Penelope's Experiences in Scotland / Being Extracts from the Commonplace Book of Penelope Hamilton
‘Edina, Scotia’s Darling seat! All hail thy palaces and towers!’
Edinburgh, April 189-.
22 Breadalbane Terrace.
We have travelled together before, Salemina, Francesca, and I, and we know the very worst there is to know about one another. After this point has been reached, it is as if a triangular marriage had taken place, and, with the honeymoon comfortably over, we slip along in thoroughly friendly fashion. I use no warmer word than’friendly’ because, in the first place, the highest tides of feeling do not visit the coasts of triangular alliances; and because, in the second place, ‘friendly’ is a word capable of putting to the blush many a more passionate and endearing one.
Every one knows of our experiences in England, for we wrote volumes of letters concerning them, the which were widely circulated among our friends at the time, and read aloud under the evening lamps in the several cities of our residence.
Since then few striking changes have taken place in our history.
Salemina returned to Boston for the winter, to find, to her amazement, that for forty odd years she had been rather overestimating it.
On arriving in New York, Francesca discovered that the young lawyer whom for six months she had been advising to marry somebody more worthy than herself was at last about to do it. This was somewhat in the nature of a shock, for Francesca had been in the habit, ever since she was seventeen, of giving her lovers similar advice, and up to this time no one of them has ever taken it. She therefore has had the not unnatural hope, I think, of organising at one time or another all these disappointed and faithful swains into a celibate brotherhood; and perhaps of driving by the interesting monastery with her husband and calling his attention modestly to the fact that these poor monks were filling their barren lives with deeds of piety, trying to remember their Creator with such assiduity that they might, in time, forget Her.
Her chagrin was all the keener at losing this last aspirant to her hand in that she had almost persuaded herself that she was as fond of him as she was likely to be of anybody, and that on the whole she had better marry him and save his life and reason.
Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin
PENELOPE’S EXPERIENCES IN SCOTLAND
Being extracts from the commonplace book of Penelope Hamilton
1913 Gay and Hancock edition
To G.C.R.
Chapter I. A Triangular Alliance.
Chapter II. Edina, Scotia’s Darling Seat.
Chapter III. A vision in Princes Street.
Chapter IV. Susanna Crum cudna say.
Chapter V. We emulate the Jackdaw.
Chapter VI. Edinburgh society, past and present.
Chapter VII. Francesca meets th’ unconquer’d Scot.
Chapter VIII. ‘What made th’ Assembly shine?’
Chapter IX. Omnia presbyteria est divisa in partes tres.
Chapter X. Mrs. M’Collop as a sermon-taster.
Chapter XI. Holyrood awakens.
Chapter XII. Farewell to Edinburgh.
Chapter XIII. The spell of Scotland.
Chapter XIV. The wee theekit hoosie in the loaning.
Chapter XV. Jane Grieve and her grievances.
Chapter XVI. The path that led to Crummylowe.
Chapter XVII. Playing Sir Patrick Spens.
Chapter XVIII. Paris comes to Pettybaw.
Chapter XIX. Fowk o’ Fife.
Chapter XX. A Fifeshire tea-party.
Chapter XXI. International bickering.
Chapter XXII. Francesca entertains the green-eyed monster.
Chapter XXIII. Ballad revels at Rowardennan.
Chapter XXIV. Old songs and modern instances.
Chapter XXV. A treaty between nations.
Chapter XXVI. ‘Scotland’s burning! Look out!’
Chapter XXVII. Three magpies and a marriage.