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    Chapter 5 - Page 2

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    proposing to go to bed; the dame was still busy broiling car-cakes on the
    girdle, and the elder girl, the half-naked mermaid elsewhere
    commemorated, was preparing a pile of Findhorn haddocks (that is,
    haddocks smoked with green wood), to be eaten along with these relishing
    provisions.

    While they were thus employed, a slight tap at the door, accompanied with
    the question, "Are ye up yet, sirs?" announced a visitor. The answer,
    "Ay, ay,--come your ways ben, hinny," occasioned the lifting of the
    latch, and Jenny Rintherout, the female domestic of our Antiquary, made
    her appearance.

    "Ay, ay," exclaimed the mistress of the family--"Hegh, sirs! can this be
    you, Jenny?--a sight o' you's gude for sair een, lass."

    "O woman, we've been sae ta'en up wi' Captain Hector's wound up by, that
    I havena had my fit out ower the door this fortnight; but he's better
    now, and auld Caxon sleeps in his room in case he wanted onything. Sae,
    as soon as our auld folk gaed to bed, I e'en snodded my head up a bit,
    and left the house-door on the latch, in case onybody should be wanting
    in or out while I was awa, and just cam down the gate to see an there was
    ony cracks amang ye."

    "Ay, ay," answered Luckie Mucklebackit, "I see you hae gotten a' your
    braws on; ye're looking about for Steenie now--but he's no at hame the
    night; and ye'll no do for Steenie, lass--a feckless thing like you's no
    fit to mainteen a man."

    "Steenie will no do for me," retorted Jenny, with a toss of her head that
    might have become a higher-born damsel; "I maun hae a man that can
    mainteen his wife."

    "Ou ay, hinny--thae's your landward and burrows-town notions. My certie!
    --fisherwives ken better--they keep the man, and keep the house, and keep
    the siller too, lass."

    "A wheen poor drudges ye are," answered the nymph of the land to the
    nymph of the sea. "As sune as the keel o' the coble touches the sand,
    deil a bit mair will the lazy fisher loons work, but the wives maun kilt
    their coats, and wade into the surf to tak the fish ashore. And then the

    man casts aff the wat and puts on the dry, and sits down wi' his pipe and
    his gill-stoup ahint the ingle, like ony auld houdie, and neer a turn
    will he do till the coble's afloat again! And the wife she maun get the
    scull on her back, and awa wi' the fish to the next burrows-town, and
    scauld and ban wi'ilka wife that will scauld and ban wi'her till it's
    sauld--and that's the gait fisher-wives live, puir slaving bodies."

    "Slaves?--gae wa', lass!--ca' the head o' the house slaves? little ye ken
    about it, lass. Show me a word my Saunders daur speak, or a turn he daur
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