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Contents
Origin of
mechanical instinct in Lancashire and Cheshire , Hugo de Lupus , The Peter Stubb's
files , Worsley labourers , Promotion from the ranks , Free trade in ability
, Foreman
lieutenants, Archie Torry , James Hutton , John Clarke , Thomas Crewdson , Trades' Union interference , A strike ordered , Workman advertised
for , A reinforcement of
Scotch mechanics , The strike scotched , Millwrights and engineers , Indenture-bound apprentices , Visits of my father , Enthusiastic reception , His last work , His death , Testimony of Sir David Wilkie
I HAD no difficulty
in obtaining abundance of skilled workmen in South Lancashire and
Cheshire. I was in the neighbourhood of Manchester, which forms
the centre of a population gifted with mechanical instinct. From
an early period the finest sort of mechanical work has been
turned out in that part of England. Much of the talent is
inherited. It descends from father to son, and develops itself
from generation to generation. I may mention one curious
circumstance connected with the pedigree of Manchester: that much
of the mechanical excellence of its workmen descends from the
Norman smiths and armourers introduced into the neighbourhood at
the Norman Conquest by Hugo de Lupus, the chief armourer of
William the Conqueror, after the battle of Hastings, in 1066.
I was first informed
of this circumstance by William Stubbs of Warrington, then maker
of the celebrated "Lancashire files." The "P.
S.," or Peter Stubbs's files, were so vastly superior to
other files, both in the superiority of the steel and in the
perfection of the cutting, which long retained its efficiency,
that every workman gloried in the possession and use of such
durable tools. Being naturally interested in everything connected
with tools and mechanics, I was exceedingly anxious to visit the
factory where these admirable files were made. I obtained an
introduction to William Stubbs, then head of the firm, and was
received by him with much cordiality when I asked him if I might
be favoured with a sight of his factory, he replied that he had
no factory, as such; and that all he had to do in supplying his
large warehouse was to serve out the requisite quantities of pure
cast steel as rods and bars to the workmen; and that they, on
their part, forged the metal into files of every description at
their own cottage workshops, principally situated in the
neighbouring counties of Cheshire and Lancashire.
This information
surprised as well as pleased me. Mr. Stubbs proceeded to give me
an account of the origin of this peculiar system of cottage
manufacture in his neighbourhood. It appears that Hugo de Lupus,
William the Conqueror's Master of Arms, the first Earl of
Chester, settled in North Cheshire shortly after the Conquest. He
occupied Halton Castle, and his workmen resided in Warrington and
the adjacent villages of Appleton, Widnes, Prescot, and Cuerdley.
There they produced coats of steel, mail armour, and steel and
iron weapons, under the direct superintendence of their chief.
The manufacture thus
founded continued for many centuries. Although the use of armour
was discontinued, the workers in steel and iron still continued
famous. The skill that had formerly been employed in forging
chain armour and war instruments was devoted to more peaceful
purposes. The cottage workmen made the best of files and steel
tools of other kinds. Their talents became hereditary, and the
manufacture of wire in all its forms is almost peculiar to
Warrington and the neighbourhood. Mr. Stubbs also informed me
that most of the workmen's peculiar names for tools and
implements were traceable to old Norman-French words. He also
stated that at Prescot a peculiar class of workmen has long been
established, celebrated for their great skill in clock and
watchmaking; and that, in his opinion, they were the direct
descendants of a swarm of workmen from Hugo de Lupus's original
Norman hive of refined metal-workers, dating from the time of the
Conquest. To return to my narrative. In the midst of such a
habitually industrious population, it will be obvious that there
was no difficulty in finding a sufficient supply of able workmen.
It was for the most part the most steady, respectable, and
well-conducted classes of mechanics who sought my employment --
not only for the good wages they received, but for the sake of
their own health and that of their families; for it will be
remembered that the foundry and the workmen's dwellings were
surrounded by the fresh, free, open country. In the course of a
few years the locality became a thriving colony of skilled
mechanics. In order to add to the accommodation of the increasing
numbers, an additional portion of land, amounting to eight acres,
was leased from Squire Trafford on the same terms as before. On
this land suitable houses and cottages for the foremen and
workmen were erected. At the same time substantial brick
workshops were built in accordance with my original general plan,
to meet the requirements of our rapidly expanding business, until
at length a large and commodious factory was erected, as shown in
the annexed engraving.
Bridgewater
Foundry Patricroft. From a painting by Alexander Nasmyth.
The village of Worsley,
the headquarters of the Bridgewater Canal, supplied us with a
valuable set of workmen. They were, in the first place,
labourers; but, like all Lancashire men, they were naturally
possessed of a quick aptitude for mechanical occupations
connected with machinery. Our chief employment of these so-called
labourers was in transporting heavy castings and parts of
machinery from one place to another. To do this properly required
great care and judgment, in order that the parts might not be
disturbed, and that the mechanics might proceed towards their
completion without any unnecessary delay. None but those who have
had practical acquaintance with the importance of having skilful
labourers to perform these apparently humble, but in reality very
important functions, can form an adequate idea of the value of
such services.
All the requisite
qualities we required were found in the Worsley labourers. They
had been accustomed to the heaviest class of work in connection
with the Bridgewater Canal. They had been thoroughly trained in
the handling of all manner of ponderous objects. They performed
their work with energy and willingness. It was quite a treat to
me to look on and observe their rapid and skilful operations in
lifting and transporting ponderous portions of machinery, in
which a vast amount of costly work had been embodied. After the
machines or engines had been finished, it was the business of the
same workmen to remove them from the workshops to the
railway-siding alongside the foundry, or to the boats at the
canal wharf. In all these matters the Worsley men could be
thoroughly depended upon.
Where they showed the
possession, in any special degree, of a true mechanical faculty,
I was enabled to select from the working labourers the most
effective men to take charge of the largest and most powerful
machine tools -- such as planing machines, lathes, and boring
machines. The ease and rapidity with which they caught up all the
technical arts and manipulations connected with the effective
working of these machines was extraordinary. The results were
entirely satisfactory to myself, as well as to the men
themselves, by the substantial rise in their wages which followed
their advancement to higher grades of labour. Thus I had no
difficulty in manning my machine tools by drawing my recruits
from this zealous and energetic class of Worsley labourers . It is by this
"selection of the fittest" that the true source of the
prosperity of every large manufacturing establishment depends. I
believe that Free Trade in Ability has a much closer
relation to national prosperity than even Free Trade in
Commodities.
But here I came into
collision with another class of workmen - those who are of
opinion that employers should select for promotion, not those who
are the fittest and most skilful, but those who have served a
seven years' apprenticeship and are members of a Trades' Union.
It seemed to me that this interference with the free selection
and promotion of the fittest was at variance with free choice of
the best men, and that it was calculated, if carried out, to
strike at the root of the chief source of our prosperity. If
every workman of the same class went in the same rut, and were
paid the same uniform rate of wages, irrespective of his natural
or acquired ability, such a system would destroy the emulative
spirit which forms the chief basis of manipulative efficiency and
practical skill, and on which, in my opinion, the prosperity of
our manufacturing establishments mainly depends. But before I
proceed to refer to the strike of Unionists, which for a time
threatened to destroy, or at all events to impede the spirit of
enterprise and the free choice of skilful workmen, in which I
desired to conduct the Bridgewater Foundry, I desire to say a few
words about those excellent helpers, the foremen engineers, who
zealously helped me in my undertaking from beginning to end.
I must place my most
worthy, zealous, and faithful Archy Torry at the top of the list.
He rose from being my only workman when I first started in
Manchester, to be my chief general foreman. The energy and
devotion which he brought to bear upon my interests set a high
example to all in my employment. Although he was in some respects
deficient in his knowledge of the higher principles of
engineering and mechanical construction, I was always ready to
supply that defect. His hearty zeal and cheerful temper, and his
energetic movement when among the men, had a sympathetic
influence upon all about him. His voice had the same sort of
influence upon them as the drum and fife on a soldier's march: it
quickened their movements. We were often called in by our
neighbour manufacturers to repair a breakdown of their engines.
That was always a sad disaster, as all hands were idle until the
repair was effected. Archy was in his glory on such occasions. By
his ready zeal and energy he soon got over the difficulty,
repaired the engines, and set the people to work again. He became
quite famous in these cases of extreme urgency. He never spared
himself, and his example had an excellent effect upon every
workman under him.
Another of my favourite
workshop lieutenants was James Hutton. He had been leading
foreman to my worthy friend George Douglass, of Old Broughton,
Edinburgh. He was fully ten years my senior, and when working at
Douglass's I looked up to him as a man of authority. I had
obtained from him many a valuable wrinkle in mechanical and
technical construction. After I left Edinburgh he had emigrated
to the United States for the purpose of bettering his condition.
But he promised me that if disappointed in his hopes of settling
there, he should be glad to come into my service if I was ever in
a position to give him employment. Shortly after my removal to
Patricroft, and when everything had been got into full working
order, I received a letter from him in which he said that he was
anxious to return to England, and asking if there was any vacancy
in our establishment that he might be employed to fill up. It so
happened that the foremanship of turners was then vacant. I
informed Hutton of the post; and on his return to England he was
duly enrolled in our staff.
The situation was a
very important one, and Hutton filled it admirably. He was a
sound practical man, and thoroughly knew every department of
engineering mechanism. As I had provided small separate rooms or
offices for every department of the establishment for the use of
the foremen, where they kept their memoranda and special tools, I
had often the pleasure of conferring with Hutton as to some point
of interest, or when I wished to pass my ideas and designs
through the ordeal of his judgment, in order that I might find
out any lurking defect in some proposed mechanical arrangement.
Before he gave an opinion, Hutton always took a pinch of snuff to
stimulate his intellect, or rather to give him a little time for
consideration. He would turn the subject over in his mind. But I
knew that I could trust his keenness of insight. He would give
his verdict carefully, shrewdly, and truthfully. Hutton remained
a faithful and valued servant in the concern for nearly thirty
years, and died at a ripe old age. Notwithstanding his mechanical
intelligence, Hutton was of too cautious a temperament to have
acted as a general foreman or manager, otherwise he would
have been elevated to that position. A man may be admirable in
details, but be wanting in width, breadth, and largeness of
temperament and intellect. The man who possesses the latter gifts
becomes great in organisation; he soon ceases to be a
"hand," and becomes a "head," and such men
generally rise from the employed to be the employer.
Another of my
excellent assistants was John Clerk. He had been for a long time
in the service of Fairbairn and Lillie; but having had a serious
difference with one of the foremen, he left their service with
excellent recommendations. I soon after engaged him as foreman of
the pattern-making department. He was a most able man in some of
the more important branches of mechanical engineering. He had,
besides, an excellent knowledge of building operations. I found
him of great use in superintending the erection of the additional
workshops which were required in proportion as our business
extended. He made out full-sized chalk-line drawings from my
original pencil sketches, on the large floor of the pattern
store, and from these were formed the working drawings for the
new buildings. He had a wonderful power of rapidity and clearness
in apprehending new subjects, and the way in which he depicted
them in large drawings was quite masterly. John Clerk and I spent
many an hour on our knees together on the pattern store floor,
and the result of our deliberations usually was some substantial
addition to the workshops of the foundry, or some extra large and
powerful machine tool. This worthy man left our service to become
a partner in an engineering concern in Ireland; and though he
richly deserved his promotion, he left us to our very great
regret.
The last of our
foremen to whom I shall refer was worthy Thomas Crewdson. He
entered our service as a smith, in which pursuit he displayed
great skill. We soon noted the high order of his natural ability;
promoted him from the ranks, and made him foreman of the smith's
and forge-work department. In this he displayed every quality of
excellence, not only in seeing to the turning out of the forge
work in the highest state of perfection, but in managing the men
under his charge with such kind discretion as to maintain the
most perfect harmony in the workshops. This is always a matter of
great importance -- that the foreman should inspire the workmen
with his own spirit, and keep up their harmony and activity to
the most productive point. Crewdson was so systematic in his use
of time that we found that he was able also to undertake the
foremanship of the boiler-making department, in addition to that
of the smith work; and to this he was afterwards appointed, with
highly satisfactory results to all concerned.
So strongly and
clearly impressed is my mind with the recollection of the
valuable assistance which I received during my engineering life
from those vicegerents of practical management at Patricroft,
that I feel that I cannot proceed further in my narrative without
thus placing the merits of these worthy men upon record. It was a
source of great good fortune to me to be associated with them,
and I consider them to have been among the most important
elements in the prosperity of the Bridgewater Foundry. There were
many others, in comparatively humble positions, whom I have also
reason to remember with gratitude. In all well-conducted concerns
the law of "selection of the fittest" sooner or later
comes into happy action, when a loyal and attached set of men
work together harmoniously for their own advantage as well as for
that of their employers.
It was not, however,
without some difficulty that we were allowed to carry out our
views as to Free Trade in Ability. As the buildings were
increased, more men were taken on -- from Manchester, Bolton,
Liverpool, as well as from more distant places. We were soon made
to feel that our idea of promoting workmen according to their
merits, and advancing them to improved positions and higher wages
in proportion to their skill, ability, industry, and natural
intelligence, was quite contrary to the views of many of our new
employees. They took advantage of a large access of orders for
machinery, which they knew had come into the foundry, to wait
upon us suddenly, and to lay down their Trade Union law for our
observance.
The men who waited
upon us were deputed by the Engineer Mechanics' Trades' Union to
inform us that there were men in our employment who were not, as
they termed it, "legally entitled to the trade;" that
is, they had never served a regular seven years' apprenticeship.
"These men," said the delegates, "are filling up
the places, and keeping out of work, the legal hands." We
were accordingly requested to discharge the workmen whom we had
promoted, in order to make room for members of the Trades' Union.
To have complied with
this request would have altered the whole principles and practice
on which we desired to conduct our business. I wished, and my
partner agreed with me, to stimulate men to steadfast and skilful
work by the hope of promotion. It was thus that I had taken
several of the Worsley men from the rank of labourers, and raised
them to the class mechanics with correspondingly higher wages. We
were perfectly satisfied with the conduct of these workmen, and
with the productive results of their labour. We thought it fair
to them as well as to ourselves to resist the order to discharge
them, and we consequently firmly refused to submit to the
dictation of the Unionists.
The delegates left us
with a distinct intimation that if we continued to retain the illegal
men in our employment they would call out the Union men, and
strike until "the grievance " was redressed. The
Unionists, no doubt, fixed upon the right time to place their
case before us. We wanted more workmen to execute the
advantageous orders which had come in; and they thought that the
strike would put an entire stop to our operations. On engaging
the workmen we had never up to this time concerned ourselves with
the question of whether they belonged to the Trades' Union or
not. The only proof we required of a man was Ability. If, after a
week's experience, he proved himself an efficient workman, we
engaged him.
The strike took
place. All the Union men were "called out," and left
the works. Many of them expressed their great regret at leaving
us, as they were perfectly satisfied with their employment as
well as with their remuneration. But they were nevertheless
compelled to obey the mandate of the Council. The result was that
more than half of our men left us. Those who remained were very
zealous. Nothing could exceed their activity and workfulness. We
appealed to our employers. They were most considerate in not
pressing us for the speedy execution of the work we had in hand.
We made applications in the neighbourhood for other mechanics in
lieu of those who had left us. But the men on strike, under
orders from the Union, established pickets round the works, who
were only too efficient in preventing those desirous of obtaining
employment from getting access to the foundry.
Our position for a
time seemed to be hopeless. We could not find workmen enough to
fill our shops or to execute our orders. What were we to do under
the circumstances? We could not find mechanics in the
neighbourhood; but might they not, be found elsewhere? Why not
bring them from a distance? We determined to try. Advertisements
were inserted in the Scotch newspapers, announcing our want of
mechanics, smiths, and foundrymen. We appointed an agent in
Edinburgh, to whom applications were to be made. We were soon in
receipt of the welcome intelligence that numbers of the best
class of mechanics had applied, and that our agent's principal
difficulty consisted in making the proper selection from amongst
them.
A selection was,
however, made of over sixty men, who appeared in every respect
likely to suit us. With true Scotch caution they deputed two of
their number to visit our works and satisfy themselves as to the
real state of the case. We had great pleasure in receiving these
two clear-headed cautious pioneers. We showed them over the
workshops, and pointed out the habitations in the neighbourhood
with their attractive surroundings. The men returned to their
constituents, and gave such a glowing account of their mission
that we had no difficulty in obtaining the men we required.
Indeed, we might easily have obtained three times the number of
efficient mechanics. Sixty-four of the most likely men were
eventually selected, men in the zenith of their physical powers.
We made arrangements for their conveyance to Glasgow, from whence
they started for Liverpool by steamer. They landed in a body at
the latter port, many of them accompanied by their wives and
children, and eight-day clocks! A special train was engaged for
the conveyance of the whole -- men, women, and children, bag and
baggage -- from Liverpool to Patricroft, where suitable
accommodation had been provided for them.
The arrival of so
powerful a body of men made a great sensation in the
neighbourhood. The men were strong, respectable looking, and well
dressed. The pickets were "dumfoundered." They were
brushed to one side by the fresh arrivals. They felt that their
game was up, and they suddenly departed. The men were taken over
the workshops, with which they appeared quite delighted. They
were told to be ready to start next morning at six, after which
they departed to their lodgings. The morning arrived and the
gallant sixty-four were all present. After allotting to each his
special work, they gave three hearty cheers, and dispersed
throughout the workshops.
We had no reason to
regret the results which were effected through the strike ordered
by the Trades' Union. The new men worked with a will. They were
energetic, zealous, and skilful. They soon gave evidence of their
general handiness and efficiency in all the departments of work
in which they were engaged. We were thus enabled to carry out our
practice of Free Trade in Ability in our own way, and we were no
longer interfered with in our promotion of workmen who served us
best. In short, we had scotched the strike; we conquered the
Union in their wily attempt to get us under their withering
control; and the Bridgewater Foundry resumed its wonted activity
in every department.
It was afterwards a
great source of happiness to me to walk through the various
workshops and observe the cheerful and intelligent countenances
of the new men, and to note the energetic skill with which they
used their tools in the advancement of their work. General
handiness is one of the many valuable results that issues from
the practice of handling the variety of materials which are more
or less employed in mechanical structures. At the time that I
refer to, the skilful workmen employed in the engineering
establishments of Scotland (which were then comparatively small
in size) were accustomed to use all manner of mechanical tools.
They could handle with equally good effect the saw, the plane,
the file, and the chisel; and, as occasion required, they could
exhibit their skill at the smith's forge with the hammer and the
anvil. This was the kind of workmen with which I had reinforced
the foundry. The men had been bred to various branches of
mechanics. Some had been blacksmiths, others carpenters, stone
masons, brass or iron founders; but all of them were handy
men. They merely adopted the occupation of machine and
steam-engine makers because it offered a wider field for the
exercise of their skill and energy.
I may here be allowed
to remark that we owe the greatest advances in mechanical
invention to Free Trade in Ability. If we look carefully into the
narratives of the lives of the most remarkable engineers, we
shall find that they owed very little to the seven years' rut in
which they were trained. They owed everything to innate industry,
energy, skill, and opportunity. Thus, Brindley advanced from the
position of a millwright to that of a canal engineer; Smeaton and
Watt, from being mathematical instrument makers, advanced to
higher positions, -- the one to be the inventor of the modern
lighthouse, the other to be the inventor of the condensing
steam-engine. Some of the most celebrated mechanical and civil
engineers -- such as Rennie, Cubitt, and Fairbairn -- were
originally millwrights. All these men were many-handed. They had
many sides to their intellect. They were resourceful men. They
afford the best illustrations of the result of Free Trade in
Ability.
The persistent aim at
an indolent equality which Union men aim at, is one of the
greatest hindrances to industrial progress. When the Union
Delegates called upon me to insist that none but men who had
served seven years' apprenticeship should be employed in the
works, I told them that I preferred employing a man who had
acquired the requisite mechanical skill in two years rather than
another who was so stupid as to require seven years' teaching.
The delegates regarded this statement as preposterous and
heretical. In fact, it was utter high treason. But in the long
run we carried our point.
It is true, we had some
indenture-bound apprentices. These were pupils who paid premiums.
In certain cases we could not very well refuse to take them. Some
of them caused a great deal of annoyance and disturbance. They
were irregular in their attendance, consequently they could not
be depended upon for the regular operations of the foundry. They
were careless in their work, and set a bad example to the others.
We endeavoured to check this disturbing element by stipulating
that the premium should be payable in six months' portions, and
that each party should be free to terminate the connection at the
end of each succeeding six months. By this system we secured more
care and regularity on the part of the pupil apprentices; as,
while it checked inattention and irregularity, it offered a
direct and substantial encouragement to zeal and industry.
But the arrangement
which we greatly preferred was to employ intelligent
well-conducted young lads, the sons of labourers or mechanics,
and advance them by degrees according to their merits. They took
charge of the smaller machine tools, by which the minor details
of the machines in progress were brought into exact form without
having recourse to the untrustworthy and costly process of
chipping and filing. A spirit of emulation was excited amongst
the lads. They vied with each other in executing their work with
precision. Those who excelled were paid an extra weekly wage. In
course of time they took pride, not only in the quantity but in
the quality of their work; and in the long run they became
skilful mechanics. We were always most prompt to recognise their
progress in a substantial manner. There was the most perfect
freedom between employer and employed. Every one of these lads
was at liberty to leave at the end of each day's work. This
arrangement acted as an ever-present check upon master and
apprentice. The only bond of union between us was mutual
interest. The best of the lads remained in our service because
they knew our work and were pleased with the surroundings; while
we on our part were always desirous of retaining the men we had
trained, because we knew we could depend upon them. Nothing could
have been more satisfactory than the manner in which this system
worked.
In May 1835 I had the
great happiness of receiving a visit from my dear father. I was
then in Dale Street, Manchester, where my floor was overloaded
with the work in progress. My father continued to take a great
interest in mechanical undertakings, and he was pleased with the
prosperity which had followed my settlement in this great
manufacturing centre. He could still see his own lathe, driven by
steam power, in full operation for the benefit of his son. His
fame as an artist was well known in Manchester, for many of his
works were possessed by the best men of the town. I had the
pleasure of introducing him to the Brothers Grant, John Kennedy,
Edward Lloyd, George Murray, James Frazer, William Fairbairn, and
Hugh and Joseph Birley, all of whom gave him a most cordial
welcome, and invited him to enjoy their hospitality.
Alexander
Nasmyth. After a cameo by Samuel Joseph
In 1838 he visited me
again. I had removed to Patricroft, and the Bridgewater Foundry
was in full operation. My father was then in his eightieth year.
He was still full of life and intellect. He was vastly delighted
in witnessing the rapid progress which I had made since his first
visit. He took his daily walk through the workshops, where many
processes were going on which greatly interested him. He was
sufficiently acquainted with the technical details of mechanical
work to enjoy the sight, especially when self-acting tools were
employed. It was a great source of pleasure to him to have
"a crack" with the most intelligent foremen and
mechanics. These, on their part, treated him with the most kind
and respectful attention. The Scotch workmen regarded him with
special veneration. They knew that he had been an intimate friend
of Robert Burns, their own best-beloved poet, whose verses shed a
charm upon their homes, and were recited by the fireside, in the
fields, or at the workman's bench.
They also knew that he
had painted the only authentic portrait of their national bard.
This fact invested my father with additional interest in their
eyes. Their respect for him culminated in a rather extraordinary
demonstration. On the last day of his visit the leading Scotch
workmen procured "on the sly" an arm-chair, which they
fastened to two strong bearing poles. When my father left the
works at the bell-ringing at mid-day, he was approached by the
workmen, and respectfully requested to "take the
chair." He refused; but it was of no use. He was led to the
chair, and took it. He was then raised and carried in triumph to
my house. He was carefully set down at the little garden-gate,
where the men affectionately took leave of him, and ended their
cordial good wishes for his safe return home with three hearty
cheers. I need scarcely say that my father was greatly affected
by this kind demonstration on the part of the workmen.
His life was fast
drawing to a close. He had borne the heat and burden of the day;
and was about to be taken home like a shock of corn in full
season. After a long and happy life, blessed and cheered by a
most affectionate wife, he laid down his brushes and went to
rest. In his later years he rejoiced in the prosperity of his
children, which was all the more agreeable as it was the result
of the example of industry and perseverance which he had ever set
before them. My father untiringly continued his professional
occupations until 1840, when he had attained the age of
eighty-two. His later works may be found wanting in that degree
of minute finish which characterised his earlier productions; but
in regard to their quality there was no falling off, even to the
last picture which he painted. The delicate finish was amply
compensated by the increase in general breadth and effectiveness,
so that his later works were even more esteemed by his
brother-artists. The last picture he painted was finished eight days
before his death. It was a small work. The subject was a
landscape with an autumnal evening effect. There was a
picturesque cottage in the middle distance, a rustic bridge over
a brook in the foreground, and an old labouring man, followed by
his dog, wearily passing over it on his way towards his home.
From the chimney of his cottage a thin streak of blue smoke
passed upward through the tranquil evening air . All these
incidents suggested the idea, which no doubt he desired to
convey, of the tranquil conclusion of his own long and active
life, which was then, too evidently, drawing to a close. The
shades of evening had come on when he could no longer see to
work, and he was obliged to lay down his pencil. My mother was at
work with her needle close by him; and when he had finished he
asked her what he should call the picture. Not being ready with
an answer, he leant back in his chair, feeling rather faint, and
said, "Well, I think I had better call it Going Home."
And so it was called.
Next morning his
strength had so failed him that he could not get up. He remained
there for eight days, and then he painlessly and tranquilly
passed away. While on his deathbed he expressed the desire that
his remains should be placed beside those of a favourite son who
had died in early youth. "Let me lie," he said,
"beside my dear Alick." His desire was gratified. He
was buried beside his son in St. Cuthbert's churchyard, under the
grandest portion of the great basaltic rock on which Edinburgh
Castle stands. His grave is marked by a fine Runic Cross,
admirably sculptured by Rhind of Edinburgh.
Monument to
Alexander Nasmyth
One of the kindest
letters my mother received after her great loss was one from Sir
David Wilkie. It was dated 18th April 1840. "I hasten,"
he said, "to assure you of my most sincere condolence on
your severe affliction, feeling that I can sympathise in the
privation you suffer from losing one who was my earliest
professional friend, whose art I at all times admired, and whose
society and conversation was perhaps the most agreeable that I
ever met with. " He was the founder of the Landscape
Painting School of Scotland, and by his taste and talent has for
many years taken a lead in the patriotic aim of enriching his
native land with the representations of her romantic scenery;
and, as the friend and contemporary of Ramsay, of Gavin Hamilton,
and the Runcimans, may be said to have been the last remaining
link that unites the present with the early dawn of the Scottish
School of Art." I may add that my mother died six years
later, in 1846, at the same age as my father, namely eighty-two.
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