144 AUDUBON 



was very agreeable, several Scotch gentlemen having 

 joined us; some of them drank their native whiskey pure, 

 as if water, but I found it both smoky and fiery ; so much 

 for habit. We passed through Selkirk, having driven 

 nearly the whole day through the estates of the young 



Duke of , a young fellow of twenty who passes his 



days just now shooting Black-cock ; he has something like 

 two hundred thousand pounds per annum. Some of the 

 shepherds on this astonishing estate have not probably more 

 than two hundred pounds of oatmeal, a terrible contrast. 

 We passed so near Sir Walter Scott's seat that I stood up 

 and stretched my neck some inches to see it, but in vain, 

 and who knows if I shall ever see the home of the man to 

 whom I am indebted for so much pleasure? We passed a 

 few miles from Melrose ; I had a great wish to see the old 

 abbey, and the gentleman to whom Dr. Rutter had given 

 me a letter, but the coach rolled on, and at ten o'clock I 

 entered this splendid city. I have seen yet but a very 

 small portion of it, and that by gaslight, yet I call it a 

 splendid city ! The coach stopped at the Black Bull 

 Hotel, but it was so full no room could be procured, so we 

 had our baggage taken to the Star. The clerk, the guard, 

 the driver, all swore at my baggage, and said that had I 

 not paid at Carlisle, I would have been charged more here. 

 Now it is true that my trunk is large and heavy, and so is 

 the portfolio I carry with me, but to give an idea of the 

 charges and impositions connected with these coaches 

 (or their owners) and the attendants, remark the price I 

 paid ; to begin with, — 



at Manchester, £3 15 00, 



at Carlisle, 12 00, and during the 



two days to drivers and guards, 18 06, 



.£5 s 06, 



nearly twenty-seven dollars in our money for two days' 

 travelling from Manchester to Edinburgh. It is not so 



