"O gie me the times when auld ploys were in vogue,
An' the cake an' the kebbuck gaed down wi' the cogue!"
Hew Ainslie,
The ancient hamely fare of the Scottish peasant has
undergone a change within the last two or three generations. The halesome
parritch is still, indeed, the chief of Scotia's food, though to a less
extent than it was when Burns proclaimed its praise. Toasted cakes of
oatmeal are, however—the more's the pity —perceptibly rarer even in farm
kitchens than they were wont to be, while girdle cakes are practically
unknown. To many people, whose immediate forefathers were possibly reared
upon them, the distinction between those varieties of cake is probably only
speculative. But while oatmeal has been declining somewhat in popular favour
among our rustics, barley-meal may be said to have gone out of use
altogether. The souple scone, the wale o' food, is merely a memory. It is
almost necessary to say nowadays to an unenlightened public that it was a
creation of barley-meal. John Barleycorn is still, no doubt, the king of
grain on hundreds of Scottish farms. His tribute to the Scottish kail-pot,
not yet entirely transmuted into that soft and fushionless concession to
enfeebled digestions, rice, still tumbles in a rollicking dance with beef
and greens in "the boiling flood;" but the barley bannock, at which our
brave forbears took many a whang, and on which, as auld sangs asseverate,
they upheld the national independence, has been for some time ungenerously
banished from the bill of rural fare. It has no longer an honoured place on
Highland dresser or in Lowland aumrie. What was once good feeding for the
old Scots nobility is now scornfully rejected by the Scottish crofter and
cottar— except, perhaps, in inaccessible regions of Perthshire and
Aberdeenshire. The ploughman's palate despises what the aristocratic throat
took down with a relish—for how goes the auld Scots sonnet of John, Duke of
Argyll? —
"At the sight of Dumbarton
once again
I'll cock up my bonnet and march amain,
With a gude claymore hanging down at my heel,
To whang at the bannocks o' barley meal."
Did our swank country lads
know how appetisingly sustaining a barley scone can be made—especially did
our comely country lasses, our rustic Helens and Hebes, realise the virtues,
of beauty to the skin and sweetness to the temper, which reside in bannocks
of bear-meal — there would be, I am firmly convinced, such a revival of this
well-approved ancient feeding-stuff as would send down the price of wheat,
and drive tapioca and similar foreign skinking ware that jaups in luggies
clean out of caup and market. It is only now and again, at rare intervals,
that some patriotic and patriarchal bonnet-laird, earthfast on his own
acres, takes a greening for the barley piece which consoled his youth, and
orders a melder of bear to the mill for his individual consumption, starting
off with a baking of half a firlot. But for these intermittent and, alas!
ineffectual plunges into the cookery of a remote past, the memory even of
the barley bannock would be lost to the whole countryside.
It was not, however, for his
benefactions to broth-pot and bake-board that John Barleycorn got title to
rank as King of Grain. It was for the gift of his strong heart's blood.
There truly he still "shines chief," whether in the etherealised spirit that
has jinked through wimpling worms to the glass, or in the rich brown browst
that reams owre the brink of the jug in glorious foam. It was for this
aspect of John Barleycorn that Burns sang in laudation of the juice Scots
bear can mak' us—gude auld Scots drink. And justification of the bard's
jubilation is not far to seek; for of the four elements necessary, in his
own estimation, to his earthly felicity, John Barleycorn furnished two.
Rowth of rhyme was, of course, essential; but scarcely one whit less
indispensable were a scone and whisky gill—both of them, there needs no
telling, gifts of the bold son of Ceres. A pair of breeks, thrown in
adventitiously —a haill pair for preference—completed the condition of the
poet's dream of happiness. It is the capabilities of John Barleycorn in this
double aspect of him, the scone-and-gill aspect, that gives him his
preeminence over the kindred grain. But it is easy to multiply the
beneficial aspects of John Barleycorn —it is easy to see double on such a
theme. "An' ye wanted fire and meat and claes, and were deeing o' cauld, and
had a sair heart—whilk is warst o' a' —wi* just tippence in your pouch,
wadna ye be glad to buy a dram wi't, to be eilding and claes and a supper,
and heart's ease into the bargain, till the morn's morning?" It is the
testimony of Scott, and the argument of Maggie Mucklebackit. But for sober
purposes the twin aspect of the subject need only be insisted upon at
present. And in the history of John Barleycorn's ministrations to man, the
solid and substantial scone, there is hardly a doubt, came first. But the
flowing gill also is of a high antiquity, and seems destined to outlast the
scone. At all events, it is for liquid rather than for solid uses that a
greater breadth of Scottish farmlands than at any time in past Augusts waved
with "mixing" barley, is waving "all fading green and yellow" with it
to-day. From the Lothians in the south to the scarcely inferior barley soils
of Moray in the north, the great mass of the bear harvest is destined for
distillation and brewing, and only an insignificant proportion will find its
way to the mill. The flower of it goes to the brewer; the distiller gets the
inferior quality; but even when barley-bread was a staple food in the farm
towns and burgh towns of Scotland, it was still the lighter qualities of
both bigg and barley that were dressed or ground at the mill for pot and
girdle.
Before the glory of the old
harvest-field disappeared, on the advent of the mechanical reaper, a special
distinction was given to the barley harvest over that of other grain. The
festival of Harvest Home, otherwise known as the Maiden, or the Kirn, though
unhappily dying out, is at least known by repute to every one. But only few
can now remember that, before the grand concluding festival of the autumn
season came round, a kind of snack or foretaste of its ampler fun was the
custom, now grown obsolete, on nearly every farm. It marked the stooking,
that is the gathering into stooks, of the barley harvest; and the
celebration of that event was known as "The Bear Barrel." In respect of name
it might be regarded as a set-off to the Kirn festival. Each of those
autumnal merrymakings was named from the part played at their celebration by
the contents proper to these vessels— whisky (not beer, as might be
imagined) in the one case, and cream in the other. The ambrosial composition
called "cream-crowdie" was originally, and still is—where the festival is
correctly observed—an essential part of the great banquet of the Kirn. In
comparison with the Kirn, the celebration of which was preceded by elaborate
preparations, and accompanied by Gargantuan eating and drinking, and quite a
programme of pastimes, the ploy of the Bear Barrel was simplicity itself.
The barley crop, as even towns' bodies know, ripens soonest, and is
generally taken in Scotland in the end of August or the beginning of
September. While it was being gathered, in an earlier generation, by the
old-fashioned hook into sheaves, and the sheaves fastened by bandsters and
"stood" up into stooks to dry and harden, the oats—and wheat; where wheat
was grown—were qualifying for the sickle in their turn; and it usually
happened that just when the barley maiden was taken—that is, when the last
handful of ripe barley on the farm w$s shorn—the reapers, without any
cessation of field work, could go forward to the wheat and oats. It wpuld
sometimes occur that a little of the latter was talten before the barley
harvest was quite finished ; on the other hand, there might be an occasional
lie day or two, rarely amounting to a week, but according to the character
of the particular season and the state of the weather, during which period
the harvesters would have to wait till the remaining corn was matured. But
whenever it happened that the barley was all cut down on the farm, whether
the oats were already touched or still grew in their green virginity, the
event was marked in the evening by the little Maiden of the Bear Barrel.
When the day's work was done and supper was over, just as it all went on
upon ordinary harvest days, signs of something extraordinary began to show
themselves both in the roomy barn, where the fee'd harvesters —weavers of
both sexes, for the most part, from the nearest village—were accommodated,
and in the scarcely less roomy farm kitchen, where the entertainment was to
be held. In the barn, or at the barndoor, if the air was tranquil, the
members of the bandwin or bandwins (a bandwin included two men and four
women shearers) began towards gloaming to pay a little unusual attention to
dress, and to personal appearance generally; the men performed ablutions,
handled a comb, perhaps a razor; tied round bare, sun-scorched craigs, with
more or less grace and comfort, a woollen scarf of faded tartan or other
check; made gallantry to the girls, and perhaps opened a communication
through the herd with the harvesters on the adjacent farm. The women, who
always made themselves tidy of an evening, seemed on their part in gayer
spirits at the prospect of a ploy, and perhaps added a brighter snood or
head riband than usual to the adornment of their hair. Meanwhile, in the
farm kitchen the keg of whisky—the caggie, as it was endearingly called—
containing a matter of some three or four gallons, was solemnly introduced,
or rather inducted, and the farmer presently appeared, with the gravity of
an officiating elder, in the ha' doorway, and briefly demanded in a stoor
voice, directed at the barn, "whether they werena coming to taste the Bear
Barrel. This was understood to be a pressing invitation, as indeed it was
meant to be; and it was accepted for the most part with such an air of
gloomy indifference, or reluctant obedience, as a rustic thinks it necessary
to assume when approaching the House of God on a Sunday. They sauntered
singly or in silent knots across the yard with a ridiculous air of
decorum—unless some frisky young fellow, the wag of the party, probably a
tailor by trade, cut "a caper to make the maids giggle, or inquired in a
loud whisper of some douce Jeanie Deans among the young women "whether she
had mindit to bring her Bible and a peppermint?"
As likely as not, more
especially on hill farms, the whisky was a home product or smuggled
manufacture, and at the time referred to—a few generations ago— did not in
any case stand the farmer in more than twopence a gill of three glasses. As
much as an English pint, consumed in the course of the evening, a glass at a
time, was the average allowance to each harvester's mouth, male or female,
at the fSte of the Bear Barrel. It was held to be a sufficiently sober
splore at that Exceptions there were, of course, to the moderation of this
allowance; some drouthy carle of a bandster, for example, might prefer his
share in a caup or luggie, declaring that his mouth held just a gill, and
that a less measure only gave his tongue "the smell o't;" while, on the
other hand, a modest bit lassie at her first hairst would be content to
cough at a thimbleful. Unstinted bread and cheese or butter (not both—those
who united butter and cheese were counted menseless) lay to hand on the
kitchen table, but the entertainment was distinctly a liquid one; it was in
no sense a supper. The tups' heads and trotters, the links of puddings black
and white, the sides of mutton, or chines of beef, and all the rest of it,
which supported the long revelry of the Kirn, were out of place at the
modest carousal of the Caggie. And here, by the way, the reader of this
paper, who may be interested in the antiquities of Scottish social customs,
might be referred to an incidental account by Sir Walter Scott of the
festivities at a harvest home on Tweedside three and a half centuries ago.
The scene is laid at the Tower of Glendearg, and the account will be found
in the thirteenth chapter of The Monastery, But to come back to the Bear
Barrel and the youth-time of the nineteenth century. The invited reapers
stepped into the glow of the kitchen awkwardly, bashfully, almost
apologetically, as if the expected entertainment was hardly to be taken
seriously. They caught the eye of the farmer, standing like a Colossus on
his own floor-head, as they entered, and fell with him into a discourse on
the evening's weather, shaping their remarks to meet the wishes of their
employer and entertainer. There was of course some talk on the excellence of
the barley, and the farmer was sure to be complimented on the fineness of
his crop, both head and stalk o't. He would probably acknowledge the
compliment by treating himself incontinently to a huge pinch of snuff, and
sending his mull on a coasting voyage round the apartment. It was still the
age of rappee, pipe tobacco being as yet left to tinkers and other gangerels.
The men folk hung about the floor, while the women gathered into knots on
long forms at the wall. Presently the tap was turned, and the Master of the
Harvest ran off a glass, held it up, making the while critical grimaces with
one side of his face at the yellowish liquid, pree'd it deliberately,
smacked his lips twice amid the universal hush, and pronounced it gude. The
next glass he dedicated at a throw to the health of the company. Then came
the harvesters' turn. They toasted their entertainer and each other in an
informal way ; the wag, who was also the buck of the party, winked his
regards to the girls, and pretended to be suffocated at each sip; the
character of the whisky was favourably commented on, as if it were the newly
manufactured juice of the barley they had just been praising. One, perhaps,
to uphold his credit as a connoisseur of whisky, reserved his judgment,
though frequently appealed to, till a late hour in the evening, when
curiosity was no longer excited, and had then the hardihood to declare that
he had tasted a better brew. But the farmer was generally a match for such
impertinences, and, in a case like the one supposed, would be kittle to
retort with the coarse but conclusive proverb—"Ay, ay, Tammy, ma man! as the
soo fills, the draff spills!" By and by, under the influence of John
Barleycorn, the wheels of life, as the poet says, began to scrieve along wi'
rattlin' glee. Strangers from the neighbouring toun, aware of the night's
frolic, peeped in blately at the open door, were made welcome, and added
their news and their nonsense to the bustle that now filled the wide
kitchen. Every tongue was going, and the conversation, which had first
spread out from the more particular occasion of the gathering into channels
of general interest, was now racing along in twenty different courses, here
noisily and argumentatively, there jocosely and banteringly, and yonder
sweetly and smoothly with whispered favours "secret and precious." Some one
at last calling out that the night was wearing, the cry for a song or a
dance was raised—just one. Where concertinas are now plentiful, the fiddle
was not rare in those days; if the fiddle failed, probably a bag-piping
shepherd in his hut on the braes was to be had for the hazard of rousing
him. Failing both windbag and catgut, there was the diddler. Anybody could
diddle who had good lungs and a sense of rhythm. But the man or woman who
had the reputation of being good at diddling was at once called for with a
voice there was no denying. It was an accomplishment so much in demand at
the daft days, and at other convivial seasons, that we have known a
woman-servant who, in enumerating the list of her qualifications for
farmhouse service, crowned the catalogue by intimating that she was "a grand
diddler." She was engaged off-hand. The diddler, then, whether man or woman,
was put into a corner, and the dancers took the floor. A veteran diddler
dashed courageously into his duty. Following or falling into a tune, he
opened his mouth, and sang or said, to the beat of his foot on the kitchen
tiles, "Diddle-diddle, diddle-diddle," and kept on singing or saying,
"Diddle-diddle, diddle-diddle," with little variety of tone, but without a
pause, and with due attention to time, till he was black in the face, and
his tongue was as dry as a parrot's. He required frequent slockening—that
is, a drink at the end of every dance; and if that was not reward enough, he
had the appreciation of the dancers, and the proud consciousness of
controlling a principal part of the evening's amusement. After the one dance
and a circulation of drinks, a song—only one—was probably called for.
Burns's ballad of the life and death of John Barleycorn was often given, as
appropriate to the occasion of the Bear Barrel; but each district had its
favourite songs, which were certain to be demanded and given, whatever the
occasion of the social gathering might be. A great favourite in Strathmore
farms at one time was the Forfar Pensioner. I have never seen it in print,
and it is too long to giye here; but whether from youthful associations or
intrinsic merit, it will remain in my memory when many a more popular rhyme
has been forgotten. It is a sort of rustic Odyssey, recounting, in the first
person, the adventures of a Forfar lad who enlisted in the time of the
Napoleonic wars, and fought in the Peninsula:—
"We mairched thro' mony a
market place,
An' wandered up an' down, sir;
My coat was covered owre wi' lace,
An' powdered was my crown, sir."
But marching orders of a
different kind were issued, and he was "ca'd owre to Spain"—
"Where fifty regiments in a
raw
Cam* mairchin' owre the plain, sir."
The night before his first
encounter with the French was a sleepless one to him—
"Dreary thochts cam' in my
mind
O' Farfar an' my daddie."
It made his heart beat when
the French came on pell-mell, but—
"Farfar bluid was ever true,
Sae I did not retreat, sir."
A ball struck him, but he
loaded and fired again. At last
"The bluid cam' bockin' thro'
my hose,
I could nae langer stand, sir,
I flang my gun amang my foes,
An' sat me doon an' sang, sir!
Scots wha hae wi' Wallace bled,'
Syne ' Up wi' Maggie Dick,' sir;
My wounded leg grew unco sair,
An' stiff as ony stick, sir."
He came home with the help of
an oxter staff, and lived snugly on his well-earned pension. Scarcely less
popular was the amatory song of a ploughman lad from Stirling braes, whose
vagaries in drink had rare power of diverting the rustic mind. Even the
English song of the Derbyshire clown was a prime favourite among the farms
and bothies of Strathearn. Its action chorus of beating a drum was not its
least attraction. It began in some such way as this—
"A sturdy clown from
Derbyshire,
Fed up on mirth and loyaltee,
With his sturdy legs and his shoulders broad,
But as ignorant as a child could be;
He went to a sergeant recruiting there,
With a broad red sash about his waist,
'Come, tip me your fist, for I mean to list,
And I hope you will speak and get me placed!'
With a row-dow-dow," etc.
Dance or song, one led to
another—the dance, as giving active employment to most, or even to all,
predominating ; whisky was shed like water, till the kitchen smelled like a
change-house at a Holy Fair celebration; and when ten o'clock struck through
the revelry, it was recognised at once that the Bear Barrel for the year was
over. Duty required that the harvesters should be astir next morning at
five; there was no allowance made for late hours at a Bear Barrel
merrymaking; it was a mere episode, which was suffered in no way to retard
the operations or dislocate the arrangements of the precious harvest season.
The mirth was hearty for the two or three hours it lasted, and strangers
from the neighbouring farm were welcome to a taste of the liquor and a share
of the mirth. But there was no attempt to abuse the farmer's hospitality or
demoralise the farm-town. In a few minutes after ten everybody was either
fast asleep or falling over—those in the latter condition perhaps with the
half-formed wish that the morning might be wet, so as to secure a long "lie"
for limbs doubly tired with the toils of the hairst field and the
festivities of the Bear Barrel.