8334. Have you a piece of land there?-Yes.
8335. Whom do you fish for generally?-For Inkster. I have fished for him for five years.
8336. Do you settle every year in the spring?-We settle at Hallowmas for the twelve months.
8337. Do you always deal in Mr. Inkster"s shop-Yes; I deal oftenest there.
8338. What do you go for elsewhere?-It is very trifling. My dealings are mostly with him.
8339. Is that because you fish for him?-Yes.
8340. Have you an account?-Yes.
8341. Are you obliged to deal on credit?-Yes, sometimes I am, because I must have supplies.
8342. Is that the reason why you go to his shop?-No. I would just as soon deal with him, if I had money, as I would go elsewhere.
8343. Is there any other place hereabout where you could deal?- Yes; but I would just as soon deal with Mr. Inkster as with any other man.
8344. Are you generally behind at the settlement?-Sometimes I am a little.
8345. But sometimes you have a balance to get in cash?- Sometimes; but sometimes the seasons are so bad that I have to go to him for a little supplies.
8346. I suppose that is the reason why you continue to fish for him? If you owe him a little money, you don"t like to go and fish for another man?-I don"t see what I could get by fishing for another; I pay him the same for his goods, and he pays me the same for my fish as another would do.
8347. Are his goods of as good a quality as in other shops?-Yes.
8348. Have you known any fishermen who have left one employer and gone to fish for another?-No; not that I could point out.
8349. A man generally continues to fish for the same merchant?- Yes; unless it may be a man who changes and goes south.
8350. But if he remains in the same place, does he generally go on fishing for the same merchant for years?-Yes; but I have heard of some of them shifting.
8351. What do they shift for generally?-They may shift to get chances in boats belonging to other curers.
8352. They think they may be better off perhaps by getting into another crew?-Yes.
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8353. Do men sometimes want to shift to another crew or another master, and are prevented from doing so because they are in debt?-I have never tried that.
8354. Do you know whether that is ever the case?-I could not answer that question, because I would not like to say anything I was not sure about.
8355. I suppose you would not think of leaving Mr. Inkster so long as you were in his debt?-Even if I was clear with him, I see no good I could do to myself by leaving him. If I ask him for money, I get it, just the same as out-takes; and I get out-takes from him, just the same as if I was paying down ready money for them.
8356. Do you think you would be any better off if you had not to run such a long account?-I don"t know. A poor man generally can have very little until it comes perhaps to the twelvemonth"s end; and if it were not that we have sometimes a beast to sell, or something like that, we would have very little to live on throughout the year, because the fishing time is only for about three months in the summer.
8357. You think if you were settled with at shorter periods, you would not have enough to carry you through the year?-Yes.
8358. And you could not settle with the merchant at the end, because the account you have to pay is bigger than what you have to get?-Yes.
8359. Is that sometimes the case?-Yes; because for some years there has been a good deal of bread to get in consequence of lean crops, and that brings the poor fishermen very much down.
Brae, January 13, 1872, JOHN WOOD, examined.
8360. Are you a fisherman in Muckle Roe?-I am.
8361. Do you fish for Mr. Inkster?-Yes.
8362. Have you heard what Gideon Williamson said?-Yes.
8363. Is your way of dealing the same as he has described?-Yes; the very same.
8364. Have you anything different to say?-No.
8365. How long have you fished for Mr. Inkster?-Nine years.
8366. Have you ever wished to change?-No.
8367. Do you always get your supplies from him?-Yes.
8368. Are you generally somewhat behind at the end of the year?-Sometimes.
8369. Who did you fish for before?-Mr. Anderson.
8370. Why did you leave him?-Because it was more convenient for us where we lived to fish for Mr. Inkster.
8371. Were you clear with Mr. Anderson when you left him?- Very nearly. I think I was due him 1 or so.
8372. When did you pay that up?-Mr. Inkster paid it up for me.
He sent it to Mr. Anderson at the end of the season.
8373. Is that a usual thing to do when a man has shifted?-Yes,
8374. His new employer pays up the whole of his debt?-Yes.
8375. Have you heard of that being done often?-Yes; I have heard of it being done.
Brae, January 13, 1872, GILBERT SCOLLAY, examined.
8376. You are a tenant on the Busta estate?-Yes.
8377. Do you fish any?-No.
8378. I understand you have come here to say something about your line of life and its bearing upon this inquiry: what is it?-My princ.i.p.al means of living is that I get an annuity for keeping some pauper lunatics belonging to several parishes, Delting and Tingwall, and so forth.