Bog-Myrtle and Peat eBook

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Bog-Myrtle and Peat.

Bog-Myrtle and Peat eBook

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Bog-Myrtle and Peat.

This is how the strongly Auld Kirk parish of Howpaslet came to have a Dissenting teacher in the person of Duncan Rowallan, a young man of great ability, who had just taken a degree at college after passing through Moray House (an ancient ducal palace where excellent dominies are manufactured), at a time when such a double qualification was much less common than it is now.

Duncan Rowallan was admitted by all to be the best man for the position.  It was, indeed, a wonder that one who had been so brilliant at college, should apply for so quiet a place as the mastership of the school of Howpaslet.  But it was said that Duncan Rowallan came to Howpaslet to study.  And study he did.  In one way he was rather a disappointment to the Kers, and even to his proposer and seconder.  He was not bellicose and he was not political; but, on the other hand, he did his work soundly and thoroughly, and obtained wondrous reports written in the official hand of H.M.  Inspector, and signed with a flourish like the tail of a kite.  But he shrank from the more active forms of partisanship, and devoted himself to his books.

Yet even in Howpaslet his life was not to be a peaceful one.

The Reverend Doctor Hutchison arose from his bed of sickness with the most fixed of determinations to make it hot for the new dominie.  When he lay near the gate of death he had seen a vision, and heaven had been plain to him.  He had observed, among other things, that there was but one establishment there, a uniform government in the church triumphant.  He took this as a sign that there should be only one on earth.  He understood the secession of the fallen angels referred to by Milton to be a type of the Disruption.  He made a note of this upon his cuff at the time, resolving to develop it in a later sermon.  Then, on rising, he proceeded at once to act upon it by making the young dominie’s life a burden to him.

Duncan Rowallan found himself hampered on every hand.  He was refused material for the conduct of his school.  The new schoolhouse was only built because the Inspector wrote to the board that the grant would be withheld till the alterations were made.

The militant Doctor could not dismiss Duncan Rowallan openly.  That, at the time, would have been going too far; but he could, and did, cut down his salary to starvation point, in the hope that he would resign.  But Duncan Rowallan had not come to Howpaslet for salary, and his expenses were so few that he lived as comfortably on his pittance as ever he had done.  Porridge night and morning is not costly when you use little milk.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Bog-Myrtle and Peat from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.