PREFACE
THE general increase of readers for some years past, and the
many advantages arising from it in a nation where Liberty is
enjoyed, have encouraged various attempts to suit the learning
of the times to the purchase and opportunity of persons of
every station.
AMONGST these, after many trials without success; after Monthly
Mercuries, Chronicles, Registers, Amusements, etc. had been tried
in vain, a Monthly Magazine at last appeared, which, from the
industry and influence of the proprietor, soon met with encouragement;
the variety of which it consisted, and the unusual quantity it
contained, yielding satisfaction to all who gave it a perusal.
THE kind reception which the Gentleman's Magazine met with, quickly
produced a rival; and as it is much easier to improve the plan
of another, than to form one, the London Magazine appear'd with
some advantage: And, had not the managers of that work discover'd
so much prejudice against the Gentleman to whom they owed its
existence, it would, probably, have had superior success. But,
as it is, they are both enabled to appear with far more advantage
than any works of the same kind which preceeded them.
THE demand of these Magazines being considerable in this kingdom,
and our distance from the place of their publication rendering
their contents stale before they came to hand, several persons
were put upon endeavouring to remove these inconveniencies by
supplying their place with a production of our own. But this
was found liable to so many difficulties as were not easily removed:
- though at length they were surmounted; and The SCOTS MAGAZINE
was offered the public when the taste for such collections promis'd
all desirable success. - And we are far from complaining of its
reception.
BESIDES these, there were other, more important causes for undertaking
this work; since, surely, the interest of Scotland, abstractedly
considered, is worthy our most watchful attention: In which view
we have had the pleasure of gaining the thanks and approbation
of several Gentlemen who have done great honour to this undertaking.
And when many are so variously engaged to promote the particular
interest of the more Southern part of this island, it is at least
laudable, if it be not necessary, to pay some separate regard
to the welfare and prosperity of the country that has been the
scene of actions the memory whereof will ever bloom while Fame
exists.
FOR, though in many things calculated for the good of Great Britain,
Scotland is little more than nominally consider'd; her distance
from the seat of monarchy, instead of dispiriting, should prompt
her sons to compensate that misfortune by their extraordinary
zeal in her service, to shew themselves equal to the present
disadvantage of their situation; and, by an earnest exertion
of their talents, revive that universal esteem which SCOTLAND
so justly acquir'd amongst her neighbours by the valour and learning
of our ancestors.
THOUGH we do not offer to swell the intention of this work so
far as to pretend to be free from all desire of gain; we can,
with the utmost sincerity, assure the public, that any increase
to the generous encouragement we have already met with shall
be carefully applied toward making this Magazine more acceptable.
And we hope we have already convinced our readers, that we are
as earnest after its merit, as the profits it may be expected
to produce: - Though this may, indeed, be vindicated from the
rules of private policy; for, however men may from indolence,
or other causes, be sometimes deceived, profit is only accidental
where the foundation for expecting it is not good. - If our great
labour and expence produce not an adequate return to our readers,
we must inevitably be losers by our assiduity: And if we are
found worthy the continuance and increase of the countenance
we have received, we are bold to say, we fear not but we shall
have it: since, notwithstanding the fashionable complaint against
the modern taste, it is our opinion, that though sometimes, from
unavoidable circumstances, a work of merit may fail of the encouragement
it deserves; yet such instances are very rare, when compar'd
with the numerous attempts made, without even a probability of
success, by persons incapable of executing what they undertake.
OUR most grateful thanks are due to our many kind and ingenious
correspondents; by whose aid we have been greatly assisted, and
the public agreeably entertained. And we must own, that the chearful
help we have received from most parts of this kingdom, gives
yet further hopes of success, as it proves that the real intention
of The SCOTS MAGAZINE is agreeable to those upon whose favour
it must principally, if not entirely depend.
WE shall only add, that as our study is to instruct and entertain,
in such manner as is most agreeable to our readers, we shall
cheerfully comply with any hints given for the improvement of
our design; and beg leave to repeat it again, that before every
thing else, whatever concerns the interest of this kingdom, shall
always be preferred; for as our labours, so are our wishes employed
on the PROSPERITY OF SCOTLAND.
EDINBURGH 1739.

domestick OCCURRENCES
January 1739
The eclipse of the Moon, the 13th, at night, begun about 26
min. after 9, and ended about 16 min. after 12, apparent time.
There was more than 7 digits eclipsed. From one to four next
morning, wind W. S. W. we had the most violent hurricane (with
lightning) ever felt here, by which the streets and lanes of
this city were covered with large stones, tiles, slates, sign-posts
and rubbish. The castle suffer'd extremely; huge stones were
carried to some distance, the leads rolled up or blown over the
walls, most of the roofs either destroy'd or much damag'd, particularly
the chapel, arsenal, and magazine; a part of Ensign Kinloch's
house was beat down, and the walls of the Storemaster's house
shatter'd; but nobody killed, only one Soldier and the Storemaster's
son were wounded. The centries were oblig'd to retire to the
guardhouse. - The leads that cover'd the stately buildings in
the Parliament close were carried off theroof; one part of it,
1200 wt. was born up about half a minute in the air, and carried
to the middle of the area, and the rest thrown into Mr. Jolley's
close. - The steeple of St. Giles's was much affected by it;
the leads of the Tron-church steeple were rolled up; the weather-cock
and spire of Magdalen chapel were carried away; the Canongate-church
was much damag'd, and its fine portico levelled with the ground.
- The chimney of a house in Todrick's wynd falling down, broke
the roof and the next floor; by which Mr. Moubray's child and
maid fell one storey, and were much hurt. - A maid of Sir Thomas
Gordon's, in Lawn-market, leaving the house in despair, and carrying
a grandchild of that gentleman's, fell down and broke the child's
thigh-bone. - A man was sorely crush'd by the fall of a stone
from a house. - A large house at the back of the Canongate, belonging
to Mrs. Hyres, was laid level with the ground, and the tiles
were blown off the new play-house. - In this general panic, we
were alarm'd by the fire-drum, the catastrophe being much more
melancholy in the neighbourhood. The impetuosity of the wind
scatter'd the fires in some chimnies, and set the houses in flames:
particularly Mr. Bryson's Brewer at Summerhall, which reduc'd
it to ashes, with above 200 bolls of grain, etc. and some low
houses at a considerable distance. The wind increased the flames,
and the fire-engines could not be used. - Numbers of Gentlemen,
Farmers, etc. are great sufferers. Many of their houses are blown
down; their corns carried away and promiscuously scattered in
the fields and roads, or blown into waters; trees torn up by
the roots; some people killed by the falling in of houses, and
a great many cattle. - The palaces of Hamilton and Dalkeith,
the abbay of Culross, the castles of Stirling and Clackmannan,
the houses of Hopeton, Aloa, Ernock, and Craigmiller, the salt-pans
along the coast, and the lead-mill at Leith, are much damag'd;
the house of Auchinbowie, and the new Church of Killearn are
blown down. - At Darnhall and Prestonhall the whole planting
was torn up; - at Yester about 1000 full-grown trees, - at the
Lord Elibank's seat 400, - at Edmonston 300, - and at Ernock
8 large firs, 16 foot round each, suffered the same fate.
We have the like accounts from Glasgow, and several places in
the country.
- From Cockenzie, that two fine ships were dashed to pieces in
the harbour. - At Loch-Leven in Fife, great shoals of pearches
and pikes were driven a great way into the fields; so that the
country people got horse-loads of them, and sold them at one
penny per hundred.
Five boats, smuggling brandy were cast ashore at Inverkip, near
Greenock, and all the hands perish'd.
A boat was cast away near Banff, and eight persons drowned.
Alexander Thomson Smith at Aberlady, who for some time seemed
disorder'd in his senses, went into the road with a knife in
his hand, and, without provocation or acquaintance, attack'd
and murder'd one Forrester a land-labourer, but cutting his throat
from ear to ear, and ripping up his chest. Designing to perpetrate
more barbarity, he made up to a Royal Gray Dragoon, who knock'd
him down, and had him secured. He was brought prisoner to Haddington
jail, and has confessed.
EDINBURGH, June 1739

THE High Court of Justiciary, in the trial of James Ratcliff,
who was indicted for house-breaking, and found guilty, have sentenc'd
him to be hanged in the Grassmarket on the first day of August
next.
P.S. July 6. The court of Session, in a complaint by George
and Margaret Cochrans, against John Bar Mason, and William Spence
late Deputy Town-clerk of Rutherglen, find it proven, That the
minutes of the Majestrates of Rutherglen upon a criminal complaint
at the instance of the Procurator Fiscal, against the said John
Bar, in the year 1730, were falsified, by counter-feiting the
name of David Pinkerton then Baillie there, and part of the sir-name
of Andrew Leitch then Provost there, to defend the said John
Bar in another criminal prosecution before the Sheriff-court
of Lanerkshire, anno 1738; and that the minute was made use of
before the Sheriff-court in judgment, and sworn to by the said
William as a true and authentick minute; and that the said John
Bar and William Spence are guilty art and part of these facts;
and that, in order to prevent a legal trial into the said forgery,
etc., the said John Bar and William Spence, in December last,
endeavour'd to seduce James Hamilton Writer in Hamilton, to deliver
up to them the said falsified minute, and other writings, then
made part of the record of the said court of Lanerk; and that,
not succeeding in that wicked attempt, they did violently seize
and take the said minute from James Hamilton and burnt the same;
as also, that John Bar and William Spence have been guilty of
gross falsehood and prevarication, in presence of the Lords,
by obstinately denying all the above facts; And therefore they
find the said John Bar and William Spence liable, conjunctly
and severally, to the complainers, in damages and expences, which
the Lords modify to the sum of 80 L. Sterl. And decern therefore.
And further they ordain the said John Bar and William Spence
to be carried to the tolbooth of Edinburgh, to remain there to
the sixth day of October next, and thereafter till the said sum
is paid, in case it be not paid against that time. And ordain
the Magistrates of Edinburgh, so soon thereafter as it shall
be proved to them that the said sum is paid, to dismiss the said
John Bar and William Spence out of prison. And further, the Lords
do banish the said John Bar and William Spence out of Scotland,
from and after the space of ten days from the day they shall
be dismissed out of prison, during all the days of their life;
and do order them, to depart out of Scotland, on or before as
aforesaid, never again to return into it; and, in case of their
return, they order and require all officers of the law within
whose jurisdiction they shall be found, to apprehend and incarcerate
them, or either of them, in the prison of the county where they
shall be so apprehended; and ordain such Sheriff, and those interjacent,
to transmit them, or either of them, to the tolbooth of Edinburgh;
from thence to be carried, on the first market-day thereafter,
and to be whipt through the town by the hands of the common hangman,
and then to be returned to the said prison, to remain there till
an opportunity offer of transporting them to his Majesty's plantations
in America. And the Lords ordain and impower the Magistrates
of Edinburgh to deliver them over to any ship-master, etc. finding
100 L. Sterl. Security for each of them, to land them as aforesaid:
And, in case of their return again, ordain them to be imprisoned
in the tolbooth of Edinburgh during life. And further, the Lords
do declare the said John Bar and William Spence infamous in all
time coming, incapable of bearing any publick trust, or of being
witnesses in any cause or action, or passing upon any assize.
And ordain the sentence to be recorded for the terror of others
in time coming.
domestick HISTORY JULY 1739
In the trial of Robert Thomson, Smith in Aberlady, for the murder
of George Forester land-labourer in Haddington, the panel pleaded
non compos mentis. The Lords found the libel relevant to infer
the pains of law; but allowed the panel to prove his defence;
reserving to the Court to determine on the import of such proof
after the return of the jury's verdict. The jury found the libel
proven as to the murder, and no curiosity proven previous to
the murder. When the court met in order to pronounce sentence,
it was pled for the panel, That as his trial began on the 11th
June, and was not finished before the 21st of July, he ought
to be affoilzied by the act appointing all criminal trails to
be finish'd within 40 days. To which it was answered, That there
were exceptions in the act, viz. If any delay made was at the
suit of the panel, or for his behoof; and, That the 40 days must
be free days. Parties are appointed to inform betwixt and the
second Monday of November.
James Ratcliffe, who was sentenced to be executed the first
of August, found means, with the assistance of one Clarkson,
another rogue confin'd in a separate room, to saw off his fetters,
and the bolts off the room-door. They both placed themselves
at the back of the outer-door till it was open'd to let a Gentlewoman
pass home, and then rush'd out and got clear off. The Magistrates
made a strict search of the city, and sent expresses to several
parts of the country; and an advertisement is published, whereby
the Magistrates promise 50 L. Sterl. and the Keeper of the prison
20 L. to any person who shall apprehend Ratcliffe within three
months.
A Cure for the Dropsy
TAKE sixteen large nutmegs, eleven spoonfuls of broom-ashes,
dried and burnt in an oven, an ounce and half of mustard feed
bruised, an handful of horse-radish scraped; all to be put in
a gallon of strong mountain wine, and stand three or four days:
then a gill or half a pint to be drank fasting every morning,
and to fast an hour or two after it.
NOVEMBER 1739

The following receipt, for the cure of the bite of a mad dog,
has not failed in the cure of any one person, out of many, who
have taken it.
TAKE twenty-four grains of Native Cinnabar, twenty-four grains
of Factitious Cinnabar, and sixteen grains of the finest Musk;
reduce each of these, separately, to an exceeding fine powder;
then mix them well together in a glass of rum, arrack, or brandy,
and drink it off, all at one dose, as soon as possibly you can
after you are bit; and take a second dose thirty days after the
first. - But suppose you should happen to be bit by a dog, and
should neglect taking any remedy soon after the bite, upon a
supposition that the dog was not mad; in such a case, as soon
as any symptoms of madness appear in the person, by that neglect,
they must take a dose as soon as possibly they can after those
symptoms appear; and instead of taking a second dose thirty days
after the first, as in the other case mentioned above, the second
dose must be given three hours after the first, which, by throwing
the patient into a profound sleep and strong perspiration, will
thoroughly cure the bite of any mad animal, though the distemper
were in the very last stage.
DECEMBER 1739
A general Bill of all the
Christenings and Burials, with the diseases whereof they died,
and the years of their age, from
the 12th of December 1738, to the 11th of December 1739.
| Christened |
16181 |
| Males |
8228 |
| Females |
7953 |
| Buried |
25432 |
| Males |
12416 |
| Females |
13016 |
| Deceased in the burials
this year |
393 |

Diseases and Casualties
Abortive and Still-born
|
605 |
Aged
|
1770 |
Ague
|
3 |
Apoplexy and Suddenly
|
194 |
Asthma and Tiffick
|
638 |
Bedridden
|
8 |
Bleeding
|
3 |
Bloody-flux
|
9 |
Bursten and Rupture
|
20 |
Cancer
|
50 |
Canker
|
8 |
Child-bed
|
260 |
Colick, Gripes, and Twisting of the
guts
|
280 |
Consumption
|
4429 |
Convulsion
|
7371 |
Cough, and Hoopingcough
|
72 |
Diabetes
|
1 |
Dropsy
|
1007 |
Evil
|
32 |
Fever Malignant, Fever Scarlet, Fever
Spotted, Fever and Purples
|
3334 |
Fistula
|
9 |
Flux
|
10 |
French-pox
|
116 |
Gout
|
48 |
Gravel, Stone, and Strangury
|
47 |
Grief
|
10 |
Headmould-shot, Horshoehead, and Water
in the head
|
155 |
Jaundice
|
121 |
Imposthume
|
22 |
Inflammation
|
39 |
Itch
|
4 |
Leprosy
|
4 |
Lethargy
|
5 |
Livergrown
|
10 |
Lunatick
|
34 |
Measles
|
326 |
Miscarriage
|
3 |
Mortification
|
258 |
Palsy
|
37 |
Plurisy
|
53 |
Quinsy
|
19 |
Rash
|
4 |
Rhumatism
|
23 |
Rickets
|
80 |
Rising of the lights
|
11 |
St Anthony's fire
|
6 |
Scald head
|
1 |
Small-pox
|
1690 |
Sores and Ulcers
|
37 |
Sore Throat
|
2 |
Spleen
|
1 |
Stoppage in the Stomach
|
206 |
Surfeit
|
6 |
Swelling
|
2 |
Teeth
|
1372 |
Thrush
|
104 |
Tympany
|
2 |
Vomiting and Looseness
|
5 |
Worms
|
10 |
White Ives
|
4 |
Broken Limbs
|
12 |
Burnt
|
3 |
Drowned
|
91 |
Excessive drinking
|
47 |
Executed
|
12 |
Found dead
|
43 |
Fractured scull
|
7 |
Killed by the bite of a cat
|
2 |
Killed by a dog
|
1 |
Killed by falls of several other accidents
|
52 |
Made away with themselves
|
45 |
Murdered
|
7 |
Overlaid
|
102 |
Poisoned
|
2 |
Scalded
|
4 |
Stabbed
|
1 |
Starved by hunger or cold
|
9 |
| Suffocated |
3 |

Edinburgh, December 1739
Robert Thomson Smith in Aberlady, who was some time ago convicted
of the murder of George Forrester, land-labourer, has obtained
his Majesty's remission, on account of his suriosity; but he
is to be transported. |