[The Dominie of St Fillan's, (Alexander Leighton) ]1
[Sayings and Doings of Peter Paterson, (John Mackay Wilson) ]34
[The Heroine: A Legend of the Canongate, (Alexander Leighton) ]66
[The Barley Bannock, (Alexander Campbell) ]93
[Gleanings of the Covenant, (Professor Thomas Gillespie)—]
[xx. John Govan's Narrative ]111
[xxi. "Old Bluntie" ]120
[xxii. Thomas Harkness of Lockerben ]124
[xxiii. The Shoes Reversed ]132
[The Lost Heir of the House of Elphinstone, (Rev. G. Thomson) ]143
[Trials and Triumphs, (John Mackay Wilson) ]194
[The Miser of Newabbey, (Alexander Leighton) ]226
[The Sea Skirmish, (Anon.) ]258

WILSON'S
TALES OF THE BORDERS,
AND OF SCOTLAND.


THE DOMINIE OF ST FILLAN'S.


CHAPTER I.

PLEASANT REMINISCENCES OF MY FATHER.

It is now about twenty years sin' I first raised my voice in the desk o' the kirk o' St Fillan's, in the parish o' that name, and He wha out o' the mouths o' babes and sucklins did ordain praise, hath never thought meet, by means o' ony catarrh, cynanche, quinsy, toothache, or lock-jaw, to close up my mouth, and prevent me frae leadin the congregation in a clear, melodious strain, to the worship o' the Chief Musician. When I was ordained session clerk, schoolmaster, and precentor, I had already passed about thirty years o' my pilgrimage; yet filled wi' Latin and Greek, till my pia mater was absolutely like to burst, I had, notwithstanding, nae trade by the hand. The reason was this. My father, who had been for forty years sexton o' the parish, had seen, wi' an e'e lang practised in searchin for traces o' death in the faces o' parishioners—for the labourer maun live by his hire, and the merchant by his customers, "and thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands"—a pleasant leucophlegmatic tinge about the gills o' Jedediah Cameron, my predecessor in the three offices already mentioned. Weel, as the husbandman in dry weather, when his fields are parched, and his braird thin and weak, watches the clouds that contain rain—mair precious to him than the ointment that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's dry beard—my guid father watched the dropsical signs or indications in Jedediah's face, daily and hourly, in the fair and legitimate hope o' gettin the aridity o' my starvin condition quenched and satisfied. He was an argute sexton, and had learned, in his younger days, some smatterin o' Latin, though I never could ascertain that he retained more of the humane lear, than the twa proverbs, "Vita mortalium brevis," "Life is short," which comes originally frae Homer; and "Pecuniæ obediunt omnia," which comes frae the sixth chapter o' Ecclesiastes—"Money answereth all things."