FROM the historic buildings of
Dunfermline, which have been considered in the last chapter, it is natural to
turn to those natural beauties of hill and sea and moorland which are within
easy reach of the town, for these no less than the civic treasures are
threatened with destruction or injury.
The chief and most beautiful
walks from the city are those leading to and along the banks of the Forth. These
are assets for the town's health and enjoyment which can hardly be overrated,
and which become more precious as each year the town itself becomes more
crowded, its environs more extensive. Yet, at the present moment, a particularly
gross piece of vandalism is being committed upon the shores of the Firth of
Forth.
The North British Railway Company
succeeded some time ago in obtaining Parliamentary powers for the construction
of a railway from Dunfermline to Kincardine. The work is now well advanced, and
it is possible to realise at what a cost a wholly unnecessary railway is to be
constructed. Running from Dunfermline to the west, the line strikes the coast at
Torryburn, four miles from Dunfermline, and thence proceeds along the foreshore
to Kincardine, a distance of five miles. To carry the railway from Torryburn to
Kincardine a huge embankment is being erected along a part of the coast which
was previously under water at high tide. The result of this is, that the view of
the Firth of Forth is blotted out from the sight of all the houses and villages
between the two places in question, and instead of the glorious ever-varying
view of the Firth waters, glistening sometimes as though studded with opals, and
at others changing to the wine-dark sea of Homer—a view, too, which once
delighted the heart of Turner—the people and visitors to this district have now
to be content with a view of a high embankment, crowned at frequent intervals
with smoke and steam.
I am not entering any protest
against railways or legitimate railway extension, but against a very flagrant
misdeed by which the nation itself sustains a great wrong. For to the north of
the coast route chosen for this railway there is a second and raised beach which
runs behind the various villages and towns on the coast, and which would have
been an entirely suitable line for the railway to have taken. It is understood
that the original plans for the railway showed this route, and that it was
abandoned through the opposition of vested interest.
How can such deeds be prevented
in the future? Only by the unsleeping vigilance of the public. At present such
schemes as the one mentioned get through Parliament without notice or criticism.
Our hope must lie in the education of public opinion and the growth of the
spirit of civic responsibility. When this spirit exists in an adequate degree,
it will be strong enough to protect the natural beauty of the earth—the common
heritage of all men—no less than the memorials in stone of the great days and
the great souls of other ages.