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Kay's Originals Vol. 1

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Volume 8 Page 221
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 157 Between the years 1781 and 1785 Mr. Lawson published a full detail of the proceedings in his case, in a pamphlet occupying nearly 300 pages of letterpress ; also, '' Three Letters addressed to candid Christians of all denominations." He immediately thereafter went to London, where he was well received hy several Dissenting clergymen, and from whom he obtained a license to preach, which he continued to do for a few years, in connection with the Relief body. Mr. Lawson died at Leith on the 27th of August 1788. No. LXVI. AN EXCHANGE OF HEADS. HUG0 ARNOT, ESQ.-MR. 'CVILLIADI MACPHERSON, AND ROGER HOG, ESQ. THE " Exchange of Heads " is supposed to have taken place betwixt two individuals, so very opposite in every describable feature, that the one has been denominated a shadow, while the other, par excellence, may as appropriately be termed substance. The space between shadow and substance is ingeniously devoted to the full development of a back view of a third party, who, differing entirely from either, displays a rotundity of person more than equal to the circumference of both. Some account has already been given of MR. ARNOT, whose head, forming the apex to the solid pyramid of Macpherson's trunk, appears first to the left in the trio of figures. Respecting his substantial friend, however, whose ponderous head, as if poised on a needle, seems like an infringement of the laws of gravity, some amusing gossip has been preserved. MR WILLIAM MACPHERSON, whose father was sometime deacon of the masons in Edinburgh, was a Writer to the Signet, and, in many respects, a man of very eccentric habits. He lived in that famed quarter of the city, the West Bow, three stairs up, in a tenement which immediately joined the city wall, and looked towards the west, but which has been recently removed to make way for the improvements now in progress, and which have all but annihilated the Bow. Mr. Macpherson continued a bachelor through life, and seemed from many circumstances to have conceived a determined antipathy to the " honourable state of matrimony." He had two maiden sisters who kept house with him ; but whether they entertained similar prejudices, or remained single
Volume 8 Page 222
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