington, 144. David, 287. Davidson, John, 183. Duncan, of Tulloch, M.P. for Cromarty and Nairn, 333. Deadmanlees, 191. Deanhead burn, 76. Declaration to be taken by all persons in positions of public trust, 27. • Defiance,' 254. Delgado Bay, 257. Delphi, 308. Dempster, George, of Skibo, 292. Denison, Evelyn, 344 note. Derby, 215. Deskford, Lord, comments on Sir John Cope, 127. Devonshire, Duke of, 172. Dewar, 42. De Winter, 250. Dick, Sir Alex., of Prestonfield, 149, 217. Dickson, John, 88. Digges, West, 159. ' Douglas,' Tragedy of, 159. Cause, 180; details of, 206. Duke of, 181, 206. Lady Jane, l8i. Marquis of, 206. Lord W. Keith, 337 note. Katherine, wife of Sir James Dundas, 5. of Torthorwald, 5. old Baronage of Scotland, xxxv. James, of Stanypeth, 17. Dover, Duke of, his patent, 6 3. Dresden, surrender of, 281. Drummond, Eliza, 254. Henry, banker, of Charing Cross, 220. Henry, of Albury, 220, Janet, servand, 11. Drumore, garden of (East Lothian), 76. Duddingston Loch, trout from, brought to Arniston, 189. Dudhope. See Angus. Dudley, Lord, Foreign Secretary in 1828, 335. Dumbarton, 213. Dunbar, Earl of, xxv. David, of Baldoon, * Buck law ' of the Bride of LatHmernioof\, 39. Dumbreck's Hotel, 239. Duncan, Captain Adam (Viscount Duncan, Admiral Duncan), 189, 249 ; writes to Lord Advocate Dun- das, 1797. 250; made Viscount Duncan of Camperdown, and Baron Duncan of Lundie, 252. Alex., of Lundie, 251 note. Lady Adamina, wife of Sir John Dalrymple, 356. Lady Mary (Lady Mary Tuflon), writes to Henry Dundas, Oct. 1797, 251. Sir William, M.D., 251 note. Dundas of Beech wood, family of, xxxi., 38. Dundases of Duddingston and Manor, y\. of Dundas, 14. Dundas, estate of, sold, xxix. owners of, xxv. Castle, xxviii., 2, 93; modern, erected, xxix. Alex., son of first Lord, by Janet Hepburn, 38. Anne, marries George Buchan of Kelloe, I773> 187. Sir Archibald, xxvi. Chas., son of first Lord, by Janet Hepburn, 38. Christian, wife of Sir Charles Erskine of Alva, 38. Sir David (Clerk to the Signet), born 1803, his career, xxxi. ; dies 1877, xxxiii. David, son of Robert, merchant in Edinburgh, born circa 1735, xxxii. Elizal>eth, daughter of George, 2 ; marries Sir Patrick Murray of Lang- schaw, 5. Elizal^eth (wife of first President), letter of, to her son, 1733, 85 ; death of, from small-pox, 1 734, 86. 576 INDEX. Dundas, Elizabeth (Chief Baron's wife), 219; on President Blair's death, 268. • General Francis, second son of second President, 223, 266 note, 284. George, of Dundas, purchases Arniston — contract of excambion by, 10 ; consenting party to marriage of Dundas with Mistress Marion Boyd, 17. George, served heir 1554, xxvii. George, laird of Dundas circa 1700, xxviii. George, son of James Dundas, sketch of, dies 1869, xxxiii. Henrietta (second daughter of second President), marries Captain Adam Duncan (Viscount Duncan), 1777, .189, 249. Grizzel, marries Adam Colt of Auldhame, 1778, 189. Henry {first Viscount Melville), 45, 107; birth, in 1742, 94; ap- pointed Solicitor - General, 1766, 181 ; writes to his brother the Lord President, Sept. 1770, 183 ; returned for Midlothian 1774, appointed Lord Advocate 1775, 184; correspon- dence with the Lord President, 1775- 1783, 185; re-elected, 217 ; writes to his brother, second President, 1787, 220; returned for Edinburgh, 1790, 225 ; writes to Solicitor-General Blair, Nov. 1793, 238 ; writes to Lord Advocate, Nov. 1 793, 239 ; to Lord Advocate, Dec. 1793, 240; writes to Mr. Smith, Dec. 1793, 240; writes to Lord Braxfield about Muir and Palmer, 241 ; retires with Pitt in 1 80 1, 253 ; impeachment of, created Viscount Melville and Baron Dunira, 1802, 259 ; resigns 1806 ; his acquit- tal, 260; death of, 181 1, aged 70, 269 ; his career, 269 et seq. ; opposes Lord North in his first speech on America, 270 ; speaks for three hours on the Indian policy, 271 ; ' King of Scotland,' 272 ; his Jcind- ness, 273 ; as Treasurer of the Navy, 274 ; relation to the Act of Union — his character, 275. Henry (Chief Baron's second son), Vice-Admiral, 292, 305. Henry (Lord Melville's son), on Huskisson's secession, 1828, 346 ; returned for Winchelsea, 1830, 350- Hugh de, XXXV. James de, xxxvi. Sir James, son of George, 2 ; succeeds George, 5 ; details about. 5 ; purchases land, 6 ; an agricul- turist, 8 ; contract of excambion by, 10 ; death of, in 1628 — his will — funeral expenses of — apothecary's bill for, 12; buys the vestry of Borthwick, 1606, 299. Dundas, Sir ]2ivi\&s,first Lord Arniston, succeeds his father at age of eight, 14 ; attends St. Andrews Univer- sity, 14; made an elder, 16; is knighted by Charles I. — a witness against Rev. R. Couper, 18 ; sits as judge, 19 ; returned to Parliament for Midlothian, 21 ; signs Solemn League in 1650, 21 ; his conduct at the Restoration, 22 ; applies to be made a Lord of Session, 23 ; letter of, to Lauderdale, Dec. 16,1663,31 ; letter of, to Lord Chancellor, Jan. 7, 1664, 32; refuses to sign the Declar- ation, 36 ; retires into private life — his marriages, 38 ; his death, 39 ; funeral expenses of, 40. James (son of second Lord), his speech on the Jacobite medal in 171 1, 52 ; issued a pamphlet in sup- port of his conduct — is prosecuted for sedition, 53 ; at the bar of the High Court of Justiciary, 54 ; marries Mary Hope of Kerse, but predeceases his father without issue, 56 ; his Jacobite leanings, 59. James, ancestor of Dundases of Beechwood, 38. John of Dundas, xxxvi. John, of Manor, his five sons and descendants, xxxiv. note. Katherine, wife of Hon. Sir J. Dalrymple of Borthwick, 38 ; mar- ries James Dalrymple, Clerk of Court of Session, 39. Sir Lawrence, founder of the Zetland family, dies 1781, xxxiv. Lawrence (Earl of Zetland), dies 1839, XXXV. Professor Laurence, founder of Dundas Bursaries, 87 note. Margaret, wife of George, 2. Margaret (Miss Peggy), marries General John Scott of Balcomie, 1773, 187. Mary, wife of Sir J. Home of Blackadder, 38. Dame Marie, maintains the rights of her son, James, while a minor, 16. Philip, 350. Robert, son of George, 2. Robert [second Loirl Arniston), 38 ; succeeds his father, Sir James (1679), 40; lives abroad — supports Prince of Orange — appointed a INDEX. 377 judge, Nov. 1, 1689, 41 : marries Margaret Sinclair of Stevenson, 56; writes to his son, the Lord Advocate, about retiring— his death in 1726, 57. Dundas, Rol)ert {first President)— ^on of the preceding— lK)m 1685, advo- cate 1709, 58; becomes Solicitor- General in 17 1 7, Lord Advocate 1720, and Dean of Faculty 1721, 57 — referred to in Guy Maunering — marries, first, Elizabeth Watson of Muirhouse, 1712, 59; apiwinted Solicitor-General, 59 ; opposes the Treason Law Assimilation Act, 60 ; obstructs the Commission of Oyer and Terminer for trial of rebels, 60 ; his opinion preferred to that of Lord Advocate Ual- rymple, 61 ; his illness in 1720, 63 ; appointed Lord Advocate, 64 ; Assessor to the city of Edinburgh, which he resigns in 172 1, 65 ; letter from, to Bailie Wightman, 65 ; elected for Midlothian without op- position, 1722, 67 ; joins the mal- content Scottish members in Malt Tax Riots — dismissed from office in 1725, 68 ; advises the Edinburgh brewers — succeeds to the family estates in 1726, 71 ; leader of the Scottish opposition — builds modern house of Arniston, 72 ; the condition of his cattle in 1726, 73 ; vindicates the rights of juries to return a general verdict at the trial of Carnegie of Finhaven, 78 ; letters from, to his son at Utrecht, in I733» 80 et seq. ; letter of, to Lord Bargany in 1734, 81; letter from, to his wife, 83 ; seconds Lord Polwarth, 84 ; strange opinion of, regarding the Lords, 84 ; as a debater, 85 ; letters of, to his son at Utrecht regarding smallpox, etc., l733-34» 85, III; loses his first wife, 85 et seq. ; marries, second, Anne Gordon of Invergordon, 87 ; letter to his wife, 1736, 88; takes his seat on the l)ench as Lord Arniston, June 10, 1737, 90; letter to his son Robert, 1737 — meets with an accident, 91 ; letters from, to his wife, dated Castle Leod, Rossdhu and Shien, 1740-43, 93 et seq. ; goes to Rossdhu. 94 ; goes • to Shien, 95 ; a candidate for the President's chair — writes to Lord Chancellor, Dec. 1747, 99 ; appointed President, 103 ; death of, in 1753— at the Mansion House of Abbeyhill, IC9. Dundas, Robert (secotui President)^ l)orn in 1713, July i8th — his school and college fife, ill; studies at Utrecht, 80 ; promses visiting the armies on the Rhine, 112; passes advocate (1738) — in 1741 marries, first, Henrietta Carmichacl of Bon- nington, 1 14 ; ap]K)inted Soli- citor-Cicncral in 1742, 99, 115; accompanies Sir J. Cope from Dun- bar to Preston pans, 1745, 131 ; remains at Berwick, 134; letter from his father, Jan. 1746, 139 ; resigns office of Solicitor-General, 140 ; suffers from gout — resolves to retire, 144 ; declines to offer himself for Lanarkshire in 1750, 145 ; writes to the Hon. Charles Hope Weir, March 1750, 146 et seq. ; returned for Midlothian, April 1754 — Lord Advocate in August — re-elected Dec, 150; marries, second, Jean Grant of Prestongrange (1756), 160 ; appointed Lord President, March 1760, 162 ; autobiographical sketch of, 166 et seq. ; writes to Lord George Beauclerk, 178 ; gives his casting vote against claimant in Douglas Cause, 18 1 ; his children, 186; purchases Shank in I753> 189 ; writes to the Royal Dragoons, Dalkeith, 192 ; proposes a rotation of crops at Arniston, 194 ; dies Dec. 13th, 1787, 197 ; funeral of, 198 ; remarks on, 199 ; his pre- eminence as a judge, 200 ; his final judgment in Douglas Cause, 1767, 207. Mrs. (Henrietta Bailie), writes to her husband, May 1744, 123 ; death of, 1755, 152. Robert (Lord Chief Baron — son of second President), lx)rn 1758, 214 ; visits England 1772 — called to the bar 1779, 215; appointed Solicitor-General 1784, 216 ; his fees — appointed Lord Advocate in 1790, 217 ; falls in love with his cousin Elizabeth — his stature, 219; Lord Advocate, 1789, 221 ; at I^xrh Ericht, 222 ; writes to Mrs. Dundas, 223 ; returned for Midlothian 1 790, 225 ; a follower of Pitt in 1790, 225 ; writes to Secretary Dundas (Oct. 1739), 237, (Dec. 1793), 242 et seq.\ again returned for Midlothian, June 1796, 246; attacked by mob, 1792, 231 ; election dinner, Oct. 1799, 247 ; on the victory at Camperdown, 1797,249; becomes Lord Chief Baron 1804, 252 ; visits Lisbon and Madeira 878 INDEX. 1804-5, 254 ; returns from his voyage, 257 ; writes to his wife, June 1806, on Lord Melville's acquittal, 261 ; travels for health on the Continent, 181 7, — his companions, 284 ; winters in Italy, 181 7, 289 ; death of, June 17, 1819, 292; pos- sessor of Arniston from 1787 to 1 81 9, 294 : improvements made by him at Arniston, 296 ; his account of the improvements, 74 ; his description of improvements made there from 1753 to 1776, 190. Dundas, Robert (Chief Baron's eldest son), born in 1797 — education, etc., 301 ; on the grouse shootings, 303 ; writes to his brother Henry, Feb. 181 5, 305 ; writes to his mother from Greece, 18 18, 306 ; in Constan- tinople in 1818, 307 ; at Vienna, 308 ; Captain of Dalkeith Yeo- manry, 311; marries Lilias Durham Calderwood, 314; becomes Advocate- Depute 1822, 314; writes to Lord Melville, June 1826, 327 ; hesitates to stand for the county, 340 ; determines to retire, 358 ; death of, June 8th, 1838, 366. Mrs., succeeds to estates of her family 1838 — death of, in Italy 1883, 366. Robert, succeeds his father Robert, 1838,-368. Robert Adam, M.P., writes to Robert Dundas, May 1827, 332 ; on Sir George Clerk's return for Mid- lothian, 342 ; writes to Robert Dundas, June 1828, 347 ; returned for Ipswich, 350 ; writes to Robert Dundas, June 1832, 352 ; writes to Robert Dundas, June 1832, 354 ; returned for North Lincolnshire 1837— sketch of his career, 367. Robert. See Melville (second Viscount). Sir Robert, of Beechwood, xxxi. Rev. Robert, of Humbie, xxxi. Robert, Merchant, xxxii. Sir Thos., born 1741 — created Baron Dundas of Aske — dies, 1820, XXXV. Thomas (son of second Lord), Sheriff of Galloway, writes to his grand-nephew 1781, 215. Sir Thomas, 232. Thomas, second Earl of Zet- land, XXXV. Sir Walter, xxviii. Walter, son of George, 2. Rt. Hon. William (third son of second President), member for Edinburgh, 248 ; his indiscretion, 280 ; again returned for Edinburgh, 1830, 350; Lord Clerk Register, 367. Dundas, W. Pitt (third son of Chief Baron), his account of a journey from Arniston to England, 257 ; Deputy Clerk -Register of Scotland, 292 ; death of, 1882, 367. Dundee, rioting in, 1792, 230. Dundonald, Earl of, attends meeting at Lord Cobham's, 83 ; at the Duke of Queensberry's, 84. Dunfermline, Abbot of, xxvi. Dunira, 222 ; estate of, purchased by Sir R. Dundas of Beechwood, xxxi. Dupplin, battle of, 1332, xxvi. Durham, Admiral Sir Philip, of Largo and Polton, 254, 366. Sir W., of Grange, ievip. Robt. Bruce, 366. Easter Halkerston, value of, 8. East Retford, 343. Edgar Atheling, xxiii. Edinburgh, Parliament in, 17 ; magistrates of, dine with Lord Arniston in 1747, 47 ; action by brewers of, 71 ; success of Tragedy of Douglas in, 159 ; influence of bar and bench in, 201 ; Town-Coun- cil of, chooses the Member, 213 ; riots of 1792 in, 230 ; Old Parlia- ment House of, 297. Edinburgh Advertiser on the elections of the Dundases in 1790, 225. Gazette, 233 ; threat in, by the Dean of Faculty, 53. Gazetteer, 247. Herald on Dundas's election for Midlothian, June 1796, 246. Weekly Journal, Malachi Mala- growther writes to, 315. Eglinton, Lord, xxvi. Elchies, Lord (Patrick Grant), 103. Eld on. Lord, retires, 330. Elgin, Earl of, 350, 367 note. Eliot, Lord, 344 w^/^. EUiock, votes in the Douglas Cause, 209 note. Elliot, Sir Gilbert, of Minto, his death, 60. Elphinston, Lord, attends meeting at Lord Cobham's, 83. Elphinston, John, son of Nicol, 3. Nicol, of the Shank, 3. ' Engagement ' for relief of Charles i., 21. England in 1795, 244. Entail Act, 1685, 203. Enzer, Joseph, 76. Epithalamium on marriage of Robert INDEX. 379 Dune! as and Henrietta Carmichael of IJonnington, 115. Ericht, Loch, 222. I'rskine, Sir Charles of Alva, 38, 105 note. Charles, of Tinwald, a candidate for the President's Chair, 99 ; a friend of the Duke of Argyll's, loi ; appointed Lord Justice-Clerk, 103 ; fails to secure the President's Chair, 162. Henry (Dean of Faculty), writes to Robert Dundas on the death of the President, in 1787, 197 ; agi- tates for Burgh reform, 229 ; op- posed by Dundas in the election of a Dean for 1796, 245. James, of Grange, 82. Thomas, Lord Chancellor, 229. Esk, 3. Esperston, 5, 42 ; improvements on, 9 ; hill, 10 ; jointure of Mistress Marion Boyd, 17 ; hamlet of, 43. Essonne, 290. Ethelred, King, xxiii. Excise Scheme, withdrawal of, 79. Faculty of Advocates presented with a Jacobite medal, 52. Fair ford, Alan, 205. Falkirk, 96. Falkland, 92. Ferguson of Pitfour, 204 ; member for Aberdeenshire, 219. Fergusson, Colonel, his Life of Henry Erskine, 245 note. Ferrol, 254. Findlater, Earl of, relation to Dundas, 168 ; fees Dundas, 217. Fitzharris, Lord, on Pitt's death, 260. Fitzwilliam, Earl of, xxxv. Fleming, Admiral The Hon. Chas. Elphinstone, 254, 255. Flanders, Dundas and Lord Bargany tour through, 113. Fletcher, Andrew (Lord Milton), 119, 149 ; Lord Justice - Clerk, thrust aside, 145 ; receives the Signet for life, 103 ; is narrowly watched, 156 ; supports Home, 159 ; dies Dec. 1766, 179. Archibald, Advocate, on Burgh Reform, 1790, 227, note. Henry, of Saltoun, 105 note. Florence, 310. Forbes, Duncan, of Culloden, succeeds Dundas as Lord Advocate, 70 ; appointed President, 1737, 90; dies Dec. loth, 1747, 99 ; compared with Dundas, his successor, 109 ; writes to Dundas, Solicitor-General, in 1742, 1 16 ; writes to Dundas on his resignation of Solicitor • General in Tan. 1746, 141 ; his relation to Dundas, 168. Sir John, 353. I'eter, 328. Forfeited Estates Act, 67. Fort- Augustus, Governor of, 153. Fountainhall, Lord, 170. Fox, Charles, 229 ; plagued by Henrv Dundas, 215 ; on Muirand i'almers trials, 244 ; suspicion of, aroused against Dundas, 274. France, war with, 123; Douglas Cause in, 207 ; termination of war with, 181S, 283. Frankfort, 287. Erasers attnck Culloden House, 135. Frederick the Great, 118. Freeman, quoted, xxiii. Rev. Dr. W., of Hammels, Herts, 161 ttote. French war, 117. Fullarton Burn, 303. Funchal Bay, 255. Fushie Bridge, 304. Galloway, Alexander, servand, II. Garden, Francis (Lord Gardenstoune), opposes Wedderburn before the Par- liament of Paris, 204 ; votes in Douglas Cause, 209 note. Garlics, Lord, death of his son from small-pox, 85. Garrick, 159. Gat ton, 350 note. Genappes, 287. General Assembly attended by Dun- das in 1837 and 1838, 365. George li. dies Oct. 25, 1760, 169. in., birthday 1792, 230; mobbed and insulted, 245. Gerard, xxv. Gerrald, Joseph, 241. Ghent, 286. Gibbon, David M., 328. Gibson, J as., 340. Gilchrist, W., 328. Gilmour, Sir Alex., 172. Sir Charles, of Craigmillar, M.P. for Midlothian, writes to Lord Arniston, Dec. 1747, loi. Sir John, of Craigmillar, Lord President, 23. (Glasgow, 312 note ; Malt Tax riot in, 71 ; only partially represented, 213 ; potatoes taxed in, 227 ; University of, 362. 380 INDEX. Glencairn, William, Earl of, becomes Lord High Chancellor, 23. Glengarry men, 94 ; insolence of, 153. ' Glory,' 254. Goat-Whey cure, 93. Goderich, Lord, succeeds Canning as Premier, 334. Goldie, Rev. Jas., writes to Robert Dundas, March 1837, 365. Goolburn, Chancellor of the Exche- quer, 1828, 335. Gordon, George, first Duke of, 52. Duke of, fees Dundas, 417. Duchess of, offers a Jacobite medal to Faculty of Advocates, 52 ; in the Heart of Midlothiany 56. Capt., 291. Sir John, 102. Lewis, 135. Sir William, of Invergordon, Bart., 87, 93 «^/