1858. Do you generally take the whole value of your shawls in goods?-Yes, I always do.
1859. And no money pa.s.ses between you at all?-No, not since I was married; but previously, when I asked him for money, I always got it.
1860. Did you generally ask for a considerable part of the price of your shawls in money?-Yes.
1861. How much might you get out of a 20s. shawl, for instance?- Perhaps I might have asked him for 2s. or 2s, 6d., and so on, money.
1862. Would that be about the usual thing?-Yes; that was generally about the usual thing.
1863. Did you ever get the whole price of a shawl or of any hosiery goods in money?-No; I never asked it.
1864. Do you live at home with your people, or did you live by yourself before you were married?-I lived at home with my father.
1865. So that you did not require any money with which to purchase food for yourself?-No.
1866. You merely knitted to supply yourself with dress, or whatever you wanted for yourself?-Yes.
1867. Did you require for your dress all the payments you received for your knitting?-No, I cannot say that I required it all for myself. I might have supplied some of my brothers or sisters with any little thing they wanted.
1868. Did they repay you for that, or did you make a present of it to them?-I generally made a present of it to them, as I was at home.
1869. Would you have preferred to have been paid wholly in money?-I should prefer to be paid part of both, if I could manage it.
1870. Would you prefer to get half the price in money?-Yes, I would like that very well.
1871. Could you not get one half of it in money if you asked for it?-I believe if I had asked for it I could have got it, but I did not ask it.
1872. Then, if you preferred it, why did you not ask for it?-I told you I managed my affairs in such a way that I did not need it.
1873. But you said you would have preferred to have had half of it in money?-Provided I could have got it, I should have liked it very well; but I did not ask that.
1874. Why did you not ask it? Do you think there would have been a difficulty in getting it?-I don"t know; I only know that I never asked for one half of it in money.
1875. Why?-I generally took a line for what remained to me upon a shawl. I might have got the money instead of a line, but I did not ask it.
1876. You have taken lines sometimes?-Yes, I generally took them.
1877. Have you any of these lines have none just now?-No, I have none just now.
1878. When you get a line, do you always take it [Page 37] back to the shop, and get goods?-Yes; I sometimes take it back to the shop.
1879. What do you do with it at other times?-Sometimes a friend may require a line from me, and give me money for it.
1880. If you were selling your goods for ready money, would you take a less price for them?-Sometimes I have seen me take a shilling or so less if it was all money.
1881. But you said you never got the whole price of a shawl in money?-Occasionally I sold a shawl to a stranger in the place in the summer time, and I might give it to him for a shilling less.
1882. Do you generally get a smaller price when you sell to a stranger in that way?-Perhaps I may sometimes have asked a smaller price, as it was the money I was to get.
1883. If you wanted the money, why did you not, when selling your shawls to a merchant, ask him for the ready money, and take 1s. or 2s. less?-I don"t know. I never thought of that.
1884. Was it not because it was not the practice here to give money?-Yes; that is the truth.
1885. Of course a shawl which you sold to a stranger in that way would be one knitted with your own worsted which you had bought?-Yes.
1886. Do you always pay ready money for your worsted?- Always.
1887. Do you always buy your worsted from the merchants in town?-Sometimes; and sometimes, when the country people come down, they have worsted with them, and I buy it from them too.
1888. Is the price the same in both cases?-Yes, always.
1889. If you were selling a shawl to a merchant and taking goods, and if you asked to have part of the goods in worsted, is there any objection made to that way of dealing?-No; I never heard any objection made to that.
1890. Did you ever get worsted as part of the goods you received in payment for your shawls?-Yes.
1891. Often?-Not very often; sometimes.
1892. You never knew of any objection being made to giving you worsted as part of what you were to get for your shawls?-No.
1893. Or for a line?-No; I never heard any objection.
1894. Do you knit to a large extent?-Yes; knit a good deal
1895. How much will you make in a month or in a week in that way?-I could not exactly say. It takes a good long time to make a nice shawl.
1896. Is it mostly shawls you make?-Yes.
1897. Will it take a month to make a shawl which is worth 1?- Yes. I have other things to do, and cannot keep constantly at it.
1898. But you do make one shawl a month or there about?-Yes.
1899. So that your dealings in that way will come perhaps 12 or 14 a year?-They will be more than that. I would reckon that they would be about 15.
1900. Would that all be your own knitting?-I could not say that.
Perhaps I might get some one to help me a little with a shawl.
1901. But it would be mostly your own work?-Yes.
Lerwick, January 3, 1872, MARGARET OLLASON, examined.
1902. Are you in the habit of knitting for merchants in Lerwick?- No; I knit for myself, and I sell the goods.
1903. How are you paid for them?-I generally make articles for which I get an order.
1904. From whom?-From ladies who employ me.
1905. Have you never sold to merchants at all?-I have sometimes sold to Mr. Sinclair.